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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Opinion >  Letters

School supplies, cheap

Once again, these school district members need to think out of the box on this one. Why rely on retail store contributions or use taxpayer dollars to buy supplies when there are alternatives?
Opinion >  Column

Sue Lani Madsen: What’s your narrative?

How many of my fellow Pacific Northwesterners had heard of Juneteenth before last summer? It’s been a Texas state holiday for over 40 years, since the underlying June 19 event took place there. It’s understandably a new thing if you’ve never lived in Texas or lack family history of celebrating Juneteenth.
Opinion >  Column

Penny Simonson: Darin Z. Krogh was the writer of our lives

If you are a reader in Spokane, there is a chance you’ve read his work in various newspapers, including quite regularly here in The Spokesman-Review; in locally and regionally produced magazines and in a fair number of anthologies. Last fall, his book “Lilac City Confidential” was released.
Opinion >  Letters

Far-right a product of Newton’s third law

I have recently read articles from various publications lamenting the extremism of the “right.” They called organizations like the Idaho Freedom Foundation and the John Birch Society “extreme” and said that long-time Republicans were upset with the shift to the “far-right.”
Opinion >  Letters

Let’s end the 1915 drug prohibition

George Nethercutt (Guest Opinion, "The right way to battle opioid abuse in Washington state," June 10) is not the only American who does not know that America left the world behind in 1915 and entered into drug prohibition, while everyone else stayed with legal and regulated drugs.
Opinion >  Letters

Malden Act

With Cathy McMorris Roger’s proposed “Malden Act,” a bill designed to stop presidents from blocking disaster assistance. CMR is tying to correct a problem she was instrumental in creating by voting lock step with a petty, vindictive president determined to punish our Governor. Supporting Trump may not reflect her personal beliefs. But she represents our deeply red, primarily agricultural district that continued to vote for this president and his adopted party even after he gave away the China market farmers had spent decades developing and made them dependent on federal welfare. Abortion and guns have been extremely effective in getting people to vote against their economic self interest and supporting the real Republican agenda of taxing work but not wealth. We need better representation, Tom Foley like.
Opinion >  Letters

Pet rescuers

Thank you to The Spokesman-Review for featuring this animal cruelty case ("Pet rescuers discover more than 80 dogs," June 17). While I am extremely grateful for the Kootenai Humane Society's prompt response and all the volunteers who helped the animals in this case, if people would do what I and many others are doing, these crimes would largely come to an end.
Opinion >  Letters

CMR’s Malden bill laughable

I nearly choked on my early morning coffee today when I read the news about Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers’ self-serving “Malden Act” bill ("McMorris Rodgers introduces 'Malden Act'," June 16).
Opinion >  Letters

Scrutiny of Pride Prep unfair

Chris Cargill’s op-ed piece (June 11) claiming unfair scrutiny of Pride Prep is itself unfair with flawed comparisons. And it sidesteps the root problem — poverty.
Opinion >  Letters

Women in computing

I was sorry to see that Charles Apple ("History of Computing," June 14) failed to recognize two very important people who happen to be women. Ada Lovelace, gifted English mathematician, financially supported Charles Babbage, co-developed the Analytical Engine and the Difference Engine, and became the first computer programmer.
Opinion >  Letters

First, do no harm

We assume that statement is a tenet of the Hippocratic Oath. It is actually from another of his works called "Of the Epidemics."