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  • Don C. Brunell

    Mitsubishi is now launching into regional jet space

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Sep 26, 2019

    Traditionally, media coverage of the Paris Air Show focuses on the battle between Boeing and Airbus over market share for newer large commercial jets. However, this year Mitsubishi shared the spotlight with its state-of-the-art "SpaceJet." SpaceJet is not the latest aircraft to join British billionaire Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic suborbital space fleet. It is a new regional passenger aircraft designed to compete head-to-head with Brazil's Embraer E-175 for routes...

  • Administration is slowly removing human rights

    Updated Sep 19, 2019

    Chip, chip, chip away. Do you notice the chipping away of human rights of migrants and reduction of total number of refugees by the present administration? Day after day, it creates an even more cruel way to block asylum-seekers; the latest being the denial of refuge for Bahamians fleeing the ravages of Hurricane Dorian, and people living here sometimes for years, who require advanced medical care. This of course includes children being sent back to their countries of origin where there is limited access to medical care, a...

  • Cigarette butts make cleaning Cheney difficult

    Updated Sep 19, 2019

    “Cigarette butts, the most littered items in the world, are proving to be an intractable trash problem for regulators and tobacco companies. Throwing them on the ground is a firmly entrenched habit for many smokers.” This statement published in the Wall Street Journal was sent to me recently. It goes on to say “Regulators are taking a tougher stance on cigarette filter pollution amid concerns about the environmental impact of single use plastic. For decades, butts have been made from cellulose acetate, a form of plast...

  • The dangerous bipartisan enthusiasm for drug price controls

    SANDIP SHAH, Contributor|Updated Sep 19, 2019

    For years, politicians have railed about the high cost of prescription drugs. But now, they appear poised to take action. Democrats and many Republicans want to impose price controls on medicines. One proposal would allow patients to import price-controlled medicines from Canada. Another would allow federal bureaucrats to effectively dictate the price of medicines sold through Medicare’s prescription drug program. Yet another plan would index Medicare reimbursements for advanced drugs to the artificially capped prices paid i...

  • History shows agitators get things done

    Updated Sep 12, 2019

    “Agitators are generally involved only for themselves.” My observations combined with reading some history of agitators provides me with a completely different opinion of these people than Frank Watson expresses in the Aug. 29, 2019 issue of the Cheney Free Press. Consider the agitators such as George Washington, Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and cohorts. Today we have Elizabeth Warren, four young Congresswomen, Bernie Sanders and Mandy Morris, all of whom are bringing to our attention many of the social problems...

  • Cheney Free Press coverage is very much appreciated

    Updated Sep 12, 2019

    My hubby and I have been Cheney residents for 40 years next January and the whole time we’ve read the Cheney Free Press to first learn about our community, and then to keep track of the many issues facing our community. Even though we’re county folks, Cheney is our home community. In a time when so much fragmented - as well as opinionated - information is shared, we still rely on the Free Press to know about issues important to Cheney whether we agree — or not — with decisions concerning those issues. So keep up the good wo...

  • It is time to talk about our national debt

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Sep 12, 2019

    Our nation is on an unsustainable borrowing trajectory and it could get much worse unless voters start asking politicians: “How are taxpayers going to pay for what they promise!” We now owe over $22.5 trillion to lenders of which nearly half are off shore. (China $1.11 trillion). At the rate which we are selling treasury notes, the deficit will balloon to $24 trillion by 2020. That means when the presidential election rolls around next year, each taxpayer’s share of the debt...

  • Spokane issues affect West Plains too

    Updated Sep 12, 2019

    Many of us in Cheney are affected by Spokane city and county administrations. At today’s (Sept. 5) Spokane Homelessness Coalition with candidates Ben Stuckart, Nadine Woodward, Breean Beggs and Cindy Wendle, I took away one realization. We need a mayor and city council president with experience to work together. I like to support qualified female candidates, but the only two I trust to improve homelessness is Ben Stuckart and Breean Beggs. I’ve immersed myself in these issues for the past year at Monday Camp Hope meetings wit...

  • The myth of safety and security in these United States

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Sep 12, 2019

    I had a wonderful opportunity in 2000. I was selected as part of Spokane’s sister city educational exchange, and taught English in the Japanese public school system. One of my students was considering applying to be an exchange student in America. She asked me several questions including how safe my country was. I assured her that the reports of violence were overblown by our free and open media. Although we were not as safe as Japan, we felt secure anywhere in our country. I couldn’t make that statement today. School sho...

  • Is this the the end of democracy?

    Lee Hughes, Staff reporter|Updated Sep 12, 2019

    Is democracy threatened? Look around and it seems like — feels like — something is off. Things are amiss, and to offset what some consider the beginning of the end of democracy as we know it requires civic responsibility. We are seemingly bombarded on a daily basis by arguably disturbing news about far right conservative leaders like Donald Trump and Britain’s Boris Johnson, both of whom are actively undermining long-held and intertwined systems of trade, commerce and strat...

  • Monkey see, monkey cure: primates are necessary for research

    MATTHEW R. BAILEY, Contributor|Updated Sep 5, 2019

    Lawmakers have recently increased efforts to introduce legislation that would impose strict reporting requirements on medical research involving monkeys and other non-human primates. The goal is to substantially reduce such research. These restrictions could endanger lives. Primate research has led to some of the most important breakthroughs in medical history — and promises to unlock treatments for the world’s deadliest diseases in the not too distant future. Consider a groundbreaking treatment for glioblastoma, the dea...

  • Tacoma LNG project needs to happen

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Sep 5, 2019

    Hopefully Puget Sound Energy (PSE) will receive final permit approval so it can complete its Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) plant currently under construction on Tacoma’s Tide Flats. For background, LNG is natural gas chilled to a liquid state, (-260° Fahrenheit), for shipping and storage. The volume of natural gas in its liquid state is about 600 times smaller than in its gaseous state. The comparison is similar to condensing air in a beach ball to a ping-pong ball. In its li...

  • Unelected judges replacing our government of we the people

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Sep 5, 2019

    I thought the court decisions against the makers of Roundup were over the top, but I was absolutely astounded at the recent ruling against Johnson & Johnson. These judgments are not only out of line, but tend to spawn even more outrageous claims in the hope that money will rain down on litigants and their lawyers. World health agencies have repeatedly stated Roundup is not a threat, with one lone exception that said the active ingredient in Roundup (glyphosate) might contribute to cancer. The U.S. Environmental Protection...

  • Look out: it's election season

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Sep 5, 2019

    “Leaves are falling all around, it’s time I was on my way.” Thus sang leader singer Robert Plant on Led Zeppelin’s classic 1969 song “Ramble On.” OK, so leaves aren’t falling — yet. And I’m not really on my way anywhere. But with Labor Day behind us, we are officially on our way into the election season. I know, I know, that’s not a season on most people’s radar, at least not until leaves really do fall and it starts getting cold. It’s hard to think about checking ballot boxes when it’s still pretty hot outside. Many people...

  • Solving the doctor shortage and medical school bottleneck

    RICHARD LIEBOWITZ, Contributor|Updated Aug 29, 2019

    Tens of thousands of Americans apply to U.S. medical schools each year. Only a fraction gain admission. The University of Arizona, for instance, posted a 1.9 percent acceptance rate in 2018. UCLA, Florida State University, and Wake Forest accepted fewer than 3 percent of applicants. Many U.S. medical schools are proud of their microscopic admission rates. But they have negative ramifications for the nation’s healthcare system. The United States will need up to 121,900 more physicians by 2032 to care for its aging p...

  • Article, celebration brought back memories

    Updated Aug 29, 2019

    Thank you, John McCallum, for the article you wrote about my parents Pete and Jewel Baccarella on Aug. 8, 2019 in the Cheney Free Press. It brought back a lot of memories. I would also like to thank my brother and sisters and the Cheney family and friends that support my parents every day. Thank you for celebrating my father’s 72nd birthday and his retirement party at Centennial Park on Aug.17 with us. It made the occasion perfect. Thanks again. Elizabeth Drumm (Pete’s daughter) Ramstein Air Force Base Ger...

  • Thank you for such a special day on Aug. 17

    Updated Aug 29, 2019

    Thank you to everyone who helped my wife Jewel and I celebrate my 72nd birthday and retirement party at Centennial Park Aug. 17 and make it a special day. I would like to personally single out those who helped make this day possible and very memorable: Bene’s Brick N Char food truck – owner Derek Baziotis, truck manager Carlos Vera, Ionic Coffee — Mobile Coffee Bar — owner Todd Cummings, Shelley Tomlinson Johnson, chief operating officer at the Tomlinson Group of Companies; Gary Shamblin – singer and entertainment, Cheney Pa...

  • Agitators are generally involved only for themselves

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Aug 29, 2019

    To tweet or not to tweet, that is the question. I have found over my considerable years that when you have nothing to add, you should keep your mouth shut. Our President seems to have missed that lesson. When congresswomen Tlaib and Omar were planning their trip to Israel, he had nothing to add, but he did anyway. He tweeted something silly about allowing the two congresswomen to visit Israel would be a sign of weakness. A sign of weakness for whom? The liberal press immediately condemned the President for picking on two “wom...

  • Refugees needed to replace lack of workers

    Updated Aug 29, 2019

    Not only is the current Trump administration refugee policy cruelly inhumane, it also courts long-term economic disaster for our country. Japan already suffers greatly from the problem of too few young workers to support its aging population. At least two other major countries, the U.S. and China, are approaching the same problem with their similarly low birth rates. So where to get more young workers? By increasing refugees rather than burdening the world with more population problems by raising birth rates. The throngs...

  • Reasons for Amazon fires are complex - and so are solutions

    SHANNEN TALBOT, Staff Reporter|Updated Aug 29, 2019

    By now, anyone with access to a television or computer has heard of the catastrophe facing the Amazon rainforest in the form of blazing fires consuming forested land and the creatures that inhabit it. As of press time, Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) had reported at least 74,000 fires in the Amazon this year — an increase of 84 percent since this time last year. Statistically, the Amazon rarely burns on its own — its foliage is typically too wet to ignite, so fires are often found to be caused by human...

  • Boycotting business with Israel is not anti-Semitic

    Updated Aug 22, 2019

    July 4th, 2019, Independence Day – is a day to celebrate our freedoms. What many people of Washington state don’t know is that our senators, Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, voted to limit our freedoms – freedom to boycott, divest and sanction (BDS).They supported Senate Bill 1, “Strengthening America’s Security in the Middle East Act.” This bill contains “Combating BDS Act” which encourages states and local governments to deny contracts to any business, nonprofit organization or individual boycotting for Palestinian fre...

  • Our right to bear arms is not an unlimited right

    Updated Aug 22, 2019

    Frank Watson is wrong. He is writing in the Opinion section of the paper, so like anyone else, he has a right to express his opinion. That’s what he’s doing in his Aug. 15 piece on guns in America. Unfortunately, his premise is incorrect; the Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms” is not absolute, no matter what Col. Watson “feels.” “Like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment right is not unlimited.... [It is] not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whate...

  • There's no doubt about it now, Donald Trump must go

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Aug 22, 2019

    I’m still looking for an alternative for Donald Trump in 2020. I agree with almost everything negative that has been said of him. He is obnoxious, he makes unnecessary enemies, he is undiplomatic, he does not command loyalty, he generates hate, etc., etc., etc.… BUT, and it is a big but, many of his initiatives are spot on. We have allowed our friends to take advantage of us. China doesn’t play fair. Border security is both a matter of law and a matter of national interest. We must do what is best for America. We don’t...

  • Drones planting trees helping restore burned wildlands

    Updated Aug 22, 2019

    By DON C. BRUNELL Contributor While drones are coming of age in firefighting, they are also establishing a foothold in restoring fire-scorched forests. Firefighting drones grabbed the spotlight last April 15 as viewers around the world watched Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris go up in flames. It has stood for over 850 years, through wars, natural disasters, and everything in between including the fire. At first, it appeared the iconic building would be completely destroyed; however, French firefighters used thermal vision drones...

  • What if there was no more oil?

    Lee Hughes, Staff Reporter|Updated Aug 22, 2019

    The Swedish climate activist 16-year-old Greta Thunberg recently set sail across the Atlantic on a solar and wind-powered racing yacht to attend climate summits in the U.S. She was offered the use of the yacht because she refused to use a transportation method that would further contribute to global warming. That got me thinking about what-ifs. What if there was no more oil to power planes or ships? Our modern world came into being because of petroleum, which has allowed...

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