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Reghan Winkler: Scams to watch for in 2023

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As the year 2022 comes to a close and 2023 begins, it’s the time of year where we reflect on the various scams that have affected our community. Unfortunately, some scams are all too common and continue to plague us year after year. However, by learning from our past experiences, we can work towards preventing these scams from happening in the future.

Legal-Ease: How to study real estate

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Most of us would not buy a car without either personally or professionally investigating the condition and history of the car.

Tom Purcell: The shameful return of earmarks

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Earmarks are back, and they’re costing American taxpayers a bundle.

Mark Figley: 20 questions to ponder during 2023

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In a world increasingly on fire, there is never a shortage of information about anything and everything. This generates a significant amount of curiosity and can lead us to compile a substantial number of questions that are pondered, yet frequently unanswered. The following 20 questions are among those I hope to have explained in 2023.

Mitch Albom: How big was Elon Musk’s bombshell? Depends on your news source

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What’s a mountain, what’s a molehill? It’s getting pretty hard to tell in American media.

Thomas Suddes: Statehouse Republicans will be all smiles at first, but then the jockeying...

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As 2023 begins, Ohio Republicans are in the strongest Statehouse position they’ve enjoyed since the 1960s.

Christine Flowers: In 2022, SCOTUS righted a grave wrong

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I generally hate year-in-review columns. They seem forced, like a list of things you must buy at the grocery store. Check this off, and then this, and we did this, and I need that, and we are out of this, and can we have extra of that, etc. Years blend into each other and it’s often hard to pick exceptional events, particularly since the same things seem to happen over and over again: Wars start and continue, and we think they end, and then they’re prolonged.

David Trinko: Getting reader opinions on columnists

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If you’re going to have breakfast with someone, shouldn’t you have some choice on who it is?

Robert Reich: Musk, Trump and the demeaning of America

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Before the midterms, Elon Musk fired half of Twitter’s 7,500 employees, including teams devoted to combating election misinformation — and did it so haphazardly and arbitrarily that most had no idea they were fired until their email accounts were shut off.

Chris Talgo: In 2023, expect the unexpected

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If the last few years have taught us anything, when it comes to politics, culture, the economy and international events, we should always expect the unexpected. After all, did anyone expect Elon Musk to buy Twitter or Will Smith to storm the Oscars stage and deliver the “slap heard round the world” in 2022? I think not.