Tag: Minnesota

  • Free ideas for Iron Range future

    Free ideas for Iron Range future

    People around local politics often like to “admire problems.” In short, people like to look at problems, complain about them, even lose sleep over them, but then take few steps to actually solve those issues. Sometimes I’m reminded that talking about economic diversification for the Iron Range or the broad concept of “change” isn’t enough.…

  • Naming a legacy one noun at a time

    Naming a legacy one noun at a time

    Humans didn’t create the world, but we do get to name the things we find here. We name our kids for our dads and our dogs for 19th Century burlesque performers. Someone called it “phlegm” and then invented the spelling. The ancients named “steel” and “stone” with nice sturdy words, but also called some tiny…

  • Power in the Wilderness podcast available on major platforms

    Power in the Wilderness podcast available on major platforms

    Readers here have probably gotten used to the fact that I’m only posting my newspaper columns these days. I’ve been working on my book, “Power in the Wilderness.” This process grew complicated when I returned to campus for my full time teaching assignment. Months ago Karl Jacob and I promoted our podcast, also called “Power…

  • When giants walked upon the earth: Latest Reformer column gets personal

    When giants walked upon the earth: Latest Reformer column gets personal

    In 2008, I turned out 800 blog posts a year, an insane output devoted almost entirely to my hyperactive political opinions. If you’ve been reading my site these last few years you know that I’ve slowed way down. Part of that is just the normal sort of time commitments that turn many “bloggers” into “ex-bloggers.”…

  • Crime and entertainment

    Crime and entertainment

    Lately I’ve been watching people walk by, wondering how many of them have bricks of cash strapped under their bellies. How many guns did they cram into those reusable tote bags? Oh, look, she’s buying a shovel. Must have thrown the last one in the lake after burying the guy who talked too much. Or…

  • Confessions of a medium Sudoku genius

    Confessions of a medium Sudoku genius

    Back when I was editor of the erstwhile Hibbing Daily Tribune, the most passionate phone calls came after printing errors on the daily crossword puzzle. At the time I compared these angry puzzlers to junkies. I rationalized our error by telling myself that perhaps these lost souls needed a wake-up call just like this to…

  • It’s supply and demand, not dystopia

    It’s supply and demand, not dystopia

    These days some of us fall too easily into patterns of dystopian thinking. Hurry up and get to the end of the world! Maybe it will be better that way! Every day I hear from someone who tells me that they’re glad they’ll be dead before the worst of it. It’s kind of a downer. …

  • Ancient crocodile needs our support

    Ancient crocodile needs our support

      A local fossil needs your support. No, I’m not talking about an Iron Range politician. I’m referring to an ancient crocodile. This particular crocodile died in the muck near modern day Calumet, Minnesota, about 90 million years ago.  You might think that it’s far too late to help this erstwhile reptile, but you’d be…

  • Labor navigates northern Minnesota political crosswinds

    Labor navigates northern Minnesota political crosswinds

    My latest column for the Minnesota Reformer is out today. Let’s call it a Labor Day think piece. Northern Minnesota has been a wellspring of the American labor movement for more than a century. However, in more recent years, organized labor has shifted into the role of mature old power, increasingly wedded to politics and…

  • Technology draws new atlas for our future

    Technology draws new atlas for our future

    Want to blow your mind? Look at the evolutionary history of whales. Whales are mammals, not fish. As such their ancestors were land animals, specifically the Pakicetus. Pakicetus was a sort of water-loving goat- or dog-looking critter that hunted alongside lakes and rivers about 50 million years ago. It had massive jaws and was probably…

  • The real value of a college education

    The real value of a college education

    Contrary to what you might think, personal growth doesn’t occur inside your head. It happens when you get outside your head.  There comes a moment when a child thinks of another before he or she thinks of themselves. A teenager makes a sacrifice for the good of others. An adult realizes that their behaviors and…

  • Most dangerous migrants are the ones leaving our communities

    Most dangerous migrants are the ones leaving our communities

    In 2010 I wrote an article entitled “Wanted: Young People.” It was about the 2010 U.S. Census and what it could tell us about the towns and counties of northeastern Minnesota.  Ten years ago, data showed that our economic problems stemmed from a lack of people to support existing business and community institutions. It wasn’t…

  • When the ‘Field of Dreams’ was in Hibbing

    When the ‘Field of Dreams’ was in Hibbing

    With the successful completion of Major League Baseball’s “Field of Dreams” game in Dyersville, Iowa, I am reminded of a Northern Minnesota connection to the story. But not the one you think.  Of course you may know that the 1989 movie “Field of Dreams” was based on the W.P. Kinsella novella “Shoeless Joe.” Fans of…

  • The view from inside the meme

    The view from inside the meme

    It all started innocently enough. Last Monday I was sitting in my comfy chair watching the Olympics on the CBC. That’s the Canadian TV channel available to many of us here in northern Minnesota. I watched Canadian swimmer Maggie Mac Neil win Gold in the 100 meter butterfly. She didn’t realize she won because she…

  • ‘Generational amnesia’ helps us forget a past we would do well to remember

    ‘Generational amnesia’ helps us forget a past we would do well to remember

    My latest for the Minnesota Reformer is out today: The piece, entitled “These Old Timers Have Nostalgia All Wrong,” takes you on another of my journeys between past, present and future. This one explores what we forget. Our boundless ability to shed the past causes us to fear the future far more than we should.…