When the world forgets its humanity
Some days, the news doesn’t just inform, it settles into the bones.
It arrives like a weather change you feel before you can name it. A pressure drop in the chest. A tightening behind the eyes. Something in the air that tells you harm is moving in, whether we’re ready for it or not.
What we are witnessing right now is not...
Latest stories
Winchester Police to support ICE
The Winchester Police Department has an agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to assist in processing for deportation of undocumented immigrants who are already incarcerated for other crimes.
Police Chief Travis Thompson said in an interview with WinCity Voices on Tuesday that he applied for the program in December, three days after he learned about it. The department will get funding from ICE to train two officers and provide equipment for those officers, as well as...
Kentucky Black lawmakers’ program reflects on Black history and the need to still teach it
Speakers reflected on the past, looked to the future and urged courage in the present during the annual Black History Celebration presented by the Kentucky Black Legislative Caucus.
Keynote speaker, educator and researcher Roger Cleveland encouraged the crowd at the Kentucky History Center Tuesday to commit to building a future that is inclusive to all while meeting the current “uncertain times” with courage.
Black History Month is a reminder that progress is never accidental, Cleveland said. “It...
Jeff’s Playlist: Chrome Dreams
A collection of music by Neil Young which includes many fine tunes. Try it, I know you’ll like it.
ICE is now going after journalists
As anger keeps boiling over the actions of federal agents—especially ICE—the Trump administration is scrambling to regain control of the story. Instead of calming things down, though, their latest moves have only fueled more outrage.
From Minnesota to Kentucky, Americans are expressing their displeasure with the actions of ICE, which seems to have turned from enforcing immigration law to attacking people who are simply expressing their First Amendment rights to object. But a new ICE target...
Editorial picks
Kentucky Black lawmakers’ program reflects on Black history and the need to still teach it
Speakers reflected on the past, looked to the future and urged courage in the present during the annual Black History Celebration presented by the Kentucky Black Legislative Caucus.
Keynote speaker, educator and researcher Roger Cleveland encouraged the crowd at the Kentucky History Center Tuesday to commit to building a future that is inclusive to all while meeting the current “uncertain times” with courage.
Black History Month is a reminder that progress is never accidental, Cleveland said. “It has always been a result of people … who acted, and people who have held themselves and their institutions accountable.” Cleveland said that Kentuckians cannot...
An Open-Hearted Invitation To Trump Voters
Human history is a record of changed minds. There was a time when most people believed the Earth was flat. Sailors feared falling off the edge of the world. New evidence slowly replaced fear with understanding.
We once believed disease was caused by “bad humours.” Then germ theory overturned that worldview entirely. That brave, humble mindshift saved millions of lives.

