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Newspaper owners’ economic salvation rests in committing a crime and soliciting donations. Even better if convicted.
Breaking the law to get on the ballot, hiding the identity of donors and cleansing the money through a pop-up church is not how the system should work.
Out with the old and in with the new seems irreversible, as I suppose it should be.
Low prices make life more affordable; public services without tax revenue is unaffordable.
This is Alaska, where nothing has to pencil out if we dream hard enough.
I hope the political parties eventually will summon the nerve to tell Father Time to sit down and let a younger crowd take over. It’s their turn.
We know it’s not healthy to keep eating oversized portions, but we can’t help ourselves.
Alaskans — businesses and individuals — should pay for the public services they need, not pretend that tax credits are the solution.
It’s the closest the state will ever get to profiting from an Arctic gas project.
The governor’s growing obsession with charter schools is frightening for the future of public education in Alaska.
Draining reserves is not a fiscal plan. It’s selfish, and it assumes our savings exist only to help the current generation and no one else.
Alaska’s income tax helped convince Congress we were willing to pay our way as a state. Is that true now?
Ranked choice voting gives independent voters, and everyone else, a better shot at voting for their preferred candidates.
Nothing against canned sardines, but they give off a strong odor — just like a proposed Mat-Su ordinance.
Pulling out $1 billion from an ATM, living the good life as a happy politician and hoping nothing goes wrong is not a plan — it’s an avoidance strategy.