
What can Medea, the child-killer, teach us about Korean democracy?
It isn’t a higher consciousness to act like a leaf in the wind; nor is it a heroic gesture to kill our children serve our victim story

It isn’t a higher consciousness to act like a leaf in the wind; nor is it a heroic gesture to kill our children serve our victim story
I asked my son, Oliver, what can the oldest living person teach us?
My reply: “She taught us you never know what another person is going through.”

Last week, a maverick American reproductive specialist published an abstract announcing a new technique: a “three-parent” baby.

If you wanted to use your own stem cells, which is the very basis for your life, then you would need to travel to another country.

In fact, everything you do remember has some emotional valence to it. The stronger the emotions, the more vivid the memory.
Is the best we can really come up with poverty, death and squalor by nature in an under-colonized world versus poverty, death and squalor by artificial scarcity in a urbanized, developed dystopia?