Guest opinion: Five ways to reduce political animosity
by Jared Whitley
Political animosity seems to be at an all-time high in the US, indeed a recent UVU study finding that Utah isnât immune to the trend. Anger begets anger rather than reconciliation, creating a vicious cycle. Itâs hard to feel like you should compromise with someone when all you see of them is riots and threats, but weâve come up with five ways we think we can reduce animosity among the left and the right in America.
One, unite on government accountability. Two, say "populist" instead of "far-". Three, unite on corporate accountability, four, remember that if America loses, China wins and five, somehow make it the 90s again.
It is very difficult to feel like you should compromise with someone when theyâre shrieking at you. Itâs amazing that American political life isnât even more contentious â a fight like this one in the Taiwanese parliament hasnât broken out in Congress, well, ever. Itâs a testament to the strength of the American spirit that things arenât even worse. At least for now. (Read More)
News Releases
Sutherland Institute announces key findings in family study
Sutherland Institute announced today a new report titled âThe Utah Family Miracle: Five Policy Ideas to Keep Utah Families Strong and Stable.â
The new report â written by Sutherland Visiting Scholar Brad Wilcox and two co-authors, in partnership with the Institute for Family Studies â unveils how marriage and family structure are significant contributors to Utahâs best-in-the-nation status for things like economic opportunity, happiness, and strong civic and social life. The report explores the significance of data showing that trends in marriage and family structure are on the decline. It also offers five concrete policy recommendations to Utah policymakers that will maintain and build upon Utahâs success as a national leader for strong families and a vibrant economy. (Read More)
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BioHive welcomes new Chair and Vice Chair to Board
BioHive, a public-private non-profit representing Utahâs collective of life sciences and healthcare innovation companies, announced today the appointment of Jared Bauer as Chairman of the Board and Cindy Dunkle as Vice Chair. Bauer will succeed Chris Gibson (CEO of Recursion), who has served as Chairman since BioHiveâs inception in 2021. (Read More)
WSUâs respiratory therapy program honored for credentialing success rate
The Department of Respiratory Therapy at Weber State University was awarded the Distinguished Registered Respiratory Therapist Credentialing Success Award on July 14 by the Commission on Accreditation for Respiratory Care. The award highlights the programâs success of having at least 90% of its students earn their RRT credential for more than three years. (Read More)
First Lady Abby Cox to host conference focused on educator mental health
Now in its second year, and as part of her Show Up initiative, Utah First Lady Abby Cox will host âShow Up for Teachersâ â a conference for Utah educators focused on their emotional and mental well-being â on Wednesday, July 19. Over 2600 educators and community leaders are expected to be in attendance â more than twice the amount in attendance in 2022. (2022 videos here and here.)
Keynote speakers will include Arthur C. Brooks and Michael Bonner, and 48 breakout sessions will feature leading presenters on topics such as classroom management, personal finance, goal-setting, stress management, conflict resolution and more. (Read More)