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By ALLEN WOODS
In 2012, The New Yorker profiled Apollo Robbins, universally accepted as the best pickpocket in the world at the time, but one who always returned what he had stolen, including watches, keys, billfolds, eyeglasses (being worn at the time), coins, cartridges from ballpoint pens, etc., etc. One of his most famous demonstrations was in 2001 when, at the age of 27, he struck up a conversation with Secret Service agents protecting former President Jimmy Carter.
By ALLEN WOODS
No one except the most extreme political or religious fanatics encourages or embraces murder. Its prohibition is a bedrock value in every society and stated explicitly in laws, and religious and moral teachings.But, of course, there are exceptions....
By ALLEN WOODS
I was blessed to celebrate what many think of as a “traditional” Thanksgiving: we ate turkey, stuffing, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes and gravy, pumpkin pie and lots more, resulting in a few naps afterwards in front of the TV football game. Our...
By ALLEN WOODS
In the weeks since the gut punch of Donald Trump’s reelection, The Boston Globe reports that some fervent supporters of Kamala Harris have fully retreated from the political arena — an area which now feels like the Roman Colosseum where slaves and...
By ALLEN WOODS
For people who care deeply about national politics, the 2024 election is barreling down on us like the locomotive in the 1950s TV Superman intro, but we don’t have the superpowers to stop it. Continuing to stand on the tracks isn’t really a smart...
By ALLEN WOODS
With the presidential election less than two weeks away, America has come to a turning point, a watershed, an inescapable fork in the road. As one of my favorite philosophers, Yogi Berra, allegedly counseled, “When you come to a fork in the road, take...
By ALLEN WOODS
In our currently fractured world, many people delve into a bit of soul-searching. Social and political divisions create uncomfortable feelings of anger, frustration, even hatred, and it’s natural to question their sources and usefulness. I also...
By ALLEN WOODS
In the hit movie Network (1976), a mentally unstable TV newscaster prompts a meteoric rise in his ratings by convincing viewers to open their windows and shout “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore.” Although the specific target of...
By ALLEN WOODS
In my first try at college, beginning in 1968, I didn’t major in journalism, or English, but experimented with writing, and read voraciously. A literate friend tutored me in the types and styles of writing, including the period’s passionate debate on...
By ALLEN WOODS
I’m generally not a fan of speeches at political conventions. The long list of speakers preaches to the choir when they need to reach a broader congregation. They feel free to make extravagant promises without specifics or programs to support them....
By ALLEN WOODS
One inevitable, and unenviable, task of getting older is accepting that people who made an impact on your life die. Today, they might be termed “influencers,” although for me, influence stemmed from actions and accomplishments beyond looking...
By ALLEN WOODS
It seemed the voracious broadcast media fanned out almost before the vivid red blood streaming down Donald Trump’s face had a chance to be cleaned in an ambulance. They wanted reactions from eyewitnesses, and asked the usual inane questions.Most...
By ALLEN WOODS
Americans spent a lot of time and emotion fighting among ourselves in 1969. We fought over the Vietnam War, the compulsory military draft, and the “counterculture” springing from it. As a youngish man (or oldish boy) nearing 20, I was happy to march...
By ALLEN WOODS
Languages are marvelously fluid and flexible. Words are created, meanings “morph” to reflect common usages, and some are discarded when they’re no longer relevant.“Outrage” crossed the English Channel from France around 1300 with a different meaning....
By ALLEN WOODS
Everyone with a profession, or even a passionate hobby, probably has one person that stands out as a role model, a target of envy, and recipient of uncritical admiration. In today’s inflated language, that person might be termed the GOAT (Greatest of...
By ALLEN WOODS
Earlier this year, my extended family met in Washington, D.C. to celebrate multiple anniversaries and accomplishments and marvel at the grandeur of our nation’s capital. The elders and young adults relived some memories with the two youngest boys and...
By ALLEN WOODS
A few weeks ago, Donald Trump again displayed his blissfully ignorant understanding of the modern world. At a fundraiser at the home of a billionaire in Palm Beach, Florida, he went off script (if there ever was a script) not only to complain about...
By ALLEN WOODS
A mob of angry men, many recently unemployed, gathered in front of an ornate, stately building, the largest in the area and a symbol of government power. Confident, because the government had taken little action after previous mob attacks, and...
By ALLEN WOODS
There’s true madness all around us: wars creating multiple military and humanitarian crimes; apocalyptic climate news daily; migrants fleeing deadly threats and facing more on their journey; our country so deeply divided that we may experience a...
By ALLEN WOODS
Here’s breaking political news — Americans are nearly unanimous in one central belief: Our society, for the lack of a better phrase, is “going to hell in a handbasket” (i.e., quickly and directly, with the phrase possibly relating to Dante’s trip to...
By ALLEN WOODS
The familiar words bring vivid memories of the 1960s video clips that opened ABC’s “Wide World of Sports”: “The thrill of victory” (a victorious boxer carried overhead by a jubilant crowd) “and the agony of defeat” (a ski jumper stumbles before...
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