by Robert Parham | Jun 23, 2014 | Opinion
EthicsDaily.com has pivoted toward a new future—more intentionally providing faith content for TV. Our decision was quickened by an opportunity with a new African-American TV network—Soul of the South Network (SSN)—to air three of our documentaries, beginning in late...
by Zach Dawes Jr | Jun 20, 2014 | Opinion
Scientists have sought to address a global vitamin-A deficiency by creating genetically engineered bananas. They will arrive in the U.S. soon for their first human trial. Washington Post reporter Abby Phillip revealed that these bananas “are fortified with...
by Marion Carson | Jun 20, 2014 | Opinion
Human trafficking is far removed from the everyday lives of most of us. We might hear about it on the news through reports of young girls being rescued from nightclubs run by gangsters or of a trafficking ring being broken up by police. In the main, however, human...
by Claude Mariottini | Jun 19, 2014 | Opinion
Public Radio International is reporting that the United Nations Human Rights Committee is investigating claims by ISIS that it has killed 1,700 captured prisoners of war. ISIS stands for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. This group is also known as ISIL, the...
by Massimo Aprile | Jun 19, 2014 | Opinion
One hundred years ago, on June 28, two shots killed Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and his wife. It happened in Sarajevo and it marked the beginning of World War I, the Great War, the Terrible War, as it should be more correctly remembered....
by Robert Parham | Jun 19, 2014 | Opinion
Secular partisan division is increasingly occupying and harming congregations. So observed a mainstream North Carolina pastor, who told me last week that “politics is destroying the church.” Only a few years ago, one could assume that many right-wing...