Opinion

Holiday Hugs: Let Kids Say No

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Understanding consent starts at home, and the holiday season is a good time to visit the fundamentals and practice personal boundaries. We tell kids, “Keep your hands to yourself.” But we also need to teach kids that affection is not mandatory. They don’t have to hug that relative they only see during the holidays. They can and should say no when they don’t want to.

Dear Annie

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Dear Annie: My wife of more than 31 years recently passed away. She had three children from a previous marriage. We had none. She left behind a large sum of money from her savings and IRA for them. Her eldest son has a mental condition, and most of his needs are met by the state of New York and Social Security. Her youngest son has an intermittent drug problem. Her middle son conned us by acting like the responsible son. She trusted him to look after his two brothers and to split all her money equally and empowered the middle son to act as her agent after she was gone.

Dear Annie

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Dear Annie: About two years ago I was pregnant with my firstborn. About five months into the pregnancy, my partner, the father, cheated on me. When I found out about it, I was devastated; I didn’t know what to do with myself.

People Shouldn’t Live on the Streets. Period.

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A lot of smart voices seem afraid to say outright that homeless mentally ill people should be taken off the streets, forcibly if necessary. They may easily agree that the sad humans sleeping on grates and under bridges would benefit from coming indoors for medical care and other social services. But they can’t concede that the public’s right to use sidewalks, parks and train stations should trump a homeless person’s desire to take over those spaces.

Dear Annie

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Dear Annie: I was a lousy husband. Not because of physical or emotional abuse but because of ignorance. I grew up in a household where I never heard my father tell my mother he loved her. I never heard him give her a compliment or ask her opinion.

Elon Musk Should Take a Clear Stand Against Censorship by Proxy

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The Most Disturbing Aspect of the ‘Twitter Files’ Is the Platform’s Cozy Relationship With Federal Officials Demanding Suppression of Speech They Consider Dangerous From the outside, Twitter’s content moderation decisions look haphazard at best. From the inside, they look worse, especially because government officials play an unseemly and arguably unconstitutional role in shaping those decisions.