ap

Skip to content
Cohen Peart of The Denver Post.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

sound-off-no-logo

The weekly newsletter of The Denver Post’s opinion pages.

cccc
Wire file photos

Coffee, cake, collusion and a royal couple. The past week’s opinion pages included a discussion of gentrification after a local coffee shop inadvertently touched off a debate; a baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple; Michael Flynn’s plea deal in the Russia investigation; and Prince Harry’s engagement to Meghan Markle. Here are highlights:

Perspective

First, a summary of what was in our Sunday Perspective section this week:

A mindless roasting: Vincent Carroll, the former Denver Post and Rocky Mountain News editorial page editor, wrote that the cascade of abuse targeting a local ink! Coffee shop in Five Points is an .

Masterpiece Cakeshop: With the U.S. Supreme Court set to hear the case of a gay Colorado couple and a Lakewood baker on Tuesday, we published two commentaries that discuss the issues involved:

The Washington Post’s George F. Will argued that Masterpiece Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips , but Charlie Craig and David Mullins, who sought his punishment, have behaved abominably.

Former Colorado legislators Joel Judd and Jennifer Veiga, who sponsored legislation that added protections for LGBTQ people to Colorado’s Anti-Discrimination Act in 2008, urged the Supreme Court to .

We’re also printing  from an attorney representing Phillips in Tuesday’s Denver Post.

Denial on the deficit: Former U.S. Sen. Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, who co-chaired the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform seven years ago, wrote that the debate on tax reform in the House and Senate suggests that .

newsletter-2017-12-04-deficits-cartoon-sack
Steve Sack, (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Can John Elway save the Broncos? In its Sunday editorial, the Denver Post editorial board wrote: ; a miraculous revival of what is ostensibly the worst team to take the field in decades will take real leadership from John Elway.

Letters to the editor: On the letters page, Denver Post readers tackled a number of issues. Here are several of their letters:

Protecting cats and dogs: Mario Nicolais, a biweekly Denver Post columnist, wrote that in Colorado, California and in cities across the country meant to shield cats and dogs are as much about consumer protection as animal protection.

The former Mount McKinley in Alaska was renamed Denali by President Barack Obama on Aug. 19, 2011.
Becky Bohrer, Associated Press file
The former Mount McKinley in Alaska was renamed Denali by President Barack Obama on Aug. 19, 2011.

The meaning of place names: Tim Lydon, who lives in Alaska, the home of former Mount McKinley-turned-Denali, wrote: The is here to stay. Regardless of the outcome, we will find ourselves increasingly considering the relationships that have long existed between people, cultures and the places we call home.

Parks, parks, parks: Susan E. Baird, a retired parks planner for the city of Denver, argued that converting such sites as Park Hill Golf Course and the Loretto Heights College campus to park land than developing housing there.

What businesses want: Denise Burgess, current chair of the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce, wrote that the from Colorado’s next state Supreme Court justice.

newsletter-2017-12-04-driverless-cars-cartoon-koterba
Jeff Koterba, Omaha World-Herald

Driverless cars threaten jobs: Dennis Dougherty, executive director of the Colorado AFL-CIO, wrote that the touted benefits about driverless cars often obscure the very real human cost of the technology: .

The welcoming of Meghan Markle: Autumn Brewington, who used to blog about the British royal family for The Washington Post, wrote: The happy union of a playboy-prince-turned-soldier-and-humanitarian and a biracial, divorced American actress-and-humanitarian marks .

Drawn to the News: Here are the editorial cartoons we featured on the back page of Sunday’s Perspective section, on the topic of the FCC’s proposed new rules on net neutrality:

newsletter-2017-12-04-net-neutrality-caroon-heller
Joe Heller, www.hellertoon.com
newsletter-2017-12-04-net-neutrality-caroon-cole
John Cole, Scranton Times-Tribune

The past week

Here are highlights from last week’s opinion coverage:

Denver Post editorials:

Inconsistency on sexual harassment: As the #MeToo movement continues to gather momentum, we’ve been in which the private sector and elected officials are handling claims of sexual harassment.

newsletter-2017-12-04-harassment-cartoon-chappatte
Patrick Chappatte, The International New York Times

Ending parent-teacher conferences: Adams County School District 14, in Commerce City, is right to stop setting aside days of the school year for and instead have classroom instruction on those days.

Judy Reyher calls the kettle black: Newly appointed Colorado state Rep. Judy Reyher, R-Swink, when she doubled down on Facebook comments saying Muslims and African-Americans are full of hate.

Op-ed columns:

People protest outside an ink! Coffee shop in Denver’s Five Points neighborhood after the company displayed a sign that celebrated gentrification of the area.
RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post
People protest outside an ink! Coffee shop in Denver’s Five Points neighborhood after the company displayed a sign that celebrated gentrification of the area.

Ink! stink was deserved: Denver Post editorial writer and columnist Megan Schrader wrote that a local ink! Coffee shop it has received for boasting about “gentrifying” the Five Points neighborhood, adding that Mayor Michael Hancock is among a handful of people in a position to demand more affordable housing in Denver.

Go ahead, enjoy Prince Harry and Meghan Markle: Washington Post columnist Alyssa Rosenberg wrote: There are a lot of things the American Revolution won us and among the least consequential but most purely pleasurable is without having to pay a dime for it or to give a fig about the implications.

Michael Flynn has flipped: The Washington Post’s Amber Phillips wrote that we can say with near-certainty that in the Russia investigation, and he is now cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller.

newsletter-2017-12-04-flynn-cartoon-mckee
Rick McKee, The Augusta Chronicle

No proof of collusion: Ed Rogers of The Washington Post wrote: The fact that a former White House official, Michael Flynn, has been charged and pleaded guilty is consequential, but between the Trump campaign and Russia.

Al Franken’s strategy of non-denial: Ramesh Ponnuru, a Bloomberg View columnist, wrote: There are two obvious responses to accusations of groping women: Either admit them, apologize and ask for forgiveness; or deny them. Sen. Al Franken is .

Horrified by anti-Muslim bigotry: Yair Rosenberg, a senior writer at Tablet Magazine, wrote that by sharing three anti-Muslim videos with his 43 million Twitter followers, Donald Trump yet again and their ideas into the public discourse

newsletter-2017-12-04-matt-lauer-cartoon-heller
Joe Heller, www.hellertoon.com

Matt Lauer and the “Today” show patriarchy: Los Angeles Times columnist Mary McNama wrote: The on-air staff of “Today” was an extended family, anchored by its boyish patriarch and a succession of smart and lovely female co-hosts. Of course the problem with having a patriarch is that it .

Scenes of beauty and despair in Lahore: Denver Post columnist Krista Kafer reported from Lahore, Pakistan, where she said she was by more than a few of the images she saw.

Letters to the editor:

 

Notable and quotable

“The conversation about a cake lasted less than a minute but will long reverberate in constitutional law.”

George F. Will, Washington Post columnist, regarding the Masterpiece Cakeshop case



The Sound Off, which is emailed to subscribers every Monday, is a roundup of what we’ve been publishing on the opinion pages over the past week. That includes Denver Post , op-ed by Post columnists like Chuck Plunkett and Megan Schrader as well as nationally syndicated columnists like George F. Will and Catherine Rampell, plus guest commentaries, and editorial .

If someone forwarded this to you and you’d like to sign up yourself, .

Follow us on Twitter:

And on Facebook:

newsletter-2017-12-04-nabors-cartoon-breen
Steve Breen, San Diego Union-Tribune

RevContent Feed

More in ap