Surprise? Marriage single best predictor of long-term happiness
The truth about marriage, however, is that it is, statistically, the single best predictor of long-term happiness.

The truth about marriage, however, is that it is, statistically, the single best predictor of long-term happiness.
Those who are happy or indifferent about the decline of American churches are beginning to get glimpses of what an America without Christian influence will look like. It can and will get worse.
The criteria are vague enough. Since the law went into effect, however, the number of Canadians killed annually has gone from 1,000 to over 10,000. In 2021, one in 30 Canadian deaths was by assisted suicide, and only 4% of those who applied to die were turned down.
Even amid plummeting math scores in the latest Nation’s Report Card data, a growing chorus of progressive voices insists that racism and sexism are the biggest problems we face in how to teach math.
Sex is either no big deal or our whole identity. Back and forth the cultural pendulum swings, never considering that there may be another option.
Our increasingly sterile way of life is a sign of sickness at the heart of modernity. Unless we can learn to see the value of past traditions for our future, we’re not going to have one.
In an age so defined by consumer choice and product reviews, it has become intuitive to embrace the “try before you buy” motto in most areas of life. For some decisions, however, those rules simply do not work.
It is time to stop pretending that divorce only affects adults when the statistics and the heart-wrenching testimonies of children prove otherwise.
Caving on words will destroy our ability to understand and undermine our ability to debate the issue truthfully.
The kind of postmodern individualism that Gen Z was raised with will never deliver on its promises. This mental health crisis is a spiritual crisis.