Letters: Overfed on materialism, starved for enchantment …

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Starved for enchantment

I loved Abby McClosky’s bit on Enchantment this Wednesday (“A case for child-like wonder in a grown-up world”). I so agree with her that our generation is starved for it. The hangover from the last 200 years of scientific materialism lingers.

I suspect that many are unaware that in the last 10 to 20 years science has become far less quarrelsome when it comes to the idea of transcendence. In fact, many of today’s scientists have become receptive to it. One of my favorite examples of this stems from a G.K. Chesterton quote. In his book “The Everlasting Man” (1925), he poses the question; “Suppose somebody in a story says, Pluck this flower and a princess will die in a castle across the sea.” He goes on to explore what we might make of it. He supposes that we would almost certainly say something like, “What!? What could possibly be the connection?” But then why do so many of us find such fairy-tale ideas so appealing? Why do we long for enchantment?

Well, in the last 10 years or so scientists have been talking about a field of study they are referring to as Entanglement. It acknowledges that two seemingly unconnected events can influence one another even at vast distances instantaneously. Apparently, such cause-and-effect phenomona are operating outside of conventional physics, ie. transcendently.

Similar mysteries have been popping up all over the place in studies being done in cosmology, brain science and human consciousness, ESP, Near Death Experience, clarvoyance, evolution and the like. It is becoming ever more plausible to believe that we may, in fact, be living in the enchanted forest.

G.J. Mayer, Lino Lakes

 

Empowering the insider game

Somehow the St. Paul DFL determined it was appropriate to endorse a candidate in a snap election for state representative in District 64A. The election was called because Kaohly Her left the seat vacant when she was elected mayor. We have been told that a mere 57 delegates were at the endorsing convention.  The endorsed candidate benefited from the DFL voter list and the supposed credibility of the endorsement. Voters who didn’t have the bandwidth to do their own research trusted that the DFL candidate was the best choice.

However, the endorsement undermined all the other candidates who were doing the valuable work of talking to neighbors.

A DFL endorsement with no associated caucus is an undemocratic and inappropriate process, using delegates from last year elected for other purposes. The DFL should not hold an endorsing convention in these circumstances. The 4,500 people who voted in the primary are a much broader representation of the people in District 64A.

No wonder the St. Paul DFL is having trouble getting people to volunteer. By giving credence to such a flawed endorsement, we are empowering the political insider game that has turned off so many of us and kept us from being involved in the St. Paul DFL.

Don Arnosti, St. Paul

 

Sainted

I had a medical emergency Sunday December 21 and went to St. John’s Emergency room, later to Short Stay Observation. Everyone from Roseville Fire, Allina ambulance and St John’s were great.  I wish to nominate them for Sainted.

David Johnson, Roseville

 

Reward care-giving, not paper-shuffling

Health-care costs in America keep rising, and much of the blame lies with structural problems made worse — not solved — by the Affordable Care Act and today’s insurance industry. What was sold as “reform” expanded bureaucracy, distorted risk pools, and accelerated the cost spiral that families now face.

A major issue is the way the ACA reshaped insurance risk pools. Insurance only works when enough people are paying in to balance those who use the most care. Yet after the ACA expansions, a large share of the newly added participants were high-cost users who contributed little or nothing toward the true price of their care. Today, according to national expenditure data, roughly 4.6 percent of Americans account for 50 percent of all health-care spending. When this many high-cost users are added to the pool without corresponding contributions, premiums and deductibles rise for everyone else.

Then there’s the administrative machinery itself. The United States now spends an enormous share of its health-care dollars on billing, coding, claim processing, prior authorizations, and compliance — work that adds complexity but not care. Estimates place billing- and insurance-related administrative costs at roughly $500 billion per year nationwide. That includes millions of employees inside insurance companies and millions more inside hospitals and clinics who spend their days feeding data into that system. These layers do not diagnose, treat or heal. They exist to process paperwork, delay approvals, and negotiate payments — and every layer adds cost.

We see the effects on every medical bill. A procedure may be “billed” at a high number, then heavily written off, and finally paid at a negotiated amount that bears little resemblance to the real cost. A $12,000 billed charge may turn into a $3,500 payment, even though the same procedure might cost a cash-pay patient around $1,800. This confusing three-step dance— billed, write-off, paid — does not help patients. It obscures prices and shields the system from accountability.

Follow the dollars and the picture becomes even clearer. The U.S. now spends $4.9 trillion per year on health care — about $14,570 per person. Yet multiple independent analyses show that a very large share of that total never reaches the doctors, nurses and facilities delivering actual care. A significant portion is absorbed by administrative overhead, insurance bureaucracy and compliance structures created by federal rules and industry practices. In other words, a substantial part of our health-care spending is not care at all.

In this writer’s opinion, the only realistic way to reduce costs is to remove unnecessary work. Shrink the administrative empires, simplify the rules, and stop forcing providers to employ entire teams whose job is to navigate insurance complexity. The health-care system should reward people who deliver care — not people who shuffle paper.

If America wants affordable health care, we first must stop paying for a system built to serve itself instead of the patient.

The solution will require restructuring, loss of jobs and a return to competition.

Scott Nintzel, White Bear Township

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Stocks slip on Wall Street as 2025 winds down

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By DAMIAN J. TROISE, Associated Press Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks slipped in morning trading on Wall Street Monday to kick off another holiday-shortened week.

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The S&P 500 fell 0.4%. With just three trading days left in 2025, the benchmark index is still up more than 17% for the year and it remains on track for its eighth monthly gain in a row.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 144 points, or 0.3%, as of 10:01 a.m. Eastern. The Nasdaq composite fell 0.6%.

Big technology stocks with outsized valuations were among the heaviest weights on the market. Nvidia fell 2% and Broadcom fell 1.3%.

Energy stocks gained ground along with rising oil prices. U.S. benchmark crude jumped 2.4% to $58.11 per barrel. The price of Brent crude, the international standard, rose 2.2% to $61.56 a barrel.

Exxon Mobil rose 0.9%.

Gold prices pulled back after recent sharp gains. The price of gold slumped 3.5%, though prices for the precious metal are still up about 66% for the year.

Wall Street faces another short week in the final stretch of 2025. Markets in the U.S. will be closed on Thursday for New Year’s Day.

Treasury yields fell in the bond market. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.12% from 4.13% late Friday.

Markets in Europe and Asia were mixed. Shares in Taiwan were higher even after China’s military said it was conducting drills around the self-governed island that Beijing claims as its territory. Taiwan’s benchmark Taiex gained 0.9%, but the Hang Seng in Hong Kong gave up early gains, falling 0.7%.

Elaine Kurtenbach contributed to this story.

Winter storm brings blizzard conditions and dangerous wind chills

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By LEAH WILLINGHAM and JEFF MARTIN, Associated Press

potent winter storm threatened blizzard-like conditions, treacherous travel and power outages in parts of the Upper Midwest as other areas of the country braced Monday for plunging temperatures, strong winds and a mix of snow, ice, and rain.

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The snow and strengthening winds began spreading Sunday across the northern Plains, where the National Weather Service warned of whiteout conditions and possible blizzard conditions that could make travel impossible in some areas. Snowfall totals were expected to exceed a foot across parts of the upper Great Lakes and as much as double that along the south shore of Lake Superior.

“Part of the storm system is getting heavy snow, other parts of the storm along the cold front are getting higher winds and much colder temperatures as the front passes,” said Bob Oravec, a lead forecaster at the National Weather Service office in College Park, Maryland. “They’re all related to each other — different parts of the country will be receiving different effects from this storm.”

About 350,000 customers were in the dark Monday morning, with about a third of those outages in Michigan, according to Poweroutage.us. There were more than 1,600 flight delays and more than 450 cancellations at U.S. airports on Monday, according to the flight tracking site FlightAware.

Blizzard conditions continued in some parts of northern Iowa on Monday morning, especially in open rural areas, according to the weather service’s office in Des Moines. Blowing snow was expected to continue through the morning.

The National Weather Service warned of 1 to 3 feet of lake-effect snow from Monday through Thursday and high winds, with gusts up to 75 mph, in western New York on Monday. Similar conditions were expected along Lake Erie in Michigan and Ohio.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a social media post that travel in the Buffalo area could become dangerous beginning at 11 a.m. Monday because of potential whiteout conditions and urged people to avoid driving.

The very strong cold front meant parts of the central U.S. woke up Monday to temperatures up to 50 degrees F colder than a day earlier, according to the weather service’s Weather Prediction Center. The cold front was accompanied by strong gusty winds.

The weather service warned of “dangerous wind chills” as low as minus 30 degrees Fahrenheit in North Dakota and into Minnesota from Sunday night into Monday.

People cross 7th street in the heavy snow on Sunday Dec. 28, 2025 in downtown Minneapolis. (Jerry Holt /Star Tribune via AP)

In the South, meteorologists warned severe thunderstorms are likely to signal the arrival of a sharp cold front — bringing a sudden drop in temperatures and strong north winds that will abruptly end days of record warmth throughout that region.

The high temperature in Atlanta was around 72 F on Sunday, continuing a warming trend after climbing to 78 F to shatter the city’s record high temperature for Christmas Eve, the National Weather Service said. Numerous other record high temperatures were seen across the South and Midwest on the days after Christmas.

But the incoming cold front was expected to drop rain on much of the South late Sunday night into Monday, and a big drop in temperatures Tuesday. Forecasters said the low temperature in Atlanta to 25 F by early Tuesday morning. The colder temperatures in the South are expected to persist through New Year’s Day.

In Dallas, Sunday temperatures in the lower 80s could drop down to the mid 40s. In Little Rock, high temperatures of around 70 on Sunday could drop down to highs in the mid-30s on Monday.

“We’re definitely going back towards a more winter pattern,” Oravec said.

The sun rises over a winter scene in Lowville, N.Y., on Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Cara Anna)

The storm is expected to intensify as it moves east, drawing energy from a sharp clash between frigid air plunging south from Canada and unusually warm air that has lingered across the southern United States, according to the National Weather Service.

Willingham reported from Concord, New Hampshire. Martin reported from Kennesaw, Georgia.

China stages military drills around Taiwan to warn ‘external forces’ after US, Japan tensions

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By KANIS LEUNG, Associated Press

HONG KONG (AP) — China’s military on Monday dispatched air, navy and missile units to conduct joint live-fire drills around the island of Taiwan, which Beijing called a “stern warning” against separatist and “external interference” forces. Taiwan said it was placing its forces on alert and called the Chinese government “the biggest destroyer of peace.”

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Taiwan’s aviation authority said more than 100,000 international air travelers would be affected by flight cancellations or diversions.

The drills came after Beijing expressed anger at what could be the largest-ever U.S. arms sale to the self-ruled territory and at a statement by Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, saying its military could get involved if China were to take action against Taiwan. China says Taiwan must come under its rule.

The Chinese military did not mention the United States and Japan in its statement on Monday, but Beijing’s foreign ministry accused the Taiwanese ruling party of trying to seek independence through requesting U.S. support.

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry said rapid response exercises were underway, with forces on high alert. “The Chinese Communist Party’s targeted military exercises further confirm its nature as an aggressor and the biggest destroyer of peace,” it said.

Beijing sends warplanes and navy vessels toward the island on a near-daily basis, and in recent years it has stepped up the scope and scale of these exercises.

Senior Col. Shi Yi, spokesperson of China’s People’s Liberation Army’s Eastern Theater Command, said the drills would be conducted in the Taiwan Strait and areas to the north, southwest, southeast and east of the island.

Shi said the activities would focus on sea-air combat readiness patrol, “joint seizure of comprehensive superiority” and blockades on key ports. It was also the first large-scale military drill where the command publicly mentioned one goal was “all-dimensional deterrence outside the island chain.”

“It is a stern warning against ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist forces and external interference forces, and it is a legitimate and necessary action to safeguard China’s sovereignty and national unity,” Shi said.

China and Taiwan have been governed separately since 1949, when a civil war brought the Communist Party to power in Beijing. Defeated Nationalist Party forces fled to Taiwan. The island has operated since then with its own government, though the mainland’s government claims it as sovereign territory.

Drills will continue on Tuesday

The command on Monday deployed destroyers, frigates, fighters, bombers and unmanned aerial vehicles, alongside long-range rockets, to the north and southwest of the Taiwan Strait. It carried out live-fire exercises against targets in the waters as well. Among other training, drills to test the capabilities of sea-air coordination and precise target hunting were conducted in the waters and airspace to the east of the strait.

Hsieh Jih-sheng, deputy chief of the general staff for intelligence of the Taiwanese Defense Ministry, said that as of 3 p.m. Monday, 89 aircraft and drones were operating around the strait, with 67 of them entering the “response zone” — airspace under the force’s monitoring and response. In the sea, the ministry detected 14 navy ships around the strait and four other warships in the Western Pacific, in addition to 14 coast guard vessels.

“Conducting live-fire exercises around the Taiwan Strait … does not only mean military pressure on us. It may bring more complex impact and challenges to the international community and neighboring countries,” Hsieh told reporters.

Military drills are set to continue Tuesday. Taiwan’s Civil Aviation Administration said Chinese authorities had issued a notice saying seven temporary dangerous zones would be set up around the strait to carry out rocket-firing exercises from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday, barring aircraft from entering them.

The Taiwanese aviation authority said more than 850 international flights were initially scheduled during that period and the drills would affect over 100,000 travelers. Over 80 domestic flights, involving around 6,000 passengers, were also canceled, it added.

The Chinese command released themed posters about the drills online accompanied by provocative wording. One poster depicted two shields with the Great Wall alongside three military aircraft and two ships. Its social media post said the drills were about the “Shield of Justice, Smashing Illusion,” adding that any foreign interlopers or separatists touching the shields would be eliminated.

Last week, Beijing imposed sanctions against 20 U.S. defense-related companies and 10 executives, a week after Washington announced large-scale arms sales to Taiwan valued at more than $10 billion. It still requires approval by the U.S. Congress.

Under U.S. federal law in place for many years, Washington is obligated to assist Taipei with its defense, a point that has become increasingly contentious with China. The U.S. and Taiwan had formal diplomatic relations until 1979, when President Jimmy Carter’s administration recognized and established relations with Beijing.

Asked about the drills, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party has attempted “to seek independence by soliciting U.S. support and even risk turning Taiwan into a powder keg and ammunition depot.”

“External forces’ attempts to use Taiwan to contain China and to arm Taiwan will only embolden the Taiwan independence forces and push the Taiwan Strait toward a dangerous situation of military confrontation and war,” he said.

There was no immediate U.S. statement on the drills.

Taiwanese army on high alert

Karen Kuo, spokesperson for the Taiwanese president’s office, said the drills were undermining the stability and security of the Taiwan Strait and Indo-Pacific region and openly challenging international law and order.

“Our country strongly condemns the Chinese authorities for disregarding international norms and using military intimidation to threaten neighboring countries.” she said.

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry released a video that featured its weapons and forces in a show of resilience. Multiple French Mirage-2000 aircraft conducted landings at an air force base.

In October, the Taiwanese government said it would accelerate the building of a “Taiwan Shield” or “T-Dome” air defense system in the face of the military threat from China.

The military tensions came a day after Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an said he hoped the Taiwan Strait would be associated with peace and prosperity, instead of “crashing waves and howling winds,” during a trip to Shanghai.