The Washington Post wants us to know that 2018 was not all bad. So the editorial board listed 18 things to feel good about. I think you should subscribe. I subscribe to many newspaper online, and I think the Washington Post is the best, even though its editorials about education are awful.
18 good things that happened in 2018
We are not doomed. Seriously.
WE IN the media are often accused of dwelling on the bad and giving short shrift to positive developments. At the end of last year, as a modest corrective, we published a list of 17 good things that happened in 2017.
Many readers expressed appreciation, and some wrote in to suggest other good pieces of news. So here we go again: 18 good things that happened in 2018.
It has occurred to us that, in establishing this as an annual tradition, we may be setting ourselves up for failure. We can’t promise that we’ll deliver 48 good things in 2048, or 58 in 2058, though we’re hopeful our children and grandchildren will be doing a better job running the world than we’re managing now.
And, of course, news that cheers some may distress others. But we’re an editorial page — we’re allowed to have opinions. In our opinion, and in no particular order, here are 18 good things that happened in 2018:
1. All 12 Thai boys who were marooned deep in a cave were saved in an operation that needed 100 rescuers inside the cave, 1,000 Thai soldiers in support, and thousands of volunteers furnishing meals, transportation and other help. One retired Thai SEAL died in the effort, but many had feared all the boys would be lost.
2. India’s Supreme Court decriminalized consensual gay sex. In the United States, the LGBT community increasingly has stepped out of the closet and vindicated its right to live free of bigotry. But many gays and lesbians elsewhere still live in fear. This decision in the world’s second-most-populous country, after years of activist struggle, offered a major step away from such fear.
3. In the United States, the economy continued to grow, wages increased, and unemployment fell to its lowest level (3.7 percent ) since 1969. Unemployment among black Americans hit the lowest it has been since the government started tracking it in 1972, and the gap with unemployment among whites was the smallest it has ever been.
4. Voter turnout in the 2018 midterm elections was the highest in a century — 49.3 percent of the voting-eligible population, compared with 36.7 percent in 2014.
5. Those voters sent an unusually diverse group to Congress. More than 100 women were elected to the House, easily breaking a record, and they included two Native Americans, the first Muslim women elected to Congress, and immigrants and children of immigrants.
6. Oh, and a majority of the House winners were Democrats. Obviously not all of our readers welcomed that, and we’re sure we won’t approve of everything the House majority does in the next two years. But, as we mentioned, we’re entitled to our view; and our view, as we said right after the election, is that we should celebrate the restoration of checks and balances in Washington — and the rejection of President Trump’s campaign appeal to “fear of immigrants [and] his depiction of his opposition as dangerous enemies.”
7. For only the eighth time, a spacecraft landed safely on Mars. The InSight lander touched down on Nov. 26 and sent the first photograph back shortly thereafter. It will collect and transmit all kinds of data for the next two years.
8. Floridians voted overwhelmingly (64 percent) to restore voting rights to felons once they have completed their sentences. The single biggest enfranchisement since voting legislation a half-century ago, this will allow nearly 1.5 million people to exercise their basic civic right, fixing an injustice that disproportionately affected African Americans.
9. It took another bipartisan vote, this one in Congress, to approve a criminal- justice-reform bill that, as we wrote when it passed a couple of weeks ago, acknowledges that “in some cases rehabilitation and training are preferable to long-term human warehousing.”
10. Voters in Utah, Missouri, Colorado and Michigan approved redistricting reforms. That means less gerrymandering and fairer elections.
11. Authoritarian governments were on the march, and the United States retreated from the promotion of human rights, but Ethiopia, a country of 100 million people, took dramatic steps away from dictatorship and toward democracy. A people’s movement in Armenia swept a strongman out of office and paved the way for honest elections. The essential human desire for freedom and dignity never abates.
12. Less momentously: The Washington Capitals won the Stanley Cup. Granted, this wasn’t good news for fans of the Las Vegas Golden Knights, but even many non-Caps fans rejoiced to see one of the all-time greats, the ever-engaging Alex Ovechkin, finally bring home the trophy.
13. In more good news for the capital area, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia agreed to provide long-term funding for Metro, and service on the mass transit system began to improve under the leadership of General Manager Paul J. Wiedefeld.
14. The Virginia legislature voted to expand Medicaid, as did voters in Idaho, Utah and Nebraska. Based on election results, Maine, Wisconsin and Kansas may follow. Health-care coverage remains vulnerable thanks to Republican challenges in court, but these results mean hundreds of thousands of Americans will be newly protected.
15. The impunity of powerful men to harass and assault women continued to be challenged by the #MeToo movement. CBS chief Les Moonves lost his job and, we hope, his severance payment. Bill Cosby was sentenced to prison. So was the repugnant sports physician Larry Nassar, after preying on hundreds of girls, in what should presage a cleanup of the corrupt and obtuse U.S. Olympic leadership.
16. Also in the category of better-late-than-never: Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro released a grand jury report that, after an 18-month investigation, revealed more than 300 Catholic priests who had abused children over seven decades. The revelations prompted resignations, sparked other states to undertake their own inquiries and raised hopes that the Catholic Church might finally face its history and reform.
17. While the impending departure of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis was unfortunate, his dignified and eloquent letter of resignation personified public service at its best. He expressed his differences with President Trump without resorting to childish insults, and he laid out principles worth fighting for: standing with allied democracies and standing up to authoritarian rivals.
18. The U.S. judiciary defended the rule of law. When the executive branch attempted to rewrite statutes — to separate children and parents at the border, to expel a reporter from the White House, to defund sanctuary cities, to block asylum requests — judges, whether appointed by Democratic or Republican presidents, said no.
Undoubtedly, they will be called upon again in 2019; and, undoubtedly, the year will bring many other challenges besides. Nonetheless — we wish all of you a happy new year in which the good news outweighs the bad. And we pledge to find 19 things to cheer for a year from now.

Good news 19: You had a very productive year and kept us well-informed and kept NPE growing, all to the general benefit of a civilized society. How about 20 and 21? Black Lives Matter and Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movements both gained ground this year, with BDS having its first Congressional advocate in Ilhan Omar from Minnesota.
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And Valerie Strauss is wonderful!
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Good news
20-The management of George Mason Public University were forced to admit to the world that the Koch’s have inappropriate influence at the school. (As long as the Mercatus Center remains “partnered” with George Mason, the university will be the shame of Virginia.)
21-Despite Trump’s DOJ trying to thwart California’s privacy/net neutrality law, the state prevailed. (Will the Federalist’s conservative U.S. Supreme Court hypocritically rule that states rights should be ignored in favor of unaccountable tech tyrants?)
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Good news
22- MSNBC had more viewers than Fox- first time in 18 years. May Fox wither away until it becomes so small that it can be flushed down the toilet with its owner- Murdoch.
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MSNBC is as much of a news channel as Fox, making half of the population mad. May all these one-sided opinion-channels wither away.
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I agree that MSNBC should also wither up and die with Faux News.
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Disagree! MSNBC is great!
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Well, a great (for me, the most memorable in 2018) article in the Atlantic about the benefits and perils of anger in politics and elsewhere writes.
On MSNBC, commentators such as Chris Matthews, Keith Olbermann, and Rachel Maddow found ratings success by playing on their viewers’ discontent, even if they stopped short of borrowing O’Reilly’s most demagogic tactics. In 2012, Bill Clinton ruefully observed that the network had become “our version of Fox.” Later that year, the Pew Research Center found that MSNBC devoted 85 percent of its programming to opinion, and just 15 percent to news. At Fox, the split was 55/45.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/01/charles-duhigg-american-anger/576424/
Here is an MSNBC interview with the author.
https://www.msnbc.com/morning-joe/watch/-why-are-we-so-angry-the-atlantic-on-politics-in-2018-1393711683567
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Since The Atlantic is now owned by Laurene Powell Jobs, whose senior helper is Arne Duncan, I read it with caution and care.
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Ouch. How about the Nation and the Guardian?
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I would say that care and caution should be taken toward the proclamation of ALL news organizations (especially given that many of them, including the Washington Post, are owned by billionaires at this point)
In my opinion, fan loyalty is very unhelpful when it comes to news media.
If all media organizations were approached with the same skeptical eye by the public, they would all be forced to adopt proper journalistic standards of evidence and withhold judgement when the evidence was not sufficient to support a particular claim.
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Pew research should be read with skepticism. Pew is paired with John Arnold on pension alarmism (same page as the Koch’s State Budget Solutions). The cabal was exposed after representatives of the two testified at hearings in state capitols.
Town and Country magazine said Pew and Arnold are also paired on community surveillance plans. Arnold funded a Baltimore police aerial surveillance activity about which the elected leaders had no knowledge.
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The only good thing that happened in 2018 was that it ended.
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Coms to think of it, that did not even happen in 2018.
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It happened the second the clock struck 12, which technically was 2019.
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SDP, you clearly are under the influence of something, but I’ll go there with you: so according to your argument, not only 2018 but none of the previous years have ended, because before one could end, the new one had begun. The years of the past have been piling up on us: the year when America was discovered, bringing white-diversity to this land, the year the Constitution was written is still with us, making millions treat the document as if it was the word of gods.
So we literally do live in the past.
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As Einstein said, “the distinction made between past, present, and future is nothing more than a persistent, stubborn illusion.”
But I take comfort in knowing that there may be another parallel universe where things actually go well – in past present and future.
Now, if I could just figure out where the door is…
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Yeah, continue your search for the doors, Poet. Just remember, it’s not gates you are searching for.
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Wouldn’t it be great to dispense of past, present, and future? We, Foreign English Learners, would not have to struggle with all the tenses in English, we could just ask “What you do yesterday?” and dispense of the useless “is, was, will, have been, had been, will have been” nonsense, and converse concisely like “How you today?”, “I well, thank you”, and “What be weather tomorrow?”, “Rainy, as since Monday, so we play chess all day.”
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Or equivalently, where it was or where it will be.
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Yes, we found Gates, unfortunately, much to our collective chagrine.
If Gates goes to Heaven
Then send me to Hell
Cuz Gates is a given
But Satan? Can’t tell
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By the way, Leibniz once said we live in the best of all possible worlds.
If that is indeed the case, there must have been only one possibility.
In other words, God had no choice in the matter.
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“restore voting rights to felons once they have completed their sentences. ”
This makes me think of our Trump: he rarely completes his sentences, so I think his voting rights should be taken away. I also wonder if we’ll see him begin his well-deserved sentence this year.
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Unfortunately, Trump is basically a run-on sentence for the rest of us.
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I always find your blog very interesting. Thanks for the share.
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