The Road Not Taken Twice

Forty years ago, Oklahoma learned a hard lesson about local power without oversight. Some now want its schools to return to a system it once abandoned for a reason.

In the early 1980s, the FBI ran an undercover operation in Oklahoma called OKSCAM. What it uncovered was a public corruption scandal remarkable for its sheer scale: at least 230 convictions touching 60 of the state’s 77 counties, all tied to a tidy and depressingly simple scheme (Holloway & Meyers, 1992). Suppliers padded invoices for road-building materials. Commissioners signed off. Kickbacks flowed back. Rinse and repeat.

It is tempting to file OKSCAM under “bad people taking advantage of the system,” close the report, and move on. That is the comfortable reading, and it is the wrong one. The reason it is wrong has very little to do with roads. It is a lesson about what happens when public money is spent where no one independent can see it — and four decades later, that lesson is being relearned in Oklahoma’s public schools.

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Could Mars Settlers Print Tools?

If humans one day settle Mars, they will need tools and parts to build structures on the planet. Carrying heavy, bulky supplies 34 million miles from Earth would be impractical. A better plan, says Zane Mebruer, a recent graduate of the University of Arkansas (U of A), would be 3D printing items on the Red Planet. His new research, completed while he was an honors undergraduate in mechanical engineering at the U of A, suggests it may be possible.

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OK Gov. Stitt v. City of Tulsa Decision

Thursday, the Oklahoma Supreme Court rejected Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols’ foolish attempt to cede authority to an Indian tribe “as a matter of law.” The decision voids a settlement agreement signed by Mayor Nichols between the City of Tulsa and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation that would have prevented municipal police and prosecutors from enforcing laws against tribal members. Said another way, this decision prevents race-based law enforcement as attempted by the Democrat Socialist Tulsa Mayor.

Oklahoma Supreme Court
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New “Welcome to Tulsa” Sign

Updated with additional photos: As Tulsa prepares to celebrate the Route 66 Centennial and its designation as the Capital of Route 66, City leaders, community partners, and residents gathered this week at the Route 66 Historical Village for the official lighting ceremony of the first new “Welcome to Tulsa” signage designed by the City Planning Office.

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Growing Demand for Skilled Workers

A seismic shift from years past towards the trades is a clear sign that President Trump’s relentless push to restore the dignity of American labor is taking hold.

  • 60% of Gen Z Americans plan to pursue skilled trade work this year, up from less than 40% just one year ago.
  • Half of Gen Z college graduates are also pivoting to trades, signaling the end of the failed “college-for-all” experiment.
  • Median pay in skilled trades now matches or exceeds many four-year degrees, with trade workers enjoying greater employment stability than their white-collar peers for the first time in history.

Meanwhile, 94% of U.S. contractors report labor shortages, driving wages higher.

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