Ever wonder what your tax dollars are supporting at our universities? Much of it is good but some of it is undoubtedly questionable and sometimes downright offensive. At the University of Kentucky, some of it goes to gay political activism. The college Office of LGBTQ Resources is an official university office that works for promotion and advocacy for gay, bisexual, and transgender issues related to the college and to the Commonwealth. Maybe we shouldn't be surprised that higher education is so committed to the sexual revolution, but it is troubling that such commitment is funded from the pockets of Kentucky taxpayers. We want our universities to teach about healthy human sexuality, not subverting it. And it begins by realizing the inherent dignity of our bodies and respecting natural boundaries instead of flaunting them.

Allow me to share with you something most septic companies won’t: there are two categories of people in this life. Those who think septic systems are just “buried containers for waste,” and those who have had raw sewage erupting into their backyard at the dead of night. I discovered this reality the difficult way in 2005—standing in muck, freezing in a Washington downpour, as my family and I assisted a veteran installer repair our family’s collapsed system. I was 14. My hands blistered. My clothes were destroyed. But that night, something changed: This ain’t just manual labor. It’s families’ lives that we’re protecting.
Here’s the ugly truth: the majority of septic companies just maintain tanks. They’re like band-aid salesmen at a disaster convention. But Septic Solutions? They are special. It all originated back in the early 2000s when Art and his siblings—just kids barely tall enough to lift a shovel—helped install their family’s septic system alongside a experienced pro. Picture this: three pre-teens buried in Pennsylvania clay, discovering how soil absorption affects drainage while their peers played Xbox. “We did not just dig trenches,” Art shared with me last winter, hot coffee cup in hand. “We understood how ground whispers truths. A patch of cattails here? That’s Mother Nature screaming ‘high water table.'”
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