I don't know what to tell you LongWalker. I test run this through multiple devices, including desktops, laptops, tablets, and smartphones. I have it configured to run on either a standard PC screen or smartphone and everything operates fine. I also get feedback from a whole group of industry writers and editors using a variety of equipment and they receive it without a problem. Without seeing your equipment, all I can recommend is a software update or have your IT department check it out.
-Dave
I checked from one of the workstations at a school I'm doing some stuff for but was unable to get the page to load correctly; all the software there checks out.
At home, I'm my IT department: browser etc are all current. I do a bit of web accessibility testing for some of the local schools and for a bunch of teachers, so at home I'm running a lot of software that lets me look at aspects of web accessibility, various adaptive technology, web accessibility, readability, etc. This includes the software actually being used rather than the "latest generation" of whatever. I was able to access your site after re-configuring the software in the startup configuration so it doesn't start when the computer boots-up, changing options in the browser, and re-booting the computer.
It looks like the site was developed using a drag-and-drop editor to build the page, and (I think) the way this compiles the page is conflicting with some of the adaptive software (best guess is something about the way it is layered, but I didn't try to look that far). Not a problem, it just means the website isn't accessible when using the software. I tried to access your host's support pages to see if I could somehow disable the features (e.g. parallax scrolling) that I think might be causing the conflict with the adaptive software, no luck.
The IT guy at the school blocked the site. Tentatively we'll be doing some seminars this summer looking at what users can do to make non-WCAG-compliant sites accessible for their purposes; we might try viewing the site (and a number of others that are similarly-difficult to access) with a variety of software to see which ones work with the sites.