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Opinion
Tough call, right call
The Robeson County Board of Commissioners added to its growing list of critics on Monday night. But in this instance, we believe they acted correctly — and even courageously. Five county commissioners, acting as the county’s Zoning Board of Adjustment, reversed a decision last month by the full board to deny a conditional-use permit that a company needs to place a solar farm just outside of Rowland. Commissioner Hubert Sealey, who represe...
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Simple math made hard
Our county commissioners have demonstrated that they are better at addition than subtraction. They have had no trouble incrementally adding onto their pay and benefits, specifically between 1996 and 2008. Because this was all done in the dark, out of the public purview, we don’t know if it was managed with haste and little thought or only after consideration and conversation. When it comes to rolling back their pay, benefits and discretio...
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Obama takes a pass on abortion
President Barack Obama was proud to become the first sitting president to address Planned Parenthood the other day. But not proud enough to utter the word “abortion.” The right to abortion is the sneakiest, most shamefaced of all American rights. It hides behind evasion and euphemism and cant. So President Obama sang a hymn of praise to Planned Parenthood at the organization’s annual conference without mentioning what makes it so distinct...
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Depression isn’t always apparent
On April 11, 2013, I got the most dreaded call that any parent could ever receive, a call from the police in the town where my 23-year-old daughter Kaitlyn was starting her third year of medical school at Wake Forest School of Medicine. He said he had to talk with me about my daughter and that I had to go there to be told what he had to say. I begged this man to tell me then, as I would have a three-and-a-half hour drive to Winston-Salem. M...
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GOP to call election shots
Tuesday was a historical day in Robeson County as Joshua Malcolm, an attorney at The University of North Carolina at Pembroke, became the first Robeson County resident and first Lumbee Indian to serve on the state Board of Elections. Malcolm joins the board at a tumultuous time, when there are questions about $235,000 in political contributions to Gov. Pat McCrory and others from a sweepstakes games operator who has been indicted on felony ...
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Politics: The art of the impossible
Someone called politics “the art of the possible.” But, in the era of the modern welfare state, politics is largely the art of the impossible. Those people morbid enough to keep track of politicians’ promises may remember how Barack Obama said that ObamaCare would lower medical costs — and lots of people bought it. But if you stop and think, however old-fashioned that may seem these days, do you seriously believe that millions more people...
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Time for president of the Black Caucus to shut up
To the Editor, I am tired of the president of the Robeson County Black Caucus, Mr. Jimmy Gilchrist, making false allegations against individuals or groups with no facts to back his claim. Ain’t nobody wronged Mr. Gilchrist and the Robeson County Black Caucus. He is lucky that himself or the Black Caucus have not been sued by now. If anyone wronged Mr. Gilchrist, it was an accident. All the trouble Mr. Gilchrist has raised here in Robeso...
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It is time for the Lumbee people to be ‘idle no more”
To the Editor, If you asked the man on the street, he might say that the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina is controlled by roughly 300 of its 57,000 members. These numbers mean that almost zero percent of our enrolled tribal population is doing everything for themselves and nothing for 100 percent of our tribe. I estimate that 99 percent of all Lumbee people are not interested or concerned with our tribal government. We feel our government ...
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The Clinton and Obama reparations
Abraham Carpenter Jr., a farmer in Grady, Ark., has more insight into human nature than the average sociologist. “Anytime you are going to throw money up in the air,” he told The New York Times, “you are going to have people acting crazy.” Carpenter is quoted in an astonishing 5,000-word Times expose on the federal government’s wildly profligate program to compensate minority and women farmers for alleged discrimination. The government rigg...
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Legalization of marijuana paying off
The good things that should happen after marijuana is legalized are happening in Colorado. In November, voters in Colorado — and Washington state — legalized pot for recreational use. (Many states allow medical use of marijuana.) What are the good things? For starters, money, money, money for the state coffers. As of last week, lawmakers in Denver were still tussling over how heavily to tax marijuana sales. A leading plan centers on excis...
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The danger of white America
It was cool and rainy Sunday morning when the bomb ripped through the building. At 10:22, a group of children was just heading into the basement to hear a sermon at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. According to a Washington Post account at the time: Dozens of survivors, their faces dripping blood from the glass that flew out of the church’s stained glass windows, staggered around the building in a cloud of white dust raised ...
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Gun opponents exploit grief to beat Second Amendment
To the Editor, The present gun debate has caused people to focus on the U.S. Constitution. It is important to take a close and long look at the U.S. Constitution’s guarantee to gun owners and people who obtain a gun or guns. The Second Amendment reads: “A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep bear arms shall not be infringed.” People have the right to purchase and carry a ...
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The real state of Robeson Co.
As he should have, Noah Woods, chairman of the Robeson County Board of Commissioners, on Thursday brought plenty of lipstick to apply to his annual State of Robeson County Address. To his credit, Woods spent a moment on some of the problems facing this county and looming challenges related to a new governing philosophy in Raleigh — one that bristles at government dependence — but his presentation was mostly upbeat. Woods is an elected off...
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Taking us to the ground for a point
The air traffic controller furloughs are the White House tours of the sky. From time immemorial, a government that doesn’t want to tighten its fiscal belt finds high-profile ways to inconvenience the public to try to turn it against spending cuts. In keeping with this so-called Washington Monument strategy, the White House canceled tours in the immediate aftermath of sequestration. In an escalation, the Federal Aviation Administration has f...
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Governor should be a Mr. Fix-It
RALEIGH — Now that Pat McCrory has passed the oh-so-important mark of 100 days in office, the political class in Raleigh feels obligated to offer a critique of his administration. The most common one is that Gov. McCrory is playing “small ball.” That is, the critics say that because the governor didn’t propose a major spending program in his 2013-15 budget plan, he’s not really doing anything of consequence. Even the reform initiatives McCr...
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