Why Women in Combat?
Carolina Journal's Summer Hood writes about the horrific brutality that is the rape of a female soldier, and why advocates of women in combat seem to ignore it.
Some North Carolina politicians are joining their national counterparts in asking for a federal bailout of state budgets. This would be a colossal mistake.
What "The Lord of the Rings," "Harry Potter," and other works of fantasy have to say about war, economics, and political philosophy.
A broad groups of state legislators and others have endorsed a commission system to rectify North Carolina's problem with gerrymandering. Perhaps we can finally get it done.
My mole at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has uncovered what might be UNC-CH’s book selection for this year’s Summer Reading Program for incoming freshmen. Readers will recall the program created a nationwide stir last year with its selection of Michael Sells’ Approaching the Qur’án, which focused on the 35 most approachable suras in the religious text.
There's a time to debate the adviseability of a military action, and then a time to see it through. Apparently, not all NC congressmen understand this concept.
All eyes are on Michigan now, thanks to a case before the Supreme Court involving the University of Michigan Law Schools' use of racial preferences in admissions decisions. It is a case being watched with extreme interest by N.C. higher-education officials , public and private.
The Zogby organization has a new poll out on where viewers are getting their war news -- and what their choice of network says about their views.
I heard two very different people Thursday dismiss the notion of "moral leadership." But those who see shades of gray everywhere aren't sophisticated. They're color-blind.
There are reports out of the General Assembly that Gov. Easley is gaining support for his proposal to redirect $700 million of bonding authority attached to the Highway Trust Fund. The legislature is drifting way off course, here.
Some are wondering whether North Carolina leaders will be able to set the war in Iraq aside to focus on other issues. But that's not the right question to ask.
The News & Observer of Raleigh announced poll results Monday that seemed to suggest public support for the governor's tax hike. Here's where the poll went wrong.