Archives

Categories

Media Meltdown

By Gary Pearce March 17, 2011

Watching television coverage of the nuclear-plant crisis in Japan is a classic case of TMI. Not Three Mile Island: Too Much Information. Too much confusing, alarmist, over-heated and incomprehensible information, to be precise. The coverage also reflects the trend toward anchors and correspondents being drama kings and queens rather than Walter Cronkite. The New York…

Read More

Only a Politician Would Argue…

By Carter Wrenn March 16, 2011

Last year, the state received $10.5 billion in ‘Stimulus Funds’ from the Obama administration – a staggering number equal to one-half the state budget.   This year, the state faces a $2.7 billion dollar budget deficit.   Does that sound a bit like fiscal mismanagement? The state gets a $10 billion windfall from Washington last…

Read More

General Tata’s Politics

By Gary Pearce March 16, 2011

Tony Tata obviously learned something about politics in the military, as well as good offensive strategy.   When he started as Wake schools superintendent, he disarmed critics by meeting with them. Now he has proposed a budget that is austere, but avoids classroom cuts.   In other words, the same political strategy as Governor Perdue.…

Read More

What Can Government Do For You – Today?

By Carter Wrenn March 15, 2011

Well, the legislative freight train called ‘Legal Reform’ has barreled out of the State Senate and over into the State House: The other day a passer-by spotted a parade of lobbyists (from Insurance Companies, the Medical Society, the Hospital Association, the Pharmaceutical Industry and the Chamber of Commerce) sauntering into Speaker Thom Tillis’ office beaming…

Read More

Channeling Jim Gardner

By Gary Pearce March 15, 2011

Speaker Thom Tillis’ quote rang familiar:    “You are looking at people who are members of a party that will lead this state for a decade, if not a generation. I’m not sure the Democrats can ever take it back,” he told the Nash County Republican Convention last week, according to the Rocky Mount Telegram.…

Read More

The Trap

By Carter Wrenn March 15, 2011

In thirty years in politics I’ve only seen a handful of problems with no solutions. None at all.   For example once during Steve Forbes first Presidential campaign we got trapped in a corner in Iowa – and there was no way out. None. But, then, as usually happens in politics the tides shifted and…

Read More

Ups and Downs

By Carter Wrenn March 14, 2011

UPS – The Governor’s up for somehow convincing House and Senate Republican leaders to attack her for juggling the state’s books to send out $300 million in tax refunds.   The Republicans are up for raiding (or trying to raid because they failed) the Governor’s Golden Leaf pork-barrel fund to use the money to pay…

Read More

Wisconsin

By Carter Wrenn March 14, 2011

I don’t understand exactly what ‘collective bargaining’ means but if it means what it sounds like – a group of workers banding together to increase their power when they bargain for better pay – it seems they have a right to do that.   At the same time, looking at what is happening in Wisconsin…

Read More

Republicans and Insurance Deadbeats

By Gary Pearce March 14, 2011

A Democratic reader wonders why Republicans have gone soft on deadbeats.   Ronald Reagan excoriated “welfare queens.” The Tea Party denounced freeloaders who sponge off hard-working taxpayers. Republican Governors pick loud fights with public-employee “leeches” who get big salaries and generous benefits, courtesy of the taxpayers.   The reader asks: What about people who don’t…

Read More

Categories

Archives

Recent Articles

Who Pays the Price

By Carter Wrenn February 5, 2025

Wiley lifted his cell phone, held it in the air in front of him, pushed a…

Read More

Going Too Far

By Carter Wrenn February 3, 2025

Cheeks round, pudgy fingers fumbling, Ellmer took a newspaper article out of his briefcase, pushed it…

Read More

Dividing Line

By Gary Pearce February 3, 2025

Trump has done America a big favor: in just two weeks, he’s drawn a bright line…

Read More