- Details
-
Tuesday, 05 August 2025
-
Written by Bill Bowman
Fayetteville and Cumberland County can learn a lot about common-sense leadership by observing recent events in our state.
On Tuesday, July 29, the North Carolina Senate demonstrated their commitment to the people by overriding twelve of Governor Stein's vetoes. This action successfully halted a series of policies that many believed would have pushed our state toward radical progressive governance.
These veto overrides signal a renewed focus on common-sense principles and respect for individual liberties. One significant achievement is the passage of the "Freedom to Carry NC" Act, which will make North Carolina the 30th Constitutional Carry state.
This measure respects the rights of law-abiding citizens to self-defense during an era of rising crime and violence. Another significant override eliminated "DEI" (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) initiatives in public and higher education. This ensures our schools can focus on traditional S.T.E.M. subjects, reading and comprehension, and academic excellence rather than on divisive social and political issues.
The Senate also took a firm stance on public safety, sending a clear message that the security of North Carolina residents is of paramount importance.
These actions are an encouraging sign of the positive direction our current state leadership is taking by both Republicans and Democrats. This is the confident and responsible leadership that we should demand of our local Fayetteville and Cumberland County elected officials.
Honest, intelligent, and common-sense leadership works, and doing the right things for the right reasons has always benefited all constituents. We saw this firsthand when the new Cumberland County Board of Commissioners was elected.
As municipal election time draws near, it is vitally important that residents vote for individuals who put the overall welfare of the community as their highest priority. Voting is the only opportunity we have to influence the future direction of our community.
What our state leadership is accomplishing in Raleigh must be duplicated locally to ensure prosperity, common-sense leadership, and good governance.
I encourage U&CW readers to vet all local candidates thoroughly. Candidates will be emailed a questionnaire from our editor, and their answers will be published in an election guide put together by the U&CW team.
I encourage both readers and candidates not to rely solely on Facebook and other social media outlets for accurate information or to get their message out.
When it comes to politics, seeing is believing. Look around Fayetteville, and you be the judge. Ask yourself: What positive changes have you really seen in the last decade? And do you want more of the same? Then, compare Fayetteville and Cumberland County to the growth and prosperity of surrounding counties. In the end, it all comes down to integrity, honest leadership, and vision.
So, trust your instincts and vet all the candidates thoroughly to do your part in creating a better community for future generations.
Thank you for reading Up & Coming Weekly.
(Candidates running for local offices in Fayetteville attended the Greater Fayetteville Chamber's Candidates Academy on Aug. 1. The Chamber put on the event to help inform those who are running for office. This year, seats on the Fayetteville City Council and Mayoral positions across the region will be voted on in November. For more information about the Candidates Academy, see page 8. Photo courtesy of Jami McLaughlin)
- Details
-
Tuesday, 29 July 2025
-
Written by John Hood
The ancient Greek thinker Heraclitus observed that one cannot step in the same river twice. In the interval between the first and second step — be it a moment or a year — the water keeps flowing, the current shifts at least slightly, sediments in the riverbed move or erode or dissolve. Some reword his insight as “the only constant is change.”
Speaking of change, longtime readers of mine in this publication and others will have noticed a gradual but unmistakable shift in focus. While I still write about current events — recently praising North Carolina politicians for enacting health reforms and castigating them for blowing tax money on sports arenas — historical subjects now claim more of my attention.
You can credit (or blame) the calendar only in part. We are in the midst of our country’s semiquincentennial, and I have indeed been chronicling North Carolina’s many contributions to the origin story of America. But I’ve also written about other historical eras and personalities.
Nor is it just that I have my own anniversary approaching. You see, it was in July 1986 that I wrote my first bylined column for a commercial newspaper. A year from now, then, as everyone is celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, a somewhat-smaller crowd will also commemorate my 40 years as a regular columnist for North Carolina media outlets. (I expect fewer fireworks.)
Over the years, I’ve assessed mayors, county commissioners, state lawmakers, federal lawmakers, governors, and presidents. I’ve covered elections, legislative debates, business openings, and natural disasters. I’ve discussed taxes, education, regulation, transportation, health care, housing, and other policy issues. I’ve described past events and predicted future ones. I’ve repeated tall tales and told small jokes.
Many readers appear to have enjoyed the ride. Others tell me otherwise, often with blunt language and colorful metaphors. For those who opine for a living, it has ever been thus.
It has ever been thus. Sounds inconsistent with that constant-change bit from Heraclitus, doesn’t it? Other thinkers have emphasized historical continuity, the persistence of humanity’s fallen state, and the recurrent patterns of behavior it produces. “What is government itself,” asked James Madison, “but the greatest of all reflections on human nature?”
A careful study of history, I have come to believe, reveals the crucial interaction of possibility and constraint. Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr, one of the first editors of France’s oldest national newspaper, Le Figaro, put it well in 1849: “The more things change, the more they stay the same.”
Human beings are capable of great good and monstrous evil. We always have been and always will be. Still, the conditions of our birth, the substance of our intellectual and moral education, and the institutions and incentive structures within which we live our lives can all influence the choices we make — and their consequences for ourselves and others.
Our political arrangements, in particular, can help align our common interests with the individual pursuit of happiness. History shows, I would submit, that free societies do it better than autocracies. Free economies combat poverty and promote abundance more effectively than command economies.
When I write about the history of North Carolina politics and government, then, I aspire not just to inform or entertain but to help readers see recurring patterns and how our institutions have evolved in response to them. At the national level, the Freedom Conservatism project I co-founded seeks to apply the timeless principles of the American Founding to current controversies. FreeCons reject the platforms of both the progressive Left and populist Right because their supposedly “new” ideas are merely iterations of old collectivist ideas that time has already tested — and found wanting.
History isn’t a handcuff. It’s a compass. To quote one more sage, the British thinker Edmund Burke, “a disposition to preserve and an ability to improve, taken together, would be my standard of a statesman.” By shining a light on North Carolina’s past, I hope to brighten North Carolina’s future.
Editor’s Note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His books Mountain Folk, Forest Folk, and Water Folk combine epic fantasy with American history (FolkloreCycle.com).