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Who do you think you’re fooling?

5In one of my all-time favorite songs, Loves Me Like a Rock, Paul Simon poses the rhetorical question, “Who, who do you think you’re fooling?” Well, I would like to ask weekend news anchor turned fledgling Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth who the heck he thinks he’s fooling by renaming Fort Liberty (nee Fort Bragg) Fort Bragg all over again. Exit the original 1918 honoree, Civil War General Braxton Bragg, and enter World War II honoree Private First Class Roland Bragg.
It is a fair bet that most Americans will never know that and will not care if they do realize what has happened.
The situation is that now President Donald Trump made changing the name of the most populous military base in the country back to Fort Bragg a campaign issue. He did so because the millions of people who have passed through the base think of it by that name and because “lost cause” and white nationalist supporters in his base were upset when Confederate Braxton Bragg was stripped of that honor.
A little history here. In 2021, Congress mandated the renaming of all military bases honoring Confederate soldiers, and 9 bases were indeed renamed in 2023. Change is hard for most people, and these changes were no exception. Layer on the political and racial tensions still swirling around the Civil War 160 years later with a hard-fought, highly divisive Presidential race and here we are.
Historians and scholars debate the question of renaming buildings, monuments, military bases, and such for people who are later disgraced in some way, in this case for supporting slavery and attempting to divide our nation. We cannot erase history, they argue, so it is better to focus on explaining it accurately and teaching it to future generations. It is a reasonable argument.
In addition, we seek to erase Braxton Bragg and the 8 other Confederates honored with military bases named for them, but we continue to honor others who also supported positions and realities we now find repugnant and unworthy. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were both slave owners, but have you ever heard anyone advocating renaming or destroying the Washington Monument or the Jefferson Memorial? Is renaming just for those lesser than a Founding Father?
But back to the various Braggs.
Out of the millions of United States veterans, Roland Bragg was one of at least 5 soldiers named Bragg considered for the renaming. The list also included a US Ambassador and Congressman and a woman pilot who helped open flight training for black pilots at 5 locations, including the famed Tuskegee Institute. The operative word here, of course, is Bragg, because the whole idea was to go back to the future.
That said, Roland Bragg, was a hero in a way the mediocre Braxton Bragg was not. As 21-year-old paratrooper from Maine, Roland Bragg earned the Silver Star and 2 Purple Hearts for his service, which included stealing a Nazi ambulance, loading up 4 wounded US paratroopers, and driving them 20 miles through active gunfire to an allied hospital. Bragg believed that all 4 died of their wounds until he received a letter from one of them in 1993 and they reunited.
However worthy this enlisted man is, it is hard to get around the deep cynicism of this renaming. It is less to honor a hero than to wink at and perpetuate history and ways of thinking that millions of Americans find increasingly offensive and a violation of the spirit of the law passed by Congress in 2020. It is a sleight of hand that most Americans will never know happened.
So, “who,” Pete Hegseth, “who do you think you’re fooling?”

Voters deserve information on fiscal crisis

4Every citizen who meets the basic requirements — adulthood, residency, and the completion of sentence after a felony conviction — can cast a ballot in North Carolina. There’s no test of civic knowledge required to exercise the civil right to vote, nor should there be. (Our state constitution still contains a Jim Crow-era literacy test to vote, but it’s vestigial and unenforceable.)
That having been said, effective self-government is difficult to sustain when voters lack basic information about candidates, issues, and our constitutional system. Surveys show such ignorance is especially prevalent among young people. In a recent poll of Americans aged 18 to 24, only a quarter knew the vice president breaks ties in the U.S. Senate. Most thought the Electoral College had responsibilities other than electing presidents, such as regulating campaign finance or certifying congressional elections.
Here in North Carolina, the latest High Point University poll tested the political knowledge of state residents. Some of the results, while troubling, fell short of catastrophic. Most respondents to the survey, conducted in late January, knew that Republicans currently control the U.S. House of Representatives, though 13% said the Democrats did and 22% were unsure. Two-thirds identified the GOP as the more conservative party and 55% knew that the U.S. Supreme Court was the federal branch empowered to declare a law unconstitutional.
But North Carolinians flubbed this question: “As far as you know, does the federal government spend more on Social Security or foreign aid?”
Just 21% knew the correct answer. Social Security accounts for one-fifth of total federal spending. Foreign aid is about 1%. Alas, most North Carolinians thought either that foreign aid was the bigger expenditure (41%) or that the U.S. spent about the same on foreign aid and Social Security (10%). The rest admitted they didn’t know.
I concede that civic knowledge isn’t a game of Jeopardy. Voters need not know which president prosecuted the Mexican-American War (North Carolina’s own James K. Polk) or was the first to be impeached (another native Tar Heel, Andrew Johnson) in order to exercise their franchise responsibly. Still, as America continues to stumble toward a fiscal crisis of unprecedented magnitude, far too few of us have a firm grasp on its primary causes and probable consequences.
If present trends continue, publicly held federal debt (excluding debts owed by one part of the government to another) will hit a record 106% of gross domestic product in 2027 and shoot up to 122% of GDP by 2034. Washington is now spending more on interest payments to bondholders than on national defense.
The U.S. House has just approved budget targets that, if fully implemented in subsequent legislation, would extend the tax cuts enacted during President Trump’s first term (generally good) and reduce future spending growth by trillions of dollars (also good). Unfortunately, under all reasonable scenarios, it also guarantees multi-trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see.
Why aren’t voters more upset about all this? The reason isn’t a lack of concern. The vast majority say they worry “a great deal” or a “fair amount” about federal spending and deficits. The problem is that they misunderstand the causes and underestimate the necessary remedies. Far too many left-leaning people think it’s largely a revenue matter and can be addressed by hiking taxes on millionaires and billionaires. As I’ve pointed out many times, doing so might realistically nudge federal revenues up modestly as a share of GDP, by a percentage point or so. But our deficits are running closer to 7% of GDP.
Far too many right-leaning people believe combating fraud and axing a few programs like foreign aid will do the job. Nah. The sum of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, national defense, and debt service represents 76% of all federal spending. Eliminate every other federal expenditure and that still wouldn’t balance the budget (Washington currently finances nearly 30% of its budget by borrowing).
Voters deserve to know the truth. They deserve politicians willing to speak it.

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).

DEI: No champion of American principles

4Publisher note: The letter-to-the-editor below examines the Fayetteville-Cumberland Human Relations Commission and its alignment with Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policies. Unlike unvetted statements and information found on Facebook and other social media platforms, I have found that the information on which the writer has based her letter is readily and publicly available at www.fayettevillenc.gov and www.CumberlandcountyNC.gov. Details about the FCHRC’s mission, meeting minutes, and policy discussions are available on the official website of the Fayetteville-Cumberland Human Relations Commission. https://www.fayettevillenc.gov/City-Departments/Human-Relations. Calista Cuevas is a Fayetteville resident, mother of two, and co-founder of the local Moms for Liberty organization. Thank you for reading the Up & Coming Weekly newspaper.
— Bill Bowman, Publisher


For generations, Americans have shared a core belief: Hard work, not identity, should determine success. The idea that all men are created equal—not divided by race, gender, or background—has shaped the nation. This principle has driven generations to work hard, succeed, and build a merit-based society. However, the push for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion undermines this longstanding American principle—not about fairness or opportunity—but government-driven social engineering that replaces merit with identity politics. This ideology, championed by local progressive activists, is being embedded into our Fayetteville/Cumberland County government, including our school system.
The Fayetteville-Cumberland Human Relations Commission is one such entity. While it presents itself as a neutral force promoting “equity and inclusion,” its policies and agenda prioritize group identity over individual ability and effort.
This is not just a partisan conservative viewpoint or issue. It is an American issue. Regardless of political affiliation (or no affiliation), every hardworking citizen should reject the idea that identity matters more than merit.
Over the years, the Fayetteville-Cumberland Human Relations Commission has quietly embedded itself in local governance, policymaking, and school influence.
In 2023 and 2024, the FCHRC attempted to establish a Student-Human Relations Commission—a DEI-based program inside Cumberland County schools. The commission contacted Superintendent Dr. Connolly to push this agenda. While this initiative was unsuccessful, the mere fact that it was attempted—without public input—should concern every citizen.
This aligns with a more significant national trend. Recognizing the growing threat of radical ideology in education, the President recently signed the executive order “Ending Radical Indoctrination in K-12 Schooling.” This order blocks federal funding for schools that teach DEI, critical race theory, and gender ideology—policies that undermine the merit-based system upon which this nation was built. It also reinstates the 1776 Commission, ensuring that patriotic education and parental rights are protected in schools.
Despite the national efforts to eradicate DEI infiltration, the FCHRC and similar commissions continue working behind the scenes to reshape policies under the banner of “equity.”
When implementing DEI policies, hiring, admissions, qualifications, and promotions cease to be objective. Instead, decisions are made based on race, gender, or other identity-based characteristics—factors that have nothing to do with a person’s ability to perform the assigned task.
For example, if two candidates were applying for a job, it should not matter the sex, race, sexual preference, or any other irrelevant characteristic an applicant has. The only things that should matter are their skills, experience, education, and overall ability to succeed in the role. An actual merit-based society selects candidates based on qualifications—not personal characteristics. And once a candidate is chosen, their race, gender, or background should be irrelevant.
This is the fundamental difference between DEI and a meritocracy, which ensures that all individuals—regardless of background have an equal chance to compete, succeed, and celebrate their achievements. DEI advocates feel that priority should be given to certain identity groups, regardless of ability.
This is why all citizens, regardless of political affiliation (or no affiliation) should reject DEI: DEI removes fairness and replaces it with forced social engineering.
Anyone serving actively on a public board, commission, or committee should be of the highest integrity to ensure honest and objective points of view. Serving in this capacity only matters if individuals uphold their values and keep their constituents and the general public informed about the policies discussed and formulated behind closed doors. Someone seated on any local board who fails to stand up and speak up for their principles compromises their values, or practices a “go along-to-get along” approach when addressing significant issues. These people should not be in a leadership position.
Even more egregious is when someone purposely contradicts their values for personal gain or to enhance their standing and stature in the community. This challenges the faith and trust that citizens have in their governing agencies. Unfortunately, this appears to be precisely what happened when several recent members of the FCHRC board professed conservative values, then surrendered those values by failing to stand firm, exposing progressive and radical overreach, and failing to use their position to inform the public of the DEI ideological movement.
As voters, we should have serious questions about how these board members manage their roles on essential boards and committees while actively serving and advocating for more realistic ideals and conservative values. Values that do not include support of DEI principles. Transparency and accountability should be non-negotiable in leadership.
Fayetteville and Cumberland County do not exist in a vacuum. Our local leadership needs to aggressively implement idealogy that enhances Fayetteville and Cumberland County and our quality of life while returning trust in our government and leadership. Fayetteville needs to lead this movement, not resist it.

Editor's Note: The views expressed in this article are those of Calista Cuevos and do not reflect the views of all of the staff at Up & Coming Weekly. Up & Coming Weekly encourages editorials from the community, and will print letters to the editor as long as they are not submitted anonymously.

Cheer up, things will get worse

5Tired of reading about Elon Musk’s adventures in rearranging American government? Bothered by the prospect that his Musketeers obtaining your IRS records may turn out poorly for you? Unsure if buying pre-construction time shares in Gaza Riveria Villages on the Mediterranean is the best use of your Bit coins?
Worried that Ukraine will not exist after Trump and Putin carve it up? Remember what happened after Hitler and Stalin divided up Poland? Ignore the news. It’s time to put on a happy face. Take advice from the MC in Cabaret: “Leave your troubles outside. Inside this column, the world is beautiful. The girls are beautiful. Even the orchestra is beautiful.”
We are going to pour several spoonfuls of sugar on all those unpleasant thoughts. Take off your thinking cap, we are going to cross the Event Horizon from grim reality into the land of blissful willful ignorance.
Today’s lesson will lessen the chaos surrounding us by digging up smiley face aphorisms suitable for printing on inspirational plaques sold at the Cracker Barrel. That’s right, boys and girls; walk down Quotation Lane to lighten up current reality. Our old pal Samuel Coleridge advised forcing a willing suspension of disbelief to enjoy life. John Bucher once said: “Ignore the fact that the arc of the moral universe is long but bends toward chaos.” Chaos is just a negative name for reality. Back in the 60’s there was a popular poster that cheered us up proclaiming “Reality is a crutch.” You don’t need no stinkin’ reality when you have a willing suspension of disbelief. Like Voltaire had Candide say: “We live in the best of all possible worlds.” Attitude makes reality swell.
Alice and the White Queen discussed reality during Alice’s visit to Wonderland. Alice laughed: “There’s no use trying,’ she said; ‘one can’t believe impossible things.”
“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was younger. I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”
Gentle Reader, get up a half-hour earlier each morning and practice believing impossible things. If you need coaching on this skill, watch more Fox News. It will take you there.
Be like the ax in the proverb: “The ax forgets. The tree remembers.” Who wants to be like a Weeping Willow tree? Trees are morose with bark worse than their bite. Cut through the inconvenient reality of 2025 to be an ax. Despite what Joyce Kilmer said, trees are stupid anyway. They just stand around waiting for DOGE to turn them into toothpicks. National Parks are so 20th century. It’s time for the National Parks to pay their own way. Drill baby, drill! Tea Pot Dome be darned. Oil derricks produce more revenue than Red Wood Trees any day of the month.
Reality just makes people unhappy. Our old buddy Thomas Hobbes opined that “life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” Who needs that sort of reality? Ignorance makes one happier. Daniel Patrick Moynihan said: “It’s not ignorance that hurts so much, as knowing all the things that ain’t so.” The more stuff you know that ain’t so, the happier you will be.
Maya Angelou was dead wrong when she wrote: “Every storm runs out of rain.” The news has more rain than you can shake a stick at. Look at the hurricane damage in western NC, floods in California and Kentucky. Wouldn’t you be happier if you didn’t have to think about reality?
An Arab proverb summed up how best to deal with reality: “It is good to know the truth, but it is better to speak of palm trees.” You can know the truth if you choose, but speaking it can get you into trouble.
America’s favorite lawyer, Jackie Chiles, Esquire of Seinfeld described the problems of reality well: “It’s egregious, preposterous, lewd, lascivious, salacious, outrageous, and flaunts the conventions of society.“ Pro tip: If you are flaunting the conventions of society by following reality instead of happy talk about the current Administration, stop it. Get over your fixation of reality. Stop complaining about reality.
Another Arab proverb says: “The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.”
If you persist in focusing on reality, not only will you be unhappy, but you might end up in GITMO stuck between the Devil and the deep Blue cheese. There is a reason the Swiss put holes in their cheese. They have figured out how to sell you holes. Reality is nothing but a Black Hole of unhappiness. Look for the holes in reality. There you will find true happiness.

(Illustration by Pitt Dickey)

Letter to the editor: Response to Bill Bowman's Jan. 29 article

7If you watched the DNC (Democratic National Committee) elect new officers, Fayetteville and the nation is in a more serious situation than most folks would think or believe.
They want to fight and obstruct the President of the USA. There was no mention of trying to work together to make America greater again and improving their party by working for all the people. Total obstruction is their mantra, which is insane!
Compliments and salutations on your Publisher's Pen article. I would have thought the Democrats would try to analyze why they lost the past election; it was as plain as sunshine. My 4 years on the City Council taught me much about local Democrats. I wish the politicians could work together to make things greater for all citizens of our metro.
A local judge told me succinctly that he has to be in line with the Democrats to get reelected. Shameful! Meritocracy seems to be a distant quality they cannot support.
— Don Talbot
Fayetteville, NC

Editor's note: Don Talbot is referencing Bill Bowman's Publisher's Pen in the January 29 Edition of Up & Coming Weekly titled Note to City & County: Binary thinking is stinkin thinkin! To read Bowman's article in full, visit https://bit.ly/3EzuvK9

Latest Articles

  • Voters deserve information on fiscal crisis
  • Who do you think you’re fooling?
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