Gen. MacArthur wanted to repeat what we did to Japan. He wanted to drop several atomic bombs on North Korea.
Letters
Are they any?
As evidenced by the testimony of the police officers, as well as the more than ample media coverage, the confrontation at Bunkerville was anything but peaceful.
Let common sense reign and open all lanes to all drivers.
The president’s initial condemnation of all forms of violence, bigotry and hatred is not enough for the left.
Your editorial on Charlottesville ignores the long, tortured, history of race and culture in our land.
Systematically removing and replacing all (and I mean all) current members of the House and Senate should be the objective.
I think the government should condemn and punish any disrespectful act regarding our flag and national anthem.
Unfortunately, many of these comments have bolstered extremists in this country.
Confederate symbols on public land, in effect, endorse a movement founded on white supremacy.
Gen. MacArthur wanted to go beyond the 38th parallel and finish the Korean War going through into the north.
In my mind, there is something morally wrong in treating all views as equally protected by the First Amendment.
Approaching the seventh month of the Trump presidency, I find that the president’s enormous promises are unfulfilled.
We will hear from deniers that global warming is baseless speculation, that anthropogenic CO2 contributes little to global warming and that the problem is too complex to understand.
I suppose President Trump would gain their approval if he asked the leaders from both sides of the Charlottesville confrontation to join him for a beer in the White House Rose Garden.