OPINION | Let's discuss climate change
Based on personal conversations, the recent extreme — hot and dry — weather in Alabama and the southeast has caused more citizens to discuss climate change.
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Based on personal conversations, the recent extreme — hot and dry — weather in Alabama and the southeast has caused more citizens to discuss climate change.
I was glad to see that Sen. Doug Jones hosted an event in Auburn earlier this month. That’s the second time he’s been on campus in the past six months, and his visits make it clear that he’s dedicated to representing everyone in Alabama, especially students.
As children, we saw them as role models.
I have spent my whole life in Alabama.
From crime and sexual assault to racism and hate, journalists are often tasked with confronting these issues head-on.
One time I asked a friend what he wanted most out of life.
Evangelical Christianity is losing the battle and most of the war, even as it believes it is prevailing. The short-term effects of its obsession with political power are obvious. This distraction brings disastrous long-term effects as well. We see them now, and they’re not pretty.
There is a shed in Thomaston, Alabama, that stands in defiance of human justice.
When I first contacted Tina Tatum on the subject of bookstores in Auburn, I absentmindedly addressed the email: “Dear Ms. Turner.”
A poll released by Morning Consult on Monday shows that a majority of Democrats still support Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, after a photo surfaced of his medical school yearbook page showing one person in blackface and another in a KKK hood.
With each year, at least each year since streaming platforms began to engulf television as we understand it, it seems there are less and less pop culture events that unite Americans.
Last Monday, Gillette – yes, the razor company – tweeted an ad that was supposed to lash out against toxic masculinity. However, they missed the mark.
The American public is routinely misled by partisan sources. From members of Congress to state senators, Americans are being misled in order to collect votes and garner support.
As this time of year rolls around — with another election on our doorstep — I feel obligated to encourage others my age to get out and vote.
Editor's Note: An opposing view to this column can be found here.
Editor's Note: An opposing view to this column can be found here.