Commentary

Birch trees stand out in the woods

Editor’s Notebook: Wonderful days and days full of wonder

BY: - July 28, 2021

Last week, a reader sent a note thanking me for writing about E.B. White and White’s dachshund, Fred. I’ve not yet reached the stage of my personal development where I no longer hope for a little external validation here and there, so it was a nice way to start the day. I waited a bit […]

The front of a yellow school bus

Commentary: Appeals court ruling could change how schools judge sexual harassment complaints

BY: - July 27, 2021

When a Virginia high school teen reported that another student repeatedly touched her breasts and genitals without consent during a school band trip, the school decided there wasn’t enough evidence to establish that there was a “sexual assault.” They did not punish the alleged offender. The student sued the school in federal court under Title […]

A pregnant woman holds an ultrasound printout

Commentary: Sununu’s abortion ban ignores real-life complexities

BY: - July 26, 2021

This month, hundreds of Granite Staters will hold their breath while waiting for the positive blue mark to learn that they are pregnant. For many, this will be incredibly joyous news. Over the next few months, they may experience morning sickness, the relief of cooler weather in the fall, and the joy of telling family […]

Exterior detail shot of the U.S. Supreme Court building

Commentary: The case for expanding the Supreme Court

BY: - July 23, 2021

If you want to protect voting rights in this country, there is now a solid case for why you should support adding seats to the U.S. Supreme Court. And it’s clear why there is little chance of protecting voting rights in the long run without court reform.  In the final week of its most recent […]

A smiling school cafeteria worker serves food to a young girl.

Commentary: Free school meals for all children can improve kids’ health

BY: - July 22, 2021

Recognizing that millions of U.S. children are at risk of hunger, Maine and California have approved funding to offer free school meals to all students within their state. Meanwhile, a bill proposed in Congress aims to make free school meals a permanent fixture in all states. The Universal School Meals Program Act would provide free […]

Two books, The Writing Life and Essays of E.B. White rest on a rock on the edge of a river

Editor’s Notebook: A line of words

BY: - July 21, 2021

“When you write, you lay out a line of words.” That is the first sentence of Annie Dillard’s 1989 book, “The Writing Life.” She continues: “The line of words is a miner’s pick, a woodcarver’s gouge, a surgeon’s probe. You wield it, and it digs a path you follow. Soon you find yourself deep in […]

Smoke rises from smokestacks

Commentary: Climate change could trigger the next big financial crisis

BY: , and - July 20, 2021

In 2008, as big banks began failing across Wall Street and the housing and stock markets crashed, the nation saw how crucial financial regulation is for economic stability – and how quickly the consequences can cascade through the economy when regulators are asleep at the wheel. Today, there’s another looming economic risk: climate change. Once […]

A building with the words "In God We Trust"

Commentary: How ‘In God We Trust’ bills are helping advance a Christian nationalist agenda

BY: - July 19, 2021

City vehicles in Chesapeake, Virginia, will soon be getting religion. At a meeting on July 13, city councilors unanimously voted in favor of a proposal that would see the official motto of the U.S., “In God We Trust,” emblazoned on every city-owned car and truck, at an estimated cost to taxpayers of $87,000. Meanwhile, the […]

Closeup of a man smoking a joint

Commentary: New Hampshire, it’s time to unite and legalize cannabis

BY: - July 16, 2021

This column was updated on Monday, June 19, at 10:15 a.m. to clarify that Gov. Sununu has never vetoed cannabis legalization because no legislation on the recreational use of marijuana has reached his desk. In this now hyper-partisan world that we call New Hampshire, is there one thing still capable of defying party lines? If […]

People rally against "critical race theory" by holding up signs

Commentary: Bans on critical race theory could have a chilling effect on how educators teach about racism

BY: - July 15, 2021

Perhaps no topic has dominated education news in 2021 like the debate over whether or not critical race theory should be taught – or whether it is even being taught – in America’s schools. Critical race theory is an academic framework that holds that racism is embedded in American society and its institutions. The debate […]

A person holds a Trump-Pence 2016 sign near red, white, and blue balloons

Editor’s Notebook: Of thinkers and mimics

BY: - July 14, 2021

During the 2016 election cycle, the editorial board on which I served met with many weary presidential candidates from a crowded Republican field in the weeks and months before the New Hampshire primary. A few candidates declined our invitation to sit for a one-hour interview – eventual nominee Donald Trump was among them – but […]

A mother holding a baby in a black and white photo form the 1960s.

Commentary: The country hasn’t changed how it measures who’s poor since 1964

BY: - July 13, 2021

In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson famously declared war on poverty. “The richest nation on Earth can afford to win it,” he told Congress in his first State of the Union address. “We cannot afford to lose it.” Yet as the administration was to learn on both the domestic and foreign battlefields, a country marching […]