A conversation with author, candidate Beth Macy: On grace, and government cheese
Beth Macy, before she was congressional candidate Beth Macy, still just journalist and bestselling author Beth Macy, was thinking through the idea for her next book.
Beth Macy, before she was congressional candidate Beth Macy, still just journalist and bestselling author Beth Macy, was thinking through the idea for her next book.
In the last century people marveled at the Wright Brothers’ success. Just 66 years later, an awestruck world watched American astronauts walk on the moon.
Our average Augusta County reader: not offended by the president posting videos of the Obamas as apes, Ben Cline calling a Senate Democratic leader a “clown.”
The campaign of Beth Macy issued a statement on Thursday, following the release of new congressional district maps, telling us Macy “affirms that she is more committed than ever to running for Congress.”
It would have surprised me if Abigail Spanberger hadn’t signed on to back Beth Macy’s run for a seat in Congress in our part of the state.
Ben Cline thinks, with respect to those who want to engage in peaceful protest of ICE, that while “protest is protected under your First Amendment right, you are not allowed to interfere with law enforcement in the performance of its duties.”
I don’t know Beth Macy, but what I know of Beth Macy would have me believing that she isn’t comfortable having to brag about her political fundraising prowess.
The West Virginia governor, Patrick Morrisey, and a Mountain State legislator, Chris Rose, think they see an opportunity to mooch off our prosperity.
We have a second candidate about to enter the race for the Democratic Party congressional nomination in the Sixth District, with a third maybe on the way – amid uncertainty about what the district will even look like next fall.
Nitazenes, developed in the 1950s as a painkiller, is being referred to as the “next fentanyl,” though the synthetic opioids are 40 times stronger than fentanyl.