Tagged: Wall Street Journal

The Cost of Deregulation (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

The Cost of Deregulation (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

OpinionEditor's Note

Regulations are a way that our society, through our elected government, levels out playing fields, creates transparency and protects the weak from abuse by the strong. And every regulation is a response to an identified problem. read more >

This Will Not End Well (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

This Will Not End Well (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

OpinionBanking & FinanceHealth CareLegalRestaurants & FoodEditor's Note

The number of COVID deaths in our country has already topped 200,000 (roughly the population of Little Rock). But there are millions upon millions of other casualties: More than 61 million unemployment claims had been filed between March and mid-September. read more >

Tastes Are A-changin’ (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

Tastes Are A-changin’ (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

OpinionEditor's Note

North Little Rock businesswoman Gina Radke was featured last week in a Wall Street Journal story about the conflict young women feel about the fur coats that were a coveted status symbol for their grandmothers’ generation. read more >

Judging a Clean Line Book by Its Hero and Antagonist

Judging a Clean Line Book by Its Hero and Antagonist

Outtakes

A new book by Russell Gold, “Superpower: One Man’s Quest to Transform American Energy," casts Clean Line Partners' bid to build a huge transmission line for solar and wind power across mid-America as visionary and environmentally heroic. read more >

Middle-Class Values (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

Middle-Class Values (Gwen Moritz Editor's Note)

OpinionEditor's Note

In their second debate last fall, Mark Pryor fumbled the question of how to define the middle class, saying that it would include income up to $200,000 a year. Tom Cotton picked it up and scored, accusing Pryor of “hanging out with out-of-state billionaires if he thinks $200,000 in Arkansas is the middle class.” read more >