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Troy's Perspective: Honoring Rev. Dr. Aaron Johnson

6Rev. Dr. Aaron J. Johnson, 93, is one of those rare individuals whose life has been defined not by applause or recognition, but by steady, faithful service. His type of service seeks no attention yet still makes a significant impact. In acknowledgment of his contributions, the Fayetteville City Council honored Dr. Johnson with a City Proclamation and a coin on Monday, Feb. 9. Although he was unable to attend the meeting, Councilman D.J. Haire and Mayor Pro Tem Derrick Thompson made the official presentation to him at his home on Friday, Feb. 13.
Councilman Haire said, "Dr. Aaron Johnson is my friend. He has been a pioneer in many areas and remains a significant influencer for our Black communities!"
Communities aren't built on grand speeches; they are formed through small, consistent actions and dedicating hours behind the scenes to ensure that everyone is cared for. Dr. Johnson has embraced this truth and, in doing so, has become something invaluable: a living example of what community truly means.
Dr. Johnson was elected to three terms on the Fayetteville City Council (1979 - 1985) and served as mayor pro tem. Marshall Pitts, Fayetteville's first African American mayor, said: " As a young man who was new to the local political scene in the late 1990's, I quickly discovered that most of the established politicians of the day were anything but warm and friendly towards me; however, Rev. Johnson was just the opposite. Even though we were from different political parties and different generations, I always found him to be encouraging and supportive."
In 1960, Dr. Johnson arrived in Fayetteville to become the Pastor of Mount Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. During his time in this role, several significant developments took place: a new church building was constructed, a daycare center was established, and a housing complex for low-income families was created.
Some people spend their entire lives discussing what should be done, while others act and make it happen. Dr. Johnson dedicated his service to the community as the North Carolina Secretary of Corrections (1985 - 1992) during Governor Martin's administration. He was also appointed to the Public Telecommunications Commission, the Governor's Drug Cabinet, the Governor's Crime Commission, and various other positions.
For decades, Dr. Johnson has been a steadfast presence in our community—always showing up, helping others, and leading with humility. What makes his story even more remarkable is that he has never led with ego. Born on March 6, 1933, in Willard, NC, he grew up in humble circumstances. Dr. Johnson earned his B.A. in Social Studies from Shaw University and his B.D. in Theology from Shaw Divinity School. He also received two honorary degrees: Doctor of Divinity and Doctor of Humane Letters from Shaw University.
Throughout his journey, he has never felt the need to dominate a room or demand recognition. Instead, he leads with kindness, integrity, and a quiet strength that has earned him respect across generations.
We should honor our elders while they are still alive, not only after they are gone. This is one of those moments.
So today, we pause to say thank you.

(Photo courtesy of Troy Williams)

Do political parties come with perks? A simple look at how local politics works

5In recent weeks, many people have asked the same question: Why aren’t there dozens of candidate forums before the primaries like there were last year? Why don’t voters have multiple opportunities to hear from every candidate before Primary Election Day?
It’s a reasonable question, especially for voters who are engaged and trying to make informed decisions. The answer has less to do with access and more to do with how different elections are structured.
During municipal elections, forums seem to be everywhere. Community groups host them, civic organizations organize them, and candidates often appear together repeatedly. This happens because municipal elections are nonpartisan. All candidates run in the same pool, and the top two advance. That structure naturally encourages broad, community-wide forums where everyone participates together.
Primary elections in even-numbered years work very differently. In these elections, political parties are selecting their own nominees. Parties take responsibility for educating their members, hosting candidate events, and creating opportunities for voters within the party to meet and hear from those seeking the nomination. That difference alone explains why the pre-primary season feels quieter and why many conversations occur within party organizations rather than in public, community-wide settings.
This is where party affiliation becomes relevant.
Political parties are membership-based organizations. They communicate with the people they know how to reach — members, supporters, volunteers, and those who have chosen to stay connected. That is how invitations are sent and how information moves.
When a party hosts a meet and greet, a candidate night, or a casual event where voters can ask questions directly, invitations typically go to existing contacts. This is not because others are unwelcome, but because outreach requires time, people, and resources. Local parties do not have a master list of independent or unaffiliated voters with neatly organized contact information. Nor do they have unlimited funds or volunteers to personally reach every unaffiliated voter in the county. If they did, local politics would look very different — and probably involve a lot more coffee.
Party affiliation simply puts you on the radar. You receive the email. You hear about the event. You know when candidates are coming to town and where to find them. That is one of the practical benefits of party affiliation: you are more connected.
For independent or unaffiliated voters, this can feel frustrating, especially for those who are engaged and eager to learn about candidates before voting. The good news is that independents are not shut out. They are welcome — often very welcome. The difference is that the responsibility shifts slightly.
Any voter can contact local party organizations to ask about upcoming events, candidate appearances, or opportunities to learn more. Most parties are happy to share information, and a little personal outreach goes a long way.
Think of it like joining a gym. Members receive emails about class schedules, updates, and special events. Non-members can still use the equipment, but they may have to ask a few questions to find what they need. No one is hiding the treadmill.
The same idea applies to party members. Being registered with a party does not guarantee every invitation or update. Like most community organizations, parties stay connected with those who participate, attend events, and stay engaged. Being on a list only matters if there is involvement behind it.
Access grows with participation.
Regardless of registration status, staying informed usually requires taking an active role — asking questions, showing up when possible, and connecting with organizations that align with your values. These groups are communities, run by volunteers but powered by participation.
This is not about telling voters which party to choose. Independence is a valid and thoughtful choice for many people. Party affiliation is, too. It is simply about understanding the trade-offs. Party affiliation offers built-in communication and easier access during partisan election cycles. Independence offers flexibility and distance from party labels but often requires more individual effort to stay connected.
Local democracy works best when people feel welcome and participate in ways that fit their lives. At the end of the day, we share the same community. We all benefit from informed voters, and we all play a role in making civic participation accessible, welcoming, and productive.
Find the path that aligns with your beliefs. Stay curious. Engage where you can. In the end, informed voters are created through participation — not just by checking a box on a registration form.

Greek mythology: What’s love got to do with it?

6Last week was the most fraught time of gift-giving of the year. Did you and your significant other survive Valentine’s Day with your relationship intact? Did you provide a gift that proved you were worthy of sleeping indoors? Gifting at Valentine’s Day is exponentially more difficult than Christmas or even birthdays.
One false step and you could be in the back yard sleeping with the Racoons. For the sake of making you feel better about your romantic shortcomings, today we shall consider the tragic love story of Phaedra and her stepson Hippolytus.
However your Valentine’s Day turmoil turned out, it had to be better than Phaedra (who we will call Fay and Hippolytus who we will call Hippo). Greek mythology is full of wild and crazy family antics. Like marriages of folks in West Virginia and Kentucky, love affairs in Greek Mythology require elaborate diagrams of family trees to sort them out.
Here is the background. Try to follow along. King Theseus kidnapped Hippolyta, the Queen of the Amazons. Whoopee was made with her, resulting in Theseus’ son Hippo.
Theseus was a major dude, helping Hercules steal the Queen of the Amazons' utility belt and killing the Minotaur. Theseus subsequently fell for Fay and married her. Hippolyta was not amused at being dumped. She led a group of Amazons to attack Theseus’ wedding reception. In the melee of this original Red Wedding, Theseus killed Hippolyta.
Unfortunately, Fay fell in love with her stepson, Hippo. This scenario has led to numerous versions of stepmom/stepson interactions on certain adult websites. (A guy told me about this.) Fay tried to seduce Hippo to no avail. Hippo had sworn to preserve his virginity forever in honor of Artemis, the Goddess of chastity and childbirth, among other areas. When Hippo turned Fay down, she was sorely vexed.
Remember the old saying about Heck hath no fury like a woman scorned? That wasn’t the half of how Fay felt after Hippo’s rejection. She was substantially unhappy.
There are two versions of what happened next.
Version one: Fay knew if Hippo told his daddy, Theseus, about Fay hitting on him, there would be big trouble. Knowing the best defense is a good offense, Fay lied to her hubby, telling him that Hippo had tried to rape her. Theseus believed her accusation.
He had been previously given three wishes by Poseidon, the Sea God. He used one of his wishes to curse Hippo to death. One day, Hippo was minding his own business while racing his chariot along the shore like folks used to do at Daytona Beach. It was a lovely day. Nothing could spoil it. Uh Oh! Poseidon sent a Sea Monster out of the ocean up onto the beach. This was no friendly sea monster like Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent.
No siree, Bob. This was a high-efficiency, full-throttle, torque-heavy, supercharged, mean, ugly, and nasty Sea Monster.
The Sea Monster freaked Hippo’s horses. They stampeded, breaking the chariot into pieces. Hippo got tangled up in the reins and was dragged to a gooey death. Like all bad things done in the dark, Fay’s lies eventually come out in the light. She couldn’t stand the heat and hung herself.
Version Two: Hippo is still a follower of Artemis, the Virgin Goddess. He swears he will never love or marry to honor Artemis. He also refuses to worship Aphrodite, the Goddess of Love. Aphrodite gets wind of this apostasy and decides to punish Hippo. She puts a curse on Fay to make her fall in love with Hippo. Fay knows hers is a love that dares not speak its name. She falls into a deep depression, refusing to leave her bed or eat. Fay eventually confides in her nurse about being sweet on Hippo.
The nurse tells Hippo, attempting to save Fay’s life. Hippo again rejects Fay.
Fay knows she will face consequences now that the story is out. She plans to commit suicide and writes a letter to Theseus falsely accusing Hippo of seducing her. She hangs herself, holding the poison pen letter in her cold, dead hand. After Theseus reads the letter, he calls in his wish from Poseidon, resulting in the Sea Monster scaring Hippo’s horses, causing Hippo’s death on the beach.
Gentle Reader, don’t you feel better now about your own Valentine’s miscues? Your mistakes pale in comparison to Greek Mythology.
You did not create a ravenous Sea Monster at Myrtle Beach. The Schadenfreude produced by this column will cure your depression resulting from Valentine’s Day errors. It’s cheaper than Rexulti and has no scary side effects.
You’re welcome.

(Illustration by Pitt Dicky)

Demographic Challenge Isn’t Going Away

4North Carolina’s economy just posted a sizzling 5.6% growth rate. Since 2020, the average income per North Carolinian rose faster than the national and regional averages. And our headline unemployment rate in December was 3.9% — quite low by historical standards.
So why I am not all smiles? Because another important measure is heading in the wrong direction. According to the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the share of working-age people who are either working or looking for a job has been dropping for nearly four years.
Before the onset of COVID-19 in early 2020, North Carolina’s labor force participation rate had for many years fluctuated between 61% and 61.6%. Another measure, the ratio of employed people to the general population, rose fairly steadily from 57.5% in January 2015 to 59.2% in January 2020.
Then came the pandemic. Employment crashed for several months, then bounced back in 2021, then started declining again in 2022. As of December, just 59.2% of North Carolinians over 16 are in the labor force. The employment-to-population ratio is 56.9%. In both cases, we are below the national average.
To be clear, though, the Bureau of Labor Statistics' measures of labor force participation and employment-to-population haven’t just declined in our state. They’ve gone down in lots of other places, too. And even for the nation as a whole, while labor force participation and the employment-to-population ratio haven’t tumbled since 2022, they remain below pre-pandemic levels.
In part, these trends reflect the aging of the population. No doubt you’ve already heard some version of this story many times. We are living longer than before, and in particular, we are living longer after retirement than previous generations of Americans did. On the other end of the labor pipeline, our rates of family formation and fertility are lower than they used to be. Everything else being equal, the ratio of workers to retirees must shrink.
Why care about that? Because retirees rely on those still in the labor market to supply their needs, either directly (because they’re being cared for by children or other relatives) or indirectly (because workers pay taxes into Medicare and Social Security, staff the companies from which retirees earn investment returns, and produce the goods and services that retirees consume). Again, everything else being equal, a smaller number of workers supporting a larger number of retirees might end in economic or political catastrophe.
All things are not, however, equal. There are multiple ways out of this doom cycle. One is immigration. Importing working-aged people expands the base of the pyramid, at least for a time, and perhaps for longer than that if the newcomers have persistently higher fertility rates than native-born citizens.
Another is innovation. If we organize workers more efficiently, or make them more productive through training and technology, or supplement their labor with robotics and artificial intelligence, they may well be able to generate enough economic value not just to support non-working adults (and children) but to continue to raise their standard of living over time.
Finally, we can try to change the parameters of the scenario directly. That is, we can induce more young people to marry and have children, induce more working-aged people to get off the sidelines and back into the labor force, and induce more older people to work full- or part-time long past the standard retirement age.
On this high-stakes quiz, my answer is, unabashedly, “all of the above.” And yet I recognize that reforming immigration is politically challenging, and expanding automation and AI is becoming so. I recognize that many non-elderly people outside the labor force have caregiving responsibilities, debilitating physical or mental ailments, or other barriers that make it difficult to keep them productively employed. And I recognize that there may be limits to how much government can or should influence private decisions about marriage, fertility and retirement.
There are no easy answers — and the longer we wait, the harder they’ll get.

Editor’s note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His books Mountain Folk, Forest Folk, and Water Folk combine epic fantasy with American history (FolkloreCycle.com).

Bigger Congress would be better Congress

4With the 2026 primaries rapidly approaching, you may well live in a jurisdiction where Democrats or Republicans are actively contesting nominations for Congress, state legislature, or local office. All voters can, of course, play a role in setting the table for this year’s U.S. Senate contest. 
Are you up on these races? Even for political junkies, keeping up with it all can be a challenge. And it’s about to get harder. If present trends continue, North Carolina will have added enough new residents by 2030 — and other states will have lost the requisite residents — for us to gain a 15th seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.
I’m all for North Carolina securing more influence over national policymaking (our expanded congressional delegation would also mean bigger clout in presidential primaries and the Electoral College). On the matter of House seats, however, my preferences are far more radical. A one-seat gain is paltry. I think North Carolina should gain 39 seats.
That is to say, I think the House of Representatives is far too small. When the Founders created the institution in 1787, they apportioned one member for every 33,000 residents of the new United States. A key framer of the Constitution, James Madison, proposed that once the House reached 200 members, it ought to grow automatically to maintain a ratio of one member for every 50,000 constituents. If districts grew significantly more populous than that number, he argued, the resulting U.S. House would be too elitist and its individual members would lack “proper knowledge of the local circumstances of their numerous constituents.”
While Madison’s congressional-apportionment plan never came to fruition, the chamber did grow periodically throughout the early decades of the republic. Since expanding to 435 voting representatives in 1913, however, the U.S. House has grown increasingly unrepresentative. 
House districts currently contain an average of 761,000 people. When the current cap was instituted in 1913, districts averaged 211,000 constituents. If that were the ratio now, the House would have approximately 1,572 members. North Carolina would hold 50 of those seats today, a delegation that would grow to 53 seats or more after 2030.
Sound preposterous? I admit that expanding the chamber so quickly might be hard to pull off. A bigger House would differ from the current institution not just in degree but in kind, with significant changes in organization, staffing, and operations. In 2021, a team of scholars proposed a more gradual approach: adding 150 seats. In that scenario, North Carolina would have 18 seats today and as many as 21 seats after 2030.
Why expand Congress? Many wise reformers have offered many sound arguments over the years. It would restore a clearer distinction between the House and Senate. It would enhance local representation and constituent service. It would diversify the chamber in a variety of ways. And it would reduce the extent to which House districts are gerrymandered to favor a particular party or incumbents of either party.
That last point deserves emphasis. As North Carolina’s history makes abundantly clear, the temptation to engage in creative political cartography extends across party lines and is exceedingly difficult to resist or constrain. I’ve fought for redistricting reform my entire adult life, and will do so again in advance of the 2030 Census. But I also admit that neither a “nonpartisan” commission nor judicial oversight will ever be a foolproof defense against abuse, and even reformers sometimes disagree about whether “good” maps maximize proportionality (the extent to which district-by-district outcomes reflect statewide tallies of partisan preferences) or competitiveness (the number of seats that could change hands from cycle to cycle, which may well produce wildly disproportionate outcomes).
Vastly increasing the number of U.S. House districts won’t eliminate gerrymandering. But legislative districts are, on the whole, more competitive than congressional districts. And in states and countries with lower ratios of constituents to representatives, gerrymandering is less effective.
In this one area of government, I submit that bigger is, indeed, better.
 
Editor’s note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His books Mountain Folk, Forest Folk, and Water Folk combine epic fantasy with American history (FolkloreCycle.com).

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