Letters to the Editor Tom Kovach
Being an elected official, I have a responsibility to represent all my constituents, and to be mindful of how I speak affects them.
Letters to the Editor Lee Agnew
Regarding Clifton Adcock’s “Kern: ‘I am not a racist,’” April 29,
okgazette.com: I am convinced that state Rep. Sally Kern, R-Oklahoma
City, meant what she said the first time, and that she still believes it
in her heart.
Letters to the Editor John R. Junger III
In the Rev. Steve Kern’s letter “Missing ‘the point’” (April 27, Gazette), he admits that some aspects of the creation versus evolution debate belong in the philosophy class.
In Sally Kern’s forthcoming tome, the Republican lawmaker describes bloggers, activists and media casting verbal stones.
News Clifton Adcock
Few people in Oklahoma politics are as polarizing as state Rep. Sally
Kern. Beloved by some, reviled by others, the preacher’s wife,
schoolteacher, grandmother and state representative has made national
headlines more than once.
Commentary Scott Jones
My first experience of Rep. Sally Kern was in 2005 when she was leading the effort to get books she perceived as having a gay theme banned from public libraries in Oklahoma.
CFN Gazette staff
While state Rep. Sally Kern, R-Oklahoma City, recently called on
embattled U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner to step down, a local group called
for her own resignation the same day.
'My greatest concern is for the souls of individuals in their relationship with God.'
Commentary Steve Kern
On June 26, 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled sodomy laws in Texas as
unconstitutional on the basis of the right to privacy and equal
protection.