A few random thoughts about free speech, monuments and who’s next …

By Jim Muir

A few random thoughts about free speech, monuments and who’s next …

I worked in the news media for 25 years and during that time I wrote thousands of newspaper columns and op-ed pieces. I also hosted a weekly two-hour radio/call-in show that allowed listeners to voice their opinion about any topic. In both of these jobs I was used to readers and listeners voicing an opinion with me and many times against what I had said. I never took offense at those who disagree, because that’s the beauty of free speech. I can have my say … but you can have yours too.

I once got sideways with a listener when I said that, while I despise the vitriolic message of the Rev. Fred Phelps (I use the term ‘reverend’ very loosely here) and his hate-filled congregation … I still defend his right to say what he wants. You remember Phelps and his crew traveling the country hating on gays and protesting military funerals.

In the words of one caller, ‘I simply can’t believe that you would defend this group.’ It was a good question, so let me explain.

Again let me stress in the strongest terms possible, I despise, I loathe and I detest Phelps’ message, but if the politically-correct police tell Phelps to shut up and he is silenced, then who’s next? Is it me or you? Do the PC police soon say that they don’t like the comments of a small-town radio guy or an aging newspaper columnist and silence him? Or maybe that post you put on Facebook yesterday about the inept state government in Illinois or your dislike for Trump is deemed offensive and you’re silenced. In my thinking shutting down ANY free speech puts us all on a slippery slope of no return. So, while we hate the comments of some, in order to maintain the greatest freedom we have, we have to accept it. We don’t have to like it, but we must accept it, regardless! As Voltaire said: ‘I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.’

I mention that today because in every way I believe this is exactly what is happening with the recent surge of monuments and statues that are being removed, vandalized, destroyed and torn down. Let me pose this question regarding what we’ve witnessed in the past week: where does the line stop for what type of monument, symbol or statue that ‘this’ person or ‘that’ group finds offensive?

At what point do those who are anti-Christian or atheist say that a cross that is attached to the steeple of a church is offensive? Or maybe even the steeple itself? What about the words ‘In God we trust’ that adorns our currency? Or a sign in front of a church? Or the words of a minister standing in the pulpit? The list of things that could be labeled as offensive to fringe groups all over the nation is endless. Again, tell me where the red line stops concerning what is and what isn’t offensive?

You might say that my comments are far-fetched and might even proclaim ‘that could never happen.’ To that line of thinking I would simply say – ‘don’t count on it.’ Take a good look around you – that red line is moving rapidly every day!

We’re already on the ‘slope’ I mentioned earlier and I believe it’s getting more slippery every day!

 

HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITIES BRING COMMUNITIES TOGETHER

By Bob Gardner, Executive Director of the National Federation of State High School Associations and Craig Anderson, Executive Director of the Illinois High School Association.

Tailgates. Pep rallies. Friday night lights. The new school year is here! And that’s exciting news for student-athletes and high school sports fans alike.

Research shows that being a student-athlete is about a lot more than fun and games. It teaches important life lessons, too. In fact, high school athletes not only have higher grade point averages and fewer school absences than non-athletes, they also develop the kind of work habits and self-discipline skills that help them become more responsible and productive community members.

Attending high school sporting events teaches important life lessons, too.

Among them, it teaches that we can live in different communities, come from different backgrounds, faiths and cultures, cheer for different teams, and still have a common bond.

That’s why attending the activities hosted by your high school this fall is so important. It’s not only an opportunity to cheer for your hometown team, it is also an opportunity to celebrate our commonality. And that’s something our country needs right now.

The bond we share is mutually supporting the teenagers in our respective communities. We applaud their persistence, tenacity, preparation and hard work, regardless of the color of the uniform they wear. We acknowledge that education-based, high school sports are enhancing their lives, and ours, in ways that few other activities could. And we agree that, regardless of what side of the field we sit on, attending a high school sporting event is an uplifting, enriching, family-friendly experience for all of us.

Many of the high schools in our state lie at the heart of the communities they serve. They not only are educating our next generation of leaders, they also are a place where we congregate, where people from every corner of town and all walks of life come together as one. And at no time is this unity more evident than during a high school athletic event.

This is the beginning of a new school year. Opportunities abound in the classroom and outside it. Let’s make the most of them by attending as many athletic events at the high school in our community as possible.

Turn on the lights, and let the games begin!

 

That’s the way it was…..February 26, 1979

By Steve Dunford

This is a column that I did not plan on writing.  I figured I would have spent tonight in my recliner watching the red hot Cardinals.  When I have something that is burning, I have learned that I need to sit at the keyboard to get it out of my system.

There was a total eclipse that went through the northern states and Canada.  Below is a clip from Walter Cronkite on CBS news telling “the way it was” on that day.

Long time legendary CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite. He closed every news cast, with his catch phrase, that’s the way it is. (BBC Photo)

One thing that was interesting on the video, was the Canadian Broadcasting Company did a story with a caged rooster.  After the eclipse passed it crowed.  I am interested in the reaction of the animals.

I was nine years old at the time.  I remember the eclipse was 1/4 around here, but the biggest story was the blizzard of 1979.  For those of you that have followed this page for a while realize I am a weather nerd.

I am going to rewind a couple days.  The eclipse happened on a Monday.  I had to look up the date to refresh my memory.

Don McNeely when he gave the weather, heavy rain and thunderstorms were in the forecast.  He disagreed with the National Weather Service forecast, which was in Cairo at the time.  He said we could possibly see some snow.

Legendary KFVS-TV meterolgist Don McNeely. (Southeast Missourian photo)

We woke up to several inches of snow.  There were two feet plus in some places.  There were very high winds.  We had thunder snow and intense lightning.  The graphics were not great in 1979.  When Channel 12 broke in they would put a cloud on the screen.  The series of beeps for the crawler across the screen existed back then.    I remember Mike Shain saying bulletin bulletin bulletin several times.

Several people lost power in Southern Illinois.  We lost it Monday afternoon.  We attempted to go down to my grandparents who had a fireplace.  There were drifts four feet high.  I felt for my dad as he had to pack me to the car.

The roads were impassable.  We had a big Monopoly game.  With two brothers cooped up in a house, there were a few game boards turned over.

I remember on the day of the eclipse,  the local radio and TV stations were bleeding over each other.  I loved the game shows Tic Tac Dough and the Price is Right.  I remember watching Bob Barker and Wink Marindale on the CBS affiliate out of Philadelphia.

I was playing with the radio and TV that day.  I was amazed of all the stations I was pulling in.  WLS-FM was coming in.

The video of Walter Cronkite helped me recall the events of that day.  When you watch the video, check out the KFVS feed of cars that were abandoned on I-55 around Jackson Missouri.

While composing this, I believe the memories came back to me.  What I am about to say, I do not mean to cause alarm.   My entire life I have lived by the boy scout motto, be prepared.

When I watched the Dukes of Hazzard as a kid, I was mesmerized by Boss Hogg’s car phone.  There are very few of us that does not have a wireless device.  If there was that much havoc with radio signals that day,  just think of how it could affect cell coverage.

Here is two advantages that I will have in eclipse coverage.  I still have a land line.  The number is 937-0253.  I also have cable internet.  I might have service, and faster speed if lines are overloaded.

I am going to do my best to be the eclipse information source for you.  From that Friday on, I will be monitoring the situation.  During the flooding it was the most rewarding but at the same time was the toughest to cover.  It was hard seeing pictures of people that I know were in danger.  I thank you for the confidence you shown in me.  I want to further earn your trust in the upcoming story of the century.

 

 

 

 

 

The statements by local officials about the elclipse, need to be taken seriously

by Steve Dunford

I have always had the philosophy that if an error is made, err on the side of caution.

Here is the thing about the potential influx of people on Southern Illinois, we do not know what to expect.

I have started the process of being in contact with local officials and business to see what to expect here in Franklin County.

There have been some in conversations, and reading social media posts that say this is an eclipse not the apocalypse.  When Rick Linton, the Rend Lake Area Tourism Director issued the press release with how an estimated 25ok to a half million people could have on this area, raised the eyebrows of a lot of people.

I have read people say this is all media hype.  According to the weather, it could be more or it could be less that descend on little Egypt.

The two things that most releases I have read by officials, say that we as local people need to prepare like it is  a winter storm.  There have been comparisons that stores could be hit hard in a similar fashion like the May 8, 2009 storm.

I  was working at Walmart in Mt. Vernon then.  The shelves were bare on a lot of things.   In fact, my dad, who lives in Thompsonville,  was coming home from my nieces graduation from the University of Illinois.  He stopped in Effingham to stock up.  This was mid afternoon on May 9th.  The stores in Salem where hit hard from people from Franklin, Williamson and Jackson Counties.

A week from today, I would fill up my gas tank.  I would pick up some “bread and milk” like it is going to snow.  Cell and internet service might be spotty.  The back roads will need to be well traveled by us locals.

I am working on two stories as we speak.  One will discuss how retail establishments are gearing up.  The second will discuss how officials will handle the influx of people.

Here is my plan for the website.  The coverage will be similar to the April floods.  If you do not see the website updated, check the Facebook page.   When internet speeds are slow, it is easier to switch to Facebook only.  I learned this during the “Sectional Tournament” tornado event.

I appreciate the trust, you the reader, has placed in me.  I will do my best to keep all the county informed.  Other than sneaking outside to the parking lot of Calvary Baptist Church to watch it, I plan on spending the weekend at the keyboard.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Illinois parents: You’re being played by Democrats in Springfield

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/ct-rauner-schools-madigan-cullerton-edit-0730-jm-20170728-story.html

From the Chicago Tribune Editorial Board.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.

For Illinois households with school-age children, August is not simply a month on the calendar. It is closure and reset. Sleepovers taper off. Bedtimes get earlier. School shoes displace flip-flops. Wet bathing suits yield to pleated pants.

The sweet back-to-school ritual is unfolding across Illinois, even as lawmakers in Springfield jockey over legislation — a fight that could jam a shiv into the August calendar. Without agreement on an education funding bill, schools might not be able to open on time. Yes, parents, while you’ve been preoccupied with lemonade stands and summer camps, Democrats in Springfield have been jeopardizing the timely opening of schools.

Democrats and a handful of Republicans supported a budget in early July that tied money for schools to a controversial rewrite of the school funding formula, which they had approved May 31. On top of that gamble, the Senate refused to send the rewrite package to Gov. Bruce Rauner‘s desk. Two months have passed with no action, only dueling press conferences and noisy insults.

 

Why the Rust Belt just gave Donald Trump a hero’s welcome

http://nypost.com/2017/07/25/why-the-rust-belt-just-gave-donald-trump-a-heros-welcome/

YOUNGSTOWN, OH – (Salena Zito, New York Post.  Please click on the link to read the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

This town was on fire.

 

President Donald Trump and Melania at the Youngstown Ohio rally (New York Post photo.

By 1 in the afternoon on Tuesday, every main thoroughfare downtown was filled with happy people heading toward the Covelli Centre. Folks dressed in red, white and blue crisscrossed the main grids as vendors sold “Make America Great Again” ball caps, American flags and bottles of water.

Thousands had filled the gravel parking lot to wait until the doors opened at 4, license plates revealing they had traveled from as far as Indiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania and West Virginia to see the president speak directly to them in this Rust Belt city.

Music played on almost every corner as Donald Skowron, a retired Youngstown police officer, drove his green pickup truck up and down Champion Street — in the back, a 6-by-8-foot homemade wooden Trump-Pence sign straddling the bed of the truck, with two large Trump flags flowing from the top.

Mike Madigan doesn’t care

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/ct-michael-madigan-destroy-illinois-perspec-20170724-story.html

(Op.-Ed. Piece from  41st District State Representative Grant Wehrli (R-Naperville, submitted to the Chicago Tribune.)

A few days ago, state Rep. Sam Yingling, D-Grayslake, wrote a Tribune commentary accusing Gov. Bruce Rauner of not caring about the people of Illinois and state government’s role in serving their needs. I’m here today to disagree. To borrow the opening construction my colleague used in attacking the governor:

Mike Madigan doesn’t care. That’s the conclusion I’ve come to after serving in the General Assembly since early 2015.

It has been clear that he doesn’t care about the financial well-being of the residents and businesses of Illinois since he first took office in 1971. Unbalanced budgets, chronic overspending, increased debt load, underfunded pension schemes and expansion of entitlement programs have left Illinoisans paying one of the highest overall tax burdens of all 50 states. And it is still not enough to pay for his reckless ways. Madigan doesn’t care.

McCaleb: After two wins, Madigan plays political game with school funding

https://www.ilnews.org/opinion/mccaleb-after-two-wins-madigan-plays-political-game-with-school/article_a8e255f6-6c0a-11e7-a843-83ccd44bf811.html

SPRINGFIELD, IL – (Dan McCaleb, Illinois News Network.  Please click on the link above for the full column.  Here is an excerpt below.)

In his more than 30 years as Illinois’ powerful House speaker, Michael Madigan has won far more political battles than he’s lost.

Illinois is losing big time, but what concern of that is it to Madigan? He keeps his power, and everyone else loses more and more money.

This month alone, Madigan won the battle to adopt the most expensive budget in state history without the kinds of structural reforms Gov. Bruce Rauner wants to help right the state’s fiscal ship. Think pension reform, workers’ compensation reform, deep spending cuts and property tax relief. None of these things that have been part of Rauner’s Turnaround Agenda are in place.

 

No longer welcome in a place we call home

http://www.navigatorjournal.com/news/article_4f22a6b8-67e8-11e7-97c8-172176123522.html

ALBION, IL (Patrick Seil, Edwards County Navigator.  Graphic by Steve Hartsock.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Ever get the feeling you’re no longer welcome in a place you call home?

The budget recently enacted by the Illinois General Assembly over the vetoes of Gov. Bruce Rauner certainly reinforce that feeling.

Raising the personal income tax 32 percent from 3.75 percent to 4.95 percent and the corporate income tax rate from 5.25 percent to 7 percent seems mighty inhospitable.

This newspaper is more than happy to oblige. If they don’t want us, we don’t want them.

Road Snacks strikes again

by Steve Dunford

I need to say this, I have paced the floor on how to say this, I have been wanting to say this for a long time,  and I hope it comes out all right.

I start my day on hold with the IRS.  No, I am not being audited.  I have a refund that has been lost in cyberspace.  I will say this, the Internal Revenue Service has been more than helpful than trying to help out in this process.

While I was on hold, I began to scan through my newsfeed on Facebook.  I have several hundred media sources on my page, and second I get to find out about what you, the people of Franklin and surrounding counties  have on your mind.

There were some things during that time that I was shaking my head about.  (SMH to prove this old geezer is hip.)  First was a editorial that said the problem with “downstate” schools is paying teacher retirement pensions.

I read some before I had enough.  The piece painted this picture of Laura Ingalls Wilder standing out in front of a one room schoolhouse, laughing all the way to the bank when she retires.  It failed to mention how the state has raided TRS funds, and that school teachers do not participate.

Then there were a couple stories about some of the extras that Mike Madigan snuck in Senate Bill 9.  I then read the story about how he snuck in the nickel gas tax.  I read a story how PETA is up in arms about the selfie rights of monkeys.

There is something that has a lot of people up in arms this morning.  The website roadsnacks.net., gave West Frankfort (or West Skankfort as the call it on the post) as being the whitest trash in all of Illinois.

They took a few statistics, a picture on Google Maps of  Route 37 coming into town from, and make what they call their “scientific” determination.

This website has had several “flattering” reviews of Franklin County in the past.  I tried to pull up previous lists, but one thing that comes to mind is the Benton Square is more dangerous than the streets of Chicago and East St. Louis.  This had everyone up in arms about a year ago.

One of the things that put West Frankfort in this rating was saying there were eight payday loan places.  I can think of four, maybe.  Also in their assessment there are only a couple hundred that are not “White Trash” that live here.

I think the blockbuster, “Poor White Trash” being filmed here put WF over the edge.  Watching it was two hours of my time that I will never get back.

To the south in Williamson County, Johnston City made the list, and they did not consider Marion the “Hub of the Universe.”

“This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment. Don’t freak out.”  This is a disclamor that is before everyone of their top tem lists.  Some people are doing the opposite and really freaking out.

I tried to do a little research on roadsnacks.net today.  I could not find any specifics, but it is national, having top ten lists in all 50 states. When the list on Benton came out, I thought it was a few kids in the collar counties in their parents basement making up the facts.

I actually spent more time looking at how they are using GoogleAds for their site.  It is something that you will see implemented on here as well soon.

I have lived in Franklin County all my life.  This is home to me.  Here is one thing that I have observed over the last few years that is starting to disturb me.  I am trying to find the right words to say, but the county is starting to develop an inferiority complex subtly.

I had a conversation about how I have witnessed this change with my son last night.  I hear this in daily conversations how people talk about what we are not in this county.

From our rich history, to having Rend Lake in our back door, school systems that our students are performing well above the state average, we have a lot to be proud of to be residents of this county.

No matter what a click bait site says, this is an awesome place to live.  It is home.  If you don’t like how something is done, try to change it and don’t gripe about it.

I can go on and on about the benefits of living here, but I would like to issue a challenge to every one of you each and every day.  Ask yourself how can I this day, make my community a better place to live.  It does not have to be something great, it could be something as small as a kind word or gesture.  If each of us do this, the world as a whole would be a much better place.

By the way here is a link to Road Snacks latest post.

These Are The 10 Most White Trash Cities In Illinois

 

 

 

 

 

 

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