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Showing posts from October, 2020

Have you voted?

The question of the day. I hope that you did not miss your opportunity to vote early or to vote by mail.  If you did, Election Day is Tuesday.  Your county clerk or board of elections for your area has a website that can tell you where you should go to cast your ballot if you're not sure. Almost 88 million people have voted across the country already, which is just more than 60 percent of the total number of those who voted in the 2016 Presidential election. Make sure your voice is heard!  Make sure that you VOTE!

It's so hard not to worry

Happy Hump Day to all.  Sorry, old cliche. I don't know about you, but I'm very worried about our current situation relative to the coronavirus pandemic.  As regular readers know, I'm a resident of central Kentucky and can unhappily report that new positive tests for COVID-19 have increased dramatically throughout my state over the past two weeks. And that appears to be the case in many, many other states.   Our governor here is determined NOT to have to repeat the extreme measures he implemented in the spring of this year, closing all but the most essential businesses, as well as schools and other entities.  As it stands now, one can shop most anywhere he likes, dine out in reduced-capacity restaurants, have a drink in a reduced-capacity and limited hours bar, attend a high school or college football game, go to work, get a haircut (as I did earlier today) and so on. Incidentally, our governor is a Democrat and he was sued more than once by the Republican Attorney General

Overcoming obstacles

Probably no need to remind you, but in most places, you can vote NOW!  And you should! Here in central Kentucky, we have the benefit of multiple ways to cast our ballots.  We're permitted no-excuse absentee balloting, which my wife and I utilized to avoid the obvious risks presented by the coronavirus pandemic, and there are even sanctioned drop boxes to take them to if you're not comfortable sending them through the mail.  And what's more, we were able to verify with the board of elections that they arrived.  We also can do early in-person voting and, of course, in-person voting on November 3. But all's not joy in Mudville, so to speak, as our County Clerk (the office that oversees elections in Kentucky's counties) complained that they hoped for more absentee ballots to take the pressure off of in-person balloting.  This is the same man who objected to having these multiple alternative ways of voting in the first place, saying that he nor other clerks were not cons

Imagine

Friends, I want you to indulge me today with a thought exercise about our country and the state that we're in.  Try to imagine.... That the President withdrew from numerous international agreements designed to maintain peace, order, economic prosperity and combat climate change.  And did so for petty and sketchy reasons. That the President decided to roll back virtually every regulation designed to protect our environment and assure clean water and air for future generations. That the President would undertake a damaging and prolonged trade war with China, implementing the ancient tactic of tariffs in hopes of leveling the playing field, only to damage the American economy and require a bailout for farmers, and that the ultimate outcome of this would be the highest trade deficit in 14 years. That the President would pursue a relationship with the dictatorial leader of North Korea and claim to have "fallen in love" with that murderous tyrant through the course of letters a