We have officials from Missouri and many other states who are threatening to punish school districts and local health departments, in particular, if they institute mask mandates. Our Attorney General, Eric Schmitt, is the chief guardian against local mask mandates and he now has a class action lawsuit forbidding school districts from having the mandates. He says parents and families should decide if children wear masks, not those who act in loco parentis when hundreds of children are together. Parents and families, he says, should make decisions based on science and facts—-as if officials in charge of hundreds of children in close contact with one another can’t make decisions based on science and facts. Or should not be allowed to make decisions based on science and facts.
The lawsuit also cites a low COVID death rate among school children.
Isn’t one child dying from this plague too high a death rate?
We find all of this energy by governors and attorneys general—almost unanimously Republicans—on this issue peculiar.
Remind us again which party is it that does the most griping about government over-reach, especially the federal government telling states (who know what’s best for their citizens) what should be done.
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One thing we’ve noticed about the pandemic, and now “the pandemic of the un-vaccinated,” is that no preacher has tried to capitalize on it as God’s punishment for this or that nation condoning this or that whatever. Perhaps it is because all nations, whatever their faults, are fighting this thing—and deciding what human trait is being punished is impossible to determine, even by those who in the past have claimed exclusive knowledge of God’s intent.
But maybe God can’t get in a word edgewise amidst all of the conspiracy cacophony that has helped give the pandemic new vigor.
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There’s been a slew of book released revealing more about the more chaotic last chaotic days of the Trump administration. It is unlikely—we certainly hope it is unlikely!!—that we will ever again see so many books from so many insiders so critical of a president. But there’s one insider book we are waiting for although it might not come until the author determines that he will be more benefitted than damaged by his words. Potential bombshell-author Mike Pence seems to think the success of his future is still too closely tied to his recent past to discuss it.
But, boy oh boy, the tales he could tell…….
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We notice, by the way, that the former VP is becoming more visible on the public speaking circuit. He’s hitting some of the big venues—a few weeks ago he repeated his lamentable attack on Critical Race Theory at the inaugural Feenstra Family Picnic in Sioux Center, Iowa.
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Watching the drought envelop the West, we are reminded of some jokes that we heard back in the very hot summer of 1953 while growing up on our little Illinois farm. That was the summer when the thermometers reached the 90s in late May and the heat wave ran well into September with several days in the triple digits. In fact, the last 90-plus day was not until October. Few homes or cars were air conditioned and I can recall my mother closing the curtains in the morning to keep out the sun during the day.
It was so hot that I saw three dogs chasing a tree.
We got a little rain one day and we sent what was in our rain gauge to the University to be analyzed. It came back only 35% moisture.
That was the winter is snowed a little bit but the snow was so dry we just shoved it into the ditch and burned it.
Not sure but those might have been told by Sam Cowling on Don MacNeill’s Breakfast Club that broadcast from Chicago for 35 years on the NBC Blue Network (which became ABC Radio) and is known as the program that created morning talk and variety as a viable radio format.
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Several months ago we told the story of a Cole County man who got married into a family situation that sounded like the story told in the song, “I’m My Own Grandpa.”
Well, we’ve found another one. From the Sedalia Capital, a newspaper founded when Sedalia was making an ill-fated run at taking the seat of government away from Jefferson City, February 21, 1925 issue. Page 5 has a picture of a nice-looking lady captioned, “Miss Ruth Davis’ marriage to her stepbrother, Andrew Jean Stormfeltz at Kansas City, Mo., made her mother also her stepmother and her mother-in-law, and her stepfather her father-in-law. She’s her own stepsister-in-law. Figure it out.”
We’re not genealogist enough to know, but would that make their children their own cousins, or their own aunts and uncles, step or otherwise?
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