| Times-Gazette Columns Highland Press Columns |
| Times-Gazette Columns |
| by Larry Chapman |
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| February Column: Jim Crow In Ohio |
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| These are various columns that were published in the Times-Gazette newspaper |
| Last Updated: 05/15/2007 |
| Click the desired topic link (Most recent columns are at end of list). |
| Melungeons | Daniel's Pool Hall | Lost Marbles | Joys of Smoking | Trent Lott | Granddaddy's School |
| Cheap People | Today's Kids | BBQ 2003 | A UFO Story | Burying Old Friends | Litter in America |
| Fishing, Food & My Wife | Better Off Today? | Exporting America's Jobs | America's Drinking Laws |
| The Melting Pot | Heaven & Hell | Me & Harry Truman | Greenfield Rocks | Liars and Lying | Banks |
| I'm Socially Liberal | Basic Government Lesson | Social Security | Barbecue 2005 | Andy Rooney & Me |
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On The Road; Kuralt Style | The Blues | Kentuckians | A Trio of Complaints | Political Parties |
| Jim Crow In Ohio |
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| Email your comments to larry@highland-ohio.com. |
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Black
History Month and Jim Crow in |
| Published February, 2006 |
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When
I was twelve I didn't know what Jim Crow laws were. I also didn’t know
that I was witness to them every day of my young life. Jim Crow is the
name given to all laws, written or unwritten, aimed at segregating the
races in My
Uncle Johnny owned a general store in I
knew things were different in At
some point, however, I must have begun to sense that somehow all these
rules and separations were wrong because I remember getting into
arguments with my cousins about how Anyway,
for many years I smugly continued to believe that morally, we Yankees
were better people than those Rebs and that we had fought the war for
the altruistic purposes of freeing the slaves and ensuring that all men
will forever be, “created equal.” I
don’t know how old I was when I came to realize that all that was
simply bunk. While
When
I was a teen growing up in My
mother cooked in a local restaurant and during lunch black men would
come in the back door, drink a beer and eat a sandwich while standing
against the kitchen wall. My mom or someone else would have to go out
front and get their food and drink for them. Housing
was segregated in When
we think of segregation and Jim Crow in the South we often think of the
rise and power of the Ku Klux Klan. Many of us don’t know or chose to
forget that the Klan was very powerful here in So,
you see that all we Yankees have been wrong in thinking of ourselves as
the good guys while chastising the South for all the wrongs perpetrated
on blacks during the days of Jim Crow. Maybe we weren’t “as bad”
but we still behaved badly. Put another way, maybe I deserved all the
thumpins’ my cousin and his friend dished out! I
have a couple of reasons for choosing this subject for my February
column. Most obvious is February being Black History Month. When I was
teaching I would have an occasional student ask me why blacks have their
own month? I usually replied, “Because whites have the other eleven
tied up. Don’t you think it’s fair that they get at least one?” In
reality there is disagreement, even among blacks, as to whether there
should be a month set aside for Black History. After all, we are all
Americans and our racial/ethnic histories did not occur in separate
vacuums. There is only one story to be told; good and bad, it is the
story of many diverse peoples trying to carve out a fair slice of the
American pie for themselves; often times against the odds and all those
forces that resist change. I
don’t have any problem allowing for some time to recognize the trials,
injustices, and accomplishments of a group of Americans who have
arguably had to fight harder than any other segment of our society.
Their fight is not over and, to me; their fight should be our fight.
Personally I think a better |
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| A Brief, Yet Still Confusing, History of America's Political Parties |
| Published January, 2006 |
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When reading Ryan’s weekly columns I employ the
“Ryan rule”. Assuming his typical column is a thousand words in
length, I will read the first one hundred words. If, during that, he
doesn’t step over the edge, I will finish the column whether I agree
or not. Now, don’t get me wrong, most of the time I enjoy
his columns and even sometimes agree with him. He, like the old Hog
Farmer, ain’t always wrong! I recently received an email from a reader thanking
me for my column on conservative-liberal points of view (December, 2004)
and stating that it should be required reading in our schools. While I
thank that person for the compliment I have to say that it is
required reading. Those same ideas are found inside every mostly
unopened American Government textbook that ever languished in a
mold-infested high school senior’s locker. Apparently, too many
students opt for an “F” on that test. This brings me back to one of First of all, political parties weren’t supposed
to happen. They are not mentioned in either the Articles of
Confederation or the US Constitution. George Washington so disliked and
feared the inception of political parties in Ironically, it was the debate over ratification of
the Constitution that instigated the birth of parties. The question was,
“What kind of a nation will What has happened in the two-hundred plus years
since is that party names have changed, some basic ideas have
flip-flopped, and the whole thing has gotten a little more than
confusing. Today’s Democrats trace their founding back to The Federalist Party, led by Alexander Hamilton, believed in a strong centralized national government and political power vested in the hands of a ruling class (aristocracy). What we know as today’s Republican Party didn’t exist yet. Jumping forward to the 1820s, several things had
begun to change. First, the Federalist, as a party, disappeared and
secondly, political thought evolved and realigned. Under Today’s Republican Party evolved from a melding
of the old Whig and Free-Soiler parties and believing that the
government should permit free settlement of western lands and that
slavery should be abolished. By Now, if you’re not totally confused yet, take no
comfort, everything is about to flip. By the late 1800s the Republicans
had become the darlings of the well-heeled, but they also worked to win
Constitutional rights for former slaves and voting rights for women. If
they had kept it up they might have even gone so far as to fight for gay
rights and got an Equal Rights Amendment passed way back when! The Dems, in the meanwhile, were busy fightin’
for the rights of the common man, speakin’ out for state’s rights,
and getting federal troops out of the South so white folks could do as
they pleased! If the Ryan Rule didn’t kick in several thousand
words ago you may have noticed that the two parties don’t, in several
ways, fit the typical descriptions we are familiar with today. The Dems
sound more like Pubs and the Pubs more like Dems. That’s because both
parties have done some more flip-flopping since the late 1800s. Throughout the first seventy years of the twentieth
century the Democrats
continued to become more pro labor, pro farmer, pro working class and
anti big business. It also flopped, beginning with F.D.R., and became
the party of big government and strong centralized power. Since the
1930s it has become the party of social change and inclusion, as it
reached out to blacks, immigrants, and the poor. The Republicans
have remained the party of big business but they have abandoned the
cause of social change in favor of preserving the status quo.
Additionally, they lost the black vote after enlisting the Dixiecrats
and embracing the white southern voter. They again flopped by adopting
the old Democratic position of state’s rights and weaker central
government. To many, the parties today are once again
experiencing change. The Republicans are working hard to be more
inclusive as they attempt reaching out to minority voters. Given the
massive deficits of the Reagan and current Bush administrations they may
also be evolving into the party of fiscal irresponsibility, a moniker
the Democrats were long been branded with. By now I’m getting as tired of writing this column as you must be of reading it. So, permit me to abruptly finish by saying that I hope you have concluded that the important issues have remained pretty constant throughout our history and in vying for our votes the positions of the two major political parties is always shifting. What is considered liberal today may be seen as conservative tomorrow. Given that, my greatest fear is that I’ll live long enough that someday a reader will tell me that I’m the nearest thing to a fascist they’ve ever known. |
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| A Trio of Complaints |
| Published November, 2005 |
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I recently went camping and fishing in I hadn’t traveled far on northbound I-95,
however, before the world began to pry its way back into my life. My
right hand kept reaching for the on/off switch of my dashboard radio and
eventually it was permitted to tune in the closest NPR station. Within minutes I was swept back into the world of
hurricane Wilma’s impending threat to the Florida coastline,
Katrina’s aftermath, FEMA’s failures, the latest death count in
Iraq, the continuing violence in Afghanistan, outsourcing, the CIA leak,
rising fuel prices, Bush’s failing popularity, and more, and more, and
forever more. So, now that I’ve made a full recovery from
having vacated reality, I’m going to take this opportunity to blow off
a little steam about a few things I’ve noticed lately. First of all, I’d like to take issue with those
of you who are critical of the, “Old Hog Farmer.” One of your main
criticisms is that you see his views as being too negative. Well,
isn’t there a major difference between being negative and merely being
real? There are those who live their days in protective bubbles and
mentally create a world that doesn’t really exist. Then, there are
those like the Hog Farmer who simply observe the world with eyes wide
open and attempt to direct our attentions beyond our noses. For example, since 9/11 the Bush administration and
congress have thrown billions of our tax dollars at homeland security. I
certainly don’t see it as negative to point out that many of these
dollars were wasted, nor have they resulted in increased security. For
example, one state spent over $100,000 to purchase night vision goggles
for its Department of Natural Resources. Another small Now, you tell me how I’m to feel safer knowing
that nobody’s fooling around down at the co-op? Are farmer’s co-ops
high up on the list of radical Islamic terrorist targets? Finally,
consider the thousands of small communities who received similar monies
and spent it on equally unnecessary items. Anyway, ease up a little on the Hog Farmer and
consider the merit of what he says before you condemn him as being the
radical, left-wing, Bush hating, liberal that he most likely is. Hey,
even liberals aren’t always wrong! Some time ago I wrote a column about banks. Well,
once again I feel the need to bust their collective chops. I recently purchased an item from a person on eBay.
The seller had a pretty good rating input from previous buyers so I felt
reasonably safe sending him, as requested, a bank money order. Several days after mailing the payment I received
an email from eBay stating that they had suspended the seller’s
trading rights and advising me to stop payment on whatever remuneration
I had submitted. So, on the next business day I called the bank and
asked if a stop-payment could be issued for a bank money order. I was
told yes but I would have to come into the office, fill out some forms,
and cough up a $28.00 fee. I thanked them, took a few seconds to gather
my thoughts and concluded that I had two options. One, I could take no action and possibly still
receive my purchase. After all, any complaints against the seller had
not been about buyers not getting what they had paid for. Or, I could
burn up some expensive gasoline, take the time and drive to town, fill
out the necessary paperwork and cough up $28.00. I quickly decided that my choice was really between
possibly getting burnt by the eBay seller or, for certain, getting burnt
by the bank. I decided for the unknown rather than the known. Can you
say “banks” without feeling the need to gargle? Another bone of contention for me lately is state
and federal grants and the irresponsible way in which local governments
view them. I’m sure that all of you have heard some administrator or
politician say, “Well, this money is from a grant and if we don’t
spend it we’ll lose it.” They
seem to think that grant money is not tax payer money and somehow it’s
better to use it for whatever, rather than not take it or give it back
to the granting agency. Here are a couple of questions that our leaders
should honestly consider before they consider spending grant money. First, is the grant necessary and will the
community experience real and lasting value from it? The Secondly, before accepting grant money for some
project consider if the community will be able to maintain the project
after it is completed. On more than one occasion I’ve seen communities
receive grant money, complete the project, and then permit it to go to
seed because they don’t have the funds necessary for maintenance. You know, to fess up a little, I’m not really all
that bothered about the things I’ve written about in this column. I
just needed a quick topic in order to earn a few more bucks so I can get
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| Kentuckians |
| Published October, 2005 |
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A couple of months ago, I wrote a column in which I
mentioned stopping in Now there is a lot to be said about And, the people of About the only negative thing one can say about this
group is that they, like those who moved to Unfortunately, Now, I’m not trying to cast a broad net here, but
it’s from this group that many of the negative ideas and stereotypes
about Kentuckians arise. Unfortunately, If you find it hard to accept the above-mentioned
idea, just consider One of the things that bothers me most about these
transplanted hill jacks is how they cling to their pasts. You rarely hear
them praise or thank And another thing, have you noticed how Kentuckians
never say what town they’re from? You’ll never hear them say, “I’m
from Starvation Flats, KY,” or “I’m from Dismal Seepage, KY.”
Instead they’ll say, “Well, I’m from Dislocated Kentuckians hang onto anything made or
grown in Their love of all things Now my purpose here wasn’t to upset anyone, too
much. I’ve simply attempted to point out some of our neighboring
state’s assets and failings and to arrive at a little humor at other
people’s expense. I hope none of the “brother briars” that frequent
the truck stop are overly offended. After all, they’ve fired a few shots
at us Ohioans over the years. I remember crossing the I-275 Bridge with
one of them once. As we passed under the Welcome to |
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| The Blues |
| Published August, 2005 |
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For many years I’ve been interested in Southern
culture and food. About fifteen years ago this interest evolved into a
love of blues music and blues history. The blues that most people are
familiar with is probably that performed by such greats as Stevie Ray
Vaughn and B.B. King. The blues that I’m most interested in is far more
raw and basic. It’s the blues that was born in the cotton fields of the
Mississippi Delta and came out of hard times and hard living. This blues is called country blues or Delta blues. It
is acoustic music played on cheap instruments by people with no formal
musical training and only the most basic vocabularies. It is rough, and
crude, and unrefined, but the lyrics tell great stories of life, be it
hard times or good, love gone wrong or love at its best. It’s the music
that reinforced how tough life could be and it is also the music that
swept away reality on Saturday night when a few dollars could buy you some
beer at a local juke joint. There are lots of places that lay claim to being the
birthplace of something. Memphis claims to be the home of rock and roll
and Jackson, Tennessee, claims rockabilly. But, if any town has a valid
claim, it’s Clarksdale, Mississippi. The proof is in drawing a
fifty-mile wide circle on a map with Clarksdale at its center. Then create
a list of bluesmen that were born, raised or spent much of their adult
lives inside that circle. The list will include such names as Ike Turner,
Sam Cooke, Charlie
Patton, Bukka White, Sonny Boy Williamson, Robert Johnson, Son House,
Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker. Besides these who became famous, there
are dozens more who achieved little or no fame. The musicologist Alex
Lomax once said that Clarksdale was responsible for more bluesmen than any
place on earth. The
Clarksdale area is filled with historical icons of Delta blues history.
The nearby town of Tutwiler is where W.C. Handy (considered the father of
the blues) first observed a black itinerant musician singing about a place
where two railroad lines cross and accompanying himself on a cheap guitar
using a pocketknife as a slide. According to Handy, “It was the weirdest
music I’d ever heard.” Because of this historical occasion, Tutwiler
also lays claim to being the birthplace of the blues and proclaims such
high on its water tower. Tutwiler
is also the final resting place of Sonny Boy Williamson II. Williamson,
also known as Rice Miller, is considered to have been the greatest blues
harp player in history. His style set the standard for all who followed. In
the rural areas around Clarksdale were huge cotton plantations such as
Stovall and Hopson. It was on these plantations that many of the greats
were born, grew up, worked, learned the hardships of being poor, and later
fled. Several plantations still exist and one, Hopson, is trying to
preserve its place in blues history by offering tours and converting its
field hand housing into sleeping quarters for tourists. In Clarksdale itself, you’ll find the Riverside
Hotel on Sunflower Ave. Once a Negro hospital, it is the site where Bessie
Smith died following an automobile crash in 1937. After World War II the
hospital was converted into a hotel, catering to black travelers it became
a haven for black musicians performing in the area. You name the artist
and he or she has spent time at the Riverside Hotel. The hotel is still
open and caters to blues fans from all over the world. The room in which
Smith died is filled with mementos about her and open to the public. Depending
on which music historian you want to believe, the Riverside can also lay
claim to being the birthplace of rock and roll. In 1951, in the hotel’s
basement, Ike Turner cut a demo tape of Rocket 88, a number that
many to consider to be the first rock and roll tune. The tape was later
sent to Sam Phillips at Sun Records in Memphis and turned into a hit for
Turner. Further
down Sunflower, and across from the cemetery, sits Red’s Lounge. Red’s
is probably the last true juke joint in Clarksdale. It’s only open when
Red is in the mood and I was fortunate enough to be there when he was.
Greenwood, MS’s T-Model Ford was the attraction that night. T-Model is
nearing 80 but still plays a strong guitar. Testifying to the
international popularity of the blues there were at least four Germans, an
Englishman and a young man from Japan in the crowd that evening. The
Germans and the Brit even picked up instruments and took a turn at the
microphone between sets. Doing
much to keep alive the blues tradition of the Clarksdale area is the Delta
Blues Museum. Located in the old railway station and adjoining warehouse,
the museum is a major repository of blues history and memorabilia. It is
the place where you’ll want to begin your visit to Mississippi’s
Delta. Located
next door to the museum, in an old commercial building, is the Ground Zero
Blues Club. It was founded in 2001 by Clarksdale homeboy and actor, Morgan
Freeman. The attempt was to recreate the look and feel of a traditional
juke joint and breathe new life into the area’s native music. Guessing
from the Saturday evening I spent there, it is working. The place was
packed with people from many backgrounds, races and nationalities; all
sharing in the emotion of this thing called the blues. A
few miles out of Clarksdale I stopped along the roadside and walked a few
feet into a cotton field. Standing there in the 105-degree temperature I
reflected on what it must have been like to spend endless twelve-hour days
chopping cotton in these fields, countless years of backbreaking toil for
little money and even less chance of attaining a better way of life.
It’s easy to see why Mississippi’s Delta became the birthplace of the
blues. |
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| On The Road; Kuralt Style |
| Published July, 2005 |
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I feel a little like Charles Kuralt in that I’m filing this column from “On The Road” and, in the Kuralt tradition, I’m going to attempt telling you about a few of the places I’ve visited in the past several days. Years ago I began hearing about the Memphis In May (MIM) barbecue competition. It is a weeklong contest, billed as the “Largest Pork Barbecue Cooking Contest On The Planet. Every year since I’ve wanted to experience it. But, for whatever reason, it just didn’t work out. Same thing this year, May came and went and I stayed at home. The fact that over 90,000 people, from all over the world, descend on Memphis during the week has something to do with it. As I’ve aged I have developed an increasing dislike for large crowds. As an alternative to actually attending MIM, I paid their web site a visit and discovered that they offer classes training people to become certified barbecue judges and qualifying to become judges at MIM. “Wow,” I say to myself, “this could be the answer.” Go to Memphis, sit in a classroom, learn the fine points of judging quality barbecue (this has to involve tasting quality barbecue), get invited to judge and, without having to elbow your way up to the table with 90,000 other porkers, head for Memphis next spring. So, I paid my tuition and departed home a couple of days ago headed for Memphis. Since the purpose of the trip was to learn about good barbecue, I decided to do a little studying along the way. Kind of like homework, don’t you know! Day one’s destination was Owensboro, KY. Owensboro bills itself as the Barbecue Capital of the World. That’s a stretch and likely coined by a Chamber of Commerce type who hadn’t traveled much. What is unique about Owensboro, however, is that people native to that area think barbecue involves slow cooking mutton. Seems as though that part of Kentucky was heavily settled by folks from Wales and instead of raising hogs and cows, they planted sheep. So, as they developed a barbecue tradition it became centered on smoked mutton. The most famous of the area’s barbecue restaurants is Owensboro’s Moonlite Barbecue Inn. I was familiar with the Moonlite from having watched too many barbecue shows on the Food Channel. By the way, is it possible that the Food Channel is high in caloric content? I swear I’ve put on 50 pounds from nothing more than watching their programs. Anyway, the Moonlite is world famous, highly touted, and hard to find. It won’t do you much good to ask a local for directions. I asked four people and everyone said, “Now let me see, I know where it is but I can’t tell you how to get there.” Someone finally told me it was on West Parrish Street and I from there I found it on my own. The Moonlite was an excellent experience. You can order off the menu but the big attraction is the buffet. Besides a large selection of quality salads and sides the buffet featured both smoked pork and mutton in chopped and pulled variations. I dished up a little of each and headed for my table. The pork was very good, very moist with a mild smoky flavor and all the signs that tell you it was prepared by someone who knew what they were doing. The mutton, however, is another story. Having never knowingly eaten sheep, I wasn’t sure what to expect. Everyone I’ve spoken to about barbecued mutton immediately turned up his or her nose. Most comments went something like, “There ain’t nothin’ you can do to hide the taste of a smelly old yew.” Armed with those opinions I wasn’t sure what to expect but I decided if it was good enough for the Welsh, it was worth a try from me. My thoughts on barbecued mutton are two. First, it didn’t smell and, in small servings, it wasn’t bad. Secondly, I’m glad I grew up in an area settled by pig eatin’ Germans.
Another item common to the Owensboro region is burgoo. Burgoo is a soup or stew that somewhat resembles vegetable soup with some kind of meat thrown in. If you're familiar with the Brunswick stew that's common to the Carolinas you've eaten something close to burgoo. A major difference will be the meat; you won't find any mutton in Brunswick stew. My next barbecue homework self-assignment was Marlowe’s Ribs and Restaurant in Memphis. Marlowe’s is a regular participant in MIM and has a huge collection of trophies on display testifying to the quality of their product. The pulled pork was excellent having both moisture and a pleasant smoky flavor. The sauce was typical of Memphis, very red, very sweet, but lacking in heat or zest. As good as Marlowe’s barbecue was, however, the sides, in my case onion rings and baked beans, struggled to just be average. This is a failing common to many barbecue joints. I’m writing this column before having attended the MIM judging school. It will be interesting, and a subject for another column, to see if my opinion of the Moonlite, Marlowe’s, and all the other barbecue places I’ve visited, changes any. I just
wonder if what I’ve come to think I know about quality barbecue stacks
up to what those who judge MIM’s Super Bowl of Swine think they know.
After all, I could have been wrong all these years. But, if I was, it
just proves that being wrong can be lotsa’ fun! |
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| Andy Rooney & Me |
| Published May, 2005 |
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A lot of people don’t like Andy Rooney. I, however,
have always enjoyed him and as I age, hope that I am able to someday rise
to the level of curmudgeonry he has attained, albeit, without the
eyebrows! Rooney is always able to find something irritating or
objectionable with our society, our culture, our politics, our religions,
and more. Often, his concerns seem petty but given he’s only allotted a
few minutes each week, he can’t delve into many major problems. One of the things I like most about Mr. Rooney is his
willingness to take on subjects many people don’t want to talk about.
Like the time he peeved off the female populace by expressing his belief
that women have no place in covering professional football. More than once
CBS has had to take the heat for his comments and once, in 1990, they even
suspended him from the 60 Minutes lineup for a comment he allegedly made
about blacks. Instead of getting riled up, however, those who are
the subjects of his jabs should first consider the intent and content.
They may discover that what he has said is something that needed saying,
needs to be seriously considered and possibly used as a catalyst for
change. Only then, should he be labeled a crazy old man who is out of
touch with the 21st century. Well, if I’m ever to become the curmudgeon I dream
of being, I need to throw a few barbs. So, let’s begin with cell phones. Last week I observed a group of 6 teenagers hanging
out together in downtown Greenfield. Instead of enjoying each other’s
company half of them had a cell phone glued to their ear. Possibly they
had some kind of conference call going on. Later, the same group was at
McDonald’s and again, half were talking to friends on their phones and
while the phoneless sat mutely in their seats. Another thing that bothers me are people who get
indignant if you stare at their tattoos and pierced protrusions. Why,
otherwise, would a person go through the pain, suffering, monetary expense
and disownership of their parents if they didn’t want to draw attention
to themselves. In my day only 2 kinds of men had their bodies pierced,
gays and pirates. Don’t recall last time I saw a pirate sitting in a
restaurant sipping a double wild strawberry vanilla mocha latte. I also don’t like calling people who have cute
little messages on their answering machine. I called an acquaintance the
other day and was treated to, “Hi, you have reached the Smith’s. Bob,
Carol, Teddy and baby Alice can’t come to the phone right now because
they’re either not home or they’re having quality family time.”
What’s wrong with a simple, “please leave a message”? Speaking of being too cutesy, I can’t stand the
cutesy news that for too many years has been posing as quality, content
orientated, news coverage. What’s with this I-Team, Storm Team, Action
Team 5 crap that takes control of our local TV channels between 5 and 6:30
each evening? At best these
Sky News Team members prove that they can read, maintain the appropriate
facial expression dictated by the icon next to each story, speak without a
regional accent, and had parents who could afford orthodontia when they
were teens. What they don’t display is any indication that they
understand the significance of what they’re reading. A case in point
happened a few years ago when Ohio’s farmers were dealing with one of
the most severe droughts in our history. They were on the verge of loosing
everything when a Cincinnati weatherman mindlessly blurted out that,
“hopefully the rain will hold off and not ruin the weekend.” A major
segment of the state’s economy was facing ruin and all this dude could
think of is working on his tan. Another thing I find distracting is overweight women
sportin’ hip huggers and tube tops. I think it is amazing that just as
America reached an obesity crisis, Brittany Spears, and others,
popularized the bare midriff look. Look, I’ll make you tube top tubbies
a deal, cover up the tire and I’ll quit wearing Speedos to the YMCA. And finally, what’s the deal with cemetery
decorations these days? Every time I drive by a cemetery I get the feeling
the carnival has come to town. You can easily distinguish the new section
of most cemeteries. It’s there you’ll find all the Day-Glo colored
baskets of plastic flowers, silver Mylar whirly gigs, plastic beads and
trinkets hanging from steal hooks driven into the ground, and growing
numbers of solar powered eternal memory tombstone lights. It’s enough to
raise the dead! You know, maybe there’s another reason Andy Rooney and we fellow curmudgeons do what we do. It’s just plain fun to put your tongue in your cheek and let her rip! |
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| State of the Barbeque, 2005 |
| Published April 2005 |
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Several
years ago CBS’s Sunday Morning did a segment on a then 85-year-old
Annie May Ward. Annie May operated the New Zion Missionary Baptist
Church Barbecue in Huntsville, TX. It began by accident a number of
years ago as a means to raise money for the church next door. By
international reputation, Annie May’s, “is the world’s best BBQ”
and is known to the locals as the Church of the Holy Smoke. After seeing
that episode I decided a pilgrimage, to what some consider the Holy
Grail of Cue, was in order. Before
proceeding I need to share with you a few of definitions for types of
BBQ places I recently came across. First there is the BBQ restaurant. In
it you will find matching furniture, easy listening background music,
and printed menus. They also accept credit cards and are members of the
local chamber of commerce. Secondly,
you’ll run into BBQ joints. Joints have screened doors, a jukebox,
sell beer, the menu is written on a blackboard, the cook is nicknamed
Bubba and they only accept cash. Lastly,
there are dives. You’ll recognize dives because the door screen is
torn, the employees are all tattooed, they sell beer and whiskey, the
cook’s real name Is Bubba, and she has a prison record. It
must be said, however, that great, average and horrible barbecue can be
found in all. Getting
back to the story, a year ago Danny Masters and I headed out for
Huntsville, TX. First night out we ate at Corky’s BBQ (a chain of
restaurants) in Tunica, MS. The ribs were dry style (seasoned with a rub
rather than a sauce) and tasty but the meat had lost too much moisture
in the cooking. Next day we stopped at Bill’s BBQ in Tallulah, LA (definitely a dive) and tried to eat what may have been the
world’s worst ribs; greasy spareribs swimming in a dark, murky, zing
less sauce. Finally,
we arrived at Annie May’s (certainly a joint minus the jukebox and
beer) just in time for lunch. After entering I instantly recognized
Annie May behind the counter manning the cash register and telephone. I
stepped up to order and told her we had driven all the way from Ohio to
see her. Her instant response was to ask, “Well, how I look?” Well,
for a lady in her late 80s she looked wonderful and we couldn’t wait
to dig in. At her suggestion we ordered the sampler plate, which
consisted of all you could eat, spareribs, beef brisket and smoked
sausage along with slaw, potato salad, white bread and sweet tea. Sadly,
I wasn’t very impressed. The meats were okay but certainly not,
“world class”. The sauces were simply sad, like Bill’s they were
very dark and lacking in both flavor and zing. All
in all, however, it was a worthwhile experience. Annie May is a legend
and her joint is a classic. Sadly, I don’t think she is able to work
in the restaurant any longer. Recent news articles indicate other church
members are now running things. Also,
after eating in several more southwest BBQ places, I have concluded I
just don’t like their style. I’m too acquainted with Carolina
barbecue and to me; nothing else begins to match up. The same cannot,
however, be said about the Mexican food we ate while in Texas, Mexico,
New Mexico and Oklahoma. Now those folks know how to cook! I’ve
almost lost track of the barbecue places I’ve tried in the past year.
Some of them deserve to be forgotten but you cue lovers need to know
about a few. Not
too far from us is the Stagecoach Barbecue on US 23 in South Bloomfield,
just north of Circleville. Four of us paid them a visit during the
winter and departed stuffed and very impressed. No one had any
complaints and for me, the hit of the evening was the smoked turkey,
fried green beans and Marena’s chocolate chip bread pudding. Don’t
want to drive that far? Try out the Old Canal House Smoked Meats
restaurant on Water Street in Chillicothe. We’ve eaten there several
times now and not been disappointed. The pulled pork is very good, the
side dishes are excellent, great cornbread, and as good a sauces as
you’ll find outside North Carolina. I especially like the apple cider
BBQ sauce. If
you’re headed for South Carolina this summer keep an eye out for a
Duke’s BBQ (there are several of them and they are restaurants). I
picked up a sandwich at the drive-thru in Walterboro, SC and the mustard
sauce was to die for. It was the best pulled pork sandwich I have ever
eaten and one of these days I’m going back for the full sit down
experience. Probably
the most unique place I’ve been in lately was Pete Jones’ Skylight
Inn (another joint without music or beer) in Ayden, NC. Pete has been
cooking whole hogs with wood since 1947 and claims that his family has
been cooking BBQ on the same property since 1830. Many
people claim his to be the capital of North Carolina barbecue and that
may account for the large silver replica of the capital dome sitting
atop his otherwise non-descript building. This
is plain Jane BBQ. You order at a counter from an extremely limited
menu. Your choices are chopped pork barbecue, vinegar slaw, and
chitlin’ cornbread, sweet tea or soda pop, and nothing else. You can
choose small, medium or large portions but the serving procedure remains
the same. A sheet of wax paper is laid on the counter and a paper boat
of BBQ placed in its middle. Next, a thin square of very dense
chitlin’ cornbread is placed on top followed by a paper boat of slaw
and a plastic fork. The items are wrapped up in the wax paper and handed
to you along with a Styrofoam cup for your sweet tea. Could it be less
complicated? Fork over $4.50 for a medium, squeeze a little red pepper
vinegar sauce on it and dig in. For
Christmas, my sister-in-law, Ruby, gave me a book listing all the best
barbecue restaurants, joints and dives in North Carolina (I already have
the one for SC). Thumbing through its pages I enjoyed knowing that I had
already visited many of them. But, there are far more that I haven’t
tried. So, if you enjoy reading these occasional BBQ columns, I don’t
mind doing the research. Bonne appepig, mon ami! |
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| Social Security; My Take! |
| Published March, 2005 |
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Like many of you, I have had many recent
opportunities to participate in discussions about the status and future
of social security. Since I’m over 55 and receive very little of my
retirement income from social security I really don’t have any urgent
reason to be too concerned about its future. However, for the good of my
children, grandchildren and younger Americans all of us have a vested
interest in how this issue plays out. One of my major concerns about Bush’s approach is
the denial of social security’s historical past and the realities of
the present. Prior to the advent of this 70-year-old program
Americans relied on their children and families, their private savings
and investments, their neighbors, their churches and private charities
to provide for them when they were no longer able to support themselves. For many this system worked well enough except
during periods of economic downturn. For the working poor, however, it
was never a workable solution. It is extremely difficult for the poor to
engage in savings under any conditions. During economic downturns people frequently found
their jobs, investments and savings swept away in bank failures, stock
market crashes, general business failure, and rising unemployment. Such
was the case in the 1930s when the Great Depression presented Americans
with the deepest economic slump in their history. Now, in case you didn’t notice. What I just
described was a totally “privatized” system and nakedly subject to
the risk and fluctuations of the economy. So, when Bush continues to
insist that social security be privatized he denies that we’ve “been
there, done that” and that it didn’t work. Realizing that something
had to be done to reduce the suffering experienced by the elderly during
the depression, President Franklin Roosevelt initiated the Social
Security Act of 1935. The idea was to mandate savings to help offset the
needs of the aging. It was never meant to be the sole income for
retirees but to act as a safety net to provide some guaranteed, risk
free, income in the face of certain future economic uncertainty. Even with social
security, it remained, and remains, imperative that individuals manage
their earnings in a sound and prudent fashion, to set aside as much as
possible in savings and investments as a hedge against old age. In
Bush’s vernacular, people need, “personal investment accounts.” Well Dubya, people
already have many opportunities for personal investment accounts far
beyond just social security. We already have the opportunity to invest
in passbook savings plans, money markets, bank certificates of deposit,
the stock and bond markets, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), 401K
plans, tax deferred annuities, real estate, and countless other avenues
of financial planning. Having considered a
little history and a couple of current realities I just don’t
understand why we would want to reintroduce the risk factor to a risk
less system that has worked wonderfully for 70 years. Similarly, I
can’t understand why we would want to draw funds away from the social
security system to establish personal investment accounts when such
already exists aplenty. I am full aware that social security needs some
attention. The system has an Achilles’ heal; the ratio of working
Americans to those drawing benefits is in decline. In 1950 there were 15
workers paying into the system for every retiree drawing a check. Today,
that ratio is just a little over 3 workers to 1 recipient. Look, social security is not broken and it is not
broke. It needs some attention but the situation is not the crisis that
Bush and his minions are suggesting. By the president’s own admission
the system will remain solvent until 2042. That gives us 37 or more
years to break out our tweakers and make a few adjustments. We certainly
don’t have to rush in and throw the baby out with the proverbial
bathwater. Social security has always been a thorn in the side
of the conservative right and since it’s beginning its elimination has
always been one of their goals. Don’t accept this; simply do a little
historical research. As I view it, this is but one more conservative
attack against this proven piece of New Deal legislation. Why can’t
they just accept the 70-year old truth that social security works, is
working, and with some prudent thought, can continue to work well into
the future? |
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| A Basic Government Lesson |
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Published December, 2004 |
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In November my column attempted to defend social
liberalism and to express my viewpoint on a couple of issues important
to those of us trying to maintain our individuality in a society that
doesn’t always appreciate people being individuals. There were several reasons why I chose liberalism
as my topic. One was to offer a different perspective to the usual
editorial content of the Times-Gazette while another was, as stated in
the column, to demonstrate to a couple of my coffee sippin’ buddies
what it means to be a social liberal. When the column was published I asked one of them
what he thought. He responded that he agreed with about 75 percent of
it. I requested that he point out specifically which 25 percent he
didn’t agree with so I could focus on those things and write a column
he didn’t agree with 100 percent. I will freely admit that my goal is
to jab this fellow in any of his ribs. A day or so later he volunteered that my statement
that both conservative and liberal ideologies, “have something to be feared. They both have extreme
fringes that are dangerous to the civil liberties of us who live in the
great middle. The far right would just as surely deny me my rights as
the extreme left would deny you yours” Confused him. He didn’t
believe the right offered anything to be fearful of. After further discussion it became clear to me that he was one of those
too many people who for years supported America’s opposition to the
spread of communism without really understanding what communism is. In
fact, he confessed that he had always thought that Adolph Hitler and the
doctrine of fascism lay to the left of the political spectrum and that
fascism and communism were the same. He, in effect, has failed to
realize that fascism is the right’s answer to the left’s communism. I have no idea how many Americans clearly fail to understand the spectrum
of political ideology but my intuition tells me there are many. Having
taught government for many years I do know that it’s something that
many people struggle with. For those of you who remain confused, let an
old teacher give it one more try. Here’s your lesson for today. First of all, imagine a line drawn on a piece of paper with a mark
indicating its middle. This line represents the scope of political
thinking and near that middle mark can be found the ideas that most
people believe in. As you move away from that middle marker, however,
you are heading to one of the two extremes in political philosophy.
The further to the left your beliefs go the more you believe that
citizens should equally share in the wealth of the nation, that all work
is of equal value and that no job should pay more than any other. You
also believed that private property is a bane to society and should be
outlawed. To the far right you’ll find folks who see the world in sort of dog eat
dog terms. The acquisition of private property and wealth is the
economic motivator and, like in the game of Monopoly, it’s just fine
to wind up with more than anyone else. A typical example of the above involves wages. Most people in the middle
believe that work should bring with it at least a minimum wage. However,
as you move further to the right you begin to encounter the idea that
employers should only have to pay what workers are willing to accept. To
the left you’ll find workers banding together into labor unions and
using their collective power to force employers to increase labor’s
share of the profits. The same thinking applies to things like taxes, social services, medical
treatment, etc. The right would lessen taxes and place more of the
burden of acquiring basic services and medical care on the individual.
The left, conversely, believes that the wealthy should pay higher taxes
and those monies should go to help meet the basic needs of all.
Both extremes believe that government has a part to play. To the left it
is government’s role to force and maintain the equal distribution of
wealth and on the right government’s job is to protect the accumulated
wealth of those who have won the game. While they appear to be vastly
different, both extremes do share something in common. They both demand
near total conformity to a doctrine and neither is reluctant to use
physical force to impose that conformity. The two greatest examples of this involve the left’s Joseph Stalin and
the right’s Adolph Hitler. Stalin, the communist, is responsible for
the estimated death of over 20 million people during his reign. On the
right, fascist dictator Hitler is responsible for an additional 20
million victims. Many of those who died were simply folks in the middle
who offered resistance or represented some threat to the extreme. Please don’t lose sight that all these ideas exist in degrees. Most
people on either side of the middle mark see some value in the basic
ideas of either side. You can be a little liberal or a little
conservative and still be on solid ground. The danger is only when
political philosophy begins moving too far in either direction. That’s
when the extremists begin reaching into their bag of dirty tricks and
people begin disappearing in the night. If the population were equally divided along this political spectrum
there would be few threats to individual liberty. However, such is not
the case. That middle mark doesn’t always stay put, it slowly swings
back and forth like the pendulum of a clock. Right now it is swinging to
the right meaning that we are becoming a more conservative nation and as
the middle becomes more conservative it becomes a growing threat to the
freedom of those who remain liberal in their thought. This swing accounts for the renewed discussion of Constitutional
amendments to ban same-sex marriages, protect the flag from desecration,
and force the imposition of pro-life ideas. If it continues to swing to
the right these threats to individual liberty could become a reality.
My intention here is not to make this a textbook or get into some deep
debate on political ideology. My intention is to provide a few simple
definitions and examples of political thought in the hope that we will
all have a better understanding of what we share in common, the dangers
we face, and possibly think twice about the labels we stick on
people’s foreheads. If I’ve accomplished my purpose, you’ll be able to read the
editorials in this newspaper and clearly understand why my views are
considered liberal and the editor’s, Rory Ryan, conservative. Consider
that your final exam and if you need any help I’ll be in the
teachers’ lounge wishing I still smoked. Oh, I know it’s politically incorrect but what the heck, have a Merry
Christmas! |
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| I'm An Unabashed Social Liberal |
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Published November, 2004 |
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I was having coffee at the truck stop on
Wednesday following the election and during the conversation I stated
that I probably believed in a greater degree of personal freedom than
most of those present. As an example I volunteered that I was most
likely the only one in the place who had voted against Proposition 1 to
ban same sex marriages in Ohio. I further stated that I was a social
liberal, took pride in being so, and didn't view liberal as a dirty
word. The immediate response from one fellow was to sharply question my
sanity. “You must be insane,” he bellowed. After lots of further discussion, and
while I was leaving, that same fellow said, "Now he says he's a
liberal but when you read those columns he writes, there's nothing
liberal about them." So, for that fellow I decided to write a
column that was unabashedly and without question, liberal. I do, in fact, believe that people
should have a high degree of personal freedom. I know there has to be
limits but I am far less willing to be the person to set those limits
than the majority of my more conservative friends. Additionally, my
limits would permit a lot more room for personal freedoms and behavior,
even if I found those to be repugnant. If my neighbor wants to paint his
house hot pink he should be permitted to do so, even if it keeps me
awake at night and makes me want to puke. However, if hot pink is proven
to attract disease-carrying vermin that threaten the neighborhood's
health, then government should possibly step in. The same holds true if my neighbors
happen to be a married, same sex, couple. It may make me uncomfortable,
it may offend my values, but until it is proven to be a direct, and
serious, threat to my safety, so what? And, if I give them a chance, I
may find them to be likeable folks who basically want the same things
out of life in America that I do. To me, marriage, as defined by
religious tenet can, and should, coexist with marriage as defined by
civil law. But, the civil definition of marriage should not exclude the
diversity of American society. After all, marriage defined by religious
law bridges the wall of separation demanded by the U.S. Constitution.
The U.S. Constitution requires that the laws of the land apply equally
to all its citizens and to apply a single, religious based, definition
of something so personal as marriage would certainly result in an
unequal application and thus violate the rights of many. Conservatives spend lots of time
espousing about freedom and liberty but, too often, they seem willing to
extend freedom to just those who share their life style, attitudes,
aspirations, religion, sexual preference, etc. Possibly Maine’s former governor,
Angus King, said it best when he stated that our society has enemies,
“They are poverty, disease, and ignorance; they are not gay people.”
Another fellow at the table that
morning was lamenting about how Kerry supporters seemed to be clustered
along the Pacific Coast and the Northeast. "Why is that?” he
asked. Well, I’m sure there are lots of answers but to begin with,
those red-blue election maps distort the truth. They only show how the
majority voted. They do not show that lots of voters in all our states
voted for the other side. However, it is true that Democrats
have a larger support base along the coastlines and in our major urban
centers. This is partly a result of those areas being more ethnically
and culturally diverse than in the so-called heartland. A consequence of
experiencing population diversity is increased tolerance for ideas,
beliefs, lifestyles, etc. that differ from the norm and liberals, by
definition, are a more tolerant lot. Over the years I taught history and
government I noticed that the most tolerant students in my classroom
were often the children of people who, by the nature of their
employment, had lived in a variety of places. These kids had simply seen
and experienced more than the other students and knew that there was
often, “More than one way to skin a cat.” You may have noticed in my previous
columns that I rarely attempt providing a finite answer to problems.
Well, that too is part of being a liberal; we liberals flip-flop.
Liberals accept that there is usually more than one correct answer to a
problem and that very often, what was accepted as being correct ceases
to be correct. Thus, changes in positions and approaches become
necessary. My position on the Iraq War provides
an example. I sat on my sofa listening to Colin Powell address the UN
about Iraq’s threat to the world. After listening to him speak and
considering all the evidence he presented, I went to town and, over
lunch, told a friend that the nation had no choice but to take Saddam
out. So, guess what happened? Essentially,
everything Powell said that day, and all his evidence, turned out to be
incorrect or highly suspect. I don’t think Secretary Powell was lying,
I simply think he was given bad advice and inaccurate information.
Coming to realize this, was I to remain firm in my support of our
preemptive military action? Should I ignore or discount the
ever-emerging facts, or should my position reflect the updated
information? Well, my position did change and if that makes me a
flip-flopper I can only say that being so permits me to sleep well at
night. Over the years I’ve observed that
very few laymen could accurately define the term communism. Yet, they
willingly approved billions of their tax dollars spent in defense of it.
The same is true of the political terms conservative and liberal. People
use them to evaluate and/or accuse others but too often don’t have
much of a clue as to their true meanings. The truth is that both ideologies
have something to be feared. They both have extreme fringes that are
dangerous to the civil liberties of us who live in the great middle. The
far right would just as surely deny me my rights as the extreme left
would deny you yours. Regardless of our political or social
philosophies, a thing we share in common is the threat from those
extremes. |
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| Got Them Mean Banker, Mayonnaise Jar Blues! |
| Published October, 2004 |
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When old blues men sang about having the blues they
were talking about things like suffering the ills of poverty, woman
troubles, loneliness or being mistreated by the boss man. Well, I’ve
got the blues but it’s not from anything so serious. My case of the blues has two causes. First, I’ve
run out of ideas for my monthly column. I’ve wanted to engage in a
pre-election rant about the Bush administration, the war in Iraq, the
failing economy, the lack of decent jobs, the declining middle-class and
not being chosen as the poster child for the Preparation-H Float in this
year’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. However, since everyone
already seems to have decided whom they’ll vote for, and I personally
have tired of politics, that won’t work. The second cause of my blues is having my favorite
fishing hole, Sebastian Inlet, Florida take direct hits from both
hurricanes Francis and Jeanie and my next favorite, Pensacola, Florida,
literally destroyed by Ivan. Furthermore, Jeanne swept into coastal
North Carolina and postponed a planned fishing trip to that locale. I
wonder if there’s an old blues song titled, “Can’t Go Fishin’ No
Mo’ Blues.” So, here I sat with nothing to occupy my time and
nothing to write about when out of the blue (notice that connection)
came the postman (dressed in blue) with a letter from Master Card. My
wife opened it and exclaimed, “They’re ought to be a law against
this! How can they get away with this kind of thing?” What she was reacting to were some policy changes
being addressed by a bank regarding our credit card. We were informed
that in the future, any payment received late would result in a $39 late
fee. Now, she was hot and I tried to temper her anger by saying that
we’re not alone in this; everyone has a complaint about banks and
their ever-growing list of fees and incidental service charges. I remembered a bit that comedian Tim Wilson did on
banks and dug out the CD so my wife could hear his take on the problem.
He covered such experiences as being charged a $30 fee for bouncing a $3
check. Wilson’s response was, “Hell, if I don’t have $3 I damn
sure don’t have $33!” He continued by telling of a bank in Atlanta
that charged $3 for simply telling you the balance in your savings
account. He said, “I walked in and asked the teller how much money was
in my account and she replied, ‘$300, well, $297 now.’ I said
loudly, HOW MUCH? She replied, ‘Uh, $294.’ So, what you’re sayin’
is, if I ask another 98 times I’ll be broke!” Well, we all have more than one such story to tell
and if you’re my age you know that it all began when banks ceased
providing free checks and checking accounts. Now days, there’s very
little to find at a bank that’s free. However, in fairness, the teller
at the Merchant’s Bank drive thru window did give my dog Sam a Milk
Bone biscuit the last time we made a deposit. Tim Wilson thinks that
banks should give customers at least a bag of Tootsie Rolls for every
$100 they deposit; “Hell, I grew up on bank candy,” he related.
Myself, I would prefer a box of Russell Stover’s. What seemed to finally establish banks, as the subject of this column was an experience I recently had while applying for a personal note. I had a CD maturing in a couple of weeks but needed some cash to buy a different vehicle. I thought I’d simply take out a short-term note until I received the money from the CD. So, I called the loan officer at a local bank and
asked about getting a note. I was told that it would be no problem but
that there would be interest charged on the note plus a $125 processing
fee for filling out the paperwork. I said, “$125!” and the bank dude
said, “Yeah, we never use to charge anything for this but everyone
else started so we did too.” Then he said, “We didn’t charge as
much but everyone else kept raising their rates so we did too.” Now, as I was absorbing this input something just
didn’t seem right. It wasn’t until I had hung up and thought about
it for a moment that it hit me. What kind of an lame ass excuse was that
for bilking customers out of more of their hard won monies? We’re
doing it because everyone else is; we’re raising our fees because
everyone else has. You just ask any of our 3 children (now adults) what
would have happened if they had come home late and said that they did so
because all their friends were breaking their parental curfews! So, if
you’re that loan officer and you recognize yourself, take 30-days off
without pay, you’re grounded! I was watching the news recently and they were
telling of a woman who had several credit cards maxed-out and failed to
make the payment on one of her cards on time. Automatically, her
interest rate was jumped to over 24 percent. Worse yet, that bank shared
this info with her other banks and they all jumped her rate to 24
percent, even though she was on time with each of them. Their collective
rationale was that if they didn’t treat such marginal risks this way,
fewer people would be denied credit cards. Now there’s a concept,
people who don’t qualify for credit won’t be given credit cards. Is
it possible that we who make our payments on time would be paying lower
interest rates if banks didn’t give out credit cards like they were
Milk Bones? Well, I’ve only begun to tell stories about banks
and I’ve already run out of space. I could make this Chapter 1 in a
series but I’m sure you can all write your own Chapter 2. Banks are a very necessary part of our economic and social system and little would be accomplished if they didn’t exist. We all rely on them, but going back to Christ himself, we’ve not always been satisfied. |
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| "Liar, Liar, Pants On Fire" |
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Published September, 2004 |
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There is one absolute truth in life; people lie.
Not only do they lie, many enjoy it and some have even elevated it to an
art form. Both my grandfathers were liars, as was my dad, and
to be truthful, so am I. I’m one of those whose enjoys telling a story
and tossing in a little spice of embellishment wherever needed. To support my thesis that people enjoy lying, just
take a look around. This world is full of gathering places where groups
of people regularly meet for the main purpose of swapping lies. In my grandfather Chapman’s adopted hometown,
Joanna, SC, they even formally organized a men’s club for the purpose
of meeting each day to exchange fibs. It was/is called the Joanna
Men’s Club and has been written up in one of that state’s more
prestigious newspapers, The State. Each member pays $10 a month and that covers the
rent on the old store front they hang around in, keeps the refrigerator
humming, the coffee pot perking and a couple of light fixtures burning. They’re so organized that they even have rules.
You can’t cuss (don’t think I’d last long there), you can’t
drink alcoholic beverages (experts don’t need booze to loosen them
up), you can’t invite a woman in, and you can’t tell more than 10
lies during a given session (I wonder how often they had to suspend that
rule?). Liar’s clubs come in all configurations but they
are usually male dominated. Women, as a rule, don’t lie, they just
gossip. The liars might be a bunch of farmers, a group (like my
grandfather’s) of retired mill workers, veterans, old high school or
college friends, sports enthusiasts, etc. My brother knows of a group in
North Carolina made up of retired Marines. They call themselves The
Semper Lie Corp. You don’t have to look too deeply around
Greenfield to find places where liars congregate. Leaverton’s Barber Shop is one such place. Dave
Leaverton, besides being the master of the flat top, is also a master of
creativity. Some years ago a fellow walked into his shop and asked why
the McDonald’s sign was so tall? Instantly, Dave came back with it
being because of the new Interstate that was being built just beyond the
east edge of Greenfield. “McDonald’s wanted it high enough so
travelers on the Interstate could see it soon enough without missing the
exit ramp.” Sometime later, one of my students came into class
asking me if I’d heard about the new Interstate? I instantly replied,
“You get your hair cut at Leaverton’s, don’t you?” Other clutches of liars can be found at the Quik
Stoppe (a.m. or p.m.), Blake’s Coffee Shop (a.m. only) and
McDonald’s (all hours of operation). Walk into any of these
establishments and you’ll find small groups of men, gathered at
tables, hunkered over coffee cups and makin’ up stuff. There are a number of ways these groups could be
categorized. One major division, however, would be to break them down
into those individuals who readily understand that they, on occasion,
are telling a lie and those who lie constantly but don’t have a clue
that they are. Bobby Everhart told me that one of Greenfield’s worst
liars got arrested once for perjury but lied his way out of it! That
same person is one of the clueless. He’s lied so long he’s come to
believe that everything he says is true! South Salem and the Buckskin area are not without
their liars. According to Richard Lucas and Al Conaway, the Morton Road
Liars, “a group of 12 Buckskin alumni plus strays,” have for years
been meeting every Tuesday for a lunch of “boloney” sandwiches,
current events, and items of general interest. I recently spent a little
time with them and observed no women, no alcoholic beverages, a bias for
Democratic politics, and just a little cussing. I could find a home with
these guys! The community of Rainsboro has a whole herd of
liars. The really good ones hang around the Rocky Fork Truck Stop.
Although lying has no season, the best lies at the truck stop are
usually told on summer evenings by those sitting on the bench outside,
watching the sun go down. They don’t say much during the waning
minutes before sunset. I’m sure they’re using those last few moments
to get their “facts” straight. Come to think on it, though, that’s
kind of cheating, since it’s easier to get away with a lie in the
dark. Years ago I used to hang around Dr. Burris’ home
and several times a week his neighbor, C.A. Kenworthy, would drop in and
strike up a conversation with Doc. I would sit attentively to the side
and absorb the fantastic stories this man would spin. For over a year I
accepted every word he uttered as the truth but began to have a hard
time accepting that one person could have experienced as many things as
he had. Come to find out, C.A. Kenworthy was a member of
some national association of liars and he was testing out lies on Doc
and me. Doc Burris was aware of what was going on but, like I said, it
was over a year before I finally figured it out. This was possibly the
first time I became aware that people told fibs for sport and pleasure. I now know that my grandfather Chapman was just
such a person. Behind his home in Joanna there was a stand of large
bamboo trees. My granddad would tell me that, as a young man, he earned
his keep as a whale fisherman. He claimed that every autumn he would cut
him an armload of those bamboo trees and use them as fishing poles on
the whaling ships he sailed on. He promised me that one-day he’d cut
some poles and take me whale fishing. I still haven’t got the barb of
that hook out of my lower lip. Now I don’t claim to be as good a liar as C.A.
Kenworthy or “Papa” Chapman but I can hold my own in most crowds.
I’ll embellish a story to make it a better story or to inject a little
humor into it but I attempt to avoid lying for lesser purposes. |
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| Hey, Greenfield Rocks! |
| Published August, 2004 |
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There have been a number of things on my mind
lately and any one of them could be the subject of a column. For example, I’ve wanted to speak out regarding
the teaching of To Kill a Mockingbird. I don’t understand
people’s reaction to this book. After all, I didn’t learn the
“N” word from reading it. Instead, it helped me understand that the
word was hurtful and wrong. I continue to be increasingly upset about our
involvement in Iraq and think it has been a huge mistake. Locally, I don’t like knowing that Highland
County, Ohio appears to be a place where one can beat an old woman to
death and have it reduced to manslaughter, or rape a 3-year old child
and plea bargain it down to a misdemeanor. A lot has been written or said already about such
heavy subjects and certainly much more will be. So, I think I’ll
concentrate on something a little more positive and cheerful for this
month’s column. Like, in the words of Cindi Pearce, “Greenfield (and
Highland County) rocks!” Early in July my wife and I took a look at our
dance card and found it full. Full of community activities we wanted to
be a part of. It actually began in June with the opening event of the town’s Midsummer’s Night on Midway entertainment series. Local garage band, Dumbfounded, opened the season with some g |