Every day I try to read Heather Cox Richardson’s Letters from an American. She does a good job of keeping up with current events and placing them in historical context. Last week she wrote about the “liberal consensus” that existed after World War II before its demise beginning in the 1980s. According to her definition,…
Month: March 2021
A Busman’s Holiday
I’ve been out of pocket for a couple days. A good friend stopped by, and we went down to Amelia Island to rendezvous with family before taking a day trip exploring the “old Florida” away from the coast. It was a nice respite after months spent holed up; fully vaccinated, we felt emboldened to strike…
Morning Read*
This morning the sun came out. That is, my morning read gave me hope that sanity might prevail in our politics. The Wall Street Journal published an opinion piece by a leading Republican moderate and the editor wrote a rebuttal to Trump’s recent lies. Republican Senator Bill Cassidy in an Op-Ed entitled “An Open Congress…
The Georgia Voting Debate
The question of voter suppression is increasingly front page news across the nation. Nowhere is this more dramatic than here in Georgia. The Republican-controlled legislature has introduced two bills to restrict voting in the state by ending automatic voter registration, weakening absentee voting and banning drop boxes for mail ballots. Coming on the heels of…
Deja Vu All Over Again
What do Yogi Berra’s famous quote “Deja vu all over again” and The Kingston Trio’s song “The Merry Minuet” have in common? Answer: They both touched on the essence of what makes us human: we frequently, if not routinely, keep doing the same things over and over. Consequently we are our own worst enemies. Some…