There's been surprisingly little said about the upcoming wet-dry elections scheduled for the City of Beattyville and all of Lee County, to be held in conjunction with the Nov. 5 general election.
To date, there have been no newspaper ads, no community forums, and very little discussion on social media. Local option elections often rip localities apart,with each side digging in on its viewpoints and arguing vehemently against the other side's positions.
That could still happen as we count down to the local balloting, but to date, what is usually a controversial issue has been remarkably quiet.
Thankfully, none of the outlandish predictions that have marked recent local option contests in nearby places have been made. There have been some crazy promises made in other communities. When Breathitt County voted wet a few years ago, a lot of people predicted that an Applebee's or other national chain restaurant would locate in Jackson. Obviously, that hasn't happened yet, and no one with any common sense thinks that it will. Yet a lot of people believed that it would happen.
Currently, Lee County sits as a dry island, surrounded by a sea of wet communities. We have direct highway access to four of our neighbors. All allow alcohol sales. Wolfe County went wet first, more than 25 years ago, followed by Owsley and Breathitt, and then the city of Irvine. Lee also borders Powell County, which is wet; and Jackson County, which remains dry; but there's no direct highway connection between Lee and those neighbors. You have to go through another county to get to one of those places.
The arguments in favor of voting wet are the typical ones. It would increase economic activity and give our restaurants and other attractions the means to compete with those in neighboring communities that allow alcohol sales. (There might be a good counter-argument that with all those other places selling booze, Lee County could market itself as a family-friendly environment, but no one's raised that talking point yet.)
Alcohol sales certainly wouldn't be a panacea for Lee County economically. Owsley County has been wet for several years now, yet it's still regarded as one of the poorest communities in the entire country. Being wet hasn't exactly brought boom times to our neighbor to the south. And local coffers aren't going to fill with taxes and licensing fees should either the city or county, or both, go wet. Anything collected locally has to be plowed back into enforcement of the governing ordinances the city or county would have to enact should voters choose to go wet.
Accurate predictions and reasonable promises are all we can ask from those who are supporting the endeavor. So far, no one's saying Applebee's or a similar chain is going to come to Beattyville. About the best argument I heard recently came from a friend who said, "I hope it goes wet. It sure can't hurt anything." That honesty is refreshing. They aren't promising or expecting restaurants to flock to open locations here. They just want to do something different than what's being done now.
Personally, my mind is not yet made up. I could go either way. I won't be buying alcohol if it's sold locally. Whatever drinking days I may have had are long distant in the rear-view mirror, and I'm not one of those who has to have a beer or a glass of wine with my meal. I'm aware of the potential societal costs to the community, as well as any possible benefits. How the two sides conduct themselves will go a long way in determining how I vote. I didn't really have a position in the recent debate concerning allowing all-terrain vehicles to use public roads, until those on one side of the proposal alienated me to the point of pushing me away from them and to the other side. If the pro-wet forces start making unrealistic promises or predictions about how much money the county's going to make, or how many businesses will locate here, then that's a sure-fire way to get me to vote to stay dry.
So, the honesty of the person who said, "It can't hurt anything," was good to hear. So, too, would be people simply saying, "I don't want to have to drive to the next county to get my booze, it would be more convenient to me to buy it here." Don't give us pie-in-the-sky arguments to justify something that would merely be more handy for you. I'd prefer not to have to drive to West Irvine to get something from Pizza Hut, but that's reality.
Maybe this issue will explode to the forefront of local conversation in the next two weeks. Perhaps it's just a ticking time bomb waiting to explode between now and Nov. 5. But for one who has seen lots of controversy and heated discussion erupt over this issue many times in the past, the seeming lack of interest seems odd indeed.
Commentary by H.B. Elkins, a lifelong Kentucky River Valley resident who left a career as an award-winning community newspaper editor for public relations. Reach him at hbelkins@gmail.com. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the writer, and do not represent any views of the writer's current or former employers. (Note to editors and publishers -- This column is available for syndication. If you are interested in carrying this column in your publication, contact the author.)
Monday, October 21, 2019
Calling out the hypocrisy concerning Bevin's birthplace
The next time you hear someone call Gov. Matt Bevin a "carpetbagger," or criticizing him because he's not a Bluegrass native and thus not "one of us" or "a real Kentuckian," ask them for whom they voted in the 1991 gubernatorial election.
Odds are they'll not have an answer, because you've either exposed their hypocrisy, or the governor's birthplace didn't matter when a Democrat was in charge.
Brereton Jones, Kentucky's governor from 1991 until 1995, was born in Gallipolis, Ohio, and grew up in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He served as a Republican in West Virginia's House of Delegates, but moved to Kentucky in 1972, and changed his party registration three years later to -- surprise, surprise -- ingratiate himself to Kentucky's political elite.
When Jones was elected lieutenant governor in 1987, back when the governor and lieutenant governor were elected separately, one of his opponents was Kentucky native Paul Patton. His Republican general election opponent was Larry Webster, the infamous Pikeville columnist and Owen County native who seems to have abandoned any pretense of being a Republican these days, if his Lexington Herald-Leader writings are any indication.
Then, four years later, Jones ran for governor and his major primary opponents were native Kentuckians Scotty Baesler and Dr. Floyd C. Poore. Gatewood Galbraith was also in that race. His predecessor's wife, Martha Wilkinson, was also a candidate before dropping out. His fall opponent in 1991 was Larry Hopkins. Although Hopkins was born in Michigan, he grew up in western Kentucky and had lived in Lexington for years before being elected to the Kentucky General Assembly and then to Congress.
The same political types that were silent about Jones' state of origin are critical of Bevin because he was born in Colorado and grew up in a rural, mountainous area of New Hampshire that's more like rural Kentucky than it is Concord or Portsmouth or any other cities in that state. He's frequently described his home county as being twice the size of Pike County, Kentucky's largest, but with about half the people. It's the northernmost county in New Hampshire, bordering both Maine and Vermont, as well as Quebec. His hometown has fewer than 400 people, making it smaller than several Kentucky county seats, including my own. Bevin has often noted that he fell in love with Kentucky while stationed at Fort Knox during his Army days, and wanted to live here because it reminded him of where he grew up.
So, why would Matt Bevin's home state matter, but Brereton Jones' home state apparently didn't? And why do people never answer the question about whether or not they voted for Jones when they complain about Bevin's background?
It reeks of hypocrisy, but we've come to expect that from one side of the aisle. If you voted for a West Virginian in 1991, you shouldn't complain when a New Hampshirite gets elected from the other party.
Odds are they'll not have an answer, because you've either exposed their hypocrisy, or the governor's birthplace didn't matter when a Democrat was in charge.
Brereton Jones, Kentucky's governor from 1991 until 1995, was born in Gallipolis, Ohio, and grew up in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He served as a Republican in West Virginia's House of Delegates, but moved to Kentucky in 1972, and changed his party registration three years later to -- surprise, surprise -- ingratiate himself to Kentucky's political elite.
When Jones was elected lieutenant governor in 1987, back when the governor and lieutenant governor were elected separately, one of his opponents was Kentucky native Paul Patton. His Republican general election opponent was Larry Webster, the infamous Pikeville columnist and Owen County native who seems to have abandoned any pretense of being a Republican these days, if his Lexington Herald-Leader writings are any indication.
Then, four years later, Jones ran for governor and his major primary opponents were native Kentuckians Scotty Baesler and Dr. Floyd C. Poore. Gatewood Galbraith was also in that race. His predecessor's wife, Martha Wilkinson, was also a candidate before dropping out. His fall opponent in 1991 was Larry Hopkins. Although Hopkins was born in Michigan, he grew up in western Kentucky and had lived in Lexington for years before being elected to the Kentucky General Assembly and then to Congress.
The same political types that were silent about Jones' state of origin are critical of Bevin because he was born in Colorado and grew up in a rural, mountainous area of New Hampshire that's more like rural Kentucky than it is Concord or Portsmouth or any other cities in that state. He's frequently described his home county as being twice the size of Pike County, Kentucky's largest, but with about half the people. It's the northernmost county in New Hampshire, bordering both Maine and Vermont, as well as Quebec. His hometown has fewer than 400 people, making it smaller than several Kentucky county seats, including my own. Bevin has often noted that he fell in love with Kentucky while stationed at Fort Knox during his Army days, and wanted to live here because it reminded him of where he grew up.
So, why would Matt Bevin's home state matter, but Brereton Jones' home state apparently didn't? And why do people never answer the question about whether or not they voted for Jones when they complain about Bevin's background?
It reeks of hypocrisy, but we've come to expect that from one side of the aisle. If you voted for a West Virginian in 1991, you shouldn't complain when a New Hampshirite gets elected from the other party.
Friday, October 18, 2019
More intellectual dishonesty from those who educate Kentucky's children
Kentucky's efforts to preserve pensions for its public employees and teachers, and to reform and improve the failing public education system, have met with protests by people who are mistaking an effort to help them for a vendetta against them.
A number of advocacy groups have sprung up from those protests. One of the most odious calls itself KY 120 United, also known as #120Strong. Its motto is "We support KY teachers and public employees."
Let me be clear. As a public employee, I can unequivocally state that you have done nothing in support of me. You have undermined efforts to preserve my pension should I ever be able to retire. You advocate for the election of politicians whose views are diametrically opposite from mine.
What's sad is that the heart of this group's support comes from educators who are supposed to be intelligent. The arguments that KY 120 United is putting forth show a complete lack of understanding of how things work.
One meme the group recently pushed out is a complete and blatant lie, yet their supporters are lapping it up the way a cat would drink a bowl of milk.
That meme blames Gov. Matt Bevin for last year's repeal of the state's pension income tax exclusion and the extension of the sales tax to services such as car repairs and veterinary services.
The truth is that Bevin vetoed that legislation, but was overridden by the Republicans in both chambers of the General Assembly. (That, incidentally, is to their shame. We elect Republicans to lower taxes, not raise them. Some Republicans already see that move was a mistake and are moving to walk it back, wanting to reinstate the pension exclusion in next year's legislative session.)
The truth doesn't matter to those with a political agenda, however.
The educational bureaucracy has always opposed conservatives and their proposals, and not just on educational issues (witness their stances on gun control and elective abortion). They don't want school choice, they don't want greater accountability, and they don't want the process reformed in any way. One of the biggest opponents has been the Jefferson County Teachers Association. After recent school test results came out that showed Jefferson County dominating the bottom of the statewide rankings at the elementary, junior high, and high school levels, it's easy to see why. They're probably afraid that real reforms would cost them their positions because they're obviously not getting the job done now. When some school districts in the poorest areas of rural Kentucky showed up at the top of the rankings, what's the excuse for Kentucky's wealthiest county performing so badly?
And now the "educracy" is steadfastly opposing efforts to preserve pensions for retirees and current teachers, while ensuring that future teachers have a sustainable retirement option. The Kentucky Education Association even opposed a plan that would have moved future hires into the Social Security system and a defined contribution pension plan, the same as current state employees. They probably did that so they could continue to point out that teachers aren't eligible to draw Social Security, even from their spouses' accounts or from jobs they had where they participated in Social Security.
People of good will can disagree on policy positions. Not everyone totally agrees with every politician or official, even those from within their own party. Feel free to oppose Matt Bevin. I don't agree with everything his administration has done the past four years. But if you do disagree, then do it for truthful reasons. He didn't call all teachers "thugs," which is another big lie that's been spread. He didn't unlawfully access or use the state educational email system to glean addresses for which to send campaign materials. And he didn't try to steal anyone's pension.
It's fine if you oppose charter schools, or tuition tax credits, or school choice in general. If you want taxes increased to fund pensions or other educational programs, that's your prerogative. Campaign against Bevin and for his opponent on those matters. Just don't spread lies, half-truths, or out-of-context statements to further your agenda.
We should hold our educators, public servants, and public officials to a higher standard. We should expect them to be honorable in their conduct when the expenditure of taxpayer dollars is at stake. Blaming the governor for a tax increase he actually vetoed is not honorable conduct. It doesn't set a good example for those children they claim their acts are supporting. But what else can you expect from a group that thinks it's OK to lie about being sick, in violation of state law, to go to Frankfort to protest, then gets upset when their improper acts are called out?
A number of advocacy groups have sprung up from those protests. One of the most odious calls itself KY 120 United, also known as #120Strong. Its motto is "We support KY teachers and public employees."
Let me be clear. As a public employee, I can unequivocally state that you have done nothing in support of me. You have undermined efforts to preserve my pension should I ever be able to retire. You advocate for the election of politicians whose views are diametrically opposite from mine.
What's sad is that the heart of this group's support comes from educators who are supposed to be intelligent. The arguments that KY 120 United is putting forth show a complete lack of understanding of how things work.
One meme the group recently pushed out is a complete and blatant lie, yet their supporters are lapping it up the way a cat would drink a bowl of milk.
That meme blames Gov. Matt Bevin for last year's repeal of the state's pension income tax exclusion and the extension of the sales tax to services such as car repairs and veterinary services.
The truth is that Bevin vetoed that legislation, but was overridden by the Republicans in both chambers of the General Assembly. (That, incidentally, is to their shame. We elect Republicans to lower taxes, not raise them. Some Republicans already see that move was a mistake and are moving to walk it back, wanting to reinstate the pension exclusion in next year's legislative session.)
The truth doesn't matter to those with a political agenda, however.
The educational bureaucracy has always opposed conservatives and their proposals, and not just on educational issues (witness their stances on gun control and elective abortion). They don't want school choice, they don't want greater accountability, and they don't want the process reformed in any way. One of the biggest opponents has been the Jefferson County Teachers Association. After recent school test results came out that showed Jefferson County dominating the bottom of the statewide rankings at the elementary, junior high, and high school levels, it's easy to see why. They're probably afraid that real reforms would cost them their positions because they're obviously not getting the job done now. When some school districts in the poorest areas of rural Kentucky showed up at the top of the rankings, what's the excuse for Kentucky's wealthiest county performing so badly?
And now the "educracy" is steadfastly opposing efforts to preserve pensions for retirees and current teachers, while ensuring that future teachers have a sustainable retirement option. The Kentucky Education Association even opposed a plan that would have moved future hires into the Social Security system and a defined contribution pension plan, the same as current state employees. They probably did that so they could continue to point out that teachers aren't eligible to draw Social Security, even from their spouses' accounts or from jobs they had where they participated in Social Security.
People of good will can disagree on policy positions. Not everyone totally agrees with every politician or official, even those from within their own party. Feel free to oppose Matt Bevin. I don't agree with everything his administration has done the past four years. But if you do disagree, then do it for truthful reasons. He didn't call all teachers "thugs," which is another big lie that's been spread. He didn't unlawfully access or use the state educational email system to glean addresses for which to send campaign materials. And he didn't try to steal anyone's pension.
It's fine if you oppose charter schools, or tuition tax credits, or school choice in general. If you want taxes increased to fund pensions or other educational programs, that's your prerogative. Campaign against Bevin and for his opponent on those matters. Just don't spread lies, half-truths, or out-of-context statements to further your agenda.
We should hold our educators, public servants, and public officials to a higher standard. We should expect them to be honorable in their conduct when the expenditure of taxpayer dollars is at stake. Blaming the governor for a tax increase he actually vetoed is not honorable conduct. It doesn't set a good example for those children they claim their acts are supporting. But what else can you expect from a group that thinks it's OK to lie about being sick, in violation of state law, to go to Frankfort to protest, then gets upset when their improper acts are called out?
Thursday, October 10, 2019
When did doing the right thing become wrong?
Reform-minded candidates are popular. The message they bring when they run for office is usually well-received. They want to root out corruption in government; do away with waste, fraud, and abuse; and start doing things by the book, according to laws and policies. They campaign on eliminating political favors, hiring public employees based on qualifications and not on party registration or support for the winner, spending public money on public projects, and other things that in theory we should all support.
But what happens when such a candidate wins and actually starts implementing those good-government policies? When certain members of the public see that their new officials are keeping their promises, they get upset.
We've all seen it, especially in small towns and rural counties. When ordinances are enforced, laws are followed, and policies are adhered to, people get their feelings hurt. Things they took for granted in the past are no longer permitted. They want the right thing done unless doing the right thing means they don't get any favors anymore. When officials stop spending public money on private property, insist that legal agreements and contracts be abided by, and demand accountability and transparency in government, their popularity can tank in a hurry when members of the public find out they actually meant what they said when they were running for office.
Tax dollars are scarce. The populace is overtaxed at every level -- federal, state, and local. We entrust our elected officials to be good stewards of that money and use it for legally-intended purposes. We elect administrative and legislative officials to set budgets, enact policies, and establish guidelines for how that money is spent. We want the best people to be hired for the positions they hold based on their qualifications, and not their politics. But let an official decide not to gravel a private driveway, actually make personnel decisions based on qualifications, or insist on procedures being followed, and see how quickly they come under fire.
It's no wonder so few people decide to take the plunge to run for elective office. If their efforts to do the right thing are met with disdain and scorn, why bother?
Doing the right thing may often be unpopular, but it's never wrong. The swamp needs to be drained. It's vital that we support those who are trying to drain it, and not help those who put the stoppers back in the drains. We must insist on accountability, honesty, transparency, and legality in our government.
But what happens when such a candidate wins and actually starts implementing those good-government policies? When certain members of the public see that their new officials are keeping their promises, they get upset.
We've all seen it, especially in small towns and rural counties. When ordinances are enforced, laws are followed, and policies are adhered to, people get their feelings hurt. Things they took for granted in the past are no longer permitted. They want the right thing done unless doing the right thing means they don't get any favors anymore. When officials stop spending public money on private property, insist that legal agreements and contracts be abided by, and demand accountability and transparency in government, their popularity can tank in a hurry when members of the public find out they actually meant what they said when they were running for office.
Tax dollars are scarce. The populace is overtaxed at every level -- federal, state, and local. We entrust our elected officials to be good stewards of that money and use it for legally-intended purposes. We elect administrative and legislative officials to set budgets, enact policies, and establish guidelines for how that money is spent. We want the best people to be hired for the positions they hold based on their qualifications, and not their politics. But let an official decide not to gravel a private driveway, actually make personnel decisions based on qualifications, or insist on procedures being followed, and see how quickly they come under fire.
It's no wonder so few people decide to take the plunge to run for elective office. If their efforts to do the right thing are met with disdain and scorn, why bother?
Doing the right thing may often be unpopular, but it's never wrong. The swamp needs to be drained. It's vital that we support those who are trying to drain it, and not help those who put the stoppers back in the drains. We must insist on accountability, honesty, transparency, and legality in our government.
These people are in charge of educating your children?
Sometimes I have to scratch my head at the supposed intelligence of those we entrust to the education of our children.
For reasons known only to them, the vast majority of educators are liberals. Kentucky is no exception. For the most part, they'd vote for a Democrat even if the venerable Dr. Thomas Boysen -- the first education commissioner hired after Kentucky passed its education reform act in 1990 -- was running as a Republican.
But even then, teachers resist most efforts to substantially change education by their own ideological and political fellow travelers. They seem to prefer the status quo and loudly oppose ideas to implement new ideas. When Democrat Martha Layne Collins, herself a former classroom teacher, suggested a number of reforms in the 1980s, she was roundly criticized by the Kentucky Education Association. I personally sat in a room in Lexington when Collins addressed the KEA and saw and heard the chilly reception she got.
Forget for a moment, though, the political leanings of what I call the "educracy" (the educational bureaucracy). Sometimes the words and actions of the teachers' union defy all logic.
This week, the KEA is all upset because a private citizen sent an email critical of their chosen gubernatorial candidate, Andy Beshear, to some school employees' work email address. They're demanding an investigation and calling this an illegal act.
If this demonstration of a lack of common sense is reflective of the intelligence level of those whom teachers choose to lead their statewide organization, I'm thinking we might be better off letting eighth-grade dropouts educate our children.
The last time I checked, there is nothing illegal about a private citizen sending an email to someone at their work address, as long as there's nothing nefarious about the act. If Albert Wells, the person who sent the email, had distributed a virus, or sent a huge file attachment intended to overload the server, then he would have committed a crime. But simply sending information critical of Andy Beshear and his former governor father isn't a crime. In fact, it's -- dare I say it -- educational.
To his credit, Kentucky Education Commissioner Wayne Lewis is having none of the KEA's nonsense. He correctly notes that citizens are legally permitted to email public employees, especially those with publicly available email addresses.
There are legal prohibitions against public employees sending political information via their work email accounts, but none against such information being sent to them. Why does the KEA fear having their members exposed to alternative views, and facts that might correct the misinformation the organization has been spreading about the gubernatorial candidates?
For reasons known only to them, the vast majority of educators are liberals. Kentucky is no exception. For the most part, they'd vote for a Democrat even if the venerable Dr. Thomas Boysen -- the first education commissioner hired after Kentucky passed its education reform act in 1990 -- was running as a Republican.
But even then, teachers resist most efforts to substantially change education by their own ideological and political fellow travelers. They seem to prefer the status quo and loudly oppose ideas to implement new ideas. When Democrat Martha Layne Collins, herself a former classroom teacher, suggested a number of reforms in the 1980s, she was roundly criticized by the Kentucky Education Association. I personally sat in a room in Lexington when Collins addressed the KEA and saw and heard the chilly reception she got.
Forget for a moment, though, the political leanings of what I call the "educracy" (the educational bureaucracy). Sometimes the words and actions of the teachers' union defy all logic.
This week, the KEA is all upset because a private citizen sent an email critical of their chosen gubernatorial candidate, Andy Beshear, to some school employees' work email address. They're demanding an investigation and calling this an illegal act.
If this demonstration of a lack of common sense is reflective of the intelligence level of those whom teachers choose to lead their statewide organization, I'm thinking we might be better off letting eighth-grade dropouts educate our children.
The last time I checked, there is nothing illegal about a private citizen sending an email to someone at their work address, as long as there's nothing nefarious about the act. If Albert Wells, the person who sent the email, had distributed a virus, or sent a huge file attachment intended to overload the server, then he would have committed a crime. But simply sending information critical of Andy Beshear and his former governor father isn't a crime. In fact, it's -- dare I say it -- educational.
To his credit, Kentucky Education Commissioner Wayne Lewis is having none of the KEA's nonsense. He correctly notes that citizens are legally permitted to email public employees, especially those with publicly available email addresses.
There are legal prohibitions against public employees sending political information via their work email accounts, but none against such information being sent to them. Why does the KEA fear having their members exposed to alternative views, and facts that might correct the misinformation the organization has been spreading about the gubernatorial candidates?
Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Why abortion is an important state issue
Gov. Matt Bevin has made abortion a key part of his re-election campaign. He opposes legalized abortion as an elective method of voluntary birth control. Democrat Andy Beshear, his opponent, is in favor of legalized abortion. There could not be a more stark contrast between the two.
Some wonder why abortion is such an issue in the gubernatorial election. After all, they say, elective abortion is legal on a federal level, and states can do nothing to change that. So why should voters care which candidate supports abortion and which candidate opposes it?
Forget the moral factors for a moment, and focus on the policy-making process. It's simple, really. It was a federal court case in which a state abortion restriction law was challenged, that being the infamous United States Supreme Court Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. And it will be another state law, challenged in federal court, that may bring a reversal of Roe v. Wade.
And that's where state elections come into play.
Since Bevin's election in 2015, and Republicans gaining a supermajority in the Kentucky House of Representatives a year later, the state has passed a number of laws restricting abortion. Bevin has happily signed them into law. And they have been challenged in court, by entities such as Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union, both staunch abortion supporters.
If Bevin is re-elected, it's guaranteed that the state will continue defending its laws as the court cases progress through the system. It's also a safe bet that the legislature will continue to pass anti-abortion laws that Bevin will sign. Should Beshear win, no doubt he'd veto any anti-abortion bills, although it's quite likely the House and Senate would override his vetoes.
But the biggest problem is that if Beshear is governor, he'll quit defending Kentucky's duly-enacted laws in court.
The goal behind the passage of anti-abortion laws in Kentucky and many other states is to eventually get a case before the Supreme Court that could overturn Roe v. Wade and allow individual states to restrict or prohibit abortion as they see fit. With the current makeup of the court leaning toward a conservative originalist philosophy, and with the next vacancy most likely to come with a liberal justice's departure, abortion foes see their best opportunity ever to reach their goal.
This has its best chance of happening if a number of cases make their way to the Supreme Court, and that won't happen unless states continue defending their laws as lower courts reach decisions and appeals are filed.
So, when someone tells you that abortion is a federal issue, and state laws on the subject are irrelevant and it's not a proper issue for a state election, they're not being truthful with you. Although the ultimate decision will be made at the federal level, any changes to the current abortion laws will begin with state action. That's why abortion is an important issue in this year's gubernatorial race.
Some wonder why abortion is such an issue in the gubernatorial election. After all, they say, elective abortion is legal on a federal level, and states can do nothing to change that. So why should voters care which candidate supports abortion and which candidate opposes it?
Forget the moral factors for a moment, and focus on the policy-making process. It's simple, really. It was a federal court case in which a state abortion restriction law was challenged, that being the infamous United States Supreme Court Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. And it will be another state law, challenged in federal court, that may bring a reversal of Roe v. Wade.
And that's where state elections come into play.
Since Bevin's election in 2015, and Republicans gaining a supermajority in the Kentucky House of Representatives a year later, the state has passed a number of laws restricting abortion. Bevin has happily signed them into law. And they have been challenged in court, by entities such as Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union, both staunch abortion supporters.
If Bevin is re-elected, it's guaranteed that the state will continue defending its laws as the court cases progress through the system. It's also a safe bet that the legislature will continue to pass anti-abortion laws that Bevin will sign. Should Beshear win, no doubt he'd veto any anti-abortion bills, although it's quite likely the House and Senate would override his vetoes.
But the biggest problem is that if Beshear is governor, he'll quit defending Kentucky's duly-enacted laws in court.
The goal behind the passage of anti-abortion laws in Kentucky and many other states is to eventually get a case before the Supreme Court that could overturn Roe v. Wade and allow individual states to restrict or prohibit abortion as they see fit. With the current makeup of the court leaning toward a conservative originalist philosophy, and with the next vacancy most likely to come with a liberal justice's departure, abortion foes see their best opportunity ever to reach their goal.
This has its best chance of happening if a number of cases make their way to the Supreme Court, and that won't happen unless states continue defending their laws as lower courts reach decisions and appeals are filed.
So, when someone tells you that abortion is a federal issue, and state laws on the subject are irrelevant and it's not a proper issue for a state election, they're not being truthful with you. Although the ultimate decision will be made at the federal level, any changes to the current abortion laws will begin with state action. That's why abortion is an important issue in this year's gubernatorial race.
Friday, October 4, 2019
in defense of the baby boomers
It seems I can't go very long these days without seeing scathing criticism of the generation that's come to be known as the baby boomers, or boomers for short.
Anywhere you look, someone is tossing barbs at the boomers. There seems to be a growing sentiment among younger generations that the boomers are at fault for everything that's wrong with the world and in their lives.
I do not write this in self-defense. I was born in December 1961. Although the baby boomer generation is broadly defined as those who were born between 1946 and 1964, I've never regarded myself as a boomer. I always saw them as being older than I was. To me, the boomers were those who were born to families after the fathers returned from World War II. In truth, I don't feel like I fit in with either the boomers or Generation X, which is the group that came after the boomers.
If the Wikipedia entry on baby boomers is to be believed -- and anything posted there should be viewed very skeptically -- you'd think the modern batch of young liberals would be thrilled at how the boomers as portrayed on Wiki blazed the trail for their beliefs. The counterculture movement, drifting away from religion, acceptance of deviances from societal norms -- all of these things that are being embraced by millennials were pioneered by the boomers.
The truth is that instead of being villainized, boomers should have the eternal gratitude of the younger generations. Most every modern convenience that these younger people enjoy and take for granted today was developed or perfected by the boomers. The standard of living they're used to wouldn't exist if not for their elders, the boomers.
When pressed why they hate or resent boomers, many young people will provide some reason that won't hold water. They can't provide specifics, and when they try to, their premise is faulty.
The best thing I can think of is they resent boomers for living longer, working longer, and keeping jobs that they feel like they're entitled to. They want boomers to retire or die so they can take over. They aren't content to wait their turn in the generational hierarchy. They want the boomers to go away so they can have their homes and their careers and their power as a voting bloc.
I'm still waiting to hear someone, anyone, provide a logical reason about why they don't like boomers, or what boomers have done to them. I'm appreciative of the boomers for the technological advances they developed and what they've contributed to society, even if Bill Clinton was their choice for president twice in the 1990s.
In the meantime, don't expect me to take your blanket generational condemnations seriously. It just makes you appear ungrateful and disrespectful.
Anywhere you look, someone is tossing barbs at the boomers. There seems to be a growing sentiment among younger generations that the boomers are at fault for everything that's wrong with the world and in their lives.
I do not write this in self-defense. I was born in December 1961. Although the baby boomer generation is broadly defined as those who were born between 1946 and 1964, I've never regarded myself as a boomer. I always saw them as being older than I was. To me, the boomers were those who were born to families after the fathers returned from World War II. In truth, I don't feel like I fit in with either the boomers or Generation X, which is the group that came after the boomers.
If the Wikipedia entry on baby boomers is to be believed -- and anything posted there should be viewed very skeptically -- you'd think the modern batch of young liberals would be thrilled at how the boomers as portrayed on Wiki blazed the trail for their beliefs. The counterculture movement, drifting away from religion, acceptance of deviances from societal norms -- all of these things that are being embraced by millennials were pioneered by the boomers.
The truth is that instead of being villainized, boomers should have the eternal gratitude of the younger generations. Most every modern convenience that these younger people enjoy and take for granted today was developed or perfected by the boomers. The standard of living they're used to wouldn't exist if not for their elders, the boomers.
When pressed why they hate or resent boomers, many young people will provide some reason that won't hold water. They can't provide specifics, and when they try to, their premise is faulty.
The best thing I can think of is they resent boomers for living longer, working longer, and keeping jobs that they feel like they're entitled to. They want boomers to retire or die so they can take over. They aren't content to wait their turn in the generational hierarchy. They want the boomers to go away so they can have their homes and their careers and their power as a voting bloc.
I'm still waiting to hear someone, anyone, provide a logical reason about why they don't like boomers, or what boomers have done to them. I'm appreciative of the boomers for the technological advances they developed and what they've contributed to society, even if Bill Clinton was their choice for president twice in the 1990s.
In the meantime, don't expect me to take your blanket generational condemnations seriously. It just makes you appear ungrateful and disrespectful.
Friday, September 27, 2019
Making the messenger the message: The left's new tactic to avoid scrutiny
Until impeachment hearings became the flavor of the day, earlier in the week you couldn't avoid Greta Thunberg even if you wanted to.
The 16-year-old Swedish girl became the left's latest new hero when she gave a speech on the "impending climate crisis" (quotes intentional) at the United Nations. She sounded the usual Chicken Little sky-is-falling alarms about how we are all doomed unless we go back to an 18th Century way of life, and kill all the evil old people -- especially the white male power structure -- who are intentionally trying to kill her and all the young people because they're greedy and uncaring.
She is the perfect person for the global warming freak-outers to put on display as their mouthpiece. You can't dare challenge her, because if you do, you're attacking an autistic child. It doesn't matter that her ideas are nuttier than the proverbial squirrel droppings. We're big, bad bullies because we dare to disagree with her.
Seems like the left has found the perfect way to marry the message and the messenger. Send sympathetic personalities, preferably young people, front and center to spread their gospel and then attack the motives of their critics and accuse them of bullying children.
Although Thunberg is the most recent example of this, she is by no means the first. She's following in the footsteps of David Hogg, the Florida student whose school was the site of a mass shooting, who became a gun control advocate after that tragedy.
No one disputes that Hogg grieves over the loss of his schoolmates, that he was impacted tremendously by what happened, and that no one wants to ever see that event repeated. But many of us disagree with the solutions he's put forth. And when we say that, we're labeled as insensitive and uncaring adults with no compassion for a kid's grief.
Funny how that didn't work for Kyle Kashuv, isn't it? Kashuv was equally impacted by the Parkland massacre, yet he didn't become a vocal anti-Second Amendment advocate. He championed sensible, constitutional changes to ensure school safety while preserving a vital God-given right enshrined in the Constitution. But since Kashuv's narrative doesn't mesh with the left's priorities, he became fair game for criticism.
And this whole "you shouldn't be critical of children" narrative? It's also funny how that went out the window when Nick Sandmann and his fellow Covington Catholic students were unfairly and untruthfully maligned for something they didn't do. Liberals wasted no time calling Sandmann a racist and a bully merely because one photograph, captured at a moment in time when a certain look appeared on his face for the fraction of a second it took for the camera shutter to open and close. And even when the subsequent facts proved the young northern Kentucky kids did absolutely nothing wrong, the falsehoods continued, even from some of the nation's biggest media outlets.
When the difference between the reactions to Thunberg and Sandmann is pointed out, the left shrieks, "false equivalency." Oh really? How so? Was Sandmann criticized merely because he's white, male, and Catholic? Yes, he was. Is Thunberg being criticized for being young, female, and autistic? Nope.
Maybe there is a false equivalency there, but not the way liberals would like to proclaim.
Expect more of this to continue. Anytime liberalism needs to make a public point, be it climate change or gun control or whatever, expect a sympathetic young spokesperson to be paraded in front of the cameras, and then anyone who criticizes their message will be accused of hating the messenger.
In the meantime, conservatives must continue to make their points known, even if we take heat for it. We have to challenge the left's policy proposals to preserve our republic and our way of life.
The 16-year-old Swedish girl became the left's latest new hero when she gave a speech on the "impending climate crisis" (quotes intentional) at the United Nations. She sounded the usual Chicken Little sky-is-falling alarms about how we are all doomed unless we go back to an 18th Century way of life, and kill all the evil old people -- especially the white male power structure -- who are intentionally trying to kill her and all the young people because they're greedy and uncaring.
She is the perfect person for the global warming freak-outers to put on display as their mouthpiece. You can't dare challenge her, because if you do, you're attacking an autistic child. It doesn't matter that her ideas are nuttier than the proverbial squirrel droppings. We're big, bad bullies because we dare to disagree with her.
Seems like the left has found the perfect way to marry the message and the messenger. Send sympathetic personalities, preferably young people, front and center to spread their gospel and then attack the motives of their critics and accuse them of bullying children.
Although Thunberg is the most recent example of this, she is by no means the first. She's following in the footsteps of David Hogg, the Florida student whose school was the site of a mass shooting, who became a gun control advocate after that tragedy.
No one disputes that Hogg grieves over the loss of his schoolmates, that he was impacted tremendously by what happened, and that no one wants to ever see that event repeated. But many of us disagree with the solutions he's put forth. And when we say that, we're labeled as insensitive and uncaring adults with no compassion for a kid's grief.
Funny how that didn't work for Kyle Kashuv, isn't it? Kashuv was equally impacted by the Parkland massacre, yet he didn't become a vocal anti-Second Amendment advocate. He championed sensible, constitutional changes to ensure school safety while preserving a vital God-given right enshrined in the Constitution. But since Kashuv's narrative doesn't mesh with the left's priorities, he became fair game for criticism.
And this whole "you shouldn't be critical of children" narrative? It's also funny how that went out the window when Nick Sandmann and his fellow Covington Catholic students were unfairly and untruthfully maligned for something they didn't do. Liberals wasted no time calling Sandmann a racist and a bully merely because one photograph, captured at a moment in time when a certain look appeared on his face for the fraction of a second it took for the camera shutter to open and close. And even when the subsequent facts proved the young northern Kentucky kids did absolutely nothing wrong, the falsehoods continued, even from some of the nation's biggest media outlets.
When the difference between the reactions to Thunberg and Sandmann is pointed out, the left shrieks, "false equivalency." Oh really? How so? Was Sandmann criticized merely because he's white, male, and Catholic? Yes, he was. Is Thunberg being criticized for being young, female, and autistic? Nope.
Maybe there is a false equivalency there, but not the way liberals would like to proclaim.
Expect more of this to continue. Anytime liberalism needs to make a public point, be it climate change or gun control or whatever, expect a sympathetic young spokesperson to be paraded in front of the cameras, and then anyone who criticizes their message will be accused of hating the messenger.
In the meantime, conservatives must continue to make their points known, even if we take heat for it. We have to challenge the left's policy proposals to preserve our republic and our way of life.
Thursday, September 26, 2019
Truth becomes a victim in Kentucky governor's race
It's often said that truth becomes the first casualty in a political contest. That's certainly been the case in this year's gubernatorial race in Kentucky. And unsurprisingly, most of the untruths are coming from one side.
The recent ad put forth by Democrat Andy Beshear claiming that Gov. Matt Bevin's budgeting puts Kentucky schools in danger of closing was an outrageous over-the-top untruth. No serious person can believe that scare tactic, but it panders to much of Beshear's teacher union support.
And it's from them that one of the biggest falsehoods of the political season has generated and spread.
Many Bevin opponents like to say that he called teachers "thugs," and that's just one of many insults he's tossed their way as they protest state pension reform measures that are actually designed to preserve the retirement benefits of Kentucky teachers. It makes for a nice soundbite, but the fact of that matter is that it's not really what happened. The allegation has a hint of the truth in it, but it's the full story that's not being told.
It's time to tell it.
When pension reform was first brought up, prior to a never-called special General Assembly session in 2017, and again during the regular 2018 session, some teachers protested. The Kentucky Education Association steadfastly opposed some of the recommendations.
One of the leading proponents of the reform measure, and one of its strongest backers in the legislature, was now-retired Sen. Joe Bowen from Owensboro. Bowen is the former owner -- emphasis on former -- of the Bowen Tire stores in Daviess County and other locations in that area of the state.
When the pension reform proposal was up for consideration in the legislature, a number of teachers picketed and protested outside Bowen Tire. When that happened, Bevin rightly called it a "thug mentality."
Let that sink in. Teachers -- educated people responsible for educating our children -- were picketing the actions of a legislator at a business he didn't even own.
The KEA has long done a disservice to its members. It promotes positions to preserve its own organizational power at the expense of education improvements in this state. By perpetuating this exaggerated falsehood, they do themselves no favors.
To its credit, the Beshear campaign isn't including that statement Bevin made about the "thug mentality" in its ad that seeks to use some of Bevin's own statements against him. Someone there must be aware of the reality of the situation to know the truth behind the matter.
But the ad does use another statement Bevin made about comparing those protesting efforts to save public pensions to those who are drowning but fight their would-be rescuers.
Long before he made that statement, I made a different but equally fitting analogy. I compared the resistance to pension reform to trying to give a cat a pill. The cat may be sick, and it may need medicine, but it will fight, bite, and scratch you if you try to medicate it. The cat doesn't know that you're trying to help it. It just doesn't want you to give it the pill.
(Full disclosure: As a state employee, I am impacted by decisions on pension reform, and I appreciate the efforts to ensure that the pension I was promised when I started my job will be there should I ever be able to retire.)
There are legitimate reasons for which one can criticize Bevin. I don't agree with the administration on every issue. But a blanket statement that the governor called all teachers "thugs" is not one of them. That didn't happen. His statement was targeted at a specific group of people who couldn't even be bothered to find out if the person they were mad at actually owned the business where they were protesting. And he didn't call them "thugs," he said they were displaying a "thug mentality."
This may be the first time some people have ever heard this truth. It's doubtful they'll change their beliefs or behavior or statements, but at least now they know. If they continue to repeat an untruth, it's on them.
The recent ad put forth by Democrat Andy Beshear claiming that Gov. Matt Bevin's budgeting puts Kentucky schools in danger of closing was an outrageous over-the-top untruth. No serious person can believe that scare tactic, but it panders to much of Beshear's teacher union support.
And it's from them that one of the biggest falsehoods of the political season has generated and spread.
Many Bevin opponents like to say that he called teachers "thugs," and that's just one of many insults he's tossed their way as they protest state pension reform measures that are actually designed to preserve the retirement benefits of Kentucky teachers. It makes for a nice soundbite, but the fact of that matter is that it's not really what happened. The allegation has a hint of the truth in it, but it's the full story that's not being told.
It's time to tell it.
When pension reform was first brought up, prior to a never-called special General Assembly session in 2017, and again during the regular 2018 session, some teachers protested. The Kentucky Education Association steadfastly opposed some of the recommendations.
One of the leading proponents of the reform measure, and one of its strongest backers in the legislature, was now-retired Sen. Joe Bowen from Owensboro. Bowen is the former owner -- emphasis on former -- of the Bowen Tire stores in Daviess County and other locations in that area of the state.
When the pension reform proposal was up for consideration in the legislature, a number of teachers picketed and protested outside Bowen Tire. When that happened, Bevin rightly called it a "thug mentality."
Let that sink in. Teachers -- educated people responsible for educating our children -- were picketing the actions of a legislator at a business he didn't even own.
The KEA has long done a disservice to its members. It promotes positions to preserve its own organizational power at the expense of education improvements in this state. By perpetuating this exaggerated falsehood, they do themselves no favors.
To its credit, the Beshear campaign isn't including that statement Bevin made about the "thug mentality" in its ad that seeks to use some of Bevin's own statements against him. Someone there must be aware of the reality of the situation to know the truth behind the matter.
But the ad does use another statement Bevin made about comparing those protesting efforts to save public pensions to those who are drowning but fight their would-be rescuers.
Long before he made that statement, I made a different but equally fitting analogy. I compared the resistance to pension reform to trying to give a cat a pill. The cat may be sick, and it may need medicine, but it will fight, bite, and scratch you if you try to medicate it. The cat doesn't know that you're trying to help it. It just doesn't want you to give it the pill.
(Full disclosure: As a state employee, I am impacted by decisions on pension reform, and I appreciate the efforts to ensure that the pension I was promised when I started my job will be there should I ever be able to retire.)
There are legitimate reasons for which one can criticize Bevin. I don't agree with the administration on every issue. But a blanket statement that the governor called all teachers "thugs" is not one of them. That didn't happen. His statement was targeted at a specific group of people who couldn't even be bothered to find out if the person they were mad at actually owned the business where they were protesting. And he didn't call them "thugs," he said they were displaying a "thug mentality."
This may be the first time some people have ever heard this truth. It's doubtful they'll change their beliefs or behavior or statements, but at least now they know. If they continue to repeat an untruth, it's on them.
Wednesday, September 25, 2019
The swamp won't let itself be drained
There's a reason crowds chanted "Drain the Swamp!" as Donald Trump was campaigning for president in 2016. It's the same reason Trump's supporters broke into shouts of "Lock Her Up!" when he referenced Hillary Clinton.
Trump voters were, and remain, tired of so many blatant violations of law and policy going unpunished. Hillary's use of a private unsecured email server for sensitive communications when she was secretary of state was an egregious no-no, yet the FBI had only paid lip service to prosecuting her while in reality giving her a pass.
Everything that has come out on the conduct of so many officials in the FBI and the Department of Justice continues to spark outrage among those who are looking for real justice to be done, yet so far, no progress has been made. There's a rogue's gallery a mile wide here -- Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, etc. -- yet other than for some of them losing their jobs, none have suffered any real punishment for their misdeeds.
Even the modest efforts to move forward with inquiries by the current administration have been met with criticism. "You just don't investigate your political opponents," liberals admonished Trump.
Well, you do if they've done something wrong.
That's what's so amazing about the Trump-Ukraine deal. This isn't a case of Trump trying to take down a potential political rival. It's a perfect example of him trying to discover and punish corruption in his predecessor's administration.
Anyone notice that as soon as Nancy Pelosi announced an impeachment inquiry into Trump, the press quit talking about Biden's dirty dealings with Ukraine by holding American aid hostage until the prosecutor got fired? This is the real scandal, but impeaching Trump is the shiny object that catches the attention of the media that will be completely in the tank next year for Biden, Bernie, Fauxahontas, or whomever the Democrats nominate.
Truth be told, the media had never given the Biden matter the attention it deserved. It didn't fit their agenda. And now the impeachment inquiry has given the press all the cover it needs to ignore the story. How many people have heard that the "whistleblower" whose turned hearsay into a five-alarm fire is a "never Trumper" liberal with a political vendetta against the president? That's certainly relevant to the discussion, yet there's been barely a mention of it in the media.
Had this story broken when Biden was vice president, would there have been calls for his impeachment? Wait, don't answer. That's a rhetorical question.
Barack Obama continues to make the laughable claim that his administration was scandal-free. For all the criticism of Trump playing fast and loose with the facts, this one's a real doozy. Fast and Furious, Benghazi, Lois Lerner/IRS, overlooking Hillary's security violations, and now Biden strongarming Ukraine to protect his son. Here's an undisputable fact: Obama's presidency makes Trump appear to be living at the foot of the cross.
Jim Comey and Andrew McCabe aren't criminally charged with anything yet. Joe Biden faces no fallout from his acts. Here, folks, is evidence that the swamp protects itself. It doesn't want to be drained. That's why the entrenched interests so bitterly opposed Trump's candidacy. It's why establishment Republicans work so hard against conservative tea party types. Swamp dwellers crave power. They want to be the kings of their playground and don't want to relinquish control. Biden's the quintessential swamp creature. Of course, his fellow swampers are going to rally to his side, distract, deflect, obstruct, and do whatever else they can to turn attention away to him and reflect it back on those who are trying to drain the swamp.
It's why Trump's presidency makes so many in both parties so uncomfortable. There's a new way of doing things and they feel threatened by it. They're used to tradition and convention and precedent and getting their own way. Trump brought a new playbook and a fresh set of rules to Washington. He's not beholden to the old methods. And it frightens them to the point they'll do anything to hang on.
We can't allow the swamp to turn this into a Trump problem. It is first, foremost, and solely, a Biden issue. It's vital we remind the world of this at every opportunity.
Trump voters were, and remain, tired of so many blatant violations of law and policy going unpunished. Hillary's use of a private unsecured email server for sensitive communications when she was secretary of state was an egregious no-no, yet the FBI had only paid lip service to prosecuting her while in reality giving her a pass.
Everything that has come out on the conduct of so many officials in the FBI and the Department of Justice continues to spark outrage among those who are looking for real justice to be done, yet so far, no progress has been made. There's a rogue's gallery a mile wide here -- Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Page, etc. -- yet other than for some of them losing their jobs, none have suffered any real punishment for their misdeeds.
Even the modest efforts to move forward with inquiries by the current administration have been met with criticism. "You just don't investigate your political opponents," liberals admonished Trump.
Well, you do if they've done something wrong.
That's what's so amazing about the Trump-Ukraine deal. This isn't a case of Trump trying to take down a potential political rival. It's a perfect example of him trying to discover and punish corruption in his predecessor's administration.
Anyone notice that as soon as Nancy Pelosi announced an impeachment inquiry into Trump, the press quit talking about Biden's dirty dealings with Ukraine by holding American aid hostage until the prosecutor got fired? This is the real scandal, but impeaching Trump is the shiny object that catches the attention of the media that will be completely in the tank next year for Biden, Bernie, Fauxahontas, or whomever the Democrats nominate.
Truth be told, the media had never given the Biden matter the attention it deserved. It didn't fit their agenda. And now the impeachment inquiry has given the press all the cover it needs to ignore the story. How many people have heard that the "whistleblower" whose turned hearsay into a five-alarm fire is a "never Trumper" liberal with a political vendetta against the president? That's certainly relevant to the discussion, yet there's been barely a mention of it in the media.
Had this story broken when Biden was vice president, would there have been calls for his impeachment? Wait, don't answer. That's a rhetorical question.
Barack Obama continues to make the laughable claim that his administration was scandal-free. For all the criticism of Trump playing fast and loose with the facts, this one's a real doozy. Fast and Furious, Benghazi, Lois Lerner/IRS, overlooking Hillary's security violations, and now Biden strongarming Ukraine to protect his son. Here's an undisputable fact: Obama's presidency makes Trump appear to be living at the foot of the cross.
Jim Comey and Andrew McCabe aren't criminally charged with anything yet. Joe Biden faces no fallout from his acts. Here, folks, is evidence that the swamp protects itself. It doesn't want to be drained. That's why the entrenched interests so bitterly opposed Trump's candidacy. It's why establishment Republicans work so hard against conservative tea party types. Swamp dwellers crave power. They want to be the kings of their playground and don't want to relinquish control. Biden's the quintessential swamp creature. Of course, his fellow swampers are going to rally to his side, distract, deflect, obstruct, and do whatever else they can to turn attention away to him and reflect it back on those who are trying to drain the swamp.
It's why Trump's presidency makes so many in both parties so uncomfortable. There's a new way of doing things and they feel threatened by it. They're used to tradition and convention and precedent and getting their own way. Trump brought a new playbook and a fresh set of rules to Washington. He's not beholden to the old methods. And it frightens them to the point they'll do anything to hang on.
We can't allow the swamp to turn this into a Trump problem. It is first, foremost, and solely, a Biden issue. It's vital we remind the world of this at every opportunity.
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