Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Papa's got a brand new blog

1 comments
Ben Holder:
"Here is what the "catalyst for Glenwood's emergence as a vibrant neighborhood" looks like today.

"... Notice the dead puppy with the beer can on its head."


And with that, Ben transitions from The Troublemaker to Action Glenwood. I expect big things.

Calling it "logic" is generous

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"Yow conveniently ignores the fact that Greensboro residents pay city AND county taxes. They are as much residents of Guilford County as someone who lives in an unincorporated area."
Allen Johnson on Guilford County Commissioner Billy Yow's "logic" in explaining his understanding of city library usage.

TV Sucks. A worse viewing experience couldn't be conceived if annoyance was the goal.

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"No Country for Old Men" was on USA Network last night. Its showing may have been the final straw in getting me to dump cable and completely revamp the way I watch TV.

I had seen the movie in the theater. It is fantastic and I was looking forward to seeing it again. USA made it unwatchable. I'm not kidding or exaggerating, they showed ten minutes of movie interrupted by five full minutes of commercials throughout. Really. I timed it.

Is this how we are expected to watch TV?

I pay Time Warner Cable $45 a month for "TV" -- and for what, really? Someone else's programing selections and the "privilege" of watching too many annoying commercials. Networks now even seem to think they can subject us to a multitude of infuriating animated promotions running while the programs are on screen. A worse viewing experience couldn't be conceived if annoyance was the goal. And I am to pay for this crap? No, dammit! Such disregard for the viewer will have consequences.

My brother just signed up for Clear's unlimited 4G wireless internet access and he anticipates that, with a combination of web video, Roku and Netflix, he will have a superior customized TV experience. I may give it a try too; after all, it couldn't be any worse.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

What do I know?

4 comments
I am not an expert and they say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but doesn't it look like the US stock markets are set for a plunge in January? Doesn't the historical price to earning ratio alone suggest a correction?

Sunday, December 27, 2009

What was Mayor Knight's campaign slogan?

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I remember seeing Bill Knight campaign signs with the slogan "Go Forward Greensboro."

The (Greensboro, NC) News & Record, Yes! Weekly and blog commenters reported Knight's slogan as "Go Forward Greensboro."

So why does News & Record columnist Jeri Rowe report Knight's "slogan proclaimed: Enough Is Enough?" Did I miss something?

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Food court find: M & M's Soul Food

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Against my better judgment, I went to Four Seasons Mall yesterday. I don't know why I dread it so. I find it enjoyable once I get there despite my preconceived expectations. Yeah, noisy and crowded, but so what? That's part of the experience.

Anyway, hunger hit and I made my way to the food court. I perused the chains but settled on what stood out as an apparently independently owned shop, M & M's Soul Food -- back in the corner, near the game room.

From among the various baked chicken entrees, fried fish and other meats and vegetables, I chose meatloaf, yams and cabbage. They were really good. The meatloaf was covered with a layer of sweet congealed ketchup, just the way I like it, and the yams, just firm enough, were bursting with nutmeg flavor. The cabbage was the least flavorful, but added vinegar perked them up. Lemonade to drink.

Bonus: Served with a sincere "Thank you, enjoy" by a multi-tattooed linebacker in a muscle shirt.

People wanted a white mayor? Rumors of rumors of whispers overheard.

6 comments
Once again, The (Greensboro, NC) News & Record's Jeri Rowe comes through as a stand up guy, taking his time to answer my question of how he can substantiate, in writing about why voters elected Bill Knight over incumbent Mayor Johnson, that "they wanted someone white, not black ." A stand up guy; a reporter with room for improvement.

I'll let you read Jeri's response yourself, in its entirety below, but I wish Jeri would think a little about what he did here. He justifies what he wrote by saying that people he talked to off the record said they heard that voters wanted a white mayor. Leaving aside the fact that asking someone to go on record makes them accountable--assures that they give some thought to whether or not what they are saying is really accurate and whether or not they want to be accountable for it--in this case, as you'll see when you read Jeri's explanation, people are not even relaying their own opinions anonymously. They are, as unnamed sources, saying that they heard something from other unnamed sources. Third-hand information: A reporter reporting what other people said they heard. Impossible to independently verify. That is a really low standard, in my opinion.

In fact, Jeri's use of anonymous sources in this manner is contrary to his editor's views on anonymous sources. His web site does not even allow them. Editor John Robinson having written:
"I don't like anonymous comments, as I've said many times before. I think people should be accountable for what they say, especially when what they say attacks someone else."
And now, Jeri's explanation:
====================
After the election, I knew I wanted to do two Sunday columns looking at the new mayor and old mayor. Basically, I wanted to find out what Yvonne Johnson was going to do next because we hadn't reported that, and I wanted to find out where Bill Knight wanted to take the city because now he’s become the symbolic face of Greensboro. 

That was the basic premise.

Now, you question my sentence "And according to some, they wanted someone white, not black.'' Let me break down why I wrote that.

What piqued my curiosity was something Gerald Witt, one of our staff writers, wrote for our Nov. 5 issue, two days after the election. He crunched numbers and looked at how Knight won. His story was under the headline, "Western, northwest turnout pushed Knight's mayoral win.''

Near the end of Gerald's piece was a quote from Sharon Hightower, who leads Guilford Unity Effort, that caught my attention. Here's what it said.

Sharon Hightower, who leads the Guilford Unity Effort, sees the election result as a local backlash against local leadership.

The mayor, schools superintendent, commissioners chairman and city manager are black.

"Too much African American leadership in this town prompted people to go out and remove and eradicate what they may have viewed as too much liberalism," said Hightower, who did not work on Johnson's campaign but backed her candidacy.

"I can't blame it on anything other than we didn't get out to vote," Hightower said.

I had heard that, too, around town while I was on assignment, at church, at school and in my neighborhood. Still, I wanted to check it out for myself to see if that sentiment was indeed true.

With this piece on Yvonne Johnson, I had a list of people I called for background. These were community leaders who I asked the question, “How did Yvonne do?’’ Now, when I ask people to talk for background, I tell them I won’t quote them and I won’t use their names. I just need them to give me guidance, some insight of what they see and believe.

Why? I want them to speak freely, without any worry of feeling the need to be politically correct. So, in thoseround of interviews last week, I asked them about that statement from Sharon Hightower. And yes, they said, they had heard that, too. Then, I asked them to expound on it.

That’s where that sentence came from “And according to some, they wanted someone white, not black.’’

I talked to four people, all of whom are community leaders. I can’t give you their names because, in discussions for background, I promised them I won’t give it out because I want them to speak freely. I know that frustrates you, Roch. But I won’t. I’ve done these kind of background discussions for two decades as a journalist, and I have to stand by my promise to them.

Here’s what I will say. Some of the folks I had talked to for the Sunday piece on Yvonne Johnson were some of the same I talked to two years ago when I did what I call the trust-funk series.

Some quick background. It was the idea of my boss, John Robinson. He wanted me to do a piece that looked at “How can GSO heal?”’ I admit. I thought it was a crock, and I told him so.

Then, two days after talking to few folks face to face about what John thought. I came back and told John that he was onto something. I spent six weeks on that, talking to 44 people – 43 of them face to face in an hour to two-hour interviews in places where they felt comfortable – to get a handle on this healing thing.

None of them were politicians, except one, the new mayor, Yvonne Johnson. They all were ministers, neighborhood activists, business owners, non-profit leaders, longtime residents, etc. Black, white. Young, old. Conservative. Liberal. I also pored through all those surveys about how we don’t have trust, yada, yada – and used those figures to help anchor a Sunday piece that started a four-part series that ran in December 2007.

I mention this because that’s why Sharon’s quote caught my attention.

After 20 years as a journalist in central North Carolina, I’ve come to believe we as a city obsess on race too much at times. But Greensboro’s civil rights history – from the Levi Coffin to the founding of N.C. A&T and Bennett College to the Greensboro Four to the Magnolia House – helps shape the city we live in, and it’s part of who we are.

Also, as we all know, the discussion of race in Greensboro is always thorny, and I believe when we raise the issue of race it can divide us as a city. And I wanted to make sure it fit because I’ve heard it, too – “There they go again at the N&R. Playing the race card.’’

I say all this because I didn’t come to that sentence lightly. And I wanted to make sure I had fully vetted it and asked the main question to myself – “Is it relevant?’’ before I wrote anything.

But in this case, I believe it was relevant. Not to stir things up. Just to state what I had found out after talking to folks after reading the statement in Gerald’s piece. Because I believe we as journalists have a responsibility to report what we find out – no matter how disturbing – with the idea of how it can help generate discussion, provoke thought, even stir debate into how to make the city we live a better place to live.

I truly believe that.

For what it’s worth.

Roch, hope this helps.

Jeri 

Video: Neighbors' luminaries raise money for American Cancer Society

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As seen on Greensboro 101: Greensboro residents Parker Deaton and Tyler Deaton narrate a very nicely put together video by Storytellernc about how a Greensboro neighborhood, Boy Scout troop 104, the Westminster Presbyterian Youth Group and the Greensboro Day Girl Scouts all came together this year to make luminaries to raise over $2,500 for the American Cancer Society in memory of Parker and Tyler's grandmother.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Council member Perkins texting developer during council meetings

14 comments
Keith Brown of Triad Watch posts a series of text messages from City Council representative Robbie Perkins to developer Roy Carrol, apparently sent during a city council meeting. Keith asks if this is proper. It is not. Not this way.

The purpose of public meetings is to have a transparent view of the workings of our government. Debate and discussion are to happen in the open so that we can evaluate the judgment of our elected officials. Text messages amount to secret whispers -- ideas and information shared away from public view. That is antithetical to democracy.

On the other hand, a council person might find it beneficial to use text or email to quickly reach out to an expert or authoritative source for some quick information that can inform the discussion underway. There would certainly be nothing wrong with checking Orbitz to see if someone's claim about hotel rates in Greensboro was accurate or not; similarly, it might make sense for a representative to seek some information from an informed individual in real time.

Not withstanding the possible distraction from the discussion in the room, if council people find it beneficial to have electronic communications during meetings, those communications should conform to the spirit of an open meeting, i.e. they should be public and the parties involved should be readily identifiable.

There are certainly ways to do that. A Twitter page or blog can accommodate the public access. It should happen that way or not at all.

On the proposed hotel: Let the spinning begin

3 comments
Sigh.

Here we go again. People in positions of power and influence should be beacons of truth shepharding us to good thinking as we consider the proposal for a hotel at Elm and Lee Streets downtown. Instead we have the tiresome usual hyperbole and misinformation:
  • The (Greensboro, NC) News & Record's Doug Clark insisting that their are "established hotels not far away already catering to well-heeled clientele." He offers as examples, O'Henry Hotel, 3.5 miles away, Proximity Hotel, 4 miles away, and Grandover, a mere 19 miles away. Not far away, indeed.

  • Then we have John Shoffner, the city’s economic development program manager, disputing the hotel proponents' expected room rates, saying, "it appears that the average daily rate at which a prudent hotel operator could successfully market upscale hotel rooms ranges between $116 and $152 a night."

    Orbitz says otherwise. Rates at Greensboro's upscale hotels are consistently well above $200 per night, just as the proponents said and contrary to the City official.

There are plenty of serious questions in need of complete and accurate information in considering the costs and benefits of this project. It would be a nice change if Greensboro's decision-makers and opinion-shapers could approach this with honesty and a desire to discern the objective realities. I'm not hopeful.

Congratulations Don Vaughan

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[Disclaimer: Don Vaughan is a web site design client of this blog's author.]

Congratulations to North Carolina state Senator Don Vaughan of Greensboro. According to Doug Clark, Don received a Sunshine Award from Democracy North Carolina for "exceptional compliance with campaign finance reporting requirements."

"That we still wallow in the same, lame, mundane stories year in and year out is an industry-wide shame."

0 comments
Leave it to a TV news videographer to summarize local holiday TV news stories with "ten pieces of holiday flotsam."

For web designers and their customers: Cross browser/cross platform web page previewer

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Whether you are a fellow web site designer or someone getting a web site designed and you want to make sure that your site will look good on any computer platform (Mac, PC) in any web browser (various versions of Firefox, Safari, Internet Explorer), here is a fabulous tool from Adobe Labs that gives you a preview of a web page in various user configurations.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Question for Jeri Rowe

1 comments
I emailed the following to Jeri Rowe this morning.
-----------------

Dear Jeri,

In your recent column in the (Greensboro, NC) News & Record, you wrote this about the recent city council elections:
"So, voters wanted change. They wanted new leadership. And according to some, they wanted someone white, not black ."
Who are the "some" who said that voters wanted "someone white, not black?"

You have previously told me you prefer phone converstations to email, but please reply by email if you can so that I may post your reply word-for-word on my blog.

Cordially,
Roch

Friday, December 18, 2009

Yule Log (with director's commentary)

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Hmmm.

American Hebrew Academy Toy Drive - Over 1000 Gifts Collected!

0 comments
As seen on Greensboro101.
"The mission is simple, we seek to provide hope in times of uncertainty, joy in times of struggle, and holiday spirit in times when the spirits of many are down and out. Were making a difference together"
 

The Coalition to Unchain Dogs

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As seen on Greensboro101.

"The Coalition to Unchain Dogs is a non-profit founded by Amanda Arrington in Durham, North Carolina in 2007. The Coalition has expanded into Raleigh, Charlotte, Greensboro, NC and Richmond, VA. In less than three years, volunteers of this organization have freed over 400 dogs from their chains by building free fences."

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Plagiarism at WFMY?

4 comments
There is an article on WFMY's Digtriad today about an accident involving Cincinnati Bengal's football player Chris Henry (who has now died). The author of the WFMY piece* is identified as Matt McKinney (his name hyperlinks to an email address at wfmy.gannet.com), but his story is identical to a story by AP sports writer Mike Cranston.

* UPDATE: The story on WFMY's site has changed. The original, as it appeared at the time of this post, is here.

Kilmer updated: 'I think that I shall never see, a tree in Reedy Fork."

0 comments
With interest rates low and the market good for buyers, we have been causally looking at what the real estate market may offer. The web keeps turning up homes in our price range and size range in Reedy Fork. I would never buy a house there. Why? The development is in the middle of a beautifully forested part of the county but the developers scalped their neighborhood to the ground -- not a tree left standing. It is unbearably ugly.


Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Ugh

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Digby via Lex:
"What this huge electoral mandate and congressional majority have gotten us, then, is basically a deal with the insurance industry to accept 30 million coerced customers in exchange for ending their practice of failing to cover their customers when they get sick — unless they go beyond a “reasonable cap,” of course. (And profits go up!)"

Health care reform is making me sick (NC Senator Kay Hagan doing her part)

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I had high hopes for health care reform. It was a major consideration in my voting decisions last year. I've followed the discussions and expressed my opinions to my elected representatives. Despite the explanation that what we are likely now to get is better than nothing, I think not. A cost/benefit evaluation leads me to think it's better that nothing get passed rather than this crippled-by-compromise junk accurately described by Lex Alexander as reform that:

  • Mandates that every American buy expensive insurance from private companies without the choice of a public option and lets the IRS fine you if you don’t
  • Severely taxes middle-class health care plans, rather than wealthy individuals
  • Increases insurance premiums about $1,000 a year
  • Increases health care costs
  • Continues to exempt health-insurance companies from antitrust laws, inhibiting competition
  • Provides a sweet deal for pharmaceutical manufacturers while denying the government the ability to negotiate for lower drug prices for Medicare, something Democrats actually promised three years ago.
  • Apparently won’t let the government import drugs from cheaper foreign sources. I’m told my own junior senator, Kay Hagan, was arguing tonight that this was a “safety” issue, which must come as a surprise to the dozens of other countries that do this every day.
  • Grants monopolies on new biologic drugs so they will never become generics
  • Offers NO public option
  • Offers NO Medicare expansion, even in return for payment, for 55- to 64-year-olds.
  • Limits insurance-company payouts, contrary to President Obama’s promise in September
  • Raises taxes in January while not beginning benefits until 2014.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Carmany criticized for blogging?

7 comments
From a Joe Killian article:
"Former council member Sandy Carmany was the only one who blogged regularly and was heavily criticized for it before losing an election, [Sue] Polinsky said."
She was? I followed Sandy Carmany's blogging very closely. I do not remember her being criticized, much less "heavily," for blogging. I question whether that is true

"Made in Triad" -- The erasure of Greensboro

4 comments
One of the consequences of our blind acquiescence to the myopic view of professional business recruiters that we are better off as some larger homogeneous ill-defined region is that we no longer acknowledge and promote the identities of the real places in which we live -- we have no sense of place. We have no community in which to take pride anymore.

This (Greensboro, NC) News & Record headline is a good example:
"Holiday stamps made in Triad go world over."
Made in Triad? The stamps were manufactured in Guilford County and designed by a resident of Greensboro Greensboro businessman*. Regionalism doesn't belong in everything, especially at the expense of the hometown newspaper acknowledging its hometown.

With this kind of erasure of place, local media obscure why interesting things happen where they happen, stealing recognition and pride from the places where innovation, education and energy drive progress. Greensboro and Guilford County pay the highest price as acknowledgment of our achievements gets diluted by shared attribution with the hinterlands as supposedly accomplished in the no-place "Triad." And we get it from both ends. When neighboring communities fail to invest in their schools, or to exercise, or to brush their teeth, Greensboro get lumped into headlines about "Dumb kids/Fat people/Lots of cavities... in Triad."

Pick a successful major metropolitan area in the US. Pick any one. Its name will be anchored by a real place. Even if it has some nifty additional descriptor, all grown-up places elevate and acknowledge the lead city or cities. Things that happen in Chicago happen in Chicago--not Ilinwi; Atlanta, in Atlanta--not The Quintcounty Region; Orlando, in Orlando--not TangerineLand.

Let the business recruiters and the government statisticians continue to identify a region called the Triad. It suits their purposes. Local media would do better, both for promoting us to the world and fostering pride at home by referring to the real named places where we live. Congratulations to the Guilford County factory that made the stamps designed by the man from Greensboro. It's a great story for them and for Greater Greensboro.

* A commenter notes that the designer operates a business in Greensboro, but lives in King.

Stoopid youts

7 comments
"Some students believe that World War II was fought after the civil war."
In a rant about how dumb today's youth are, you might want to leave that one off your list.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Greensboro Sports: Aquatics center deficient

2 comments
"If we are going to build an Aquatics Center, let’s get it right. You can’t cut corners and expect to be the best on the East Coast."
Don of GreensboroSports.com takes a close look at the proposed aquatics center and finds it lacking.

Snow in Greensboro

2 comments
As seen on Greensboro101.

I don't know who did this or where exactly, other than it's in Greensboro. But someone made snow yesterday.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

A Christmas memory

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"My daddy was always a big kid when it comes to Christmas. He couldn’t wait for Christmas Day to arrive. I’ve long suspected that if Christmas Day was on December 26th, instead of the 25th, he might just keel over from the pain of waiting just one more day. I just don’t think his heart could of handled it."
 Bill the Blogging Poet remembers his dad.

Shout out to the leaf crew!

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Methodical. Physical. Meticulous. A big thanks for the job you do to the city crews who vacuum up the leaves from our curbs.

Related: An interactive map of where the leaf crews are and where they are headed.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Greensboro: Journalism case study

3 comments
I had a nice interview with UNC Journalism masters candidate Michelle Cerulli this morning. She is working on a project of Greensboro as a study of the influence of alternative media on local journalism.

We talked for over an hour about everything from the interplay of local corporate media and blogs, to the roles of traditional and alternative media in the Wray saga, to the question I found most interesting, "Why this proliferation in Greensboro?"

Michelle says her report will be published on the web and I'll link to it when it is.

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

105.7's Bob and the Showgram: Failure right around the corner

9 comments
This video of some local DJ rednecks being obnoxious, in a Christmas parade, of all places, caught my eye on Greensboro101 this morning. So, as I ran some errands, I thought I'd tune in and check out 105.7's morning show Bob and the Showgram.

What a boring and embarrassingly unfunny crock-o-crap this thing is. Just what is the size of the eating-boogers-is-funny moron market in Greensboro? However minuscule it is, Bob and the Showgram will have it cornered -- until their imminent and prompt failure.

Monday, December 07, 2009

Coliseum Director issues correction: There was no unanimous War Memorial Commission vote in support of the swim center.

0 comments
Tony Wilkins reported that the War Memorial Commission took a vote on December 3rd on supporting the proposed financing scheme for the proposed swim center. It passed 8 to 1.

But Keith of Triadwatch notes in the comments that Coliseum Director Matt Brown, two days prior, told City Councilor Trudy Wade at a public meeting that the War Memorial Commission had voted unanimously in support of the swim center.

Here is a transcript (On video here, starting at the 01:05:00 mark):

==========
Brown: "I can only speak to you of what... my presentation to both the Parks and Recreation Commission and War Memorial Commission were nothing but enthusiastic support, I can say unanimous support because I didn't hear anyone oppose the idea and object it once we described and were clear in the details of what the end product was."

Wade: "So you never took a vote on any of it, you just discussed it. Is that correct?"

B: "On Which group, Trudy?

W: "Either group. Did you ever vote on whether we...?"

B: "The War Memorial Commission voted, I'm not sure we had an actual vote on the Parks and Recreation Commission, I'm not sure there's a member here who could attest that for me, but..."

W: "Well, what was the vote? It was unanimous...

B: "Yes."

W: "...on the War Memorial?

B: "Yes, ma'am."
========

This exchange led me to submit a records request of the City for "all minutes of the War Memorial Commission at which any votes were taken regarding the proposed swim center."

In response to my request, I did not receive any minutes. I did receive a letter, dated today, from Coliseum Director Matt Brown to the City Manager and City Council that reads, in part:
"I incorrectly stated that the War Memorial Commission had held a formal vote in support of the Aquatic Center. I then compounded my error by later stating that I recalled the WMC vote as unanimous."
As much as I despise the hyperbolic BS that too often accompanies the cheerleading for these kinds of public projects, Brown deserves credit for correcting his mistake, publicly, directly and unambiguously.

Thursday, December 03, 2009

Punished for offending?

12 comments
Greensboro blogger Jeff Martin (AKA Fecund Stench) has been charged with annoying someone with email. Why? It is not because he annoyed someone with email. It is because he confronted someone by email, said some things to which she took offense and, in my opinion, probably hit too close to home; she didn't like what was said and found a way to hit back through what I hope will be decided was a misapplication of the law.

Those who are saying that they think Jeff has exhibited objectionable behavior by writing derogatory things are correct. They are wrong, I believe, to leap from that observation to cheering for a successful prosecution of him. Remember, the charge was not for libel, not for defamation, not for threats -- it was for annoying. The "victim" wasn't libeled, wasn't defamed, wasn't threatened and, judging by her replies to the emails in question, she did not seem to even be annoyed, never asking Fec to stop emailing her.

What she was was offended.

We should all think long and hard about whether or not we want offending someone to become criminal in North Carolina.

"Darlin' do not fear what you don't really know"

0 comments
I was in Sisters on Tate Street last night when I heard this Brett Dennen song over the speakers.

"We have nothing to fear from love and committment."

0 comments
Greensboro blogger Gedeon Maheux posts this video of New York State Senator Diane Savino speaking on the subject of gay marriage. As Ged accurately describes it, "this speech is a testament to how common sense, humor and the moral high ground are powerful weapons in the battle against bigotry."

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Erecting Friendly's Santa

0 comments
Found on Greensboro101.

Rumors and whispers substitute for reason and facts among the feeble-minded

1 comments
Did you know there are a couple of cops in Greensboro who have conducted scores of illegal warrantless searches? Neither did I. A supposed leader in our community allegedly whispered that to "substantiate" a point of view.

This kind of whisper with a wink and a nudge is, unfortunately, not uncommon. There is a frothy subcurrent of "discourse" in Greensboro that I find sickening. It involves people wedded to an untenable opinion, unable to convince others with reason and facts of their point of view and yet unwilling to adjust to reality. Instead, they resort to explaining their opinions with rumors of secret evidence -- stuff they earnestly ask us to believe exists but cannot produce for inspection and often have no first-hand knowledge of themselves. "Wait until the tapes come out." "You know it's because she was sleeping with him." "We have information." "If you only knew what I know."

It would be one thing if this crap came from little old ladies around a knitting circle, that it comes from elected officials, newspaper editors, reporters, police officers, preachers and otherwise seemingly intelligent and upstanding people is mind boggling. Please, put up or shut up. I'm willing to follow the facts, but the rumor mongering is despicable.
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