Join us Friday evening, 7:00 PM, January 8 online for Writer's Night Out.
Accepting what is to come
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Karen Luke Jackson will be featured on Writers' Night Out
Join us Friday evening, 7:00 PM, January 8 online for Writer's Night Out.
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
How to make a better year happen
Thanks to Roger Carlton for his informative and interesting articles this past year. He is a columnist for the Graham Star Newspaper.
This has been a difficult year for most folks. The only good news to some is that the year is nearly over.
In a few days, we move on to 2021. We
tend to segment time and history into decades. The Fabulous Fifties and the
Roaring Twenties come to mind. What historians and pundits will call the last
decade will be interesting. How do you find a phrase that melds hope with
despair? That will be the challenge.
This column is about moving forward in a positive manner that will allow us to find emotional peace in difficult times.
Here are a few thoughts that help me to be positive and maintain a sense of balance:
- Who cares if the glass
is half-full or half-empty? The key is which direction it is going. Try to
keep the glass filling up.
- History and its impact
on our lives is like a pendulum on a well-wound clock. The pendulum can only go so far to the right or left until it swings back to the center.
The key is to keep the clock wound up and not let it run down.
- Always tell the truth.
Then you don't have to remember what you said.
- Follow the wisdom of our new Secretary of the Interior Designee Deb Haaland regarding the environment in which we live. Think of the world in terms of the Seven
Generation rule. Make all decisions with the next seven generations in mind. What we do today will impact our descendants whom we will never know.
- Don't try to eat elephants. It can't be done.
- Turn off your devices
and news feeds for at least 30 minutes in the morning, afternoon, and evening. Use the time to think and chill a bit. Whatever riled you up may not be as important later or may change more to your satisfaction in the time it took to relax.
- Schedule only what you can accomplish each day. Not everything can be finished in one day, but progress can be made. Jot down what you haven't finished at the end of the day and walk away. There is no need to obsess over the undone if it is on your "To Do" list for the next morning.
- Learn from the past but don't live in it.
- Read Carlos Castaneda's Journey
to Ixtlan. He profoundly writes "We either make ourselves miserable or we make ourselves strong. The amount of work is the
same."
- Listen to the Bee Gees
wonderful song Words if your challenges seem insurmountable.
"This world has lost its glory. Let's start a brand new story. Now my love, right now. There'll be no other time. And I can
show you how my love." We all need to start a brand new story in some way.
This columnist would be remiss if he did not thank his wife Beth
for her editorial insights. Further thanks go to Glenda Beall for her
being the muse who helped me learn what "Creative Non-fiction" was
all about. Thanks also to Kim Hainge and Jim Kreiner. Their dedication to
the natural wonders of the world in which we live is an inspiration. Finally,
thanks to David Brown, Kevin Hensley and the Graham Star staff for keeping our
local paper alive and remembering that sunshine is always the best
disinfectant.
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Celebrate Christmas 2020
Sunday, December 20, 2020
The power to pardon
By Roger Carlton
The purpose of a Presidential pardon is to restore civil rights
and other privileges of full citizenship such as the right to carry a gun to
felons convicted of federal offenses.
The power to pardon is
provided in Article II Section 2 of the U..S. Constitution. The process is that
an application must be made to the Office of the Pardon Attorney in the
Department of Justice. There are criteria for the pardons to be recommended by
this Office. The President has no mandate to follow those criteria.
President Franklin Roosevelt issued 2,819 pardons during his four terms. President Barack Obama issued 212 pardons. Some pardons have been controversial like President Gerald Ford pardoning former President Richard Nixon. This columnist believes that a deal was brokered by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in order to guarantee Nixon that no prosecution would occur if he resigned. If so, that was a fair trade-off that eventually cost Gerald Ford the next election.
We are now in unchartered territory regarding pardons. There is much speculation that President Trump will pardon himself, family members and other associates as a pre-emptory strike against prosecution after he is out of office. With the Justice Department in shambles in the waning days of the current term, this could happen. It would be a miscarriage of justice and violative of the Rule of Law upon which our democracy is based.
When the Framers of the Constitution wrote the document that both grants and limits the powers of government, they specifically excluded the power of a President to grant a pardon to avoid impeachment. They foresaw a lot of things but did not predict that massive political cash contributions, for example, would be the justification for a pardon.
George Mason was one of the Framers. He worried that the power of the pardon might be abused. Simply stated he worried that "someone of sound character and high intelligence" might not always be elected to the highest office in the land.
Mason argued that "the President ought not have the power of pardoning, because he may frequently pardon crimes that were advised by himself. It may happen, at some future day, that he will establish a monarchy, and destroy the republic. If he has the power of granting pardons before indictment, or conviction, may he not stop inquiry and prevent detection?"
Another Framer, James Madison, argued that Presidential abuse could be met with impeachment. True, but that nuclear option has not worked in the 233 years since the Framers framed.
The next few weeks will be very telling as we learn who will be pardoned. There will no doubt be a hue and a cry over many of the pardons. The journalistic investigations won't be done until after President Trump is out of office. Attorney General Barr is already leaking that he is considering resigning. He has many reasons to do that most of which were self-imposed. Let's be patient as the final weeks of President Trump's extraordinary term run down and hope that any damage done to the Rule of Law can be reversed in the next four years.
Friday, December 11, 2020
Do we need the Electoral College?
![]() |
Roger Carlton, newspaper columnist |
This article first appeared in the Cherokee Scout newspaper published weekly in Murphy, NC/
The debates are debated. The conventions have convened. The election is over. The canvassing boards have canvassed. Frivolous litigation has been adjudicated. Yet we still don’t have a final decision on who our next President will be. Something is wrong with this picture and it is not Hillary’s e-mails or President Trump’s unwillingness to accept reality.
What is wrong is an anachronism that our Founders named the Electoral College.
The Electoral College is made up of 538 members. With the exception of Maine and Nebraska, each state is a winner takes all situation.
Whoever wins in the general election gets all the votes for that state. To win
in the Electoral College, 270 votes are needed. The vote will be held December
14, 2020. That is eight days after the deadline for the states to certify their
elections and more than a month with a lame duck POTUS. If a state doesn’t
certify, the decision goes to Congress so states always meet the deadline to
certify.
The Electoral College origins come from fear by the
Founders that the big population states would overcome the smaller less
populous rural states. That theory certainly bombed in 2016 when some bad
strategy on the part of Hillary Clinton led her to ignore some of the smaller
states and she ended up winning the general election and losing the Electoral
College vote. Winning one and losing the other is not like eating a box of
Cracker Jacks. There is no guaranteed prize for the loser of the Electoral
College vote.
The big population fear was compounded when the Founders
compromised on the slavery issue. Slaves were counted in the population of the
southern states but only 40 percent of the actual number of 400,000 slaves were
included in the count at the time the Founders worked on the Constitution and
the Bill of Rights. That number had grown to nearly 3.5 million by the time the
Civil War ended.
There was great concern that if the slaves were freed and allowed to vote in the future, the numbers would shift in a popular election to give more power to the South.
To avoid this potential from happening, the
Electoral College was originally created to balance the popular election
outcome with an elite process wherein the voters were a small number of
hand-picked folks. After all, why should we trust the unwashed masses to vote
for their President? Let’s control the rabble by setting up a second-tier
process with voters whose numbers and loyalties reflect the distribution of
U.S. Senators and Representatives.
We need to do away with the Electoral College and let the
plurality of votes be the end of the $14 billion dollar exercise in the democracy we call the
2020 Presidential election. That is what was spent on the 2020 election. That
number is appalling.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will win the Electoral College
with 306 votes which is the same number President Trump got in 2016. We already
know the outcome, so why waste the time and money? Let’s move on with bringing our country back together and regaining our leadership role in world events.
There is too much to do to wait even one unnecessary day.
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Places to submit prose and poetry now
This is one we, who live in Appalachia, should try.
Rattle’s Tribute to Appalachian Poets
Our Summer 2021 issue will be dedicated to Appalachian Poets. The poems may be any subject, style, or length, but must be written by poets who themselves identify with Appalachia and were born or have lived in the region for a large portion of their lives. The poems need not be about Appalachia—our goal is to honor these poets by sharing the diverse creative work that they’re producing. Deadline: January 16, 2021.
https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/34382/tribute-to-appalachian-poets
Sunday, December 6, 2020
Write Your Memories into Family Stories
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
Positive Thoughts on the Future
- The younger generations have awakened to their civic responsibility. Whatever the reasons this has happened, they will take over and fix the mistakes that the older folks made. This is our history and it is called the pendulum effect. Whenever we go too far to the right or left, the pendulum swings back to the center.
- We will most likely have a more conservative Supreme Court. Just remember that the Court interprets laws and does not enact laws. It takes years for litigation to make it to the Supreme Court. In most cases, laws are not tossed. Just chipped away at or affirmed regarding finer points. There will be grand arguments to be won and lost. There will be an emotional rough ride but unjust laws are eventually overturned. The key example is Plessy v. Ferguson that said separate but equal schools were legal. Brown v. Board of Education reversed that earlier decision.
- The dreaded liberals and socialists, if they win the contest, will not increase your taxes if you make less than $400,000 per year. They will not take your guns away. Certainly, some fair program that provides medical insurance to everyone, without taking away choice for those that can afford it will be enacted.
- To those that fear four more years, most likely the majority of the House and Senate will be held by the opposing party. That is why the Founders brilliantly adopted a system with the Executive, Legislative and Executive branches keeping each other in check.
- We will deal with climate change, a gradual transition away from fossil fuels and other existential (life threatening) threats. This will happen whether by gradual planned transition or crisis created need. Technology marches on whether we like it or not. If you don't get that, think about Kodak's rejection of the electronic camera because it would take away from their wet film sales.
- The dominance of and failed promise of the social media to educate rather than incite will come under control. We should always reject P.T. Barnum's quote "Nobody ever lost a dollar by underestimating the taste of the American public." The American public has pretty good taste most of the time and the majority does not fall for lunatic conspiracy theories.