"You'll never get ahead if you don't take care of what you have." - Doris Waddell, RIP

The late Ralph E. Williams with "Heidi" - morris mn

The late Ralph E. Williams with "Heidi" - morris mn
Click on the image to read Williams family reflections w/ emphasis on UMM.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Distress over the park and the library?

I took this photo of East Side Park with a wide angle lens. - BW
Why the fuss over certain "frill" issues lately? Why do we have East Side Park as a crux matter? The "preservationists" build this major movement. As if a threat was looming of the park being somehow destroyed! The irony is that the movement arose in response to a proposal to actually improve Morris by doing something new with the park. It's not as if certain people wanted the park wiped out to make way for a commercial purpose. 
Why should be want to discourage "NextGen" which was seeking to be dynamic on behalf of Morris? And for that, they put the wheels in motion for an aggressive "nay" response? I wouldn't blame them if they withdrew permanently. 
The preservationists fight for the park as an "open space." It is true that parks have value as open spaces. But, if that's what really turns you on, walk three or four blocks north of the park and you can look out over all the open space you'll ever want to see. 
By the same token I have always wondered about UMM's policy of requiring parking permits. Goodness there is nothing but wide-open spaces to the east of campus. But UMM would say there's a reason. I heard once it's because UMM does not want students to drive cars. But then, students who do not want to buy a permit will park close to campus and become an annoyance for residents and businesses where they park. 
It was reported to me that students sometimes park at Willie's in the morning and leave their cars there all day. The sanctity of residential neighborhoods can be violated too. 
I imagine the residents around East Side Park develop the same wariness about having lots of activity at the park. I would be sensitive to their argument. Where I live, the tremendous growth of Superior just down the road might be a potential issue because noise does emanate from there. I would not voice any concern at this time. But if the company's growth continues, might be concerning. 
I remember saying to Blaine Hill "what if Superior snakes around behind my neighborhood?" Right now we on Northridge Drive have farm field to the north. I am not seeking to make an issue at the present time. I only bring it up to try to show I'd be sensitive to the concerns of residents who live tightly around East Side Park. 
I remember hearing a smattering of concerns in this vein when the Killoran stage/building was first proposed and developed. Frequent noisy concert events there? It was a legitimate concern. You have to be sensitive to how property owners feel about such things. "A man's home is his castle." 
The threat of noise from the stage has absolutely not been borne out. Mostly the Killoran thing has seen negligible use. The best argument that could have ever been made for it, was in connection to the "old" Prairie Pioneer Days. The original PPD is the stuff merely of history. It was such a grand step forward for this community when it was on. This is not overstatement. I remember well the atmosphere. 
Were the surrounding neighborhoods ever concerned about it? I don't think they were. It was such a wholesome event. And on Saturday night the park had to go dark anyway because the Miss Morris pageant was held at the school. You should know that the pageant was originally at the park, probably should have stayed there. I think that was before the involvement of Miss Minnesota. It was strictly locally organized. 
What was wrong with that? Is Miss Morris still held? I haven't made the rounds for the Morris newspaper since 2006. Increasingly I think such pageants are sexist. This was remedied for a time with the injection of the term "scholarship." "Miss Minnesota Scholarship program." This to make clear at least superficially that it was not an "eye candy" event. I still thought it came away that way. There was a time when America totally accepted such a thing, the Bob Hope sexist days. 
Heck, there was a time when girls athletics did not even exist, right up to around 1970. The year 1970 was also when the Lutheran Church allowed the first woman pastor! Could blow one's mind. I do not forget such things, nor the tragedy of the Vietnam war. 
I began this post by mentioning that Morris has been getting excited by "frill" things. Might we say "de minimis?" So let's cite another one: the library. The library is a "fringe" service, I mean not essential, certainly not in our advanced Internet age. 
It is quaint to think back to when defenders of the "print" media would wring hands and say "not everyone is online." Isn't nearly everyone online now? And there's no limit to what you can access online? C'mon. 
It's tough to question or criticize the public library because the library is like Mom and apple pie. You see young mothers with their children in there. I'm sure it's a costly service. And maybe there is growing sensitivity about that. 
 
Our Morris Public Library
Another kerfuffle 
So at the same time we see the East Side Park preservationists making a big fuss, my goodness we see our Morris Public Library at the vortex of. . .controversy? 
I would argue the library is not worth the trouble. Life would go on fine without it. 
Republicans don't like libraries because libraries leave the door wide open for critical thinking. But that's a matter to discuss separate from what's pertinent now. What's pertinent now is the status of the library director. Hoo boy. And the matter just stretches on and on. 
Aren't city leaders just embarrassed by how the "controversy" reflects the library now? At a certain point couldn't the leaders just say "we're going to end this, whatever it takes." 
Here's from an email I got from a friend the other day:
 
I also don’t understand this Anne Barber thing. Either she is guilty of improprieties or completely innocent and the City Manager has some bug up her butt about Anne, which makes no sense. I thought it was resolved and behind us, but then this meeting came up. So now we wait until August. I wonder if there’s “something in the wood pile,” as Keith D. might say. 
 
I will not explain to you the Keith D. thing. He is a much beloved local resident and amazing with his longevity.
So, there was a meeting on the library director on Tuesday. At the courthouse? Library director appealing her suspension? It appears suspension ought not be her biggest worry. 
Someone sent me a heads-up but I decided not to attend. I have also heard about the meeting after the fact from a friend. This is a different source from the one I just quoted. Guess I'm a little like Woodward and Bernstein! So here goes: 
 
We went to the council hearing that started at 3. The City's attorney and City Manager were very aggressive towards "all of the fraud" perpetrated by Anne. The investigator they hired testified that she couldn't find 67 items on the invoices (she did not let Anne look for them in the library since she was suspended  at that time.)  She had not talked to any of the library staff, either. The CM testified that she believed Anne committed fraud and should be terminated. When it was Anne's turn to testify, she very calmly and thoroughly explained all of the claims against her, including where she had found all of the "missing" items that she had in a box in her office now.  The CM leaned over to a couple of city employees at that statement and they made a beeline to the library to check. Anne's husband Gary followed them and filmed them going through the box in Anne's office. They came back and nothing was said. The meeting went until 7:15 when the City Council was meeting, so it was continued to August 6th.  A decision will be made by the Council at their Aug. 12 meeting. A big deal was made that Anne had ordered personal items using the library's tax exempt number and defrauded the citizens of Morris by using their hard-earned tax money. Anne explained that all of the items she had ordered were for library use, and she had never ordered anything for herself using library funds. I'm sure the City Manager won't address the thousands of dollars in tax funds that the citizens of Morris will have to pay for attorney fees and investigator fees. She had already charged $9000 to the library budget for the first fees due! Anyway, we'll attend the rest of the hearing in August. 
 
Addendum: I hate for this blog post to end on such a dreary note as what you read above. Let's remember when the FFA kids of Morris put up the replica "alfalfa arch" over East 7th Street for Prairie Pioneer Days! I should communicate with Mayor Wohlers. He and I were on the same page for wanting to keep the old Prairie Pioneer Days going. Remember the big Coborn's shopping cart in the parade? Well, Coborn's is gone just like PPD. Legend has it they wanted a liquor license to stay, would have built a nice new store.
 
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Judgmental ways of English teachers

Well, what to write about as we enter the slowest part of the calendar? Maybe time to just write about writing? My old critics would say it's a subject about which I know nothing. How much of a service do "English teachers" provide, really? It's easy to get discouraged in their classes, isn't it? Well, I would not get a unanimous "aye" to that. 
But I do know that the formal instruction of reading and writing can be a downer. It's easy to suggest that English teachers perform in their own little fiefdom as it were. It becomes a world where they learn how to reinforce each other. This is to secure a feeling of job security. It's human nature to want job security. 
How might I support this line of thinking? As a follower of the news I can share on this: A graduate dissertation by Jill Biden came to light. A conservative media personality arranged for an "English teacher" to evaluate it. You know where this is going: all kinds of errors. This led the media personality to conclude in the harshest way that the First Lady was "borderline illiterate." His exact words. This was a Fox News personality who had the 7 p.m. time slot at the time. 
"Borderline illiterate." Oh, I think he said "may be borderline illiterate." Whatever, the crude putdown was obvious. 
Whatever college was in charge of Jill's endeavor, don't you think the college came away quite pleased with her work? Well of course it was impressive, even though it's not going to change the world. And the writing. Since that is the crux topic here, I'll say I sampled a portion and of course it was good. It was easily sufficient to get across her research conclusions. 
Perfect? Oh hell how many of us could write something to the complete satisfaction of "picky English teachers?" Such people operate in a world of rules which subconsciously I guess give them a feeling of power. Power equals job security. Or let's put it this way: the ability to put forward all their rules and be accepted in academic ranks gives their discipline of English continued legitimacy. 
Actually nothing new about this. However, today I think English teachers feel threatened. They may sense that the real world is catching up to their racket. I can point out an excellent example from mass communications. That's a related field, right? Full of teachers who like English teachers press a whole mountain of norms and rules on their students. 
Here's a good example: headline-writing for students considering newspaper work. When you get right down to it, all that matters with headlines is that they communicate effectively. Do mass communications teachers still push a "count" system for headlines? You jot down a proposed heading and then see if it's acceptable for filling the designated space. The idea is to fill that space as much as possible. 
So a capital "T" would get a particular count, an "I" and a 'W," as if any of this fulfills any reasonable purpose. It fills no purpose whatsoever. 
The media professionals of today would disregard all that. We can see that because it's common to see a two-deck headline from an Internet page where the second line is just one word! The heading was likely written with the idea that the words would all stay in one line. However, the last word "dropped down" and is the only word in the line. Certainly this has no impact on how you appreciate the headline - the info it conveys. 
So it was always just a cosmetic thing? I'm not sure it was even that. I will repeat that such rigid guidelines for mass communications people, English teachers and others had to do with the teachers' need to feel power. That's lest their job security shows signs of crumbling. You know how powerful that fear can be. 
But really I'd suggest that so-called "academia" has been in retreat for some time. What survives and thrives are the fields that have real demonstrable power, self-evident importance. 
I remember seeing our campus newspaper here in Morris when the students involved with the newspaper were obviously following the headline "count" system. The quite obvious problem was that the headlines came to have stilted or odd wording. I saw a heading on the front page that made me wince. 
The newspaper staff was aware of the "rules" even though the campus probably did not have a class that actually taught it. A strong sense floated around of having headlines that tightly fit the designated spaces. (Of course we're talking printed media.) 
Then along comes the Internet and blows up everything! As it has in countless fields, as the old pretensions coming from schools are disregarded. 
I got curious about seeing the online headings with one word in the second deck. A bigger "violation" of the old headline rules you could never find. Sometimes the hosts of cable news and commentary programs would show a page from the web as they spoke. And there's the single word as the second deck. Outrageous, right? No, in fact I never heard anyone even act like they gave a rip about the second deck. The program hosts just stayed on their subject matter. Because, all that mattered with the headline was that it communicated in a pertinent way. That's all. And to think generations of mass communications students got their brains tied up in knots trying to follow all the rules. 
A friend of mine with "Minnpost" told me that one word would sometimes "slip" to the second deck as the result of a particular Internet browser being used. 
 
Just be real 
Recently we had the exhibit of the English teacher whose services were arranged by Tucker Carlson of Fox News. The English teacher was at the ready for tearing Jill Biden's thesis apart. The teacher should have had too much pride to do that. Better yet, just be real and realize how people communicate in the real world. 
You'll notice in my own writing that not all my sentences are technically complete sentences. Partly that's because I am most aware of how people today appreciate thoughts that are expressed compactly. This is often with short bursts of thought that make the point even without all the standard components of an English sentence. 
The English teacher would get into all the nomenclature of writing - is that the right word? - like nouns, verbs, prepositions. I remember being told once "don't start a sentence with a preposition." And I'd like to respond "don't be such a pain in the butt." 
 
A need to give grades 
But teachers have always had a foundation for giving grades based on rules that become an end in themselves. We might put an asterisk by Tucker Carlson's little "project" on Fox News: he would want to humiliate a Democrat. We should not be so juvenile as to accept his shenanigans. Very obviously Jill Biden is a refined and intelligent person - case closed. 
Edwin Newman
You want another example? I remember when Edwin Newman wrote his book in the '70s about how the English language was deteriorating and being handled recklessly by many including many in power. 
To make a point, an English teacher from somewhere came forward and did the same thing as was done to Jill Biden. Went through Newman's book as if with a scythe, a scythe that English teachers always have prepared. Fail to capitalize "midwest?" OK the scythe will take a bite, look out. And on and on. Look for the little red pen markings everywhere. 
Teachers develop bodies of rules so they have a basis for their draconian "grading" systems. I think this has faded. If you're too hard on students with your judgment these days, heck the students have options, like just leaving the academic setting. 
This temptation or pull has never been greater. Are teachers adjusting? I'd say it must be a work in progress.
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Wonderful to have "T.K." visit again!

Your blog host is at left and the great Tommy Kramer at right. Thanks to Dan Dripps of Heartland Motors for having a group of fondly-remembered Vikings players visit at the showroom on Friday. I'll never forget it.
 
What an uplifing day on Friday for residents of Morris. We're into the heart of summer when things get a little slow. Many of us might welcome that. Some of us of course are "off to the lake." The old Prairie Pioneer Days was a way to feel enlivened when the heart of summer arrived. Our current mayor Kevin Wohlers felt it was a helpful pick-me-up. 
And back in 1987, Tommy Kramer was here to be grand marshal for the Prairie Pioneer Days parade. PPD was totally in its prime then. I was covering the fest for the Morris Sun Tribune newspaper. I could be seen out and around covering anything in those days. I would have covered the various graduations in Stevens County, maybe even UMM's. 
Kramer was riding in a little golf cart at the head of the '87 parade. I even remember who the driver was: Brett Weber. Was a privilege to have the great Minnesota Vikings quarterback visit us. Tommy would have been 32 years old give or take a year. That's easy for me to figure: Tommy and I were both 1973 high school graduates. 
Tommy was from the South and this is readily affirmed by the name of his high school, would you believe Robert E. Lee High School in San Antonio TX! From there he went on to Rice University, not a common place for future NFL players to matriculate. He was a superstar QB for the Rice "Owls." 
On to the pros! I read a lot about Tommy before he was even drafted by the Vikings. Once he got some snaps with the Vikings, it was clear he was a total natural. Some of us got impatient to see him sooner. Fran Tarkenton was closing out his career as Vikings signal-caller. The transition finally came. 
Tommy easily gave us his share of thrills. Somewhat bittersweet memories though: It was clear that our team general manager was not going to make the $ commitment to have a real Super Bowl contender. That GM was Mike Lynn. 
Tommy played part of his career in the old Metropolitan Stadium. I suppose the team needed a new stadium to really have the big bucks to spend. That's what they would tell us I'm sure. 
Met Stadium itself was considered a breakthrough for progress when it was put up. It was put up sooner than many of you might think. My, it was home to the Minneapolis Millers baseball team for five years before the Twins even started! 
"Number 9," T.K.
It was at Met Stadium where Tommy Kramer connected with Ahmad Rashad on the miracle pass play against Cleveland. Also, the place where an up-and-coming Kramer engineered a miracle comeback against the San Francisco 49ers who were quarterbacked by Jim Plunkett. Plunkett was at the low point of his career then - he'd later surge back to top form with Oakland. 
Many people cite the pass to Rashad as the No. 1 T.K. highlight. Not sure as I'd concur because the S.F. game was thrilling beyond words. I remember the TV camera zeroing in on Bud Grant's face after the climax was realized. We won! And one of the guys in the booth said "look at coach Grant, stoic like always, his usual expression." And the partner in the booth responded "Oh I don't know, I think his eyes are open a little wider." 
As I recall, Kramer was playing as the backup to Tarkenton in that game. 
Of course, many years have gone by. So many changes. Our Morris no longer has its summer Prairie Pioneer Days or the grand parade with it. Yours truly walked out of the Morris newspaper building for the last time on June 2, 2006. A long time ago, though it doesn't seem so long ago in my mind. Kind of eerie how it seems like just yesterday. Has time been suspended in my mind? 
On Friday I had the unforgettable opportunity to meet with Mr. Kramer again! That was because of the exciting gesture of Dan Dripps having several former Vikings come here to meet fans. I enjoyed meeting all of them. A special place in my heart for Tommy. We are after all the same age, both 1973 high school grads. 
Back on the "bittersweet" note that I struck. In the years since T.K.'s heyday, society has learned so much about the dangers of football for its players. You know, we should have realized more at the time. I guess we just enjoyed watching football so much. We watched the NFL games on the major TV networks and absorbed the constant beer commercials like the classic Bob Uecker Miller Lite commercial. "I must be in the front row!" 
We have veered away from social drinking as a totally accepted thing, "bigly." 
We are vividly aware of how the NFL left many of its players wrecks in the years following, shortening lifespans of many. I could simply feel sad about that. But "we didn't know what we didn't know," and that included the players. "What's done is done." 
We can greatly regret the toll those players experienced. Nevertheless we came away with memories that we can cherish. 
 
Unfortunate 
On Friday night I did some quick news research and discovered that two years ago, Tommy Kramer was diagnosed with dementia. I thought he was a little slow at Heartland but he came across as content and that's the main thing. 
The two of us have been through changes since that pleasant day in midsummer when T.K. rode as a passenger of Brett Weber, ready to receive adulation in our PPD, a festival that now has to be referred to in the past tense. Man, I remember the atmosphere being so abuzz on Sunday. Lawn hairs set out all along the route. 
I remember early on Saturday morning photographing the "Baby Olympics" of the Morris Women of Today. I am old enough that I covered this organization when it was called the "Jaycee Women!" I covered them when they had a state convention at the UMM campus. Guess I could "write a book." Maybe I won't but I am happy to share on this June Saturday a photo of yours truly with Tommy Kramer taken Friday at Heartland Motors. 
Thanks to Del Sarlette for taking the photo. This is a prized moment in my life. T.K. and myself have extra tread on the tires for sure. But don't we look happy in the photo? Let's be thankful for our blessings in the moment. "Live long and prosper." And Captain Kirk would add, "Promise." That's from the "Saturday Night Live" parody of Star Trek. Shatner endorsed Promise Margarine. 
And Joe Dimaggio endorsed "Mr. Coffee." And Henry Fonda endorsed "G.A.F." And Fred MacMurray endorsed Greyhound Buses. Yes, I am demonstrating that I'm a "boomer." I can remember when Tarkenton played under coach Norm Van Brocklin.
 
Addendum: When I state that Friday was such a wonderful day, I was referencing also the evening music event at East Side Park featuring the "Cheese Bots." The group performed at the Killoran stage. Alas, people still choose to sit a fair distance away from the stage. Defeats the purpose of the stage, doesn't it? People consider the sun too overbearing at the aluminum bleachers. Just like in the days of PPD.
 
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com 

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Peace at the Morris library now?

Our library director
Just got back from downtown where I stopped at the library (or "libery" as some people say). 
Always a relaxing place to visit. I guess that's part of the idea as long as taxpayers wish to keep supporting it. I am familiar with the place going all the way back to when it opened. It was previously in west Morris. Mom would walk me to the old Carnegie library. Keep quiet there or Ms. Grove would "shush" you. But she was a good-hearted person. 
Libraries had an expectation of quiet in long-ago times. I guess my childhood could be described as long-ago. 
Was pleased to see today that Ms. Grove's counterpart in the present time, Ms. Barber, was there. I was happy to exchange hellos. So sad to see that her Stone's Throw Restaurant is only referred to in past tense now. Sad that the place could not be jump-started for new life and vigor. A popular hangout for the - ahem - highbrow crowd. Oh, bless those people. A friend described the clientele as "the NPR crowd." 
I could mix with those people but then again I've always been adaptable. Maybe I'm like the Woody Allen character in the movie "Zelig." I can pretend I fit with many types of people without being a genuine member of any group. It's really not an enviable place to be. 
So, Anne Barber is in control from the library director's chair. Such a strange episode she was through not long ago. It was a strange episode for the whole community. I know many others thought it strange. Is the city at present proud to have her as director? Well I think the city most certainly should be proud. 
I was scared for a while that Ms. Barber may truly have done something bad. Frankly we can never rule this out with anyone. I dreaded the thought. We all come across news articles where a trusted person somewhere is found to have absconded with $. Not to say this was the particular suspicion with Anne. But if it wasn't, then what was it? After the City of Morris led us along with sensational news tidbits - "allegations of misconduct" - the thing ended with a whimper. 
My, did it even end with a whimper? What was the deal with the whole ordeal? And it really truly was an ordeal. So now Anne sits with apparent confidence in her position. And the city appears good with that. 
But Mayor Wohlers and others would have to admit that the whole question as it hung out there was not good for the city, quite the opposite. The city must attend to its image. I will give every benefit of the doubt to Anne. And if there was any "wrongdoing" worthy of acknowledgment, the city should acknowledge. 
I have written previously that Anne has been one of those people "in the arena," an expression used to describe people who can hold their own through a public storm. Kudos to her, 100 percent. 
Now, who was the "villain" in that whole thing? I am open to being enlightened. 
 
Watch my back?
It is the afternoon of June 17 as I write this first draft. I normally write early in the morning. It is with mixed feelings that I am writing at all. I have evidence that the political right wing is aware of me and my writing, is probably trying to inflict harm. This in a time when right wingers have become so unhinged, they might pick up a gun and kill people. 
Can't you all see that the tone of rhetoric from the top of our government is causing this tendency? I mean for the president to now call the chairman of the Federal Reserve a "numbskull?" And the way he talks about certain Democratic governors like our own Walz. 
It was often said during Watergate that "a fish rots from the head down." Not sure that parallels with Watergate are so apt now. Nixon had a fundamental respect for the rule of law. We have a president now who never worked his way up through government, to learn the ropes as it were. We chose this. Trump probably surprised himself with how he was able to win. 
We must conclude that this is not the America of old. This is a panicky America that has gotten so insecure because of lost jobs due to globalization. Ross Perot talked about the "giant sucking sound" of job losses. That was from NAFTA, right? And maybe we could have seen this coming. And things are getting worse because of the inroads of "AI" to wipe out swaths of jobs. This after the Internet itself wiped out swaths. 
It was many years ago that the great libertarian John Stossel wrote a book that noted how the whole class of "middlemen" across the country was being wiped out by efficiencies. If you want to grasp what the old middleman calling was like, watch Chris Farley in "Tommy Boy." Schmoozing a lot. People spun their wheels but they had jobs. 
Sen. Mike Lee
We see the fish rotting from the head down with the public statement just yesterday from the senator Mike Lee from Utah. Making light of the assassinations of Minnesota political leaders. Democratic leaders of course. These are my stripes at this particular stage of my life. 
Prior to Sen. Lee of Utah it was the Iowa senator Joni Ernst making a crass statement which she should have immediately walked back. There was a time when this would be assumed. Joni Ernst was confronted with the very real conclusion that "people will die" because of large cuts to Medicaid, to which she responded "well, we all die." Yes, then so maybe dying would help save the government $ with health care. In the days following she made matters worse with her sarcastic apology, a total non-apology. 
I have a track record of writing certain things. I have been concerned with our congressperson's total unquestioning loyalty to Trump. I emailed her a question a couple weeks ago to which she did not respond. So I'm not worthy of even a conversation. 
 
Stigma maybe?
I really wonder if one of the things that put Ms. Barber under a cloud at the library was that she really is known to be progressive. Or shall I say "liberal." So yes she might think there is something to climate change science. As I do. She and I would be profoundly concerned about someone like RFK Jr. being in the position he has. 
So conservatives really want to embrace someone like RFK Jr. who was a heroin addict for 14 years? When I was young, it was the "lefties" who were associated with drug use. The right wingers of today appear to have no scruples whatsoever. 
I have no influence to change what is going on. Still, for me to even write about it makes me a marked person. So maybe certain people do in fact feel threatened? I only wish to edify people, not intimidate or threaten them. But look at the environment we're in now. Consider the literal political assassinations in Minnesota and the behavior of Mike Lee in the aftermath. 
Trump uses the mindset to insult Gov. Walz. A headline in the Star Tribune noted recently that Gov. Walz was "shifting to the center" politically. You think any right wingers would give him a break because of that? Look how Trump treats Gavin Newsom of California ("Newscum"). Look how Kristi Noem's people treated a U.S. Senator of California. And I know all the "spin" from the right on that. The senator did in fact identify himself. So the guy gets taken down and essentially beaten up by thugs and goons. 
And then we got the Minnesota assassinations, people literally shot dead. 
And might some harm be done to yours truly? I have been denied membership on Facebook. Because, "violation of community standards." Really? I have never belonged to Facebook. Where is this allegation coming from? There are powerful tools for discrimination online. Should I cease writing because of this? Or, maybe it's too late to even do that. 
Trump should not have won the 2024 election. Think of what a loving and accepting place America could be now. Close your eyes and imagine. Because that's all we can do. 
I might have violated community standards by just quoting DJT when he has a foul mouth. Are parents trying to shield their children from this?
From an email I just received from a friend: "If you get shot because of your blog, at least that means somebody was reading it. I hope you have your affairs in order, just in case."
 
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com 

Friday, June 13, 2025

Gray day and a gray mood perhaps

So we're almost into July? Forecast for continued precipitation? Still wearing a jacket to go downtown in the morning? Well, we have had back-to-back mild winters. Two years ago, really no snow to speak of. I'm old enough to remember the winters of the late 1960s. Quite the contrast. 
So, these days no big disputes over who will pay for snow removal like in Donnelly. A relief? Or should we be disturbed by mild winters from the standpoint of climate change? What if we eventually learn that the science put forward by climate change believers is accurate? Don't you think that's a possibility? Well, those on the right end of the political spectrum would scoff at me. Guaranteed. 
Go to DeToy's Restaurant in the morning and listen to the guys in the middle section. Talk politics. What would happen to Gov. Walz if he were to walk in there some morning? He'd need a warning in advance. I'm not sure why the political climate of outstate Minnesota had to change so much. 
There is so much about our president now that isn't even "conservative." I have fundamental respect for the conservative philosophy. It encourages restraint with the spending of public dollars. There are most certainly times when we need that. Mainly we need to resist the demands of the education bureaucracy and in particular its unions. 
Larry Elder
They say California is literally run by the public employee unions. This is why Larry Elder never had a chance to become governor. And I'm as concerned about that as anyone. Hasn't California allotted a lot of $ to eradicate or combat the homeless problem? But the problem is still severe? So where did all the money go? I decided it was tiresome to listen to KFI-Los Angeles in the afternoon because they just droned on about the homeless. I get the message. 
Conservatism and Republicans are not one and the same. Republicans, led by you-know-who, want power. They'll posture and issue rhetoric to acquire power. And then you would think they would use all that power to achieve conservative ends. 
When DJT talks about wanting to get rid of the Federal Reserve chairman, does he really think that would be prudent judgment for all of America? Well no I don't think he even thinks that. The very wealthiest people would benefit from a return to near-zero interest rates. And everyone else? Well, we would be saddled with ever-more inflation. 
Republicans are very serious about tax cuts for the rich. And when they talk tax cuts they are talking about the income tax. They are not talking about local property taxes. Maybe you're aware that the property tax is a regressive tax. Republicans have seriously floated the idea of a national sales tax of maybe 30 percent to replace other kinds of taxes. This would be regressive on steroids, in other words hard on the common folks. 
But DJT and his party can posture by talking up other issues like cultural issues. And they really don't care much personally about those issues, for example many or most of them might be pro-choice in their own views. If someone close to them has a problem pregnancy, they would want the most sensitive care for that person. But then on another level: posturing to cater to people's emotions and to keep power. 
And I'll concede that abortion is a difficult issue. Complain to God about how he created the human body. Complain to God! Oh my, I'll incur the wrath of a great many by saying that. 
It appears I'm in some rough water because of my background of online writing. My application for joining Facebook has been denied. "Violation of community standards," this in spite of the fact I have never contributed any content to Facebook. So the action is being taken because of thoughts I have expressed elsewhere? Like my sympathy for the Palestinians? 
Has criticism of DJT become actually dangerous now? To endanger one's own safety and security? Look how the U.S. Senator from California got roughed up yesterday. Have we become like the boiling frog about this sort of thing?  
This morning I notice that a well-known online progressive commentator senses that the DJT people are "coming for him" and his YouTube site. Interesting because I sent this guy, David Pakman, an email just yesterday about my own experience and suspicions. Is it too late for me to escape this threat? 
Will the criticism of the administration be forced "underground" or some such thing? Forget it, I'm not up to joining such a thing. We may have to watch our whole country go down in flames at some point. Regardless, the whole right wing crowd would just find a way to blame "Democrats." 
There is no correcting this. Look at our congressperson Michelle Fischbach. She is guaranteed to go along with what DJT says and does 100 percent of the time. And Steve Boyd challenged her "from the right." That's who we are out here in our own little "Bible belt." I will try to co-exist, I really will. I would take no joy in feeling more isolated than I already do. 
Every week I consider just ceasing my online writing. For one thing, my eyesight gets worse all the time. My doctor has suggested "blue light blocking glasses." Well, you know what I did: I went online and learned that the only benefit of such glasses is as a "placebo." Well darn. I would have to get the strongest possible reading glasses. 
In the interest of self-preservation I may have to discontinue sharing my views online. But it may already be too late. Here's the email I sent to David Pakman who seems to think on the same wavelength as me:
 
Hello David - This is probably a better way to communicate than by submitting a comment to a YouTube post. Now I'm sure you're showered with communications all the time and you may well not even read this. I'm age 70 and not always the most sophisticated in using online communications. I posted to one of your YouTube posts recently about how I was disturbed at being denied a membership with Facebook, based on "community standards." Well that's pretty insulting because I consider myself a leading community member, give $ to my church and the U of MN Foundation. I am disturbed because there is no record of any activity on my part with Facebook. So where are they getting info for banning me? And I theorized that it might be because of some comments to Yahoo! News articles being rejected. Again, "community standards." 
It is common for Yahoo commenters to lament the flimsy ground on which comments are rejected. There are filters. Often you'll see commenters using "coded" language like "Not C's" instead of Nazis. There are certain terms that are just verboten even if the commenter is making a reasonable point about something (Godwin's Rule notwithstanding). I'm trying to think of examples and I now remember how I shared some cultural history background, noting how we in America once had the term "flunky" employees, i.e. low-level work. And this term is no longer heard, fortunately. We respect all jobs now, even the grocery store "carry-out boys." This has been a cultural shift. But I brought this up in a Yahoo comment and it was rejected based on "community standards." 
I had a comment "paused" recently because I used the expression "crack in the dike." Two words there I guess were problematic. A figure of speech of course. But the comment got through. But the bigger point I should make here is: are the various powerful online platforms "sharing" with each other so people with edgy views get pushed down - "edgy" by the standards of the MAGA power structure? I have blogged for 15 years, a very reasonable and shall I say "deep" blog and yes I'm a frequent Trump critic, and I sympathize with the Palestinians. So by the standards of DJT I'm a "terrorist sympathizer." I love the Jewish people but I do not love Israel. But now I'm apparently banned for life from Facebook. I should get a more detailed explanation as to why. But Fascists are not interested in rational and lucid conversations. If you read this email, God bless you David. I really truly am an upstanding person. But I feel on the defensive.
- Brian R. Williams, Morris MN (home of U of M-Morris) 
 
 

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Our U of M showing feet of clay

Capitulating to DJT is not as practical as it might seem. It is pretty irresistible human nature to want to gravitate to where the power is. 
I remember George C. Scott as "Patton" in "The Last Days of Patton" saying the overwhelming percentage of people in Germany only supported Nazi rule "because they had no choice." 
It's called self-preservation. But in the long term, the instinct can be counterproductive or even life-destroying. One might say that the forces for good always end up with the upper hand. This ought to be the Christian attitude. 
But look how Christianity itself has been co-opted by the Trump movement. My own "liberal" church of First Lutheran in this town is no longer even strong enough to have its own Sunday services at its own building anymore. Our ELCA is trying to be an outlier vs. Trump-ism. Will we eventually capitulate in some way just to keep the doors open? Or let's say open them again? 
This coming Sunday there will be no service at FLC. I have asked if the doors would at least be open. I'm not certain on that. Meanwhile the right-leaning churches of Morris are doing fine, pews filled with Trump voters who are no doubt cheering what the ICE "goon squads" are doing. 
We are seeing the slow but steady creation of a "secret police." In some cases they wear masks. They'll descend on people like they came right from hell. 
Law firms have been put on the defensive in America. The whole purpose of American law is to litigate, to advocate for aggrieved parties in a civilized system that reflects the Judeo-Christian ethic. We have seen the foundation of that get threatened. However, there have been rays of hope, rays of sunshine lately. 
DJT has mounted an unprecedented offensive against major law firms. The  firms have had to consider appeasement vs. Trump. MSNBC tells us that four important firms have chosen the courageous route and that to date, these four are undefeated in court! 
It turns out that people have a basic tendency not to trust law firms and lawyers who are inclined to "capitulate" vs. power. It's not the nature of the beast. We can feel somewhat encouraged by new developments, at least in the short run. Storm clouds are always on the horizon, So I posted this comment to a Yahoo! news article:
 
Trump will try to call off the mid-terms. Don't ever bet against him. 
 
"Ty" responded:
Trump can't call off the mid-term elections, and Congress has to vote on him running a third term. We found no provision in the House tax and spending bill that says the president can delay or cancel an election. Elections experts told us the bill would not give the president any power over elections. Only Congress can change a presidential election’s date. The president lacks the power to cancel or delay elections. So, with all this that he and the GOP are doing now, you can best believe that the majority of the people who backed him for the 2024 election will be running in a different direction, trust and believe that! 
 
Thanks for the articulate elucidation. If all this is true, maybe the storm clouds will abate. 
Now I'll move on to something closer to home. Will people lose trust in educational institutions that are now choosing to "cave" in the face of Trump-ism and its power? 
An example of the weak-kneed and cowardly approach may be exhibited by our University of Minnesota. Very sad to say this. The U has of course been part of the backbone of our Morris community. I have wondered if the phenomenal growth of Superior Industries will be enough to compensate if the U suspends operation of its Morris campus. 
Based on new budget news coming out for the U, we can legitimately wonder if the sky is falling. Will the U's Morris campus end up in a state like the Appleton prison? Well, the toilets would still have to be flushed. 
Maybe we should be ashamed of the U right now. But some people locally would want to whack me over the head for offering that thought. Because, we are all supposed to recognize where the influence is, adjust to that. So in the name of looking out for our own interests, we're going to capitulate? History does not offer encouraging lessons about this. Then again, we can never predict the future with certainty. 
We had a U.S. Senate candidate in MN who has said "the bad guys won World War II." I presume he continues to root for his "good guys." As so many preferred churches in the Morris area are continuing to do. Look at Good Shepherd for example. I doubt that these people support the U of M much if at all. Oh it's "liberal." 
Rebecca Cunningham
The U at present is trying to fight for its existential interests. Here's an April 30 headline on Minnpost: "As other schools band together against Trump threats, the University of Minnesota keeps a low profile." The subhead reads: "Faculty and students are pressing a 'non-committal' President Rebecca Cunningham to act." 
So there's a gamble at play here? A gamble that the top forces are truly going to take over America? Cancellation of the mid-terms? Therefore, well, just "go along to get along?" I don't think the Trump movement thinks a whole lot of "higher education" anyway. 
We might as well commit ourselves to a higher ideal. And if it fails? Well we can at least sleep at night. That is, if the goon squads don't come after us. And please be aware that's possible. 
The first sentence of the Minnpost article: "The University of Minnesota, swept up like other schools in the maelstrom of the Trump administration policies they say erode academic freedom, is undergoing intense internal debate about what to do about it." 
Collin Peterson pathetically ran his last race for Congress like he was ashamed to be a Democrat. What did that do for him? He'll have the weak-kneed image permanently. And so the forces for capitulation still rage. How can the U of M hold up? 
There remains more than a breath of life among America's colleges and universities. So, hundreds of institution presidents have signed an American Association of Colleges and Universities letter that decried the "unprecedented government overreach and political interference." 
Some Minnesota schools are in with this. The document has hundreds of signatures. "Yet the University of Minnesota's new president, Rebecca Cunningham, took a pass." 
I'm sure our UMN-Morris leaders have gotten talking points for supporting Cunningham. So I won't bother talking to them. The nation's schools are trying to organize a defense to the Trump administration's actions. And we're on the sidelines. 
Am I a marked person myself? I mean, I have written with sympathy toward the Palestinians, and now by the "standards" of the DJT administration, I would be considered a "terrorist sympathizer." Schools that have allowed pro-Palestinian demonstrations are now labeled anti-Semitic. 
Not sure I really can extricate myself from this situation. Unless we can pull off the mid-terms. But I don't know about that. I love the Jewish people. But I do not love Israel. Guys wearing masks might come and get me in the middle of the night. Are people really proud of what they are doing when they wear masks?
   
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com 

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Sorry (really) but we have bad news

Dawn is breaking on this Sunday morning. I should not be writing anymore. Don't be concerned if I just stop. Maybe it's time. So this morning I must note that even thought Minnesota is a "blue" state, things look bleak for the flagship education/research institution. Of course that's the U of M which incidentally has an institution here. 
The leadership class of Morris about did cartwheels at one time trying to get the U here. Sometimes dreams do come true. So it happened. 
Right at the present, the headwinds are fierce for the U. Just think how much worse the situation would be if Republicans were in charge in Minnesota. What if the Republicans could come up with a decent U.S. Senate candidate one of these years, rather than someone who says "the bad guys won World War II." 
In the old days such a person would be described as a fringe candidate or just as a lunatic. But this is Trump's Republican Party. Even if video came out showing DJT having sex with an underage girl, his supporters wouldn't care. Our congressperson probably wouldn't care. I mean, she would not dare utter a single skeptical word about Trump. So that's the way it is. 
I feel increasingly isolated as a critic of Trump. Will I end up totally condemned? Maybe that has happened already. So why am I writing his morning? 
I will proceed to write that the U of M, in case anybody cares, has experienced major cuts in Federal research funding. Plus there is a definite cloud over the future of Federal funding and international student enrollment. And I'll say again that my estimable UMN-Morris friend Michael Lackey has continually pointed out that foreign students have been UMM's "cash cow." 
The visitors from China are from well-to-do families. They pay their bills in full, Lackey says. Meanwhile we have Native Americans getting the benefit of not paying tuition, this in spite of the Supreme Court absolutely striking down affirmative action. 
Has anyone of high standing noticed that UMM is continuing its Native policy? Do we have to cross fingers? Are we so small and remote here that no one will care or bother? Is that it? Seriously, maybe it is. 
Our state representative and senator are both Republicans. Well, you wouldn't expect them to be Democrats, would you? 
Any Democrats in Morris must be viewed as oddballs now. An endangered species? Don't we have a lot of seniors locally? And Republicans at the national level are on the warpath vs. entitlements for seniors. And the senator from Iowa just said we have to accept the inevitability of death, so don't expect the Federal government to do much if anything to help keep you alive. You'll just have to pay your bills on top of all the other bills you're paying. 
Chuck Grassley
It's very ironic because when Obama was proposing his Obamacare or the Affordable Care Act, Republicans were all excited about "death panels," remember? Iowa's Chuck Grassley said "we don't want to pull the plug on Grandma." Of course the real aim of the ACA was to encourage end-of-life consultations which is prudent. 
Now Sen. Ernst just shrugs about death. So, older people can be a burden for the taxpayers. You of course all know how health care bills can be exorbitant. Then again, "we all die," as Ernst asserted. Her later apology was just sarcastic. Something like "I apologize for assuming that you all knew about the inevitability of death." 
The problem of course is that we keep electing people like this, or nominating people who are on record saying "the bad guys won WWII." Could such a person be invited to a Memorial Day or Veterans Day program? Well yes I suppose they would be, because people out here where the coyotes howl just love Republicans. 
If you really think the Nazis were the good guys of WWII, then I'm sure you're cheering all that Trump does now. He is literally establishing a "secret police." People have been trying to resist this in California. There were people trying to resist the rise of the Nazi party in Germany. Then they started disappearing. 
Am I to be condemned just having certain opinions? Well yes I probably will be. Probably has already happened. I am isolated. I should not be writing anymore. 
 
Good money after bad?
The two main recipients of my charitable giving over the past few years have been 1) the U of M, and 2) First Lutheran Church. Both are fading fast because of the onslaught of the far right and MAGA. The U of M is proposing a seven percent cut to its academic programming and a massive hike in tuition fees in the face of a stark and uncertain financial future. 
First Lutheran Church? In the science world they say that when a certain species of animal no longer exists in the wild, it is extinct. That creature will never again be the same if it merely exists in captivity. A species is only viable if it has to deal with natural selection. 
In the case of a church, it is only viable if it has a weekly Sunday service at its building. If it can't cut it on that, it's over. First Lutheran is dead. It had a long and proud history. It was mainstream as could be. But today the ELCA is stigmatized as "liberal." And that is the kiss of death out here where the coyotes howl and country music reigns. 
"Country club" Republicans have been overwhelmed by the "country music" Republicans. I am merely an observer. 
There is only one recipient of my $ giving that has remained viable. That is the MAHS band activity fund. So, "one out of three isn't bad." Well, that's really no consolation. Was gay rights the catalyst for everything that I am seeing and writing about now? Stop and think of the consequences, really.
 
Addendum: I may have to discontinue my online writing because my eyesight is deteriorating rather badly. But the overriding problem is that I'm just overwhelmed by MAGA. Maybe a friend or two will say "don't lose the faith." But I doubt it. We're all supposed to listen to the Joni Ernsts of the world.
 
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com