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Governor Eric Holcomb Directs Flags To Be Flown at Half-Staff

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INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb is directing flags in the State of Indiana to be flown at half-staff for National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.

Flags should be flown at half-staff from midnight to midnight on Monday, December 7, 2020.

Gov. Holcomb also asks businesses and residents in Indiana to lower their flags to half-staff on Monday.

UPDATES: STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNT INCREASE TO 375,019

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Commentary: Mike Braun’s Ode To Magical Thinking

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Commentary: Mike Braun’s Ode To Magical Thinking

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, R-Indiana, took a step through the looking glass the other day.

You know, to the place where up is down, the night is day and fact is fiction.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

The first-term Indiana senator went full-tilt boogie on the twisted argument that somehow many, many votes for Donald Trump in 2020 were either manufactured, mislaid or misread. And that, somehow, this was all the media’s fault.

In an op-ed piece for The Washington Examiner that struggled to meet the demands of both logic and grammar, Braun cited stray anecdotes from around the country and, from these cherry-picked pseudo-facts, tried to make a case that the integrity of the entire election was in question.

And, again, that somehow this was the fault of journalists.

Rather than, say, the responsibility of elected officials entrusted with making government work.

There were several things troubling about Braun’s outburst.

The first was its selectivity. He pointed to supposed lapses in the system – on the strength of evidence about as substantial as a summer morning mist – that affected the presidential vote count but didn’t call into question any of the other races on the ballot.

If there were significant irregularities, wouldn’t they have affected other races, too?

Shouldn’t we also be looking at the congressional and state campaigns Republicans won?

That is, if we’re really concerned that the system had been breached and that outcomes shouldn’t be trusted?

But, then, it’s asking a lot of a man who ran for office on promises of being President Trump’s flunky – promises Mike Braun has kept – to think clearly about the needs of the nation rather than the task of keeping his master happy.

The uneven application of Braun’s analysis – and I realize I’m straining the definition of the word “analysis” beyond its limits – isn’t the most bothersome aspect about the senator’s op-ed.

That honor goes to the piece’s sheer, unadulterated, undiluted looniness.

One of Braun’s arguments is that a supposed whistle-blower in Nevada filed an affidavit saying workers disregarded signature verifications. Again, if this were true, it would disqualify all the votes on that ballot, not just the ones cast in the presidential race.

But that’s not the biggest problem with this bit of reasoning. Affidavits aren’t particularly compelling evidence. They haven’t been subjected to close or cross-examination. In many cases, they aren’t even subject to penalties of perjury.

In other words, there’s no risk or cost associated with lying or making things up in many affidavits.

There are affidavits out there that say UFOs exist. There are affidavits that say Elvis is alive and living happily in Sioux City, Iowa. For all I know, there may be affidavits floating around that assert that Donald Trump’s wall along our southern border has been completely built and Mexico paid for it.

Much of the reason journalists haven’t dropped everything else to examine the president’s claims of voter fraud is that even the president’s advocates aren’t taking those claims seriously.

However much Trump may fulminate on Twitter – and Braun in loopy op-eds – the president’s lawyers sing from a different hymnal when they get in court.

In court, of course, standards of evidence apply, and people get slapped hard if they do not tell the truth. There, the president’s people don’t make claims that widespread fraud occurred. Instead, they argue that certain legally cast votes should be disregarded because the president doesn’t like the outcome of the contest.

The courts, understandably, haven’t been kind to this real attempt to rig an election.

When judges haven’t just tossed Trump’s cases out after a summary hearing, they have laughed at them.

Even U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr – a man who has vied with Braun and U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina for the title of most slavish Trump lapdog – has acknowledged that voter fraud wasn’t a problem in this election.

But that didn’t deter Mike Braun.

That’s because Braun will buy anything the president sells.

For that reason, the senator from Indiana should be careful.

Trump, we know, will have cash-flow problems when he leaves office because he has more than $400 million in debts about to come due.

President Trump may have a bridge to sell someone as gullible as Mike Braun.

That bridge connects Brooklyn with Manhattan.

Doubtless, the good senator from Indiana will see it as a great deal.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

The City-County Observer posted this article without bias, opinion, or editing.

 

Councilman Justin Elpers Against Paying Down $800,000 in Hospitalization Deficit

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elpers

Dear Council Members

Finance Ordinance F-2020-20 is asking for $800,000 of Local Income Tax dollars to be used to pay down the Hospitalization deficit. 

I will be making a motion to have this removed, and I’m asking for your support.

The city’s self-funded health plan has been in a deficit since 2016.  The current negative balance is $2,911,943.  A self-funded health plan works by using the member’s premiums, co-pays, deductibles, etc to pay down claims.  

Therefore, the council should not use other funds to fix a broken health care plan.  As I have stated before, changes will have to be made to the health plan if the city wants to address the deficit problem. 

Justin Elpers 

Evansville City Council 5th Ward

FOOTNOTE:  Link:  pg 5   https://evansville.granicus.com/MetaViewer.php?view_id=&event_id=4665&meta_id=207597

 

Gov. Beshear Urges Vigilance as Kentucky Passes 200,000 COVID-19 Cases

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Gov. Beshear Urges Vigilance as Kentucky Passes 200,000 COVID-19 Cases

FRANKFORT, Ky. (Dec. 6, 2020) – On Sunday, Gov. Andy Beshear asked all Kentuckians to redouble efforts to fight COVID-19 as Kentucky surpassed 200,000 reported cases of coronavirus in the commonwealth – exactly nine months since the state’s first reported case.

“These are difficult numbers, having passed 200,000 cases and earlier this week passing 2,000 deaths. And now this is our highest week to date. However, in the data there is some potentially good news: While this is our highest week ever, the rate of growth does appear to be slowing. In other words, our increase from the last couple of weeks is less than what we have been seeing. Certainly, our hope is that we are slowing down this train and are moving at least to a new plateau,” the Governor said. “We’ll have to watch in the coming week if we do have that Thanksgiving surge or if the majority of our families kept it small this year. So even on a tough day, possibly some good news. That should make all of us want to work that much harder knowing that we can impact this thing, that it is within our control and that a vaccine – two vaccines – are just around the corner.”

Case Information
As of 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 6, Gov. Beshear reported the following COVID-19 numbers:

  • New cases today: 2,567
  • New deaths today: 10
  • Positivity rate: 9.75%
  • Total deaths: 2,072
  • Currently hospitalized: 1,673
  • Currently in ICU: 401
  • Currently on ventilator: 214

Top counties with the most positive cases today are: Jefferson, Fayette, Kenton, Boone and Boyd. Jefferson, Fayette and Kenton counties reported 100 or more new cases; Jefferson County alone reported 446.

The red zone counties for this week can be found here. Community leaders, businesses, schools and families in these counties should all follow red zone reduction recommendations, as well as other orders and guidance.

Those reported lost to the virus today include a 68-year-old woman from Barren County; two men, ages 64 and 74, from Fayette County; two women, ages 69 and 71, from Jefferson County; a 65-year-old woman from Jessamine County; an 84-year-old man from Laurel County; an 81-year-old man from Lewis County; a 68-year-old man from Mason County; and a 72-year-old man from Washington County.

“The imminent distribution of COVID-19 vaccine in the upcoming weeks should help put this pandemic in the past, but the coming weeks remain critical and come with sacrifices,” said Dr. Steven Stack, commissioner of the Department for Public Health. “We must make good decisions every day and protect fellow Kentuckians by wearing masks, practicing social distancing, and staying home if we are sick. Doing so will save lives. It won’t be easy, but Team Kentucky is strong and supportive. We look out for each other, take care of those in need, and will get through this together.”

Reporting is limited on Sundays. Additional information, including the number of Kentuckians who have recovered from COVID-19, will be reported Monday.

More Information
To view the full daily report, incidence rate map, new statewide requirements, testing locations, long-term-care and other congregate facilities update, school reports and guidance, red zone counties, red zone recommendations, the White House Coronavirus Task Force reports for Kentucky, and other key guidance visits, kycovid19.ky.gov.

New requirements impact restaurants, bars, social gatherings, indoor fitness and recreation centers, venues and theaters, professional services, and schools. See the full executive orders here and here.

Audio public service announcements about the new requirements (created in partnership with RadioLex) are published herein: Bosnian, Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, Spanish and Russian.

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Chanukah, Christmas, And Western Civilization Are Central to Understanding America

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Chanukah, Christmas, and Western Civilization The Two Holidays Are Central to Understanding America

By Richard Moss, MD

Chanukah, the festival of lights, is a Jewish holiday that commemorates the victory of the Maccabees (or Hasmoneans) over the powerful armies of the Seleucid (Greek) Empire under King Antiochus IV. King Antiochus, in 167 BC, in a show of force, forbade important Jewish observances such as keeping the Sabbath and circumcision and dedicated the ancient temple in Jerusalem to Zeus. 

In the town of Modi’in, Antiochus’ soldiers forced a village elder named Matityahu to sacrifice a pig before a pagan altar.  Matityahu refused. When another Jew complied, he killed him and another Greek official.  This sparked a three-year rebellion against the Greeks and their Jewish allies, some of whom accepted Greek or Hellenic culture.  Matityahu and his sons, the Maccabees, fought to maintain the ancient ways of the covenant.  At first, the Maccabees and their motley fighters employed guerilla tactics but eventually formed regular forces and routed the Greeks.  In 164 BC, the Maccabees entered Jerusalem and rededicated the temple, removing pagan influences, thus the name “Chanukah” or rededication.  

It was a most unlikely victory. But because of it Judaism survived. Without this victory, history would have been profoundly altered.  In the absence of Judaism, Christianity, which followed more than a century later, would never have emerged.

Chanukah is a victory of religious liberty, of the weak over the strong, of righteousness over tyranny, of light over darkness, a miracle.  But there was another miracle.  Jewish tradition holds that when it was time to light the Menorah in the Temple, there was only enough pure oil for a single day, but it lasted eight days after which it was replenished.  And the men that had been soldiers and were now priests and scribes knew that their victory over the mighty Greek army was not just by force of arms but through divine providence. That God walked among the defenders of Judaism.  

After the Greeks fell away, there was a brief interlude of Jewish independence in Israel but then the Romans conquered the Holy Land in 63 BC (Pompey).  Life under Roman rule was difficult and there was another rebellion in 70 AD.  General Vespasian destroyed the Jewish kingdom and King David’s ancient capital fell for a second time.  Many Jews died or were enslaved.  There rose again a savior in 135 AD, Bar Kochba, but in the end, his rebellion too crumbled before Rome’s might (Emperor Hadrian). Jerusalem and the Temple were plowed under with salt and hundreds of thousands of Jews were slaughtered.  Jerusalem was resettled.  Rome renamed Israel, Palestina, reaching back to Israel’s ancient foes the Philistines to conceal its Jewish past.  The exiles went forth as slaves and rootless wanderers.  And the long night began. 

But the Chanukah flame continued to burn in the hearts of the Jewish people who dreamed of returning to Israel and Jerusalem.  For 2,000 years it burned in villages and cities across the seas and the continents.  And the exiles returned to reclaim their patrimony.  In 1948, out of the ashes of the Holocaust, the modern state of Israel was born, its fledgling forces defeating the five Arab armies that attacked it at the moment of its birth with the intent of annihilation, another miracle.  And so the Chanukah lights continued to burn in Israel, sometimes flickering but still illuminating, nearly 70 years later.  

With Christmas upon us, there is also a light that burns for Christians, under assault in the West by the secular left and around the globe especially within the Muslim world.  It is symbolic that in the darkest time of the year, Christian teaching tells that the logos or the word was made flesh in the form of a newborn baby, the baby Jesus, a Jew, under a star, a light for the world to drive away the darkness and bring redemption and hope. 

That Chanukah and Christmas are closely linked in the calendar is fitting for the message they each bring. The two faiths, Judaism and Christianity, taken together as the Judeo-Christian tradition, is the foundation of Western and American civilization.  Western nations are the greatest in the world because they are informed by Judeo-Christian principles.  It is in the West where human rights, liberty, the rule of law, democracy, music and the arts, science and technology have flourished and where slavery was ended. These are the nations that inhabitants from the rest of the world seek to live.  It is in Western nations where citizens are most free and enjoy the greatest prosperity.  It is not an accident.  

We must dedicate ourselves to preserving America, the West, and Western civilization, by preserving its Judeo-Christian tradition.  The light of Chanukah and Christmas must continue to burn, and illumine the night, pushing away the darkness that is always present, the norm for most of history. They should guide us and our nation and the West for all time.  It distinguishes us from the rest: our values, our devotion to truth, knowledge, goodness, beauty, and reason, the belief in the sanctity of the individual made in the image of God, while rejecting the moral and cultural relativism of the post-modern left and the totalitarian threat of unreformed Islam.  We must rededicate ourselves in our current battle as the Maccabees did against the Greeks and as Israel did against the Arab armies that sought its destruction in 1948 and has done ever since against its many enemies. 

The spirit of Chanukah and Christmas should inspire us.  Happy Chanukah and Merry Christmas to all.

FOOTNOTE: Dr. Richard Moss is a board-certified head and neck cancer surgeon and was a candidate for Congress in 2016 and 2018. He graduated from the Indiana University School of Medicine and has been in practice in Jasper and Washington, IN for over 20 years.  He has written A Surgeon’s Odyssey and Matilda’s Triumph available on amazon.com.  Find more of his essays at richardmossmd.com.  Visit Richard Moss, M.D. on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

  

YESTERYEAR: History Of Lamasco

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History Of Lamasco

 REMEMBER – EVERY STORY WORTH TELLING DESERVES A FEW GOOD LIES)

The city of Lamasco stretched from Ohio river to Maryland Street and from First Avenue to Pigeon Creek. It was founded in 1836 by four local businessmen who combined letters from their last names – LA from “Law”, MA from “McCall” and SCO from “Scott” – to create the town’s off-beat moniker. In 1857, Evansville and Lamasco merged, and only after the heated argument was the Lamasco minority over-ruled and the new city called “Evansville”. It’s been West Side vs. East Side ever since!

The building at the corner of what became 6th Avenue and West Franklin Street was built-in 1913 as a sheet metal factory, but by the 1920s had become a hot spot for local gamblers and revelers, with rum running out the back door during Prohibition. At least that’s how we heard it! Lamasco Bar officially opened July 10, 1934, and has been a staple ever since.

In 1998 Vicki Hamilton, Amy’s aunt, bought the bar and closed it down for a major re-decoration. Lamasco re-opened after the 1999 Fall Festival, and Vicki, who lived for a while near New Orleans, brought authentic Mardi Gras-style partying to Evansville; she used to say” I know how it’s done down there!”

Since 2009 this local landmark is under the ownership of the feisty but oh-so-sweet (usually, anyway) Amy Word, whose resume runs from big game hunter (look at the walls) to the teacher, hash-slinger, waitress, and musician. If you ask nicely, she might just pull out her guitar and entertain with an impromptu show.

With live music 250 nights a year, Lamasco has positioned itself as a mid-west venue that is a MUST stop for local, regional, and touring bands.

Almost any night of the week, great music, great friends, great food, and great times can be had!

There’s a reason that GET LAMASCOED is on the lips of people everywhere.

#GETLAMASCOED

Traffic Advisory Lincoln Avenue/Bonnieview Drive Intersection Closure

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Lincoln Avenue

 

  • Closure Dates
    • Close December 7, 2020 at 7:00 am
    • Re-Open December 11, 2020 at 5:00 pm

As part of the ongoing sanitary sewer upgrades related to the Bonnieview and Oak Lift Station Improvements Project, it will be necessary to temporarily close Lincoln Avenue at the intersection of Bonnieview Drive to safely and timely complete a portion of the work.

Local traffic will be maintained on Lincoln between Burkhardt Road and Southfield Drive. A detour route will be posted for thru traffic and is intended to direct the public to utilize Lincoln Avenue, Burkhardt Road and Plaza Drive to avoid the construction area.

A second closure of Lincoln Avenue is anticipated in January to complete additional improvements to the system.

 See attached map that reflect the intended detour route for the closure

 For information on the Bonnieview and Oak Lift Station and other Renew Evansville sewer projects, visitwww.evansvillesewerprojects.com.