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“READERS FORUM” JUNE 21, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Would you like for Deaconess and Henderson Community Methodist Hospitals to be more forthcoming with the details of the merging of services between both hospitals?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com.

Commentary: What Happened To Liberty And Justice For All?

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – These days, as I read the news, I find the words to an old Bob Dylan song running through my head:

I can’t see my reflection in the mirror

 

I can’t speak the sounds that show no pain

I can’t hear the echo of my footsteps

 I can’t remember the sound of my own name.

We Americans have lost our way

This is not the America I have known, the America I was taught to honor, even revere, as a child. This is not the America to which I pledged allegiance in school when I was a small boy.

That pledge didn’t proclaim liberty and justice only for some or just for those who support the president.

No, it promised liberty and justice for all.

That’s what this country was supposed to stand for. That’s who we Americans aspired to be, the people who created a land where everyone could be free.

In the past, we Americans sacrificed in defense of liberty. We fought wars – even with ourselves – to keep or make people free.

In fact, we became a nation in the first place out of a desire to escape tyranny. So many American family stories – mine among them – contain tales of an ancestor fleeing oppression and hardship in search of freedom.

These are the stories that define us as a people.

Or at least they used to.

Now, though, we are the nation that tears families apart as they try to flee terror and seek asylum in the land of the free. We are the nation that rips children from the arms of their parents and places them in camps that are at best inadequate and at worst subhuman. We are the nation that sends people home to be killed by thugs and murderers.

We do this, the attorney general to the United States tells us, for biblical reasons.

“I would cite you to the Apostle Paul and his clear and wise command to Romans 13, to obey the laws of the government because God has ordained the government for his purposes,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a speech in Fort Wayne.

The biblical passage Sessions cites has figured in American history before.

Loyalists to the British crown leaned on it to make a case against the American Revolution in the 1770s. And southern slaveholders used the same words to combat the case for abolition in the years leading up to the Civil War.

Sessions, like so many self-proclaimed devout Christians, seems to miss the point of the crucifixion. Jesus’s suffering and martyrdom were powerful and redemptive in part because his punishment was so obviously unjust. His misery wasn’t just a comfort to the spirit, but also a challenge to the conscience.

Yet Jeff Sessions urges Americans now to stand with the heirs to Pontius Pilate and not with the spirit of the figure nailed to the cross.

Our policy regarding refugees, immigrants and their families – their children – isn’t biblical.

It isn’t conservative.

It isn’t liberal.

It’s just wrong.

And it’s mean.

It’s too much to expect this president and his cultish coterie of appeasers and enablers to understand America’s historic sense of moral aspiration. They view every national act through a prism of personal, political and financial self-interest.

But it’s not too much to expect that U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly, D-Indiana, and U.S. Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, both of whom are honorable men who have taken oaths to serve this country, will rise to their duty and remember who we are.

And what we stand for.

The same goes for the members of Indiana’s congressional delegation.

This is a time for them to put party aside and do the right thing – the decent thing.

And it is our duty as citizens to support them if they do.

If we do, if we stop this injustice, maybe we will be able once more to see our reflection in the mirror, hear the echo of our footsteps, remember the sound of our own name.

And, maybe, just maybe, once again speak the sounds that show no pain.

FOOTNOTE: mJohn Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

This article was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.

Study Finds Farmers Suicide Rate Higher Than Veterans

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Study Finds Farmers Suicide Rate Higher Than Veterans

According to a recent study, farmers have twice the suicide rate compared to veterans. Experts believe the increased cost of living is a contributing factor.

Many farmers say it’s more difficult to make ends meet. Between 2011 to 2014, the average net income from agriculture was nearly $105 billion.

Since 2016, that number has dropped roughly 45 percent at $62 billion. Since most farms are family owned experts believe that can add to the stress. Experts say there are few things to watch out for when it comes to your friends and family in agriculture.

Associate Professor of Psychology at Purdue University Doug Samuel says, “Some of the softer signs would be things like feelings of hopelessness, feelings like things aren’t going to get better, and feeling like there’s a real burden on other people.”

A bill passed Congress this year creating a pilot program allowing for free behavioral health support and suicide prevention for people in the agriculture business.

While Indiana does not have a bill like this in place just yet several other states have adopted similar bills to ensure the well-being of farmers and ranchers.

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“Pro-Life Bridges Day” To Be Held On June 22, 2018

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Evansville is one of 50 cities taking part in National Pro-Life Bridges Day with banners declaring “Abortion Takes a Human Life.”

On Friday, June 22, pro-life volunteers will hold two large banners on the Lynch Road bridge over Interstate 69, reaching commuters in both directions of traffic with the message that “Abortion takes a human life.”  The group will hold their banners on the overpass from 7:00 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. as part of National Pro-Life Bridges Day, taking place in 50 cities throughout the United States.

“We want to get people throughout the Evansville area thinking and talking about abortion, a topic that they too often try to avoid,” explained Ann Schulz, President of Right to Life of Southwest Indiana, who is organizing the banner display in Evansville on June 22.  “Abortion takes the lives of 2,500 unborn children every single day in our country.  And it’s legal.  That’s a difficult reality to face – but one we just can’t keep ignoring.”

This nationwide day of public outreach is being coordinated by the Chicago-based Pro-Life Action League.  Evansville is one of 50 locations where National Pro-Life Bridges Day is being held.  Other cities include Tampa, Florida; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; St. Paul, Minnesota; San Antonio, Texas; Fresno, California; Memphis, Tennessee; and metropolitan Chicago.  In all, hundreds of thousands of highway commuters will be reached with the message that “Abortion takes a human life.”

For more information, please contact Ann Schulz, (812) 204-0408, annschulz5@gmail.com or Richard Clements, (812) 746-8569, richard.clements@att.net

Lorraine Swimmers Swam Off Against Howell Swimmers

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LORRAINE SWIMMERS SWAM OFF AGAINST HOWELL SWIMMERS
Thursday, June 21, 2018
written by CCO Sports writer Aulden Nance 
 Tuesday evening, Lorraine Swimmers swam off against Howell swimmers. Around 100 plus swimmers competed in this event.  we estimate around 300 hundred spectators attend this event.
We spoke to Henslie Darke-Schrieber (age 6) before her first race, she stated that “I am ready to swim and push my self to swim my hardest.” Henslie did just that and came in first place in her breaststroke race.
We also spoke to Hadlie Darke-Schrieber (age 8), sister of Henslie, she told us “I have prepared hard for this.” She also won her breaststroke race. Both qualified for the city meet in July.
In total, there were close to 150 swimmers at the meet. There were 11 age groups. Those being, 6 & Under, 7 & 8, 9 & 10, 11 & 12, 13 & 14, 15 – 18, 19 – 30, 31 – 41, 42 – 54, 55 – 64, and 65 & Over.
All of those age groups compete in 7 different events. Those being, Backstroke, Breaststroke, Butterfly, Freestyle, Individual Medley, Medley Relay, and Freestyle Relay.
Next Tuesday, Helfrich swims off against Lorraine. Howell swims off against Lloyd.
FOOTNOTE:  If anyone has any pictures or scores of competitive swimming or diving events please send it to me at auldinimagic@gmail.com and I will put them in my next column.

St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements For June 18, 2018

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St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements For June 18, 2018

Tykesea Jones and Ephraim Reynolds, Evansville, son, Za’Kari Arell Ozias, June 12

Ashley Ratcliff and Travis Stewart, Poseyville, IN, son, Emmett Wade , June 8

Christan Manning and Joshua Nash, Mount Carmel, IL, daughter, Neriah Adelaide Daniel-Mae Lynn, June 13

Kayla Summers and Khiry Griffith, Evansville, son, Amir Deshaun, June 10

Megan and Anthony Mayes, Evansville, daughter, Margaret Catherine Rose, June 13

Kristen and Jordan Raben, Evansville, son, Hudson Michael, June 11

Elizabeth and Jerod Schaefer, Evanston, IN, daughter, Lila Leigh, June 11

Anne and George Kane, Evansville, son, Lazarus Putzier, June 12

Natalie and Casey Turpin, Princeton, IN, daughter, Austyn Raelynn, June 14

Tristyn and Keith Nelson II, Evansville, daughter, Paisley Evie Lynn, June 13

 

ADOPT A PET

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Pilot is an 11-year-old female Collie mix. She was surrendered because her owners were having a baby. She’s a laid-back and very well-mannered girl. Her adoption fee is $110 and she’s spayed, up-to-date on vaccines, and ready to go home today. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Justices reverse 13-year-old’s bomb threat case on Miranda grounds

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Kate Stancombe for www.theindianalawyer.com

A boy alleged to have written bomb threats on a bathroom wall at Decatur Middle School was deprived of his Miranda rights under police interrogation and his statements should have been suppressed, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.

Thirteen-year-old B.A. was alleged to have written the threat: “I will Got A bomb in the school Monday 8th 2016 not A Joke” on a bathroom wall in February 2016. After checking the premises on February 8. 2016, a vice principal and school resource officer removed B.A. from his school bus and escorted him to the vice principal’s office.

B.A. was interviewed by three uniformed school resource officers. Upon his confession, B.A. was suspended from school, and the school resource officers arrested him and took him to the Marion County Juvenile Detention Center.

The boy was adjudicated for committing false reporting and institutional criminal mischief, Level 6 felony and Class A misdemeanors if committed by an adult. He then moved to suppress the evidence from his interview, arguing that he was entitled to Miranda warnings because he was under custodial interrogation and officers failed to secure waiver of his Miranda rights under Indiana’s juvenile waiver statute.

The juvenile court denied the motion and found B.A. delinquent on both accounts, however the Indiana Supreme Court determined his statements should have been suppressed. The court also found that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the statements.

“As the State points out, no one yelled at or threatened B.A. Still, the consistent police presence would place considerable coercive pressure on a reasonable student in B.A.’s situation,” Chief Justice Loretta Rush wrote Wednesday. “So this case lies solidly on the “custody” end of the student-confinement spectrum.”

The court reversed B.A.’s delinquency adjudications in B.A. v. State of Indiana 49S02-1709-JV-567 and remanded the case to the juvenile court.

The Indiana Court of Appeals previously reached the opposite conclusion, issuing a ruling in March 2017 affirming the juvenile court.

AG Curtis Hill: Wayne County’s experience demonstrates dangers of so-called ‘needle exchange’

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n the aftermath of Marion County’s decision to allow distribution of clean needles to illegal drug users, Attorney General Curtis Hill said communities statewide should consider the recent experiences of Wayne County.

As reported by media in Richmond, Ind., Wayne County Prosecutor Mike Shipman has documented at least one fatal overdose in which a needle from the county’s exchange program was apparently used in causing the person’s death. He has also documented unauthorized street sales of such needles, which can be sold for up to $2 per needle. Authorities discovered one drug user to be in possession of approximately 100 unused needles from the exchange program that the user obtained secondhand.

“Those who advocate handing out free needles to substance abusers are no doubt well-intentioned individuals,” Attorney General Hill said. “Too often, however, they overlook the unintended consequences of these needle handouts – namely, the continued risks of dying from overdose and all the other ills that accompany substance abuse and addiction. While we should always work to mitigate risks of contracting contagious diseases, we must focus greater attention on helping these individuals overcome the root problems of substance abuse and addiction.”

Attached is an op-ed the Attorney General wrote last August expressing his views on so-called needle exchange.