Arcadia resident videos mayor’s comments (DISCLAIMER: Explicit and vulgar language)

DISCLAIMER: Explicit and vulgar language

A video of the Town of Arcadia Mayor O’Landis Millican has been a constant topic of discussion over the last week especially since Arcadia resident Curtis Brown attended the June regular meeting for the town on June 13 where details of the video were brought to light. Brown questioned the mayor on whether he had intentions of making a public apology over some crude things that were mentioned in the video.  

Brown said, “I would like to know if you are going to offer a public apology for talking about my mother’s genitals, which I have on a recording.” 

Since then, there has been debate over many aspects of the video and the situation in general. Many believe Brown instigated the conflict and deserved the choice of words made by the mayor. While others believe that under no circumstance should an elected official be speaking or treating a resident in that manner.  

This video was recorded by Brown during a visit to the Town Hall on May 19.  

In the full video, you see Millican and can hear a discussion between the two regarding the mayor along with the town of Arcadia being investigated for misuse of Covid-19 funds received in 2021.  

Things escalated rather quickly and ended with the mayor escorting Brown out of the building.  

In the FIRST VIDEO: While walking Brown out of the office, Millican proceeded to say some rather vulgar things pertaining to Brown’s physical appearance and his mother.

First VIDEO: 

DISCLAIMER: Explicit and vulgar language

To View the full video, please paste this link into your browser:

youtu.be/kK6c1XKidFw

Obituary: Brian Patrick Feeheley

December 7, 1957 – June 24, 2023

Memorial services for Brian Patrick Feeheley, 65, of Ringgold, LA will be held at 6:00 P.M., Monday, June 26, 2023 in Rockett Funeral Home Chapel, Ringgold, LA. Mike Riches, one of his dearest friends, will be paying tribute to Brian at the memorial service. Visitation will be from 5:00 P.M. until service time.

Brian was born December 7, 1957 in Saginaw, MI and passed away unexpectedly June 24, 2023 at his home in Ringgold, LA.  He was a very outgoing and lovable man.  His life revolved around his wife, boys and grandchildren.  Going to all of his boys and grandchildren’s events was something he always looked forward to and he was their biggest fan.  For over twenty years, he was the football announcer for the Ringgold High School football games.  Brian was very active in the Ringgold Recreation Club and Dixie Baseball when his boys were growing up.  He spent many hours preparing the fields and coaching.  During the years his boys were in high school, he was an avid member of the Ringgold High School Booster Club, serving as president some of the years.

Family get-togethers, grilling and cooking was something he dearly enjoyed.  He was a huge LSU fan and will have a great view from above of the championship games of the College World Series. Brian was affectionately known by many as “PeePaw”.  He will be missed dearly by the community and especially his family.

Left to cherish his memory include his wife of nearly 40 years, Rene Feeheley of Ringgold, LA; sons and daughters-in-law, Brock Jordan and Paula Feeheley of Castor, LA, Matthew Britt and Shannon Feeheley of Shreveport, LA and Cameron Patrick and Brittney Feeheley of Jena, LA; grandchildren, Tyler Feeheley, Bryce Moton, Jaiden Feeheley, Bentley Feeheley, Kaiden Williams, Brooklyn Feeheley, Bailey Feeheley, Farrah Feeheley, Zane Feeheley, Khol Feeheley, Knox Feeheley, Kannon Feeheley, Jett Feeheley and one on the way, Kreed Feeheley; brother, Kevin Feeheley of Saginaw, MI; sister, Nancy Ureche of Glenwood Springs, CO; father-in-law, Tony Procell; mother-in-law and father-in-law, Jeanette and Butch Carter; special brothers-in-law, Chris Procell and wife, Julie and Brandon Procell and wife, Linda, aunt and uncle, Judy and Jack Gill, and a number of other relatives and dear friends.


Today in History

1096 – Peter the Hermit’s crusaders forced their way across Sava, Hungary.

1243 – The Seljuk Turkish army in Asia Minor was wiped out by the Mongols.

1483 – Richard III usurped himself to the English throne.

1794 – The French defeated an Austrian army at the Battle of Fleurus.

1804 – The Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the mouth of the Kansas River after completing a westward trek of nearly 400 river miles.

1819 – The bicycle was patented by W.K. Clarkson, Jr.

1844 – John Tyler took Julia Gardiner as his bride, thus becoming the first U.S. President to marry while in office.

1870 – The first section of the boardwalk in Atlantic City, NJ, was opened to the public.

1894 – The American Railway Union called a general strike in sympathy with Pullman workers.

1900 – The United States announced that it would send troops to fight against the Boxer rebellion in China.

1900 – A commission that included Dr. Walter Reed began the fight against the deadly disease yellow fever.

1907 – Russia’s nobility demanded drastic measures to be taken against revolutionaries.

1908 – Shah Muhammad Ali’s forces squelched the reform elements of Parliament in Persia.

1917 – General John “Black Jack” Pershing arrived in France with the American Expeditionary Force.

1925 – Charlie Chaplin’s comedy “The Gold Rush” premiered in Hollywood.

1926 – A memorial to the first U.S. troops in France was unveiled at St. Nazaire.

1924 – After eight years of occupation, American troops left the Dominican Republic.

1927 – The Coney Island Cyclone roller coaster opened in New York.

1936 – The Focke-Wulf Fw 61 made its first flight. It is often considered the first practical helicopter.

1942 – The Grumman F6F Hellcat fighter was flown for the first time.

1945 – The U.N. Charter was signed by 50 nations in San Francisco, CA.

1948 – The Berlin Airlift began as the U.S., Britain and France started ferrying supplies to the isolated western sector of Berlin.

1951 – The Soviet Union proposed a cease-fire in the Korean War.

1959 – CBS journalist Edward R. Murrow interviewed Lee Remick. It was his 500th and final guest on “Person to Person.”

1959 – U.S. President Eisenhower joined Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II in ceremonies officially opening the St. Lawrence Seaway.

1961 – A Kuwaiti vote opposed Iraq’s annexation plans.

1963 – U.S. President John Kennedy announced “Ich bin ein Berliner” (I am a Berliner) at the Berlin Wall.

1971 – The U.S. Justice Department issued a warrant for Daniel Ellsberg, accusing him of giving away the Pentagon Papers.

1974 – In Troy, Ohio, a Marsh supermarket installed the first bar code scanning equipment, made by IBM, and a product with a bar code was scanned for the first time. The product was Juicy Fruit gum.

1975 – Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a state of emergency due to “deep and widespread conspiracy.”

1976 – In Toronto, Canada, the CN Tower opened to the public. The official opening date is listed as October 1, 1976. It was the world’s tallest free-standing stucture and the world’s tallest tower until 2010.

1979 – Muhammad Ali, at 37 years old, announced that he was retiring as world heavyweight boxing champion.

1985 – Wilbur Snapp was ejected after playing “Three Blind Mice” during a baseball game. The incident followed a call made by umpire Keith O’Connor.

1987 – The movie “Dragnet” opened in the U.S.

1996 – The U.S. Supreme Court ordered the Virginia Military Institute to admit women or forgo state support.

1997 – The U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Communications Decency Act of 1996 that made it illegal to distribute indecent material on the Internet.

1997 – J.K. Rowlings book “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” was published in the U.K. The book was later released in the U.S. under the name “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” This was the first book in the Harry Potter series.

1997 – The U.S. Supreme Court upheld state laws that allow for a ban on doctor-assisted suicides.

1998 – The U.S. and Peru open school to train commandos to patrol Peru’s rivers for drug traffickers.

1998 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that employers are always potentially liable for supervisor’s sexual misconduct toward an employee.

2000 – The Human Genome Project and Celera Genomics Corp. jointly announced that they had created a working draft of the human genome.

2000 – Indonesia’s President Abdurrahman Wahid declared a state of emergency in the Moluccas due to the escalation of fighting between Christians and Muslims.

2001 – Ray Bourque (Colorado Avalanche) announced his retirement just 17 days after winning his first Stanley Cup. Bouque retired after 22 years and held the NHL record for highest-scoring defenseman and playing in 19 consecutive All-Star games.

2002 – David Hasseloff checked into The Betty Ford Center for treatment of alcoholism.

2002 – WorldCom Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com  

June 25 (10:30 a.m.)

First Baptist Church of Gibsland’s 137th Anniversary/Homecoming Celebration

Bro. Orvell Bryant, pastor, welcomes all members past and present, families and friends to come share in memories and the Worship Service to celebrate the history of the church.

A covered dish “Sunday Dinner” will follow the Worship Service.

July 1

Farmer’s Market (Makers, Crafters, Food and Farm Items) – Downtown Arcadia

July 3 – 8

40th Annual Saline Watermelon Festival

July 4 (8 a.m.)

Flag Raising Ceremony – Mount Lebanon Stagecoach Museum 

July 8 (7 a.m.)

The Dam Melon Run 5k – Saline High School 

July 13 (12:30 p.m.)

The Circle of Bienville Medical Center – Arcadia Event Center

RSVP to Sharla McClusky at 318-572-0274


Notice of Death – June 25


Notice of Death – June 25, 2023

LaVerne DeLoach

June 6, 1931 – June 21, 2023

Coushatta, La.

Graveside service: 10 a.m. Monday, June 26, 2023 at Social Springs Cemetery in Ringgold, La.

Sandra D. Sparkman

Dec. 2, 1941 – June 23, 2023

Minden, La.

Visitation: 1 p.m. Monday, June 26, 2023 at First Baptist Church West Chapel in Minden

Funeral: Following visitation

Patrick Brian Feeheley

Dec. 07, 1957 – June 24, 2023

Ringgold, La.

Visitation: 5 p.m. Monday, June 26 at Rockett Funeral Home in Ringgold, La.

Memorial service: Following visitation

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are free of charge.)

New Bienville Lumber Company still hiring


The new Hunt Forest Products Sawmill in Taylor- the largest new industrial project in the parish in recent memory is still on the hunt for employees.

They are expecting to be fully staffed and and operable by the last quarter of the year.

They currently have the following openings:

Dry End Superintendent

Dry End Supervisor

Electrician

General Sawmill Utility

Millwright

Operations Manager

Quality Control Technician

Saw Filer Manager

The mill will run 4 days a week in two 10 hour shifts (80 hours per week).  This state-of-the-art sawmill will require only five people in the actual sawmill from the time the stem hits the deck to the time a forklift driver pulls the lumber out of the stacker to go into the kilns.  The maintenance, electrical and programmer staff are who make mills such as this run. 

Hunt will be working with Delta Community College in Minden to ensure that they develop a curriculum which will benefit those seeking employment in modern sawmills such as the one in Taylor. Hunt has been successful in the past at hiring graduates from these programs to work in their sawmills.

Facts about the new sawmill:

  • Location:  1643 Highway 80, Gibsland, LA; site of the former Weyerhaeuser Taylor Sawmill
  • Acreage: 255 acres, including the existing Taylor sawmill site and adjacent timber land
  • Construction Start: First Quarter of 2022
  • Estimated Completion and Operation: Second Quarter of 2023
  • Cost: Approximately $240 million
  • Employees: 60 at initial operation; 130 at full operation
  • Indirect Jobs: 300+during construction
  • Average wage: Close to $20 per hour
  • Production Capacity: 320 million board feet annually
  • Timber Requirements: 1.3 million tons annually
  • Log Dimensions: Maximum butt diameter: 20 inches, Minimum tip diameter: 6 inches. Maximum log length: 65 feet, Minimum log length: 20 feet.
  • Workforce Training: Louisiana Department of Economic Development FastStart workforce development program, in coordination with Bossier Parish Community College
  • Ownership: 50/50 joint ownership between Hunt Forest Products of Ruston, LA, and Tolko Industries Ltd. of Vernon, British Columbia.  Hunt will manage and operate the mill day-to-day.

To view additional details on job openings or to apply, please click the link below.

https://http-bienvillelumber-com.breezy.hr/

Week Four of the BP Library Summer Reading Program

Week Four of the Bienville Parish Library 2023 “All Together Now!” Summer Reading Program continues with “Louisiana in Story and Song” by Rickey Pittman, the Bard of the South.  This performance is a mixture of intriguing stories, flags, historical relics, and interactive activities with a mix of original and traditional music performances. Learn about the famous and infamous characters in Louisiana History!

What is a bard?

According to Wikipedia, a bard was a professional storyteller, verse-maker, music composer, oral historian, and genealogist in ancient Celtic times. He was employed by a king or chieftain to commemorate one or more of his ancestors and to praise his own heroic activities.

Today a bard is still a professional storyteller and music composer that travels from place to place teaching through songs and stories about the heroics of men and women in history. The traveling bard might also sing songs and tell colorful stories of the dastardly deeds of thieves, rogues, and pirates in history too!  

Here are the dates and times for program times for each library:

Wednesday, June 28

Gibsland Branch at 2:00 p.m.

Thursday, June 29

Arcadia Main Library at 10:00 a.m.
Ringgold Branch at 2:00 p.m.

Friday, June 30

Castor Events Center at 10:00 a.m.

Saline Branch at 2:00 p.m.

DON’T FORGET TO SNAG YOUR BRAG TAGS!

This reading incentive motivates your reader to read and collect all ten tags. It will impress teachers with how many books/pages they read during their summer vacation! We also encourage readers to select books with AR points. Most schools have an accelerated reading program and while you’re collecting brag tags, you can also collect AR points. When you head back to school, you’ll be ready for the new school year!

The 2023 Summer Reading Program is designed to help:

  • Children stay motivated to read.
  • Develop positive attitudes about reading, books, and the library.
  • Maintain their reading skills during summer vacation.
  • Provide access to experiences that further their sense of discovery.
  • Gives access to experiences through which they can learn to work cooperatively.
  • Most of all – HAVE FUN!

Look for the Pull & Post Fridge Flyer in the Bienville Parish Library Event Guide for times and a list of performers. You’ll also find all you need to know at your Bienville Parish Library website at: www.bienvillelibrary.org

SEE YOU AT THE LIBRARY!


St Duty CME Church’s Summer Feeding Program


The St. Duty CME Church located at 2832 MLK Drive in Arcadia is hosting a Summer Feeding Program that will run until Thursday, July 27.

Breakfast is served from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. Monday through Thursday.

Lunch is served from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday.

Participants may receive meals in-person or by delivery.

For more information please contact Evet Harris at 318-607-3074.

Storm damage? Here’s how to report it

Louisiana residents hoping for some relief after storm damage received during the period June 14 through June 16 should utilize Damage.LA.Gov to report that damage.

Residents applying should know the survey is voluntary and does not guarantee any federal disaster relief assistance. To access the survey, please visit the website  https://damage.la.gov/.

While no funding through FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) has been granted for this event, data will help the governor and GOHSEP (Governor’s Office of Homeland Security) and parish officials evaluate situations and have accurate damage information.

Residents who received damage to a residence or business should complete this survey to report damage to the home (residential structure only, no vehicles). Information collected here will help parish, state, and federal authorities understand how and where locations were impacted by this disaster event.

Take pictures up close to capture specific points of damage but also take pictures of the whole area. Make sure pictures are not blurry.  If the pictures are hard to capture, use the “other comments” field to describe the photos and help portray the damage.

 When submitting, make sure the street address is accurate and the map pin is placed on or near the damaged building. Submit reports only on living residence or business; no out buildings/barn/shed/ garages or fencing.

Damage.LA.Gov is a Virtual Louisiana initiative and damage reporting process launched by GOHSEP in the Spring of 2020. It gives citizens of Louisiana access to self-report damages in the aftermath of significant disasters including hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and winter weather.


Account Executive Needed

Do you enjoy meeting new people and greeting old friends?

You may be perfect for an account executive’s position with the Bienville Parish Journal. You don’t have to fit a particular profile, you just need to be as passionate about spreading the news as those with whom you will be working.

BPJ subscriptions are – and always will be – free. We depend on businesses and advertising to help us meet our goals and keep the public informed. That’s where you may be able to help. We need an outgoing individual to sell advertising for BPJ – the fastest growing publication in Bienville Parish.

Contact us at bpjnewsla@gmail.com, if this describes you.


Power outage triggers a memory

Having lost power for several hours last weekend due to a storm, memories emerged of a column I wrote years ago for Louisiana Conservationist magazine. With your indulgence, I’m sharing that column with you.

DRAGGING A TEENAGER DOWN MEMORY LANE

As I have experienced more and more birthdays, I have noticed that I seem to possess the uncanny ability to dredge up and bring into sharp focus vivid details of things that happened to me ages ago. It thus seems a paradox that I can’t ever seem to remember where I laid my glasses. It takes very little to get me off on a stroll down memory lane taking with me, whomever happens to be within earshot.

My most recent, if reluctant, companion for a trip down the lane was Melissa, our teenager. She actually had no choice because a brief but savage storm had zapped us, rendering inoperative everything electrical. And that included TV, stereo and jam box. With no juice, there was no “Night Court” re-runs; no screeching disc jockey spinning such ditties “I’m Too Broke To Pay Attention, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah”.

Boredom was closing in on her, so I mercifully came to her rescue. Sitting her down, I began blazing a trail down memory lane, kicking off with a phrase teens love to hear from the lips of their parents…”When I was your age…”

Not wanting to appear overly eager to hear my “back when” stories she masked her glee with a facial expression like the one you get when the dental assistant comes to the door, calls your name and asks sweetly, “Ready for that root canal?”

“Back when I was your age, we didn’t have electricity, television , running water, indoor plumbing but boy, did we have fun!”

(I’ll bet…).

“You wouldn’t catch us sitting around the house bored. No sir-ree, we’d go down to the creek and catch frogs, crawfish and bugs.”

(I think I’m going to be sick…)

“We’d take the shovel and dig in cow patties for fish bait. Then we’d go catch us a bunch of mudcats.”

(Well WHOOP-de do…) “And we’d go snipe hunting down in the deep woods after dark. You talk about scary, especially when the rest of the kids went off and left you all alone there in the dark holding the sack and waiting for a snipe. Bet you’d get a kick out that, wouldn’t you?”

(I can’t believe I’m missing Three’s Company…)

“And the games we played…deer and dog, red rover, pop-the-whip. Then for some real excitement, we’d sneak over after dark and turn over a neighbor’s privy.”

(Dear Lord, PLEASE make the power come back on!)

“If you can find an old inner tube, I can make us a sling shot. When I was your age, we’d get us a pocketful of rocks, take our sling shots and shoot snakes, turtles and frogs.”

(Personally, I’d rather have chicken pox…)

Without warning, the power came back on and, like a shot, she was up to the television.

“Wait,” I called after her, “I didn’t get to the good part about how we made flying jennies and cars out of grandma’s snuff bottles. By the say, have you seen my glasses?

(You’re wearing ‘em….)

“Oh….”


There will be blood

Q: “How concerned should I be about ‘catching something’ from an attacker?”

A: “Very.  Just know that it’s better to live with a disease than to die in a fight.”

The focus of today’s article is not on sexually transmitted diseases.  However, it should be noted that if you are the victim of a sexual assault or rape, medical screenings for STDs should be high on the priority list of things to do following such an attack.

If you find yourself in a fight for your life – be it a fist fight, knife fight, or a gun fight – it’s not just possible that you end up with the attacker’s DNA on you, it’s highly likely.  Most violent encounters, even with guns, occur at “bad breath distance.”  When a bad guy wants to take something from you – your money, your car, your watch, or something far more personal – they must get close to you, which increases the potential for disease transmission.  

Bad guys tend to live high-risk lifestyles.  Drug abuse, sexual promiscuity, unsanitary living conditions, and flagrant disregard for personal health and hygiene are commonplace among criminals.  Criminals also spend a lot of time in jail – a close quarters living arrangement with others who live similar lifestyles, and a breeding ground for yuck.  These life choices produce a higher-than-normal risk of contracting disease, whether it be the flu or something Ajax won’t take off. 

  Cross contamination with bloodborne pathogens is the biggest concern when discussing communicable disease in a self-defense scenario.  Other things are certainly possible, but hepatitis, HIV, “FBA” (Full Blown Aids), as I’ve heard it referred to in the scientific medical community, and tuberculosis, rank among the top of the list concerning disease contraction.  What some people might not realize is the importance of medical screenings following a self-defense scenario.  Frankly, with all the hoopla going on at the scene and in the hours immediately following a violent encounter, medical tests will likely be the furthest thing from your mind, but those screenings should be a part of your plan of action, later down the road.

Screening for some diseases is not as easy as going to the hospital, donating a vial of blood, and getting a lab report back within an hour.  These things don’t just appear in your system over night.  Testing for certain diseases involves multiple tests over a period of months, maybe even a year or more, to determine the presence of a virus, or the lack thereof.  

Even if the attacker doesn’t noticeably bleed on you, which is a big IF, it’s possible that they still transmit disease.  Human saliva and mucus are not, by themselves, bloodborne pathogen carriers.  However, if there’s blood mixed into saliva or mucus by way of an injury, an ulcer or other reason, those fluids become a vehicle in which blood droplets can hitch a ride.  Spit and sputum are disgusting.  When you add the possibility of blood hanging out with them, they can be just as dangerous as an open wound.  Imagine you pepper spray an attacker.  Now he has long strings of relatively harmless snot hanging from his nostrils to his belt buckle.  Now imagine you punch him in the nose.  That relatively harmless snot just became a biohazard whip.

If you thought that was nasty, just wait.  These are things people don’t like to think about because bodily fluids are gross, but the reality is that they exist, and you will physically encounter them in a fight.  If you punch, stab, bludgeon, or shoot someone, they will bleed.  Depending on how and where you inflict the trauma, in addition to blood, you might also find yourself in direct contact with bone fragments and / or brain matter.  What’s far worse than getting those things on you isgetting them in you.  

Blood, bone fragments, and brain matter on your skin can usually be cleaned off with no negative physiological effects or disease transmission occurring.  However, getting those things into your eyes, mouth, or into an open wound can be medically devastating.

I say all this not to be gruesome or to prevent you from defending innocent life, but to emphasize the importance of medical screenings being a part of your self-defense plan.  Does hepatitis suck?  Yep.  It sure does.  Would I rather live with hepatitis than die in a fight because I was afraid of what disease I might catch from the bad guy?  Most definitely.  

Nobody wants a disease, but death is even less desirable.  We, and anyone dependent on us for protection, only get one life and it’s our responsibility to protect that gift.  We can’t depend on anyone else to come to our rescue during a violent encounter, and the responsibility of our wellbeing after the fact falls solely on us as well.  That’s why knowing what to expect and having a plan of action before you need one is so crucial.  We can’t always avoid bad things, but medical considerations are just another reason to always… you guessed it – Avoid what you can.  Defeat what you can’t.

Thanks for reading.

-Ryan   

Please submit your questions to Ryan via email at Ryan@9and1tactical.com

Ryan Barnette is not a licensed attorney or a medical provider, and no information provided in “Slicing the Pie,” or any other publication authored by Ryan Barnette should be construed, in any way, as official legal, or medical advice. 


Walk the walk and talk the talk

One thing I envy about my husband is his assertiveness. He is what I would call the opposite of a people pleaser. He does not care about fitting in or saying the “right” thing. He is hard fast in following his own set of rules and is not swayed by others’ opinions. The song lyrics, “You’ve got to stand for something, or you’ll fall for anything,” by Aaron Tippin suits my husband well.  He is by no means the type of person to just tell you what you want to hear and I am pretty sure he has made that clear about 20 thousand times over the many years that I have known him. I can hear him now… “I am not going to tell you what you want to hear. I am going to tell you what you need to hear.” This probably sounds familiar to anyone who has any type of relationship with my husband whether it be personal or professional.  

Sometimes I wish I could be more like that. If that were the case, I would probably live a much healthier life all together. I know that it is great to consider others and try our best to not be insensitive or unkind, but there is a point where it becomes unhealthy when we are neglecting our own feelings and needs just to please others.  

The stress and anxiety that comes along with every potential “no” that may have to leave my lips is gut wrenching at times. I hate feeling like I am letting anyone down and it doesn’t even matter if I know you. If you ask me for a favor, my natural inclination is to say, “yes.” I quickly agree to almost anything even when I know that I am stretching myself too thin.  

After being married to my polar opposite when it comes to this personality trait, I am well aware that I need to establish better boundaries. But that leads me to the question: Is it actually a personality trait or is this something we are perhaps unintentionally instilled with during childhood? 

I feel like it is natural for young children to want to please their parents or teachers MOST of the time. I mean wouldn’t it be nice if every time you ask your kid to do something, they immediately go do it without you having to ask 10 times?  

There must be a way to find a good balance between aggressiveness and passiveness though, right? I have said this time and time again, but I feel that our primary duty as a parent is to make sure our kids grow up to be assertive, self-assured, independent adults. So, the question remains, how do we as parents make sure that we aren’t raising people pleasers if it is indeed something that is instilled during childhood and not just some part of our individual personalities? 

This may be a better question for my husband to answer, but I will give it a go. 

I think by highlighting the fact that “fitting in” is overrated. Even though I am a recovering people pleaser I have always stood firm in this fact. By allowing your kids to embrace their individuality, you let them know it is okay to not be liked and accepted by everyone they meet.  

I also think that just simply paying attention and giving them your individual time when they desire to be seen or heard may eliminate them either acting out or trying to seek your approval and praise. 

But most importantly, we must be an example. Our kids pay attention to everything we do and say. If you have mistakenly let a not so nice word leave your mouth in front of a two-year-old, then you know this to be true. A huge part of them learning healthy boundaries will come from witnessing you, as a parent, setting those same boundaries for yourself.  

Walk the walk and talk the talk.

(Paige Nash is a wife, mother of three, publisher of Bienville Parish Journal and Claiborne Parish Journal and a digital journalist for Webster Parish Journal.)


A former fruit cart at a century

Some people judge towns by their population. Others judge them by amenities such as parks and playgrounds. Many consider school systems and tax policies when evaluating municipalities. Still others prioritize water and air quality. I judge towns by the excellence and longevity of their small independent diners and cafes.

For 100 years, the Coney Island Café has defined my hometown of Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

Arthur Fokakis, the original owner, emigrated here from Greece in 1923. He got his start by selling fruit from a pushcart he parked under a large shade tree near the railroad tracks on Main Street. After a few years, he leased the land under the tree and built an open-front fruit stand. A few years later he turned the fruit stand into a short-order café that served hamburgers, hot dogs, homemade curly fries, and breakfast, just as it does today.

Greek immigrants like Arthur were the early pioneers of the restaurant business in Mississippi. They were our culinary forefathers. In 100 years, only four Fokakis men— all direct decedents— have run the Coney Island Cafe. It’s the definition of a true, family-run operation.

Arthur turned the business over to his son, also a Greek immigrant, who everyone called “Junior.’ His son Billy took over in 1984. After Billy’s untimely passing five years ago, his son B.J. began manning the griddle and still runs it today. Four generations of fathers and sons. A century of commitment, hard work, dedication, and service. Truly rare air in the restaurant business. Seriously, the rarest of air.

There has been a member of the Fokakis family manning the grill at The Coney Island Café since Calvin Coolidge was in the White House. The Coney Island Café in Hattiesburg predates the Empire State Building in New York, but— to us— it’s just as iconic of a structure in downtown Hattiesburg as the 102-floor structure is in Midtown Manhattan.

Billy Fokakis was a few years older than me, but we were friends. Once Billy took over the business, he never missed a day of work. Not one. 34 years. 6am to 3pm. Every day. He once scheduled surgery on a Friday afternoon, so he could be back to work on Monday. He was.

Locally owned restaurants and cafes are key to the makeup of a city or town’s character. Whenever I am out of town I go to the front desk of the hotel and ask directions to the local breakfast café. “I want to go where the old men are talking sports and politics over eggs and bacon,” I say. That is the place where one learns of that town and its people.

I do my best to only support locally owned restaurants, and independent restaurateurs. The owners are in your town, and they live in your neighborhood. Their kids and grandkids go to school with your kids and grandkids. They shop in your stores and buy groceries in your markets. I believe independent restaurateurs support locally owned businesses more than others in the community, because they know— on a deep and personal level— how important it is to keep all commerce local whether it be grocery stores, hardware stores, gas stations, or boutiques.

A chain-restaurant proponent might make the argument that the chain restaurants are hiring people who also live in the community, and I can’t dispute that. But corporate profits get sent to corporate headquarters in Dallas, Orlando, or wherever the base of operations is located. Think of it this way— if there weren’t so many chain restaurants in your community squeezing out the independent operators, there would be more independent restaurants filling that void, creating unique character, vibe, and distinctiveness in your town, while keeping everything local.

I believe restaurants have souls. They define a town and tell the story of that place and its people. Some restaurants take on the personality of their owner, some take on the collective personality of the staff. Still others adopt the characteristics of their customers or the town itself. The Coney Island Café is a little bit of all that wrapped up in a small dining room filled with stools, booths, and memories.

The Coney Island Café probably won’t ever win a James Beard Award or get special recognition in any of the national culinary trades. But it has done so much more. It has fed all the people of a town— black, white, young, old, rich, poor, local, tourist, for 100 years— a feat that can’t be measured by ribbons, and trophies, or accolades.

The Coney has survived a world war, a great depression, and dozens of recessions. It was there in the early days when downtown Hattiesburg grew and thrived. It never wavered when those businesses moved away to open shiny new stores in sprawling malls and strip centers. It held firm during the white flight of the 1980s and was still standing when downtown’s renewal and renaissance began in the late 1990s. The Coney Island Café is a survivor.

I ate at the Coney Island Cafe as a kid. My father brought me there. His father took him here. I take my son there. I hope that he’ll do the same.

The last conversation I had with Billy Fokakis was about his café reaching the 100-year mark. It’s something we spoke about every time I dined with him. One of the last things he said to me was, “Robert, I don’t think I’m going to get to see us hit 100.” A few weeks later he was gone. Though B.J. Fokakis was the next in line and he took over immediately. Billy would be proud. So would Junior and Arthur.

We are all proud.

So, on behalf of a grateful community, happy 100th to the Coney Island Café and the hard-working Fokakis family. Here’s to 100 more!

Onward.

The World’s Last Meatloaf

2 pounds Ground beef

1 Tbl Bacon grease (or canola oil)

1 cup  Onion, minced

3 /4 cup Celery, minced

3 /4 cup Bell pepper, minced

1 tsp Garlic, minced

1 /8 tsp Thyme, dry

1 /4 tsp Oregano, dry

2 tsp Steak Seasoning        

1 Tbl Salt

1 cup Milk

1 /2 cup Ketchup

1 Tbl Worcestershire sauce

3  Eggs

1 cup Bread crumbs, course

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Heat the bacon grease in a large skillet over medium heat. Sauté vegetables with salt and dry herbs until tender. Allow to cool.

Combine milk, eggs, Worcestershire and ketchup and mix well. Place ground beef, cooled vegetables and egg mixture into a large mixing bowl. Using your hands, squish the meatloaf until you have mixed everything together and all is well incorporated. Fold in the breadcrumbs last.

Shape the meat mixture into the form of a loaf on a baking sheet. Using your hand, make an indentation down the center of the loaf (This is where the glaze goes). Bake 50 minutes.

While meatloaf is cooking make the glaze. Remove from the oven and spoon glaze down the center of the meatloaf and spread over the sides. Return meatloaf to oven, lower heat to 300 degrees and bake 30 minutes more. Allow meatloaf to rest 15 minutes before serving. Yield: 8-10 servings 

Tomato Glaze

Ingredients:

1 tsp. Bacon fat

1 tsp. Garlic, minced

1 Tbl.  Onion, minced

¼ cup Brown sugar

2 Tbl. Yellow mustard

1 Tbl. Worcestershire Sauce

1 cup  Ketchup

Heat the bacon fat in a small skillet over a low heat. Cook the onions and garlic for 2-3 minutes. Add the brown sugar and allow it to melt. Stir in remaining ingredients.

(Robert St. John is a chef, restaurateur and published cookbook author who lives in Hattiesburg, Miss.)


Today in History

1683 – William Penn signed a friendship treaty with Lenni Lenape Indians in Pennsylvania.

1700 – Russia gave up its Black Sea fleet as part of a truce with the Ottoman Empire.

1758 – British and Hanoverian armies defeated the French at Krefeld in Germany.

1760 – The Austrians defeated the Prussians at Landshut, Germany.

1757 – Robert Clive defeated the Indians at Plassey and won control of Bengal.

1836 – The U.S. Congress approved the Deposit Act, which contained a provision for turning over surplus federal revenue to the states.

1848 – A bloody insurrection of workers in Paris erupted.

1865 – Confederate General Stand Watie, who was also a Cherokee chief, surrendered the last sizable Confederate army at Fort Towson, in the Oklahoma Territory.

1868 – Christopher Latham Sholes received a patent for an invention that he called a “Type-Writer.”

1884 – A Chinese Army defeated the French at Bacle, Indochina.

1902 – Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy renewed the Triple Alliance for a 12 year duration.

1904 – The first American motorboat race got underway on the Hudson River in New York.

1926 – The first lip reading tournament in America was held in Philadelphia, PA.

1931 – Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York on the first round-the-world flight in a single-engine plane.

1934 – Italy gained the right to colonize Albania after defeating the country.

1938 – The Civil Aeronautics Authority was established.

1938 – Marineland opened near St. Augustine, Florida.

1947 – The U.S. Senate joined the House in overriding President Truman’s veto of the Taft-Hartley Act.

1951 – Soviet U.N. delegate Jacob Malik proposed cease-fire discussions in the Korean War.

1952 – The U.S. Air Force bombed power plants on Yalu River, Korea.

1956 – Gamal Abdel Nasser was elected president of Egypt.

1964 – Henry Cabot Lodge resigned as the U.S. envoy to Vietnam and was succeeded by Maxwell Taylor.

1966 – Civil Rights marchers in Mississippi were dispersed by tear gas.

1972 – U.S. President Nixon and White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman discussed a plan to use the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s Watergate investigation.

2003 – Apple Computer Inc. unveiled the new Power Mac desktop computer.

2004 – The U.S. proposed that North Korea agree to a series of nuclear disarmament measures over a three-month period in exchange for economic benefits.

2005 – Roger Ebert received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

2013 – In Arizona, aerialist Nik Wallenda completed a quarter mile tightrope walk over the Little Colorado River Gorge.

2015 – NASA’s Mars Odyssey completed its 60,000th orbit around Mars. The spacecraft entered orbit on October 23, 2001.

2015 – Verizon announced it had completed its $4.4 billion purchase of AOL, Inc.

2017 – In Los Angeles, CA, the Wilshire Grand Center opened. It opened as the tallest building west of the Mississippi at 1,100 feet.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com  

June 19-23

Vacation Bible School – New Ebenezer Baptist Church in Castor

June 21- 23

Tommy Terrific’s Wacky Magic Show – Bienville Parish Libraries

Please check the library Facebook page for individual showtimes. 

June 24 (6 p.m.)

Auction – Faulk Auction Company – 1968 North Railroad Avenue in Arcadia

June 25 (10:30 a.m.)

First Baptist Church of Gibsland’s 137th Anniversary/Homecoming Celebration

Bro. Orvell Bryant, pastor, welcomes all members past and present, families and friends to come share in memories and the Worship Service to celebrate the history of the church.

A covered dish “Sunday Dinner” will follow the Worship Service.

July 1

Farmer’s Market (Makers, Crafters, Food and Farm Items) – Downtown Arcadia

July 3 – 8

Saline Watermelon Festival

July 4 (8 a.m.)

Flag Raising Ceremony – Mount Lebanon Stagecoach Museum 

July 13 (12:30 p.m.)

The Circle of Bienville Medical Center – Arcadia Event Center

RSVP to Sharla McClusky at 318-572-0274


Notice of Death – June 22


Notice of Death – June 22, 2023

Brenda Sue Rainey

Oct. 11, 1941 – June 20, 2023

Homer, La.

Visitation: 5 until 7 p.m. Friday, June 23, 2023

Funeral service: 9 a.m. Saturday, June 24, 2023, Ruple Baptist Church under the direction of Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Homer.

Burial: Ruple Cemetery near Haynesville, La.

William “Billy Joe” Bagwell

Nov. 28, 1926 – June 18, 2023

Homer, La.

Visitation: 1 p.m. Saturday, June 24, 2023, First Presbyterian Church, Homer, La.

Funeral service: 2 p.m. immediately following visitation.

Burial: Sibley Cemetery, Lincoln Parish, La.

Holly Renee Plunkett

March 16, 1981 – June 20, 2023

Ringgold, La.

Memorial service: 2 p.m. Saturday, June 24, 2023, home of Andrew and Tabetha Plunkett, 6888  Hwy. 4, Ringgold.

Pugh Theis Huckabay Jr.

March 2, 1942 – June 20, 2023

Coushatta, La.

Visitation: 10 a.m. Saturday, June 24, 2023, First Methodist Church of Coushatta.

Funeral service: 11 a.m., immediately following visitation.

Burial: Springville Cemetery under the direction of Rockett-Nettles Funeral Home, Coushatta.

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are free of charge.)

Jay B. McCallum to speak at Mt. Lebanon Historical Society’s annual flag raising ceremony

Mt. Lebanon Historical Society will host its annual flag raising ceremony at 8:00 a.m. on July 4th, 2023, at the Mt. Lebanon Museum. Our veterans will be honored during the program, and a potluck breakfast will be served following the ceremony. Please bring a lawn chair and one of your favorite breakfast foods to share.

This year’s speaker is Associate Justice Jay B. McCallum of the Louisiana Supreme Court. Justice McCallum is a lifelong resident of Union Parish. He is the first in his family to receive a college education, having graduated from Northeast Louisiana University in 1982 and LSU’s Paul M. Hebert Law Center in 1985. Prior to serving as a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for 11 years (1992-2002), Jay was a member of the Rabun and McCallum law firm, served as an Assistant District Attorney, and worked as a trial court judge for 15 years (2002-2018) on the bench of the Third Judicial District Court. In 2018, he was elected without opposition to the Second Circuit Court of Appeal in a district comprised of Bienville, Bossier, Claiborne, Caldwell, Jackson, Lincoln, Union, Webster, and Winn Parishes. On November 3, 2020, he was elected to the Louisiana Supreme Court for District 4. He took office as an Associate Justice on November 13, 2020. Jay is a much sought after motivational and inspirational speaker. He has been honored to have been the commencement speaker for numerous high schools and universities, including Louisiana Tech University and the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Jay and his wife Deanna are members of the First Baptist Church of Farmerville. In addition to Jay serving as a deacon and teacher, they are both active in the various ministries of the church.

 

Feeling creative? Two upcoming events for area artists


Local artists and inspiring artists will have two opportunities to showcase their talent at upcoming events to be held right here in Arcadia.

The first event, Art in the Park, is set for August 19 and will be taking place from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Henderson – Jordan Memorial Park. This event will be for those 18 years and younger. An 8 x 8 canvas along with all the supplies will be provided.

The artwork created at the park will be displayed at the Artists and Authors Expo on September 2.

Sponsored by the Historic Downtown Arcadia, the Artist and Authors Expo, will be happening in Downtown Arcadia and will feature area artists, authors and musicians. There will also be a silent auction.

Auction items are still needed. If you would like to make a donation, please reach out to 318-578-1431. Once donations are received, all items will be listed along with the donor throughout the month of August.

David Wade Correctional Center hosting Job Fair today

LOOKING FOR A NEW CAREER?

David Wade Correctional Center will be hosting a job fair today, June 21, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Arcadia Event Center located at 630 Factory Outlet Drive. 

They have immediate openings for correctional officers and other positions.

They are ready to hire qualified applicants on the spot and are offering affordable health plans and excellent retirement options. 

Snacks will be served.

For more information please reach out to 318-927- 0400. 


Obituary: David Gene Humphrey

November 27, 1955 – June 16, 2023

David Gene Humphrey of Saline, Louisiana passed away on Friday, June 16, 2023 after a brief courageous cancer related battle.  He was thought to have turned the corner on the road to recovery, however God had different plans.

Gene was born in Jonesboro, Louisiana on November 27, 1955 to Paul and Margie Humphrey.  Above all else, he loved his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ and his church family at Old Saline Baptist Church, where he faithfully served as a deacon and treasurer for many years.  He also enjoyed singing bass in the church choir and in quartets.  He was gentle and quiet, but had the biggest and most caring heart.

Gene graduated from Saline High School and then earned his bachelor’s degree in Industrial Technology from Northwestern State University in 1977.  He spent his entire professional career as a public educator in the Bienville Parish School System, teaching Trade and Industry at Shady Grove High School, Castor High School and Saline High School.  After retiring in 2013, he loved living the simple life; working his daily puzzles, watching Jeopardy, gardening, working to restore his Chevy Nova and searching for automotive parts to sell at swap meets.

Gene was extremely talented with mechanical and fabrication skill along with an innovative imagination.  He fabricated countless custom: toys, tools, race cars, trailers, and vehicles over the years.  He built his first championship winning race car engine in 1973 as a senior in high school.  He was also an accomplished circle track race car driver and earned numerous wins along with multiple track championships over the years.  He always made sure all of his grandkids, nephews, and nieces had plenty of motorized toys to ride while growing up.

Gene was preceded in death by his father, Paul Humphrey.  He is survived by his wife Gail Dement Humphrey, mother Margie Humphrey, brother Douglas Humphrey and wife Gail of Saline, brother, Ronnie Humphrey and wife Janice of Shreveport.  Children include Chris and Shannon Fife of Sterlington, Matt and Kristi Fife of Sterlington, Leigh Ann and Nick Hamburg of West Monroe.  Grandchildren include Otayia “Ty” Fife, Ariana Fife, Saphire Harris and Race, Sidney Harris and Nikki, and one great grandchild Daisy Harris.  Nephews and nieces include, Tanya and Jeremy Paul of Ruston, Trent and Emily Humphrey of Haughton, Ryan and Amy Humphrey of Shreveport, Alyson Humphrey of Shreveport, Ashlin and Heath Thompson of Shreveport, seven great-nephews and one great-niece, and a host of family and friends. 

Visitation for Gene in planned for Tuesday, June 20, 2023 at Old Saline Baptist Church from 9:30AM ~ 11:00AM. His funeral service is set to begin at 11:00AM with Bro. Michael Reed officiating.  Burial will follow in Old Saline cemetery under the direction of Southern-Edmonds Funeral Home.

Serving the family as pallbearers will be Donald Dement, Ronald Dement, Matt Fife, Ryan Humphrey, Trent Humphrey, Hudson Paul, Jeremy Paul, and Heath Thompson.


In the Right Place

It was the 1969 Toronto Pop Festival and Malcolm “Mac” John Rebennack Jr.’s band was scheduled to perform.  Mac looked like something from a strange other world.  He had strands of beads and other trinkets interwoven into his hair and “powders coming out of his ears.” Strips of colorful rags hung from his clothing.  He used a walking stick which looked like its intended use was for casting spells rather than walking.  The 18-year-old musician was in perfect health and did not require any type of apparatus for walking.  The stick was just part of who Mac was.  When Mac walked in a room, everyone instinctually turned their gaze his way.

The concert was held at an outdoor venue, and it had been raining periodically throughout the day.  Mac and his band were onstage playing their unique mixture of jazz, blues, rock and roll, and funk which the media nicknamed “voodoo rock,” when the rain began to pour.  As if it were a part of the show, Mac raised the unique walking stick toward the sky and held it there for a few moments.  His eyes focused on the dark clouds.  Some say he mumbled a few words.  Suddenly, as if under Mac’s spell, the rain stopped completely. 

Mac was born and raised in New Orleans’s middle class Third Ward.  His father owned and operated an appliance store.  In addition to household appliances such as washers, dryers, and refrigerators, Mac’s father sold sound systems and records in a variety of genres Mac later described as “gospel, bebop, real filthy party records, and hillbilly stuff like Hank Williams.”  Mac’s father also repaired appliances and sound systems.  Mac was first subjected to the gypsy world of musicians as a child when he accompanied his father on sound system repair jobs at local clubs.  Mac was more than a decade away from the required age to enter the clubs, but he was allowed since he was helping with the repairs.  Mac was entranced.  He recognized at this early age that he wanted to be a performer just like them.  Within a short time, Mac learned to play multiple instruments with almost no instruction. 

By the time he was a teenager, he was writing songs for other artists and playing guitar for recording sessions.  Mac said, “New Orleans produced a lot of good piano players and some good drummers, but for some reason there weren’t a lot of guitar players around, so I kind of filled the need.”  Mac was always modest.  Aaron Neville recalled that “the ratty dude,” which is how he referred to Mac, “was a bad dude on guitar.”  But that changed when Mac was 20 years old.

In 1961, Mac was on tour with his friend, fellow New Orleans native Ronnie Barron.  When Mac and Ronnie were not performing, they spent most of their time at a local motel.  During their stay, Ronnie and the motel manager’s wife became friends, maybe more than friends.  The motel manager confronted Ronnie about the possible infidelity and an argument ensued.  In a fit of rage, the motel manager pulled a pistol from his pocket.  Mac grabbed the pistol with his left hand just as the motel manager pulled the trigger.  POW!!!   Because of Mac’s quick action, the bullet missed its intended target.  For Ronnie, Mac was in the right place at the right time.  For Mac’s left ring finger, Mac was in the right place at the wrong time.  The bullet passed through his finger and left it “hanging by a thread.”  Surgeons repaired his mangled finger to the best of their abilities, but Mac’s career as a guitar player had ended with that pistol shot.  Mac transitioned from guitar to bass and then to piano, his first instrument.

Mac fell into a deep depression and tried to dull it with drugs.  He was arrested for possession of narcotics and spent time in a federal prison.  Upon his release in 1965, Mac moved to Los Angeles, California where he became a session piano player for artists such as Buffalo Springfield and Sonny and Cher.  In 1967, Mac recorded his first album, Gris-Gris, with other transplanted New Orleans musicians.  While working on the album, Mac began working on a way to incorporate the Mardi Gras tradition that he was so fond of into his live shows.  He created a character for his live shows that he named after a 19th century Louisiana voodoo priest.  In creating this character, Mac said he was “just tryin’ to hustle album deals, just tryin’ to hustle money.”  Rather than being a one-off character as Mac had planned, he became known as the character.  Malcolm John Rebennack Jr. may have been known as Mac to his close friends, but the world knows Mac as Dr. John.  He is most associated with his biggest hit single released in 1973 called “Right Place, Wrong Time.”

Sources:

1.     Browne, David. “Dr. John: The Joy and Mystery of a New Orleans Saint.” Rolling Stone, 24 July 2019, www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/dr-john-joy-mystery-new-orleans-saint-861931/amp/. Accessed 18 June 2023.

2.     “Dr. John – Right Place Wrong Time (Official Audio).” www.youtube.comwww.youtube.com/watch?v=W4PjWgiH-LQ. Accessed 7 Feb. 2023.


We all know right from wrong – It’s time we enforce it!

LCCM Policy Solutions is a non-profit established to advocate and educate legislators and the public on public policy based on conservative principles.

By utilizing a myriad of scholars, policy wonks, pollsters, and activists, we help craft and promote top conservative policy priorities for Louisiana.

From fiscal issues to social issues and everything in between, LCCM Policy Solutions is a beacon for those interested in advancing Louisiana to a more conservative run government.

Paid Content by LCCM Policy Solutions


The mask-wearer and forked-tongued bearer

Leonard Cohen wrote the song “Hallelujah,” and toward its end there’s a lyric that goes, “Now I’ve done my best, I know it wasn’t much/I’ve told the truth, I didn’t come here just to fool ya/And even though it all went wrong I’ll stand right here before the Lord of song/With nothing, nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah.”

You’ve probably heard the tune before. It’s been featured in numerous movies and television programs over the last couple of decades. I like it and all of Cohen’s music because he focuses exclusively on trying to do right in a world of cowards, hypocrites, panderers, liars, and politicians. Once again – being a politician has NOTHING to do with holding public office. A politician is someone who has no problem going along with anything just so long as it benefits them in the end. 

These people are the focus of a lot of Cohen’s songs because of their fast and loose concepts of truth and honesty. 

Honesty – that’s a word I’ve been thinking about a lot lately. Listening to Cohen while cutting the grass and clearing some brush, I found myself repeating this bridge:

“I can’t run no more

with that lawless crowd

while the killers in high places

say their prayers out loud.

But they’ve summoned, they’ve summoned up

a thundercloud

Ring the bells that still can ring.”

I love music because it can mean different things to many people. To me, this portion addresses the political among us, those who see the truth as malleable to be wielded as a weapon in whatever way benefits them at the time. 

I have always prided myself on honesty because a liar isn’t a man. My daddy and my football coach taught me that. A liar is worse than a thief. A gland-hander is worse than a idolater. Without honesty you’ve got the Republic you’ve got today, one moving ever closer to the edge, toward rot and ruin. Rome reborn. The go along to get along crowd? The time and a place crowd? The play the game crowd? Gag me with a spoon. 

You see, different opinions are my favorite opinions. I love someone who disagrees with me. Without disagreements I have no idea if I’m right or wrong because I have nothing to challenge me.  What is to be loathed is the schemer, the manipulator, the guy with two accents for two different groups. The mask wearer and the forked-tongued bearer. Harvey and his two faces. 

Rather than fame, rather than money, give me truth. The cowards cannot be trusted and the ever-growing societal aversion to uncomfortable truths may be saving your individual backside but only for a little while. 

Because:

“There’s a man goin’ ’round takin’ names

And he decides who to free and who to blame

Everybody won’t be treated all the same

There’ll be a golden ladder reachin’ down

When the man comes around

The hairs on your arm will stand up

At the terror in each sip and in each sup

Will you partake of that last offered cup

Or disappear into the potter’s ground?

When the man comes around.”

There are no more Pauls. No more Patrick Henrys. No more Martin Luthers. No more Dr. Kings. No more August Landmessers. We’re left with a nation of Tucker Carlsons and Elizabeth Warrens and Donald Trump Jrs. 

Thou shalt not lie. Be honest and if you can’t be honest just be quiet. Silence can be golden in a post-Christ world. I’ve discovered I’m saying less and less and less. 

Maybe one day I’ll just speak no more. And that’s ok. I’d rather be silent than not say the words I truly feel. I’d rather be mute than say the words of one who kneels. 

Let it be written on my grave marker: “I’ve told the truth. I didn’t come here just to fool ya.”

(Josh Beavers is an award winning writer and author. He has earned more than 40 individual writing awards and is syndicated in 12 North Louisiana news journals. The Louisiana Press Association has recognized him five times for excellence in opinion writing, and he has earned numerous Best Investigative Reporting Awards and Freedom of Information Awards for exposure of governmental corruption in Webster Parish.)


Hot Honey Chicken Dip


You know I love sharing all the best apps.  When I came across a few recipes with honey and sriracha, I knew a good combo had to happen.  This recipe can easily be doubled.  

We devoured this on the back porch with some cold drinks.  (This Louisiana weather is ridiculous!)  This one is spicy and full of flavor.  Keep it easy by using precooked fajita meat.  Enjoy!

Ingredients:

  • 1 large bag precooked chicken fajita meat
  • 1 (8 ounce) container cream cheese spread
  • 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese, divided
  • 1/2 cup shredded mozzarella cheese
  • 1/2 cup sriracha sauce
  • 1/3 cup honey
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
  • Ritz crackers or Fritos Scoops for serving

Directions:

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.  In a large bowl mix chicken, cream cheese, 1 cup cheddar and mozzarella cheese.  Stir in sriracha, honey, salt and garlic powder.  Pour into an 8×8 baking dish.  Top with remaining cheddar cheese.  Bake 16-18 minutes.

(Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom and published cookbook author who lives in Minden, La.)