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Take Tribal Politics Out of Shutdown Debate and Think About the Guy at the Food Pantry
Townall.com ^ | April 24, 2020 | John Kass

Posted on 04/24/2020 11:57:46 AM PDT by Kaslin

Unlike the tens of millions of Americans who have lost their jobs, America's cultural elites, in politics, government and media, are doing just fine during the coronavirus shutdown.

Some of the politicians are paid well enough to hoard gourmet chocolate ice cream in their expensive kitchen freezers, like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, rightly dubbed by Republicans as our very own Nancy Antoinette.

"I enjoy it," Pelosi said of her chocolate stash on "The Late Late Show" in the most tone-deaf media interview of the year, with her country out of work and people low on food. "I like it better than anything else. ... I don't know what I would have done if ice cream were not invented."

As Republicans shout "Let them eat ice cream," the Democrats shout that President Donald Trump is at it again, with his wantonly barbaric Twitter thumbs, virtue-signaling and rallying his Trumpian base about stopping immigration.

But then, after pressure from agribusiness lobbyists and the high-tech lords, Trump pulled back and decided to allow temporary workers to keep working on farms, and in Silicon Valley, where they have already displaced higher-paid Americans.

So, everybody who counts votes or money gets their say. But what about those who don't?

Like those Americans who've just lost their jobs. And small-business owners losing everything they've saved a lifetime for. The government shut them down, too, and they don't get much of a say, do they?

If they dare protest, if they demand to work and run their own lives, they're condemned by mouthpieces of the left as a bunch of greedy fools Who Just Want People to Die.

And who wants people to die?

In this, America's elites are very much like the wealthy rich in Boccaccio's "The Decameron," safe behind the walls of a secluded villa outside Florence, full of wine and full of ourselves, babbling on and on about love and morality during The Plague.

We telecommute to work on our laptops, where we debate the nature of this coronavirus death model and that coronavirus death model. From the safety of our screens, secure in our home offices, perhaps just a few feet from some freezer loaded with gourmet ice cream, we wax on and on when it might be acceptable for Americans to venture forth and take a risk.

Risk? What is this word? Our American culture has been working to eliminate risk for decades. Now, all the kids get a trophy. Universities aren't about challenging the young, they're about "safe spaces" from difficult ideas. And helicopter parents hover like those drones that'll take your temperature -- and determine the rate of infection -- from the sky.

Take the tribal politics out of it and think about the unemployed guy at the food pantry waiting for a box of charity food to feed his kids. He has worked all his life yet now finds himself unemployed, not through any fault of his own, but because government has deemed his job to be "nonessential."

He hears the politicians giving their daily coronavirus briefings to the media, expressing sympathy and concern, telling him that if he just shuts up and goes along with the shutdown rules, there could be light at the end of the tunnel. In some states, he can't buy tomato plants for a garden. In others, he can't drive to his church parking lot and sit inside his car and say a prayer.

He knows the state-licensed weed dealers are working. The liquor stores are open.

If he drives into the large cities, into rough neighborhoods dominated by street gangs, he knows he'll see the dealers slinging heroin. In some neighborhoods it is a never-ending party, people hanging out in the streets, getting infected, going home to infect their elderly family members.

And no pundits or big-city politicians dare condemn them as murderers Who Just Want People to Die. The mayors just send in the cops, many without masks, to deal with it, and hope the media ignores it for yet another day.

He doesn't want people to die. He doesn't want to die either. He doesn't want his family to die. He just wants to work and pay his bills. And he knows that as he waits for his box of charity food, there is one sector growing in the time of coronavirus shutdown.

Government.

Bureaucrats don't wait in line for charity food. Nobody in politics has been laid off. And businesses that rely on government contracts are fat, like the road builders. Because coronavirus or no coronavirus, the kings of asphalt and concrete are always first in line.

And what of the small-business owner who doesn't build roads? She risked everything to open her business. She went into debt. But there are no customers now, and the landlord wants the rent and the taxman is always waiting.

She doesn't see herself as someone who Just Wants People to Die.

She wants to work. She wants to live.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; food; government; jobsandeconomy; politics; shutdown

1 posted on 04/24/2020 11:57:46 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

I work from home at a job that shouldn’t be threatened by the virus. A couple of times I caught myself rather liking the reduced traffic when I went on errands.


2 posted on 04/24/2020 12:01:36 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: Kaslin

I’m working from home just fine. I also had a job interview today, but we had to use zoom.


3 posted on 04/24/2020 12:04:49 PM PDT by cuban leaf (The political war playing out in every country now: Globalists vs Nationalists)
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To: Dr. Sivana

I normally have a 3 hour commute and go through a tank of gas every two days. I’m lovin’ it.

Of course, it’s a bit like lovin’ crack. I compare what we’ve already done to the economy to a guy that jumps off a 20 story buidling and as he passes us here on the fourth floor, he yells, “So far, so good”.

The ground is coming up. It will leave a mark. A bad one. That’s why we started raising chickens again.


4 posted on 04/24/2020 12:06:47 PM PDT by cuban leaf (The political war playing out in every country now: Globalists vs Nationalists)
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To: Dr. Sivana

My work regimen has changed little due to the stay at home edicts. I get the honor of going to several different locations in the vicinity to keep our infrastructure up and running.

I meet new and interesting people almost every day, and now can’t really put a face to a name anymore as most of those faces are hidden behind some type of mask. I’m not thrilled with having to expose myself constantly to people I don’t know, but life has to go on, and I hope I don’t contract the virus.

The lower volume traffic has a significant downside from my own observations. Some people now drive like they have lost their mind and are doing “things” that they likely wouldn’t have even dreamed of with so few people on the roads compared to constant gridlock just a couple of months ago. I’ve even caught myself getting dumb on the roads and finally got over that after a couple of days.


5 posted on 04/24/2020 12:12:14 PM PDT by Pox (Eff You China. Buy American!)
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To: Kaslin

Bookmark


6 posted on 04/24/2020 12:14:02 PM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.)
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To: Kaslin

Drove by one today here in MO. They had Nat Guard directing vehicles & bringing stuff out to people.


7 posted on 04/24/2020 12:26:30 PM PDT by Pollard (shadowbanned)
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To: Kaslin

> Take the tribal politics out of it

Not directed at our brave poster but ... yea, go tell it to the people who’ve made every breath since Trump came down the escalator an ever-increasing war against ... well, without exaggeration, truth, justice, and the American way.


8 posted on 04/24/2020 12:58:48 PM PDT by No.6
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To: Kaslin

Small bulk ag business. Really slow but Thought we’d be ok. Many are cancelling orders. Didn’t apply for PPP. “Farmers gotta farm”
Can’t lay off drivers. Need them for deliveries when it gets started. Pushing brooms for now.
For what little work we have done, the entire Accounts Payable departments have closed. Waiting...Waiting...Waiting.


9 posted on 04/24/2020 1:04:54 PM PDT by griswold3 (Democratic Socialism is Slavery by Mob Rule)
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To: Southside_Chicago_Republican

When Kass is on, he’s on.

L


10 posted on 04/24/2020 1:14:13 PM PDT by Lurker (Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: Dr. Sivana

I retired just before the lockdown. For mr I’m doing fine, great time to accomplish my goal of catching up on 50 years of sleep deprivation.

Kids are doing fine, too, so I have no problems. I have friends that do, though.


11 posted on 04/24/2020 2:20:23 PM PDT by chesley (What is life but a long dialog with imbeciles? - Pierre Ryckmans)
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To: chesley

“For mr I’m doing fine, great time to accomplish my goal of catching up on 50 years of sleep deprivation.”

I’m retiring in June and I’m trying to stay awake. :)


12 posted on 04/24/2020 2:33:21 PM PDT by dljordan
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To: Pox

I’m enjoying the higher speed limits. I still see the cops but its been weeks since I’ve seen someone pulled over.

I’ve been working on a project that’s based at one of my companies warehouses and thus have gotten to know many of the guys who work there. Something I expect that no one else at the corporate office has ever bothered to do.

I’ve told a couple people how impressed I am with some of them and their strong work ethics and knowing their importance to our business.

I threw something out the other day that one of the forklift operators thought was hazardous. He pulled it out and brought it back to me and told me the warehouse GM said I couldn’t throw it out.

I went to talk to the GM and let him know I’d rendered the product inert and that it was safe. I told him how deeply I appreciated the operator’s caring about doing things the rights way. He was to be commended. Later, when I saw the operator, I reiterated that.

I honestly never expected anyone to even notice that I’d thrown the stuff out let alone pull it out of the compactor.

Without this shutdown, I never would have gotten to know these guys nearly as much.


13 posted on 04/24/2020 2:41:44 PM PDT by cyclotic (A vote for Democrats is a vote for lower traffic volumes)
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To: dljordan

:)


14 posted on 04/24/2020 4:26:54 PM PDT by chesley (What is life but a long dialog with imbeciles? - Pierre Ryckmans)
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To: dljordan

:)


15 posted on 04/24/2020 4:27:11 PM PDT by chesley (What is life but a long dialog with imbeciles? - Pierre Ryckmans)
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