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Spotlight on the Labor of Local Journalism

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I know, I know, I'm a bad journalist.

I had not seen the Academy Award winning movie "Spotlight" until last night.

I'm not sure it surpasses my other favorite Michael Keaton newspaper movie, "The Paper," on my list, but it is definitely up there.

I told myself I would not write about it, that I would just enjoy it like a regular Joe, and then I did a stupid thing. I started thinking about it.

For those of you who don't know, the movie is about a the team of investigative reporters from The Boston Globe who finally told the world about the Catholic Church's problem with priests molesting children.

So of course I would like it.

Gallant and persistent newspaper people doggedly digging out the evidence to reveal a wrong, it's enough to make you love newspapers again.

Except love is not enough.

Newspapers, as we all know and as I've written here before, are not healthy.

Fewer people read them and even fewer people pay for them, which is the crux of the problem. Given that in order to, as Liv Schreiber's character says in the movie "the newspaper should stand alone" (among Boston's great institutions), it has to make its own money.

If you haven't seen it yet (and you have 20 minutes to spare) comedian John Oliver explained it all pretty well on his HBO show "This Week Tonight:"



The fact that Oliver uses "Spotlight" as the basis for his parody at the end of the piece only makes it that much more relevant for my purposes.

When newspapers were making money by the bucket, it was easy for them to convince themselves that they could be capitalists and protectors of the public trust. But money has become an issue.

I could not help, while watching this movie, thinking about Oliver's piece, which I had seen prior to the movie, and thinking about how expensive it was to keep this team of reporters and editors, focused on this one story for month after month.

First page of the first day of the "Do or Die Time" series.
I can tell you this, in case you didn't already know, we don't do that kind of thing at The Mercury any more.

We used to.

When I began at The Mercury in 1997, it was not long before I was assigned "a project," which grew into the five-day "Pottstown: Do or Die Time" series, which some of you may recall and is now so old I cannot provide you with a link because it was never on a web site.

During the four or six weeks I was given to research that project, my beat was covered by another reporter -- even, rather painfully -- when Mrs. Smith's Pies announced it was closing its Pottstown plant.
Page 2, Day 1 of said series

Since then, however, any big projects I've worked on at The Mercury have been cobbled together in addition to covering my regular beat. And since then, my
beat has grown larger as the staff has grown smaller and I don't think our readers can expect too many "Spotlight" worthy investigations landing on their doorstep any time soon.

For as money gets tighter, ad revenues drop, staffs get cut and the capitalism part increasingly overshadows the government watchdog part.

The Mercury, and its sister newspapers in what we call "the Philadelphia cluster" are owned by Digital First Media, a company that is owned or controlled by a hedge fund named Alden Global Capital.

Hedge funds, as you probably know, are a little more focused on capitalism than they are on journalism. And so as our owners cut photographers, editors and reporters in a self-immolating effort to slice their way to double-digit returns (we manage single digit returns with old staff levels but remember -- hedge fund), the question  arises: can newspapers survive?"

Jim Rutenberg tackled that question Sunday in The New York Times, and yes I see the irony thank you. (Also ironic, you may have to pay to read that link).

The answer is in the long run, probably not. The more vital question, in my mind, is can the function of newspapers survive?

Although the romantic in me loves the feel and legacy of newspapers, I am not so naive as to believe they must exist forever. Already many of us, perhaps most of us, read our newspapers on-line, for free if we can.

But more disturbing is how we end up reading them.

Chances are they come to us in some kind of social media feed and studies show readers view a New York Times expose about increased flooding due to global warming with the same level of interest (importance) as the photo their friend just took of the ice cream cone he is about to eat.

Further still, consider what happened when our friends at Facebook recently fired all the human beings overseeing their "trending topics" function -- and within two days had identified a fake news story as trending.

Now to be fair, it was revealed before that decision was announced that the humans who had been in charge of "trending topics" apparently had been letting their bias show in what topics were trending, so its a kind of six-of-one-half-a-dozen-of-another conundrum.

But left to choose between outright falsehood or human bias in what Facebook tells us people are reading, put me squarely in the fallible humans column if for no other reason than because I'm not sure how you get accountability from an algorithm.

Which brings us back to the human equation, i.e., that imperfect species of human known as "journalist."

If you agree that A) they are currently preferable to machines in producing the news you consume and, B) its preferable to have people who know a thing or two about the business in charge, than you reach the inevitable conclusion that C), you're going to have to pay them; preferably a living wage so they can concentrate on their work and not the need to leave early for their second job bagging groceries.

Which brings us, inevitably, to the Labor Day portion of our tirade.

The Mercury is among several newspapers in our cluster, and among many more across the country, who are members of a union -- The Newspaper Guild.

Our Guild is part of a larger union, The Communications Workers of America, or CWA.

A grant from the CWA helped pay for an effort by Digital First Media guild workers to mount a media campaign highlighting not only the plight of news workers who had gone without raises for as long as 10 years, but also how hedge fund ownership of your local newspaper affects what news you get and what that means for your community.

In fact I was researching an article for the effort's web site on what happens to a place when its local newspaper goes under when the unprecedented happened -- Digital First Media sat down in Denver with every Guild unit within its newspapers and negotiated a three-year contract that included the first raise in years and a 5 percentage point reduction in our share of health insurance premiums (from 40 percent to 35 percent).

This is obviously good news, and good news to share on Labor Day.

But let's be honest.

It is an overdue battlefield victory in a long war of attrition which ultimately news workers and, even more ultimately, small towns like Pottstown, are bound to lose unless something changes in the basic equation.

Unless an economically sustainable way can be found to provide the local journalism function, it simply cannot continue as it is now.

 And while I cannot tell you how to fix it -- smarter people than me haven't succeeded yet -- I can tell you what it means.

Simply put, it means more corruption, fewer voters, more incumbents being reelected.

In 2007, the Cincinnati Post closed, and had the good grace to announce it ahead of time. This allowed Princeton Assistant Professor of economics and public affairs Sam Schulhofer-Wohl and Miguel Garrido to study the before and after affects on civic life in the northern Kentucky towns where the Post's coverage dominated.

As Time magazine summarized: "in towns the Post regularly covered, voter turnout dropped, fewer people ran for office and more incumbents were reelected. That is, when there were fewer stories about a given town, its inhabitants seemed to care less about how they're being governed."

Another Princeton study found a director correlation between the circulation of newspapers in a democracy, and the level of corruption in its government.

"Free circulation of newspapers has a very strong effect on the level of corruption," the study authors found.

"A change in the level of circulation in newspapers from its median to its maximum level would reduce the level of corruption."

And if you're looking for a real life example of this hypothesis, look no further than the City of Bell, California.

Elected city council members were being paid $80,000 and approved raises for the city administrator, Robert Rizzo, that paid him $880,000 per year and would have gained him a pension of $1 million.
Robert Rizzo

This, while the city was laboring under huge tax increases and huge deficits.

The state pension system should have realized the problem when those papers were filed but, surprise!, it didn't.

How did they get away with it for years? One factor was the closing of the local newspaper in 1998, the same year tRizzo was hired. No one knew what was happening.

And it took a team of reporters from the Los Angeles Times, Jeff Gottlieb and Ruben Vives, to uncover the corruption and publicize it in 2010, an effort that won them a Pulitzer Prize.
The Los Angeles Times celebrates its Pulitzer.
As newspapers fade, such scandals will become
more common and less reported.

But ask yourself, how many others are there out there? How many more towns and cities, small and large, which no longer have an independent watchdog in the local media, are looting the taxpayers?

They wouldn't even know, and neither do we.

Because there is no one being paid to tell us.

And although Pew Center for Excellence in Journalism studies increasingly show that the public does not recognize, or appreciate, the role local media plays in making their lives better, as Conrad Fink, a former journalist who teaches newspaper management and strategy at the University of Georgia puts it:"The American public doesn't realize it, but they're going to miss us if we're gone."









Questions Raised About Former Official's Building

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If you would like to show your support for the Lower Pottsgrove Police, yard signs such as this one are on sale at the Lower Pottsgrove Township building at Buchert and Pleasantview roads for just $10.
Tuesday  night was another one for North Coventry resident, and Sanatoga property owner Dave Fisher to pose some uncomfortable questions to the township commissioners.

Fisher, who in June called for the resignation of zoning hearing board chairman Keith Diener for his failure to file financial disclosure forms, this time apparently had former township commissioner James Vlahos in his sights.

Fisher asked several questions about why his Right to Know requests regarding the development file for 1954 E. High St., in which Vlahos apparently had a hand, showed no evidence of a sprinkler system being installed or waivers from the approved plans for a water permeable parking lot to control storm water.

In fact, said Fisher, the macadam parking lot has made storm run-off worse, affecting a building he developed, which is downhill from 1954.

He also noted there there is no highway occupancy permit in the file, which is required given that High Street is a state road.

Fisher further noted that he could find no evidence of a use and occupancy permit for the second floor of the building, as he was required to procure for his building, or for an expansion out the back of the building.

Whether this is simply evidence of a bad filing system or something deeper is not yet known. Township Solicitor Charles Garner Jr. thanked Fisher for bringing this information to the board's attention, and said they would respond when they had some answers.

Fisher requested that the response be in writing.

Here are the Tweets from last night's meeting, including video of Fisher's comments.

A Routine Borough Council Meeting

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Wednesday's work session of Pottstown Borough Council was a quick one, less than an hour.

There were few big ticket items, but a few smaller one.

Police Chief Rick Drumheller reported that the locations for street cameras have been identified and that project is moving forward thanks to the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office.

Plans to close High Street for the Halloween Parade on Oct. 25 are moving forward, as are approvals for the Walk-Bike Pottstown project, which will change a few street orientations to make room for bike lanes.

Council also appears prepared to vote on changes to the fire ordinance, which will give more control to the fire chief position and now, thanks to input from council, will require the chief live within five miles of the borough within a year after getting the job.

The borough will likely hire the Maillie firm to conduct the next two year's audits of the borough's books due to their price coming in lower than was charged this year.

And, there are also a number of vacancies on borough boards, some of which may be filled Monday night.

They are: two vacant seats on the code board of appeals; one on the Environmental Advisory Council; one on the Historic Architecture Review Board; several on the Human Relations Commission and one on the Pottstown Downtown Improvement District Authority.

In the meantime, here are the Tweets and video from last night's meeting.

$278,000 in Water Quality Grants Announced

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Silas Chamberlin, executive director of the
Schuylkill River heritage Area.
Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Schuylkill River heritage Area.

The Schuylkill River Heritage Area has distributed grants totaling $278,832 to eight projects this year that will improve water quality in the Schuylkill River.

The Schuylkill River Restoration Fund grants were awarded to six projects that will focus on stormwater runoff, abandoned mine drainage and agricultural pollution. 

Also awarded were two land transaction grants that will assist with protection of a priority watershed parcel. 

The projects are:
  • Borough of Pottstown, Stormwater Filter Project: $40,000: The Borough will install a new backflow prevention device to mitigate chronic roadway flooding and a new water quality unit to remove pollutants before they can discharge into the Schuylkill River.
  • East Coventry, Kulp Property: $4,000: Natural Lands Trust will purchase a conservation easement on a 30-plus acre property to protect important natural resources including the headwaters of Pigeon Creek. This project will also provide public access to a trail system in the East Coventry Township trail network.
  • Barto, Meyers Horse Farm: $8,332: Berks County Conservation District project will install best management practices on a horse farm operation in Barto to aid in preventing manure, sediment and other non-point source water pollution from entering the West Branch of the Perkiomen Creek. A roofed manure stacking pad will be constructed as well as a stabilized gravel lot. Stormwater controls will also be installed to aid to manage runoff.
  • Berks Nature, Durkin Farm: $95,000: Berks Nature will install a manure storage facility and water transfer system on a 501 acre dairy farm located on Manor Creek, a tributary of Maiden Creek. Additionally, the farm will install stormwater controls throughout the barnyard as well as streambank fencing and improved riparian buffers.
  • Berks Nature, Zettlemoyer Farm: $50,000: This project will implement various agricultural Best Management Practices on a 445-acre heifer operation located on Manor Creek. Two dry storage facilities will be installed along with a waste transfer system, stormwater controls and streambank fencing.
  • Berks Nature, St. Lawrence Property: $4,000: The St. Lawrence Borough land protection project will permanently protect through a conservation easement a 245-acre high priority landscape of forested property on an unnamed tributary of Antietam Creek. This project will contribute to the preservation and conservation of water quality within the upper Schuylkill River.
  • Schuylkill Headwaters Association, Big Creek Limestone Project: $40,000: The Schuylkill Headwaters Association will implement a dosing of high calcium limestone sand into the headwaters of Big Creek in an effort to reduce in-stream acidity. The restoration of Big Creek’s water quality will result in an average of 6,407 gallons per minute of treated water entering the headwaters of the Schuylkill River.
  • North Light Community Schoolyard Stormwater Project: $37,500: The North Light Community Center will complete a schoolyard renovation project at their educational facility in Philadelphia. Impervious playground surface will be removed and a stormwater management system will be installed that will include a rain garden and native plants. This project will serve as a learning lab for both the students and the community. 
The grant fund is administered by the Schuylkill River Heritage Area. This year, funds were provided by Exelon Generation’s Limerick Generating Station, the Philadelphia Water Department, Aqua PA and MOM’s Organic Market.

About 50 people attended the award announcement, which took place at the scenic Marty Nothstein Property in Port Clinton, PA, a 170-acre property that received funding and a permanent conservation easement through a restoration fund award in 2012. This property has been identified as a high-priority parcel that includes over 1,000 feet of river frontage.

The Schuylkill River Restoration Fund announcement was held in conjunction with a Schuylkill Action Network Project Tour that visited three watershed project sites.

“Over the past 11 years, the Schuylkill River Restoration Fund has distributed $2.7 million—and leveraged another $4.7 million—for 82 projects that improve water quality in the Schuylkill River watershed,” said Schuylkill River Heritage Area Executive Director Silas Chamberlin. “The success of this fund demonstrates how non-profit, government, and private sectors can work together to protect and restore the Schuylkill River, which is a source of drinking water for 1.5 million people.”

Grant recipients were selected by an advisory committee consisting of: Exelon Generation, Delaware River Basin Commission, Philadelphia Water Department, Environmental Protection Agency, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, Schuylkill River Heritage Area, Aqua PA, and the Schuylkill Action Network.

“The Schuylkill River Restoration Fund clearly shows what can be achieved by partners working together to implement grassroots water quality improvement projects that benefit all who rely on the Schuylkill and its tributaries,” said Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) Executive Director Steve Tambini. “On behalf of the DRBC, I am pleased to be here today as we announce the eight projects selected this year to receive grants and to thank the awardees for their efforts.”

This year, fund donations came from Exelon Generation ($183,885), Philadelphia Water Department ($100,000), Aqua PA ($7,500) and MOM’s Organic Market ($1,087). All funds not distributed this year will be rolled over into 2017.

“Protecting and preserving the Schuylkill River is very important to us,” said Rick Libra, Exelon's Limerick site vice president. “We are proud to be part of this unique partnership that recognizes the innovative stewardship efforts of these projects to improve the quality of the Schuylkill River.”

The Land Transaction Assistance Grants program provides matching grants of up to $4,000 per project to pay for costs associated with property purchases and conservation easements on high priority lands for water quality and habitat protection.

Exelon has provided over $2 million to the Schuylkill River Restoration Fund since it was founded in 2005; the Philadelphia Water Department has contributed $700,000 over the past seven years. Aqua PA has donated over $22,000 and MOM’s Organic Market over $2,700.

The Schuylkill Action Network and the Schuylkill River Heritage Area continue to seek additional contributors in an effort to further expand the fund.

The fund was originally created under a Delaware River Basin Commission docket approved in 2004 and Exelon Generation’s desire to support restoration efforts in the Schuylkill River and its tributaries.

The Philadelphia Water Department’s contribution to the fund is leveraged by other watershed partners and is directed towards addressing stormwater management and pollution mitigation projects upstream of the City’s two drinking water intakes on the Schuylkill River.

A Bronze Medal for Pottsgrove High School

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottsgrove School District 

US News & World Report released its annual survey of high schools across the nation. 

Pottsgrove High School received a bronze rating, meaning that it ranks in the top third of all high schools across the nation. 

US News & World Report ranks schools based on performance in their state assessments and how well they prepare all students for college and career. 

According to Bill Ziegler, principal of Pottsgrove High School, “the data used in determining our bronze status was from the 2013­/2014 school year.” 

“Combined with our excellent rating in the 2015 Pennsylvania School Performance Profile, Pottsgrove High School has enjoyed positive recognition for our achievements over the last few years. Our academic initiatives include: (1) increased AP course selections, (2) more STEM courses, (3) the implementation of the Digital Learning Environment (DiLE), and (4) more college and career opportunities for all students," said acting superintendent William Shirk. 

"There is always work to be done and that is why we have been so focused on our comprehensive plan for continuous improvement,” said Shirk.  “We appreciate the hard work of our faculty, students and the ongoing support of our community.” 

English teacher Mays Coleman noted, “we are pleased to be recognized among a prestigious group of secondary schools for preparing students for advanced educational opportunities.” 

 Librarian Dani Small shared, “Pottsgrove students should be extremely proud of their accomplishments and academic successes. It is an honor to be part of our students’ every day life and watch these Falcons grow and “soar to excellence.” 

"It is refreshing to know that all of our hard work has been nationally recognized by U.S. News & World Report.” said science teacher Brian Sheehan. 

“For the school, Pottsgrove being recognized by the US News just affirms what we already know, that Pottsgrove is filled with dedicated faculty and staff that care about their amazing students and students who give their best and work hard to achieve success. Personally, it makes me proud to call Pottsgrove my home,” Sheehan said.

“This good news comes to us at the same time we are opening our newly renovated high school facility. This achievement is the result of the hard work of our outstanding students and staff. We are excited and look forward to a great school year,” Ziegler said.

Of Fire Chiefs, Bodegas and Shade Tree Commissions

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There are about five things worth noting about Monday night's borough council meeting.

Three of them are votes, one is a surprise and the other not much of a surprise.

The last first: a presentation was given on the final costs of the borough's new $4 million public works garage. Or, no surprise, should I say the borough's new $4.4 million public works garage.

That 7.7 percent cost overrun on the project was due almost entirely to $270,000 in costs to remove unstable soils and replace them with stable soils and $55,000 in "enhancements" borough council was told Monday night.

More on that in The Mercury when I get my hands on the final numbers, which Borough Manager Mark Flanders has promised to provide.

Now for the votes (yes, we're saving the surprise for the end):

One vote, on which Councilman Dennis Arms offered the only dissent, will re-vamp the regulations governing convenience stores, limiting them to downtown and gateway districts and requiring 1,200 feet between them so as not to create a concentration of them.

However, Mayor Sharon Thomas's suggestion that hours be limited as well was not included.

The second vote was to revamp the Human Relations Commission, expanding membership in an attempt to revitalize it.

The third vote re-writes the fire ordinance, gives broader powers to the fire chief and requires that the new chief live within five miles of the borough line within a year of taking the job.

In case you were wondering, the current chief, Richard Lengel, intends on retiring by the end of the year.

And again, Councilman Dennis Arms offered the only dissent.

Council Vice President Sheryl Miller praised Thomas's suggestions that an incentive be offered to fire chief candidates that mirrors the $10,000 forgivable loan the school board wants to offer teachers and administrators who live in town.

And now, for your surprise. You've been patient, so you've earned it.

Six years after disbanding Pottstown's shade tree commission, Miller suggested council visit the idea of putting it back together.

She pointed out that there is "no funding to take care of the problem," by which she meant problem street trees, or dying or dead street trees.

Miller noted that since the commission was disbanded by council "homeowners are fully responsible for taking down the trees and, depending on the size of the tree, it can be thousands of dollars."

Arms said he liked the idea of revitalizing the shade tree commission  "but it should be tree removal commission. I have a lot of elderly residents around me that are having issues with trees and they can't afford to remove them, nor do they want to plant another tree in its place, which I totally understand."

He then volunteered with work with Miller on exploring the issue.

Surprise!

Here are the Tweets from the meeting:

PottsTOWN Talks Economy and More

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No, this is not a photo from last night's PottsTOWN Talks meeting. It is a photo from last month's meeting. But our new free-lancer Nancy March was so busy live Tweeting the meeting, that she didn't Tweet any photos.



 Welcome, guest Tweeter/Blogger Nancy March.

Never able to stay away from local news for long, March, the former editor of The Mercury, came out of retirement this week to cover some stories for us as a free-lancer.

One of them was last night's PottsTOWN Talks meeting, the second in as many months.

(I was busy at a Pottsgrove School Board meeting that was as brief as it was absent of earth-shattering news.)

This month's topic was the local economy and the meeting started off with presentations from two executive directors, Steve Bamford from Pottstown Area Industrial Development, or PAID; and Sheila Dugan of Pottstown Downtown Improvement District Authority, or PDIDA.

Also speaking was Matt Green, a local realtor and activist and former Pottstown police officer.

Then the meeting, which was attended by about 50 people, according to March's Tweets, broke up into smaller groups to brainstorm specific actions in specific areas -- economic development, community engagement and external marketing.

Although the dates have not been set, the topics for the next two PottsTOWN Talks meetings have, according to organizer Emanuel Wilkerson: schools, then neighborhoods.

And here are March's Tweets from last night's meeting. An article will also be published in The Mercury.


Latin Cultural Festival Set for Riverfront Park

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Centro Cultural Latinos Unidos.

The first festival to celebrate Latin Culture in Pottstown will be held at Riverfront Park on Saturday, Sept. 24.

Pottstown Borough Councilwoman Rita Paez who serves as director of the Centro Cultural Latinos Unidos, said the family oriented program will feature live music, dance performances, games, arts and crafts, ethnic foods and much more. 

Produced by the CCLU, the free program will begin at 11 a.m. and conclude at 4 p.m.

Learn about and enjoy Latin culture with the Mariachi Band Pedro Villaseñor and Latin band Sabor Gitano from New York City. 

Experience Latin dance lessons with Pottstown’s Stevie J. Dance Productions. 

Children will love to take part in activities such as soccer, piñatas, nature experiments and Spanish story times to name a few.

“We are thrilled to be able to offer this wonderful line up during National Hispanic Heritage Month,” said Paez. 

“We have received tremendous support from the Borough of Pottstown, local businesses, educational institutions, non-profit organizations, and the Latino community in the greater Pottstown area.” 

This year National Hispanic Heritage Month runs from Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 and recognizes the contributions made and the important presence of Hispanic and Latino Americans to the United States and celebrates their heritage and culture. “We welcome all to participate in this Festival,” she added.

Centro Cultural Latinos Unidos. Inc. (CCLU) is a non-profit bilingual, bridge building organization, committed to enrich the lives of Latinos and others by embracing diversity through cultural, educational and recreational programs in the greater Pottstown Area. 

For more information, visit http://www.cclu-pottst.org/

Gospel Jam Helps Kids Get Ready for School

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Tunes the Clown


Blogger's Note:The following was provided by Bethel Community Church of Pottstown.
BCCP Pastor Vernon Ross, who sported
some 
face paint, with Emanuel
Wilkerson, 
Pottstown School Board
member

Late last month, Bethel Community Church of Pottstown held a Back to school Gospel Jam.

It was designed to help students grow spiritually, build relationships, and have fun in a safe environment. 

 In addition, all students received a Back Pack filled with necessary school supplies.

The event moved from the Social Hall to the Sanctuary for worship where 11 youth committed their lives to Christ and to live a productive life.

The youth enjoyed Gospel DJ Craig, Tunes the Clown - Vernon Morrison, Jared Bostick, gospel rap artist, David Charles, gospel rap artist, and evangelist Kim Graham. 
Students helped choose goals for the school year.
They also enjoyed gospel story telling, Tamika Summers and Gospel Singers, Reverend Robert Pinkney, senior chaplain for Philadelphia Phillies, and Tameka Ferebee, gospel soloist, writer, producer, and musician.

With parents, grandparents, and students, there were close to 100 in attendance. 

Great food and fun was had by all.

The church had Back Packs for 108 students all donated by members and friends of BCCP.

Gospel music of all kinds was performed at the Gospel Jam

Sweet Taste of Success During Carousel of Flavor

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Richard Ellis of Maple Street knows how to enjoy an Italian hoagie from Monsanto Bros.; one of dozens and dozens of offerings at yesterday's 13th annual Carousel of Flavor.


For 13 years, the Carousel of Flavor has been big news in Pottstown.

An extremely successful restaurant festival that attracts thousands of people to downtown Pottstown every year, this year the event had an all new news hook.

When I went over to see how the Carousel itself looks, low and behold, not only was it spinning and playing music, it turns out it had just been certified for public use.

Now don't hop in your car and drive over there just yet. If you can believe it, retired long time State Farm Insurance agent George Wausnock, who also happens to be the President of the Carousel at Pottstown, doesn't have it insured for the public to ride it.
George Wausnock, carousel president, left, is joined at the
restored 
trolley that will serve as the snack bar
by volunteer Bob Roebuck Sunday.

At least not yet.

But if you stop by, you'll see the inside is painted; the floors have been polished, the safety fence has been installed and even the antique trolley has been restored to serve as the facility snack bar.

Full disclosure, I have done some work for this non-profit group, but being paid has never been the source of my enthusiasm for this project.

Although the cyber nay-sayers who love to make snide remarks about this project may scoff, I find
this to be one of the more up-lifting things going in Pottstown.

Understand that there is a certain population of people who feel about carousels the way others feel about roller coasters. If you restore it, they will come.

Similarly, there is population of people who love to ride vintage trains.

Brenton McDowell, 2, could not keep his eyes off the spinning
carousel Sunday even long enough to get his picture taken with
his mom, Esther Jean-Louis and his brother Branden Lors, 5.
So when you combine the working antique carousel with the pending construction of a platform for the Colebrookdale Railroad's Secret Valley Line across King Street in Memorial Park, and then add Manatawny Green mini-golf next door, and the Schuylkill River Trail, this starts to look like a fun place to hang out -- and, most importantly, spend some money.

So hat's off to the volunteers who have stuck with it for the 17 years it has taken to raise the money, restore the carousel, fix up the building and overcome the regulatory hurdles.

Through it all, the Carousel of Flavor is a reminder of the success many of us always knew you would achieve.

Now, I'll stop bloviating. Here are the Tweets (and videos) from yesterday's food festival.

Changes Coming to Busy Route 100 Intersection

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Photo by Evan Brandt
The renovation of this commercial building into a retail "Mattress Factory" is just one of the changes coming to the intersection of Route 100 and Upland Square.



Changes, some small and some not so small, are coming to one of the region's busiest intersections -- Route 100 and Upland Square.

Probably the most notable change is pictured above, the pending conversion and renovation of an existing pluming warehouse to a retail "Mattress Warehouse."

The developers, Catalyst Commercial Development, were in front of the township commissioners Monday night to explain their request for a variance to allow a bigger sign than the law allows.

They received the full-throated support of the board, although the final decision rests with the township's zoning hearing board.

Another, much smaller change is a change in the traffic light, so small most of you won't notice it.

What you will notice is what's driving it, no put intended -- the planned development of property in West Pottsgrove that is opposite of the traffic light at the main entrance to Upland Square shopping center, a parcel west of the new Citadel Bank.

That's the one where a European discount grocery store, Lidl, is planned.

The other change that might have come -- slower truck traffic between that intersection and the Route 100 intersection with State Street to the north -- died a quick death Monday night.

Township Manager Carol Lewis said she is regularly contacted by three Farmington Avenue residents who complain about the sound of "jake brakes," the special retarder brakes large trucks use to slow down on hills.

Miller said she was informed that if the township asks, PennDOT will conduct a speed study to see if a restriction is warranted.

But the commissioners decided such a study would be a waste of state taxpayer money and would do nothing to improve the situation and voted against it.

To learn more, read the Tweets from the meeting.

Storm May Rise Over Looming Stormwater Fees

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You might say, you could blame it on the rain.

For about a year, the firm of Amec Foster Wheeler has been putting together a look at Pottstown's stormwater situation.

It found 1,700 storm inlets, 90 miles of streets, 49 miles of storm sewer, 6.5 miles of it stone arches and about half a million in costs.

And it found, as is the case in all of the more than 1,200 municipalities in Pennsylvania, a rising liability for those costs as infrastructure ages and federal and state regulations about pollution get more stringent.

There is no question more costs will be incurred as those regulations come into play. The question that remains open is who will pay and how will those payments be calculated.
Nathan Walker makes his presentation to the borough authority

Authority Chairman Tom Carroll advocated for moving ahead, conferring with borough council and get a jump on issues Pottstown will have to face sooner or later.

But Authority Secretary Jeff Chomnuk pointed out that only .5 percent of Pennsylvania municipalities have taken the steps Carroll was advocating and he worried about "imposing another fee on developed property."

Particularly if surround towns have not acted yet, Chomnuk worried it would add to the perception that Pottstown is an expensive place to do business.

Wouldn't it be better, he suggested, until Pottstown was part of a larger movement. Ultimately, that decision will be made by borough council.

Authority solicitor Vincent Pompo noted that developed places like Pottstown have so far been the places where these ideas are now being tried out. He also warned that the state and federal governments have begun to fine localities who are not living up to their new obligations under the new rules.

Here are the Tweets.


Pottstown Takes the Classroom Outside

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Blogger's Note:The following was provided by the Pottstown School District

This school year will feature an exciting twist on STEM learning for Pottstown fourth graders thanks to a new program being offered in a partnership between the School District, NorthBay, a premier outdoor education center, and Natural Lands Trust, the regional conservation organization.

The program emphasizes exploration in nature, authentic scientific investigation, and character development in order to improve essential academic skills and help students understand that the choices they make have the power to transform the planet, their community, and themselves. And it will all happen outside.

“The fate of our environment and our communities ultimately depends upon the decisions we make on a daily basis,” noted Molly Morrison, President of Natural Lands Trust. “Those choices, and the impact they have on ourselves and the world around us, are at the heart of this curriculum. It is a unique approach that helps children to identify issues in the environment, their community, or in their own lives and empowers them to act.”

The program kicked off on Monday, Sept. 12, when all fourth grade students conducted a study of the natural habitats on their school grounds.

Later this fall, students will visit Memorial Park in Pottstown where they will assess the quality of Manatawny Creek and consider how the way land around the creek is used impacts the stream. Next spring, the students will take a field trip to Natural Lands Trust’s Crow’s Nest Preserve in nearby Warwick to learn about water quality in a more natural setting. At the end of the school year, the students will develop an action project designed to address an environmental issue on their schoolyard.

Here is a video of the program in action:

Pottstown - Schoolyard Assessment from NorthBay Media on Vimeo.

Keith Williams, Executive Director of NorthBay said, “NorthBay is thrilled to partner with Natural Lands Trust and Pottstown School District to serve Pottstown students through the delivery of NorthBay’s unique environmental and character education curriculum. Students will become champions of their environment as they engage in authentic investigations that will help to reconnect the Schuylkill River and Manatawny Creek with the community.”

The organizers of the program plan to extend it into 5th and 6th grades in the coming years, providing a rare opportunity for students to participate in a long-term outdoor education curriculum.

“Many of our students are not exposed to the glorious and beautiful environment which surrounds us,” said Stephen Rodriguez, Acting Superintendent of the Pottstown School District. “In a day and age where man's impact on nature is increasingly felt, it is vitally important for students to understand environment, natural habitats, ecology, and the effect we have on our own world. To that end, our new partnership with NorthBay and Natural Lands Trust is so exciting and vital to our education of the whole child. As the future leaders of tomorrow, our students need to know about the place they live as well as have opportunities for positive character education and teambuilding exercises. We are grateful for this excellent opportunity and look forward to the positive outcome in the next generation."

Support for the partnership program is being provided by J.P. Mascaro & Sons, the Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation, NorthBay, and the members of Natural Lands Trust.

Pottstown School Board Twists the Night Away

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Photo by Evan Brandt
Stephen Rodriguez, acting superintendent of the Pottstown School District, really seemed to enjoy his star turn with the Pottstown High School Color Guard Thursday night when they undertook the #twistchallenge to raise awareness about the fight against childhood cancer.



So, little did I know it, but apparently my 'Bucket List' included watching acting Schools Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez, Trojan Man and members of the Pottstown School Board (yes, you read that right, the Pottstown School Board) cut the rug to Chubby Checker's classic "The Twist."

Consider that bucket filled.

Sure, there was news last night.

We got an update on the campaign to raise money to replace the lights in Grigg Stadium.

And a decision was made on how to move forward with replacing School Board Vice President Andrew Kefer, who resigned last week to move to West Virginia.

There was even a presentation on a vote that could ultimately save school tax payers $1 million.

But folks, I have to tell you, watching Rodriguez and the school board members twisting away like dervishes is something you just have to sit back and take a moment to appreciate.

Things like this don't happen ever day you know.

Like the Ice Bucket Challenge which preceded it (you all remember that right?), the #TwistChallenge was brought to the board by member Emanuel Wilkerson and the Trojan Man mascot, who was there representing Mascots for a Cure.

Apparently Trojan Man has been running around all over the place issuing this challenge and, Wilkerson announced last night, Pottstown High School is the first place to take up the challenge, thanks to Trojan Man's efforts.

Here is the shortened version of Rodriguez's post board-meeting happy feet ...




And yes, the school board danced too.

But you're doing to have to work for it.

The video is hiding down there somewhere amid the Tweets below.

Enjoy.

Join Together With the Band

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Photos by Evan Brandt

Members of all the marching bands that performed Saturday night at the Lancaster County Marching Band Coalition Showcase were invited on to the field to play with the Kutztown University Marching Band as a way to close out the evening.

Technology, the giver of wonderous gifts and the source of terrible frustration.

For those of you who follow this blog with any regularity, you know I am no technical wizard;
Technology gave me a face like this, but

Pottstown sophomore Terrell Taylor-Williams

insists he just doesn't believe in smiling.
plodding my way through whatever silicon valley has thought up to see if it poses any value to the cause of local news.

So I confess that there are surely times I fail to switch the right widget, or override the under-code.

But surely you will agree that when you use the nifty live video function called Periscope, and it saves on your wonderous company-issued iPhone every single video you shoot, except one, that it should be chalked up not to the technological ineptness of the user, high though it may be, but to the technology's own fickle, self-destructive desire to make the user want to smash the phone on the ground and jump up and down on it until it is in tiny little i-Pieces.

However, as an adult and parent of a teenager, you've come to learn (after several lectures) that tantrums like that are unbecoming and set a bad example.
Pottstown High School Marching Band.

So, you move on.

Besides, as you will see below, I just used the video from the Pottstown Bands YouTube channel, so I should stop complaining....

Now I must also confess that technology can be wonderful.

Because while technology denied me a permanent recording of the Pottstown High School Marching Band, which my wife and I had driven 50.4 miles at somewhat unsafe speeds to see, it did provide two recordings of Pottsgrove High School's marching band, thanks to the technical prowess of one Fred Remelius.

Owen J. Roberts High School Marching Band.
A dedicated band dad three-times over, he saw my video experiments on Facebook and through that platform we arranged for him to send YouTube links to Pottsgrove's performance, which was going on miles away at the Boyertown Cavalcade of Bands, also happening on the same night.  Those two videos are posted below as well.

So there you have it.

Technology, a double-edged sword.

While we have attended and enjoyed the Boyertown Cavalcade in the past, I must say we particularly enjoy a
The big Duck, Duck, Goose circle.
particular aspect of the Lancaster show -- no scoring.

The Lancaster audience and the bands, which also included Owen J. Roberts, seem much more relaxed and much more supportive and enthusiastic of each other as a result.

I can be hard to cheer with true enthusiasm for a competitor, and applying the whole "win-lose" dynamic to something as subjective as music seems, in my mind, to diminish music itself.

Perhaps the first best example of this sense of camaraderie at the Lancaster show was a phenomenon I have never seen at a Cavalcade of Bands show, and doubt I ever would. During the intermission, the bands all mingled on the field and, as it by osmosis, organized themselves into a giant circle and began to play, of all things, "Duck, Duck, Goose."
Pottstown's Isaiah Williams

as the goose.
Action shot! After Isaiah chose a new goose.












So ironically enough, it would seem the absence of scoring turned the whole
thing into a quasi-athletic event.

Not only was there running around in a circle, but there was also some kind of weird ju-jitsu kind of activity that I am quite obviously just too old to understand.

I have no idea what the hell this is ....
But the kids seemed to have fun.

The other excellent example of camaraderie is how the Kutztown University Band, which closed the show this year and last, invites members from all the bands to join them in a big final number.

Its very obvious, as you will see in the video below, that everyone is having great fun, and the audience has fun and joins in.

Isn't that what music is supposed to be about?

Enjoy the Tweets and videos (those that saved anyway) below:



Save the Lights Receives $15,000 in Donations

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Photos by Evan Brandt

School board member and head Save the Lights fundraiser Polly Weand, in blue, accepts a $5,000 donation from members of the Federation of Pottstown Teachers during Monday night's Pottstown School Board Meeting.


You might call it the night of the big checks -- literally and figuratively.

At Monday night's school board meeting, two checks totalling $15,000 were presented to the Save the Lights effort to replace the night lighting at Grigg Memorial Field.
Myra Forrest with the framed, oversized check from the

Frances Chapin Philanthropic Fund presented Monday 
to the Save the Lights fundraising campaign.

The donations came, but were likely planned long before, a story in yesterday's Mercury outlining that with the pull-out of a $1 for $1 matching donor, the effort still has $130,000 to reach the $300,000 goal to replace the lights.

The donations received multiple thanks from the board members and Weand said she was truly surprised by the teacher contribution.

"I had a feeling I might be getting a check from Dr. Forrest," said Weand ... (perhaps because it was listed on the agenda ... ahem) "but I am truly surprised by this generosity from our teachers. Who should I hug?" she asked with a laugh.

There were a few other items of note -- such as the delaying on moving forward with a long over-due upgrade to the fields along North Franklin Street that could cost as much as $300,000.

Also, a concerned parent said the district's bullying policy "is a joke" and that her child has been bullied since the third grade and the district seems powerless to do anything about it.

Board member Katina Bearden said her daughter had also been bullied and she and board member Amy Francis both said the district's policy needs to be re-examined and possibly strengthened.

But you can find it all in the Tweets below....

Most Skip Joint Council/School Board Meeting

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Dear Reader,

I know you envy me, because I am privileged to attend civic meetings night after night, where the weighty questions of the day are debated among the mighty.

"How do you live with the excitement?" I am often asked.

Well, I'll tell you, it's not easy and its taken its toll on my fragile health, but I soldier on for you, dear reader.

One borough council meeting, or school board meeting is doubtless enough to satisfy the thirst for adventure among even the most concerned of citizens.

So I say now to you, imagine if you will the sheer awesome magnificence, the unbridled power, the unprecedented conviviality of two such meetings, or, more intimidating yet, two such boards meeting -- wait for it -- at the same time in the same place.

Together ...

It's almost too much for even a wizened veteran such as myself to contemplate, but contemplate it I had to for Tuesday night, the harmonic convergence happened.

The two Titans of Pottstown's governance prepared to meet together in the same room, and let me tell you, the entire borough was crackling with anticipation.

Ummm, yup. That's just about everybody who was there.
Parents were taking their children off the street, shopkeepers closing storm-shutters, emergency workers stocking up on duct tape. It was pandemonium out there.

Indeed, so intense was the potential for excitement and challenge; so massive was the thrill; so intimidating the agenda, that the majority of both boards must have fainted clean away under the pressure before it had even begun.

Alas, homebound as they were by this apparent attack of the vapors, the majority of both boards, with great regret no doubt, left it to three brave and intrepid comrades from each team to dare the impossible.

But, as it turns out, they need not have worried.

The meeting turned out to be less than an hour,

No decisions were made, no weighty issues wrestled to the ground and everyone agreed that everyone else was doing a simply splendid job.

Despite the hype, it was little more than a pleasant and deliciously brief review of several things everybody already knew about, accompanied by some light refreshment.

See for yourself ...

Big Projects Stir Traffic Concerns Among Planners

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Photos by Evan Brandt
The Zern Tract, pictured here, calls for 240 town-homes on 28.5 acres split by Minister Creek
Two large development projects near major highways, one in Douglass (Mont.) and the other in Lower Pottsgrove, drew concern from planners Wednesday night.

The projects in question are the long-discussed "Zern's Tract" off Jackson Street in Douglass; and Sanatoga Green off Evergreen Road in Lower Pottsgrove.

Both projects were reviewed by the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee Wednesday and the same concern was raised about both -- traffic.

The Zern's Tract, so named because it includes Zern's Market along Philadelphia Avenue in Gilbertsville, is being developed by the Danny Jake Corp. and calls for 240 closely packed townhomes on 28.5 acres off Jackson Road.

The project includes 7.4 acres of open space along both sides of Minister Creek, but the primary concern is access. At some point in the future, the project would have access not only to Jackson Ropad, but also to a new $8 million to $10 million road called Market Street that is planned for the other side.

But a letter the planners intend to send to the township will suggest the development not be allowed until Market Street is built, even though it is not on property Danny Jake controls.

Sanatoga Green site plan.
Planners also raised concern about the lack of street trees, saying it will detract from the value of the
homes and make the project look "stark."

In Lower Pottsgrove, the massive Sanatoga Green project -- 159 town homes; 342 apartments in 17 buildings, as well as a hotel and medical office on 52 acres off Evergreen Road -- also has potential to create traffic headaches with only access off only road.

That road also carries most traffic off Route 422 to the Philadelphia Premium Outlets in neighboring Limerick.

The Sanatoga interchange off Route 422 will need to be upgraded before the project can break ground, but a joint PennDOT grant to Limerick and Lower Pottsgrove has made that project all the more likely.

There again, planners voted to send a letter outlining concerns about traffic.

 Here are the Tweets from the meeting...

A Pep Rally With a Twist(Challenge)

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Photos by Evan Brandt
Senior athletes and musicians were recognized Thursday during the Pottstown High School pep rally.


Thursday was not your grandfather's pep rally at Pottstown High School.

Not only was there the usual raft of music, games like musical chairs and tug of war, there was also an effort to help fight childhood cancer.

Both sides of a human Battleship match-up.
Part of the #TwistChallenge being promoted by @MascotsForaCure, the idea is to dance t the Chubby Checker classic for 36 seconds, signifying the number of children who are diagnosed with cancer each day.
You can't have a pep rally without cheerleaders.

This may well be the first time an entire high school has undertaken the challenge. Already in
Pottstown, the school board and acting superintendent Stephen Rodriguez have done it, along with a dozen other staff members and students.

Its a demonstration of the Trojan spirit that even in the midst of celebrating themselves, they can take the time to recognize and address the troubles of others.

Well done Trojans.

Don't forget to come to homecoming versus Pottsgrove on Saturday, at 2:30 p.m. at Grigg Memorial Stadium.

Here is a little video sampling of what went on:



For even more, check out the Tweets below:


Donald Trump is No Adolf Hitler

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Some of you may have read an article I wrote for The Mercury last week that was published two days after the first presidential debate.

It was your typical local newspaper story, exploring a local angle on a national event.

In this case, it was based on a phone interview with Marcel Groen, who spent 27 years as the chairman of the Montgomery County Democratic Party -- and is now state chairman -- who was at Hofstra University for the debate between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Necessarily, his comments were primarily pro-Clinton and anti-Trump, none too surprising given Groen's job and decades of advocacy for Democrats.

What you did not read is a portion of the story that was removed by my city editor, which is, of course, his prerogative.

I had interviewed Groen several years before and recalled that his mother had survived World War II in Holland and asked him what she thought of the debate and the campaign.

"She survived for 18 months in a cellar in Holland, which was where I was conceived," Groen said of his 94-year-old mother.

What he said she told him about the campaign, which was cut from the article, was that "she remembered being 10 or 11 years old and a man was saying he was going to make Germany great again, and that only he could do it."

Groen said his mother told him that "they would have rallies where they would beat up people who did not agree with them. Sound familiar?"

My editor said he thought those comments went too far beyond the scope of the article and I will not dispute that decision here.

But it does raise an interesting question about the western world's relationship with the history and legacy of a man whom many consider to be the most evil human being ever to rise to power.

For the last 52 years of my life, people have been comparing people they don't like to Adolf Hitler. As a result, the comparison itself has become an empty, over-used parody of itself.

It seems like everyone from Mother Theresa to Dr. Kevorkian has been called Hitler, compared to Hitler, or painted with a Hitler-tinged brush.

As Shalom Auslander wrote in The Washington Post on Sept. 13, "Vicente Fox, the former president of Mexico, has also compared Trump to Hitler. Cher has compared Trump to Hitler. Abraham Foxman, former national director of the Anti-Defamation League, has compared Trump to Hitler (although in fairness, that’s kind of his whole brand). Even Glenn Beck compared Trump to Hitler."

Hitler's shadow and legend have grown so large that it is almost impossible to view his life, his rise to power and his crimes against humanity with anything like historical objectivity.

Adolf Hitler is now a symbol in the world consciousness of something dark and horrible in the human spirit and so is used too often to describe things less dark and horrible than his true legacy, which needs little embellishment.

The hanging of a Trump banner next to a Nazi flag

at the Bloomsburg fair last week is just one of too 
many examples of how Pennsylvania's white 
supremacists have embraced Trump's campaign.
And so it is inevitable, given the adoration that America's white supremacists seem to have for Donald Trump, that this comparison will be made and made often.

Perhaps that is why Michiko Kakutani's review of a new Hitler biography in The New York Times recently raised so many eyebrows.

Without once mentioning Trump's name, she achieved what few of the ever more hyper-ventilated columnists in the media have failed to do -- showing us how many parallels there are between Hitler's rise to power and Trump's without making us dismiss this comparison out of hand.

It was so clearly (and, dare I say cleverly?) done that even The Washington Post noticed.

Yes, there are most certainly parallels, but more of circumstances and methodology than of the substance of the men in question.

Hitler was not born into wealth.

A failing student, rejected from art school, Hitler served his country in the German Army during World War I, received accommodations for bravery and was injured by mustard gas.

Adolf Hitler knew failure and rose to overcome it. Understand, I list none of these circumstances by way of praise for a man who was a monster, but they are historical facts and they helped to shape what he became.

These are also historical facts.

Donald Trump was born into wealth.

He never knew economic hardship or what it means to have an insecure financial future. He never knew that fear that lives in the pit of your stomach when you wonder if you can provide for your family.

Despite being educated in the New York Military Academy, Trump  never served his country.

Educational deferments and then a bum heel (he can no longer recall which one and no longer suffers from the effects of the handicap) kept him from being drafted and, sadly, robbed U.S. forces of his military prowess in Vietnam.

Trump inherited money from his father, and went on to a business career chequered by both successes and bankruptcies -- along with accusations of shady dealings too numerous to list here.

He is the star of the world's worst reality television show, if there can be said to be such a thing.

The point is, Adolf's Hitler's beliefs, as abhorrent as they were and remain to this day, were hardened by life experiences that would likely have crushed Donald Trump.

And despite sharing certain personal characteristics -- Hitler was often underestimated and never admitted to being wrong -- Donald Trump pales by comparison.

You see, Donald Trump has no beliefs.

He says what he needs to as circumstances demand to ensure he gets the most attention possible. Such a devoted narcissist does not bother with truth, facts, or, more importantly, consistent positions. All that matters is what will draw the attention of the nation that day, and satisfy the endlessly compliant national news media's inability to fill a 24-hour news hole with something of substance.

Yes, like Hitler, Trump does ascribe to using the lowest common denominator in his political parlance, but certainly he is not the first American politician to do that.

Trump is not even the first American politician to spew, much less hint at, white supremacy or ethnic hatred (I think we would give him too much credit to call it "a philosophy") in his effort to play on America's fears.

Where the parallel does cause concern, and does demand the attention of voters, is that apparently, such an approach can still work in modern America.

Some would argue, without much foundation, that the election of a bi-racial man as president meant the end of racism in America. Rather, I would argue, it has helped move it to the front burner of the national discussion.

And its not a pretty discussion. How can it be?

As just one example, consider how police violence against African-Americans, long suffered but rarely addressed, is now making headlines every day. Are we to believe this never happened before?

But we're talking about it now.

Can you remember a time when black artists were able to make the observation about "how white" the Academy Awards are without having their careers undermined?

But we're talking about it now.

It is to be expected that the tipping of the scale toward justice for all, is going to trigger a counter-reaction.

But it is dismaying to see how much traction that county-reaction has claimed.

To be certain, there are many factors at play to explain Trump's rise. And yes, like Hitler, Trump does have a knack for taking advantage of circumstances and trends for his own benefit and advancement.

The nation has grown weary of Washington's ineffectiveness -- made most recently manifest by the mendacity of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who had the balls to blame President Obama for failing to inform him that a bill allowing victims of 9-11 to sue Saudi Arabia might also be used against our own service people overseas before McConnell led the effort to override the veto that made that exact point.

The nation has grown weary of crumbing bridges, undermined public schools and an economy that seems designed to favor the few.

By claiming the mantle of "outsider," a time-honored political tradition, Trump has gained support the other Republican candidates -- insiders all -- could not.

My father, a student of history if every I knew one, recently pointed me to an article in The Guardian about what British journalist Arlie Hochschild calls "the great paradox of American politics" -- in short, how people screwed over by rich business interests can support a rich guy with a reputation for screwing people over to further his business interests.

It's worth of read if you are part of the half of the country who can't understand what the other half sees in Trump. Hochschild captures how Trump speaks to the white lower middle class's feeling of being left behind in pursuit of the American dream or, more specifically, that others are being put ahead of them on the great line of progress to a better life just because they're black, or Syrian refugees.

It fleshed out the gray areas for me, helping me -- forever insisting that there is little in this world that is ever just black and white -- to see why its just too easy, too simplistic and too ineffective to call Trump Hitler and call it done.

But that does not relieve this nation of the responsibility for the fact that  it had until recently become a campaign killer to use such starkly blatant racial and ethnic hatred in a campaign for president.

There was a time, not so long ago, when saying things like Donald Trump says every day would have put a candidate immediately out of the running for president and onto the pile of fringe candidates whose names are forgotten to history.

Instead, he was rewarded for the use of such rhetoric by becoming the GOP nominee, as much a surprise to him and to Reince Priebus as to the rest of us I suspect.

(I have one friend who theorized that Trump's campaign began as a way to get free publicity for a new television show and that it turned into a serious bid by an accidental matching of demagogue to conditions and trends that too many of us failed to realize were stewing under the surface for years.)

But however accidental the candidate, it's who we face now and we have to deal with what he has come to represent now.

The first order of business is we, as voters, as citizens and as human beings, simply cannot reward such hateful, divisive, misogynistic rhetoric with the highest office in the land.

For although I feel sure that the joke would be on most white supremacists in America, who would find themselves supremely disappointed with Donald Trump as their president, being the leader of the free world is no joke and allowing him to win the election just to mess with their heads is not worth the punchline.

Donald Trump may be no more a bona fide white supremacist than he is a conservative Christian, but the use of a race-baiting ethnic hating path to reach the White House would encourage others to follow; and that America cannot allow to occur ever again.

Further, although Donald Trump is certainly no Adolf Hitler, using Hitler's political methods to win the presidency would dishonor our fathers and grandfathers who gave their lives to ensure it never happen again.

Donald Trump may be no Adolf Hitler, but that fact that his campaign "sounds familiar" to a 94-year-old woman who spent 18 months in a Dutch basement hiding from Hitler's horror should be enough to disqualify him in the eyes of American voters.

The fact that it hasn't already just adds to our growing shame as a nation.
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