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Archive for October, 2020

Whatever minor offense Marina Bischoff may have committed on May 27 hardly compares to what the Kansas City Police Department did to her the next day.

The day before she disappeared, Bischoff, a 39-year-old social worker at Children’s Mercy Hospital, was arrested on suspicion of driving while impaired and leaving the scene of a crash after she drove into someone’s yard in Kansas City, North. She left the car but then came back to it when she saw police approaching.

She wasn’t carrying a cellphone, car keys or a wallet. (The keys and phone were found several days later in some woods.)

Marina Bischoff

Police took her to the Shoal Creek station on N.E. Pleasant Valley Road, west of Interstate 435. They kept her overnight but early the next morning began processing her for release on a signature bond.

She made several calls from the station. About 7 a.m., the cops turned her loose — without a car, without a phone, without a wallet, without a ride.

Now, maybe she assured them somebody was going to pick her up somewhere near the station, but, whatever the case, no one at the police station cared enough or had enough sense to insist that she stay put until someone showed up to get her.

So, she walked off.

**

Her brother, who lives in Texas, said she never drank but suffered from depression and that before the May 27 incident she had seemed to become consumed with fears about Coronavirus testing and PPE shortages at Children’s Mercy.

And yet, Victor Bischoff said, the actions that led to her arrest seemed “completely uncharacteristic” of her. “It feels to me like something was really wrong and I don’t know what happened to get her to that state,” he told The Star.

When Marina Bischoff left the station, a police department news release said, she did not seem impaired and was “deemed…competent to be released.”

She was wearing a black shirt and blue jeans.

**

She was last seen — police didn’t say by whom — about an hour and a half later on Pleasant Valley Road between Searcy Creek Parkway and North Crystal Avenue. (North Crystal Avenue is on the east side of Interstate 435; the police station and Searcy Creek Parkway are on the west side.)

Police said it appeared she was waiting for a ride.

In July, human remains were found in nearby Shoal Creek. On Friday, a police spokesman said the remains were those of Bischoff.

(I don’t know exactly were she was last seen or at what part of Shoal Creek her remains were found, but it appears everything occurred within about a mile of the police station.)

Contacted by The Star, Victor Bischoff said he felt officers had lacked compassion and common sense when they allowed his sister to leave the police station. “It’s just a pure disaster,” Bischoff said. “No compassion, no thought, no care.”

**

This case reflects more than a lack of common sense; it’s unfathomable. How could officers (several had to have been involved in the decision) have just let her walk away with nothing but the shirt on her back and the jeans on her legs?

Wouldn’t it be logical for any and all officers to conclude — instantly, without discussion — “You’re not leaving here until somebody shows up to get you.”

As we’ve heard many people say many times in recent months, with all the protests after the George Floyd murder, “The police are supposed to protect and serve.” They’re not supposed to kill people involved in minor dust-ups, and, by the same token, they’re not supposed to turn loose someone who is obviously disturbed and temporarily disconnected.

As I’ve said before, I used to think Kansas City had a good police department. It has sunk so far it is almost unbelievable.

This is just one more example of how KCPD has completely lost direction and why the current chief, Rick Smith, who has no relationship whatsoever with the Black community and who didn’t adequately control his officers during the protests on the Plaza, is unfit to lead.

And beyond that, it’s another example of how bad things have become with a bunch of Republicans, appointed by Republican governors, overseeing the police department. (The only member of the five-member Board of Police Commissioners who is not appointed by the governor is the mayor.)

Every day, it is increasingly clear how far the police department has descended under state control. Departmental leadership seems to have no idea what to do to combat the sky-high homicide rate, and the police union is untouchable and wields so much political clout that Mayor Quinton Lucas cowers in a corner for fear they won’t endorse him for re-election in three years.

If union leaders cared about the department, instead of just themselves, they would push for local control because, at this point, the department appears to be close to incompetent.

The death of Marina Bischoff, a woman who had a good life, a good job and was loved by many people — is on the hands of KCPD. Police didn’t shoot her; they just killed her with dereliction.

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Let’s take a break from politics and enjoy some good Oldies.

Today I bring you four songs by “bands with great names,” as selected by the staff at JimmyCsays (a pretty fair name in itself).

Here we go…

The Shirelles

The group that later became the Shirelles was formed in 1957 by four teenage girls from Passaic, New Jersey, under the name the Poquellos or Pequellos. The founding members were Shirley Owens, Doris Coley, Addie “Micki” Harris and Beverly Lee.  They entered a talent show at Passaic High School at the suggestion of a teacher. After hearing them sing “I Met Him on a Sunday,” which they had written for the show, their classmate Mary Jane Greenberg convinced them to meet with her mother, who owned a record company. They briefly used the name Honeytunes, but by the end of the year they had changed their name to the Shirelles, a combination of the first syllable of Shirley and -el, reminiscent of then-popular group the Chantels.

Here’s one of their biggest hits, “Soldier Boy,” which was released in 1962 and soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. On the comments section of this YouTube page, a man named Shane wrote, “When I was leaving for Nam in ’69, my wife would always sing this song to me.”

 

The Monotones

I couldn’t find out how they got their name, but it’s a good one, and “mono” — meaning “alone,” “single” or “one” — is fitting because the group had only one hit. It was a classic, however, “The Book of Love,” which was released in September 1957 and peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1958.

The group members got their musical start singing with the New Hope Baptist Choir in Newark, New Jersey. One member of the group, Charles Patrick, was listening to the radio one day and heard a Pepsodent toothpaste commercial, which contained the ditty “you’ll wonder where the yellow went.” From there, Patrick got the idea for the first line of a new song: “I wonder, wonder, wonder who! who wrote the book of love.” With two other group members, Patrick embellished the line and expanded it.

What gave the song its main energy, of course, were those dramatic, emphatic syllables the writers placed in the middle of the first sentence: badoo-ooh-ooh! This version, from American Bandstand, was poorly lip-synced, but as you can see from the teenagers’ reaction, it didn’t matter.

 

The Human Beinz

This band name, one of my all-time favorites, came about by accident.

The group started in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1964 as The Premiers. In 1966, they changed their name to The Human Beingz because they felt their old name didn’t fit with the feel of the late 1960s. They were signed to Capitol Records in 1967, and at that time Capitol misspelled their name, leaving out the “g.” The Beingz were told the name would be corrected on the next release, if the debut single was not successful. “Nobody But Me” came out in August 1967, became a Top 40 hit, and Capitol left the name alone.

“Nobody But Me” peaked at No. 8 in February 1968. This is a herky-jerky, poorly filmed video, but it gives you a sense of the group’s vigor and personality.

 

The Mamas and Papas

The Mamas and the Papas were formed by husband and wife John Phillips and Michelle Phillips, and Denny Doherty. The last member to join was Cass Elliot, who had been in a band with Doherty. Wikipedia says John Phillips was concerned “that Elliot’s voice was too low for his arrangements, that her physical appearance would be an obstacle to the band’s success and that her temperament was incompatible with his.”

The group considered calling itself the Magic Cyrcle, but, according to a website I found, Cass provided the initial inspiration for the name that stuck. They were supposedly watching TV one night, when an interview with the Hells Angels came on, and one of the bike club members said something like, “We call our women mamas.” Cass remarked, “Well, we got mamas in our group, and we got papas!” John then suggested the name The Papas and The Mamas, but Cass and Michelle wouldn’t hear of it, so they flipped it and became The Mamas and The Papas.

Here’s one of their great hits, “California Dreamin’,” written by John and Michelle. It was released in December 1965 and peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100…When you see the number of views this video has attracted, it makes you wonder how it didn’t reach No. 1.

Rolling Stone ranked it No. 89 on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

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For anyone who loathes Donald Trump (yes, gang, I’m talking to you!), The New York Times Sunday Review section is mandatory, and gratifying, reading. (If you don’t have a print subscription, you can probably still get the Sunday Times at the grocery.)

The entire 10-page section was dedicated to establishing that Trump is “A Man Unworthy of the Office He Holds” — the title of the editorial.

Following the lead editorial, The Times broke Trump’s spectacular unfitness into five compartments: His Unapologetic Corruption, His Demagogy, His Fake Populism, His Incompetent Statesmanship and His Super-Spreader Agenda.

Here are some of the highlights from the editorial and the five sub-sections…

From the lead editorial:

  • The enormity and variety of Mr. Trump’s misdeeds can feel overwhelming. Repetition has dulled the sense of outrage, and the accumulation of new outrages leaves little time to dwell on the particulars. This is the moment when Americans must recover that sense of outrage.
  • Under his leadership, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has stopped trying to protect consumers, and the Environmental Protection Agency has stopped trying to protect the environment.
  • In June, his administration tear-gassed and cleared peaceful protesters from a street in front of the White House so Mr. Trump could pose with a book he does not read in front  of a church he does not attend.
  • He campaigned as a champion of workers, but he has governed on behalf of the wealthy.

From “His Unapologetic Corruption”…

Even Americans who don’t support Mr. Trump are filling his coffers. Each time the president, a family member or certain top administration officials visit a Trump property, taxpayers foot the bill for the security details that must tag along…Forget draining the swamp; the president slapped his name on it and began charging admission.

From “His Demagogy”…

A few months after his inauguration, he told a gathering of police officers that they should rough up the people they arrest. “Please don’t be too nice,” Mr. Trump said, to cheers.

From “His Fake Populism”…

Much ink has been spilled about whether Trump supporters voted for him out of economic anxiety or racial anxiety, with plenty of studies concluding the latter. But spend time at a dying factory and you might see how difficult it can be to disentangle the two.

From “His Incompetent Statesmanship”…

“From this day forward, it’s going to be only America first,” Mr. Trump warned in his Inaugural Address. Today, what that meant is clear in the decline of American leadership and the hallowed American brand, in the wariness of allies and the glee of strongmen.

From “His Super-Spreader Agenda”…

Pollution is up, fines for polluters are down, carbon emissions have risen and are poised to rise further. Hundreds of thousands of lives have been lost, and millions of livelihoods destroyed, by a pandemic that could have been contained.

**

The final page of the section consisted of quotes from some of the people who have been close to the president and have come to their senses regarding his dangerous incompetence. Here are three of those quotes…

  • This is far beyond garden-variety narcissism…Donald is not simply weak, his ego is a fragile thing that must be bolstered every moment because he knows deep down that he is nothing of what he claims to be. — Mary Trump, from her book about Trump called “Too Much and Never Enough.”
  • He’s off the rails…And the honest people in the room know that he is crazy.Anthony Scaramucci, former White House Communications director.
  • As I’ve been saying since the beginning, Trump was a mobster, plain and simple.Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer.

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I don’t know what, but something jogged my memory last Friday or Saturday, and I got to thinking about Timothy O’Leary, a former Jackson County Circuit Court judge, who before and after his 20 years on the bench practiced law in Kansas City.

Then, as bad luck would have it, I went to The Star’s Sunday obituary page, and the first paid obit was that of “Timothy Dean O’Leary.”

I took in a short breath, and my heart sank. I have such fond memories of Tim O’Leary, who was always smiling, telling funny stories and making unpredictable comments.

Here was his career in capsule: Graduated from UMKC Law School in 1956; was a practicing attorney until 1969, when he was appointed to the Circuit Court; resigned as a judge in about 1989 and joined the law firm of Shughart Thomson and Kilroy, which became Polsinelli. He worked at Polsinelli until 2018, when he was 90.

Tim O’Leary

I got to know Tim in about 1971, two years after I had arrived in Kansas City and shortly after getting my first major “beat” with The Star — Jackson County Courthouse reporter. At the courthouse, I covered politics and government and civil and criminal courts. It was a tremendous beat, and I loved it.

The press room — mostly inhabited by just us Star reporters — was on the fourth floor mezzanine, 4M, between the fourth and fifth floors. You could take the elevator to four and walk up a half flight or take it to five and walk down a half flight. It was a two-room office, very adequate for our purposes. A tall, wide window afforded a great view of the majestic, 29-story City Hall directly across 12th Street.

(Toward the end of my seven-year run at the courthouse, I’d sometimes look over at City Hall and think, “That’s where I want to be.” I got my wish in 1985, when I began a 10-year run as a City Hall reporter.)

I was actually working for The Kansas City Times, “the morning edition of The Kansas City Star,” and my hours were generally noon to eight, or whenever a particular day’s story was wrapped up.

A few people, including a couple of judges, would sometimes drop by the office about 5:30 or 6, after they’d finished work and were about to head out of the building.

Tim and another judge who later returned to the law, Paul Vardeman, were regular visitors. These days you wouldn’t find many judges dropping by press rooms to shoot the breeze with reporters. (In fact, you don’t find many press rooms in courthouses these days.) But back then it was commonplace.

I called him Judge, and he called me “Scoop” — a nickname that tickled me.

Tim would always be wearing a coat and tie and a natty, short-brimmed hat. He’d stand next to that big, wide window while we chatted, and he’d often smoke a cigarette — a habit he later gave up. He spoke unhurriedly and in a mildly gravelly voice. We’d talk about everything, from court cases to what was going on in our lives. As a young reporter, I leaned on his every utterance, looking for insight into whatever subject came up.

I remember only one of those conversations vividly, however. I remember it because it wound up with him coming out with a line I’ve used ever since.

He got to talking about youth basketball and the fact that he had recently started coaching somewhere — not a school, as I recall, maybe the YMCA. I had played grade-school basketball and was a big fan of the game, so I was very interested in the subject. I asked him if he’d played basketball in school, and I don’t remember if he had, but, regardless, he said just about anybody could teach the fundamentals, of basketball — passing, dribbling and shooting.

And then he turned the subject around on me. “You ought to try it,” he said.

“What?” I said.

“Coaching kids basketball. It’s fun and would give you something else to do.”

“No, no,” I said, “I don’t know enough about it, even though I played when I was younger; I certainly couldn’t coach.”

“Well,” he said, “you ought to do it; it would take your mind off your fat self.

…I’d never heard a line like that in my life. I knew he wasn’t speaking literally because, for one thing, I wasn’t fat. I understood he was simply emphasizing, figuratively, how important it is for all of us to get involved in something that gets our minds off ourselves and, instead, helps us engage and interact constructively with others.

I don’t remember if I laughed when he said that, probably did. But in short order our chat wound up, and off he went down that half flight of stairs.

I never did give serious consideration to coaching youth basketball, but I never forgot that line.

After I left the courthouse beat in 1978, I didn’t see Tim regularly, but I’d run into him occasionally because we both lived in the Brookside area and were members of Visitation Catholic Church. Once I saw him tailgating at an M.U. football game. (He was an M.U. grad.) I would usually call him “Judge,” and he would usually call me “Scoop.” It was always good to see him and his lovely wife Darlene, with whom he had five children.

Until a few years ago, I believe, he played golf with another retired judge, Forest “Frosty” Hanna. And they walked the course.

**

I can’t tell you how many times, over the decades, I’ve told someone — sometimes in jest, sometimes in the vein Tim said it to me — “You need to get your mind off your fat self.”

When I told Patty about Tim’s death after reading Sunday’s obit, I related the story of that nearly 50-year-ago conversation in the press room. “So that’s where you got that line,” she said. “You’ve used it so many times; I never knew where it came from.”

…The man who turned the phrase is gone, but the line lives on. And of course it’s still true: We’re all better people when our minds are not consumed with our fat selves.

The late Darlene and Tim O’Leary

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On Nov. 3, Jackson County voters will see two questions of their ballots, and in all my years of covering and watching politics, I’ve never seen two issues that are farther apart in complexity.

:: Question 2 is as straightforward as any issue you’ll ever see:

“Shall Jackson County, Missouri, remove the statues of Andrew Jackson now located outside the Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City and the Historic Truman Courthouse in Independence?”

On one hand, I’ve loved saying I’m a resident of Jackson County since I arrived here from Jefferson County (Louisville), Kentucky, in September 1969. It’s an infinitely stronger name than Johnson County (named for missionary Thomas Johnson), Platte County (named for the Platte River) or Clay County (named for Kentucky politician Henry Clay).

On the other hand, Andrew Jackson was a slave owner, reportedly a racist, and enforcer of the Indian Removal Act. He’s one of those people, like developer J.C. Nichols, whose image and legacy are crumbling with time.

For those reasons, I’ll be voting “YES” on this issue. It’s time for Jackson to come down off his high horse(s).

:: Question 1 is a ballot-title nightmare…

“Shall Jackson County, Missouri, impose a monthly fee not to exceed $1.00 (one dollar) on a subscriber of any communications service that has been enabled to contact 911 for the purpose of funding 911 service in the County? The proceeds of this fee shall be deposited in the County’s special E-911 System Fund and not co-mingled with the general funds of the County, to be expended solely for the purpose set forth herein?”

The clearest deciphering I’ve seen of this confusing proposal was an Oct. 6 Independence Examiner story by longtime Examiner reporter Jeff Fox.

Fox explained that the overwhelming majority of 911 calls are made on cellphones, but cellphone owners do not help pay for the 911 system. The system is financed strictly with a seven-percent-fee fee on landlines, and landlines, of course, are falling like a rock slide.

The county’s inability to tax cellphones for the 911 system has led to a $600,000 shortfall in 911 funding, according to County Administrator (and former Kansas City Manager) Troy Schulte.

In an attempt to beef up revenue, Jackson County Legislator Jeanie Lauer of Blue Springs introduced and got passed an ordinance calling for an election to also tax cellphones.

Now, I don’t doubt Lauer’s sincerity or Schulte’s assertion of a shortfall, but I do have problems with just about any Jackson County proposal that involves reaching deeper into residents’ pockets.

During the last several years, the county has lost virtually all credibility. From former County Executive Mike Sanders and top aide Calvin Williford going to prison for stealing tens of thousands of dollars in campaign funds to last year’s tax-assessment gouge, county officials have given voters no reason to trust them on anything.

It’s not just the executive branch that has turned many residents against county government. Some legislators have held onto their posts long enough to be considered career employees. I refer to Dan Tarwater (Class of 1994) and Scott Burnett and Ron Finley (Class of 1998). If they live long enough, any of those three could some day challenge Fred Arbanas’ record of 42 years on the Legislature.

…In addition to the issue of the county’s credibility, Question 1 also has complexity working against it. When voters have trouble understanding a ballot question, their tendency is to vote “NO.”

I won’t be confused when I vote, but I will be voting “NO” along with those who are.

As Rex Hudler might say, “Question 1, you got to go!”

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One of the biggest casualties of the contraction and diminution of major metropolitan daily newspapers has been coverage of local and state governments.

Where The Kansas City Star, for example, used to provide government coverage of most area municipalities and most county governments, only Kansas City’s City Hall gets regular coverage now. Even Jackson County government, the biggest of the area’s county governments, seldom makes The Star’s print or online pages.

In addition, coverage of the Kansas and Missouri state houses is way down. I pointed out recently, for example, that The Star failed to report the final, approved ballot title of Constitutional Amendment 3, which, if approved by voters Nov. 3, would negate the reforms that came with passage of the Clean Missouri Amendment two year ago.

Fortunately for residents in many states, a new, nonprofit network of state-based publications is taking root, including in Kansas and Missouri, and it will help offset some of the attrition that has taken place at newspapers.

The quickly growing nonprofit network is called States Newsroom, which officially launched last November and is financed with individual contributions and institutional grants. There is no “paywall” for readers, meaning all content is provided free of charge.

States Newsroom’s mission is to provide “relentless capitol reporting” and to “connect people to state leaders and government policies that affect their lives.”

States Newsroom has offices in Washington and Chapel Hill, NC, and it has established newsrooms in about 20 states. Kansas opened its States Newsroom operation — called Kansas Reflector — in July. One of its four staff members is C.J. Janovy, formerly of KCUR and before that editor of The Pitch.

Jason Hancock

A States Newsroom operation is getting ready to start up under the leadership of Jason Hancock, longtime statehouse reporter for The Star in Jefferson City. Hancock announced on Twitter Aug. 21 that he was leaving to be editor of “an as-of-yet unnamed nonprofit news site focused on Missouri politics and government.”

Hancock’s operation, to be called The Missouri Independent, will launch Oct. 20.

Here’s more about the Kansas Reflector and The Missouri Independent.

Kansas Reflector

Besides Janovy, the three other Kansas Reflector staff members are Tim Carpenter, Noah Taborda and Editor-in-Chief Sherman Smith.

Smith spent 16 years at the Topeka Capital-Journal, where he held various jobs, ranging from copy editor to managing editor and including covering the state Capitol.

The staff of Kansas Reflector: from left, Noah Taborda,, Tim Carpenter, C.J. Janovy and Editor-in-Chief Sherman Smith

Carpenter is also a veteran of the Capital-Journal. He previously worked for the Lawrence Journal-World.

Taborda has worked in public radio in Columbia, MO, and also at KCUR, where he spent part of his time reporting news and features.

The Reflector’s lead story today is about Kansas district courts having fallen far behind on the resolution of criminal cases. More than 1,700 cases have been delayed by Covid-19 and need to be rescheduled.

The Missouri Independent

Hancock headed The Star’s Jefferson City bureau for eight years and was on top of many ground-breaking stories, including the ill-fated administration of former Gov. Eric Greitens. Before coming to The Star, he was statehouse reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for nine months.

Rudi Keller

Deputy Editor Rudi Keller is a 30-year journalism veteran, having spent 22 years covering Missouri government, most recently as the news editor of The Columbia Daily Tribune.

Rebecca Rivas

Reporter Rebecca Rivas has been reporting in Missouri since 2001, most recently as senior reporter and video producer at the St. Louis American, the nation’s leading African-American newspaper. As a Fulbright scholar, she investigated Peru’s high maternal-death rate among Andean women and produced a 45-minute documentary that has been used as an educational tool in college campuses nationwide.

Tessa Weinberg

Reporter Tessa Weinberg previously covered the Missouri General Assembly for The Star and The Columbia Missourian. She most recently covered state government in Texas for The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which, like The Star, is a McClatchy paper.

**

These are positive and hopeful developments for people who want to stay abreast of developments in Topeka and Jefferson City. These niche operations will help fill the ever-enlarging hole in metropolitan papers’ coverage of state governments. I urge everyone to give these new websites a lot of “clicks” — and maybe even contribute.

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As we watch and wait for reports on President Trump’s condition, the experience of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson could yield clues as to how Trump might fare.

Even though Trump’s doctors said this morning he was doing “doing very well,” there is no assurance that is the case. And in a very confusing and contradictory development, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows later told reporters: “The president’s vitals over the last 24 hours were very concerning and the next 48 hours will be critical in terms of his care. We’re still not on a clear path to a full recovery.”

As you know, when Trump was admitted to Walter Reed Medical Center on Friday, doctors said they were transporting him out of “an abundance of caution.”

That phrase sounds a lot like what 10 Downing Street put out on Sunday, April 5, when Johnson was admitted to the hospital. He supposedly was going in for “routine tests” and as a “precautionary step.”

The next day, though — Monday, April 6 — he was moved to ICU in a development that rocked the world. It was clear then that Johnson was in real danger.

Unlike Trump, Johnson had been displaying “persistent symptoms” for 10 days before being hospitalized. (The diagnosis was March 26.)

Johnson was in ICU for four days, until Thursday, April 9, when he was moved back to a regular room. He was released three days later, on April 12. Here’s what he looked like shortly after being discharged…

Johnson was 55 when he had the virus and he’s now 56. Trump, on the other hand, is 74, and clearly more overweight than Johnson. Also — like me — he takes a statin drug to treat high cholesterol and aspirin to prevent heart attacks.

It would not surprise me a bit if Trump ended up in ICU, and from there, his fate would be more uncertain than it already is.

A New York Times story today quotes Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University, as saying: “He is 74, he’s hefty and he’s male, and those three things together put him in a higher-risk group for a severe infection. Although he is being watched meticulously and may well do fine for a few days, he is not out of the woods, because people can crash after that period of time. This is a very sneaky virus.”

With Johnson, it truly did seem like a sneak attack. If it happens with Trump, it won’t be quite so sneaky.

Another thing I read is that non-mask-wearers who contract the disease often get worse cases than masked people because they get a fuller “load” of infectious particles.

The images of that Rose Garden ceremony last Saturday, with scores of people sitting side by side, unmasked, is what really shocks the senses. Same with the photos of Trump family members sitting in the front row at Tuesday’s debate, unmasked and having firmly rejected a direct offer to don masks, which was a requirement to be in the debate hall in the first place.

Fools all. Absolute knuckleheads.

**

I said in yesterday’s post that this development should pretty well seal the deal for Biden, and two New York Times/Sienna College polls conducted late this week tend to support that statement.

In Pennsylvania, Biden led by seven percentage points, 49 percent to 42 percent, among likely voters surveyed. In Florida, the margin was 47 percent to 42 percent.

Pennsylvania and Florida were key states in Trump’s 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton.

The polls also showed voters disapproved of the president’s conduct in the debate by a whopping 65 percent to 25 percent. Perhaps more important, some of those expressing disapproval were core supporters.

A third of the president’s supporters said they disapproved of his performance, while eight percent of people who backed him in the survey said the debate made them less likely to support him in the election.

Is even the base starting to crack? Is Superman’s cape starting to slip from shoulders to waist?

For all we know, Superman could be flat on his back in a hospital bed on Election Day. Or worse…

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Well, well, well…

First we had the September surprise — RBG dying. And now we’ve got what a physician/commentator on MSNBC described this morning as “the October surprise of all October surprises.”

The President has Covid-19.

Now, being what I would like to consider an empathetic person of goodwill (it took me a long time to get there), I should wish Trump and his wife the very best and a speedy recovery.

But after what Trump has put this country through and the absolute ignorance he has displayed regarding this lethal virus, it is hard for me to muster much of a charitable attitude.

He has been such a fool, such a fool. Listen again to his comment at Tuesday’s debate about Joe Biden’s scrupulous diligence about wearing a mask…

I don’t wear masks like him. Every time you see him, he’s got a mask. He could be speaking 200 feet away from them and he shows up with the biggest mask I’ve ever seen.

Now, surely, Trump wishes he would have worn a very big mask every day, all day.

But it’s too late, and we will see where this goes. The Times is reporting that two people familiar with his condition said he was suffering mild symptoms, but how can you believe anything coming from his orbit?

Like me, Trump is 74 years old and much more susceptible to a bad, bad case of Covid than much younger people in good health.

Frank Bruni, a New York Times columnist who regularly and eloquently expresses disdain for Trump, said in a column this morning that the Trump’s Covid carries a moral that is “necessary to articulate”…

There is a real risk in being cavalier. The president is now the embodiment of that.

Now, Trump is off the campaign trail. In a few days, or a week, he could be fighting for his life. We don’t know.

What we do know, politically, is that this development pretty much assures Biden of beating him on Nov. 3…if he survives.

The floor is now open for your thoughts and reflections…

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