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District takes stock of progress on 100th day

Feb. 18 marked the 100th day of the 2020-21 school year at Luverne Public Schools, and staff and students couldn’t be happier.
Elementary students resumed in-person instruction after the Christmas break, and middle school and high school students ended distance-learning classes on Jan. 26.
It marked the first time in 317 days that all 1,200 students were together on the school campus since the coronavirus pandemic started in March 2020.
The results so far have been healthy.
As elementary students celebrated the 100th day of school with various activities, administrators celebrated the COVID-19 weekly case update numbers that showed no reports of active cases.
All 93 confirmed cases tracked by the district since the pandemic started have recovered and no one is currently in quarantine.
“We are very excited about zero cases reported,” said Superintendent Craig Oftedahl Monday. “We really want to see this end, so we are trying to do our part by being safe in all school settings.”
Oftedahl praised students and staff for wearing masks while in school, at extra-curricular events and out in the public. He also commended people who practice social distancing and stay home when feeling ill.
“This is about doing the right thing and following the rules,” he said. “I believe our entire student body and our staff  have done a great job.”
 
In-person learning used by one-fourth of schools
Luverne is among 29 percent of the 537 public and charter schools meeting entirely in person as reported to the state Department of Education.
Of the remaining 71 percent, 10 percent are in hybrid learning, 14 percent distance learning, and 47 percent are in a combination of in-person/hybrid or hybrid/distance learning.
The Luverne Middle-High School is coming off a combination of hybrid and distance learning since the start of school on Sept. 8 and has been in-person for almost a month
Teachers say they are relieved that the first 100 days of school are behind them.
“We survived, and I believe our students are stronger, more resilient because of it,” said middle school teacher Jodi Rops.
“Did we lose some learning opportunities in the classroom? Of course we did. However, I think of everything we all learned from it.”
 
‘Can we see actual learning loss?’
Administrators and health professionals worked to keep students and staff healthy amid pandemic conditions while still meeting state learning mandates.
Now that students are back in class, teachers are assessing what the various learning models have meant for student learning.
Jason Phelps, middle school principal and the district assessment coordinator, addressed School Board members about student achievement in a Feb. 10 workshop.
“One of the common questions out there is how schools have been affected by the change in learning models and if we actually have any information that we can see actual learning loss,” he said.
“If we look at the big picture … the idea that there is a huge loss from what we did last spring is probably not true.”
Minnesota schools closed in mid-March 2020 and resumed instruction March 29 under distance learning conditions and finished the 2019-20 school year with students learning at home.
Elementary teachers have seen some decline in the first-graders in benchmark tests when school reopened to in-person learning this fall.
Phelps said first-graders scored lower in naming letters and letter sounds.
Since returning to in-person instruction, the interventions appear to bring students closer to reading standards.
“Our in-person probably had an influence on that this year,” he said.
 
Attendance plays big influence in learning
Attendance is the major factor in class failure rates with middle and high school students. Instruction has been either by hybrid or distance until Jan. 26.
Three middle school students did not advance at grade level for the 2020-21 school year, which Phelps indicated is a “very rare” occurrence.
“That is 100 percent attendance related,” he said. “We didn’t have any more information to support passing them on to the next level.”
Middle school teachers use a standards-based grading system in which students demonstrate they understand and are ready to perform at the next level.
However, letter grades are issued at the high school level.
Phelps said in the fall of 2019, 36 students in grades nine through 12 received a failing grade in at least one class. That number jumped to 72 in the fall of 2020. Average daily unexcused absences jumped from an average of 3 to 14.5 over the same time period.
“A majority of high school failures are the lack of work completion,” he said. “If they are not in class, they are not able to demonstrate that they know the material.”
Phelps expects improvements at the middle and high school as in-person learning enters its second month when staff helps students set a plan to recover any missing credits.
“Overall the one overriding idea is that … being here in person is the most consistent method for teaching and learning,” Phelps said.
Educators will know more about potential learning gaps when the annual state reading and math assessment tests are completed this spring.
The state assessments were canceled last fall.

ALTAS to grow ministry in larger space

ATLAS of Rock County is expanding into the former Kawasaki building with a goal of expanding its Christian ministry in more directions.
The organization recently purchased the property on Maple and Freeman where it will expand its Redeemed Remnants second-hand business.
ATLAS Board president Brenda Winter was among volunteers Friday morning painting, cleaning and assisting contractor Tony Gacke.
“Welcome to Redeemed Remnants,” said Winter, in a paint speckled T-shirt and paint roller in hand.
She offered an informal tour of construction and renovation progress in the building.
On the other side of a central dividing wall, she said, “Welcome to New Life Celebration Church.”
In a room off that area she said, “Welcome to ATLAS,” a space for ATLAS director Michael Blank and assistant to the director, Loree Ness.
Winter explained how the organizations are related and connected.
“ATLAS owns the building and is the landlord,” she said. “Redeemed Remnants will be a tenant. New Life Celebration Church will be a tenant. The BackPack program will be a tenant, probably a non-paying tenant.”
The distinction is important, she said, “because ATLAS doesn’t have a church.”
It’s a community-based nonprofit that “comes alongside hurting men, women and families with caring, compassionate support,” according to its website, offering “tangible assistance to those struggling with life-controlling issues through a program of resource guidance, advocacy, and mentoring.”
Redeemed Remnants has been a clear example of the mission, according to Blank.
“We are here to help people,” he said. “Certainly Redeemed Remnants does that. … People have moved into places with almost no furniture and we have furnished people’s homes. There are people with very basic needs, like a bed.”
Redeemed Remnants helps people, and it funds ATLAS ministries through its sales of donated clothing and furniture.
“We have off-site storage for donated furniture,” Blank said. “But we can’t sell what’s not on display and what’s not on site.”
That’s why the 10,000-square-foot Kawasaki building is such an improvement over the store’s previous 2,300-square foot space downtown.
“The purpose of the new space is to turn over more furniture, because that’s where the profit is,” she said. “You make a dollar on a necklace and you make $80 on a couch.”
Actually, Redeemed Remnants has already proven to be profitable selling donated clothing and furnishings to the point that it supports many of ATLAS ministries.
Now the store can do more in its spacious, sunny, south-facing showroom.
Winter said volunteers are excited about the display area, the back-door alley to accept donations in a large storage for sorting next to laundry facilities for folding and preparing items for sale.
“Right now they have to work in a little hallway, but this is the new hallway,” she said gesturing to the garage-sized storeroom area.
As a member of New Life Celebration Church, she said she’s looking forward to a more permanent worship space, even if it is rented, with a secure area for praise band equipment.
“And the days that our church isn’t here, it’s a great space to have a big gathering,” Winter said.
A stained glass window allows light to filter through the wall that divides the ATLAS office of the worship area.
“Phyllis Rogers made it for New Life Celebration Church,” Winter said. “It puts the cross over the whole space.”
 
Timeline
ATLAS currently rents from month to month its second floor space in the Cragoe Building on Main Street and Cedar Avenue.
On March 1, Blank and Ness will move, even if it means they work on folding tables in the new building until their offices are ready.
Redeemed Remnants sold its building on East Main Street and will move into the new building this spring.
Winter said countless little “miracles” allowed ATLAS to come as far as it has in the new building.
“People’s hearts are just open. And their checkbooks and their garage doors,” she said, estimating the project has received well over $5,000 in donated materials. “This community is crazy generous.”
Winter said people have asked about donating to the ATLAS building fund, but she steers them to Redeemed Remnants.
“The biggest way people can help is to donate their goods to Redeemed Remnants and shop at Redeemed Remnants,” she said. “As far as cash donations – we want to put the focus toward ATLAS. Because we’re not a building, we’re a ministry.”

Ashby Recreational Trail starts work in spring

Gene and Barb Ashby’s bike path in memory of their son, Chris, will be completed this summer after two years of planning with local officials.
The Ashbys have pledged $1 million toward the project and requested matching funds either by labor, grants or other funds from the county.
The 1.35-mile hard-surface Ashby Recreational Trail will connect the Luverne City Park to County Road 9 near the golf course.
Work will begin this spring, and once completed later this year, the trail will be donated to the county for maintenance.
Commissioners unanimously agreed to the arrangement at their Feb. 16 meeting when the Ashbys attended with Emily Crabtree, director of the Luverne Area Community Foundation.
LACF is fiscal agent for the project, and Crabtree has worked with the Ashbys and DGR Engineering out of Rock Rapids, Iowa, for the past four to five months to finalize property easements
“We opted to go with an 8-foot-wide trail rather than a 10-foot,” Crabtree said.
“I know a 10-foot width is what you need to apply for grants, but with the money saved by going with a narrower path, we will be able to move along at a quicker pace than waiting for grants.”
Minnesota Department of Transportation standard width for a multi-use path is 10 feet, and the 10-foot width is a requirement if the path is paid for through state dollars.
“Going with an 8-foot (wide) trail we save $200,000 and … with the guidance of DGR we opted to bypass the grant system since it (Ashby trail) is privately funded.”
Instead of waiting two years with a grant program, the Ashby project can be completed this year.
According to county highway engineer Mark Sehr, it costs about $2,000 annually to maintain the county’s current 1.5-mile section of the Luverne Loop north of town.
For nearly 20 years the county has maintained the 4-inch bituminous layer of the bike path along Blue Mound Avenue from the highway department to Blue Mounds State Park
Work includes mowing, weed control, crack sealing and surface repair, and the same tasks will be completed for the Ashby Recreational Trail.
The Ashbys first presented their idea for their trail to commissioners in April 2019, and since then county employees have assisted them in finding an appropriate route and securing easements.
Crabtree said landowners along the Ashby trail have agreed to request no money for the perpetual easements.
The trail will run through land owned by the city of Luverne, Dean and Jennifer Tofteland, William Cowell and the Rock County Sportsman’s Club.
A possible loop may be added along County Road 4 to provide a route back to the city park for the Ashby Recreational Trail.
Currently, paved shoulders are planned for along County Road 4 from the Luverne City Park east to County Road 9, the golf course road.
During a presentation of the county’s five-year road construction plan, the 10-foot shoulders are part of the construction plans for 2022. This would provide room for a multi-use paved path on the north and south sides of the road.
However, commissioners directed county highway engineer Sehr to further investigate costs and location of the bike path prior to finalizing the 2022 road improvement plans this fall.
The trail honors the Ashbys’ son, Chris, who died at age 16 in an automobile accident in 2006.

Community calendar Feb. 25, 2021

Entrants sought for St. Pat’s parade March 17
Register now at the Luverne Area Chamber to enter the 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 17, St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Main Street Luverne.
All businesses, individuals and families can participate with no pre-registration required. Entrants must meet in the Living Rock Church between 4 and 4:30 p.m. to be included in the parade lineup.
Every parade participant will receive a gold dollar coin at the end of the parade.
For more information contact the Luverne Chamber, 507-283-4061 or luvernechamber@co.rock.mn.us.
 
Tax assistance for Rock County residents
United Community Action Partnership will be providing free online virtual tax assistance for residents living in Rock County and surrounding communities. See website for details at https://www.unitedcapmn.org/services/community-family-services/tax-clin…
The number to make an appointment and to get intake forms sent via mail is 507-537-1416 ext. #2163. You can also email Courtney Newgard at Newgardcourtney.newgard@unitedcapmn.org with questions.
 
Rock County Library winter activities
Register now at the library to participate in the Rock County Library 2021 Winter Reading Program, which began Jan. 1. Patrons who read at least 12 books from now until March 31 will win a prize for their efforts — and enjoy some good books.
Call the library at 507-449-5040 or email the library at rocklibrarystaff@gmail.com.
Check with the library to participate in Virtual Trivia. Receive weekday trivia to break up our quarantine schedules (until Trivia Nights in person can continue again.)
 
Take and Make bird treat kits
Stop by the Luverne Area Chamber at 213 East Luverne Street to pick up one or more Take and Make bird treat kits. Kits are free, but a $5 to $10 donation is welcome to benefit Project Food Forest in Rock County. (Or donate online at https://donorbox.org/support-pff)
 
Community Ed
Call the Luverne Community Education office, 507-283-4724, for registration information.
Come to Use It or Lose It class on Feb. 22 to learn some simple exercises using your own weight, fitness bands and YouTube videos to improve your fitness. Class will begin with Coach Wenninger giving a tour of the new weight room.
Paint a Winter Wonderland class on Feb. 23 is for students in grades 1-3. Listen to a story and enjoy snacks. Class meets at Coffey Contemporary Arts. Fee is $33.

Correction Feb. 25, 2021

The fire protection service protection contract between the Hills Fire Department and Clinton Township is $550 per section from April 15 through April 14, 2022. The per section amount was incorrect in the Feb. 18 edition.

Payments out to local businesses affected by COVID-19 closures

Fifteen Rock County businesses shared $250,000 of coronavirus relief grants awarded Friday.
The grants were the result of a special state $216 million coronavirus recovery legislation passed in December.
Commissioners outlined a targeted distribution approach in January and asked the 21 businesses most impacted in Rock County to make application.
The county identified businesses closed during the governor’s month-long 2020 mandate to prevent the public spread of COVID-19.
All 21 businesses, primarily restaurants, event and fitness centers, made application, and each met in person to discuss losses with a county committee charged by the commissioners to distribute the funds.
Payments distributed Friday ranged from $1,843 to $64,993.
Business owners indicated they suffered a combined $432,500 in lost revenue due to the mandate, an amount well over the $250,000 the county received.
County Administrator Kyle Oldre said all applications would receive 58 percent of their requests, according to the distribution plan approved by commissioners at their Feb. 2 meeting.
“We discussed different methods of distribution and it seemed like across-the-board distribution was the most equitable when all was said and done,” Oldre said.
Disbursements, however, were made to businesses that passed state lien searches and businesses that had not already received automatic relief payments directly from the state.
This changed the percentage each business received.
The distribution formula increased to 78 percent because six of the local applicants did receive state payments, and the state check amounts covered the percentage of loss indicated in their county applications.
These applicants were removed from the local relief list.
Those businesses whose total losses were not covered by the state were adjusted by what they did receive, and the county committee granted relief funds to cover the percentage loss over the state aid amount.
“One applicant came forward and said they did receive a check,” Oldre said. “There was some confusion from them as to whether or not they would receive state aid.”
The state automatically calculated lost revenues to businesses by comparing taxable gross receipts from retail sales in the second and third quarters of 2019 to the second and third quarters of 2020. If the losses were 30 percent or greater, the business would automatically receive a state payment.
State payments ranged from $10,000 to $45,000 based on the number of employees the business employed, which ranged from one employee to more than 300 employees.
Oldre said the majority of local business owners interviewed had losses of 27-28 percent, which fell under the state’s automatic 30-percent loss payment criteria.
Some businesses had ownership changes, and the state did not recognize revenue reports of the previous owners.
Businesses not meeting the state’s automatic payment threshold were what the local committee sought.
At first, state officials were not releasing the names of businesses that automatically received state funds.
Local officials relied on business owners to indicate on the county application whether or not they received state funds. The county committee did not take into account if businesses received any payments from the Payment Protection Program.
The state revenue department later allowed counties to submit business names to verify any automatic payments.
“The state program ended up being a lot better than we thought it was,” said county attorney Jeff Haubrich, who also served on the distribution committee.
Rock County businesses receiving emergency relief funds (rounded to the nearest dollar) include:
•Cozy Rest Motel, $7,799;
•Dang Fine Dine, $21,664;
•Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie 3403, $7,669;
•Grand Prairie Events LLC, $64,993;
•Green Lantern Bar & Grill S & L, $21,664;
•Hidden Hills Cafe, $25,694;
•Howling Dog Saloon, $11,981;
•Kenneth Bar, $7,799;
•Luverne Hotel Partners LLC, $21,664;
•Luverne Pizza Ranch Inc., $17,332;
•Luverne Power Fitness, $1,843;
•Magnolia Cafe, $4,333;
•Spring Brooke LLC, $21,664;
•Up the Dam Creek LLC, $2,807;
•Wildflowers Coffee Boutique, $11,092.
Friday’s distribution was the second COVID-19 relief package that the county distributed.
Rock County distributed $740,000 to businesses and nonprofit organizations through grant applications up to $5,000.
 
BMAT receives $15,000 in state COVID relief
Blue Mound Area Theater was among 73 movie theater owners and 15 convention centers that shared in a $14 million appropriation for movie theaters and convention centers in Minnesota impacted by COVID-19.
The Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development awarded the Blue Mound Area Theater $15,000.
The DEED grants were part of the $216 million COVID-19 recovery package passed in December.

Gevo Inc. plans to open plant in South Dakota

Nearly 11 months after laying off its local workforce at the Agri-Energy LLC in Luverne, parent company Gevo Inc. has no immediate plans to rehire and resume full production.
Gevo officials did, however, recently announce the home for a new production plant would be built on 240 acres near Lake Preston, South Dakota.
The new plant called Net-Zero 1 would produce 45 million gallons of renewable jet fuel and gasoline from corn each year.
These are the same renewable fuels the Luverne plant is currently being retrofitted to produce from renewable energy sources of wind and cattle manure.
Agri-Energy stopped production on March 27, 2020, and laid off 27 employees in response to the growing coronavirus pandemic that negatively affected market prices for ethanol.
 In a letter to the Luverne community dated Feb. 11, plant manager Phil Cherry said the Luverne plant will reopen to full production.
“While there are fewer cars in our staff parking lot these days and less activity at our scale house, you should know that inside the plant we are working hard to make sure we are ready to roll if and when we decide to restart operations,” Cherry wrote.
“In fact, we recently posted a job for a project manager position for our expanding work in the production of renewable natural gas from dairy cows.”
Gevo engineers are working to develop a digester that would take biogas generated from cattle manure and use the green gas to lessen the Luverne plant’s dependence on natural gas.
The Luverne plant was the first of its kind to use wind power to lessen its reliance on electricity, also generated from coal. Construction of the two wind turbines, located west of the plant, were finished in early 2020 and began producing electricity in April.
The electricity not used at the plant was sold to the city of Luverne and Missouri River Energy Services.
The use of green energy to produce renewable jet fuel and gasoline is also the goal of the Net-Zero 1 plant in Lake Preston, which is anticipated to be in production by early 2024. Gevo plans to construct up to three plants generating renewable energy from renewable energy sources.
“Gevo would like to convert and upgrade our Luverne facility into a net-zero site as well sometime in the future,” Cherry indicated.
“We are not abandoning Luverne and, in fact, we want to make this a world-class production site as well.”

Public Safety, school take top spots on legislative agenda

The 2021 session is in full swing as bills have started moving through the legislative process as committee meetings kick into high gear.
While this year’s session looks different with most meetings taking place virtually, I nevertheless continue to work hard to make sure Senate District 22 is well represented at the Capitol.
 
Holding cities accountable for funding public safety budgets
On Monday, the Senate passed my bill that would hold cities accountable to pay their mutual aid agreements and prevent Governor Walz from diverting funds away from education and healthcare to cover cities’ public safety costs that defund the police.
Cities are given Local Government Aid to fund necessary functions of their government, which includes public safety. While the state has a responsibility to protect the public’s safety, it is not every Minnesotan’s responsibility to pay for it when that community is actively undermining its own safeguards. The solution proposed in this bill is fair. It encourages law enforcement to be fully funded by cities and ensures that when neighboring communities answer the call that they are going to be reimbursed for their support. The bill allows cities that provided mutual aid but haven’t been reimbursed for it yet to apply to have their Local Government Aid adjusted to match the amount owed. The funds would be provided by lowering the LGA from the city that owes the mutual aid payment.
Following the bill’s passage, Governor Walz, via his spokesperson, Mr. Tschann, issued a statement accusing Senate Republicans of voting to defund the police. This was after House Democrats failed to pass their own version of the legislation on the same day.
Governor Walz’s accusation does not accurately account for the provisions of the bill and is blatantly false. This legislation was spurred on by an active effort from Minneapolis’s city council to undermine its own public safety needs as well as the city’s unmet reimbursement obligations to neighboring communities.
Rather than accuse Senate Republicans of defunding the police, the Governor should reflect on his own party’s actions, which have driven police out of the cities and have positioned Minneapolis poorly should there be further unrest.
 
 Removing the governor’s authority to close schools via executive order
On Thursday we passed bipartisan legislation that will protect students’ right to an excellent education at all times. The bill, Senate File 2, removes any governor’s authority to close schools or alter school schedules via executive order. Decisions about opening and closing will be left in the hands of individual school districts moving forward, where local officials have firsthand knowledge of their students’ needs.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, Minnesota never should have adopted a statewide mandate forcing all of our districts to use the same criteria and protocols for each individual school. We know that all of our schools are unique and should have empowered local authorities the flexibility to do what is best for their communities and students. Now, with the data clearly saying it’s safe for schools to reopen, it is time for the Governor to relinquish this authority.
The bill says the Governor may not use executive order authority to issue any order or to authorize the commissioner of education to alter school schedules, curtail school activities or order schools closed.
The legislation passed 40-27 with four Democrats and two Independents joining Senate Republicans.
Gov. Walz’s executive orders closing schools have been among his most questioned and controversial orders of the outbreak.
There is mounting evidence, including research from the CDC, that schools pose a minimal risk of spreading the coronavirus. A fall Reuters report that studied 191 countries also found no clear link between school reopenings and coronavirus surges. In addition, Axios looked at several studies and found schools are not COVID-19 hotspots, and the Atlantic Magazine wrote that kids are not superspreaders and that it’s time to reopen schools. The New York Times reported on evidence that schools, especially elementary schools, are not “stoking community transmission.”
On Wednesday Governor Walz revised his Safe Learning Plan but still holds state authority to change education plans going forward.
The Governor is slowly tweaking the dials, but he is certainly not moving fast enough. His own data indicates that transmission rates for teachers is a minuscule .37 percent, which is astounding. Our students need to be back in the classroom, and prolonging their time out of the classroom is an embarrassment on this administration and Minnesota’s teachers’ unions.
 
 

What does your penmanship say about you?

While recently signing farm paperwork for my late parents’ estate, I came across some documents with both Mom’s and Dad’s signatures that were dated decades ago.
I ran my finger lightly over the ink they had pressed into the paper, and my mind briefly wandered to their younger years when conservation reserve acres were part of their farm planning.
Their side-by-side signatures were neat and fluid, unlike the halted scribbles their aging fingers had more recently produced.
These two signatures (that became so familiar to me growing up) suggested a youthful optimism for the future, a resolve to tackle life’s adventures as a team.
Mom was a school teacher and her penmanship reflected a commitment to both precision and flair. The letters were evenly spaced, uniformly sized with upper and lower zones reaching equal distance above and below the lines.
Dad’s signature was less so, but reflected a deliberate, no-nonsense manner.
Contemplating this later, I consulted “the all-knowing internet” for the science behind handwriting and what it says about our personalities.
Not surprisingly, big letters indicate outgoing personalities and smaller letters are written by shy introverts.
Similarly, people who space out their letters and words tend to enjoy freedom and independence while those who squeeze words and letters prefer the company of others.
Other findings include:
•Heavy pen pressure suggests tension and anger, while moderate pressure is a sign of commitment, and soft pressure suggests empathy.
•Circles in place of dots on “i”s are playful and childlike.
•Right-slanters are extroverts and left-slanters are introverts (or liars, as some sources suggest).
•Long crosses on “t”s indicate determination, enthusiasm and possibly stubborn tendencies. Short-crossed “t”s reveal laziness. Unless you cross it on the high side, which indicates high goals. Low-crossed “t”s are for low achievers. (Pity the low and short “t” crossers.)
•A widely looped letter shows spontaneity and narrow loops are restrained.
•A short hook on the lower-case “y” means you’re a homebody and a long hook could signal wanderlust.
The list goes on, but of course, considering my own propensity to write very quickly during interviews for stories, I was interested to learn:
•Those who write quickly are “impatient and dislike wasting time.” (Or, they’re news people who need to keep up in an interview.)
•And finally, a legible signature is a “sign of confidence” while an illegible signature is “the mark of a private or hard-to-read person.” (I’m nothing short of a mystery.)
Of course, I knew my parents and didn’t need a handwriting analysis to tell me who they were.
But my fascination with the ink they left on paper tells me something about myself: I still miss them and find comfort in little things that make me feel close to them.

Voices of our Readers Feb. 25, 2021

To the Editor:
Things I find perplexing, perhaps even contradictory:
Why would we shut down a pipeline and transport oil by truck and rail?
Why would a gender who fought years for equality applaud confused men being on their sports team?
How is it that people who claim to be Christians vote for a party that wants to kill babies?
Has the flu been cured? You hear nothing of it. Perhaps we killed the baby that God destined to cure this and other diseases.
Why would someone who says “my body, my choice” endorse mandatory vaccinations?
Have you been to the elementary school to see the snot, food and bacteria laden masks we are forcing our children to wear all day?
Why would any sort of media be for censorship and “fact-checking?” It seems they would have the most to lose under communism.
Why would we question the Constitution, Bill of Rights and Declaration of Independence that served us well for 200+ years, when the wise men that wrote them found “these truths to be self evident,” meaning any simple-minded person should be able to understand the most basic ideas of freedom?
Why would you lock down small businesses, yet let hoards of people shop at Walmart?
How did 100+ people march into one of the most secure buildings in the world?
Why is it not racist to have a black only college?
Maybe we should forgive all debts, not just student loans. That will teach all the naysayers who chose to live within their means.
Maybe we should be studying history instead of rewriting it: How is that possible, do they have a time machine?
And lastly, why do we elect lunatics to come up with these absurd ideas?
God bless America.
Todd Meinerts
Luverne

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