Local Issues

Local Issues

My First Lincoln Dinner: Impressions and Takeaways

Nancye and I attended our first Lincoln Dinner as Warren County Conservatives on Friday April 14, 2023. The event was held at the Corvette Museum in Bowling Green. We did not know what to expect, so we planned to arrive early. I was taught that it is better to overdress for an event when there is no stated dress code, so we did.

When we arrived at the museum, there was plenty of parking. As we entered the reception area, there were a few people in front of us, but the check-in seemed to take longer than necessary. I don’t know if this was by design, but by the time we received our name tags and took the obligatory stroll through the main lobby to gaze at the newly sold Corvettes, the line was backed up to the front door and curled around the front with quadruple the number of people.

As we milled around the lobby and then found our assigned table, it became evident that the purpose of the delayed start was to meet and greet existing representatives and selected political candidates. As newbies to the fray, it seemed everyone knew everyone else except us. The familiar faces were those I have seen or spoken with at the various political meetings in town.

As I surveyed the crowd, it was evident that elected officials and wannabes were the ones dressed in professional business attire. Some of the groups interacted like good ol’ boy fraternities while other gaggles included their families in polite political conversation. The candidates present were willing to talk to anyone.

As a newcomer, it is sometimes difficult to engage with elected representatives as their attention span seems to diminish rapidly after one or two minutes of conversation. They also seem to be constantly interrupted by other colleagues or government bureaucrats. The constituents, some more informed than others, have trained these politicians to talk more than listen. Fortunately, we were approached by a representative (name withheld) who introduced himself and his family. Because I knew of his recent voting record, we had a productive discussion where I shared my viewpoints and got his feedback. Because of this, I left the conversation with a more positive impression than I held previously. If only more representatives would spend a few quality minutes with ordinary citizens.

Once we were seated at the table, the conversations with other conservatives were informative and spirited. Additional candidates made the table rounds and informational flyers soon cluttered our eating spaces, including some oppositional smear material. I was somewhat shocked by this and felt like a kid who accidently discovered an older brother’s porno collection. The purveyor of the smear material told us we could keep the flyer if we wanted, but I demurred. I got the gist of the accusations.

Finally, a delicious dinner was served after almost two hours and the scheduled program began. The invocation, anthem, and pledge were inspired sandwiched by comments of support for law enforcement and the military. In the subsequent program, two candidates for state offices and five candidates for governor spoke for three and five minutes each, respectively. Interestingly, all the speakers are serving or have served in an elected capacity except one. Their speeches quickly sorted themselves into two categories, those who were running against their primary opponents and those who were running against their Democratic Party opponent. It was also clear that a political newcomer has a tremendous disadvantage. The seasoned office holders all know the hot button issues and speaking cadence that will generate positive crowd reactions. The common themes were faith, family, economy, energy, and education. The word freedom was mentioned often.

The keynote speaker, Asa Hutchinson, former governor of Arkansas, provided a fine exclamation point to the event. As a recently announced candidate for the President of the United States, he had the clearest and most transparent message of all. He began by speaking of his accomplishments in government under Reagan and Bush the younger. He then outlined his five-point presidential platform.

1. Control spending

2. Secure the border

3. Lead the free world

4. Grow energy opportunities

5. Defeat leftist indoctrination in schools and business

I’m sure his message will be further refined and tested over the next year during the presidential campaign. For me the burning question remains whether any of the candidates or current elected officials will have any interest in reducing the size of government. The swamp is alive and well at all levels. Money brings influence and power seeks more power. Over 300 attended the event, but during the entire evening’s activities, the list of 34 sponsors scrolled continuously on the big screen. This ensured we didn’t forget who the truly important people were at this event.   

Mark Doggett, PHD

About Mark

Mark has twenty years of experience in higher education with thirteen years as a full-time educator. Twenty years of experience in business and industry including defense aerospace, food and beverage manufacturing, farm and irrigation products. 

Education: Doctorate at Colorado State University Interdisciplinary Studies with B.S. and M.S. degrees in Industrial Technology from California State University Fresno.

To contact Mark, email him at mark.doggett@wku.edu

Masks

Fear and Control in Louisville. What’s next for Bowling Green?

I was in Louisville yesterday and stopped for a school bus… two young children exited the bus with masks on their face because of a unanimous decision by the Jefferson County Board of Education. Louisville is plagued with crime, fear mongering and control. To avoid this disaster in Bowling Green, citizens must know their candidates. Who are the true conservatives? WCC developed candidate surveys for this reason, covering issues affecting our schools, the city and county. We’ll talk about them here, so you can decide. Stay tuned. P.S. Better yet, join our email list – so you don’t miss anything! Send your request: tonjatuttle@warrencountyconservatives.org

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Bowling Green Pride Fest: Art or Obscenity?

During the public comment section of the Bowling Green City Commission meeting Tuesday, Feb 16th, Warren County Conservatives argued that the lewd performances hosted during the 2021 Bowling Green Pride Fest have no place in our community and violate the city’s obscenity code.

Keep scrolling to read remarks.

Contact Bowling Green City Commissioners today and urge them to enforce public decency ordinances consistently.

NamePositionPhone NumberEmail
Todd AlcottMayor270-792-1488todd.alcott@bgky.org
Carlos BaileyCommissioner270-594-1233carlos.bailey@bgky.org
Dana Beasley-BrownCommissioner270-697-3262dana.beasleybrown@bgky.org
Melinda HillCommissioner270-792-7212melinda.hill@bgky.org
Sue ParriginCommissioner270-792-1428sue.parrigin@bgky.org

Bowling Green Pride Fest: Art or Obscenity?

As Americans we have an innate sense of fairness. One might say – it’s our one redeeming quality. It allows us to overcome our faults, our prejudices, and acknowledge each other as equals.   We as Americans start and join wars over fairness… 

We cannot make everyone the same height, weight, sex – we cannot make people equal financially, or grant them intelligence or wisdom they do not have.  But, from our inception – we have acknowledged that we are all equal under the law.   Our constitution states this eloquently – it’s what makes us different.

Here in Bowling Green, we have had issues in the past with events leading to excess.  In the 1970’s Western was picked by Playboy magazine as the #1 party college in the United States. An event that was met by community and university leaders with changes to Greek organizations, and local ordinances to ensure we did not remain so.   

In the early 1980’s a heavy rock band came to town for a concert and significant damage was done to the Western Campus, again community leaders and the WKU administration took action – banning specific types of events. You may also remember that it was nearly 20 years before concerts of any kind graced our town again. 

In the late 80’s early 90’s Western hosted Rugby intermural finals – followed by a party that gained a significant following – it was called the Banshee.  There were issues with public nudity, obscenity, violence and underage drinking, and it too ceased to be welcome here.

Here in Bowling green, we have expectations of conduct.  Our community has a long-standing social contract, defined and codified within our city and county bylaws that clearly represents our values. As members of the community, we expect that our fellow members will be treated, and will treat us equally within that contract, and that we will all abide by the regulations defined within it.

Which brings me to the point of my presentation tonight.  On Saturday, October 23, 2021, Bowling Green hosted the Pride Festival.  An event that my wife and I have attended in the past.  One that allows members of our community to celebrate their differences, and the many joys that life brings. 

At the conclusion of pride fest, the event sponsors hosted a Drag show, where performers dress as the opposite sex – and perform for an audience for prizes and recognition. This event has been hosted before and is one of the highlights of the event.  The Drag show last year was different.  A few performers choose to step outside the bounds of normal conduct – and violated the city’s code on Obscene material (section 9.2 – https://codelibrary.amlegal.com/codes/bowlinggreen/latest/bowlinggreen_ky/0-0-0-56530 ).

I won’t go into the explicit details of the violation, except to say the performances were well outside the code, to include the depiction of sexual acts, sexual excitement, and partially denuded human figures. 

Following the event, public outcry, both in the papers and here within these chambers demanded action, and the community waited for action from this body.  Waited for the organizers to provide an apology, a statement of future correction.  Waited five months now – and it has become clearly obvious that nothing will be done without further action and public pressure. 

A series of follow up calls on the matter, finally resulted in a statement from the city attorney – that the performances were “covered by a right to artistic expression”.  Which is interesting – because the word Artistic is only mentioned once in the code (included along with a copy of my statement) – clearly with regard to evaluating obscene content – “..taken as a whole it lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value for minors.”.   The word “Minors” however is used 15 times within the document.  The entire purpose of the code is to shield minors from inappropriate content.

Minors were clearly present at the event, and the highly sexualized content – where adults danced around in their underwear, has no “literary, artistic, political, or scientific value” to minors.

What has become clear to the community, is that one privileged group is being permitted to violate our social contract.  This is not a fair adjudication of the law.  We do not permit Male or Female Reviews, strip tease presentations, or even provocative advertisements for such in the public forum. 

If we did, I am sure more than a few local businesses would advantage themselves of the opportunity.  Those events must occur behind closed doors – where minors are excluded, and advertisements for such must follow section 9.2 of the city code. 

You, members of the city council have an obligation to act, the “bad as I want to be” crowd is watching;  I can assure you that a failure to act will result in even more inflammatory conduct within our community.