Welcome back! Our power finally came back on at 11:44 EDT yesterday morning. Crews showed up right at 8:00 and started working. They identified the local problem but then had to find the cause of the local problem and fix that first. The problem on the pole across from our house wasn’t that bad: a blown fuse. It took longer to level and raise the bucket truck than it did to replace the fuse. The crews working our neighborhood were from Ft. Wayne and South Bend. This morning, they’re heading for Kentucky and will be helping restore power down there. We greatly appreciate their sacrifice in getting power turned back on.
Having our power back was nice, but then came the problem of checking the refrigerator and freezer to see what we had lost. We had been careful to not open the doors, but when the power is out for over 72 hours, there’s not much hope. I opened the door with the trash can by my side. The smell caused my stomach to turn. About the only thing that survived was the various jellies. It took three large garbage bags to cart everything out.
Fortunately, we have fantastic family and friends who have helped us be able to restore some of what we lost. As has consistently been the case over the past two years, you again came to our rescue. Food has been ordered and we’ll be okay. There are still some cleanup issues, but we’ll be able to handle those. Through all of this, we have to remember that what we got here in Indy was but a smattering compared to the decimation in other places throughout the Southeast. The search for survivors still continues, especially in North Carolina, where numerous roads and bridges are just gone. As of this morning, 140 are known dead, but that number will have increased by the time you read this. Helene is one of the deadliest storms to hit the US and it will take weeks to even start putting things back together. For too many, the devastation is incalculable. All the help in the world won’t bring back lost loved ones.
Sadly, the Orange Felon has been spreading lies about disaster recovery. Is anyone surprised? No. However, his rhetoric could cause some to experience delays in getting the help they need. President Biden will look over the devastation today and has promised all the help legally possible. The topic will almost certainly come up at tonight’s vice presidential debate. Please remember, when the felon was president, he minimized disaster relief. Haiti is still dealing with severe hunger and crime because they didn’t get the disaster relief they needed. We don’t need that kind of response again.
What is scary is that the hurricane season isn’t over. The National Weather Service is tracking multiple storms forming in the Caribbean. What had been an unusually quiet season seems to be heating up on the back side and could still cause continued problems for the Southeast US even as they’re trying to put their lives back together after Helene. There’s just a lot going on and the next few weeks could have everyone reaching for their anxiety medication.
Oh, and just as millions of people are needing their food replaced, dockworkers have gone on strike across the East and Gulf Coasts. This is going to affect everything from food to fashion, especially fresh foods that have to be imported this time of year. I saw someone on Facebook foolishly question why we don’t “just grow the vegetables that we need here in the US?” We do. The problem is that all that food has been harvested and much of it has been consumed. This time of year, through April, almost all fresh fruit and vegetables have to be imported and come through those docks along the coasts. Even if the strike doesn’t last long, the ripple effect will cause higher prices on almost everything and make some items unavailable through the holiday season.
I’m not going to even try to catch up on all the news that we missed. I know the big headline story this morning is Israel’s incursion into Lebanon, seriously expanding the war.
Today is former President Jimmy Carter’s 100th birthday, which is nothing short of incredible.
Pete Rose, Dikembe Mutombo, and Kris Kristofferson have all died.
A Judge blocks Georgia law banning abortion after six weeks of pregnancy.
The New York Times editorial board has endorsed Kamala Harris for President.
Life sucks for a lot of people right now. Be nice. You never know what someone’s going through.
Thankfully, there’s coffee this morning!
Monday Morning Update: 12/30/24
We are at that point where end-of-the-year deaths are kicking in. Linda Lavin, who became a familiar face on TV playing ‘Alice,’ died yesterday at age 87. Charles Shyer, ‘Father of the Bride’ and ‘Baby Boom’ filmmaker, dies at 83. The founder of Cablevision and HBO, Charles Dolan, died at 98. At least 66 people died after a truck plunged into a river in southern Ethiopia. 18 passengers were killed in 2 separate road accidents in Pakistan. Indy’s homicide rate hit 200 yesterday, but overall, the nation’s murder rate continues to decline.
What’s dominating headlines this morning, though, is the death of former President Jimmy Carter, the 100-year-old longest-living president of the US. All the tributes being raised are appropriate for no one deserves as much respect as does President Carter. You don’t have to look far to find lists of all his accomplishments and the challenges that cost him a second term. Thousands of people have stories of their encounters with the former president, most of which are overwhelmingly positive. I am fortunate enough to have two.
The first came in a reception line in 1997. I was photographing the event and it wasn’t until everyone else had filed through that I was allowed to meet the former President and First Lady. I wasn’t expecting anything more than a tired handshake and maybe a ‘nice to meet you’ or ‘thank you for coming.’ The fatigue was showing on the President’s face, the hour was late, and there was absolutely no reason for us to have a conversation. Yet, when I extended my hand, he took it firmly in both of his and held it. He smiled with that trademark smile and we talked for nearly five minutes, an eternity in presidential time. We briefly discussed photography and the event but quickly moved on to family, faith, and concerns about the future. He didn’t temper his statements to be politically correct. He was forthright and candid in his opinions. I left significantly more impressed than I could have imagined.
The second encounter was by chance in 2002. I was exploring numerous side projects at the time, one of which involved trying to get a grip on exactly what happened during the Iranian hostage crisis. At the time, there was still a lot of information that hadn’t been digitized, so my best resource was Carter’s presidential library. After pouring through pages of redacted documents, I stepped outside for a breath of fresh air. Off to the side, totally undisturbed and almost unrecognizable, was the former President kneeling down to tend to a young flowering plant. He was wearing jeans, a denim jacket, and an Atlanta Braves ball cap.
I had no intention of disturbing him; I had no right nor reason. He was busy working with the plant, as far as I could tell there wasn’t even Secret Service around (they were there, I just didn’t see them). I sat on a concrete bench and was looking through my notes when I felt a hand on my shoulder; it was the President. Smiling, he asked, “It’s Charles, isn’t it? I almost didn’t recognize you with the long hair.”
I started to stand but his hand sat me back down. “Don’t bother,” he said. “I was going to sit down anyway.” He inquired as to what I was working on and when I told him his expression and tone grew serious. He asked, “What’s your perspective?”
“It seems like it was a lose/lose situation no matter what you might have done,” I told him.
He nodded. “There’s still a lot that’s classified which prevents me from fully explaining our decision-making process at the time. Let’s just say that there are moments we can’t see clearly until we’re looking through the lens of the past. If I had known then what I know now, the situation would never have happened.”
We talked for almost thirty minutes, discussing the challenges of dealing with multiple concurrent crises, the politics of international negotiations, and trying to parent a rebellious child (Amy) while running for re-election. He talked openly about deception, political interference, and the loneliness of taking an unpopular stance (he wanted to officially recognize Palestine). He worried that 9/11 proved how vulnerable the US is and how the unpredictability of terrorism sometimes backs presidents into a corner. Winning isn’t always an option.
A phone call from his wife, Rosalyn, brought an end to our conversation. We shook hands and he went inside. I gathered my things and stopped for a chili dog on my way back to the office, pondering what had just happened. Such accessibility to any other president would be impossible. He broke the mold in ways we still can’t imagine.
There will be a lot said, a ton of analysis and re-examination, over the next week and a half. President Carter’s state funeral has been set for January 9. There will also be memorials in Atlanta and internment in Plains. People will say a lot of things, share a lot of memories, and build up a life that was unique in his public service.
I’ll sit here wishing I could have seen him again, had another conversation. I’m sure his perspective had changed even more over the years. He was an extremely intelligent and thoughtful person who never, ever stopped thinking.
His death closes one of the most chaotic years in memory. I’ll never forget the experience, the humanity, and the honesty of the gentleman from Plains. May he rest in peace.
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