Category: Default

The Lafayette Sentinel will remain an irregular publication.

Last winter I started the Lafayette Sentinel to provide local news and weather to the people of Greater Lafayette. Unfortunately working my day job and providing regular articles worth reading turned out to be beyond my current capacity.

There is also another reason: two of Greater Lafayette’s most beloved news personalities have regular, professionally written Substacks: Dave Bangert and Chad Evans. Imagine if a new ice cream shop just learning the ropes showed up next door to Silver Dipper — its chances would not be very good because Silver Dipper offers great ice cream at decent prices and has become a sort of local institution.

Dave Bangert and Chad Evans are Greater Lafayette institutions. While there is always room for the best, that probably will not be me for some time.

But if you would like my writing in your mailbox every now and then, with a lot more then than now, why not subscribe to The Lafayette Sentinel?

Support your local news and weather!

Two of the more locally famous news personalities have started Substacks.

Dave Bangert, who used to be write for the Lafayette Journal and Courier, now runs the “Based in Lafayette” Substack. He specializes in deep, informative articles regarding issues that affect all of us in Tippecanoe County. He has 6,900 subscribers. The Substack may be found at https://www.basedinlafayette.com/

Chad Evans is the WLFI meteorologist who was in danger of being laid off due to a decision by WLFI’s corporate owner in Atlanta. Hundreds of area residents demanded that his job be saved, and it was, for now. The end of his contract with WLFI is approaching, but one way or another he will keep informing Greater Lafayette about the weather through his Substack. You can join 5,000 of his other subscribers to follow him at https://chadevansweather.substack.com/

How to protect your democracy in 20 minutes per day

Make ten phone calls every day. Six of them go to your Federal Representatives, who are listed at the end of the article. Three of them go to your State Representatives. One goes to the Governor.

Each Federal politician has two phone numbers: the first in Washington DC and the second at his or her local office. The Governor has one. Your state legislators may have one or two.

It is helpful to have a script for your phone calls. Here is a pattern:

Good morning! My name is (First Name) (Last Name) and I live in your district in (city, town). Please, (representative’s name and title) to (twenty or thirty polite words maximum). Thank you for your time.

If you get a live operator, they may ask for your address (which they can easily get anyway) or to clarify your answer.

Many of us do not have twenty minutes per day. Any call you make to stop the Musk and Trump train from rolling over our rights as Americans is positive.

Senators and Representative for Congressional District 3 in Indiana

Sen. Todd Young
Indianapolis: 317-226-6700
Washington DC: 202-224-5623

Sen. Jim Banks
Fort Wayne: 260-321-7130
Washington DC: 202-224-4814

Rep. Jim Baird
Washington DC: 202-225-5037
Danville, IN: 317-563-5567

Governor Mike Braun: 317-232-4567

Indianapolis: 317-232-4567

State officials

As you may know, Indiana is a severely gerrymandered state. The gerrymander dismembers Greater Lafayette, so that both of our Senate districts extend tens of miles into deeply rural territory.

Find Your Legislators

Even if it seems there is no chance your call will affect the vote, call. It is true that your legislators’ votes on many issues may be predetermined by their donors, their loyalty to MAGA or their opposition to MAGA, but not all of them. It is also true that they can gauge the strength of public sentiment based on these calls, which may dissuade them from voting for the worst of the bills.

Confession of a former bureaucrat

Nine weeks with the Census

Back in 2020, I worked for the Census during the summer and early autumn. It was interesting work and COVID played its tricks. There was so much that I did not know about my neighborhood and the surrounding counties. The stories would be entertaining and instructive, with all sorts of characters and even a climax of sorts…and I cannot tell you a word of them without breaking my oath or courting five years at Club Fed. I asked if I could tell them without identifying information — my coworkers said no.

All Federal employees, even temps, are required to take an oath which follows:

I, AB, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.

One-third of federal workers are veterans. In a few cases, challenge coins like those given to members of the military to commemorate an accomplishment are unofficially offered: people use their own money to get the coins designed, stamped and painted. If you received a blood transfusion, chances are very good that a federal worker donated it.

Federal employment is largely believed to be a sinecure, that is, money for almost nothing. Park rangers wrangling tourists away from the cute buffalo and black bears and discouraging them from trying out those lovely hot springs made of battery acid kept at 200 degrees may disagree. Overstretched air traffic controllers may also disagree — we saw what happens if they make mistakes: perhaps a jet sinking into the Potomac with 67 passengers or something smaller crashing into a residential part of Philadelphia, killing six.

The cloud of contractors, multiplying

A recent phenomenon in DC is the swarm of contractors orbiting the place. The Federal government fell into the fad of contracting everything out. Somehow the number of people working as contractors has been so tremendous that the DC area extends into four states now including DC. And where there are contracting firms there are CEOs and their entourages drinking deep from the stream of money headed to the multimillionaires who run the firms and shareholders. The New Republic described DC as a workaday place where the streets rolled up at 10 pm and commuters read news on their way to work — the current DC is a place where parking can easily exceed $100/day and homes worth over a million dollars spread out in every direction.

Research

Related to the contractors is the way that research is done. Most of the research is done far from DC, in hundreds of universities. Typically, a primary: investigator (PI) competes for grants from one department or another. Should they get the grant, the professor’s employer gets a large cut (roughly 50% at Purdue) and a team may be assembled with grad students working as apprentices and postgrads serving as the journeymen, plus supporting actors; the PI supervising a team of research workers. So cut out a department that does research, and jobs disappear from dozens of colleges and thousands of people on modest pay lose their appointments.

Final Notes

And yes, federal employees sometimes have a stick up their butt. They can be extremely doctrinaire and rigid, wedded to the way things used to be (in their minds). In business, failure is expected; in government, it can ruin a career or kill a program, if it is caught so not getting caught gets priority. And like any institution, previous mistakes lead to policies designed to keep the mistake from being repeated, which backfires when the mistakes and consequences are tabulated over a department employing thousands in twelve states leading to pages of rules covering situations that happen once every decade somewhere in the department. Some of that stick is the possibility of embarrassment, career ruin, fines and incarceration should one policy or another be violated or something crash in unexpected, fiery ways.

A last note: the data gathered by governmental agencies is the property of the American taxpayer and citizen. When Musk and his minions make data go away, they rob the American people of what we purchased through taxes.