RIP Luke Letlow (Maybe?)

It’s an interesting question about how we should feel when someone makes bad, ill-informed choices that lead directly to their death.

*Of course* every death is sad.  *But maybe* it’s not quite as sad when someone willingly makes a conscious choice to avoid even the most basic Covid precautions and then ends up dying of Covid?

Decorum says you can’t speak ill of the dead. But maybe reality and our current circumstances say otherwise?

Because, on one hand, Luke Letlow was a 41-year old man with no pre-existing conditions who had a wife and two young children and was poised to take a major step in his political career as a recently elected congress person.

On the other hand, if you repeatedly put a single bullet in a revolver, spin the chamber, and put it in your mouth then pull the trigger, there’s a good chance that eventually the result won’t be good.

So, since my last two posts of the year will be my usual “First Lines of Every Month” post on December 30 and my “End of Year Memes” post on December 31, this is a bit of a weird way to end 2020.

But given what a strange year it’s been and how 300,000+ Americans have simply blurred into a single statistical blob, an ever-increasing counter on CNN instead of being remembered as real people with families, jobs, histories, passions, contributions, it seems fitting to treat a Republican congress person who tied himself to Donald Trump and was regularly photographed not wearing a mask, even at events featuring elderly veterans, as a cautionary tale.  (This isn’t a Republican thing – I regularly hear younger, healthier, presumably more liberal and/or more educated Canadians say some variation of “I’m young – if I get it, I’ll be okay” which leaves me shaking my head – “actually, you don’t know that for sure.  You *can’t* know that for sure.”  And honestly, there are *some* conservatives who appear to recognize the seriousness of the disease – though often only after they or someone they know has had it.)

Anyhow, there are lots of people across the political spectrum sending prayers to Letkow and his family.  But if I were someone inclined to send meaningless prayers, I’d prefer to send mine to the doctors and nurses who had to treat him plus anyone his wanton disregard of science and facts and basic common sense may have harmed as well.

This man, like so many others, portrayed himself as a leader.  But leadership isn’t just a title, it’s your actions.  He was anything but.

Google’s 2020 Year in Search (And A Couple Other Year-in-Review Compilations Too)

And since it was such a memorable year, I’ll add a couple other “year in review” compilations…

 

 

Music Monday – “It’s been a hell of a year/How did you see/Who I was and who I was gonna be/I could’ve been right was probably wrong/So many nights wishing I could go home”

This is a song about the end of a relationship but man, that title is perfect for the final “Music Monday” of 2021…

Hell of a Year” – Parker McCollum

Secular Sunday – Covid Nativity

The Covid Continuum

As Saskatchewan adds more restrictions, mostly on retailers in the post-Christmas period, I’m thinking a lot about how everyone is somewhere different on what I think of as the “Covid Continuum”.

I’d say the range for this starts with anyone who’s absolutely minimized their outings since March – maybe only leaving the house to buy groceries and nothing else while either working from home or possibly retired and not having to go out anyhow.

On the other end of the spectrum, are those who act as if nothing has changed at all and continue to live their lives as they did pre-Covid as much as possible – not wearing masks except when forced, still having large gatherings in violation of the rules, and pretty much ignoring most or all guidelines meant to keep the virus from spreading.

Comfort levels will likely change for everyone over time too – people who wiped down their groceries after an outing in March might no longer do so now.  People who said they would never wear a mask in May feel embarrassed when they forget their mask in the car in November.  And so on.

All of this also happens within a set of ever-changing government guidelines that leads to all sorts of weird contradictions:

* extended families can’t gather in a home right now but if they rent a couple poolside rooms at a local hotel, they can freely visit while sitting in a hot tub.

* people in the city worry if parking their third car in the driveway will trigger a call to the police by a nosy neighbour but people on a farm have very few concerns that extra visitors might invite scrutiny.

* Hypothetically, I’d imagine a person may even feel like a criminal if he were to slip into his parent’s house to use the bathroom while doing an otherwise completely outside, socially distanced surprise visit.

On a completely unrelated note, we’re grateful that we can still gather outside in groups of 10 or less even if we can’t gather with family indoors.

Since the weather was cooperating, we did a road trip today to surprise Shea’s parents in Weyburn then my parents in Indian Head, knowing that Christmas has been especially tough on them not being able to be with their grandkids.

A Visual Representation of 2020 for Christmas?

Sasha tested out her new Christmas makeup on me and I realised this process made a good analogy for 2020 in general…

* it was unexpected, sort of weird and occasionally scary
* it looks like somebody got beat up (or possibly has a communicable disease)
* I had my eyes closed for most of it
* there was limited seating available
* everybody was wearing PJ’s
* we had to hand (and face) wash immediately after!

@officialRPL ‘Twas The Night Before Christmas… #yqr

RPL’s Marketing Unit has created some great content recently including this timely video featuring a number of well-known Regina names…

 

The Beatles: Get Back: A Sneak Peek From Peter Jackson

This looks amazing and I am excite!

“Mommy, you know how you mix a couple different things in a drink sometimes?”

“Yes, did you really make me a rum and egg nog?  Or a rum and coke?”

“Even better – I put egg nog and wine together since I know those are two of your favourite drinks!”

Music Monday – “Oh I’m/Staying home this Christmas/For friends and for strangers/And for family”

Staying Home This Christmas” – Dillon Currie