The GOP’s Mail Voting Allergy Still Persists

More Republicans are asking for mail ballots in some key states, but this isn’t the good news they might expect.

Jimmy Keady, the founder and president of JLK Political Strategies, a GOP consulting firm, is telling Fox News Digital that Republicans are doing a better job of early voting. That’s based on Decision Desk HQ data showing that relative to 2020, “the Democratic lead in vote-by-mail requests has shrunk by over 5% in Florida, nearly 15% in North Carolina and over 35% in Pennsylvania.”

“It definitely signals that A, there’s turnout… but B, also that the base has adopted, kind of being able to accept that early voting is a proper and mostly secure way to vote,” Keady said.

I’m not sure this is really such great news for the Trump-Vance ticket, however. But, first, let me remind you of the scene from the summer of 2020. It was the pre-vaccine height of the pandemic. On June 15, I wrote about President Trump’s self-defeating war on vote-by-mail, using Florida as my prime example. In June, I wrote Trump Has Destroyed the GOP’s Vote-By-Mail Advantage in Florida. By that time, the Biden campaign had opened up “a 302,000-voter advantage over Republicans in vote-by-mail enrollment” in the Sunshine State, which was a complete reversal from 2016 when more Republican Floridians voted by mail than Democrats.

In Pennsylvania, by contrast, we did not have a no-excuse vote-by-mail option at all prior to the pandemic. Unlike in Florida, where Republicans historically had the option and were more inclined than Democrats to use it, in Pennsylvania it was a new concept. And Trump told his supporters it was unreliable and a potential source of fraud. He also kept complaining about safety measures to keep people safe from COVID-19, which made Republicans less inclined to worry about queuing up in lines to vote in-person. The results were predictable and I did predict them. The Republican mail-in advantage in Florida was completely reversed, and in Pennsylvania the Democrats gained a giant new advantage by banking many, many more early votes than the GOP.

Keady does a good job of explaining why this is important:

Getting voters out to early in-person voting or to vote by mail can free up resources for campaigns, Keady said, allowing them to focus their attention on lower propensity voters who often play a big role in deciding elections.

“I’m sure voters complain all the time about text messages, about getting mail, about getting robocalls to go vote,” Keady said. “Campaigns are now sophisticated enough that once you go vote, those stop… once a voter goes to vote, and those stop, that allows resource allocation from that voter to another voter.”

Despite winning the vote-by-mail battle, the 2020 election in Florida did not go well for the Democrats. and it was even worse in 2022. The state is drifting to the right. One reason the Democrats’ didn’t do better in 2020 is that Florida also has a robust in-person early voting system, and very few Democrats chose that method. In other words, Democrats early voted by mail and Republicans early voted in-person, and it largely canceled out. But there was no in-person early voting option in Pennsylvania, and so the Dems banked a huge and probably decisive advantage.

Now, hopefully this helps you understand why there’s such a big difference in Decision Desk HQ’s numbers for the two states in 2024. In Florida, the Democratic lead in vote-by-mail requests has shrunk by about 5 percent. That’s really not much of a change, and it’s to be expected that there would be some reversion to pre-pandemic splits. Remember that before the pandemic, voting-by-mail was familiar to Floridians and more popular with Republicans. But if the Democrats still have an edge, then it’s still an improvement over the status quo ante.

The change in Pennsylvania is significant, with a 35 percent reduction in the Democratic advantage. But, again, few Pennsylvania Republicans chose to vote by mail in 2020 because they were not familiar with it and President Trump was telling them not to trust the voting method. The numbers are telling. There were 1,702,484 Democrats who cast mail ballots in 2020 compared to 623,404 Republicans. That gave the Democrats over a million vote advantage before any Election Day votes were cast, and the final outcome was 3,458,229 votes for Biden compared to 3,377,674 votes for Trump.

If I am a supporter of Trump, I’m encouraged to see that more Pennsylvania Republicans are asking for mail ballots, but the 35 percent number isn’t as significant as it might seem. In 2020, 64.7 percent of Pennsylvania ballot requests were made by Democrats compared to 23.7 percent by Republicans, and the Democrats had a higher return rate. (87.7 percent to  79.4 percent). Cutting into that 39 percent deficit by a little more than a third is helpful, but we’re still talking about a 25 or so percent advantage for the Dems. And this won’t be offset by any early in-person option.

Again, given that the 2020 election was held during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, many more Democrats were eager to stay safe and vote by mail, while Republicans were actively discouraged from either staying safe or voting by mail. We should expect more natural splits in our current environment. It’s not just that Republicans are more comfortable voting by mail this time, but also that Democrats are more comfortable voting in person.

No matter what, I would expect the splits to be less dramatic in 2024 than they were in 2020. The way the splits look in Florida and Pennsylvania reflect much more  the political and voting situation in 2020 than anything specific to the current campaign.

The truth is, the Democrats will still have an enormous early voting advantage in Pennsylvania and that this will make it easier for them to do their get out the vote work on Election Day. That’s a legacy of Trump poisoning his own supporters’ view of mail voting in 2020, and he’s going to pay a price for it.

If the GOP wants to grasp for good news, they can seize on these numbers, but they don’t concern me. They are exactly what I would expect.

Will Mike Johnson Survive His Effort to Avoid a Government Shutdown?

As we approach a possible government shutdown, I don’t want to reinvent the wheel so I will refer you to a piece I wrote in January 2023 called Can Kevin McCarthy Avoid Blowing Up the Global Economy?. It’s proof of both my political acumen and my prescience, but the topic was modestly different from what we’re dealing with now. In that case, I was explaining why we should be concerned that the U.S Government might default on its debt in 2023 and cause another Great Depression. My argument was essentially that McCarthy had made a series of concessions to the hard right in order to secure the Speakership, and that it would probably wind up costing him his job.

To be a little more specific, I knew that McCarthy was going to face two really difficult tasks. The first was to avoid a default on our debts in May 2023. The second was to avoid a government shutdown at the end of the fiscal year in September 2023. As it happened, McCarthy barely made it through the debt crisis but, in the process, used up all the leeway the hard right was willing to grant him. The good news was that he avoided blowing up the global economy, but it meant that when he went back to the well in September to avoid a shutdown, he was immediately ousted from power. My prediction that his concessions to the hard right would quickly doom him was accurate.

One of the key concessions McCarthy made was giving three seats on the Rules Committee to Freedom Caucus members Ralph Norman, Chip Roy and Thomas Massie.. As I explained in the earlier piece, this meant that despite having 9-to-4 Republican majority on the committee, McCarthy couldn’t pass a rule the Freedom Caucus opposed without Democratic help. And if you can’t pass a rule on a bill, the only way to bring that bill to the floor is under a suspension of the rules which requires a two-thirds supermajority to pass. Obviously, if you need a two-thirds majority, that means you need a lot of Democratic votes.

Now, it took a while for the Republicans to agree on a replacement for McCarthy as Speaker, but they eventually settled on Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana. And he wound up in the exact same pickle, needing Democratic votes to pass must-pass spending legislation because of a narrow majority and lack of control of the Rules Committee. I thought it would cost him his job this year, but Donald Trump stepped in to save him, no doubt concerned that another protracted Speaker fight would be unhelpful to his cause in the November election.

As Johnson struggles to pass a continuing resolution to avoid a shutdown six weeks out from the election, Trump has made his job more difficult by demanding he attach the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE Act). But Johnson didn’t have the votes and so he cut a deal with the House Democrats and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to pass a CR that lets FEMA tap into next year’s disaster relief money and provides an extra $231 million for the Secret Service. There’s also some extra coin for security at the inauguration and a few other extensions. However, this likely won’t fly with the Freedom Caucus members of the Rules Committee.

Republican leaders have doubts that the panel will be able to pass a rule allowing the House to consider the funding bill under a simple majority vote.”

The Rules Committee has nine Republicans and four Democrats. Among those nine Republicans are three conservative hardliners: Reps. Ralph Norman, Chip Roy and Thomas Massie. The trio has the power to block any rule if they side with Democrats.

Norman famously hates CRs and told us last week he wouldn’t back a three-month stopgap bill. Roy’s SAVE Act was twinned to a six-month CR and failed on the floor last week. And Massie loathes Speaker Mike Johnson and seems to relish criticizing him publicly.

The Democrats on the committee could vote for the rule but Roll Call reports that convincing them to do so is “a task made more complicated by the omission of several policy and funding riders Democrats sought” in the continuing resolution. These include a rate increase for “Social Security Administration expenses and expanded loan guarantee authority for State Department financing of Ukrainian purchases of U.S. military equipment.”

To be clear here, a strong majority of congressional Republicans in both the House and Senate, and all their leaders are ready to completely capitulate to the Democrats on this temporary spending bill because they absolutely do not want an October government shutdown. But, procedurally, it’s just not that easy to capitulate, especially when Trump isn’t providing any cover. They think it’s a political loser, and history definitely supports them in that sentiment, but the concessions McCarthy made last year are still haunting his successor.

So, as has been the case for this entire Congress, the Democrats are in the functional majority in the House because their votes are needed both to keep the country solvent and to keep the government operating, and that means that they can make demands. It’s true that Speaker Johnson cut a deal with Schumer, but that deal didn’t necessarily envision Democrats on the House Rules Committee voting to make Johnson”s job easier. In general, the minority on the Rules Committee almost never votes with the Speaker and they’re happy to pass the CR under a suspension of the rules.

The problem for Johnson, as it was for McCarthy, is that relying on Democratic votes makes you the leader not of the Republican Party but of a bipartisan governing majority, and that’s not viable. The Democrats were willing to save Johnson when he paid our debts, but they don’t have much use for him in general. It’s hard to see how he can continue for long as the leader of the House GOP, and that’s true whether the Republicans retain control after the midterms or relinquish it, as is widely expected.

The House GOP will probably oust Johnson for the sin of trying to protect their jobs. They did it to McCarthy and they’ll probably do it to any future Republican Speaker. This is a party that can only really function in the minority. They are incapable of governing.

Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.996

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be continuing my painting of Navajo Bridge near the Arizona/Utah border. My recent photo is seen below.

I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 5×7 inch canvas panel.

When last seen, the painting appeared as it does directly below.

I’ve now done some work on the cliffs and river. I’m not particularly happy with the color of the water. I may change it.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.

I’ll have more progress to show you next week. See you then.

Friday Foto Flog, V. 3.047

Hi photo lovers.

I am seeing if I can post just a bit more frequently. The featured photo this time is one of the new sunflowers that one of my daughters brought home this summer. These plants started blooming before we could get them in the ground. They will look quite nice for the early fall, and should come back next year. I’ll appreciate these for now, and am excited to see what next growing season has in store for them, as well as a host of additional sunflowers we’ll plant next spring along the back fence.

I am still using my same equipment, and am no professional. If you are an avid photographer, regardless of your skills and professional experience, you are in good company here. Booman Tribune was blessed with very talented photographers in the past. At Progress Pond, we seem to have a few talented photographers now, a few of whom seem to be lurking I suppose.

I have been using an LG v40 ThinQ for almost six years. My original LG v40 ThinQ is gone. The back of the phone came off. Apparently the battery began to burst. My initial replacement had a similar fate. I bought yet another version of the same phone about a year and a half ago for hardly anything, as I simply didn’t have the time to really research a good permanent replacement. We will see how long this one lasts. I need more time to research smart phones, especially at the high end. I prefer to get a device and keep it for four or five years. Most of my family seems to be gravitating toward iPhones, but I am determined to avoid going that route. The newer Samsung phones look really promising. Given the times we live in, my default is to delay any major purchases as long as possible. So, unless something really goes wrong with my current phone, I’ll stick to the status quo for as long as possible. Keep in mind that my last Samsung kept going for over four years (although the last year was a bit touch and go). Once I do have to make a new smart phone purchase, the camera feature is the one I consider most important. So any advice on such matters is always appreciated. Occasionally I get to use my old 35 mm, but one of my daughters commandeered it. Presumably she’ll return it before she moves out. So it goes.

This series of posts is in honor of a number of our ancestors. At one point, there were some seriously great photographers who graced Booman Tribune with their work. They are all now long gone. I am the one who carries the torch. I keep this going because I know that one day I too will be gone, and I really want the work that was started long ago to continue, rather than fade away with me. If I see that I am able to incite a few others to fill posts like these with photos, then I will be truly grateful. In the meantime, enjoy the photos, and I am sure between Booman and myself we can pass along quite a bit of knowledge about the photo flog series from its inception back during the Booman Tribune days.

Since this post usually runs only a day, I will likely keep it up for a while. Please share your work. I am convinced that us amateurs are extremely talented. You will get nothing but love and support here. I mean that. Also, when I say that you don’t have to be a photography pro, I mean that as well. I am an amateur. This is my hobby. This is my passion. I keep these posts going only because they are a passion. If they were not, I would have given up a long time ago. My preference is to never give up.

I Don’t Think the Trump Machine is Broken

What gets him to near parity with Harris is the people who have abandoned every standard in the interest of owning the libs and getting some policy they want.

Brian Beutler writes that The Trump Lie Machine is Broken, and uses as evidence the right’s failure to negatively define Tim Walz and Trump’s apparent inability to convert two assassination attempts into any bounce in the polls. I suppose there’s something to this, but I’m not really convinced.

It’s true that efforts to Swift Boat Walz have had nowhere near the impact they had on John Kerry. But I think the explanation for this is probably different from the one Beutler offers, which is that “tried-and-true GOP tactics ha[ve] suddenly stopped working” and “Republicans can no longer dependably scandalize their enemies with concerted bullshit.” First, we need to understand why the Swift Boating of Kerry worked so well.

The 2004 election, which took place during the height of the War on Terror, was one in which the Democrats were laboring to convince the public that they had the toughness to protect the country from another devastating September 11-style attack and to take over responsibility for the faltering wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Democratic primary voters understood this, and they chose a Vietnam War hero as their candidate over more convincing and committed antiwar alternatives. Kerry had the sterling military credentials to ward off attacks from chickenhawks like George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. But Karl Rove’s strategy was always to attack your opponents’ strengths rather than their weaknesses. Attacking Kerry’s war record blunted his advantage and undermined the very purpose of choosing him over someone like Howard Dean.

Tim Walz was chosen by Kamala Harris for entirely different reasons. She likes him. He’s affable and funny. He’s down to earth. He’s midwestern. He’s totally normal. He’s a white man. He has executive experience. He’s got an attractive bio that does include military service but also a long career as a public school teacher and sports coach. It’s a total package, so you can’t target just one strength and do any kind of fatal damage.

Walz has the best favorability ratings of any of the four candidates at the top of the ticket, so clearly the Republicans were not successful in making the American public dislike or distrust him, but I think that has more to do with Walz being a difficult target and a good choice than some sudden failure of tried-and-true GOP tactics.

As for the second example, Trump’s decision to falsely blame the Democrats for the attempts on his life rather using the opportunity to signal personal growth is the main reason he’s getting no bounce. Beutler notes this, but focuses on Trump’s inability to sell the Democrats as the culprits.

Nobody outside Trump’s existing pool of supporters has time for his shit anymore. Everyone at some level knows that he sowed the maelstroms that now threaten to sweep him into oblivion.

Here I think the problem is somewhat the same as it has always been with Trump. It’s not that he’s convincing to most Americans. It’s that about 45 percent of Americans will stick with him no matter what he does. And I don’t know how much that’s attributable to people believing his lies, and how much it’s a byproduct of people being willing to overlook his lies to get the parts of his political movement that they want.

Whatever stupid shit he says or unethical thing that he does, he’ll appoint conservative judges, cut taxes for the rich, and insult people who need insulting. That’s good enough for more 4 out of 10 American voters, and this won’t likely change. When you add this strong floor of support to the advantages he has with the Electoral College, he’s still in a toss-up race against Harris.

Almost all the recent national polls of the race have at 45 percent or below, and he shouldn’t expect to do much better than that. I’d guess his ceiling if he gets some breaks is about 47 percent, although I doubt he’ll get so lucky. But he doesn’t need to win the popular vote or even get close to winning the popular vote. Whatever has worked for Trump in the past seems to be working just about the same for him now.

If he were more flexible, he might be able to raise his ceiling, but it’s really his floor that fascinates me. His stubborn level of support is confounding and deeply depressing, but very little of it seems driven by the effectiveness of his lies on people outside of his core supporters. It’s much more accurate to say that many of his supporters have given him permission to lie in the interests of winning and getting satisfaction out of his slanderous attacks on people they consider their political enemies.

Sure, there’s a group utterly convinced that the 2020 election was stolen and the Democrats are trying to kill him, but that’s a small subgroup of his core of support. What gets him to near parity with Harris is the people who have abandoned every standard in the interest of owning the libs and getting some policy they want. I don’t see whatever process drives this dynamic as broken at all. Because it still works, Trump can easily win this election.

Will Mark Robinson Be the Deciding Factor in the Presidential Election?

North Carolina’s gubernatorial candidate allegedly called himself an anti-Semite and a black Nazi on an adult website in 2009.

On September 8, I asked, “Could Mark Robinson Sink Trump’s Chances in North Carolina?”. It looks like the GOP’s problems with their Tarheel State gubernatorial candidate have only grown since then. Thursday is a big day. As The Carolina Journal reports, Robinson is now “under pressure from staff and members of the Trump campaign to withdraw from the governor’s race, and Thursday is the last day that he can do that.

Thursday evening is the state deadline to withdraw from the race. The deadline to remove Robinson’s name from the ballot already has passed. There are just four weeks to go until early voting, and absentee ballots are due to go in the mail Friday…

…Should Robinson decide to withdraw from the race, something that Carolina Journal’s sources say he is opposed to at the moment, the North Carolina Republican Party Executive Committee would need to choose a replacement candidate for November.

According to elections expert Andy Jackson of the John Locke Foundation’s Civitas Center for Public Integrity, the deadline to change the name on the ballot has passed under state law. Once the North Carolina State Board of Elections mails the absentee, overseas, and military ballots on Friday, changing the names could run afoul of the 14th Amendment. Instead, any votes Robinson receives on Nov. 5 would go to the replacement candidate chosen by the NCGOP.

So far, the immediate cause of this increased pressure is somewhat unclear. The rumor is that Robinson made some very disturbing comments on an adult website 15 years ago. He has apparently been told that he cannot appear at Trump events, and he just claimed a positive test for COVID to explain why he isn’t making a planned appearance with J.D. Vance.

As I discussed in my earlier piece, Robinson’s extreme beliefs and statements were already a potentially fatal drag on the Trump campaign’s efforts to win North Carolina. September polling of the race has consistently shown Democrat Josh Stein beating Robinson, often by double digits.

And Robinson’s name will appear on the ballot irrespective of his decision on withdrawal. If he formally drops out today, votes for Robinson can be counted for a substitute candidate chosen by NCGOP, which is the best result the party can hope for.

The comments in question, which CNN is preparing to report, aren’t sexual in nature.

“I spoke to Mark this morning and he was prepared to go on CNN and defend himself against the allegations,” Jason Williams, a partner in Endgame Consulting, the agency handling Robinson’s campaign, said in a text response to a question.

Williams described the CNN story as a “hit piece.” The reported story makes explosive allegations regarding statements the national network says Robinson made on an online message board in 2009, Williams says. Robinson did not hold elected office until 2021, after his successful campaign for lieutenant governor in 2020.

“The main ones I remember were that they were alleging he made some extremely racist comments about Martin Luther King, referred to himself as a Black Nazi and used antisemitic language referring to Jews,” Williams stated in the text message.

Robinson denies making those statements. “He 100% denied it when I spoke to him,” says Williams.

Having to deny you called yourself a black Nazi on an adult website isn’t a good look.

The impact on the campaign should be obvious. As Jonathan Martin of Politico writes today, “If Vice President Kamala Harris can’t carry Pennsylvania, her only hope is on a Southern strategy. Harris must win either Georgia or North Carolina. She has no other path to the White House.” In Georgia, it seems unlikely that Harris will easily be declared the victor even if she wins. This is especially true if the victor of the state will be determinative of the winner of the general election. One possibility is that  Trump takes Georgia outright and is certified as the winner. But, if he loses, the state’s electoral votes will most likely be awarded either by the U.S. Supreme Court or the U.S. House of Representatives, both of which will be controlled by supporters of Trump. In the case of the U.S. House, this will be true even if the Democrats retake control, as is expected. That’s because decisions on the Electoral College are decided by state delegations rather than individual members, and even if in the minority, the GOP is certain to have a majority in more state delegations than the Democrats. This doesn’t necessarily mean that Trump will falsely be awarded Georgia in these scenarios, especially if his loss is clear, but it should be a messy and protracted process at a minimum, and a potential cause of an outright coup.

For these reasons, the outcome in North Carolina could be extremely important.

Polling out of Pennsylvania this week has looked somewhat positive for Harris, with surveys showing her either tied or narrowly leading. The best results, for Quinnipiac, have her opening up a five-to-six point lead, but polls by Emerson College, Marist College, and the Washington Post have the race even.

It’s easy to see why Robinson is giving the Republicans heartburn, and it will be interesting to see if Robinson decides to drop out or stay in.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Volume 374

Howdy! How are you all doing? Here’s a tune that seems as timely as ever:

I would have heard this song on the radio around autumn 1981. The steel guitar solo is very David Gilmour-inspired. The keyboard intro was haunting. If Tom Cochrane’s vocal style had been closer to either Roger Waters or David Gilmour, I might have mistaken this song as an outtake from The Wall recording sessions.

The bar is open and the jukebox selections are limited only by your imagination. Drop by and say hey if you get a chance. Cheers!

The Lebanon Pager Incident is a Terrible Development

For a mild and probably temporary military advantage, Israel has created a new world where we all have to worry about our devices exploding.

No one should be happy about the Lebanon pager incident. One thing about war is that it incentivizes humans to find new and creative ways of killing and injuring each other, and then these new means of destruction never go away but are just added to the list of threats we all must contend with in our lives. It’s not just nuclear weapons. It’s military-grade firearms in the hands of citizens. And now it’s our pagers, phones, and watches that can explode at any moment on the whim of some malefactor.

So, what happened? Israel got so good at tracking Hezbollah fighters through their cell phones that their leader, Hassan Nasrallah, warned the group’s members not to carry them. Instead, they made a mass purchase of pagers, apparently from a Taiwanese company. It looks like the shipment was compromised in some way because at 3:30 p.m. local time on Tuesday, several thousand pagers simultaneously heated up and exploded in people’s hands, pockets and bags. The explosions were relatively small so there were far more injuries than fatalities, but many people were killed and the injuries were often grave. The son of a Lebanese member of parliament was killed, and Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon was injured. An eight-year old girl is listed as one of the fatalities.

It’s not clear how this attack was carried out. It wasn’t a simple lithium battery fire but seems more like the heated battery set off a small explosive charge. Israel isn’t commenting, although they are the obvious perpetrators. The U.S. government denies all involvement or knowledge.

From a military point of view, this will certainly further complicate Hezbollah’s ability to have internal electronic communications. Their fighters won’t trust pagers, phones or watches in the future. But they’ll adapt. It’s not like they’re going to quit fighting Israel.

The rest of us, however, now have to live in a world where we could become the target of such an attack if we step out of line or get on the wrong side of some political conflict. And to reassure us, the manufactures of personal electronic equipment will have to take new expensive measures to control their assembly lines and distribution networks, and even work on software and hardware security measures. Our devices will be more expensive, at a minimum.

And let’s be clear. Every major power in the world will now work to master the technology and spy craft needed to carry out and protect against a similar attack. It’s one more thing the Secret Service needs to worry about. It’s just a negative development no matter how you look at it.

And, for what? What was achieved to compensate us for this degraded new world? Did it end a World War? Did it lead to an era of relative peace and commitment to collective security?

Or did it just escalate a seemingly irresolvable conflict and give one side a mild and probably temporary military advantage?

Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.995

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be continuing my painting of Navajo Bridge near the Arizona/Utah border. My recent photo is seen below.

I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 5×7 inch canvas panel.

When last seen, the painting appeared as it does directly below.

I’ve been away and made only limited progress this week. I’ve added some preliminary paint to the left side of the river.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.

I’ll have more progress to show you next week. See you then.

Friday Foto Flog, V. 3.046

Hi photo lovers.

I could not resist a Friday the 13th post. The featured photo this time is of one of the Guara plants one of my daughters brought home this summer. We really need to get it planted, since it is a perennial. We have a few weeks left in the growing season, so it will come back next spring. I have two other Guara plants with white flowers in the flowerbeds by the patio. This one produces some beautiful pink flowers, and right now it is putting on quite a display during the waning days of summer.

I am still using my same equipment, and am no professional. If you are an avid photographer, regardless of your skills and professional experience, you are in good company here. Booman Tribune was blessed with very talented photographers in the past. At Progress Pond, we seem to have a few talented photographers now, a few of whom seem to be lurking I suppose. The distant hills in the background are in Crawford County, just a ways south of the Ozark Pleateau, which starts maybe a good half hour or so north of where I was standing. Across the river to my west is some unincorporated land in Oklahoma. I’m on the Arkansas side. It’s good to see that any remaining damage from the flood of 2019 has been repaired. I am grateful for some lovely scenery that is a very convenient drive from where I work and live.

I have been using an LG v40 ThinQ for almost six years. My original LG v40 ThinQ is gone. The back of the phone came off. Apparently the battery began to burst. My initial replacement had a similar fate. I bought yet another version of the same phone about a year and a half ago for hardly anything, as I simply didn’t have the time to really research a good permanent replacement. We will see how long this one lasts. I need more time to research smart phones, especially at the high end. I prefer to get a device and keep it for four or five years. Most of my family seems to be gravitating toward iPhones, but I am determined to avoid going that route. The newer Samsung phones look really promising. Given the times we live in, my default is to delay any major purchases as long as possible. So, unless something really goes wrong with my current phone, I’ll stick to the status quo for as long as possible. Keep in mind that my last Samsung kept going for over four years (although the last year was a bit touch and go). Once I do have to make a new smart phone purchase, the camera feature is the one I consider most important. So any advice on such matters is always appreciated. Occasionally I get to use my old 35 mm, but one of my daughters commandeered it. Presumably she’ll return it before she moves out. So it goes.

This series of posts is in honor of a number of our ancestors. At one point, there were some seriously great photographers who graced Booman Tribune with their work. They are all now long gone. I am the one who carries the torch. I keep this going because I know that one day I too will be gone, and I really want the work that was started long ago to continue, rather than fade away with me. If I see that I am able to incite a few others to fill posts like these with photos, then I will be truly grateful. In the meantime, enjoy the photos, and I am sure between Booman and myself we can pass along quite a bit of knowledge about the photo flog series from its inception back during the Booman Tribune days.

Since this post usually runs only a day, I will likely keep it up for a while. Please share your work. I am convinced that us amateurs are extremely talented. You will get nothing but love and support here. I mean that. Also, when I say that you don’t have to be a photography pro, I mean that as well. I am an amateur. This is my hobby. This is my passion. I keep these posts going only because they are a passion. If they were not, I would have given up a long time ago. My preference is to never give up.