Showing posts with label invocations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label invocations. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Damn -- wasn't he supposed to say the invocation at tonight's council meeting?



It could happen to anyone?

Jeffersonville pastor arrested for seeking sex with minor (WAVE-3, via the Jeffersonville News Aggregator)

FRANKFORT, KY - A southern Indiana church pastor has been arrested in Kentucky after arriving to meet a minor for sex.

David James Brown, 46, was arrested just after 10 a.m.Wednesday by investigators with the Kentucky Attorney General's Office, according to newsgathering partner WAVE-3 News.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

The VA's list of available emblems for headstones and markers might help Dan Coffey choose invocation contestants.

Yesterday, reader W took issue with 1st district councilman Dan "Wizard of Westside & Dispenser of Soulful Balm" Coffey's ongoing insistence that only "legitimate" religious institutions are eligible to offer invocations before council.

NAC Reader Comments 1: "The US Government has no list of 'legitimate' religions."

As Coffey contemplates the existence of various "official" religions, to be daintily arranged in precise order on his clipboard with a different color of Crayola for each, the very same blog reader who commented yesterday has provided the VA's list for the councilman's use.

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
National Cemetery Administration
Available Emblems of Belief for Placement on Government Headstones and Markers

First, I've chosen a few of the more interesting emblems. The whole list follows.

You're welcome, CM Coffey.

I'm readying my stirring atheist's invocation as we drift toward irrelevance together.

ATHEIST (16)

HUMANIST (AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION) (32) 

FAROHAR (Zoroastrianism) (43)

INFINITY (49)

HAMMER OF THOR (55) 

WICCAN (37)

SANDHILL CRANE (57)

AVAILABLE EMBLEMS

LATIN CROSS (01)
BUDDHIST (Wheel of Righteousness) (02)
JUDAISM (Star of David) (03)
PRESBYTERIAN CROSS (04)
RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CROSS (05)
LUTHERAN CROSS (06)
EPISCOPAL CROSS (07)
UNITARIAN CHURCH (Flaming Chalice) (08)
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (09)
AARONIC ORDER CHURCH (10)
MORMON (Angel Moroni) (11)
NATIVE AMERICAN CHURCH OF NORTH AMERICA (12)
SERBIAN ORTHODOX (13)
GREEK CROSS (14)
BAHAI (9 Pointed Star) (15)
ATHEIST (16)
MUSLIM (Crescent and Star) (17)
HINDU (18)
KONKO-KYO FAITH (19)
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST (20)
SUFISM REORIENTED (21)
TENRIKYO CHURCH (22)
SIECHO-NO-IE (23)
THE CHURCH OF WORLD MESSIANITY (lzunome) (24)
UNITED CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE (25)
CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH (26)
UNITED MORAVIAN CHURCH (27)
ECKANKAR (28)
CHRISTIAN CHURCH (29)
CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY ALLIANCE (30)
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST (31)
HUMANIST (AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION) (32)
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (USA) (33)
IZUMO TAISHAKYO MISSION OF HAWAII (34)
SOKA GAKKAI INTERNATIONAL - USA (35)
SIKH (KHANDA) (36)
WICCAN (37)
LUTHERAN CHURCH MISSOURI SYNOD (38)
NEW APOSTOLIC CHURCH (39)
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH (40)
CELTIC CROSS (41)
ARMENIAN CROSS (42)
FAROHAR (43)
MESSIANIC JEWISH (44)
KOHEN HANDS (45)
CATHOLIC CELTIC CROSS (46)
THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST (Cross and Crown) (47)
MEDICINE WHEEL (48)
INFINITY (49)
LUTHER ROSE (51)
LANDING EAGLE (52)
FOUR DIRECTIONS (53)
CHURCH OF NAZARENE (54)
HAMMER OF THOR (55)
UNIFICATION CHURCH (56)
SANDHILL CRANE (57)
MUSLIM (Islamic 5 Pointed Star) (98)

Monday, June 15, 2015

NAC Reader Comments 1: "The US Government has no list of 'legitimate' religions."


Referring to our post on June 2, Prayer duly restored, the Ayatollah Coffey will now decide whether your religion deserves his stamp of approval, reader W takes issue with Dan Coffey's insistence that only "legitimate" religions can offer invocations before council.

Looks like I need to bone up on my atheistic scripture ... or find a Druid.

"Coffey disagreed, as he said the U.S. Supreme Court ruling assures that a church has to be deemed as a legitimate institution before it can push for inclusion in public prayer during a meeting."

I've just read the Supreme Court ruling, including Parts II and II-B.

There is no mention in the ruling that a church must be "deemed as a legitimate institution" before it can be included in public prayer.

The US Government has no list of "legitimate religions." There's this document called the Constitution which specifically forbids a government list of "official" religions.

Councilman Coffey could be opening a huge can of worms for Council prayer if he insists on allowing only "officially recognized" religions. The only such US list that exists is the list of religious emblems of faith allowed on US Veteran headstones.

The list of religions "officially recognized" by a US government agency include Wicca, Eckanar, The Hammer of Thor, and yes, Atheist.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Nash on the rights of everyone.


Matt doesn't mention our very own Ayatollah Coffey by name, but he needn't bother. By now, the silence has grown deafening: Fellow council members (most of them Democrats), Jeff Gahan and the Democratic Party itself, all cowering in their respective bunkers as Coffey once again mocks them with impunity.

Coffey has no challenger in his re-election race, but you're free to punish the others by withholding your votes. Consider this a recommendation.

Thanks to Matt Nash for another fine column.

NASH: The rights of everyone, by Matt Nash (Jeffersonville Now!)

... The irony of the local situation is the offending words came during a discussion about “Freedom of Religion” and the free exercise thereof, another of the rights guaranteed by the same First Amendment. It is true that you can practice whatever religion you see fit, but it also forbids the establishment of a state religion. Now I understand that the courts have ruled that prayer prior to public meeting does not violate the establishment clause, but why must you feel the need?

What will happen when a non-Christian clergy decides that it is time that you pray to his or her god before you hold your city council meeting? Who gets to decide what religions are worthy of this honor? Will members of the New Albany City Council be so open to their free exercise of their religion?

Monday, June 08, 2015

KoffeyKulturKampf 3: Democrats release bold statement of principle.


Don't just do something -- stand there.

As Dan Coffey continues to define the parameters of our "new" Democratic Party, here's what we've had to say.

KoffeyKulturKampf 2: Why are Democrats averting their gaze as Democrats enable Dan Coffey?


KoffeyKulturKampf 1: John Gonder writes, "I'm just one Councilman who probably has been/is being targeted for defeat because of (Coffey's) antics."


Dan Coffey sniffs the wind, smells impending defeat for the mayor -- and tacks starboard.


Matt Nash on Dan Coffey: "His views are backward and repugnant."


ON THE AVENUES: Dan Coffey speaks for Jeff Gahan and the Democratic Party … unless they say otherwise.


Mount Tone Deaf just doesn't have the same ring, does it?


Vintage Coffey Klatch: "Let me explain by threatening you."


Dan Coffey's copperhead shake described: "Hot toadstools and cold cappuccino" (2009).


Dan Coffey's homophobic council tantrum: The Video.


Longtime homophobe Coffey offers heartfelt prayer for his "lying piece of (expletive)" colleague.


Prayer duly restored, the Ayatollah Coffey will now decide whether your religion deserves his stamp of approval.

KoffeyKulturKampf 2: Why are Democrats averting their gaze as Democrats enable Dan Coffey?


(John Gonder's side of the story is here)

The Green Mouse has been told that Dan Coffey plans a triumphant encore presentation of his Cantina Prayer Revival Meeting for the next city council gathering on Thursday, June 18.

Conversely, those supporters of basic human rights and freedoms savagely maligned by Coffey's televised anti-social behavior on June 1st already had announced their intention of massing at the next meeting.

Are you ready to rumble?

There'll be denunciations of Coffey, amen-accented praise for Coffey, with cheering and tongues and cat-calling and snarls, all of it immensely enriching for the sole corporeal entity in New Albany that really matters, for the star of the big show, for the straw that stirs the Shirley Temple -- this being Dan Coffey, himself.

On Friday, expect Coffey's wardrobe mirror to shatter out of sheer envy.

And yet still, a week later, not a peep has been heard to emerge from the Democratic Party or Mayor Jeff Gahan.

The Disneyesque monetization of capital projects continues. The re-election feast rolls forward. The hologram is unpacked and repacked. We fall ever further behind Jeffersonville.

It seems as though only the city's younger Democrats are the only ones to see the damage, and are asking a very good question: Dan Coffey's YOUR mess, after all, so where's the party and mayor during all this?

Previously NAC explored the topic here: ON THE AVENUES: Dan Coffey speaks for Jeff Gahan and the Democratic Party … unless they say otherwise.

John Gonder's typically thoughtful explanation yesterday was greeted with a smattering of applause at Facebook, but isn't there a surreal quality to Democrats congratulating a Democrat for his solution to havoc wreaked by ... a Democrat?

The Democratic machine controls power in this town. Why then is Dan Coffey happening, and if his behavior is undesirable, why was John's compromise defeated?

Because fellow Democrats voted against him, that's why. Is it by design that this gang can't even shoot straight?

Does the Democratic Party even have a leader?

For those outside the party, excluded from the pork barrel (and Coffey himself certainly has not been), this appears savagely hypocritical. In fact, Coffey and the mayor have worked in concert for months to undermine Gonder.

Again, why should any of us outside the machine shed the first tear for any of it?

And, for Democrats like Gonder and those of like mind who grasp his essential progressive wisdom amid the current Machiavellian ordeal, why keep crawling back to the organization that's doing the whipping?

By acquiescing to Coffey's antics, both party and mayor implicitly endorse them.

If you're a Democrat, how can you continue to support anti-Democratic elements like these?

KoffeyKulturKampf 1: John Gonder writes, "I'm just one Councilman who probably has been/is being targeted for defeat because of (Coffey's) antics."


(Part 2 is here)

Councilman John Gonder, in his own words.

Commentary to follow. Just remember: These are Democrats. Democrats on all sides, whether Gonder, Coffey, Dickey, Nash or Gahan himself.

This is the machine, at war with itself. The chief casualty? Progress.

It's Alright. Right?

Although it seems a long time ago it was just last Monday, June 1, that the City Council chamber erupted in a surreal display of short-circuitry. Epithets were pitched, and caught by the electronic glove of WAVE TV's news cameras. Seemingly settled expressions of tolerance were recanted, then tossed onto the chamber's floor to be beaten into unrecognizability, as though an errant snake had slithered under the door.

Since then, a trip to the hardware store yielded this observation, "the City Council in Jeffersonville is pathetic too". (emphasis added)

At a public event for a Historic Society, "if a Republican had uttered the same kind of intolerant, homophobic remarks, (as were heard at the City Council last Monday) the Democrats would have crucified him, and the entire party. Looks kind of like a double standard."

A chance encounter with a fellow Councilman opens with, "how's it going, you lyin' piece of shit?" Je suis L.P.O.S.?

As a result of the purposefully obtuse characterization of my attempt to reach a bit of compromise on the issue of spoken prayer at a Council meeting, I've been called a racist, anti-prayer, in cahoots with un-named forces outside the Council, and beholden to a society-destroying agenda promoting human rights. I've also been reminded that thousands of voters will remember that I was out to strip prayer from the City Council. I realize this controversy is not about me. But, as one maligned in such a ridiculous campaign to hoist the flag so the Christian Soldiers could March to War (by way of vote centers), I'll simply say, I'm sick of it.

Tuesday, June 02, 2015

Dan Coffey's homophobic council tantrum: The Video.


Dan Coffey, on fire.

Listen as Coffey maligns two of his council colleagues while the body's president sits inert and motionless.

Flinch as Coffey explains that reconstituted council prayer is necessary in light of the constant agitation of gays, lesbians and transvestites.

Guffaw as the WAVE reporter follows the Wizard of Westside down the stairway of a public building as the Wizard flees.

Worst of all: Recoil when you consider that Coffey is one of New Albany's highest ranking Democrats, and a veritable pillar of Adam Dickey's party machine.

Welcome to Jeff Gahan's New Albany, in a nutshell.

Fundamentally more bigoted.

Longtime homophobe Coffey offers heartfelt prayer for his "lying piece of (expletive)" colleague.


Prayer duly restored, the Ayatollah Coffey will now decide whether your religion deserves his stamp of approval.



Longtime homophobe Coffey offers heartfelt prayer for his "lying piece of (expletive)" colleague.

This tidbit didn't make the Jeffersonville Moore-ovian.

It speaks for itself, don't you think? Just remember: Dan Coffey is Jeff Gahan's chosen enforcer, the one running interference for the mayor.

This isn't Coffey's scandal alone, is it?

New Albany councilman swears into open mic during prayer debate, by Theo Keith (WAVE)

NEW ALBANY, IN (WAVE) - A New Albany councilman referred to a colleague as a "lying piece of (expletive)" during a debate over public prayer on Monday.

Councilman Dan Coffey made the comment into an open microphone, yet denied using the curse word during a brief, tense interview after the meeting.

"I didn't call him that," Coffey said, as a reporter followed him down a staircase in the City-County Building. "That's what you say I called him."

Coffey used the meeting to argue in favor of starting Common Council meetings with a prayer. The council approved the public prayer ordinance on a 7-2 vote after three amendments failed.

A minister who attends the meetings will likely lead the prayer, as one did before Monday's debate that became increasingly tense.

Councilman John Gonder offered an amendment that would've allowed only council members to lead in prayer or moments of reflection before meetings. The amendment failed, 5-4, after Gonder accused Coffey of trying to "curry favor" with the prayer issue.

"No, I didn't bring this up to curry favor," Coffey said, hitting his hand against the council's desk. "I brought it up because every time you turned around, there was something coming up about gays, lesbians, transvestites and making sure they had their rights."

READ THE REST AT WAVE  NEWS' WEB SITE

Prayer duly restored, the Ayatollah Coffey will now decide whether your religion deserves his stamp of approval.


After Dan "Wizard of Westside" Coffey recently observed that "tolerance is a two-way street," even if actual two-way streets in New Albany seem to run in only one direction, someone asked him if he even knew what a "pun" was.

Coffey answered: "It's where you stick your wiener, atheist."

Meanwhile, at last night's city council theological seminar and piety promotion fest, CM Phipps sent one of Coffey's fattened pitches clean out of the park.

"This shows exactly how divisive an issue like prayer can be."

He was referring to the ludicrous spectacle of ragpickers and bankers, presumably elected to help govern the city, instead waste time meeting after meeting trying to resolve cosmological questions that plagued the ancient Egyptians.

Just when you conclude that it couldn't possibly get any more ridiculous, CM Blair ruminates over the dangers of having non-traditional religions be heard (below), as though he or Coffey or anyone else on the council -- or anyone in the city, for that matter -- is qualified to judge individual matters of conscience, and thus gaily disenfranchise a druid owing to conceptual and intellectual limitations when fathoming what "real" worship entails.

Which of course is precisely why meeting prayers are sheer folly in the first place. They're not about genuine devotion, but public litmus tests, applied for purely political purposes by ward heelers. 

I expected this from Coffey, who zealously serves only one master: Himself.

However, Blair's enthusiasm for Iran-style posturing is profoundly annoying. Scott, is there a half-point interest differential on loans to legally chartered religious (read: tax evading) organizations? Sounds like as good a standard as any, right?

Future vision?

As the Board of Works has clearly established, the new city motto is "It's Not an Option."

AMEN: Debate over prayer during New Albany council meeting ends with passage of ordinance, by Daniel Suddeath (Jeffersonville Today)

(Scott) Blair then offered an amendment similar to (John) Gonder’s except it removed the option of a moment of silence.

Under Blair’s amendment, the council members could read a religiously-inspired work, offer a prayer or pass their time to another council member.

Blair said he supports prayer during public meetings, but believes it should be lead by the council members since it’s intended for their benefit.

Opening the invocation up to the public could also invite non traditional religions to come forward and participate, and that’s a situation that could cause some further issues, Blair said.

Coffey disagreed, as he said the U.S. Supreme Court ruling assures that a church has to be deemed as a legitimate institution before it can push for inclusion in public prayer during a meeting.

Blair’s amendment also failed 6-3, with only Councilmen Bob Caesar and Greg Phipps joining him in support.

Monday, June 01, 2015

Dan's ideal invocation: "Oh, it's Cof-Cof Coffey Time, the very best time of day."


For about three years, 1st district councilman (and Wonderful Wizard of Westside) Dan Coffey had nothing whatever to say about prayer at council meetings, even if prayer has been a consistent recourse all along among those unfortunate souls in attendance, who consistently are spotted beseeching various deities for shelter from Coffey's rambling, self-serving oratorios.

Then Coffey, who is a Democrat in the same way that Auto-Tune is a singer, was compelled to join discussions earlier this year on a council resolution concerning the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

There Cappuccino sat, fuming, as modernity invaded his personal council fiefdom, malignantly contemplating his newfound role as Gahan's Chosen Hammer, determined to exact tribute not only from the villainous gays, whom he despises, but even more importantly, from the whining downtown shopkeepers, those highfalutin foreigners who've never accepted a humble hardscrabble rag-picker like Coffey as one of their own -- who refused to acknowledge Coffey as their natural leader.

Magically, from that point on, Coffey has become the veritable malfunction junction where the Ayatollah Khomeini meets Billy Sunday, and they breathlessly procreate, and a vivid new politically-motivated obfuscation is born.

But rejoice, anyway, because there will be deliverance. The council will vote this evening to move its starting time forward from 7:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., meaning that as the body accomplishes even less without the written consent of the mayor to whom its president is subservient, at least there'll be more time for Bud Light longnecks at The Road House afterward.

Closing prayer in New Albany: Measure establishing call for invocation to receive final vote, by Daniel Suddeath (That Clark County Newspaper)

... Councilman Dan Coffey has pushed bringing back vocal prayer during meetings, and has criticized fellow members for not being more supportive of allowing an invocation.
“I’m tired of people saying we have to be tolerant of others, but they want to take the prayer out of our council,” he said last week.

Friday, May 29, 2015

Coffey's prayer offensive last week documented at the newspaper yesterday.

As the news pours out of Clark County, here -- for the record -- is the mind-bending account of how 1st district councilman Dan "Wizard of Westside" Coffey became a leading legal and theological and scholar.


Every picture tells a story, don't it?

---

New Albany City Council moves forward with return of public prayer

News and Tribune, Thursday, May 28, 2015 7:45 am

NEW ALBANY — After a process that led to animated discussions and heated exchanges, the New Albany City Council moved to return its agenda to allow a minister to lead prayer at the onset of meetings.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

“Hope will never be silent" -- except, of course, when Dan Coffey endlessly bloviates.

Ireland? It gets an Equality Minister.


New Albany? We get the Ayatollah Coffey.


The news wire is filled with gratifying reports from Ireland, as here: "Ireland becomes first country to legalise gay marriage by popular vote."

Meanwhile, I cannot find any local news coverage of last Thursday's city council meeting, when Coffey sought to ratify his new part-time job as invocation coordinator.

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

McLaughlin allows Coffey to talk continuously for 2.5 hours in "travesty" of a council meeting.


Having wasted my time attending it, there is no desire to waste even more describing it, and so we turn to Daniel Suddeath.

New Albany council calls for return of prayer — for now (News and Tribune)

(Dan Coffey's) resolution calling for the agenda to return to its previous version was approved Monday after several members of the public criticized the council for removing audible prayer.

Instead, as backed by Coffey, the council will be charged with contacting churches within the city to inquire if their minister would like to be placed on a rotating list to lead a prayer during a meeting.

Friday, May 01, 2015

Bullseye: With three primary-eve council resolutions, Kevin Zurschmiede demands accountability from Jeff Gahan.

For Monday night's final city council meeting prior to the conclusion of primary election voting on Tuesday, Dan Coffey has scheduled "Prayer Prattle-Thon: The Sequel," a down home camp meeting designed to reunite the city's errant legislative arm on the rack of bimonthly rote invocations.

Customarily, we'd give this time-wasting idiocy the ritualistic lancing and satirical lampooning it so richly deserves, but not today, because in a well-played tactical thrust, councilman (and Republican mayoral candidate) Kevin Zurschmiede has chosen the very same evening to place Team Gahan on the docket, with three precisely-aimed resolutions, each of which addresses one of City Hall's many recent prominent examples of institutionalized non-transparency.


Of course, given that Coffey has become the most vocal Gahan advocate this side of the mayor's own blood relatives -- to paraphrase POTUS, Gahan and Coffey have gotten so close that some places in Floyds Knobs won't serve them pizza anymore -- the wizard's opportunities for grandstanding and caterwauling in response are endless, and the jokes just write themselves. The three resolutions appear in their entirety below. Here are handy summaries.

R-15-10 On botched appointments to the stormwater and/or sewer boards
R-15-11 On city seals, logos and Dugginsesque branding skittles and doohickey proliferation
R-15-12 On ceasing the hitherto unknown practice of waiving sewer connection fees

Further merriment comes from the fact that 6th district councilman Scott Blair, who has consistently derided council resolutions and refused to vote on them out of principle, also has openly stated his eagerness to vote with Coffey on the latter's vacuous invocation ... resolution.

How will the fundamentally beleaguered denizens of the down-low bunker react to Zurschmiede's resolutions? I think they won't.

At the end of the day, over ice-cold long-necks of soothing light beer at the roadhouse, resolutions are merely symbolic. I expect to see Mike Hall on hand Monday, with perhaps a drive-by on the part of corporate counsel. As for the vote tallies, one wouldn't expect a largely pliant council with a DemoDisneyDixiecratic majority to muster the "yeas" necessary to pass resolutions amounting to censure, introduced by a Republican who's running against their paymaster -- but I'm the sort who values the little things, like a furrowed brow or a barely discernible squirm.

This may require a pre-meeting martini at The Exchange, but only one, please; I must be in shape to ask Bob Caesar why the bicentennial commission financial report I requested last time has yet to appear in my inbox.

R-15-10

R-15-11


R-15-12


The evening's agenda.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

ON THE AVENUES: Say a prayer for NA Confidential as it conducts this exclusive interview with Councilman Cappuccino.

ON THE AVENUES: Say a prayer for NA Confidential as it conducts this exclusive interview with Councilman Cappuccino.

A weekly web column by Roger A. Baylor.

It’s an election year in New Albany, and to prove it, tonight’s city council meeting will be devoted in part to a consideration of whether the Lord’s Prayer should be reinserted into its twice-monthly agenda.

That's right, reinserted, when naturally this particular variant of invocation is nowhere to be found within the ordinances defining council. Mind you, the non-issue of how council conducts its meetings is not destined for the top of the charts with a requisite bullet, but of course this isn't the reason for Dan Coffey’s latest diversionary tactic.

When Coffey demands a resolution on the Lord’s Prayer, or bemoans the absence of a crucial audit, or abstains from a vote immediately following his vicious denunciation or hyperbolic praise of the precise topic at hand, you can be sure he is doing so for the very same reason your cat purrs, rubs your leg or piddles on the blanket.

Which is: He demands to be fed … and fed right now.

For those just tuning in to the abysmal shambles of New Albany’s underachieving city council, this is hardly Coffey’s first dance. As Yogi Berra probably never said, it’s déjà vu all over again.

We’ve been following his self-serving antics since the very advent of NA Confidential, having dubbed this most conniving of all local ward heelers twice, both as Councilman Cappuccino and the Wizard of Westside, the latter nickname coming from awed recognition of his unparalleled ability to catastrophically inject himself into city-wide matters from his tin pot’s perch in the numerically tiny 1st council district, while all the sheltering his constituents from any trace of genuine progress.

Unfortunately, the same might be said of the city at large. Turning back the pages of NA Confidential to April 17, 2005, we find remarkable symmetry between the times of our New Albanian lives then, and now – so much so that the drinking lamp might be lit today well before lunch.

In New Albany, we coddle the anti-social dim bulbs and purge the creative, bright lights.

Decades pass. Our worthiest sons and daughters – the bright, capable and eager future leaders of the city – get away from New Albany as fast as they can, far away from institutionalized slum lord debasement not just tolerated but welcomed over a period of four or more decades, away from the overcrowded and down market Harvest Homecoming that is our sole and only claim to infamy, away from a place where any good idea, any sign of intelligent life, any revolt against the lumpy mashed potato norm is dismissed and derided as craziness emanating from a book-reading, un-American queer who can just move the hell out if he or she doesn't like it here.

Do you think this characterization of traditional New Albany is somehow unfair? If so, we submit with all due respect that you have a strong coffee, look around you, and face the unpleasant facts of the matter.

All of it is true, it’s inexcusable, it's embarrassing, and the inescapable conclusion is that we’ve been purging the wrong elements all these years.

Go ahead. Pour the java and have a glance ... if you dare. Disturbing, isn’t it?

Apart from the recent frenzied construction of numerous shiny campaign empowerment objects via the gleaming ATM known locally as TIF, nothing much has changed here in New Albany. Granted, the Wizard has a grand new role, portraying an ever-faithful Sancho Clemenza to Jeff Gahan’s power-crazed Godfather Quixote, but insofar as Coffey’s real political life renders satire nearly moot, we’re stuck in a time warp.

Following is an “interview” first published on April 18, 2005. We hope Sherreff Duggins will note the proper use of quotation marks, although breaths are not being held here in the office.

---

NA Confidential: Today in the studio we have a very special guest, the esteemed city councilman of long standing, Mr. Cappuccino.

Councilman Cappuccino: Thank you (preening) … now, where’s that red light? Citizens, just last week, as I spent quality time with my beloved hobby of antique furniture refinishing, which I’d gladly settle for doing in a heartbeat if not for the hopes and dreams of dozens of honest, salt-of-the-earth West Side families, who depend on me to bring home their bacon, improve their drainage, install their water heaters and protect them from the Ordinance Nazis – hah! Boy, that’s a real knee-slapper – I gotta thank my friend Li’l Stevie here (Cappuccino hoists a doll atop his knee) for coming up with the Ordinance Nazi phrase, right Li’l Stevie?

Li’l Stevie (former 3rd district councilman Steve Price): Yes sir, Mr. Cappuccino, you’re dead right, just like always … hey, there they are! NAZIS! NAZIS! Hide the video poker machine!

NAC: He’s certainly well-tanned.

CC: Did you say well tamed? It runs in the family. Hmm, like I was piously intoning … anyway, my downtrodden westsiders need me, and as the Wizard I whiz only for them, even if it kills me.

NAC: All right. Here’s our first question, Mr. Cappuccino. Do you support ordinance enforcement in the city of New Albany?

CC: Well, Knack, when it comes to enforcing the prevailing laws, we have to be extra careful to avoid those questionable practices that might be conscrewed as discriminatory. We must understand at all times that there’s a higher principle involved than just the exterior design tastes and storage practices of fine, church-going, taxpaying people who have chosen to make New Albany their homes, and that’s because they have a right to expect a certain level of respect for the lifestyles they’ve chosen to lead.

NAC: Are you talking about the higher principle of fairness?

CC: (Rolling his eyes) Fairness? That’s what those godless Louisvillians are always pushing. Heck, we have plenty of fairness in New Albany, just so long as you’re normal. (Cappuccino strikes a theatrical pose) No, not, fairness, but the very lifeblood of the city itself, without which we’d have nothing.

NAC: The rule of law?

CC: (Exasperated) Law, schmaw. No, VOTES! Can’t live with ‘em when they’re cast by those hoity toity East Enders, and can’t live without ‘em if they’re my neighbors on the West Side! They don’t call me the Wizard for nothing, you know. At the same time, my world-famous barbecued bologna cookouts only go so far, and at some point, you have to earn the respect of your constituents, and one great way to do that is to protect them from the heat.

NAC: Wait -- did you say barbecued bologna?

CC: Yes, I can smell it and taste it right now. My neighbor Marcelene cooks it up right. Cube the bologna, cook some onions in oil, throw in your favorite barbecue sauce, let it simmer … man, let me tell you, that’s living. Right Li’l Stevie?

LS: And you can put it in Tupperware, Mr, Cappuccino! Save it for a rainy day! Save it for a rainy day!

NAC: Mr. Cappuccino, what were your thoughts last year when the city of New Albany began enforcing the right of way for street sweeping?

CC: Quite frankly, it was a blatant attack on our cherished West End way of life – family, church, iced tea and the ice cream social, all under siege by the Silver Hills elite and the book-readin’ snobs. You know, I’d call it discrimination, maybe even genocide … if I knew what genocide meant …

NAC: To be perfectly honest, that sounds somewhat paranoid.

CC: You book learners are all the same, and it’s a good thing I don’t have to read those books to know what’s in ‘em for me. Listen, just because you’re paranoid, it doesn’t mean the pointy-heads aren’t out to get you. Every self-respecting ward heeler knows that ordinances are just like women – you’ve got to squeeeeze ‘em a little until they start making sense. Go and clean up the porno shop, and the people in the district love you. But when it comes to making them move the old appliances off the porch … well, that’s different. They’ll turn on you, vote against you, and all that tasty bologna’s wasted.

NAC: So, can you explain your vote in favor of ordinance enforcement?

CC: Of course I can. Like I said, I’m for it.

NAC: And what about your public statement that you are in favor of rental unit inspections?

CC: I’m for that, too.

NAC: But won’t you lose votes if such measures are adopted?

CC: There’s the rub, knacker. Being for 'em is one thing, but you didn’t hear me say anything about FUNDING them properly, did you? Or writing that ordinance so it'd have any chance of working?

NAC: Perhaps we’re beginning to understand the central equation.

CC: Don't you see? If we give the uppity East Enders and City Hall what they want, and then it doesn’t work out in the end … well, you just try and guess who gets blamed when it tanks – right Li’l Stevie?

LS: Right, boss!! My friends, I’m not anti-parks, and I’m not anti-progress … I’m anti-success!! No, wait, I mean I’m anti-egress!! No, that’s zoning-speak. I’m anti-Garner!! That’s it!! It's all his fault!!

CC: Yes it is. It’s kind of like the good spy, bad spy thing in Mad magazine.

NAC: Oh, so you read Mad magazine?

CC: NO! For the last time, I don’t read … but I know what people are writing. It’s a trick that Dick Nixon would have taught me if he would’ve been a Democrat … not that I was ever a Republican, mind you. Like I always say, be proud, be Democrat!

LS: NAZIS! NAZIS! They’re coming now, and they have books!!

NAC: But I thought the Nazis burned books?

CC: Who knows, but I’ve found that the biggest words tend to make the best open fire underneath that skillet of barbecued bologna.

NAC: But isn’t there an ordinance against open fires?

CC: Not where I come from, tenderfoot: The Wild, Wild West.

NAC: Unfortunately, that’s all the time we have today. Thanks to Mr. Cappuccino and Li’l Stevie for speaking with us today.

CC: Thanks, and just a quick reminder to my constituents – I have the keys to the crapper, if any of you need to use it.*

* At the time, Coffey was lobbying strenuously to be awarded the keys to the public toilet located at the park across the street from his house, so that he could lock it up each evening. The county parks department responded by demolishing it.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

What they're saying: On school buses, prayers and the Bard.

As the weeks go past in route to May's primary election, I'm providing periodic candidate statements of substance, mostly unretouched, as lifted from social media and news reports. Familiar gems such as "yard signs win elections, not people" and "donate to my campaign first, and maybe I'll have something of merit to say much, much later" will be omitted. That's because it is my aim to determine whether our declared candidates have anything to say at all, and I'll quote all candidates, from any and all parties, whether or not they're in a contested race. Just promising change and new ideas without divulging them won't cut the mustard, aspirants.


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We begin with a housekeeping note. Incumbent at-large council members Shirley Baird and John Gonder, both Democrats, have updated their Facebook campaign pages. Gonder also still has his blog, and yesterday  -- perhaps in a nod toward this recent post at NAC -- he published a short piece about schools and public transit.

Food for Thought

Why not have an arrangement between the school system and TARC which uses TARC buses rather than school buses to transport students to and from school?

In a risky move seemingly designed to dissuade Dan Coffey from ever voting for her, Hannegan Roseberry (at-large council, Democrat) has chosen to speak publicly about ... Shakespeare.

Here is an excerpt; click through for the complete post.

Kentucky Shakespeare is bringing its parks tour production of "the Scottish Play" to New Albany's Bicentennial Park on Friday, April 24th at 8:00 pm. What a delight to look forward to! I am pleased that this event got scheduled as a result of a passing conversation between my family and a friend of ours who is an actor with Kentucky Shakespeare. We ran into him at a show in Louisville, he mentioned the tour, and my husband mentioned that the tour should come to New Albany, gave him some names of who he should talk to to get it scheduled, and voila: several weeks later, the schedule was released and we were thrilled to see New Albany had been added to the list!

Coincidentally, Coffey has his own Shakespearean prayer plot line coming tomorrow night, although screenwriting for The Dukes of Hazard comes closer to describing his resolution's overall intent. At-large candidate Al Knable (at-large, Republican) has thoughts on the matter.

It seems the current NA City Council is sailing into waters that have been charted many, many times before.

Like many of you, I have my religious beliefs. They are sacred to me. These beliefs, along with my parents, my life experiences and many secular readings have helped frame my personal behavioral codes. I take these moral and ethical bulwarks to work with me each day and would use them to guide me if elected to the City Council.

But as I would resist anyone imposing their religion upon me, I would not attempt to do so to anyone else.

The "moment for reflection" now held before Council meetings is a working compromise. I suggest leaving it in place and getting on with the actual work of governing our City.

A novel idea, this governing. Is that the same thing as ward heeling?

Democratic at-large hopeful Brad Bell provides today's coda.

The City Council will take up a resolution to re-adopt the saying of the Lords Prayer before every City Council Meeting. Dan Coffey brings the measure for a certain fail on Thursday's agenda. To say that i'm opposed to this resolution is an understatement. I personally think that the moment of reflection is a perfect compromise between the 2 sides. I do happen to agree with my opponent, John Gonder, that a Municipal building is not the place for a cross. I have no problem with organized religion, but there is, though greatly overlooked within the past several years, a separation of church and state in our country. Our founding fathers adopted this legislation for a reason and we have turned our back on it.

You can not cater to one religion over another in a matter such as this. We would literally be sitting through prayer after prayer for hours on end to cover the vast cultural diversity of our city. My opinion stands, that a moment of reflection is perfectly suitable during the start of the City Council meetings. Should I get elected, and should this resolution pass, it would be first on the list for immediate repeal.

Happy voting, folks.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Nash: "I do not agree that it is important that a public meeting must start with a prayer."



Reading Nash's column reminds one of the fundamental ongoing problem: A council with no leadership.

Sitting supinely while Dan Coffey merrily hijacks meeting agendas may qualify as borderline presidential (the Wizard of Westside's contract with Mayor Gahan probably stipulates it), but it makes for the reinforcement of New Albany as regional laughingstock.

Hope you can make it next time, Matt. Sanity in the council chamber currently enjoys the same status as water in California. Witness this passage from the newspaper's coverage:

Coffey acknowledged some separation should exist, but added many people in New Albany are of Christian faith. “This is a Christian nation, with Christian values, and if people don’t like that, at least come out in the open to try and change it,” he said.

Groan.

NASH: The council and prayer, by Matt Nash (News and Tribune)

 ... The reason I had wanted to go to the meeting was that the council was to vote on a resolution denouncing Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and calling for its repeal. I wanted to be there to show my support and to hear what our council feels about the legislation. I would have never predicted that the final outcome would be 8-0-1 in favor, especially after some of the debate.

The debate is usually where it gets entertaining and where it easily takes off on multiple tangents. This week’s meeting was no exception. Somewhere along the way while they were discussing a state law that many people believed to be a license to discriminate in the name of religion, the subject of praying before meetings was brought up. As things tend to go it must have escalated from there.

Friday, April 10, 2015

Give each of our council members an invocation resolution, and they can waste a lifetime.


New Albany's obvious civic issues include economic development, police & fire, poverty, street grid reform, substandard housing, human rights, and an urgent need to take daddy's credit card away from Jeff Gahan before the budgetary pinball machine flashes "tilt," and yet next Thursday night, New Albany's city council instead will debate competing visions of meeting-opening prayers, moments of silence or rotating essay contests.

We already know that at least two of our council representatives don't accept their own "invocation" ordinance as currently written, with Dan Coffey and John Gonder leading the way in proposing alternatives -- but why not all of the council's members?

Just have the city clerk slap these ideas on the agenda, and there'll be enough foolishness to get council through November -- which is all most of the members want, anyway.

At-Large - Shirley Baird
Resolved: Let Develop New Albany decide what I should do. Don't they always?

At-Large - Kevin Zurschmiede
Resolved: I swear to God that "happy ending" describes my campaign for mayor, and not what any of my tenants are doing when I avert my eyes.

2nd District - Bob Caesar
Resolved: "See, the Lord is coming with fire, and his chariots are like a whirlwind; he will bring down his anger with fury, and his rebuke with flames of fire ... for anyone who wants two-way streets -- right, Irv?" (Isaiah 66:15)

3rd District - Greg Phipps
Resolved: Even if there were not a prayer, wouldn't an empty agenda be better than a crumbling dilapidated building? After all, it's not the role of the council to announce prayers, that's the role of the players who are involved. Or the prayers involved, and I can't imagine a prayer that would be worse that what's there now. So I say, tear it down.

4th District - Patrick McLaughlin
Resolved: Hey, whatever the mayor wants is fine by me. Isn't it always?

5th District - Diane Benedetti
Resolved: Truth be told, I had it right the first time.

6th District - Scott Blair
Resolved: My previous public rejection of resolutions needs to be placed into context, since in this instance, an independent must think alive with a copperhead, especially as it pertains to critical quality of life situations here in the council chamber. Can I see this on a spreadsheet? Without financial controls ... oh, what the hell: Yea. What did I just vote for?

Dueling resolutions: Dan Coffey has nothing whatever to do except waste council time on agenda formalities.

Of all the conceivable ways that New Albany's city council might use its time ... but what we get is this. Why must this city be held captive by imbecility?

First, Dan Coffey wants "his" council (make no mistake, it's his toy) to return to the use of a prayer that has never once been stipulated in ordinance -- ever.

ON THE AVENUES SPECIAL: The proper separation of church and council.


Next, John Gonder counters with what must surely be Monty Pythonesque satire in the form of a "compromise" to resolve a problem that does not exist (see below).

The suspense is killing me.

Will Scott Blair remain consistent to his resolution allergy after openly vowing earlier this week to support the rote recitation of Christian (only) prayer prior to the council's usual expeditions into inanity?