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A story in the Louisiana Record, a reputable online news service trumpeted a headline way back in 2015, during Jeff Landry’s successful bid to oust incumbent Attorney General Buddy Caldwell that said:

A.G. candidate Landry pledges transparency

The first paragraph of that now infamous promise said, “An organization working to hold attorney general candidates accountable says Louisiana attorney general candidate Jeff Landry has made a pledge to be transparent in office.”

To read the entire text of that story, go HERE.

Fast forward to March of 2021 and we see a vastly different headline in the Louisiana Illuminator, another trustworthy online service, which said:

AG Jeff Landry gets dubious ‘Black Hole Award’

for ‘outright contempt’ of government transparency

Here’s the first sentence of that story: “The Society of Professional Journalists is giving its annual “Black Hole Award” to Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry for his attempt to block a public records request by filing a lawsuit against the reporter who made the request…”

Wait. He did what? Yep, he actually filed suit against a Baton Rouge Advocate reporter who had the audacity to make a public records request.

But don’t take my word for it; read it for yourself HERE.

Now that he’s governor, he’s thrown his bantam weight behind Senate Bill 482 by Sen. Heather Cloud (R-Turkey Creek) who obviously takes her marching orders from the State Capitol’s fourth floor.

And if you want to hear the most absurd, most juvenile justification for Landry’s desire to shut down access to public records, try this: He said you don’t go into a restaurant, order food and then watch to see how the cook prepares it, so why would we entrust elected officials not to do the right thing by insisting on examining records and correspondence to see how a particular decision was reached?

Again, you can read (and watch) it HERE.

Are you freaking kidding me? I cannot recall any elected official uttering that inane an “explanation” of anything. It’s not even worthy of a middle schooler, for which Landry might be mistaken, given his robust physique.

That video, by the way, is courtesy of WVUE in New Orleans (a Fox station, no less), which does a damn sight better job of covering state government than any of the Baton Rouge TV stations which seem to prefer cramming as many injury lawyer ads and weather updates into a 30-minute “news” cast as humanly possible.

And just in case you think I’m exaggerating, there is another WVUE story that informs us that Cloud and Landry also defend SB 482 by making some sort of comparison between media transparency and government accountability. They whine that reporters are not forced to reveal their sources for investigative stories, so why should elected officials be required to give up information? Isn’t it just amazing how they concocted such similar arguments? I’m sure it’s just a coincidence. Click HERE to see story and video.

Well, Guv and Sen. Cloud, the reasons are many-fold. First reporters are not elected officials who swear an oath to protect the interest of the citizens. They can – and are – fired if they violate a trust. Elected officials, on the other hand, are not so easy to fire and many take full advantage of their positions to make timely investments to enrich themselves. And before any troll out there can remind me, I’m acutely aware that that’s true of either party – Democrat and Republican. Reporters do indeed have a responsibility to tell the truth and when they do not adhere to that responsibility, there are consequences. Politicians have the same responsibility but when has a politician not lied when it was expedient to do so. You can’t sue a politician for lying (there’d be no politicians) but when a reporter lies, there is a legal remedy.

Reporters are not making daily decisions with taxpayer money – like approving the expenditure of public funds to make a purchase monetarily beneficial to the elected official approving the expenditure. If someone chooses to terminate a subscription or to cease watching a news station, there is no one to stop him. That same option is not available when it comes to paying taxes, so we should have some insight as to how our money is being used.

It was Thomas Jefferson who said if he had to choose a government with no free press or a free press with no government, he would not hesitate to choose the latter. Without a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) or in Louisiana’s case, a Public Records Act (LA. R.S. 44.1 (et seq.), there will be absolutely no governmental accountability. None. Zilch. Nada. Zero, Zip.

Yet, this is precisely what Landry wants through his puppet Sen. Cloud. He also wants to make it downright illegal for an out-of-state individual to make public records requests.

He claims public records requests have become “weaponized.” Sounds a little like Don Snoreleone, aka the Nodfather, also aka Ebenezer Snooze.

And irony of irony, today I made the following public records request of Landry: “Pursuant to LA. R.S. 44.1 (et seq.), I hereby submit my formal request for the opportunity to examine, inspect, and otherwise review all correspondence between Gov. Jeff Landry or any and all of his designees and State Sen. Heather Cloud relative to public records and Senate Bill 482. According to state law, I have the option of reviewing records before committing to any purchase of documents.”

Anyone taking odds on the outcome of this request?

I’ll keep pounding away at this theme, so remember what I say about Landry and his minions: These people are not your friends.

The so-called “conservative movement” in St. Tammany has received the support of the Slidell Ministers Association in the hysterical effort to solve the suddenly critical problem of accessibility to “inappropriate” material in parish libraries – just like dozens of other parishes in Louisiana that all at once, and curiously, altogether, discovered this plague that has somehow surpassed drugs, broken homes and myriad other problems facing our youth.

The association has parish Councilman David Cougle in distributing yet another questionnaire about libraries to citizens. Combatting hunger, spousal abuse, homelessness and a multitude of other maladies confronting society, have now taken a back seat to dirty books, which seem to have made their way to the top of the list of concerns of these men of God.

It’s strangely curious how this issue has popped up simultaneously across the state. That being said, here is the questionnaire being sent out by the ministers:

Slidell Ministers Association

Library Control Board Nomination

SurveyTop of Form

Important SMA Survey

Nominations have been finalized to serve on the St Tammany Library Control Board by the St Tammany Parish Council. The Slidell Ministers Association (SMA) has created a survey with eight (8) statements you can respond to on a scale of one to five. One being Strongly Disagree and five being Strongly Agree.

Please make every effort to finish the survey before Friday April 26, 2024, so the survey can be compiled and distributed to the council before they vote.  Your names will not be distributed.

Thank You for participating.

1) The St Tammany Library Control Board members are subject to the appointment and/or removal by The St Tammany Parish Council.

    2) Sexually explicit books deemed pornographic with no educational value are not harmful to underage children.

    3) Public Libraries should not expose children to sexually explicit books deemed pornographic and of no educational value.

      4) Library Control Board members must abide by the predominate conservative values of St Tammany Parish.

        5) Library Control Board members must resist all efforts to allow sexually explicit books and material in St Tammany libraries.

          6) Restricting access to sexually explicit books is about protecting the innocence of children not banning books.

            7) Library Control Board members need to be held accountable if they approve sexually explicit books that are harmful to children.

              8) The principles espoused by our Founding Fathers as stated by President John Adams 1798: “the Constitution, is made only for a moral and religious people.”

                This questionnaire was not sent to me but it did provide an opportunity for anyone to respond. So, I’m responding:

                  1. This is a loaded question but yes, of course the parish council has the authority – and responsibility to appoint library board members. That, however, does not give the parish council authority to interfere in the operation of the libraries by professionals specifically trained for that purpose.

                  2. First of all, “no educational value” is a subjective call if ever there was one. Who makes that determination? A kid who aspires to become a doctor would find an illustrated book of human anatomy educational, But of course, any responsible parent would see to it what a child is reading; it’s not the duty of self-appointed morality police to impose their standards of right and wrong.

                  3. Again, who “deems” a book to be “pornographic” and of no educational value? As above, this is an attempt to force someone’s beliefs onto others. During the Dark Ages, Christians were burning non-believers at the stake and boiling them alive in efforts to “convert” them.

                  4. See above.

                  5. Are you suggesting that librarians and board members “resist all efforts” to allow the Holy Bible into libraries? I suggest that these ministers go back and re-read some of the scriptures and decide if Lott’s offering his two virgin daughters to a Sodomite mob or when Lott impregnated his two daughters. Or perhaps they can explain how Adam and Eve propagated the human species when the only children attributed to them were a couple of sons. And even if Cain Abel had any sisters, the same question still applies. They might also wish to review Ezekiel 23:20 and Numbers 31:18 for explicit sexual and violent passages. Also, if God is truly all-knowing, why did he require the Israelites to smear blood on their doorposts so that the angel of death would know to “Passover” those households? And for pure violence, why did God deem it necessary to kill babies?

                  6. I call B.S. This silly nonsense is all about banning books. Why else would To Kill a Mockingbird be on the hit list? Why would there be emphasis on material deemed “inappropriate” to white adults? To try to claim that your crusade is only about protecting the “innocence of children” would be laughable if it were not such a blatant lie.

                  7. See numbers 3 and 4.

                  8. John Adams also vehemently disagreed that women and non-property owners should be allowed to vote, so what’s your point?

                  Miss me yet?

                  (I too, wanted absolute power… but at least I was inept)

                  More headlines that are relevant to the planned takeover of all phases of state government by Jeff Landry who, I have already said more than once, will have us longing for the days of Jindal before he is finished wreaking his carnage:

                  Child labor laws are under attack in states across the country

                  States relax child labor laws amid tight labor market: ‘Benefits to kids’

                  States are weakening child labor laws, 8 decades after the feds took kids out of the workforce

                  Child labor remains a key state legislative issue in 2024

                  Some lawmakers propose loosening child labor laws to fill worker shortage

                  America is divided over major efforts to rewrite child labor laws

                  States Are Loosening Restrictions on Child Labor

                  Republicans continue effort to erode US child labor rules despite teen deaths

                  Illegal child labor is on the rise in a tight job market

                  So, how are these developments in other states relevant to Louisiana? Because of this headline in today’s Baton Rouge Advocate:

                  Bill could take lunch break off the menu for young workers in Louisiana

                  Wait. What?

                  Yes, you read it correctly. A bill by a clown in my parish, Rep. Roger Wilder, actually wants to REPEAL requirements that teenage workers be given a lunch break. Wilder’s logic? Because “children want to work without having to take lunch breaks.”

                  State Rep. Roger Wilder (R-Denham Springs)

                  That off-the-wall reasoning begs the question of just how many “children” he polled in coming to this asinine conclusion?

                  The answer is, of course, zero. There was no poll conducted for him to arrive at this knee-jerk opinion. He is simply taking his marching orders from the Republican playbook as passed down by Gov. Jeff Landry.

                  Wild man Wilder’s bill has already attracted national attention with this story:

                  What the HELL is Going On in Louisiana?

                  And this one from MSNBC:

                  Louisiana Republicans vote to end lunch breaks for child workersttps

                  His “children want to work…” is eerily reminiscent of the utterances of the Great Orange One, who loves to say things like, “people tell me…,” “you wouldn’t believe…,” “I hire only the best people” and “I’ll be working; I won’t have time for golf.”

                  One of the above headlines is particularly revealing:

                  Some lawmakers propose loosening child labor laws to fill worker shortage

                  Worker shortage? I wonder why? Could it be because Republican lawmakers are so damned reluctant to pay employees a living wage? When was the last adjustment to the minimum wage? Why, I do declare, it was in 2009 when it was bumped up from $6.55 an hour to a whopping $7.25 where it has remained now for 15 years.

                  But here’s an interesting fact that should (but probably won’t) jolt you out of your complacent comfort zone:

                  Since 1965 the wage DISPARITY between typical workers and CEOs has increased from 21:1 to today’s astronomical level of 400:1.

                  But yet, we are inundated with these headlines from red states:

                  State Cuts Continue to Unravel Basic Support for Unemployed Workers

                  States cutting unemployment benefits didn’t get people back to work, study finds

                  Cutting unemployment insurance benefits did not boost job growth

                  Cutoff of Jobless Benefits Is Found to Get Few Back to Work

                  States That Cut Unemployment Benefits Saw Limited Impact on Job Growth

                  So, we have seemingly coordinated efforts to loosen child labor laws and to TIGHTEN UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS in an effort to get folks back to work.

                  I seem to recall there was no real labor shortage as long as we had migrant farm workers to pick the oranges, strawberries, apples and vegetables that the corporate farmers plant and sell to feed America’s 300 million citizens. But then the Republicans, thanks to the same Great Orange One, grabbed onto the illegal immigration issue that Republican governors obligingly picked up on as a hot button issue.

                  I’m not saying we don’t have an immigration problem; we do. But Republicans are capitalizing on the issue to harvest votes like immigrants harvested fruits and vegetables in Florida, Texas and California. So, the obvious solution is to get more work out of teenagers and to cut the benefits of the unemployed.

                  At the risk of being too redundant, I’ll repeat what I said in the POST below this one:

                  These people are not our friends.

                  And neither are these:

                  When you peruse some of the recent news stories around the country, it was inevitable that Gov. Jeff Landry, never one to be accused of coming up with an original idea, would fall in line with other red states in attempting to slam the door on public access to “public” records.

                  Just look at some of the actual headlines:

                  Worries over secrecy grow as state officials shield records from the public

                  Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders proposes carve-out of Arkansas public records law during tax cut session

                  DeSantis is squeezing the sunshine out of Florida’s public records law, critics say

                  Attorney fees proposal could hurt access to Florida public records, watchdogs say

                  Texas Gov. Greg Abbott suspends part of open-meetings law

                  Arizona’s GOP legislators vote to shield themselves from public records laws

                  More secrecy than sunshine: Lawmakers push for exemptions to public records, open meetings laws

                  Senate advances bill that could chill access to public records

                  NORTH CAROLINA GOP HIDES REDISTRICTING PROCESS FROM STATE PUBLIC RECORDS LAW

                  NEWS ROUNDUP: ATTACKS ON PUBLIC RECORDS ACCESS IN THE STATES

                  And just to acknowledge that these efforts are exclusive to Republicans, there’s this from decidedly blue New Jersey:

                  New Jersey Democrats Attack the Public’s Right to Government Records

                  Unwilling to take a back seat to any other state in the sweepstakes to conceal actions from public view, we have this in the gret stet of Louisiana:

                  Jeff Landry pushes bill that would block public from viewing government records

                  Long time readers of this blog know by now that LouisianaVoice has found it necessary to file lawsuits on several occasions in order to obtain records that are clearly public. We also filed suit, along with four former SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY professors when we were barred from a hearing on their dismissals. State law (currently) provides that a public employee may request that his or her hearing be held in public as opposed to closed-door, or executive session.

                  All four of the professors requested an open hearing but Southern’s committee which hears professors’ claims decided otherwise – without a vote to go into executive session, which also is illegal (for now). We sued and won a judgment of $1,000 for each of the five plaintiffs but Southern has yet to pay up some five years later.

                  I use the words “currently” and “for now” because now, like the red states of Arkansas, Alabama, Florida, Arizona, Ohio and Texas, Louisiana’s governor is chomping at the bit to exempt public officials from the public records laws.

                  Landry also wants to disqualify any out-of-state resident from seeking public records.

                  Wonder why? What on earth could Republican legislators and the governor be contemplating hiding? Surely, they are planning to do something that citizens might object to. Well, let’s see:

                  • Several top DEQ employees have abruptly quit over differences with Landry’s policies.
                  • Legislators are taking aim at public libraries, ostensibly over something called “inappropriate content.”
                  • Landry is determined to make it impossible for those wrongly convicted of crimes to get a new look at evidence – even though there have been no fewer than 97 documented cases in which people have been wrongly convicted of murders, robberies, rapes, and other crimes who have since been exonerated. There certainly are others.
                  • Our Huey Long wannabe governor wants to remove the job requirement stipulation for approval of industrial tax exemptions because, he says, the industrial tax exemption program “is not about job creating; it’s about capital investment.” That means it’s immaterial if an industry wants to locate in Louisiana or if an existing company wants to expand, even if all the work is to be done by robots while eliminating a few thousand jobs because it ain’t about jobs, it’s about capital improvements.
                  • Landry has voiced his intentions to hold a constitutional convention to re-write the Louisiana Constitution – over a two-week period. The last constitutional convention took more than a year to craft and Landry wants to do it in two weeks? C’mon! Just try to imagine how much special-interest matters would be shoved through with no time for public comment.
                  • And Landry showed his colors early when, while he was attorney general, he sued a reporter who had the temerity to request public records.

                  So, now maybe you have a little better handle on why the guv is dead-set on closing the books on public records. The fact is, he and his Republican legislature don’t want you to see what they’re doing.

                  It’s only a matter of time before there is an effort to conduct closed-door legislative committee hearings on bills and that the online video coverage goes black.

                  These people are insidiously untrustworthy, folks, and you’d better wake up to the fact that they’re not your friends.

                  It’s no wonder that the Washington Post carries this slogan beneath its Page One masthead:

                  Deocracy Dies in Darkness

                  Or that LouisianaVoice has chosen to go with this one:

                  It is understandable when a child is afraid of the dark

                  but unforgivable when a man fears the light

                  Editor’s note: This is an unusually long post but it illustrates the length to which some will go to undermine the First Amendment. Proponents of censorship claim they only want to remove “objectionable material” from libraries but where is the line to be drawn? Who determines objectionability? Who gets to dictate some vague moral code for the rest of us? The bottom line here is control. Please read all the way to the end.

                  Mayor Martin Behrman, mayor of New Orleans for 18 years, once famously said of the federal crackdown on prostitution in the Storyville section of the city, “You can make it illegal but you can’t make it unpopular.”

                  This no effort to lobby for legalized prostitution, but the good mayor’s utterance succinctly summarizes the assertion that you can’t legislate morality. If you could a lot of politicians, especially inside the Beltway of Washington, would be out on their ears, a certain former president included. Oh, hell, let’s just say it: at least a dozen former presidents – Republicans and Democrats alike.

                  But let’s bring that argument down to the local level. We have legislatures in several states like Florida, Texas, Arkansas, Alabama, Tennessee and Louisiana who, in their desperation to appeal to the vocal minority affectionately called evangelicals, are doing their dead-level best to dictate their own moral code – or at least a moral code that they’ve plagiarized for their own political perpetuation.

                  Yes, I know that plagiarize is a strong term, but when you’re examining the motives of those who are incapable of thinking for themselves, those who must take direction from more assertive individuals, when originality has taken leave, then plagiarism is the most fitting noun I can call to mind.

                   pla·gia·rism

                  /ˈplājəˌriz(ə)m/

                  noun

                  1. the practice of taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as one’s own.

                  Take the sudden interest in parishes throughout Louisiana in the content being offered in our public libraries. Do you really think it’s a coincidence that the issue suddenly erupted in Lafayette, Livingston, Caddo, Bossier, St. Tammany and other parishes simultaneously and without any outside influence? Do you actually think that local politicians just overnight discovered the existence of so-called “objectionable” material in our public libraries?

                  Take for instance, one David Cougle, the gunslinging councilman from St. Tammany’s District 9. He claims it was out of self-defense that he toted a concealed, loaded weapon into a parish council meeting last month on the advice of the council chairman but without bothering to actually research the actual law on the books which said it was illegal to carry a weapon into a parish building.

                  He attributed his actions to fear of threats he received over his stand against “sexually explicit” materials available in “our taxpayer-funded library system.” He said in an open letter to his constituents that the matter of protecting children from those materials has been one of his main issues since 2022.

                  I wonder what his concerns were before that time and why he only became alarmed two years ago. Could it have been because some person from St. Martinville named Michael Lunsford, representing an outfit called Citizens for a New Louisiana told him he should be campaigning to rid libraries of such trash? Could it be that it took some holier-than-thou, sanctimonious outsider from halfway across the state to remind him that he should be offended?

                  Here is Cougle’s letter to the voters of his district:

                  The thing that concerns me about this John Wayne wannabe and all those others who strut their manhood by walking around with a gun hanging from their belts is if something did occur which they perceived to be a threat, a lot of innocent people would die – because for the most part, these macho concealed carriers are not properly trained, have never been in an actual fire fight and would panic in a moment of peril.

                  That said, let’s return to the Hon. Mr. Cougle. Like the revelation that DJT’s Republican National Committee, Cougle has distributed a litmus test questionnaire for prospective members of the St. Tammany Parish Library Board of Control.

                  Oh, did I mention that Cougle is leading an effort to remove all the current library board members and replace them with those who share his “concern” for the children. Here is the 12-question survey he is asking all prospective members to complete and return – to him, of course:

                  St. Tammany Parish Library Board of Control Nominee Questionnaire

                  Instructions: Please fill out the following questionnaire to the best of your ability.  If you have no opinion about a particular question, you can just write, “I have no opinion.”  The same questions will be asked of all nominees.  For purposes of these questions, the term “sexually explicit” refers to that which is described in La. R.S. 25:225(B)(4).

                  1. Please provide your name, information about your background, why you want to serve as an LBOC member and why you believe that you are qualified to do so.
                  1. The general view is that the library should respect “community standards” in how it purchases and otherwise handles library materials.  What do you consider “community standards” for St. Tammany parish?
                  1. What are your thoughts about whether the library’s current policies for acquisition and distribution of sexually explicit and violent materials are representative of St. Tammany community standards?
                  1. Article 5 of the American Library Association’s Bill of Rights states that there should be no age restrictions on any library materials.  What are your thoughts about this?
                  1. What do you see as your role as an LBOC member?
                  1. In December of 2023, the Lafayette Library Board of Control passed a resolution in regard to the American Library Association.  A copy has been attached to this questionnaire.  What are your thoughts about this resolution?
                  1. What do you think about which restrictions, if any, should be placed on sexually explicit materials in order to control access by minors (physically accessing within the library, accessing electronically and through checking materials out to take home)?
                  1. What is the library system’s role in our community?
                  1. Do you believe the library and the LBOC have a responsibility to identify what is sexually explicit in the acquisition and distribution of new materials, or should the burden be on the parent prior to their child accessing materials?
                  1. There has been a lot of controversy over different types of materials in the children’s section in our library system.  That being said, historically, we know sometimes appropriate materials still cause controversy.  What, if any, materials should be in the children’s section that might be seen as controversial to residents of St. Tammany parish and why?
                  1. Considering the current controversies and the upcoming millage renewal, are there any reforms or changes that you would propose to ensure St. Tammany residents have confidence in their library system and desire to continue funding it?
                  1. What relationship, if any, do you think the St. Tammany Parish library system should have with the American Library Association, EveryLibrary or their affiliates and other organizations outside of the state of Louisiana?

                  Do you have any other comments

                  Again, I have to wonder if he came up with this all by himself. Did he originate the idea for this questionnaire? Or, is he again taking his marching orders from someone outside St. Tammany and with no interest in the parish other than to create an issue to instill confusion and resentment among its citizens?

                  In fact, if Mr. Cougle is so concerned about the children’s welfare and undue influence on their little minds, he might wish to take a look at one book in particular. One passage in the book reads, “She lusted after lovers with genitals as large as a donkey’s and emissions like those of a horse.” Elsewhere in that same book, it suggests that infants shall be “dashed in pieces” and pregnant women “shall be ripped up.” It also orders in another chapter that all males are to be killed along with every woman who has slept with a man but that virgins may be taken for yourselves.

                  Those passages are from, respectively, Ezekiel 23:20, Isaiah 13:16 and Numbers 31:18, in a book we know as the Holy Bible.

                  Now we wait to see if Cougle, Lunsford and their ilk would suggest removing that publication from our libraries.