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Letters to the Editor

Examining Clary stance on Trump

Dear Editor:

I am writing in response to the article that appeared on the Courier’s front page on May 27, titled “Rep. Clary joins GOP effort to beat Trump.” I know Mr. Clary served as a judge and in the State House. I would think he would have a better grasp of facts.

Rep. Clary, where have you been and where do you get your news? Mr. Clary said he “doesn’t like Trump’s method of simply bullying, criticizing, ridiculing, attack mode.” That begs the question … then why doesn’t Mr. Clary oppose the bullying, criticizing, ridiculing, attack mode that has been directed at the president since day one?

The mainstream media produces the “fake news” Clary has attributed to the president. Mr. Clary complained about the president’s use of Twitter to communicate. What choice has the media given him? He doesn’t get a front-page story to defend himself. The New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC, MSNBC have all done a great injustice to the American people by false reporting or negligent coverage of his accomplishments.

The corruption, such as Russia collusion, the fake dossier, lies to the FISA court and an impeachment attempt all amount to an attempted coup to unseat our elected president. All of this has been proven untrue at great expense to the American taxpayer.

The president has been working night and day, yet there remains no effort by the Democrats and RINOs to help govern the country. Instead, they continue to obstruct his administration at every turn. A list of the president’s accomplishments shows that he has done more for minorities, women, veterans and the disabled than any president before him (Google it.).

Mr. Clary seems proud to be on a committee of “fellow Republicans looking to defeat President Donald Trump this year.” Noteworthy that he was “encouraged to join the committee” by Bob Orr, a former associate justice on the North Carolina Supreme Court and gubernatorial candidate. Dallas Woodhouse, executive director of the N.C. state GOP, stated in the Charlotte Observer on June 25, 2018, that “Bob Orr’s largely detested within our party. He used Republican money to get elected to the Supreme Court. … He’s as revolting of a political figure as you can have.”

Mr. Clary falsely stated that “over the past three and a half years, we’ve alienated allies and cozied up to dictators and communists and folks like that.” Actually, Trump stopped cozying up to Iran, stopped sending money to our enemies, reversed unfair trade practices and got tough with North Korea. Other presidents let it go. Nothing was done — until Trump got tough.

Since my research turned up all the above, I wonder about Mr. Clary’s perceptions. Has he signed on to the resistance to Republican Trump based on these perceptions? My goal is to expose fake Republicans (RINO), fake news and money-grabbing politicians. MAGA!

Dennis L. Bauknight

Easley

 

Rolling the dice

Dear Editor,

Although I don’t gamble, there are games that use dice to play. I was cleaning house not long ago when I found a couple of dice.

I realized something about dice that had never dawned on me. Each opposite side adds up to be the same number. Seven. If it’s four, the opposite side will be three. If it’s two, the opposite side will be five. One, it will be six. Doubt it? Look for yourself.

Trivia about dice. When thrown and the top numbers are five on both, it’s called box cars. It looks like the doors on a box car.

When thrown and it’s one on both dice, it’s known as snake eyes. People over the years have figured out ways to mess with dice. There’s shaved dice. One side is sanded down to make the weight uneven.

Then there are what is known as loaded or trick dice.

The black dots are drilled out on one side and lead is poured in. Then the dots are painted over to cover up. In both cases it gives the user the advantage. Yes, it is illegal, but some do it anyway.

I’ve heard of gamblers who would use hair tonic to stick the dice together so they could mess with their landing on the numbers they wanted. What they’d do is pretend to smooth their hair out, only to get grease on the dice. I once heard about a man who would put a wrinkle in the blanket he was on the floor throwing dice on. He’d bounce the dice off the wrinkle to get the number he wanted.

No end to what people will do, is there? No one knows just who or even when dice were invented.

In the Bible, it tells about the soldiers who crucified Jesus shooting dice for his coat. Casting lots, as it was called then, was nothing new. They had a cylinder-shaped jar which they put the dice in and shook up then poured out. Seven dice were used instead of two like today.

Archeologists have found dice as old as 6,000 B.C. Back then, they were carved from bone. Animal, I hope. Actually, sheep knuckles were said to be the start, followed by wood, stone and even brass. Just something to think about.

Eddie Boggs

Westminster