latest
Plantersville News
Read moreFriends, we all have or have had neighbors who were okay or maybe even pretty good, but this story is not about them. This story is about the most caring, most generous and friendliest neighbors I have ever had the pleasure of knowing.
Read moreDuring the summer I saw a help wanted post from the downtown restaurant Rail & Rye, so I inquired about working a little bit since I have my food handler certification, was home for the summer, and didn’t have much to do.
Read moreOn the way home from church Sunday, I tuned into a program to hear the host saying that the World Happiness Report published by the United Nations found Israel to be the fourth happiest country in the world behind Finland, Denmark and Iceland. He added a little personal commentary saying that was the nicest thing the U.N. ever said about Israel! Wanting to hear more about how a population living 24/7 under the threat of annihilation by its neighbors could be so happy, I took to the internet. This information is out there for you to review as well.
Read moreThese days, it’s getting harder to tell what’s real and what’s not, both in words and images. Thanks to technological advances coming so fast it makes one’s head spin, software programs can now convincingly duplicate voices, falsely enhance or create totally realistic-looking landscapes that never existed with people who were never there, and even show “live” images of actors, politicians and others speaking or moving that are completely fabricated but are very hard to detect as deceptions.
Read moreThe Texas Legislature, conceived as a part-time body to meet every other year for 140 days, is now in its record fifth session (counting the regular session). When the impeachment trial of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is included, legislators have been in Austin pretty much the entire year, as the Texas Tribune noted. While legislators are paid just $7,200 a year in salary, per diem payments – meant to cover their expenses while in Austin – have mounted. If the fourth special session goes a full 30 days, taxpayers will have spent $4.8 million keeping lawmakers in Austin.
Read more