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While vintage cars continue to arrive in the neighborhood waiting on Ben Affleck and George Clooney filming a few houses down today & tomorrow I’ll be visiting Fault lines Radio at 9:15 AM to talk about Hunter Biden and the left whole Georgia BS.

And with Lent now over keep an eye out for this space because DaTechGuy’s spontaneous livestream Podcast should return sometime before noon today, Topics, Divine Mercy Sunday MLB and more.

Be there for both, and if you come to the neighborhood to watch them shoot the movie, stay off my grass.

Update: For unknown reasons fault lines bumped me to tomorrow but once I have breakfast the podcast will take place.

By: Pat Austin

Living in Shreveport these days is turning into some kind of twisted, dystopian experience. It feels like those opening pages of Atlas Shrugged, where everything is gray, gloom, dying, oppressed. It is no exaggeration to note that shootings occur every single day in this city, sometimes multiple times, and often with injuries or fatalities. It is tragic anytime a life is lost to this senseless violence, but it seems even more so when an innocent life, or a beautiful child, is lost.

And we accept this.

On March 20, 2021, five-year old Mya Patel was killed when she was hit by a stray bullet.

Wednesday, March 24, social media reflected multiple audio recordings of shots fired early in the evening, shots I heard clearly while reading in my bedroom.

March 30, a woman a few blocks from me was shot in the hip; luckily she is okay.

March 31, Xavier Griffin, 19 years old, shot and killed.

April 2, one was killed and others injured in multiple shootings.

Last night a woman was shot in the chest in the parking lot of the Masonic Lodge.

It is literally every single day or night – doesn’t matter what time — and we are doing nothing about this. You can check the Caddo 911 Active Emergency Events page and almost every single time you’ll see a shots fired or a shootings call, and those don’t include the ones that never make it to the page or are “holding,” waiting for available officers.

We are doing nothing about it.

“But, what can we do?!”  I hear you. I don’t have those answers. My layman’s opinion would be to first work through the local elections process to elect leaders tough on crime, willing to enforce penalties on criminals. From the mayor, to the District Attorney, to the city council and the parish commission, we need support.

We need police officers and the money to pay them. Shreveport ranks woefully low in police pay and our officers do not stay. We need the best and the brightest, willing to work hard for good pay.

We need jobs. We need businesses to come here to grow the tax base and to provide employment. We need all levels of jobs, from the trades to the administrative. We can’t continue to depend simply on service industry jobs as our main employers.

Businesses won’t come without decent infrastructure. Our streets are literally crumbling, our water system is collapsing (not to mention their mismanaged billing practices), and the city is covered in trash, litter, and empty buildings.

We need a vibrant downtown. The downtown area is trying: there are some places to eat, a few renovated buildings for apartments, you can see a movie, look at buildings. Many people avoid downtown due to safety issues. Maybe we need bicycle or mounted units there. Maybe we need more options for our large homeless population on the streets there.

We need so many things. Old time Shreveporters often speak of the “good ol’ days” when we had sports teams like The Shreveport Captains, where families could go enjoy a game on a pretty afternoon or evening. Now, our baseball stadium is empty, crumbling, and filled with bats and toxic guano.

For the most part, unless you want to drink or gamble, there is not much for families to do here. There are a few things…SciPort is downtown, and the Aquarium.

Before anything else happens, safety has got to be addressed. Perhaps I am alone in my concern. Perhaps I am in the minority when I balk at going to Betty Virginia Park to walk or spend an afternoon outside. Maybe I’m the only one who is constantly on guard when I walk my neighborhood.  Maybe nobody else has started taking their dogs out at night earlier, or in the backyard rather than the front yard. Maybe nobody else has installed surveillance cameras around their home. Maybe I’m the only one much more cautious about locking their car at night. Maybe nobody else has had packages stolen off their front porch.

Maybe all this is just my perception.

I long to see a thriving Shreveport with businesses like when we had Western Electric, General Motors, Kast Metals, Libby Glass, Poulan WeedEater, to name a few. The Captains played baseball in their new stadium and people sat in the beer garden eating hot dogs and sipping nickel beer. New malls and shopping centers dotted the city, and parks were growing. People ate at local restaurants, like Sansone’s, Brocato’s, Abe’s, Monsour’s, The Centenary Oyster House, George’s, and Fertitta’s, to name a few. Downtown was bustling with department stores like Selber’s, Hearne’s, Rubensteins, and Palais Royal. You could grab lunch at a nice, fancy place downtown or a quick, inexpensive burger place. You felt safe. You could park in the Selber’s parking garage and not worry about your car or about getting panhandled or mugged. Shreve Square was hopping on weekend nights: great bands in multiple clubs, people walking between them, great restaurants, good times.

We could reminisce about the glory days forever, and everybody knows times change and nothing stays the same, but the truth is, other cities adapt better than we have. When you travel, when you leave the city and see other places, even places within say a three hour radius, it is stunning to see the difference.

It’s possible to have a clean city with happy people. But Shreveport feels like a city with a cloud of gloom over it. We can talk it up and pretend to be positive. I know people will jump on me and say that it’s the negative people like me that keeps it down. “If you hate it here so much, why don’t you leave!?” I’ve heard it.

The answer is I’d like to be part of a solution, not stick my head in the sand and pretend like it’s great. It’s not great. Listen to that gunfire every night and tell me how great that is.

So. What’s the solution. What do we do? Is this a nationwide problem or is it unique to Shreveport, to Louisiana, to cities with inept political leaders? The city, like so many others across the nation, is decaying from the inside out. I’ve lived in my home for almost forty years and now I wonder if I’ll even be able to sell it when I finally decide to get out of here. And we live in one of the better neighborhoods; it’s an older neighborhood, but has always been considered a good one.

Now?  I’m ready to pull the plug.

Pat Austin blogs at And So it Goes in Shreveport and at Medium; she is the author of Cane River Bohemia: Cammie Henry and her Circle at Melrose Plantation. Follow her on Instagram @patbecker25 and Twitter @paustin110.

 “You will be saved if you want to be.

St. Thomas Aquinas

Thy damnation comes from thee,” 

St. Leonard of Port Maurice quoting the Prophet Osee (Hosea)

Today is Easter Sunday the Holiest day of the year where we celebrate the resurrection of Christ and our own that will follow. It started at the Easter Vigil mass where the great “Alleluia” returns to the mass and converts to the faith are baptized (if they have not been before) and confirmed (in the faith) and receive their 1st Holy Communion (if they were Catholics in their youth but never confirmed then they return to the Sacrament). This makes a lot of sense as what better day to welcome someone to salvation then the day it was completed.

Good Friday is the day our debt was paid and Easter Sunday is the day that we were told that we were free to go.

But while we are free to go, it’s worth noting that while we are promised life we are not promised an easy time of it. As Jesus told the disciples just before he went into the garden:

“If the world hates you, realize that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, the world would love its own; but because you do not belong to the world, and I have chosen you out of the world, the world hates you.

Remember the word I spoke to you, ‘No slave is greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they kept my word, they will also keep yours. And they will do all these things to you on account of my name, because they do not know the one who sent me. If I had not come and spoken to them, they would have no sin; but as it is they have no excuse for their sin.

Whoever hates me also hates my Father. If I had not done works among them that no one else ever did, they would not have sin; but as it is, they have seen and hated both me and my Father. But in order that the word written in their law might be fulfilled, ‘They hated me without cause.’

“When the Advocate comes whom I will send you from the Father, the Spirit of truth that proceeds from the Father, he will testify to me. And you also testify, because you have been with me from the beginning.

“I have told you this so that you may not fall away.

They will expel you from the synagogues; in fact, the hour 1 is coming when everyone who kills you will think he is offering worship to God. They will do this because they have not known either the Father or me.

John 15:18-16:3

Those words are particularly relevant today. While the United States has been a Christian Country for most of its existence historically it was not all that friendly to Catholics, (quite understandable our nation came from English colonies who had very little use for Catholics and where constantly at war with Catholic France who used the Indians as pawns in that fight for a century.) It wasn’t until the wave of Irish that the Catholic faith gained a modicum of power in the country and while the church is much more powerful then it was in 1776 or 1850 or even 1920 we are in an era where believing Christians of all stripes are in disfavor by our media, by our leadership and by our culture.

That’s why I respect those who joined the Church at the Easter vigil. Such people are doing so in the face of our Catholic “President” and the leadership that has a greater hatred for actual practicing and believing Catholics who follow the faith as it is then most prior administrations.

This is not a surprise nothing is a bigger indictment for one who is false then one who is true and those who are coming to the faith at a time when it is a target are the truest of the true. If they came a century or even a half century earlier that act would have been still been celebrated by civil authorities and by to some degree by the culture. In fact I’m sure there were many during that time when one without faith was less likely to advance who repeated those vows in the spirit of Michael Corleone’s saying the words because it suited him even as he tossed them away:

In fact I am sure that there is more than a few “conservatives” in deep red states that are Michael Corleone who give lip service to the faith for their own purposes. I find such people even more despicable than those who in a blue state like mine when given the choice between faith and power and prestige drop the faith for put on the false fig leaf of “personally opposed” to things. They like Pilate are merciful until it becomes inconvenient or dangerous.

But those who came in yesterday are doing so in the face of all of this knowing all these things and also knowing that with the exception of St. John the Evangelist every single one of those disciples who the risen Lord would greet in that locked room would die a violent death at the hands of authorities all over the world.

Yet they still come because they understand that two thousand years later those dead are still alive today, members of the Communion of Saints that they have just entered and that they are venerated and remembered on earth Millenia later and will be till the world takes its final turn, while those who sought to kill them (and did not repent of this crime) are largely forgotten, and if remembered on earth remembered as villain’s while more importantly find themselves today in a position that I would not want my worst enemy to be in.

Those busy running from or attacking Christianity in general and the Catholic faith in particular for fun, power and profit should keep that in mind.

Those who came in yesterday show the 1st and most vital of the virtues courage, the courage that Don Surber wrote of a few days ago when he noted this story:

The Guardian ran a story on October 2, 2015, which began, “Details have begun to emerge of the terrifying experience of students and staff at the Umpqua community college, where 26-year-old Chris Harper Mercer shot and killed nine people and injured at least seven others.
“Harper Mercer died in a shootout with police who responded to calls about an active shooter at 10.38 am on Thursday.”
The headline read, “Oregon college shooting: ‘He asked are you Christian? Then he shot and killed them.’ “
I ask myself sometimes if I were the second person he asked would I be brave enough to say yes? 
Sometimes I answer correctly, and other times I am ashamed of myself.

I am very lucky. I had very devout parents who brought me up in the faith and when to a Catholic grade school for seven years when such schools were actually Catholic, even with that advantage it was a hard slog to get to where I am. They managed to get here without the advantages I had. I’m in awe of them.

Pray for them, they’ll need it.

Yesterday MLB who I was prepared to forgive for last season decided to throw in with the left and thus has lost me as a potential customer to go to games, watch games listen to games and or buy any MLB paraphernalia over Georgia’s new elections law.

In their haste to please and appease the left and throw away a good chunk of their customer base they have neglected to answer a most important question, one that the Democrat left has not answered either, concerning this law: Here it is:

How does the new Georgia Law actually stop any voter who legally voted in 2020 from casting a legal vote in any election that follows?

Now as a person who believes that election 2020 in Georgia was stolen and that hundreds of thousands of illegal ballots were counted I will readily concede that this will law will help prevent false votes from :

  • People who didn’t actually vote
  • People trying to cast multiple ballots
  • People who are not legally allowed to vote (out of state residents, illegal aliens)
  • People who don’t exist

What I want to know however is how it stops a legal voter from casting a ballot.

Now note that the question isn’t a question of convenience, for example if a drop box is 1 mile away vs 100 yards away that doesn’t prevent a person from voting any more than a Wendy’s 1 mile away prevents a person from getting there, particularly with the full power and resources of the Democrat party to get a person that mile and the number of days allowed for a person to vote. I’m asking how does it actually stop a person who voted legally last time from doing so again?

The answer to that question is really easy:

It Doesn’t!

If I was a person on the left and believed that the last election was clean, I’d welcome the scrutiny this law provides because it would prove their win was legit and silence folks like me who maintain that Joe Biden is only president due to magic ballots provided by corrupt democrats in the dead of night in multiple states.

But I submit and suggest that the dirty little open secret is that the left knows they can only win if they cheat and this law makes cheating more difficult, which is why they are screaming bloody murder. I further submit that once enforced some of the offices they have held for a very long time in the state in districts considered unwinnable by the GOP might not be so secure once votes are counted honestly.

I challenge the left in general and MLB in particular to prove me wrong by answering the question I just asked.

Oh and if you want to ask MLB to answer that question and / or to offer your objection to their move the phone number for MLB off their web site is: 866-800-1275. Why not take the time to give them a call and let them know what you think.

Oh and when you call be nice, none of this nonsense was the idea of the person answering the phone.