November 5, 2019 6:00 AM
Morning Reads for Tuesday, November 5
It’s Election Day! Is there a municipal race in your city?
- Residents in thirty Georgia cities will vote to decide whether they will have an extra hour and a half to serve alcohol on Sundays. Many believe that mimosas = jobs. Will your city be Bloody Mary-ready?
- Lordy, Lordy, NPR’s Morning Edition is 40!
- What are the real costs of “taxation by citation” for three Georgia cities?
- Insight on why the Democratic debate will be at Tyler Perry Studios in Atlanta, and not in Sandy Springs.
- Metro Atlanta. Is getting. A WEGMANS.
- Florida Senator Marco Rubio regrets disparaging philosophers, and embraces Catholic social doctrine.
- In the years since Sister Helen Prejean published “Dead Man Walking,” support for the death penalty in the U.S. has dropped from 80% to 49%.
- “If you can manage a Waffle House, you can manage anything.”
- “The Last Police Officer,” or, how policing in remote parts of Alaska is tragically broken.
- Savannah’s Waving Girl may be on the move.
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At one time the AJC claimed to cover Dixie like the dew, now it’s the dew that covers the AJC.
“City Springs” in two different articles, really?
Guess that public investment is returning earned media dividends. And, almost, a spot on the national stage.
Teri, let’s hope the national media concentrates on Tyler Perry’s Studios rather that following the AJC on the “City Springs” location as the AJC pointed out. Where is City Springs anyway……. I don’t guess the AJC reporters get OTP very much.
“The social doctrine of the church is not something that gets a lot of attention,” Rubio told me. “I mean, its teachings on issues like marriage and abortion and so forth get all the coverage. But there’s a very rich social doctrine that sometimes is misinterpreted and sometimes just not understood. And a lot of it is based on the importance and value of work, but also on the obligation of the employer and of the private economy to provide dignified work.”
The senator argues that the primary purpose of capitalism is to provide for human dignity. He has concluded since losing the Republican nomination to Donald Trump in 2016 that corporate executives, by prioritizing shareholders above workers and quarterly profits above the national interest, have caused an existential crisis of confidence in the underpinnings of the free-enterprise system.
This leads me to ponder – how does one not know the basic social doctrine of Catholicism being raised in a Catholic family?
as a recovering catholic myself, i’d say pretty easily…
He still attends a Catholic church (and sometimes a Southern Baptist church).