FRANKFORT —
Time moves and the world changes, but in Kentucky time moves and we don’t seem to change much.
I love this place. I love its people, so colorful and interesting and many of them full of wisdom. I love the variety and beauty of its geography. Kentucky’s people are usually warmhearted and they mostly love their land, recognizing how much it shaped who they are – even while they often cruelly mistreat it.
We stubbornly resist change. I understand the impulse; I feel it especially as I grow older. I see the things which made and shaped me changing or disappearing. The little farm where I grew up is covered by houses and driveways which have replaced the fields. The hedgerows and pathways I once walked, just my dog and I, and that enormous presence all around me I believed was God.
I see people who enriched my life and nurtured me leaving forever. The wise men and women, the storytellers, the human markers of my heritage and the past which as Faulkner observed is never dead, it’s not even past. They live now in my soul and my memory, though that’s a poor refuge compared to their real presence.
I read the poems, novels and short stories of Wendell Berry and feel the pain of his wisdom as he laments the passing of elders, of their old and simpler ways that made us more human, and the ravaging and paving of the good earth that sustained them and which must sustain us in spite of what we continue to do to it.
But I also see the world changing sometimes in good ways and Kentucky slipping farther behind. We are insulated, suspicious of change and those not like us or who think a bit differently.
Mark Twain famously said: “When the end of the world comes, I want to be in Kentucky, because everything there happens 20 years after it happens anywhere else.”
We can’t prevent the future. Instead of fearing the future is out to get us – the wonderfully apt description by Lexington Herald-Leader editorial writer Jamie Lucke – we might recognize it’s already here.
There must be a way to accept the future and allow our intellectual and spiritual horizons to expand while we honor the past and preserve what was good about it. Kentucky welcomes new machines of destruction but rarely new people and ideas which might enrich us in non-material ways.
Can’t we live our values as well as proclaim them? If we are in fact a Christian culture, shouldn’t we act toward others with a Christian attitude, to approach those who seem different from us with the wisdom and knowledge that they too are children of God? Perhaps their differences and different ideas are just as much God’s creations as we and ours are. Shouldn’t we try to emulate the tolerance and humility of the New Testament?
Maybe we ought to listen to Abraham Lincoln. During the Civil War, Lincoln was asked if God was on his side.
“Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side,” said the President, “my greatest concern is to be on God’s side.”
We should question new ideas, but we ought to question our own as well, and we ought to question others’ with an open mind. They needn’t always be feared or reviled. God’s universe has plenty of room for all of us.
For if we are indeed the children of God, we must acknowledge so are they and we are more alike than we are different.
Ronnie Ellis writes for CNHI News Service and is based in Frankfort. Reach him at rellis@cnhi.com. Follow CNHI News Service stories on Twitter at www.twitter.com/cnhifrankfort.
Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed
We’re more alike than we know
- Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed
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Beshear will call special session if pension issue unresolved
Gov. Steve Beshear held out hope Tuesday that lawmakers can still find a compromise solution to the state’s badly underfunded employee pension funds in the waning days of the 30-day General Assembly.
He all but said he’s prepared to call a special session later this year if no solution is reached in this session. -
Right to work, prevailing wage debate for nought
It was perhaps a perfect illustration of the 2013 General Assembly deliberations so far.
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Redistricting, pension fix remain hot topics
Tuesday was the final day to file bills in the state House but that doesn’t mean the possibility of a House redistricting plan or using instant racing revenues to fund a pension system fix are dead.
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Selenium regulations deferred in committee
Concerns by environmental representatives persuaded the Administrative Regulations and Review Subcommittee Monday to defer a new regulation proposed by the Cabinet for Energy and Environment on discharges of selenium into Kentucky streams.
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Senate unanimous: DNA bill ‘matter of justice’
The Kentucky Senate unanimously passed a bill Monday that would allow those in prison to seek DNA testing to prove their innocence.
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Special taxing bill sails through the House
A bill to require more uniform reporting of financial information by special taxing districts sailed through the House 96-1.
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Tax reform to be looked at during special session
Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson and Mary Lassiter, Gov. Steve Beshear’s executive cabinet secretary, made plain Tuesday they believe tax reform is desperately needed — but won’t be undertaken during the regular session.
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Revised ‘pill mill’ regulations calm most objections
Revised regulations implementing a wide-ranging new law to rein in prescription drug abuse seem to have quelled the most vociferous objections to the law.
House Bill 1, which attempts to combat prescription painkiller abuse and “pill mills,” went into effect last summer but initial emergency regulations governing prescribing procedures and tracking of use and prescription of the drugs caused widespread alarm among physicians, hospitals and patients with legitimate need for the drugs. -
We’re more alike than we know
Time moves and the world changes, but in Kentucky time moves and we don’t seem to change much.
I love this place. I love its people, so colorful and interesting and many of them full of wisdom. I love the variety and beauty of its geography. Kentucky’s people are usually warmhearted and they mostly love their land, recognizing how much it shaped who they are – even while they often cruelly mistreat it.
We stubbornly resist change. I understand the impulse; I feel it especially as I grow older. I see the things which made and shaped me changing or disappearing. The little farm where I grew up is covered by houses and driveways which have replaced the fields. The hedgerows and pathways I once walked, just my dog and I, and that enormous presence all around me I believed was God. -
Stumbo, Stivers react to tax talk
The prospective state Senate President and Speaker of the House Friday were noncommittal about reaction to recommendations to create $690 million in new state revenues through tax reform.
Democratic Speaker of the House Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, said he wants to examine the proposals by Gov. Steve Beshear’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Tax Reform further but said it includes at least some things he favors. - More Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed Headlines
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Beshear will call special session if pension issue unresolved

