NEW for 12/13: Some news that might surprise you

Charleston Currents #14.07 |  Dec. 13, 2021

FINAL ISSUE.  Thank you for reading Charleston Currents through the years.  Enjoy the kind of writing and community information we’ve been providing by reading the Charleston City Paper online every day.

IN THIS EDITION

FOCUS: Charleston Currents publishes final issue
COMMENTARY, Brack: Haley’s new book is craven plea for political relevance
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: S.C. Clips
NEWS BRIEFS: Is the Lincoln Project the vanguard of democracy
MYSTERY PHOTO: Last week’s photo
CALENDAR: Holy City Holiday Market is Dec. 18 

TODAY’S FOCUS

Charleston Currents publishes final issue

Staff reports  |  Charleston Currents, a weekly publication that focuses on good news about the Lowcountry, is publishing its final issue today after more than 13 years and 650 weekly issues.

“It’s been a great run, but now that we also publish the Charleston City Paper, it’s time to focus efforts on continuing to improve its local news and feature story offerings,” said publisher Andy Brack. “Since purchase of the City Paper two years ago, many of the weekly sections in Charleston Currents have also been published in the the City Paper.  Now it’s time to consolidate these efforts.”

For example, Brack’s weekly column is published every Friday in Statehouse Report and over the weekend in the City Paper.  If you enjoy the Currents’ News Briefs section, you can find five stories every morning in the City Paper’s email newsletter of daily headlines.  (Sign up for CP newsletters for free.)

One of the Currents’ most popular features, Mystery Photo, will continue online at the City Paper every Monday starting at the first of the year. 

“Readers love the Mystery Photo.  Not only do we offer interesting pictorial views of the Charleston area, but we frequently get reader submissions that try to stump fellow readers.  If you have a submission starting January 1, send it to mystery@charlestoncitypaper.com.”

Brack said he appreciated the support through the years of underwriters who have made publication of the Currents possible.

“It’s been a great ride and we appreciate the help through the years of past editors Ann Thrash and Marcia Guerard as well as contributors Marjory Wentworth, Michael Kaynard, Kyra Morris, Rob Byko, Michael Kaynard, Fred Palm and others,” Brack said.  “We’ll keep publishing good news in the City Paper to bring together people and foster a renewed sense of community.  Join us online frequently – and pick up the paper every week in one of our hundreds of distribution locations.”

COMMENTARY 

Haley’s new book is craven plea for political relevance

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Former S.C. Gov. Nikki Haley offers a craven mush of platitudes in a new policy book that is little more than a painful cry for political relevance.

As former President Donald Trump’s enabler in the United Nations where she served as U.S. ambassador, Haley brings together 16 essays on domestic and foreign policy in “American Strength: Conservative Solutions Worth Fighting For.” 

The new 160-page free book from her Stand for America advocacy group features short essays from conservative luminaries such as U.S. Sens. Tim Scott of  South Carolina, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Dan Sullivan of Alaska, as well as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Gen. H.R. McMaster. 

But it is the four pages of Haley’s introduction to the nine essays on domestic policy that are chilling and filled with stolid, cliched word play that offers a narrow, unsettling view of America.  

She repeats something that Trump supporters want to hear, but is blind to reality: “America is not a racist country,” she wrote.  

Governor, you grew up in Bamberg County.  Drive around a little today and you’ll see a continuing legacy of the racism that split the country apart in the Civil War and continued for 100 years with Jim Crow and segregationist policies.  Get out a little and you’ll see how Black and brown America has more poverty, more health inequities, shorter lives and fewer economic opportunities due to a failing rural education system where school choice efforts siphon public dollars.

Haley

Walk into a restaurant in Mississippi or Indiana or Arizona and it won’t be long before you hear someone talking about “those people” – people who look different from white America but are just as American.  

It sounds good when you say, “The moment we reject the principles at America’s heart and accept the lie that our country is racist and rotten to the core, we throw away any chance of national progress.  Instead, we go in the wrong direction, toward no freedom, no equality and no rule of law.”

Hogwash.  You are pandering to the conservative masses to make them feel like past discrimination wasn’t all that bad. We no longer live in the 1950s.  By not accepting the inequities of the past and dealing with them in a positive way, we continue two Americas – one of privilege and another rooted in the plantation culture.  By not accepting that racism drove the deaths in North Charleston of Walter Scott or in Charleston of nine worshippers at Emanuel AME Church, you are pushing nothing more than a political fairy tale just to be seen as more appealing by conservative voters in the off-chance that you run for president.  .

And your solution:  To trust you.  “Take it from me, the first female governor of South Carolina and the first minority female governor in the United States, America is not a racist country.”

Yet paragraphs earlier, you don’t want your readers to trust the American government. You conveniently say, “On both sides, the argument can be boiled down to this: We can solve any problem by putting our trust in government.  My response is ‘no thank you.’ I put my trust in the American people instead.”

Governor, the “government” is people – living people like Tim Scott, Pat Toomey, Dan Sullivan and Newt Gingrich, as well as convenient targets like Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer.  All of them are members of a governing class who strive to lift up the nation, not make it devolve into a sinister America.

It’s sad that as a past government public servant that you don’t trust the very government in which you served.  If you truly want to stand up for America, please stop dividing it with fear and platitudes.  Rather, bring people together – not as conservatives, moderates and liberals – but as Americans seeking solutions to nagging problems.

Andy Brack is publisher of the Charleston City Paper.  Have a comment?  Send to: editor@charlestoncurrents.com.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

SC Clips

If you want to keep up with news from across the state every business day, we encourage you to take a spin with SC Clips, an affordable, daily information digest.  Subscribers receive a daily email news round-up before 10 a.m. that provides a link to each day’s edition of SC Clips. 

Each issue (click for sample) provides a concise summary of dozens of the latest newspaper and television reports of news with statewide impact, politics, business and local stories. Readers also are linked to key opinions by South Carolina’s editorial writers.

NEWS BRIEFS

Is Lincoln Project the vanguard of American democracy?

By Andy Brack  |  America is in the throes of the largest internal political war since its first, the American Civil War, began in Charleston 160 years ago. Then, as now, the nation was being pulled apart by injustice, inequity and white supremacy. Now, however, the battlefield is far different. The weapons aren’t rifles, cannon or a submarine. Rather, warriors often employ sophisticated technology, messaging, misinformation, disinformation, gerrymandering and fear to manipulate a sleeping electorate to question long-held values of decency, the common good, fairness and the American dream. 

Is anybody really standing up and fighting these days for democracy? Meet the Lincoln Project. (First published in the Charleston City Paper.)

In other recent news:

Charleston area to be home to 100+ Afghan refugees.  At least 100 adults and children fleeing regime change in Afghanistan are expected to settle in the Charleston area in the next six weeks. North Carolina-based Lutheran Services Carolinas will spend the next month or so preparing for the arrival of the Afghans and their families — and there are ways locals can help. Speaking at a dinner hosted downtown at Park & Grove Monday night, Bedrija Jazic, Lutheran Services director for refugee services, said the group is in the process of lining up accommodations and employment opportunities for the Charleston newcomers.

Charleston libraries extending hours.  Ten Charleston County Public Library branches will expand evening and weekday operating hours beginning Jan. 3 in efforts to provide better access and more flexibility for patrons needing to visit the library after work or school.  Click the link to see the changes.

Activists call on county for more affordable housing. Charleston Area Justice Ministry (CAJM) leaders during a press conference last week called on Charleston County Council to put $20 million of an $80 million federal-dollar gift toward an affordable housing trust, and $10 million toward making an immediate dent in the housing crisis.

State Senate has new leaders.  Oconee County Republican Sen. Thomas Alexander became the new president of the state Senate following the resignation this week of Sen. Harvey Peeler, R-Cherokee, who took the powerful position of chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.  While controlling the day-to-day business and debate of the state Senate is a key position, Peeler’s move to chair the budget-writing committee is actually a step up in power because of the way the position has its fingers in every part of funding state government.  The position became open last month after the passing of longtime Finance Chair Hugh Leatherman of Florence. 

S.C. experts say state could have sun, few clouds in economic forecast. Amid concerns that new COVID-19 variants could derail the national economy again, South Carolina’s economy is booming and has recovered almost all of its losses from the pandemic, according to state experts at the University of South Carolina’s annual economic conference. More: The Post and Courier.

New House, Senate districts approved.  South Carolina state senators approved new districts for the Senate and House Tuesday, but legal challenges are almost certain before filing begins in March for the 2022 elections. Work is still underway to finish maps for the U.S. House districts. Efforts were delayed after Democrats appeared ready to put up a fight over efforts to split Charleston between the 1st and 6th districts. More: The State.

FEEDBACK

Send us your thoughts by email

For the next few weeks, we’ll still get your emails and comments at:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  Starting Jan. 1, you can offer thoughts on issues of public importance via Statehouse Report or the Charleston City Paper.

MYSTERY PHOTO

Steer  your browser to the City Paper for new mysteries

At the beginning of the year, we’ll shift our weekly Mystery Photo to the Charleston City Paper and publish it every Monday in our morning newsletter. Every weekday, the City Paper publishes a roundup of recent news.  Every afternoon, there’s a specialty newsletter on a range of issues from food (Tuesday) and music (Thursday) to arts (Monday) and opinion (weekends).

  • Click here to sign up for City Paper newsletters to stay in touch with what’s happening around town.

Our previous Mystery Photo

Thanks to all mystery guessers through the years.  You can still find a weekly mystery at Statehouse Report and we’ll start one at the City Paper on Jan. 1.  Last week’s mystery, “Pointy,” showed the sharp security fence along the S.C. State Ports Authority Property on Washington and Charlotte streets.

Congratulations to those who figured it out or knew where it is:  Bill Segars of Hartsville; Christel Newton of North Charleston; Kirk Zerangue and David Lupo, both of Mount Pleasant; George Graf of Palmyra, Va.; Jay Altman of Columbia, Jim McMahan and Craig Bennett, both of Charleston; and Kristina Wheeler of West Ashley.

Peel shared that the fence was called a “palisade” fence, “also called a ‘spear’ fence for its pencil-point shaped pales that ensures excellent surveillance visibility and are highly resistant to forced entry with scissor-jacks. It is a popular type of perimeter fencing when there is a need for higher security and vandal resistance. This particular design includes a curvature in the pales that point outward, making the fence all that more difficult to scale.”

ON THE CALENDAR

Holy City Holiday Market is Dec. 18 

via Facebook.

Holy City Brewing in North Charleston will cohost its seventh annual Holy City Holiday Market in Park Circle from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 18.  The brewery will also offer vendors at its brewing location down the street (1021 Aragon Ave.).

We’ve partnered with several neighboring businesses to host this year’s event. Vendor markets will be happening all around Park Circle on December 18,” according to the event’s Facebook page. “The main hub opens at noon. Visit Holy City Brewing to check out the new venue space while you shop from up to 100 local vendors. Stardust Tattoo, Firefly Distillery, The Station, Roadside Blooms, Black Octopus Mercantile, and Ship’s Wheel Hard Cider will also be hosting pop-up vendors throughout the afternoon.”

  • To keep up with Charleston-area events, check out the City Paper’s continually updated Events section

Also on the calendar this week:

Elf the Musical returns:  Through Dec. 19, Dock Street Theatre, Charleston.  The popular musical, sold out in Charleston in 2019, returns for several holiday performances by actors at Charleston Stage.  Based on the 2003 film starring Will Ferrell, the musical tells the story of Buddy the Elf who is transported from Santa’s Workshop to New York City.   Click here for times and tickets, which range from $32 for students to $36 to $75 for adults.

Holiday Festival of Lights: 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m, through Dec. 31, James Island County Park.. Visitors can drive through the impressive three-mile light spectacle with more than 750 illuminated displays. The festival also includes other holiday activities like train rides, marshmallow roasting, a climbing wall and more. There also will be a Winter Wonderland, which features the area’s largest holiday sand sculpture made from more than 50 tons of sand. You and your family can also explore the shops, an enchanted walking trail and the amazing dancing light display. Tickets  It is recommended that visitors purchase tickets in advance online.  

Even When It’s Dark: Through Jan 22, Redux Contemporary Art Center, King Street, Charleston. This solo show by Greenwood artist Doug McAbee offers drawings on wood, steel sculptures, and murals. As viewers engage with the works of art they will connect with the absurdity, the liveliness, and the humor in the work. Whether for a few seconds or perhaps longer, the artist’s hope is that connection will create change. The exhibition can be viewed at the center, 1056 King St., Tuesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. More.

Winter Wonderland exhibit.  Through March 27, 2022, Lowcountry Image Gallery, The Charleston Museum, 360 Meeting St., Charleston. This exhibit showcases colorized photographs of remarkable snow days captured by residents of Charleston dating to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. More on tickets and hours.

CHARLESTON HISTORY

ABOUT CHARLESTON CURRENTS

OUR TEAM

Charleston Currents offers insightful community comment and good news on events each week. It cuts through the information clutter to offer the best of what’s happening locally.

  • Mailing address:  P.O. Box 21942, Charleston, SC 29413.
  • Phone:  843.670.3996

Charleston Currents is provided to you weekly by:

  • Editor and publisher: Andy Brack, 843.670.3996
  • Contributing editor, common good, Fred Palm
  • Contributing editor, money: Kyra Morris
  • Contributing editor, Palmetto Poem: Marjory Wentworth
  • Contributing photographer:  Rob Byko
  • Charleston Currents also uses content from the outstanding staff at the Charleston City Paper, a sister publication.
  • © 2008-2021, City Paper Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. Charleston Currents is published every Monday by City Paper Publishing LLC, P.O. Box 21942, Charleston, SC 29413.
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