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Recognizing outstanding youths in our community

Keenan Williamson, Lily Smith, Andrew Smith, Reese Hynson and Addyson Bryant, from left, compete in the 4-H Youth Dairy Goat Show at the Northwest Florida Fair in Fort Walton Beach. [SPECIAL TO THE NEWS BULLETIN]

Okaloosa County 4-H has been very busy the last couple of weeks. Many events happened all at once and will continue to occur over the next month or two.

We are officially in fair season for our area. Local 4-H members participated in the Northwest Florida Fair held Sept. 25-30 at the Northwest Florida fairgrounds in Fort Walton Beach.

Nightly shows and hosting at our 4-H building keep our 4-Hers busy. We even had youths from Walton and Santa Rosa counties join in the both our goat and beef shows.

Our youths offered over 175 project exhibits and over 40 chickens, ducks, pigeons, rabbits, and even cavy for the public to come and check out. They also displayed their showmanship skills in poultry, dairy goat, meat goat, beef, rabbit, and dog shows.

These youths competed for ribbons and trophies, but also took home lessons that will last a lifetime. Many of our senior level youths took time to assist our Cloverbud (5-7 year old) participants, proving that 4-H is not always just about animals, but also about developing teamwork and leadership skills.

Okaloosa County 4-H has partnered with a county in southern Florida that was recently affected by Hurricane Irma. Many of the youths in that county lost feed and supplies for their show animals. This fair was a perfect place for our 4Hers to reach out for community help. They set up a donation jar in our 4-H barn to help buy new feed and supplies for our sister county and they were pretty successful. They were able to raise over $30 toward this effort, and in doing so realized that community does not just consist of your own neighborhood, but can reach far beyond it. They learned that even the smallest contributions can make a difference.

So what’s next for our youths? Many of them plan to participate in the Walton County Fair and may even travel to the North Florida Fair in Tallahassee in November.

Also look for Okaloosa County 4-H outside Tractor Supply in Crestview this month, where they will support the Paper Clover Event. Part of the proceeds of every paper clover purchased helps support local 4-H programs.

Veronica Graham is an agent at the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension office in Crestview.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Recognizing outstanding youths in our community

Readers' thoughts on gun control, NFL kneeling

CRESTVIEW — Numerous crestviewbulletin.com and Facebook readers shared their thoughts on local issues. 

Here are some of their comments. 

FALSE SENSE OF SECURITY

Gun control is a feel good, false sense of security for the ignorant. There are so many current laws on the books that cover weapons and use of; there are laws against murder and attempted murder, as well as assault.

But just as a law against speeding, these laws are only as good as the person abiding by them and the law prosecuting the offenders.

No criminal or criminally intent person is going to give a damn about a law. So, therefore, only the law-abiding citizens are affected by a law, and they are not the ones committing these acts.

Daniel Crawley 

REGARDING KNEELING

Perhaps we should look at ‘taking a knee’ as a form of allegiance to the anthem and flag? Many genuflect in church, why not the playing field?

E.S. Farrell

Crestview

HOPING FOR TRAFFIC CHANGES

Sure hope there is a plan to change the intersection at [State Road] 85 and John King. The backup there now is a hazard. Excited that Popeyes is coming, however.

TerryandKelly Hayes 

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This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Readers' thoughts on gun control, NFL kneeling

Thoughts on Community Hymn Sing, Winn-Dixie's improvements

Crestview High School's band, The Big Red Machine, accepts a check for more than $6,000 from Winn-Dixie Oct. 12 in Crestview. [LYNSEY REEVES | SPECIAL TO THE NEWS BULLETIN]

One of the most enjoyable events that takes place in Crestview is when several of the local churches get together for a Community Hymn Sing at one of the participating churches. 

This quarter's hymn sing is 6 p.m. Oct. 22 at Mount Zion A.M.E. Church, 502 McDonald St., Crestview. The entire community is invited to come and sing praises to the Lord.

Previous hymn sings featured special music provided by the various churches participating. The congregation gets to choose the hymns they love to sing out of the hymnal. I have attended several of these enjoyable times of fellowship with members from other churches and look forward to attending this fabulous, musical event! Please join in the fun.

I had the pleasure of attending Winn-Dixie's grand opening last Thursday. The Big Red Machine from Crestview High School was there to play for this event and the company provided a $6,153 check to the band.

The Ricky Reeves management team, the people in white shirts, are always available and willing to help customers, whatever the need. Jimmy McEachern, customer service manager, told me, "Winn-Dixie is proud to be part of the community of Crestview and looks forward to continuing to giving back."

Many Crestview residents attended the grand opening. There were 500 $5 gift cards passed out beginning at 8 a.m. and they were gone by 8:30 a.m. As well there were 1,000 tote bags.

Many things have been moved around in the store to provide a better shopping flow. There are paper store directories at each check stand to help shoppers find their groceries, or any of the staff will be happy to help.

The re-vamped produce department features locally sourced produce and much of it is now on ice. In the produce department there are products from Louisiana, Florida, Alabama and Mississippi.

The most interesting part of the store are the additional items available in the deli department. There are now hot pizzas and hot sandwiches to order, a soup bar, and hot meal offerings, chicken wings, and fried and rotisserie chickens. Additionally, there are tables and chairs with free Wi-Fi so one can buy their meal and catch up on emails or Facebook. It is a very nice addition to the store. I have tried the soup and chili, and they are delicious.

I wish Winn-Dixie continued success!

Janice Lynn Crose, a former accountant, lives in Crestview with her husband, Jim; her two rescue collies, Shane and Jasmine; and two cats, Kathryn and Prince Valiant.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Thoughts on Community Hymn Sing, Winn-Dixie's improvements

Political correctness leading to comedy's slow death

"When humor goes, there goes civilization." —Erma Bombeck

On his deathbed, comedic actor Jack Lemon popularized the saying, “Dying is easy, comedy is hard.” He’d have no idea how hard comedy would get in the 2017 Orwellian world of PC police and Millennials who have been taught to be perpetually offended.

The left dominates humor. Their "jokes" have devolved to be condescending, self-righteous and not funny. They make themselves the heroes in their own jokes, as with the Second Amendment right after the Las Vegas  shooting. Daily Show host Trevor Noah simplistically sniffed, “I’m sorry that we live in a world where there are people who will put a gun before your lives.” The self-important comments about gun control, which would not have stopped the Vegas madman, were on display from late night comics. According to their theory, they would have saved 59 people from death; but by you not being totally on board with them, you caused the deaths.

My response to Vegas last week was some (maybe too soon) humor on a radio show. The host asked, “What was your thought when you first heard about Stephen Paddock shooting 59 people?” I said that I thought Stephen was an odd name for a Muslim.

Back in the Rat Pack days, we could say more. Once arrested for carrying a gun, Dean Martin was asked a leading PC question by a reporter: “Do you think people should have guns?” Martin said, “Well, in a perfect world no — just me.” Unfettered humor makes you both laugh and think about an issue. We can’t lose that.

The few of us who write political satire from the libertarian, right-of-center side get our jokes called "mean" if the left disagrees. We are called "racist" if we joke about Obama, the NFL or crime stats, and "sexist" if we do not totally agree with Hillary Clinton. The left uses identity politics to fan the fires of racial division. After eight years, it backfired on them when Trump turned that anger into his improbable election.

Humor can be hard to define. One man’s humor is another’s insult. In her book “What Happened,” Hillary Clinton blamed sexism, racism, and pretty much every “ism” — and others — for her election loss. Book stores don’t know which fiction section to put her book in: Horror or Humor.

Pointing out irony where there is truth makes for humor. Saying you feel sorry for Hillary that President’s Day and Valentine’s Day often fall on the same day is an example. Unlike slapstick pratfall comedy, political humor makes you think and laugh and is a power medium feared by the elites. It’s also the reason the leftist media make sure all late night show hosts are committed to their agenda and use their platform to advance it.

Mel Brooks joined the recent chorus of comedians who say that the PC culture has gone too far in stifling comedy. He says his classic movie "Blazing Saddles" would not be made today, and he blames the “stupidly politically correct.” Other comedians like Jerry Seinfeld, Larry the Cable Guy, Dennis Miller, John Cleese and Chris Rock agree. Many say they will not play college gigs anymore because of the rigid PC pushback.

Since Aristotle, evolved and free societies have used political satire to make society better. It keeps community leaders in check and paves the way for progress. In the world of the left, socialists would not allow anything to be funny unless government declared it so. Think North Korea. We don’t want to become that.

I have found, contrary to the left’s narrative, the right to be far more tolerant of humor than the left. Twelve years ago, the only major pushback on my column from the right was displeasure at the title of a column about the hypocrisy of several televangelists, like Revs. Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart, caught with their pants down. Its title was “Ministers Should do More Than Lay People.” More religious-right-type newspapers wouldn’t run it. It was one of the rare pushbacks from the right. Most meddling with my column comes from leftists.

Francis Bacon said, “Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he’s not; a sense of humor to console him for what he is.”

I think God gave us a sense of humor in order to cope, and He clearly has one Himself. The latest example: Hugh Hefner’s death.

“Heff” died on Wednesday, Hump Day.

Ron Hart is a libertarian op-ed humorist and award-winning author. Contact him at Ron@RonaldHart.com or @RonaldHart on Twitter.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Political correctness leading to comedy's slow death

Like David, recognize God as your shepherd

The Rev. Mark Broadhead is pastor at Laurel Hill Presbyterian Church and First Presbyterian Church of Crestview. [File photos | News Bulletin]

People do a lot of rushing around in life pursuing the quest for things like recognition, high dollars and fancy possessions. They kill themselves, literally and figuratively, in these pursuits.

These pursuits can have a very detrimental effect on life. They can cause people to never be truly satisfied with what they have or who they are. They are always on the hunt for the next treasure that can be pursued or won.

As this happens, focus gets skewed and misaligned. What is important gets lost in the shuffle. What is truly needed is missed completely — even by the best of persons.

Because we often let ourselves wander from what God wants from our lives, it is good for us to remember where our focus needs to be in order to find true life.

For the next several weeks, I will share some thoughts on the 23rd Psalm. This is a very short psalm, only six verses long. But it is very powerful and packed with meaning that helps put, and keep, things in proper perspective.

David starts this psalm with a very telling statement: Because the Lord is my shepherd; I have everything I need. Notice he doesn’t say “If I let the Lord be my shepherd,” or “When I remember he is my shepherd.” He makes a declaration that the Lord is his shepherd.

It’s not like David is weighing the pros and cons of such an arrangement with God, and working out a deal to acquire something he wants. It’s not like he is saying when he pays attention to God that he has everything he needs.

No, he is saying because God is his shepherd. He is saying that God is central in his life and he lives for God. And because he has made God central in his life, he is satisfied.

There is nothing more he needs. There may be more he wants, but he has everything he needs, everything that is important, everything that provides true meaning in life.

God is sufficient for the needs in your life. God provides. If you should ever feel a restlessness settling in that causes you to want more and more, it would be good to make sure the Lord is your shepherd. He provides for you.

He provides everything you need to truly be fulfilled in this life.

The Rev. Mark Broadhead is pastor at Laurel Hill Presbyterian Church and First Presbyterian Church of Crestview.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Like David, recognize God as your shepherd

Put lessons from 'Retirement Week' to work

Yvonne Shanklin is an Edward Jones financial adviser. [Special to the News Bulletin]

To raise public awareness about the importance of saving for retirement, Congress has designated the third week of October as National Save for Retirement Week. What lessons can you learn from this event?

First of all, save early — and save often. Too many people put off saving for retirement until they are in their late 40s — and even their 50s. If you wait until you are in this age group, you can still do quite a bit to help build the resources you will need for retirement — but it will be more challenging than if you had begun saving and investing while you were in your 20s or early 30s.

For one thing, if you delay saving for retirement, you may have to put away large sums of money each year to accumulate enough to support a comfortable retirement lifestyle. Plus, to achieve the growth you need, you might have to invest more aggressively than you'd like, which means taking on more risk. And even then, there are no guarantees of getting the returns you require.

On the other hand, if you start saving and investing when you are still in the early stages of your career, you can make smaller monthly contributions to your retirement accounts. And by putting time on your side, you'll be able to take advantage of compounding — the ability to earn money on your principal and your earnings.

Here's another lesson to be taken from National Save for Retirement Week: Maximize your opportunities to invest in the tax-advantaged retirement accounts available to you, such as an IRA and a 401(k) or similar employer-sponsored retirement plan.

If you have a 401(k)-type plan at work, contribute as much as you can afford every year, and increase your contributions whenever your salary goes up. At a minimum, put in enough to earn your employer's matching contribution, if one is offered.

Apart from saving and investing early and contributing to your tax-advantaged retirement accounts, how else can you honor the spirit of National Save for Retirement Week?

A key step you can take is to reduce the barriers to building your retirement savings. One such obstacle is debt. The larger your monthly debt payments, the less you will be able to invest each month. It's not easy, of course, to keep your debt under control, but do the best you can.

One other barrier to accumulating retirement resources is the occasional large expense resulting from a major car repair, sizable medical bills or other things of that nature. If you constantly have to dip into your long-term investments to meet these costs, you'll slow your progress toward your retirement goals.

To help prevent this from happening, try to build an emergency fund big enough to cover three to six months' worth of living expenses. Since you'll need instant access to this money, you'll want to keep it in a liquid, low-risk account.

So, there you have them: some suggestions on taking the lessons of National Save for Retirement Week to heart. By following these steps, you can go a long way toward turning your retirement dreams into reality.

This article was written by Edward Jones on behalf of your Edward Jones financial adviser.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Put lessons from 'Retirement Week' to work

Boyett heads 2017 Farm Family of the Year

Russell Boyett stands in front of his tractor on his farm. [Jennifer Bearden | Special to the News Bulletin]

What is a family farm? Simply put it is a farm that is owned and operated by a family unit. There is a lot of talk about corporate farming and the evils of such farming practices.

The truth is 97 percent of U.S. farms are family owned. Whether they grow crops such as cotton, peanuts, soybeans, corn, tomatoes, vegetables, pecans or cattle, they all have one thing in common. They work hard as a family to make the farm successful.

Each year Okaloosa County Farm Bureau and the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Okaloosa County Extension recognize one outstanding farm family. This recognition honors the farmer’s dedication and commitment to agriculture in Florida and to their superior values.

For 2017, we are delighted to recognize the Russell Boyett family of Baker.

Russell, along with his fiancée, Debbie McLain, farms about 250 acres of cotton, peanuts and soybeans.

He grew up on a farm belonging to his grandfather, who raised row crops, cows and hogs in Okaloosa County.

Russell began farming part-time in 1983. In 2010, after retiring, he began farming full-time. Russell plans to keep farming until he just can’t farm anymore.

Personally, I’ve visited fields and watched Russell and Debbie help other farmers harvest their crops. I’ve seen them working alongside each other to get the job done.

They represent farm families everywhere as the backbone of U.S. agriculture. Here in Okaloosa County, we are proud to call Russell and Debbie our farm family of the year for 2017.

Jennifer Bearden is an agent at the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension office in Crestview.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Boyett heads 2017 Farm Family of the Year

Thoughts on the Las Vegas tragedy

Janice Lynn Crose, a former accountant, lives in Crestview with her husband, Jim; her two rescue collies, Shane and Jasmine; and two cats, Kathryn and Prince Valiant.

We here in the Crestview area are blessed to have a fairly safe place to work and live. Many of our neighbors and friends are military or retired military that know how to defend themselves and our country. We are fortunate that we haven't had tragedies such as those in Orlando or Las Vegas. Since we are adjacent to military bases, this probably isn't an ideal place for a terrorist attack.

The devastating attack in Las Vegas may take weeks to sort out and answer such questions as what motivated this attack, how many people were involved, why this venue was chosen and so on. Time is needed to follow leads and interview people.

One question I have is why the absolute hatred towards fellow Americans? What motivates someone to murder their neighbors? The Bible states in Jeremiah 17:9-10a, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? I the LORD search the heart."

 We are sinful people, prone to sinful acts, but as Christians we are commanded in I John 4:7, "Beloved, let us love one another: for love is of God." When we love each other, we certainly don't kill one another and we want what is best for them.

My heart breaks for those who lost beloved members of their families, friends, co-workers and those they may have only known casually. While I can't comprehend why someone would carry out such an attack, I can pray for all involved.

Here are some suggestions for our prayers:

•For quick and complete healing for those who were injured

•For the families of those who lost loved ones

•Give thanks for first responders

•Wisdom for our leaders

•Unity in our country

While we may never know the motivation of the shooter or shooters, we can pray and love one another as we have been commanded by the Lord.

Some people call to sacrifice our liberty for a sense of security. Here is a quote from Benjamin Franklin, who stated on Nov. 11, 1755, "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." It's something to seriously think about.

Janice Lynn Crose, a former accountant, lives in Crestview with her husband, Jim; her two rescue collies, Shane and Jasmine; and two cats, Kathryn and Prince Valiant.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Thoughts on the Las Vegas tragedy

'Love your neighbor as yourself'

The Rev. Mark Broadhead is pastor at Laurel Hill Presbyterian Church and First Presbyterian Church of Crestview. [File photos | News Bulletin]

I write this article in the wake of the devastating carnage perpetrated in Las Vegas earlier this week.

My heart breaks for those who lost their lives while enjoying a time of recreation and fun. I am deeply grieved for those who must now move forward in a life in which hopes and dreams were shattered.

When will the madness end? When will the senseless taking of human life stop being a game of one-upsmanship to see who can wreak the worst carnage? When will individuals start treating one another with compassion instead of contempt?

I will not debate the topic of gun control. I have my own personal position on that. But I believe no matter what laws may be passed, people will always be able to purchase guns and weapons to do heinous acts.

The issue is not one of gun laws. It comes down to a matter of God's laws.

The madness will end when people realize and accept completely that every person is a creation of God; that each person is worthy of love and respect; that every person deserves to be treated kindly.

The madness will end when people stop thinking it is okay to do anything they desire in order to grab attention and feel important.

The madness will end when selfishness and a sense of entitlement are understood to be a devastating mindset in our society.

Our Lord says, "Love your neighbor as yourself." If each person did that, there would no longer be any senseless killing. There would be plenty of food and resources to go around. There would be a true sense of well-being among people.

Let us all strive to do better at bringing an end to the madness. It may seem like an insurmountable task. But if we each start to bring about change in ourselves first, a major first step will have been made.

The Rev. Mark Broadhead is pastor at Laurel Hill Presbyterian Church and First Presbyterian Church of Crestview.

"The issue is not one of gun laws. It comes down to a matter of God's laws."

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: 'Love your neighbor as yourself'

Goodell runs a congressionally-sanctioned Monopoly; he needs to go

With all the cowardly decisions, especially the recent National Anthem enforcement and the concussions deceptions, the real question is: Why does Roger Goodell make $44 million a year for running the NFL, a monopoly sanctioned by Congress?

Maybe the NFL is in cahoots with Washington to distract the citizenry from lawmakers’ own doings, much like the “bread and circuses” of ancient Rome. Football diverts attention and placates the masses. (It’s also said to satisfy men’s innate lust for war but, just to make sure, Washington has us in a bunch of real wars, too.)

President Trump, to his credit, clearly loves football; why else would he wear that helmet hair? But getting rid of the taxpayer-subsidized, tax-exempt status, antitrust exemptions, etc. of the NFL would be a good move for Trump right now.

With all its revenues, why can’t the NFL stand on its own? Anheuser-Busch alone paid $1.4 billion for NFL rights. If you want to sell beer to 18-34-year-old males, the NFL’s the place. If you want to sell power tools, also advertise on the NFL.

The American justice system, like the NFL, has tons of laws and rules, often laws layered upon laws by the ruling classes so they can prosecute whom they want, when they want, for whatever they want. Thus, it is within the power of the NFL and its beleaguered commissioner, Roger Goodell, to pursue one thing and not another. Just ask “Deflate-gate” victim Tom Brady.

Goodell has had a long string of odd decisions. He toyed with penalties for uttering the N-word or sexist slurs. Yet he weighed free speech issues and reached a compromise: Players can listen to rap music but are not allowed to sing along.

Goodell has dictatorially tinkered with some rules; he once decreed that players can no longer celebrate TDs by dunking the football over the goalpost crossbars. That didn’t go over well. If Americans wanted to watch a sport with no dunking, we’d watch Ivy League college basketball.

Goodell threatened North Carolina and threatened to pull the Super Bowl from Arizona over legislation he viewed as anti-gay. He didn’t follow through with his threat, but the publicity dashed any hopes Arizona or North Carolina had of hosting the Tony Awards. And the gay rodeo business is non-existent in Arizona now. The NFL and Goodell feel that strongly homophobic attitudes should be confined to rap songs and its locker rooms.

California’s liberal laws create issues which make governing the NFL difficult. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said the NFL should allow players to smoke pot. Yet if a player gets arrested for a bag of weed in California, the pot is legal but the plastic bag is illegal. Now with the Chargers, Raiders, Rams and 49ers floundering there, California has apparently also declared itself a sanctuary state for bad NFL teams.

The League is in constant litigation settlements. The NFL Oakland Raiderettes cheerleaders sued and settled with the team for $1,250,000 — or, as their lawyers told the ladies, a quarter-million dollars.

Per Snopes: Here’s what the game Operations Manual says regarding the National Anthem, according to an NFL spokesperson:

"During the National Anthem, players on the field and bench area should stand at attention, face the flag, hold helmets in their left hand, and refrain from talking. The home team should ensure that the American flag is in good condition. It should be pointed out to players and coaches that we continue to be judged by the public in this area of respect for the flag and our country. Failure to be on the field by the start of the National Anthem may result in discipline, such as fines, suspensions, and/or the forfeiture of draft choice(s) for violations of the above, including first offenses."

So Goodell does not enforce the NFL rule that teams must stand for the National Anthem, yet he prosecutes Tom Brady for “Deflate-gate.”

Ron Hart is a libertarian op-ed humorist and award-winning author. Contact him at Ron@RonaldHart.com or @RonaldHart on Twitter.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Goodell runs a congressionally-sanctioned Monopoly; he needs to go

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