Thursday, December 30, 2004 

Customer Service Blahs

The New York Times (NYT) headline today, Customer Service: The Hunt for a Human, strikes a cord with many online shoppers. The NYT looks at the arrogance surrounding Amazon.com and CEO Jeff Bezos’s refusal to put Amazon.com’s toll free Customer Service number on their web site. The wheezing weedy-boy spokesman, Craig Berman, of Amazon said in a statutorily senile statement:
Amazon sees no reason to apologize for its decision to leave the customer-service phone number off its Web site. "We've found that customers really do appreciate the self-service features we've got."
As The Anchoress said of her grandmother’s favorite retort, Balls, or in my vernacular, Amazon.com and the many other companies willing to take your money but skip the customer service, they have lost their cojones! As an individual who holds degrees in Management and Marketing it is time for many online companies to relearn Marketing 101, Customer Satisfaction makes money. Amazon.com is not alone; look at Dell and many other technological companies outsourcing their technical service to India and the Philippines.

Not all is lost; there are individuals who experienced poor service in the past striking back. Either in the form of an individual boycott or as in the case of Ellen Hobbs of Austin Texas posting Amazon.com’s toll free Customer Service number 1 (800) 201-7575 on her web site clicheideas.com/amazon.htm or Lou Garcia, president of the “Society of Consumer Affairs Professionals in Business,” located in Alexandria, Virginia, posting customer service information on many companies at the web site pueblo.gsa.gov/crh/corpormain.shtml.

Monday, December 27, 2004 

Unfinished Business and What's Coming

While The Lady starts on her yearly ritual of taking down the Christmas decorations and getting ready for a visit by her twin sister from Levittown, Pennsylvania, on Friday, we should spend our time looking at unfinished business and what more faces our community Sumter County.
The idea came to me after reading Mayor Bubba’s Newsletter yesterday morning. And folks, if you don’t read Mayor Bubba, you are missing news and events connected to our history, local happenings, and the importance of your faith in a Judeo-Christian God.

Unfinished Business:

  • Follow-up with Susan Wild on history of the Fantasy of Lights

  • Complete my post on “A Miracle Unseen”

  • Contact S.C. Dept. of Commerce on the new Paper Mill $125M investment (announced Tuesday December 14, 2004) and define the statement “competition for the company’s …capital was fierce.” How much did it cost taxpayers and what promises did the state make in the face of such “fierce competition?”

Ideas for the Future:

  • Follow up on some ideas generated by Mayor Bubba’s Newsletter of December 26, 2004, Who monitors traffic; how much traffic is “too much” for the existing infrastructure; who determines what’s needed for any correction if needed; who pays for the improvements; and who makes these decisions
  • Before a new development, i.e., I-Hop, Chili’s, old Ryan’s, and the possibility of a new mall location across from Goodwin on Broad Street Ext. that will include the indistinguishable Mr. Scrooge of department stores, Target
  • Who looks at the traffic protocol of a before and afterMayor Bubba mentioned the intersection of US 441 and US 76 just beyond Shaw AFB as being the worst in the State. What makes it the worst and what if any are the corrective actions needed to make this area more safe
  • Try to get numbers on traffic accidents and fatalities in the city, county and surrounding areas and a number of wrecker service pickups during this time frame
  • Print a list of the Sumter County Legislative Delegation and arrange to get to know a little more information on each one – what is their job, how much control or influence do they have over the expenditure of taxpayers’ money and lives

I’ll leave it for now and will begin in earnest as we look forward to a new year in Sumter and the changes that face us in 2005 and beyond.

Peace from the Barber Shop…


Saturday, December 25, 2004 

An Unselfish Spirt...

John Hendrix 12.25.04 NYT

The New York Times is not my favorite of the Main Street Media (MSM) but in the Op-Ed Contributor section, Kent Haruf has written a brief reverie from today’s world titled, A Life on the Plains. Please, take time on this Christmas day to travel back into the early 1920’s and beyond to relive the life and caricature of a father that brought no crocodile tears to this OL’ man’s face.

Sunday, December 19, 2004 

Target Stores - Scrooge Continues

Hugh Hewitt writes today about an article in the December 18, 2004, Atlanta Journal Constitution concerning a polling taken of recent shoppers at Target Department stores. Read the article and remember Target and their continued Scrooge attitude towards the Salvation Army.

A portion of Mr. Hewitt’s writing is as follows:
The article makes clear that customers have been shunning the Scrooge of American retailers, and only an incredibly stubborn management team will continue in this course. It is not a one-year, one-Christmas-season disaster. The damage will go on and will grow as Target's obstinate refusal to listen to its customers comes to be understood, correctly, as contempt for the opinions of those customers.

Saturday, December 18, 2004 

Let Us Remember Our History

David and Kristin Ezquerra, front right, hold their candles together as they listen to prayers and songs during a candlelight vigil in memory of terrorist attacks victims in Florence, S.C., Saturday, Sept. 15, 2001. (AP Photo/Morning News, James Nedock)

I hope that you will forgive me the extreme lateness before posting this picture of my daughter and her husband in Florence, South Carolina, only four days after the tragedy of 9/11. My daughter found it one day recently as she was surfing the internet for information on that terrible day a Dantesque (imagine the poet Dante’s visceral image of Hell) nightmare. We marveled at it when we saw it in the Florence Morning News the next morning but back then digital was not in our everyday vocabulary as it is today.

We have sadly become apathetically American certainly not all but many. Our recent election proved, in my mind at least, that slightly less than 50% of our population is irritatingly timid when it comes to the war on terror.

Frankly, this writer doesn’t care; no, taking that back there is care but no one and that means no one inside or outside our borders can we allow to threaten our sovereignty as a nation without a fast and decisive retaliation. History lets us see into the past to that day, December 8, 1941, when Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave his immortal speech:

Yesterday, December 7, 1941 – a day which will live in infamy – the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.

And if it takes 10 years 20 years the fact that we allowed a breach in our sovereignty must be dealt with by an iron fist and not the global impotence of the smart-alecky kid on the international scene, the sodomites out of the United Nations. Also, if you doubt the work our Armed Forces are doing in Iraq, go visit Iraq The Model, selected this year as the Best Non-American Blog.

Friday, December 17, 2004 

Courage and the Teddy Bear

A must read! See what we here at home do NOT see on the daily propaganda of the Main Street Media (MSM). You can find out about the awesome and calm-clarity of courage shown by one young Iraqi child by linking to Blackfive here.

Ask yourself this question, “What small contribution can I possibly make to the men, women, and children of Iraq who the MSM consciously fails to show you who want democracy and freedom?” Read Blackfive’s blog and he can point the way. Let us make a difference…

Thursday, December 16, 2004 

Target Stores Down For The Count

That’s right, Target’s on the mat and the count is nearing ten and out. Wal-Mart just pinned Target and its new Management (old Coca-Cola team) and Marketing program against the mat. Wal-Mart announced today that it would donate $1,000,000.00 – that’s one million dollars folks – to the red-kettle donations of the Salvation Army.

You remember, the wise and apathetically constricted management of Target Department Stores decided it was in their best interests this year to deny the red-kettle bell ringers of the Salvation Army in front of their stores this Christmas season. Please see Hugh Hewitt here and Betsy’s Page here for more information. Let us just hope that at some point the cadaverous management of Target will eventually become the changed Ebenezer Scrooge and not that of the grotesque and former partner of Ebenezer Jacob Marley.

Peace from the Barber Shop…

Wednesday, December 15, 2004 

Newsweek's Christmas Cover Article

Vox Blogli VI: What does Newsweek’s Story on Christmas tell us about Main Stream Media (MSM)?

Hugh Hewitt put out the above question after Newsweek’s cover page article titled Religion: The Birth of Jesus by Jon Mercham asking other Bloggers to comment on Mercham’s lack of scholarly background and open bias to the virgin birth of Jesus as supported by history.

This blog will not be long because 1. This writer is NOT a scholar and holds no degrees other than a Bachelor of Science in Management, Marketing, and Biochemistry sufficient to debate accurately Mr. Mercham 2. To call me a “learned man” is inaccurate also although my hobby is books, history, and 3. My current health problems with a disease affecting memory, well, let’s just say that the phrase, “Keep it simple stupid,” is most appropriate in my case.

After reading the Newsweek article not once but three times my personnel conclusion is that, Mr. Mercham sees “Christianity as a scapegoat of the masses “ and by the way, those words come straight out of the old Cold War Communist Manifesto. Writers come in all shapes, sizes as does their work, an author’s bias cannot but help to show in his or her writings, and the best example to date is Jon Mercham’s article on Christianity. Mercham’s bias shows immediately in two statements. First, Merchams states, “This month more than a billion Christians will commemorate their Lord’s Nativity. Amid candlelight, carols and the commingled smells of cedar and incense, the old tale will unfold again… [Emphasis mine] and second to use Dan Brown’s fictional thriller novel, “The Da Vinci Code,” is hardly a scholarly reference. Many critics and readers see the written word as the matter is good, and the words are good; or the author writes many words, but to no purpose; or the writer has neither good words nor good matter. In my layman’s opinion, Mercham’s, “Religion: The Birth of Jesus” falls squarely in the latter. Where is his substantial matter but more so his documentation to support such a heavy assertion as to validity of Jesus Christ’s birth.

You may have realized by now I am a devout Christian and believe in a Supreme Being although lacking in sufficient knowledge to make a good and scholarly answer to the question. But common sense tells me that after reading a previous Times magazine article on the same subject and then Newsweek’s, the MSM is playing the “political correctness” card which is always so far removed from the millions of us but average everyday citizens. Talking of believing in God reminds me of a story told to me many, many years ago but never forgotten – it was at a time when my faith wavered, as is the norm because we would not be human if we failed to ask questions. The story goes something like this, “An elderly woman ventured into a lecture hall where a young man standing before a large crowd of admires began to talk on his atheistical beliefs. He spoke enthusiastically and passionately for several hours. All the while, the elderly woman sat and listened intently to his every word. At the end of his talk came a question and answer session that went on for more than an hour until finally when the young speaker asked if there were any more questions, the elderly woman slowly rose from her seat and said very politely, ‘ May I please ask you a question?’ If there is no heaven and I do not believe in God I’ve lost nothing, is that correct but if I live my life on this earth believing in a God and there is no God what have I lost but if there is a God and a heaven look at what I have gained eternal life with a Savior who loves me.”

Martin Luther in one of his “Table Talks” wrote, “Aristotle is altogether an epicurean; he holds that God heeds not human creatures, nor regards how we live, permitting us to do at our pleasure. According to him, God rules the world as a sleepy maid rocks a child. Cicero got much further. He collected together what he found good in the books of all the Greek writers. ‘Tis a good argument, and has oftened moved me much, where he proves there is a God, in the living creatures, beasts, and mankind engender their own likeness. A cow always produces a cow; a horse, a horse, &c. Therefore it follows that some being exists which rules everything. In God we may acknowledge the unchangeable and certain motion of the stars in heaven; the sun each day rises and sets in his place; certain as time, we have winter and summer, but as this is done regularly, we neither admire nor regard it.”

Excluding the bible as a source of historical reference as is so often the case with many religious writers of the MSM and the few very, very liberal seminarians, we do have extra historical evidence of Jesus and his life but sadly, I’m not the person qualified for this debate. My credentials come as a Christian believing that Jesus Christ is my savior and that he died for my sins so that I may live.

Peace from the Barber Shop…

Tuesday, December 14, 2004 

A Book For Christmas

This painting is by Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze, American, 1816-1868 titled "George Washington Crossing the Deleware," 1851.

What can I say missed it… Washington’s Crossing, by David Hackett Fisher, Oxford University Press, Published February 14, 2004. If you want to give someone who loves books and history at the same time, consider this genuinely gripping and heroic novel of America’s hard fibered determination for freedom.

Yes, I’m a Bibliophilist a lover of books, just ask any member of my family and take one look at a house crowded no crammed with books, since the age of sixteen (16) and an amateur collector since the age of thirty-two (32). After reading this mornings New York Times’ list of Best Books of 2004, I suddenly realized I had simply missed out on an absorbing historical take on General George Washington’s daring and desperate attempt to change the course of the American Revolutionary War. Washington’s astonishing and covert crossing of the Delaware River in the winter of 1776 struck a blow to the British at Trenton, New Jersey that according to many historians gave ultimate freedom to the colonists from British rule. Yorktown was the climax and surrender of the British but we all know that most if not all war’s have a crucial turning point and the Delaware River was ours. Trenton succumbed to Washington’s clinching and strategic decision in a time of war and to the grimacing tenacity of the troops who followed him.

Monday, December 13, 2004 

Hard Times Ahead - Again

No long post this evening, it appears that a little over a year since my last heart catheterization and stint implant, angina clusters are beginning again. A BUMMER! The scary part, they are waking me up at night necessitating more and more sprays of oral nitroglycerine. Since my first heart attack, I’ve taken a sleeping aid at night. This should give you an idea of the pain severity of each attack. A year ago, I honestly thought I was out of the woods and my frequent bouts with angina would end. Intellectually, I should have known better because of the progressiveness of heart disease. My mother died of a heart attack – I watched her die thus the help sleeping at night by using a sleeping pill. Even then, I put off going to bed as long as I can.

My email to WCOS in Columbia was returned, the Director of Music Glen Garrett would be out of his office until December 20, 2004. I’ll make a call to WCOS in the morning and I understand there is a Country and Western station in Manning, SC, also. I hope that they will participate in honoring the soldier of my last post by playing Toby Keith’s “American Soldier” on Wednesday, December 15, 2004, at 1 pm EST. This post is longer than expected so I’ll sign off and tell you later about our progressive Christmas dinner tonight with our two closest couples and the true meaning of friendship.

Peace and goodnight from the Barber Shop…

Sunday, December 12, 2004 

Death in Iraq: A Special Request

URGENT - read BlackFive’s post of December 9, 2004, Warrior’s Last Request – We Need Your Help!

A death occurred in Iraq on December 3, 2004 of an American soldier by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED). What makes this one different is that he left a letter to his squad should he die with many a thank you and some special requests.

Let us help fulfill at least one of those requests by contacting WCOS, 97.5 FM, in Columbia at (803) 343-1100 or by email to their web site here.

Saturday, December 11, 2004 

A Comment To La Shawn Barber

Reading my favorite Blogs this morning, a post by La Shawn Barber, Question Of The Day: Should Christians Have Anything To Do With Ann Coulter? struck a cord as how do we react to those with whom we truly have a difference of opinion. Ann Coulter is a very feminist and outspoken critic of the political left (Democrats). Even I do not always agree with her opinions but admire her for telling it how she sees it.

The following is my take on La Shawn Barber’s post and the comment made in response to the original question:
Should Christians have anything to do with Ann Coulter?

One could extend the question should Christians have anything to do with someone they may disagree with or simply do not like – George W. Bush, John Kerry, Jessie Jackson, Al Sharpton, the Dixie Chicks, or for that matter the late Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, etc.

Martin Luther once said, “Of Discord,” "When two goats meet upon a narrow bridge over deep water, how do they behave? Neither of them can turn back again, neither can pass the other, because the bridge is too narrow; if they should thrust one another, they might both fall into the water and be drowned; nature, then, has taught them, that if the one lays down and permits the other to go over him, both remain without hurt. Even so people should rather endure to be trod upon, than to fall into debate and discord with another."
Oh, how I wish it could be so in our present day and time.

Friday, December 10, 2004 

James Longstreet - Lee's Maligned General

On our recent visit to the Gettysburg battlefield this fall, the statue of the most maligned of Robert E. Lee’s generals sits unceremoniously among a tree line on the south end of Seminary Ridge. The statue was not erected until July 1998 and only then by private organizations seeking to rebuild the torn and tattered reputation of Longstreet that existed after the war. These and similar perceptions exist in many circles, North and South, to this day. Note that Longstreet’s horse looks out of proportion when compared to his figure - it is, the original design had the statue sitting atop a pedestal thereby allowing the horse and rider to appear in proportion when viewed from the ground. Money became an object and the pedestal was never built. In my opinion, had Lee listened to Longstreet the slaughter of July 3, 1863 would not have occurred and the South would not have lost its most strategic battle during the war.

The following excerpt from the Association Action to Memorialize The Military and Public Service of CSA General James Longstreet gives you a good background on Longstreet:

Lt. General James Longstreet served in the Confederate Army in high command positions from 1861-1865, from Manassas to Appomattox. "Old Pete" (nickname) became known as Lee's "Old War Horse" and the best fighter and corps commander in the Army.

Despite a distinguished military record and several brilliant victories where his prescience, strategic vision and well-executed tactics saved the Army of Northern Virginia from certain destruction, General Longstreet was unfairly scapegoated and blamed for the loss of Gettysburg (and the war itself) for many years after the conflict…

Written on the back cover of William Garrett Piston’s book, Lee’s Tarnished Lieutenant, are the words:

Reconstructing the military career of one of the Confederacy’s most competent but also one of his most vilified corps commanders, Lee’s Tarnished Lieutenant reveals how James Longstreet became, in the years after Appomattox, the Judas of the Lost Cause, the scapegoat for Lee’s and the South’s defeat.

Longstreet’s image as an incompetent who lost the battle of Gettysburg and, by extension, the war itself is underserved, argues William Garrett Piston…


Thursday, December 09, 2004 

Conversation with Susan Wild

Susan Wild, Communication Director for the City of Sumter, and I had a very pleasant conversation today on the history of Sumter’s Fantasy of Lights display. She was able to start at the very beginning and continue through the years as the total concept grew and expanded. We also talked economics, tourism, and taxes and how all three come together in a very coherent package to make the Fantasy of Lights one of Sumter’s largest and free attractions for Sumter and our surrounding counties and to outside tourists.

Ms. Wild will send me within the next few weeks a write up to our conversation, which I will immediately pass on to you. My desire is to understand the history behind the Fantasy of Lights and its evolution over the years. In addition, I want to pass along how certain taxes and revenues help to promote Sumter as a city for employment and residential and cultural living.


 

An Inspirational Young Soldier

Take a few minutes and read Sgt. Lizzie’s Blog for an inspirational and introspective view on the front lines in Iraq. Sgt. Lizzie is now recovering from injuries sustained when a Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) hit her convoy truck. The driver was killed and Sgt. Lizzie hung upside down pinned for forty-five minutes until fellow soldiers were able to cut her out.

No matter what your feelings are about this war let us not forget our soldiers in “Harms Way.” They and their families need our continued support and prayers. For a better look at why soldiers fight and die, we have to travel back in time to the history of the Civil War. The Pulitzer Prize winning author, James M. McPherson in his book, For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War, gives us a new insight into this question and remains as true today as it was then.

Tuesday, December 07, 2004 

One Single Event, One Single Day

Today, December 7, 2004, marks sixty-three (63) years since the surprise and unprovoked attack upon America by Japan. Power Line has an excellent post titled, Pearl Harbor Day 2004, which deserves reading by all. Please take the time to read it and reflect on the history of then and the struggles America faces today.

I do not make it a habit of using the same post on both of my Blogs, WizzyWig and Barber Shop, but made an exception in this case. Since my health is not cooperating lately, several days have elapsed since my last posting - for that I apologize.

Saturday, December 04, 2004 

Three Powerful Words

What are the three most powerful words a person can say or hear in any language on our planet? Can you name them? Until several minutes ago I could not I had forgotten them even though I have heard them in sermons many times and read them repeatedly in my bible over the years.

It took a movie; A Season for Miracles my wife and I were watching to remind me the power that lies in but three innocuous and quiet words. Have you remembered them yet? Three words but the power they have when said or heard at that special, special time in an individuals life. What are they?

I forgive you…

Peace

Friday, December 03, 2004 

Target Still Battling Salvation Army

The San Francisco Chronicle ran a story on Mervyn’s department stores reversing their opinion to bar the Salvation Army red-kettle bell-ringers. Let us hope that Target comes to see the arrogance and futility of their actions soon. Send your “polite” concerns to guest.relations@target.com.

Peace…

Thursday, December 02, 2004 

Our Fallen Heroes

On December 1, 2004 my favorite Blog, Power Line, posted a readers recognition of the Fallen Heroes Memorial blog here. On December 2, 2004, a reader wrote Power Line here a very emotional account of one of his students that had fallen in Iraq. Please read the blog Fallen Heroes often and keep in mind that a total of 23 South Carolina soldiers have so far given their lives for us in a battle for freedom while we over here continue on with our daily lives.

Peace...

Wednesday, December 01, 2004 

Fantasy of Lights

I got off a call to Susan Wild, Communications Director for the City of Sumter, early this afternoon. Unfortunately, I had to leave a message on her voice-mail asking her to return my call. Ms. Wild is an energetic young woman who continues to accomplish exciting experiences for our Sumter community. On this particular day I was looking for historical background on the Fantasy of Lights at Sumter's Swan Lake Gardens. If you have not yet taken the tour, please do so. The light show will last from November 27, 2004 through December 31, 2004. I hope to talk with Ms. Wild to get, as I stated previously, a historical perspective on the who, when and how the idea originated.

Peace...

 

Response from Target

Target responded to my email, November 18, 2004, addressed to their Guest Relations Department on their decision not to allow the Salvation Army bell-ringers this Christmas season. It is as follows:
Subject: The Salvation Army

Dear Ed,

Like many nationwide retailers, Target Corporation has a long-standing "no
solicitation" policy that it consistently applies to all organizations
across all of its stores.

We receive an increasing number of solicitation inquiries from non-profit
organizations and other groups each year and determined that if we continue
to allow the Salvation Army to solicit then it opens the door to any other
groups that wish to solicit our guests. While some of our guests may
welcome the opportunity to support their favorite charity or cause,
allowing these organizations to solicit means that Target would also have
to permit solicitation by organizations whose cause or behavior may be
unacceptable to our guests.

We notified the Salvation Army of our decision in January 2004, well in
advance of the holiday season, so the organization would have time to find
alternative fundraising sources. Target also asked the Salvation Army to
look at other ways that we could support their organization under our
corporate giving guidelines. To this date, they have not provided a proposal
that fits those guidelines.

Local Salvation Army chapters can apply for grants through their local
Target stores. For decades, many non-profit organizations across the country
have successfully worked with Target in this manner. We are asking the
Salvation Army to work with us in the same exact manner as the other groups
and organizations who ask to solicit our guests.

This decision in no way diminishes Target Corporation's commitment to its
communities. Target has one of the largest corporate philanthropy programs
in America, donating more than $2 million per week and hundreds of
thousands of volunteer hours each year to the communities in which it does
business.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Hanson
Target Executive Offices
I will try tomorrow to get a comment from the National office of the Salvation Army in Washington, DC, to see if they are continuing to work with Target on alternative plans as suggested in the above e-mail.

Peace…

 

A Target Store for Sumter, Maybe

Yesterday, November 30, 2004, I spoke with Major Newton Brown of the Salvation Army, 16 Kendrick Street, Sumter, SC 29150 and Mr. Ray Reich, City of Sumter Department of Growth and Development. Mayor Newton told me that between the three counties of Sumter, Kershaw, and Clarandon the Salvation Army through its bell-ringing program they collected for the 2003 Christmas season $72,172.14. Of this money, 100% stays in our communities to help the needy.

Mr. Reich was very pleasant but said he could not confirm that a Target Department store was intending to build in Sumter. He also said that until all leases have been signed and all the other legal documents signed he could not verify my question. We did talk in general that should a large retail store such as Target decide to build in Sumter property tax revenue would increase significantly and the city would most likely recoup its initial outlay of monies for improvement, i.e., water and sewer in about a year. He compared this to the city annexing in residential property with a recoupment time for city improvements of five years or more.

If a Target store does come to Sumter, it would certainly not be in time for this year’s holiday season. Much can change between now and next year and hopefully with Target facing national pressure on its Scrooge attitude towards the Salvation Army’s Christmas holiday Bell Ringing program they will reconsider their decision.

In deference to Target Department Stores, they do sponsor Target House, “long term housing for families whose children are receiving life-saving treatment at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.”

However, let us not forget the real reason we celebrate Christmas the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Our Lord who came among us as a man taught us the “lowliness of mind and unselfishness of spirit” not only with words but also by action. Before the Last Supper Jesus washed and dried the feet of all his disciples even to include the one who would later betray him.

Jesus then asked his disciples, “Do you understand the meaning of what I have done to you?”

“You call me your Teacher and your Lord, and you are right, for I am both Teacher and Lord. Well, if I, who am your Teacher and your Lord, have washed your feet, you ought to wash each other's feet. I have set you an example, that you should do what I have done to you. I tell you truly, a servant is not greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sends him. If you know all this, you are happy if you do them.”

The next time you see that small red kettle and bell-ringer let us all remember Christ’s so humbling action and place a donation inside. Those pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and more may help wash the feet of one person in so much need physically and spiritually.

Peace…