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Wound too tight

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Stress OutGetting more upset lately: Too tense in situations that require calm, too easily angered when confronted and too disposed to lose control.

Maybe the stress comes from being too close to things. Maybe it stems from caring too much about what happens around us. Maybe it’s just frustration with the hidden agendas that seem to be so much a part of life nowadays.

Maybe. Not sure.

Maybe it’s exhaustion. Maybe it’s a case of just being wound too tight right now. Maybe a break is required. Maybe a vacation is in order. Maybe all that’s needed is a good night’s sleep.

Maybe.

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Creigh Deeds campaign in Floyd

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Creigh Deeds campaigns in Floyd

As Virginia’s state and local election campaigns head into the final week, Democrat Creigh Deeds continues to sink in the polls and many voters, looking at the two choices available for governor, feel like a Christian Scientist with appendicitis. They don’t know what the hell to do when they go into the polls.

But most just want the campaigns to end. The mud-slinging has reached an all-time high this election season and polls show a majority of voters are sick and tired of the flood of negative ads.

The Washington Post reports today:

Republican Robert F. McDonnell carries a double-digit lead over Democrat R. Creigh Deeds in the final week of the campaign for Virginia governor, according to a new Washington Post poll.

The Republican, briefly buffeted in the polls by voters’ initial reaction to the publication of his 1989 graduate school thesis, has rebounded to big advantages on the top issues, particularly taxes, and is now seen as the more effective leader, more honest and more empathetic. McDonnell is also buoyed by support outside Northern Virginia, where he is outperforming all other top-of-the-ticket Republican candidates this decade.

Statewide, McDonnell leads Deeds among likely voters by 55 to 44 percent. McDonnell, who narrowly defeated Deeds in the race for attorney general four years ago, has been above 50 percent among likely voters in all four Post polls in the campaign.

The poll shows that Deeds has been unable to shift the dynamics of a race that in recent weeks appeared to be slipping away from him. Despite a concerted effort to reverse a widespread voter perception that his campaign has been largely negative, more than six in 10 polled see the Democrat as running a mainly negative effort. By contrast, most see McDonnell’s campaign as a predominantly positive one.

Deeds has also been unable to excite his supporters and close the dramatic gap in enthusiasm McDonnell has held from the start. About a quarter of Deeds voters say they are supporting him “not too” enthusiastically or “not at all” enthusiastically. More than nine in 10 of those who back McDonnell are “very” enthusiastic or “fairly” enthusiastic about the Republican.

Locally, most voter attention is focused on the Supervisor race in the normally-Democratic Courthouse District between Republican Case Clinger and former Floyd Town Manager Mike Maslaney, a Democrat running as an independent. Outgoing supervisor Jerry Boothe, a Democrat turned Republican, is supporting Clinger and Masleney has some baggage from his involvement, as a member of the county Economic Development Authority, in the controversial data center deal that went south last Friday when Data Knight 365 failed to come up with a $100,000 down payment on purchase of land for the deal and documents delivered to the county left more questions than answers.

Several voters who live outside the Courthouse District tell me they might not vote this year because neither McDonnell or Deeds gives them any reason for support.

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A busy week in our quiet little town

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Shaping up to be a busy week. The trial of Jeffrey Young, charged with assaulting an employee of Slaughter’s Supermarket in the store parking lot, starts today with jury selection in the Circuit Courtroom of the County Courthouse. Young is claiming he was insane when he hit the woman with his car and then clubbed her in front of witnesses.

The trial is expect to last 2-3 days.

On Tuesday night, the county Economic Development Authority meets to write what most expect will be the final chapter of the Data Knight 365 (DK3) saga and the aborted attempt of the company, which really existed only on paper, to buy 51.5 acres of land for a purported data center in the county’s Commerce Park.

And this is the final week for our studio, Blue Ridge Muse, at The Village Green in Floyd. We close Friday and will finish moving out on Saturday.

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Winding down

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Blue Ridge Muse, the studio, closes its doors at the end of next week, ending a failed experiment.

While sadness remains over ending a two-year tour at Floyd’s Village Green, a sense of relief also comes into play. No more worrying about keeping books, cataloging expenses and going aobut the day-to-day busy work that comes from trying to keep a small business up and running.

Small business failures continue to rise nationwide even as the talking heads in Washington claim we are coming out of the largest recession since the Great Depression.

Maybe we are, maybe we aren’t. Running a small business no longer concerns Amy or I. I intend to concentrate on early retirement, along with serving my existing web hosting and web site clients, covering county government and the courts for The Floyd Press, and shooting photos of high school sports for both the paper and parents.

Bue Ridge Muse the web site will continue as a local news/blog. So will my political web site, Capitol Hill Blue and my motorcycle blog, Road Kill Diaries. I’m working on some other web and video projects so staying busy won’t be a problem.

One chapter ends, another begins. Life goes on.

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Say what?

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This is not the kind of headline a 61-year-old man named Doug Thompson wants to see as he scans the news:

Doug Thompson, 61, had been buried by the time his family heard he had died

Say what? I’m 61 but still had a pulse the last time I checked. So I clicked on the headline and discovered the Doug Thompson in question lived in Ottawa.

Escaped another close one.

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Murphy was an optimist

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Anyone who has worked with databases knows that when they go haywire chasing down a solution can drive your crazy.

I saw that Sunday when a glitch in the database that serves content to Blue Ridge Muse hiccuped and comments by users disappeared from the posts.

The comments were still in the database and even appeared in the “recent comments” listing in the far right-hand column of the pages but they could not be found on the pages.

After running a number of tests (and gritting my teeth a lot) I found a routine database update had changed the ID number of “anonymous” posters and this caused the comments to disappear. Once that was corrected, everything worked again and we were back in business.

Ah, technology.

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Floyd, we have a problem

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A glitch somewhere in our database has caused a problem with our comment system and comments disappeared from the pages (although they were still in our database).

As with most database problems, it took a while to track down the problem.

Everything seems to be working fine now. Thanks for your patience.

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Bomb threats breed more bomb threats

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Over the past eight days, three bomb threats have sent students out of school in Floyd — two at the high school and one at the elementary.

On Wednesday, police and school administrators moved students from Floyd Elementary School to the auditorium at the high school just up the hill after a bomb threat was found written on a bathroom wall.

This followed another written threat that emptied the high school the day before and one that sent students into the field at the front of the school last week.

In all three cases, written threats appeared at the schools. None were phoned in.

Besides the surge in bomb threats, graffiti and vandalism are on the increase in Floyd County.

What the hell is going on?

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After watching Virginia’s two gubernatorial wannabes hack away at each other in a televised debate Monday night, I’m hoping this year’s ballot has a a check box for “none of the above.”

Neither Bath County’s Creigh Deeds or Northern Virginia’s Bob McDonnell gave an informed viewer any reason to put either one in the governor’s mansion for the next four years.

If these two are the best that Virginia’s Republican and Democratic parties have to offer then the Commonwealth is headed for a lot of trouble.

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The missing lake at Mountain Lake

Some feel Mountain Lake should be called “Mountain Pond” or perhaps “Disappearing Lake” because the Giles County landmark goes into a seasonal disappearing act with drops in water levels that get increasingly severe.

The lakefront once came to the dock (above) but now is way off in the distance because of level of the lake dropped from leakage and dry conditions over the past few years.

The scene today is a far cry from 1987 when Hollywood came to the resort to film Dirty Dancing with Patrick Swayze, Jennifer Grey and Jerry Orbach. Of course, in true Hollywood tradition, they put the resort in the Catskills, not Virginia. Swayze’s death from cancer generated some interest in visiting the area but those who come expecting to find a lake find a field where the lake used to be. Some will be at the lake in November for two Patrick Swayze Memorial Weekends.

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