Town investigation underway after Fowler trustee accused of racist social media comments

The town of Fowler has commenced an investigation into Trustee Shaun Luttrell after he was accused of racist comments on the Rocky Ford Word of Mouth Facebook page on Friday.

Editor’s Note: This story was reported in February 2025.

The town of Fowler has commenced an investigation into Trustee Shaun Luttrell after he was accused of racist comments on the Rocky Ford Word of Mouth Facebook page on Friday.

“Your just mad Google took it off the calendar,” Luttrell said in a comment under a post celebrating Black History Month.

The original post, shared by Rocky Ford resident Daeja Jones, was a collage of Black activists Fred Hampton, Huey Newton, Malcolm X, Khalid Muhammad, Marcus Garvey and Stokely Carmichael.

Superimposed over the collage was the message, “A moment of silence for those who made the ultimate sacrifice.”

Luttrell’s comment about Black History Month being removed from Google calendars garnered dozens of disapproving replies.

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A review of the Suicide Squad movie (the bad one)

It’s been a long time since I’ve written a blog post.

Yep. A long time. And this is just a plug to a review I wrote almost 10 years ago. Wowzah! Fortunately but also a little unfortunately, a lot of writing I do these days is for other publishers. But that doesn’t mean I can’t reminisce. The piece below is another article I wrote for another publisher – one of my first published pieces under another entity. One I’m happy and eager to share.

First off, I’m very happy to see Gamespresso – the first videogame outlet I freelanced for – is alive and well. Nowadays, I’m a smalltown journalist writing about issues my community finds important (or are important whether they like it or not).

But I am still a magnet and sponge for all things nerdy, and I hope to return in some capacity to the world of games and movies at some point in some way. Vague? Yes. That’s – not how I like it, actually, being a fact seeker and all. But them’s the ropes. Without further adieu, here’s my old Suicide Squad film (the bad one) review. And a link to my other stuff at Gamespresso.

Another shoutout to Gamespresso: https://www.gamespresso.com/

Suicide Squad (2016): What was Warner Bros. thinking?

The cinematic DC Extended Universe got off to a troubling start with Man of Steel and its subpar sequel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. But despite those films’ flaws, Suicide Squad has been highly anticipated since it was first announced. While the latest Superman films first gained – and then subsequently lost – intrigue for their darker, more “realistic” take on the story of Superman, Suicide Squad promises a much lighter movie filled with laughter, guns and fun – and it delivers, but not without damaging some vital goods in the process.

Read more at Gamespresso.

Long Live the King

The king frowned as he observed the villagers below in quiet contempt. They were gathered near the base of his tower around a raging bonfire and conversed over a sparse yet merry dinner. They were happy, despite the poverty they shared. Their ignorance made the king furious. The throne room was empty save a body sprawled across the floor. A series of man-sized capsules lined the west wall. Only two were functional, the rest had been welded shut and smeared over with black tar. Pink mist gathered within one and hummed softly as it took the form of a human, first with bone and muscle, then with flesh and blood. A young naked man stepped from the tube and kneeled before the king. “I am thirsty,” said his Majesty. “Ergo, get me some water.” Ergo nodded. He put on a tattered robe hung on the wall and made to exit. The king’s voice boomed. “And bring me stones.” Ergo wavered. He sighed and faced the king. “Your Majesty? Why must you hit them with stones?” “Because it is of no consequence.” “But they suffer.” “They suffer now. I end the suffering. Ergo, bring me stones.” Ergo bowed in silence and disappeared. He returned with a cup of water and a wheelbarrow of stones and placed them at the king’s side. His Majesty clapped with callous pleasure and punched a button on the wall. The great window opened to the dark, draping sky. The wind nipped at their faces, forcing Ergo away from the ledge. The king held his place, frozen in disgusted contemplation. He leered and spit. The wind delivered his saliva into Ergo’s eyes, who shuddered. “A stone,” he said. His palm was open and waiting. Ergo hesitated. He looked from the king to the peasants below and back again. To be enjoying a hot meal by the fire only to blink out of existence as a massive rock crashed through his skull… “A stone,” the king demanded, “or throw yourself over, and end my suffering.” Ergo lifted a stone, paused to study it. Its surface was coarse and flawed, withered into imperfection through eons of indifferent stillness. He closed his eyes and clenched the rock. Then he struck the king from behind, toppling him forward. The king flailed through the bitter wind until the tower battlements impaled him. The servant smiled through a stream of tears. Behind Ergo one of the working tubes began to generate the familiar pink mist. A youthful voice filled the vacant throne room. “Ergo,” the voice said. “I am thirsty.”

Two Pieces Are Available in Georgia’s Emerging Writers Anthology

I’m excited to announce that Georgia’s Emerging Writers has officially released! In this anthology for up and coming writers, you can read two stories by me: Adventures in the Land of Not-America, nonfiction, and a fiction piece titled Appetizers. Consider purchasing a copy to support myself and other emerging writers and publications! Thanks to everyone who has already purchased a copy. It means a lot.

Purchase your copy at Amazon or Z Publishing House’s website.

 

 

Changing Climate Impacts our Environment and Economy

Oliver Manufacturing sits on the outskirts of La Junta, Colorado, in what’s known as the Arkansas Valley. From our offices, one can watch the wind carry tumbleweeds across the dry plains or spot summer storms developing on the horizon. We always hope for those storms to drift our way, bearing with them refreshing rains, but they rarely do. It’s something that I long ago came to accept about the region I grew up in. And yet, every year seems to swelter more than the last. Read more

Farmers Upset as Trade War Finally Unfolds, USDA Considers Subsidies

As US soybean farmers feel the weight of Trump’s trade war, the president’s staff considers dipping into federal Treasury funds to shield them from Chinese retaliatory tariffs.

Consideration to use Treasury funds comes at a time when the national debt is fast approaching record highs. By 2019, the federal budget deficit is expected to reach $1.1 trillion.

The US deficit is soaring toward such a perilous high thanks in part to the 2018 Republican tax cuts.

Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue says that the USDA is considering the use of the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) to subsidize farmers. Further details have yet to be revealed.

Some farmers don’t necessarily want a short-term fix to the president’s problem, but a long -term solution instead.

“I just don’t like the idea of the government coming up with some balm to spread over wounds that are self-inflicted. It seems to be a huge moral hazard problem,” USDA chief Joseph Glauber reportedly told The Financial Times.

Concerns stem from Chinese retaliations to the president’s tariffs, which went into full effect at 12:01 a.m., Friday, July 5.

Trade Wars End Game

As published on SeedWorld.com.

2018 promised a lot for soybean producers. In February, the USDA predicted that annual US soybean exports would break 2.5 billion bushels by 2020. Brazil expected to surpass production of approximately 70 million to 110 million bushels this year.

These predictions boded well for soybean producers and sellers, as well as processing and conditioning equipment manufacturers. However, on March 8, President Donald Trump imposed steel and aluminum import tariffs of 25 and 10 percent, respectively, with temporary exemptions for Canada, Mexico and the European Union.

American steel suppliers took advantage of the situation, and increased steel prices passed from manufacturers to their end-users — some of whom were soybean producers. Following China’s subsequent decision to block all imports of US soybeans in retaliation to American tariffs, a more promising outcome for the American soybean market billowed away. Five months of quaky trade talks later, and what has formed in the absence of a positive year is a toxic cloud of uncertainty and insecurity.

China and the US briefly appeared to resolve the trade dispute after the president stated that he planned to bail out Chinese telecommunications company, ZTE. China and the US rescinded their tariffs, only for President Trump to impose them again and for China to threaten the same. Since then, the two powers have been interlocked in an ambiguous state of contention.

Much like Schrodinger with his cat, it seems that the very act of observing Trump’s foreign trade policy is enough to change it. The trade war is dead. In a blink, it looms on the horizon, very much alive. I dread what effect that the very act of writing this article may have on the space-time continuum.

Trump initiates a trade war against China, states that NAFTA must be renegotiated on a basis of national security, and, in utter tone-deafness, saves ZTE, the Chinese company that pleaded guilty in 2017 to violating US trade sanctions on Iran and North Korea.

It is important to note that ZTE illegally sold American technology to Iran and North Korea; sanctions aside, the theft of American intellectual property is exactly what the president used in addition to a deficit as justification for tariffs against China in the first place. (And there goes the space-time continuum.)

On the other side of the world, China threatens tariffs one day and then actually offers to increase the import of American sorghum the next. Meanwhile, American soybean producers have no choice but to brace themselves and cross their fingers as the pendulum swings.

What lies next for the United States and China is uncertain. And things were further complicated from America’s perspective on May 29, when Mexican President Peña Nieto declared a 25% tariff on imported US goods such as pork, cranberries, bourbon and American steel. Mexico, Canada and the European Union were originally exempted from US tariffs, but that privilege piddled out days before its May 31 deadline when Trump declared that he would prefer to renegotiate NAFTA with each member nation separately.

Canada, France and Japan have also recently drawn their own lines against the Trump administration’s aggressive metals duties.

American steel has thus far benefited from these tumultuous negotiations. But how will such an unpredictable and volatile environment affect manufacturing and agriculture in the near and distant future? Why is the President of the United States helping an adversarial foreign company at the expense of the industries that support the country he leads? And where exactly do steel, manufacturing and agriculture fit into this administration’s end game?

Press to Make Music

Disclaimer: Some dates and figures have been approximated.

The opening scene is an interpretation of my experiences with EDM shows and festivals.

It’s nighttime. Stars dapple the sky but nobody notices. Over the rolling hills softened by greening grass, hundreds of people, mostly ages eighteen to twenty five, crowd together. A cacophony of chatter and laughter rises from the crowd. It mixes with the smoke of spliffs and cigarettes and drifts away on a lazy breeze. Some are drinking beer while others sip water from thin rubber hoses attached to their backpacks. Some are sitting cross-legged on blankets and a few are even dancing. Some are quiet; some are still. Waiting, watching the world through widened pupils.

Everyone is happy. Read more

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