With no active political races and a fairgrounds population returning after a 2020 hiatus caused by the global COVID pandemic, this summer’s return to the Neshoba County Fairgrounds was wonderful but there was an underlying tone that things had not quite returned to normal.
The largest crowd of the week was undeniably the Tuesday night grandstand concert presented by rising Nashville country music singer/songwriter Hardy – but Michael Hardy is after all a Philadelphia native son whose family owns one of the cabins. He’s the son of Mike and Sarah Hardy and the grandson of Bobby and Joyce Hardy.
While Hardy and veteran Nashville star Trace Adkins packed the racetrack grandstand, it was college football – not politics – that packed this year’s Founder’s Square Pavilion as University of Southern Mississippi Head Coach Will Hall, Ole Miss Head Coach Lane Kiffin, and Mississippi State Head Coach Mike Leach participated in a first-ever fairgrounds roundtable to talk about their upcoming seasons.
Hall was impressive and Golden Eagle fans have a lot to look forward to in their future with this young man. But the crowd under the tin roof was clearly there to see the exchanges between Leach and Kiffin – and neither disappointed. The bottom line is that for the first time in many years, the two coaches battling each other in the Egg Bowl seem to genuinely like and respect each other.
That doesn’t mean that they each aren’t dead set no winning that contest, but it does mean that the two respective fan bases can learn a lot from watching this pair interact. The same can be said for how baseball fans from across the state – regardless of their individual allegiances – clamored to see and get selfies with MSU’s 2021 NCAA Baseball National Championship trophy while it was briefly on display at Neshoba.
On the political front, the rise of the COVID “Delta Variant” and accompanying debates over mask requirements, vaccines, and the prospects of possible returns to some form of societal closures or interruptions were active and lively.
I left the fairgrounds convinced that the next month to six weeks will determine the answers to those questions and concerns. Will folks, even the vaccinated, return to wearing masks as a deterrent to the Delta Variant? Will concern over rising Delta Variant numbers fuel an uptick in voluntary vaccinations?
Without question, there is a public health stream and there is a political stream. The public health stream is offering information regarding the rapid, almost uncontrolled spread of the Delta Variant even among the vaccinated.
But the political stream – at the federal and state level – sees politicians avoiding any serious discussion of vaccine requirements and at least public scoffing at mask requirements. That in spite of concern about a simultaneous increase in Delta Variant infections and cases of another virus known as respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, a highly contagious flu-like illness that is generally more likely to affect children and older adults.
As in the old “Ghostbusters” movie, the warning – at least for politicians navigating conflicting public opinion on COVID, is “don’t cross the streams.”
Finally, this writer joins so many Mississippians this week in mourning the passing of talk radio personality JT Williamson, who died Saturday hours after the close of the 2021 Fair. Prior to his cancer battle, JT was a frequent visitor at our cabin and we will long miss him.
We did not always agree on politics, but I enjoyed JT’s company immensely and he was always kind, generous and ready to help others through his statewide platform.
His unselfish work on behalf of autistic children and raising funds for Palmer Home are his monuments – along with his own outstanding children. Rest in peace, brother.
Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com
16 comments:
Thanks for those closing remarks.
Word is a pile of people who attended the fair have the Covid.
What’s the point of this article? It’s just some rambling
Newsflash: 'Some Rambling' is the point of all of Sid's articles. And that of every other article writer. Some people apparently like to pretend to live through the eyes and thoughts of columnists...same as some love to get immersed in Father's Knows Best, Hazel, Days of Our Lives and, John Wayne movies and Gunsmoke. I'm in there somewhere. Are you?
I've never understood the fair. Own a house you can only use 2 weeks out of the year to get drunk, watch horse racing that you never do otherwise, and listen to a bunch of blowhard positicians. Don't believe anyone can convince me that is a good use of resources or money.
The bodies man, the bodies.
welcome to masks forever in the the magnolia state thanks to outbreaks caused by unvaxed people.
Newsflash @1:22
The vaxxed are catching Covid-19, spreading Covid-19, and dying.
Stop blaming victims and start blaming the damn chicoms and their democrat party lapdogs
Lol, back to normal ? WTF is that ?
Never turn down an invitation to a cabin up there.
Hot. Muddy. Drunk or dusty as it may be.
A cabin invitation at Neshoba is not issued to everyone.
If one receives an invitation, they should consider themselves lucky.
"Lol, back to normal ? WTF is that ? "
That's when all the cousins can once again gather and enjoy each others' company with no damned outsiders demanding they wear masks. But still insisting on condom use.
6:11 I’d turn it down. The heat. Hell no.
My friend goes, and I make fun of him every time. If it wasn’t so damn hot on the other hand....
Like, they should really really consider changing the timing of the fair. Think of it as a cabin update. LOL.
Everyone I know that went, vaccinated or not, caught Covid.
8:18 - evidently you don't know many people.
All total there were over 100,000 folks at the fair during its eight day run.
Of all the folks I know who went, probably a couple hundred, I know of two that have tested positive for COVID since.
"8:18 - evidently you don't know many people.
All total there were over 100,000 folks at the fair during its eight day run.
Of all the folks I know who went, probably a couple hundred, I know of two that have tested positive for COVID since."
Er, well, lessee - you know a couple of hundred and a mere two of them have a potentially life-altering or even fatal, highly-transmissible disease. That is 1 in 100. Thankfully, we aren't talking about anything serious...right?
"Newsflash @1:22
The vaxxed are catching Covid-19, spreading Covid-19, and dying.
Stop blaming victims and start blaming the damn chicoms and their democrat party lapdogs". Need to put some of this on our great President Joe. He and his admins policy of releasing unvaxed and sick "New Democratic Voting Americans", from south of the border, into all areas of the country hasn't helped either. Super spreader by any definition.
Post a Comment