Halloween is Coming and Americans Are Scared.


By Dr. Glenn Mollette

Halloween is typically a relaxed day for America's kids to fill their coffers with candy. Children and adults often don their favorite wacky attire for a day of comic relief.

America needs a day of some kind of relief and maybe Halloween will provide some insanity or terror relief. Because nothing about Halloween is as scary as what America and the world has been experiencing.

We have buried over 220,000 Americans from Covid-19. Over eight million have been sick. Nursing homes and Intensive Care Units have become horror wards. The projections for more sickness and death scare most Americans. We are afraid to go to church, out to eat, and to the grocery store. The airplane, hotel and restaurant industries are in peril as many have already closed or are on the verge of closing. Over 12 Million Americans are now unemployed and many in financial devastation because of Covid-19.

Congress continues to haggle over what and how much the government can further indebt our nation to keep us afloat for the present. With an approximate 28 trillion-dollar deficit and growing when will America file for bankruptcy? What will it take to keep Social Security and Medicare going? More taxes for a broader range of Americans and increased payroll taxes are on the near horizon, most Americans fear. It's more than a little scary.

On top of Covid-19, job loss, business failures and increasing poverty Americans are masked fatigued. Children are tired of being home from school. Adults miss the comaraderie and social dynamics of their workmates. Working at home first felt good and welcomed but has become old for many Americans. The thought of this going on for another six months or even a year or longer is more than scary - it's terrifying.

On top of all this we have a major election in front of us. Americans are terrified about the election. We are frightened about who will be elected. Trump being reelected terrifies millions while millions are terrified Joe Biden will be elected. We are horrified of what may come as the result of this election and what either of the candidates may bring to America the next four years.

We are further scared by each other. The hostility of Americans toward people with different views is out of hand. Hurting people, cursing people, destroying property are not hallmark qualities of a civilized society. We have sadly stopped being civil in America. Rude and crude are no longer shy in this nation. Pushing, shoving and outright fighting with people is becoming too normal. This is not what the average American wants and is disdained by most of us. Let's face it, people who act this way scare most Americans.

It's Halloween time in America and there is plenty of fright to go around. The best treat we can give our country is treating each other the way we would like to be treated.

Learn more at www.glennmollette.com.

More Resources


04/25/2024
Democrats Have a Trump Trial, Now Just Need a Crime
We've never seen a case like this one where a dead misdemeanor from 2016 could be revived as a felony just before the 2024 election

more info


04/25/2024
Trump Can't Be in Two Places at Once in Courtroom Drama


more info


04/25/2024
Trump Has a Path to Victory
The upcoming 2024 U.S. presidential election is shaping up to be tightly contested between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump. Amidst economic struggles and concerns over border security and global conflict, the polls show a narrowing gap, with Trump gaining a lead in key swing states.

more info


04/25/2024
Welcome to Another ‘American Century.' Also: We Suck


more info


04/25/2024
It's a Tough Time for Those Awaiting the End of History


more info


04/25/2024
Jewish Students Fear for Their Safety. Where's Biden?
The recent explosion of antisemitic demonstrations on Ivy League campuses is a tipping point for President Joe Biden's America.

more info


04/25/2024
Giving Up on Elite Colleges--and Heading South
'Even if I could've gotten into Harvard, I wouldn't have gone.'

more info


04/25/2024
What Democrats Want Out of the Trump Trial
WHAT DEMOCRATS WANT OUT OF THE TRUMP TRIAL. Former President Donald Trump is back in a Manhattan courtroom after a Wednesday break. On the way to court Thursday morning, Trump stopped at a construction site where he received an enthusiastic welcome from workers chanting,

more info


04/25/2024
'Reverse Coattails' Won't Rescue Biden
Across the battleground states, down-ballot Democrats are running well ahead of President Biden. This delta has been a defining electoral feature since the 2022 midterms, where congressional Democrats significantly outperformed expectations set by Biden's poor approval rating. With the incumbent back on the ballot in 6 months, some Democratic strategists

more info


04/25/2024
The Fantasy of Open Borders


more info


04/25/2024
Biden Wins NABTU Backing as Its Leaders Attack Trump


more info


04/25/2024
Democrats Target Ted Cruz To Stave Off Senate Disaster
With just over six months to go in the 2024 campaign, incumbent Republican Ted Cruz has a healthy seven-point lead over Democrat Allred.

more info


04/25/2024
Why Did Cars Get So Expensive?


more info


04/25/2024
You Can't Overstate Media's Covid Coverage Failure


more info


04/25/2024
A New Set of 'Four Questions' for Anti-Israel Protesters


more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

The Senate's New Drug Bill is Socialism Lite


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has a radical new plan to let the federal government set drug prices.

Fracking Bans Will Cost Democrats the White House


It often seems as if Democrats want to reelect Donald Trump. Why else would their top presidential candidates advocate a ban on fracking, the drilling technique that supports millions of jobs and accounts for half of all U.S. oil production?

Division One Athletics: It's About the Money


During an episode of Lebron James' online show "The Shop," California Governor Gavin Newsome signed into law a bill allowing California student athletes to sign endorsements while in college. The NCAA Board of Governors, having studied this issue for years, responded by announcing that college athletes can "benefit from the use of their name, image or likeness." The charade of big-name Division 1 football and basketball athletes being in college first and foremost to receive an education has now been fully exposed.

Who's Afraid of Religious Reasoning?


If people fear what they don't understand, then one of the most feared things today is religious liberty. It's standard practice for mainstream and left-leaning news outlets to handle the notion with scare quotes when it conflicts with the civil rights claims of sexual minorities. Reporters routinely relay the talking point that religious liberty is just "a license to discriminate."

Hugh Culverhouse, Planned Parenthood, and Eugenics


The University of Alabama on May 29 announced its plans to return a $26.5 million donation from the largest donor in the university's history. The announcement came only hours after the donor, Hugh F. Culverhouse Jr., called for students to boycott the university in response to Alabama's recent ban on abortion.

Budget Deficit Capitulation: Our Spending Problem


During the week before Christmas, Congress rushed a spending bill into law.

Prioritize Chronic Disease Prevention to Slash Health Insurance Costs


Private health insurance spending surged $101 billion between 2016 and 2018. Hospital care and emergency services accounted for the largest share of that increase -- 42 percent.

Direct-to-Consumer Drug Advertising Benefits Companies, but Patients Even More


Analysts at the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently scored Speaker Nancy Pelosi's drug pricing bill, H.R. 3.

Curbing U.S. Population Growth Would Fight Climate Change


Millions of young Americans want to shrink their carbon footprints.

Patients Should Fear Partnership Between The FDA and Anti-research "watchdog"


FDA regulators have approved over 600 new medicines since the turn of the century. And more treatments are on the way. Scientists are currently developing over 7,000 experimental drugs.

The Energy Industry Was Ready For COVID-19


The COVID-19 outbreak has made a lot of things uncertain. Americans don't know the next time they'll see toilet paper in a grocery store, let alone whether or not they'll stay healthy or have a job in a week.

U. S. Was Right to Avoid Tariffs in Oil Price War


The price for a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil delivered in May recently dropped into negative territory.

Government Intervention Would Hurt Energy Producers


America's energy sector has seen better days. The recent price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia rocked oil and gas markets -- and the coronavirus outbreak has reduced demand and forced some companies in the renewable sector to stall projects and furlough workers.

Enough Subsidies for Electric Vehicles


Americans are naturally wary of electric vehicles (EVs). Salespeople may pitch battery-powered cars as the future, but most drivers see them as an expensive, chancy alternative to petroleum-fueled automobiles. This has been true for more than a century.

Enough Subsidies for Electric Vehicles


Americans are naturally wary of electric vehicles (EVs). Salespeople may pitch battery-powered cars as the future, but most drivers see them as an expensive, chancy alternative to petroleum-fueled automobiles. This has been true for more than a century.