• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
No Result
View All Result
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
No Result
View All Result

Class is in session

Chris Kamler by Chris Kamler
August 16, 2023
in The Rambling Moron
Class is in session
6
SHARES
155
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

Across the region you can hear the piercing tones of the school bell break through the summer wind. Or that might be the groans from the children forced to leave their summer activities and strap on their book bags and charge up their laptops as they head back to school for another year.

However, class is also in session in a small town in Marion, Kansas, just north of Wichita. The whole country is invited to this master class on how not to deal with a small town newspaper. The details are still pouring out as the national press has begun to shine an intense spotlight on a very small-town cluster. But we know that the Marion County Record, which bears a lot of similarities to this Platte County Landmark, was raided by local police. We also know that the paper had been confirming allegations surrounding a local business person’s DUI. We also know that the co-owner of the newspaper passed away shortly after the raid on the newspaper and on the home she shared with her son, who is the newspaper publisher. She was 98.

RelatedNews

To the class of 2025

Please and thank you

Eggs

Those are facts and a small town newspaper deals in facts (and sometimes handsome, quippy columnists.) We also know that the town’s new police chief has ties to the Kansas City area after retiring from the KCPD after two decades.

From there, the story gets wilder and wilder. A police raid that seizes an entire newspaper’s ability to print a newspaper is beyond rare. Mostly because it is forbidden by the United States Constitution. The police took computers, file servers, cell phones, and basically anything connected with publishing a newspaper. The motive of the raid appears to be less based in fact and more based in payback for investigation of the police chief and local politicians by the newspaper.

As you might imagine, the details of the case have been quite the buzz around our own newspaper just a few miles away. While I don’t think anyone would mistake The Landmark or The Record for The New York Times, the contributions of small town newspapers like ours are, in many respects, even more critical to the DNA of a functioning democracy. Coverage of the local police chief or the school board member or a mayor who likes to bid jobs to their cousin is the backbone of communities. And newspapers like ours are only shining a light on things that are already there. We can’t just come out and say the mayor of Platte City has purple hair if they do not, in fact, have purple hair.

The most concerning thing, however, is that if the mayor doesn’t like the mere speculation and the poking around the purple hair question, it seems that the polarity in our community makes it easier and easier to attack the fourth estate in the most aggressive attacks to date.

It used to be if you didn’t like coverage in The Landmark, you just didn’t renew your subscription. Now you might be able to wield your army to attack. The metaphor isn’t that far off from what happened in Marion, Kansas.

But here’s the good news… Reports of the death of small town newspapers have been grossly exaggerated. Oh, sure, nobody is getting rich running a small newspaper. But the aggressive small newspapers aren’t going away. And there are more barrels of ink getting ready to shine a light on a-hole mayors and politicians, and cops, and elected officials. You see, it does take education to run a small town newspaper. So the ones who should be heading back to school are the officials who have something to hide. Class is in session.

(Get more from Chris Kamler on Twitter, where he is @TheFakeNed)

Tags: chris kamlerplatte cityplatte countyPublic Safety
Chris Kamler

Chris Kamler

Chris Kamler is a cybersecurity architect by day, and pain in the ass by night.

He is a twice-published author, and has over 500 columns with The Landmark under his belt. Chris is a lifelong Northlander with a son and dog.

You can reach him on most of the social networks as Chris Kamler or TheFakeNed.

Related Posts

45 Years Ago–May 9, 1980

by Ivan Foley
May 11, 2025
0

Jim W. Pinkerton has joined the news and advertising staff of The Landmark. He has 10 years of daily newspaper experience in Odessa, Tex., Pryor, Oklahoma, and Nevada, Mo. Holder of a bachelor of arts in journalism from the University...

30 Years Ago–May 11, 1995

by Ivan Foley
May 11, 2025
0

Platte County commissioners presented Betty Wallingford with a resolution honoring her for 28 years of service in the Platte County Sheriff’s Department on Thursday. Wallingford, who has served as supervisor of the civilian unit for 28 years, is the longest-serving...

15 Years Ago–May 12, 2010

by Ivan Foley
May 11, 2025
0

Gov. Jay Nixon has appointed Dennis C. Eckold of Kansas City as an associate circuit judge of the Sixth Circuit in Platte County. Eckold will fill the vacancy created by the governor’s appointment in January of Gary D. Witt to...

graduation ceremony

To the class of 2025

by Chris Kamler
May 11, 2025
0

Congratulations to the Class of 2025. You did it. You're the first true post-COVID graduates—meaning you've survived remote learning, mask mandates, Zoom fatigue, and enough hand sanitizer to pickle a horse. Also, you've lived through not one, but two Trump...

Next Post
Maya Mexican Restaurant

Mexican restaurant coming soon

Popular News

  • Crash in Platte County

    Police pursuit ends with fatal shooting of suspect

    80 shares
    Share 32 Tweet 20
  • Four alarm fire at Haydite plant

    10 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 3
  • KC commits $25 million to new workforce center

    20 shares
    Share 8 Tweet 5
  • Tariffs, fireworks, and tariffs on fireworks

    6 shares
    Share 2 Tweet 2
  • Park Hill South athlete aspires to play in WNBA

    5 shares
    Share 2 Tweet 1
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Call us at 816-858-0363

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Online
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved