August 19, 2025

Henryetta Free Lance
Login Subscribe Advertisers
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinion
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
News
August 10, 2022
Mostly Educational:

Where’s Our Flycatcher, Oklahoma?

Legend has it that Oklahoma was surveyed by a team of government agents prior to statehood. At the end of the project, they met to compare their results, but all presented vastly different accounts of the same territory.

One told of cypress swamps and alligators. Another reported foothills of the Rocky Mountains, dotted with ponderosa pines.

Others described vast prairies teeming with the exotic pronghorn antelope. Parched deserts with ancient petroglyphs. Black bear in lush forests of hickory, oak and pine. Impenetrable swaths of cross timbers. Crystal clear streams and muddy red rivers. Mountains and tors rising from the plains.

Those same surveyors, upon hearing such different descriptions, immediately doubted the veracity of their fellow agents.

So passionate and unwavering was their dedication that suspicions grew and conspiracies were alleged.

Each knew their Oklahoma too intimately to be swayed and none could imagine how it could be the same territory.

Charts and maps were studied and contested. Testimonies were considered. The debate raged and divisions widened. But just about the time when they had decided that Oklahoma was a myth, a scissor-tailed flycatcher perched among them.

One-by-one, they fell silent, mesmerized by the odd bird, for each of them had known the scissortail as a companion during their surveys.

The same bird darted between the cross timbers. It perched in the cypress trees, and it spiraled gleefully over the waving prairies.

From the Wichita Mountains to the Ozarks, they had all come to know this uniquely Oklahoman resident.

In time, they decided that their wildly conflicting views of Oklahoma were not only true, but in perfect agreement.

Our state was as odd and as unpredictable as the little bird which guided their travels. Shortly thereafter, Oklahoma became a state, and the scissortailed flycatcher took its place as our state bird.

Such a story illustrates not only our state’s great ecological diversity, but also illustrates a tragic flaw in human nature.

For even when people share passion and goals, they often cannot come together because their disparate perspectives prove to be insurmountable.

Thankfully, we have always been blessed with leaders who have been able to unite us, even when our experiences do not align.

We face the same situation today in Oklahoma regarding education.

We all desperately want the best educational system. Yet, statewide perspectives on the issue are so vastly different that suspicions and conspiracies have grown. Where is our flycatcher?

Oklahoman’s love their local schools, but we now see a world almost exclusively through our ”cable news goggles” that portray two extreme options: either a progressive march toward Marxism or a progressive march toward crony capitalism.

Either blindly accept faraway activist agendas or blindly accept the wholesale privatization of public schools.

Millions in dark money now pours into Oklahoma as faraway activists influence everything from medical marijuana to energy to farmland.

Now, the same strategies have targeted our classrooms. Meanwhile, common sense Okies look inside their neighborhood schools – full of their neighbors, friends, relatives and pew mates whom they trust with their children – and they scratch their heads. Where is our flycatcher?

A modern version of those old-time surveyors has now descended upon Oklahoma and they view us as a state and a people to be labeled, divided and manipulated for profit or power.

Unable to control Okies on a grand scale, they now pour resources and people into local issues. They have turned our state, our communities, and our schools into battlegrounds.

We now prove our valor by opposing and denigrating, and it’s as easy as a click of the mouse.

Peacemakers are no longer blessed, they are compromising cowards.

Unfortunately, we should not expect much relief soon from this season of bitter politics and straw man culture wars; some things must run their course.

As we watch, however, let’s remember that anyone can sow discord and strife, but peacemakers are special, like the scissortail. Where is our flycatcher?

Thankfully, this is Oklahoma and flycatchers are everywhere, in every community, in every church and in every school. And by the Grace of God, may they soon rise.

Tom Deighan is author of Shared Ideals in Public Schools. You can contact him by email at deighantom@gmail.com and read past articles at www.mostlyeducational.com.

HPS board meets ahead of new school year
A: Main
HPS board meets ahead of new school year
August 15, 2025
The Henryetta Board of Education convened Monday, Aug. 11, at the district’s Board of Education Office for its regular meeting, focusing on final preparations for the 2025-26 school year. Superintende...
this is a test
A: Main
Road addition approved by county
August 15, 2025
The Okmulgee County Board of Commissioners met Monday, addressing a full agenda of routine approvals, infrastructure projects, and operational updates.The meeting opened with an invocation that includ...
this is a test
Ribbon Cutting Held for Dr. Ann Alexander Children’s Garden
A: Main
Ribbon Cutting Held for Dr. Ann Alexander Children’s Garden
August 15, 2025
Members of the Okmulgee County Community Garden and the Okmulgee Chamber of Commerce celebrate the dedication of the Children’s Garden to longtime garden advocate Dr. Ann Alexander with a ribbon-cutti...
this is a test
HPS Receives Donation
A: Main, Lifestyle...
HPS Receives Donation
August 15, 2025
HPS sincerely thanks Mr. Brad Sellers with Eastern Oklahoma Catholic Charities for the donated school supplies and backpacks for our 5th grade students. Pictured is HES Counselor Jennifer Huckabay. Sc...
this is a test
Sooner legend to hold book signing
A: Main, Lifestyle...
Sooner legend to hold book signing
August 15, 2025
Henryetta football fans will have a chance to meet a college football icon up close, as Jamelle Holieway, the legendary quarterback who led the Oklahoma Sooners to the 1985 NCAA National Championship,...
this is a test
News
Lecture series to highlight 1990s era of MN governance
August 15, 2025
The third installment of the lecture series on the History and Development of Contemporary Mvskoke Government will be held Tuesday, Aug. 19, from 6:308:30 p.m. at the College of the Muscogee Nation Le...
this is a test

e-Edition
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Editor Picks
WhatIsEconomicDevelopment?
News
WhatIsEconomicDevelopment?
August 15, 2025
This article kicks off Econ Dev 101 - a local series aimed at demystifying what economic development really looks like in a place like Okmulgee County. Over the next few months, we’ll explore everythi...
this is a test
News
Osage Hill OHCE prepares for upcoming Okmulgee County Fair
August 15, 2025
The Osage Hill OHCE group gathered at the home of Norma Green on Aug. 5 to put the finishing touches on their plans for the upcoming Okmulgee County Fair. With months of preparation behind them, the g...
this is a test
News
County sales tax income increases
August 15, 2025
The Oklahoma Tax Commission recently released city sales tax collection figures that primarily represents local tax receipts from June business. The monies they reported this period represent sales fr...
this is a test
100 Years Ago (1925)
News
100 Years Ago (1925)
August 15, 2025
A Cloudburst flooded the city this afternoon at 5 o’clock causing considerable damage in the business section by water running into the buildings. Water near Boerstler Wholesale house was said to have...
this is a test
Sizzlin’ sounds, spicy spoons await at 45th Bluegrass & Chili Festival
News
Sizzlin’ sounds, spicy spoons await at 45th Bluegrass & Chili Festival
August 15, 2025
Get ready, Okmulgee County! If you’re a fan of toe-tappin’ bluegrass tunes and lip-smackin’ chili, the 45th Annual Bluegrass & Chili Festival in downtown Tahlequah is the perfect weekend getaway. Mark...
this is a test
Facebook

HENRYETTA FREE-LANCE
208 E. Main Street
Henryetta, OK 74437

918.652.3311

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2022 Henryetta Free-Lance

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy