"did not handle a dozen or more cases in a timely manner, cases that took years to come to a conclusion with some still outstanding due to Bordeaux’ inaction."
Florida Workers' Comp
Musings of David Langham on the workers' compensation world
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Justice Delayed?
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Even the Experts
Sunday, November 16, 2025
Did they WARN You?
Thursday, November 13, 2025
What are you waiting for?
You know you gotta give it your allAnd don't be afraid if you fallYou're only livin' once, so tell meWhat are you, what are you waiting for?
"Who was the best pilot I ever saw? Well, uh, you're lookin' at 'im."
You know you gotta give it your allAnd don't be afraid if you fallYou're only livin' once, so tell meWhat are you, what are you waiting for?
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Caught with Trousers Down
Sunday, November 9, 2025
A Tech Example from Ancient History (the 90s)
At 4% interest: PV = $400 / (1.04)^20.06 = $400 / 2.208 = $181.16At 6% interest: PV = $400 / (1.06)^20.06 = $400 / 3.281 = $121.91At 8% interest: PV = $400 / (1.08)^20.06 = $400 / 4.953 = $80.76
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Yesterday
I have rarely related the history that led to the potential of me; I am inherently and deeply private. Nonetheless, here goes. I have deep roots in Indiana agriculture, dating from its frontier era. I likewise have decades of roots in Mississippi, dating to its manifest destiny homestead era. How do people from such a distance meet in the mid-20th century? In the absence of technology, vacation travel, and other modern wonders, the answer is migration.
I descend from a line of Mississippi farmers who homesteaded, built cabins, and lived off the land. My grandfather was a sharecropper who traded a promised portion of his harvest for the seasonal use of someone else's bottomland. He borrowed to plant and prayed to harvest sufficiently to both share and repay. He came from a level of poverty that I can scarcely imagine.
There came some years tougher than others, whether from drought or flood. Sometimes the expected harvest simply did not come. It was an era in which manufacturing jobs in Mississippi were few and far between. Legend has it that some Mississippians would not have eaten in those days but for the WPA and its Sardis Dam project, but that is another story. I have heard it recounted so many times—imagine building the (then) largest land dam in the world with picks, shovels, and wheelbarrows.
It was a time when war was beginning in Europe, threatening beyond, and America was still recovering from the first "war to end all wars." We might readily agree that there was uncertainty, challenge, and even angst.
There came an opportunity for work. A man in a stake truck drove through Mississippi and promised work picking produce in Missouri. As it had been a tough crop year, my grandfather rode north without the accoutrements of a seat, seatbelt, air conditioning, and more. He picked until the crop concluded. There soon followed an opportunity for similar agricultural work in Indiana, and he rode east in another truck in continued pursuit of a living.
When that Indiana crop concluded, he answered a handbill for factory work. A now infamous company was producing rock wool insulation at a factory in Alexandria, Indiana. Through grace or luck, perhaps fate, he was hired and began a career there. That lasted thirty years. I periodically look at the watch he was presented with at retirement, and I reflect.
Thus, my Mississippi heritage resulted from people unable to earn a living in one (or more) place, and itinerant progression in search of more. More opportunity, more money, more stability. The journey soon enough brought my father to Indiana and to the opportunity for college, a first in that family.
Agriculture, fertile land, and homesteading brought my mother's ancestors to rural Indiana. Success and sustenance kept them there, though the particular locations changed, as did crops, livestock, and other details. Not the first in her family to attend a university, she was nonetheless the first female member I can find who did so.
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
I thought it was a prank
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Professionalism While Studying Professionalism
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Just Delete It?
(A) Respect for Law. A judge should respect and comply with the law and should act at all times in a manner that promotes public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.
(5) A judge should dispose promptly of the business of the court.
all draft opinions, orders, and memorandum decisions undergo a mandatory, independent review by a second law clerk before submission to me.






