
THE
JOB FACTOR
So the Eugene City Council is proposing yet another
property tax — this time to provide emergency shelter and
affordable housing for the homeless. While I firmly believe that
no one should live without decent shelter, and for 18 years have
actively participated in and financially contributed to a food for
the homeless program, I take issue with the notion that property
owners should bear the brunt of solving the homelessness problem.
I am dismayed that the City Council seems to view
property owners as their ready reserve. Here's a hypothetical: If,
as a property owner, I am taxed for a new City Hall, repairing infrastructure,
downtown redevelopment and financing a homeless project, I may become
one of the homeless on whom property tax money is spent. In that
case, if I score affordable housing, I will once again be eligible
to pay property taxes for — guess what?
Has it occurred to any of the "Eugeniuses" charged
with solving the problem that a major cause of homelessness is unemployment?
I would gladly support a program of job training or re-training
and a task force to help those in need find employment. Better to
teach a person to fish than to give them a fish — over and
over.
So it goes.
Judy Dellar, Eugene
DISGUISED
HATRED
Well, wouldn't you know it, Gustavo Arellano has
shown his true colors in loud fashion. I've known his true colors
for sometime, now with his latest response to his conjured up question,
it should be obvious to all what this guy's all about. He's pro-Mexican,
anti-non-Mexican Latino, anti-caucasian, anti-Native American, anti-gringo
(white, black and Hispanic). If you're not a Mexican, you're a gringo.
This includes Puerto Ricans, which I am one.
Why are you jealous of us, Gustavo? Are you jealous
that we already are American citizens and can come and go as we
please? Are you jealous of the Cubans, with their special immigration
— get to solid land and they can stay in the U.S. status?
Why do you hate us so? A better question would be: Why do Puerto
Rican and Cuban rights groups support illegals getting citizenship?
As a former racist myself, the answer is: All of
us Latinos hate the white Americanos more than anyone else for the
past 200 years of manipulation and oppression. So we stick together,
and stick it to them whenever we can. I on the other hand don't
hate anyone, I just expose hatred no matter how it's disguised.
Mr. Arellano has masterfully disguised his hatred, well, disguised
it to the liberal, progressive, hoedad, burned-out old hippie community
of Eugene.
You guys swallowed his seven course meal of dog
shit with a boner in your pants and wanted even more. Maybe now
the owners of EW will read his columns with objectivity
and see that this guy's a fraud, an egomaniac and a racist. Read
the last week's column for yourself. Don't let his name calling
and pathetic humor fool you! The caricature, well if that's stopping
you from reading his columns, don't bother complaining, your brain's
full of hot air anyway.
Mr. Arellano should save his energy writing his
bullshit column and really use his wit and energy in Mexico where
people need him more. How about organizing and fomenting revolution
in Mexico? I used my wit down there and let the locals in Chiapas
pick my brains for about four months on how to organize and how
to deal with the corrupt government officials. My radical days during
the early 1970s in the South Bronx where I grew up gave me some
insight on how to deal with corrupt politicians. I don't know what
good all my advice did, hopefully some.
My street "cred" would make Arellano's street "cred"
look like he spent his life selling Girl Scout cookies. He would
have been eaten alive by the gangs in my old neighborhood. Arellano,
you just see me as a gringo, no matter if I'm Puerto Rican, or Costa
Rican. I think you're a fraud and it's time for you Eugeneans to
see it too. How about you hoedads move to the big city for a couple
of years so you can obtain street "cred"? Then maybe it'll be worth
listening to you.
Jorge Arroyo, Eugene
SEX
APPEAL
In 1992, those of us who had supported the Jerry
Brown for President campaign in Lane County joined together around
the banner "Vote for Hillary's Husband" in the general election.
Although I am mindful of an anarchist tidbit of wisdom, "Don't vote,
it only encourages the bastards," I do vote, selectively. Last time
around I supported my old colleague from the national Committee
for Non-Violent Action, David McReynolds, running as a Democratic
socialist.
But the prospect of Hillary herself, damaged goods
to be sure, but no more or less so than any major officeholder,
that has a real draw for me. My mother, as a girl, lived in an America
that denied women the vote. To go from there to Clinton's lead among
Democratic presidential contenders, within my mother's lifetime,
gives me hope that the oppressive monoculture of power is amenable
to humanizing change.
Women, people of color, immigrant and locally born
youth, progressive geezers like me, etc., we are the hope of the
future, if there is to be one that avoids the endlessly devastating
impacts of global climate change and swelling worldwide populations.
So, I may vote for Hillary's husband's wife, or not. I wish Dennis
Kucinich had a chance — he has the mind and the heart.
Paul Prensky, Eugene
PISSING
AND MOANING
Dear whiny, disgruntled Eugeneans: What will you
bitch about this week? "ÁAsk a Mexican!"? Dan Savage? Downtown?
Sally Sheklow? Unjust prison sentences for people you've never met?
Something new and exciting that you can imagine slights your fragile
little sensitive existence in some way? Or will you do what most
humans are wont to do when there is no current drama to nibble at
— invent one? Here's an idea: Every time you feel angry about
some injustice or other, simply go to your sink and turn the tap.
Voila! You have running water! Get over yourselves now, please.
I have three children — they are 9, 7 and
10 months. And all of them put together on their worst day cannot
generate a fraction of the piss-and-moan wattage you people
are putting out. And I'll stop right here and say that if you find
yourself already feeling angry and indignant at this letter, then
you are most likely the kind of person I am talking about. Give
me a break, children! Most of you preach tolerance (rag it to death,
in fact), but are you not the most intolerant creatures on the planet?
Whenever a new idea crops up, you immediately pop
it under your microscopes and scour it for flaws, PC discrepancies
and ways that it doesn't jibe with your paradigm in general. This
being the case, you all must really hate yourselves, for if there's
one thing you will simply not put up with, it's a sanctimonious
hypocrite, right?
Every week when I open the Weekly, I see
the same names under the same old whiny inane drivel. Give it a
rest already! It should be obvious to you by now that it is not
possible to bitch problems away. What happens is you begin to bitch
for the sake of bitching and you lose any concept of what you think
you are fussing about. Wait. I am bitching right now, aren't I?
See how easy it is to realize that you are being a pill?
So, EW, let me make it clear that I love
you. I find your paper highly entertaining and informative,
and I cannot thank you enough for making yourself available to everyone
at no cost. I also ask that while you don't let these bell-clangers
influence what you print, please never stop printing them.
Because probably the most entertaining part of the paper is when
I get to read the frothy ravings of a bunch of angry, petty adult
dumbasses.
Rodney C. Cimburke Jr., Cottage
Grove
FORESTS
AND CLIMATE
Despite claims from NASA, the U.N. and the British
Government's Stern Review that logging the world's forests is the
second cause of climate change (after fossil fuels) — up to
25 percent of human-caused carbon emissions — we've heard
hardly a peep from either the mainstream media or the mainstream
environmental movement about the most compelling reason yet presented
to protect and preserve our remaining natural forests.
Mainly because of the Bali climate summit in December,
we're finally seeing a few blips on the radar screen about the need
to stop native forest logging to protect the climate, both globally
(due to forests' carbon storage and sequestration capabilities)
and regionally (as logging causes desertification and drought)
To further explore the connection between forests
and climate and to help bring together the climate and forest protection
movements, on Saturday, Jan. 26, from 10 am to 5 pm at the UO's
177 Lawrence Hall, Cascadia's Ecosystem Advocates, Native Forest
Council and GreenwashEugene.com (with 16 regional cosponsors) will
present "Clearcutting the Climate," a conference of science and
action. The conference features OSU scientists discussing the role
of forest carbon, panels exposing timber industry climate change
propaganda and the link between deforestation and desertification,
and a workshop to find common ground between forest and climate
advocacy. It will be videorecorded and uploaded to our website Forestclimate.org,
where it will be available along with other information on the link
between forests and climate change.
Attendance is free, though donations are accepted
(and appreciated!). Please RSVP at conference@forestclimate.org.
Call 688-2600 for more info.
Josh Schlossberg, Eugene
KEEP
TO THE RIGHT
Regarding Christelle Munnelly's letter to the editor
titled "Give Us Our Lane" (11/21), she only had it part right. What
she had right was that it's certainly not acceptable for a driver
to say, "Get the fuck out of the road" to a bicyclist, and that
where necessary, under certain conditions, the bicyclist has the
right to use the full lane.
What she had wrong was that actually, the Oregon
rules of the road actually DO require bicyclists — generally
— to use "a teeny portion [of the road] all the way to the
right." What the relevant Oregon statute (ORS 814.430) actually
says is: "A person commits the offense of improper use of lanes
by a bicycle if the person is operating a bicycle on a roadway at
less than the normal speed of traffic using the roadway …
and the person does not ride as close as practicable to the right
curb or edge of the roadway."
The exceptions are: 1) passing another vehicle,
2) preparing to execute a left turn, 3) when reasonably necessary
to avoid hazardous conditions, 4) riding bikes two abreast in a
manner that does not impede "the normal and reasonable movement
of traffic."
A sometime bike rider myself, the main reason I
share this information is that failing to follow these rules is
a ticketable traffic violation. Don't give a cop an excuse to ticket
you instead of the rude SUV driver.
Marianne Dugan, Eugene
SEND
A MESSAGE
History will damn George Bush and Dick Cheney for
treasonous crimes against the U.S. Constitution, state-sanctioned
torture and global war crimes.
Unfortunately, democratic leadership will also be
damned by history and be held complicit to these very same crimes
because of its cowardly refusal to use its constitutional authority
to impeach and investigate Bush and Cheney for such crimes. Congressional
leaders have taken an oath to defend and protect the constitution
of the United States. They did not take an oath to defend George
Bush. They did not take an oath to defend the American people from
inconvenience should impeachment hearings bring strife. They did
not take an oath to protect a cabal of neocon punks and corporate
cronies who have hijacked the machinery of government and the U.S.
military to be used for their nefarious and self-enriching imperial
projects around the world.
The Democrats' excuse that impeachment is impractical
because there is only a year left in Bush's term is an obscenity.
If a corporate CEO is alleged to have committed murder and bilked
millions from his company, would a prosecutor withhold charges if
the CEO only had a few months left at the job and it might cause
strife with the company?
Impeachment would send a message to future leaders
that there is accountability for criminality. It would also show
our citizenry and the world that our country has returned from the
brink of lawless insanity. What could be a more important task?
Gerry Rempel, Eugene
MAN
WITH A PLAN
So many Americans are desperate for a change in
leadership, but in the frenzy of the upcoming presidential elections
the issues are being bypassed by multi-million-dollar campaigns.
We hear only rhetoric from those candidates who can buy the most
media time, thus successfully imprinting themselves on the American
psyche. But after all the hype, what we really want is a candidate
who best represents our shared vision for our country.
I've decided to approach the elections the way I
approach any major purchase. Using a car for example, I would not
buy a car based on appearance or the biggest price tag or media
blitzes, and I would definitely not buy from a dealership that received
most of its funding from an auto repair shop. I would look for a
car that has consistent quality, safety and dependability, that
will save money; one designed for the driver. I would buy it from
a dealership funded by the very drivers it hopes to sell to.
Using this common logic, my candidate is Dennis
Kucinich. He has a consistent voting record on issues of peace,
justice, environmental protection and human rights. He is funded
by the people, not big corporations, and he has a plan for universal,
single-payer, not-for-profit healthcare, a plan to get us out of
Iraq immediately and keep us out of Iran, a plan for education,
a plan for the economy, a plan for the environment moving away from
dependence on foreign oil, a plan for immigration and, most importantly
— a plan to restore the Constitution and the values it puts
forth to the American people. Dennis Kucinich may not be flashy
or receive any contributions from corporate giants (which means
he has no strings attached to the oil, pharmaceutical or defense
industries), but he does represent our hopes and dreams, and he
has viable plans to achieve them.
On an Internet poll (www.dehp.net/candidate/index.php)of
197,000-plus people that asks solely about the issues and their
importance, Dennis Kucinich consistently ranks number ONE with more
than 85 percent of respondents. Try it, and you may be surprised
to learn that you, too are most in alignment with candidate Kucinich.
Gail Rhamy, Eugene
A
DELICATE BALANCE
The Earth is the only planet in the universe that
has running water, air to breathe and multiple life forms and is
just the right distance from an energy source the sun. It is a delicate
balance. It is the only place that we know like this. For the last
200 years, humans have attempted to control nature. This has resulted
in high standard of living for many of us. It also has resulted
in polluted water, air and agricultural systems. Many species have
gone extinct. We are out of balance with nature and on a destructive
path. We humans have a choice to become extinct or not.
The latest BLM plan to cut the rest of the "old
growth" and to cut further down to streams has been criticized by
scientific peer review, the EPA and the Federal Fish & Game.
These lands belong to the people, not the corporations. Their health
helps to insure our health.
I plead with everyone: Please call your federal
representatives and senators. Tell them they need to insist that
the BLM must produce a "new" plan to help renew the health of our
region, our planet and our species.
Mary Jo Davis, Cottage Grove
MITT
FOR BRAINS
It appears that the Republican presidential nomination
race has focused around Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson.
Mike is in Iowa telling the voters that they don't know Mitt. Mike
is a religious minister. He is convinced that Romney has Mitt for
brains and is a Mittfaced imitation of a conservative. Romney is
trying to persuade voters that if they let him sling some Mitt,
the religious right will be shouting: Holy Mitt! Brother Fred is
walking around the precincts looking like two pounds of Mitt in
a one pound box. He is telling the right wing faithful that a vote
for Romney will put the GOP up Mitt creek without a paddle. The
latest polls shows Huckabee surging in favor with the Republicans
while losing the presidency to any breathing, hot Mitt Democrat.
Gerry Merritt, Eugene
|