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Letters to the editor for August 20, 2012

Caricature used to just be an ant

To the Editor, 

This is in response to the Aug. 1 letter written by Gilbert Hofacker, regarding the “black pipe caricature of President Obama” on Phoenix Lake Road. 

First, and most certainly foremost, the “black pipe caricature” was and never has been a caricature of President Obama. It is, and always has been, a black ant that originally held the homeowner’s mail box, a rather clever idea, I thought. Most writers protesting the signage have forgotten that fact or may have never noticed it before now. 

Secondly, this is the United States of America. Because of our great Constitution, we are guaranteed the right of free speech. 

I am a registered Independent voter. I base my voting decision solely upon whether or not a candidate will do the best job for our country, not because of party affiliation, race or religion. If you don’t like what the sign says, don’t look at it; if you don’t like what you see on TV, change the channel. It’s as simple as that! 

C’mon people, there are more important issues at hand beside the ant! 

Kandy Bell 

Sonora

Elected officials speak unwisely

To the Editor,

Your otherwise good coverage (“Lake is water priority”, August 15) of the August 14 joint Board of Supervisors and TUD Board meeting on water issues missed one disturbing element that was apparent to many in the audience.  

When are our elected officials going to learn that it is counterproductive to publicly bash State officials who hold our fate in their hands?  

TUD staff did a reasonably diplomatic job of spelling out the exceptionally complicated water issues that may impact Tuolumne County that are currently on the front burner in Sacramento.

 Sadly, the response of our local elected officials was to simplify it all and blame Sacramento for all our woes. 

Whether there may be some truth to their paranoia or not, it’s not helpful when a county Supervisor publicly questions whether the members of the most important State level water agency have any “brains.”  

And it’s no more helpful when a TUD board member describes the actions of that and other state water agencies as being “antics.” 

Inflammatory rhetoric like that has a way of finding its way back to Sacramento.  

It’s no way to make friends and positively influence people. As far back as biblical times it has been understood that you reap what you sow. 

Some of our local elected officials need to refresh themselves on Paul’s letters to the Galatians.

Jerry Cadagan

Sonora

K through university education

To the Editor,

If the teacher stinks, fire them. I have seen movies with teachers with pure passion. Edward Olmos “math,” Morgan Freeman “principal,” Richard Dreyfuss “music.” I  don’t know who starred in the story about teaching every grade. 

Oh my goodness. If every teacher taught like he did what a wonderful world it would be. Parents help teachers: 1. Listen to your child/children; 2. Children lie. Find out from other parents if your child is telling the truth; 3. Help your kids teacher with books, pencils, color paper. If you don’t have children, I know we pay taxes for schools; 4. Be helpful. Supplies, money over and above your taxes or volunteer to help your teacher without pay. 

Wear funny hats. Go on field trips. Teach outside in a tree. Make it fun for kids, not just the intelligent ones. Put your desks in the round not in rows. Teach with passion. If you can’t, get out of teaching. You are not helping the kids. I never had a good teacher.

Jackie Davis

Sonora

Slap in the face
to taxpayers

To the Editor,

I can’t believe it! I just heard on the news that the Department of Fish and Game wants to spend approximately $250,000 to change their name, logo and websites. I am hoping that while state and county employees, and many other taxpayers, are taking cuts in pay, losing jobs and being forced to take furlough days that the state will not condone this waste of money. 

I don’t usually do this, but I wrote to the governor, the senator and the assemblyman, as well as the Dept. of Fish and Game.

I would encourage the other members of this community to do the same. I believe that this is a slap in the face to taxpayers that are being affected by government spending cuts. 

Teresa Hernandez 

Twain Harte

 

Letters to the editor for August 17, 2012

Cents per gallon of gas do matter

To the Editor,

Over the years I have read many letters regarding the price of gasoline per gallon. The recent article in your paper dated Aug. 14, 2012 has finally prompted me once again. We are all affected by the cost per gallon of gas. We all use it.

First off, it was quoted, “a fire last week at a large oil refinery in Richmond reduced capacity at that facility that produces at least 15 percent of the state’s fuel ... which required a special blend of cleaner gasoline making it difficult to replace that lost supply.” 

Who then replaces my home if that burns, can I expect local citizens to start paying to replace my home? No. 

That is why I pay insurance so why doesn’t the refinery pay insurance for the same reason? The same goes for the high price of crude oil, insurance. The paper was right, we do not give up a vacation for a few pennies per gallon. 

There are many citizens affected by many cents per gallon. We all need necessities just to survive our daily needs for such as food, doctor visits, visiting aging parents, Sunday church and those trips to the “gas station.” Some such are the elderly, kids for travel to and from school (some at great distances).

Why do we need to pay extra per gallon to support gas stations, they certainly do not support we who must drive to live? The gas stations should have paid insurance in advance of need as do we to cover the unexpected.

Gene Smith

Sonora

Lottery should benefit schools

To the Editor,

Here we go again!

The lottery people, in their in their stupid wisdom, have yet another asinine commercial on T.V.

That money they spend could, and should, go to the strapped schools.

The latest one does not make sense at all.

Jackie Baker

Groveland

Obama v Romney

To the Editor: 

M.C. Long: You attack Romney for having “Mansions, cars” and his wife’s “prancing horses.” I have a problem with taxpayer financed trips to Spain with an entourage of friends by Mrs. Obama. Travel and security we the people paid for. Two planes, one hour apart, to Martha’s Vineyard to vacation with the elite society, paid for by we the people. 

Mrs. Romney is spending her own money. Check out the salary for Michelle Obama at the University of Chicago Medical Center in 2005. 

Regarding military service, tell me where Barack Hussein Obama has served. The Commander in Chief of the United States Armed Services did not know the difference between a “Navy corpsman” and a “Navy Corpse Man.” 

Swiss and offshore accounts? Look at the Clintons. Can you produce work credentials for B.H.O.? 

Gov. Romney made his fortune for himself. In Obama’s own words he was raised in a privileged environment (private schools, etc.) 

Why criticize a self-made person in opposition to a person who was manufactured by the media and the Chicago Daley machine and sold to the American public. Take a look at just a few of Obama’s 30 some-odd appointees.

Van Jones (green czar); Kevin Jennings (safe school czar); Anita Dunn (communications director). 

I’ll take Romney’s B.S. and raise you challenge to restore our morality, our self respect and above all, our Republic.

Katherine Van Hatten

Jamestown

 

Letters to the editor for August 15, 2012

Phoenix Lake Obama caricature 

To the Editor,

Why are so many offended by the Obama caricature?

Is it because it’s painted black?

Obama calls himself a “black man.” He is in fact, half white, which the dictionary says is mulatto. Are we allowed to use that word? Or is “mulatto” offensive?

Obama seems to be proud of himself being black — why is it racist to portray him as black?

Probably the statue should be more correctly half black and half white, but if so, which half should be white? Surely not the left side, people would be offended. 

George Bush is accused of being “dumb” (degrees from Yale and Harvard — where are your degrees?), and a “draft dodger.” (He was a fighter pilot — what uniform did Obama wear?)

Effigies of President Bush showed up frequently during his presidency. Offensive speech about Bush is “political disclosure,” but offensive speech about Obama is “shameful racism.”

Since we’re all socialists now, people on both sides should keep quiet about their views — it’s what good socialists do.

Richard Eller

Sonora

Scraping by and increased rates

To the Editor,

Well now, I said to myself, self, Calaveras looks like a good place to retire to, on our fixed income.

Wrong. The house is nearly paid for along with the vacant lot next door, so we’re scraping by, even  with the present economic situation.

Now it looks like my home lot and my weed lot are both going to become a luxury, or an unneeded expense. How many folks are singing that song?

Last week it was CCWD that is talking about an increase for water service and the entire county is going to be charging more for fire prevention by parcels. Even though we use minimum water at the house and just mow the weeds next door.

Why not allow gray water irrigation to save water for irrigation? And fine people that don’t live in the county, that start fires, according to how much it costs to put them out?

Al Duncan

Valley Springs

Stop government overspending

To the Editor,

The recent defeat of the Transient Occupancy Tax on only private RV parks for the benefit of the State of California, coupled with the unique discovery of monies to fund certain State Parks should be a grateful signal to all. 

The significant waste, fraud and abuse of our state and federal governments to entice us to vote for funding of items while hiding funding monies has convinced me to vote ‘No’ on all funding measures where the money goes to the state and the federal governments, no matter what!

We must stop the overspending to save our country.

James P. Beaty 

Columbia 

 

Letters to the editor for August 16, 2012

Obama is the American dream

To the Editor,

Ray Anderson’s claim that “Obama’s world view is wrong and dangerous” from his Aug. 7 Letter to the Editor, is based on his selective, out of context, and ultimately dishonest reading of what Obama said about building a business. No business was built without lots of help. Help means someone fought to keep the country free so a business could prosper, and someone else paid taxes for police, etc so the business could survive. Also, someone paid the business’ customers money for their labors so they could spend it elsewhere. Obama is a classic example of the American dream come true. 

William Bergmann 

Murphys

Don’t let the fair disappear

To the Editor:

Let the funeral procession begin.  No wait! We’re talking about the Mother Lode Fair.  

A funeral procession, is lively, a celebration of a life and the loss of it. The fair this year seemed more like a Bataan Death March.  

We all know where we’re headed, stay in line, stay put and no turning back. How have we gotten to this point? While there are those to blame (some more than others), this one’s our fault, maybe because we all thought that our fair would always be there for us (that old pair of shoes and the like).  

So it wasn’t nurtured and attended to as it should have been, and this is the result.

I love this fair, warts and all. I’m just as guilty of neglecting the place as all the other “extraordinaires” out there, and if this is the first step on that march and the Mother Lode Fair fades away into the annals of history, the loss to us all cannot be quantified. But I will leave roses.

Tom Griffiths

Sonora

Thank you Candidate Romney

To the Editor,

Candidate Romney has selected Paul Ryan as his running mate. This is a huge gift to the Democratic party. 

Ryan is opposed to Social Security and to Medicare “as we know it.” If I lacked these two programs I would be dead. 

Moreover, my two children are approaching the age for these programs. They are not stupid. And they vote.

Thank you, Mr. Romney, for probably ensuring the reelection of a fine and intelligent statesman, Barack Obama.

Lloyd Kramer

Twain Harte

Paying our bills

To the Editor,

Since 2003 the U.S. has waged two wars in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.  These wars have cost trillions of dollars, yet who asks how these costs are covered?   They are the only wars in our history that have been fought without raising taxes to pay for them. 

Indeed, they were waged simultaneously with a tax cut. 

So how are the costs of these wars paid for? 

The costs were paid for by loans from China. Congress deferred the costs to the future.  

The future is now. What are the proposals for paying for these wars now? Cuts in public safety, education, safety net programs that help the needy and the elderly; cuts to maintaining our infrastructure and to research programs that give business cutting edge innovations.

Rather than raise taxes to pay for the wars we supported, legislatures are cutting programs that will restrict the future options of our children and of our country.  

Cuts in education reduce options for our children and deny businesses the skilled workers they need.  

Microsoft alone has 5,000 jobs unfilled because applicants do not have the necessary skills.  

These cuts are foolhardy and a huge threat to our country.   

We must reconsider our views on taxes and send a new message to our elected representatives, insisting that they act in our country’s best interests.

When President Ronald Reagan doubled the defense budge in the early 1980s, he also proposed increases in taxes which were passed by Congress.  He understood the need to pay for what you buy.  

We bought two wars and now it is time to step forward and pay the bill.

Ellen Beck

Sonora

 

Letters to the editor for August 14, 2012

People’s beliefs

To the Editor,

There are those that don’t believe the earth and cosmos were formed intentionally. There are those that don’t believe that a great disobedience took place some thousands, possibly millions of years ago.

There are those that don’t believe in a set of moral laws that were established thousands of years ago. There are those that don’t believe there’s a hateful, dejected, purposeful, and pure evil entity out there, looking to destroy things that are good and honestly intended.

There are those that don’t believe in the horrors of the Holocaust. There are those that don’t believe in the original sanctity of marriage, as it was intended.

There are those that don’t believe folks have a right to their own respectful and respective opinions, without being attacked. 

There are those that believe veterans are just like other folks. 

There are those that don’t believe in the infallible, and unchanging truths of the Bible. 

I just have one thing to say: My momma always told me “Just because you don’t believe it, don’t mean it ain’t true!”

 Wally George

Jamestown

Dangerous recommendations

To the Editor,

Two letters in Friday’s paper make some interesting and dangerous recommendations. 

In one, they propose that the electoral college be abolished, a foundation of our republic and Constitution. The writer must not realize the danger in a direct democracy which would invalidate states rights and protect us all from the tyranny of the majority. If abolished, a handful of states would dictate our governance. 

In another, the writer recommends that some kind of intrusion into our personal medical histories should determine the right to bear a legally bought firearm. What the writer ignores, is that if a loose cannon was determined unfit by some measure to own a gun, he could easily find one (or more) on the black market. 

And finally, he ignores the fact that guns in and of themselves do “cause” violence, but rather human beings do...and don’t need a gun to do so...anything will do. 

As Rush so aptly put it: “Do spoons cause obesity?”

CB Maxwell 

Sonora

Out with the old, in with the new

To the Editor,

On August 6, I had the pleasure of attending a town hall meeting put on by congressional candidate, Jack Uppal. 

What a breath of fresh air! 

At a time when the approval rating for congress is at 12 percent, it was a pleasant surprise to find an intelligent, reasonable, and genuinely nice man interested in representing us. 

What a contrast between Mr. Uppal and his opponent, Tom McClintock. To my knowledge Mr. McClintock has never set foot in Tuolumne County, while Mr. Uppal has been here several times.

Uppal: Ph.D. in chemistry, 28 years in management at Intel, first time in politics.

McClintock: B.A. in political science, lifelong politician.
While Mr. Uppal was solving problems and helping create technical advances, Mr. McClintock was throwing rhetorical bombs and causing conflict, confusion, and chaos. We voters in the newly created 4th District have a wonderful opportunity to do our bit to improve congress. 

Out with the old, in with the new! 

David Munson 

Tuolumne

 

Tuolumne County needs a long term water solution

The water supply of Tuolumne County is vital to the growth and future of this community. This water supply from Pinecrest Lake and Lyons Reservoir, which are owned and operated by PG&E, serves the needs of the residences, commercial businesses, schools, industry, government, the hospital, a growing agricultural industry, fire protection, etc. in Tuolumne County. 

Currently there are no other readily available and properly located sources of water supply available to Tuolumne Utilities District (TUD) or its customers, which can meet the current and future water needs of the community. Unlike other water agencies, TUD does not export any of this water outside the county.

This summer, as you are well aware, has been an exceptionally dry and hot summer. With a low snowpack, the water supply for the county has been reduced. Not only do we have to be concerned about the water supply but also how the state government is controlling access to this water. 

As we have all experienced, the state government is extending its reach and influence into our daily lives; not always to the benefit of our pocketbook or the way we choose to live our lives. 

In 2009 the state changed the way TUD could receive water deliveries from PG&E from Pinecrest Lake, the main water supply for TUD. The state set a minimum water surface elevation at Pinecrest Lake (as measured at Labor Day) that is 13 percent higher than it has historically been operated by PG&E. This action of the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) has reduced our access to water supply, significantly increased the cost to TUD customers, and at the same time forced TUD to restrict its customer’s water consumption.

TUD has been working closely for three years with the state in an effort to reduce the restrictions on the Pinecrest Lake elevation. Based on the results of a Lake Level Study completed by PG&E, TUD and PG&E have submitted a request asking the SWRCB to modify the lake level restriction to more closely match the way the lake level has always been managed, and at the same time provide for ongoing water supply for our community. In this request, TUD is not trying to “drain” Pinecrest Lake. Rather, TUD and PG&E are trying to convince the state that the lake elevation restriction should be consistent with the agreements reached through many years and hundreds of meetings among TUD, the Forest Service, PG&E, environmental groups and others. The Lake Level Study clearly showed that recreation would not be impacted at the requested lower elevations.

This year, the SWRCB approved a one-time variance to the lake level restriction. As part of its approval, the state required TUD to impose mandatory water restrictions on its customers. Prior to the lake level restriction, the agreement with PG&E and the water supply from Pinecrest Lake provided a reliable water supply well into the future without additional significant financial investment. 

Unfortunately that has changed and with the current restriction, as now this county is extremely limited on water supply for future economic growth. 

We simply cannot leave the fate of the water supply for the county in the hands of the state each and every year or we will surely find ourselves with less water available and the associated economic loss, as well as increased cost to the community.

TUD and its predecessors have long been considering other water supply options such as increased groundwater use, increased water storage at new or existing reservoirs, reservoir restoration, securing water rights independent of PG&E, and increased water conservation. Each of these requires many years and millions of dollars to accomplish. All take risk and community compromise. That is the purpose of the upcoming joint meeting of TUD Board of Directors and the county Board of Supervisors, being held at 1:30 Tuesday in the County Board of Supervisors Chambers. 

The time is now for us to join together as a community. 

This includes knowing the truth about the current condition of the supply, threats to it, as well as opportunities for improvement to ensure that a reliable supply of water is available for current and future generations of residents and visitors to Tuolumne County.

Pete Kampa is the general manager of Tuolumne Utilities District.

 

Letters to the Editor for August 13, 2012

Early voting a
matter of fairness

To the Editor,

There are 88 counties in the state of Ohio. Sixty-seven of them are considered “red” or Republican and 21 are considered “blue,” or Democratic. There are two Democrats and two Republicans on an elections committee for each county. 

The committees were asked to vote to allow early voting, meaning staying open evenings and weekends so people could more easily vote in the weeks before the regular election (last time the lines were unbelievably long). 

In all of the “red” counties the vote was both Republicans, and both Democrats voting to allow early voting. Both sides agreeing that this was best for everyone. When the votes were counted for the “blue” counties, the two Democrats voted for the early voting but the two Republicans voted “No” in every one. 

None of those counties will allow it. Isn’t that strange? 

This is yet another example of Republicans trying to make voting more difficult for voters...obviously, the Democratic voters. This is going on everywhere...intimidation through requiring I.D.’s or making it difficult to just stand in line for hours to vote. And it is aimed at people in union and black states in particular...people that historically vote Democratic. 

If Republicans cannot win fairly, they will win unfairly. That is becoming more obvious everyday! 

Judy Herring 

Sonora

Reduced school days at Sonora High

To the Editor,

This comment answers an article about Sonora High School having fewer days this coming year. Twenty? 

I really find it very hard to see a high school with so many high paid administrators at one single school. Five administrators are making close to $100,000 a year or over and there are still layoffs and a coming shorter year. 

I find it very hard to see that the students at, or coming into Sonora High School, are important at all! 

You tell me that you need a superintendent and principal on the same school campus? Perhaps they could split a year so that only one is on campus at a time and only one very high salary coming out of a slim budget? 

These very lopsided conditions really sadden me and I only hope that someday there is a board that has the spirit to make a difference during these hard times. 

Cutting the school year 20 days should never be an option!

Paulina Sanfilippo 

Sonora

A right to your opinion, not facts

To the Editor,

You have the right to your own opinion but not your own facts. A recent letter, trying to shift blame away from President Bush, stated that “Bush had a Democratic House and Senate.”

Not true until 2006. That’s why he could immediately get rid of the “pay-go” plan that helped the Clinton Administration reduce the deficit every year for eight years in a row. That’s why he could pass massive tax cuts for the rich.

Everyone agrees that we need 150,000 new jobs every month to just break even. That’s about 14 million new jobs every 8 years. Clinton raised taxes and produced 22 million jobs. Bush cut taxes and produced two million new jobs. 

Do you think the fact that the Bush years fell 12 million jobs short has anything to do with the fact that the current unemployment is 15 million?

The government only considers you unemployed if you are still looking for a job. In the Bush years, millions of people quit looking for a job so the unemployment rate stayed artificially low. Obama gave people hope so they started looking for jobs again (Just as the housing bubble burst). After 6 straight month of job losses of 750,000 per month, the stimulus plan passed and in just over a year we were producing 250,000 jobs per month. 

Job growth has been positive ever since with 4.5 million new jobs in the last 29 months. 

Re-elect Obama.

Bob Gould

Groveland

 

Letters to the editor for August 10, 2012

Occupy Wall Street

To the Editor,

Re: Occupy Wall Street Being one of the few remaining “Occupiers” of Sonora that the reader might have observed on Saturday mornings at Courthouse Square, I have been often asked, “What are you all about?” 

Since we have no formal creed, and none of us has been authorized to speak for the rest, I would like to offer the following quotation as a succinct explanation of the gist of our various notions. It appears on page 261 of E.J. Dionne Jr.’s new book, “Our divided political heart.”

“Populist anger against Wall Street, whether in 1935 or 2011, arose not from envy or jealousy but from a belief in the public obligations imposed by a republican conception of citizenship. Sometimes in inchoate ways and sometimes explicitly, the Occupy Wall Street protesters were speaking from this grand republican tradition. ...the Jeffersonian, Jacksonian, and Populist arguments for greater economic equality rest, finally, on republican ideas: that citizens in a free republic need a degree of economic security, independence, and self-sufficiency to carry out their civic duties and to participate fully in self-government. Plutocracy is antithetical to both democracy and republicanism. Our Founders were sensitive to this in a way that recent Supreme Court decisions were not.” 

If you agree with the above, you might consider joining us once-in-awhile on Saturday mornings, for smiles, laughter, and often stimulating conversation.

David Fristad

Sonora

Suggestions on political change

To the Editor,

Assuming that the current political climate and campaigns are undermining the health of American society, the following proposals are hereby submitted: 

1. Campaigns shall be publicly funded. Donations shall go into a  Public Campaign Fund. 

2. Nominees shall be selected in a political convention held the week before Labor Day. Primary campaigns shall be abolished. 

3. Potential candidates for the Presidency shall present no more than five position papers of not less than 3000 words no more than 4000 the week before the convention. 

4. After Labor Day and before the November election the candidates shall participate in four public debates. Each debate shall focus on only one topic. 

5. The Electoral College shall be abolished and the winner of the election shall be determined by direct popular vote. 

6. The newly elected President shall serve for only one term of six years duration; US Senators shall serve for a maximum of three terms and members of the House of Representatives for a maximum of six terms; Supreme Court Justices shall serve a maximum of eighteen years.

Daniel Connell

Sonora

Colo. shooting and 2nd Amendment 

To the Editor,

With regards to the recent Aurora shooting: Theaters can enhance their security by installing silent alarms on the screening rooms’ outside exits that feed back to a monitored panel. Especially during showings when employees are unlikely to be performing duties that include passing through those doors such an alarm could quickly alert theater security personnel and could even be transmitted to local law enforcement. And this wouldn’t in my humble opinion interfere one iota with viewers’ experience. 

Under certain situations, a medical provider is required to notify the Department of Motor Vehicles that a patient needs to have their driving privilege temporarily or permanently suspended. 

Psychiatrists should also be required to notify the Department of Justice/Federal Bureau of Investigation, etc., about patients showing likely homicidal or suicidal intentions, that they would be excluded from lawful firearm purchases until cleared. 

Sure, this breaches patient-doctor confidentiality but the empirical evidence is mounting that in the interest of greater public safety such change is warranted. This precaution wouldn’t impact law abiders at-large one iota in my humble opinion. 

I know I’m not alone in seeing the above as common-sense solutions to real problems. Instead of blindly slashing away at our Second Amendment right, let’s be honest and address those real problems. 

Karl Merrill 

Sonora

 

Letters to the editor for August 8, 2012

Death and injuries by gun-wielders

To the Editor,

At the risk of incurring the wrath and enmity of the self-proclaimed “patriots” of the National Rifle Association (including draft-dodgers George W. Bush and Dick Cheney), I suggest that the NRA alter its name to the National Automatic Guns Association (NAGA) in view of the death and injuries wrought across America by gun-wielders in the recent years.

Ray Mellana

Sonora

Our freedoms are
being threatened

To the Editor, 

Here’s your Republican candidate for president. Just bought a house here in California for a touch over $12 million. A few months later he files for a tax reduction because he says his house is only worth half of the value he paid. He just does not want to pay the California 1 percent value per Prop. 13. Here’s the point. You want a president who’s just admitted he paid too much for his new house when he’s a business genius. Just think, if he waited 6 months he could have got the house for half price.

As to some recent letters. Your freedoms are being threatened. Right wing Koch party Republicans are suppressing voting rights countrywide. Over 14 anti-female bills introduced in the house. The Supreme Court shuts down Republican Communism in Michigan. Gun control. I ask the NRA to come to Groveland and replace all the road signs shot up by local gun toting loyal NRA members. Remember these are paid for by people’s taxes. I guess if get you hit by a stray bullet you’ve become a victim of someone else’s rights. And to the black statue. You can’t hide your racial prejudice by claiming free speech!

Obama. Just one thing we all should be proud of. Over 30 million people will now have access to health care through the ACA. Just think, now we all have access to Death Panels of our choosing. How cool is that. 

Jim Hassay

Groveland

Insults thrown
at GOP unfair 

 To the Editor,

With some frequency, letters from Democrats appear on this page, ascribing various negative characteristics to Republicans. Most recently, a letter writer linked the hateful effigy on Phoenix Lake Road to the GOP. 

It’s confounding, but nevertheless true, that adherents of the Left are complacent and comfortable in leveling unsubstantiated insults. It would be beneficial for them to consider that here in Tuolumne County they are insulting the majority of voters and thus must hold a negative view of the majority of their neighbors. 

Surely if leftist letter writers were asked if they felt their next door neighbors were racists, they would at least think twice before applying such a characterization. 

Michael Ackley

Sonora

 

Letters to the editor for August 9, 2012

State Park fiscal mismanagement

To the Editor,

Like everyone else I found the news that the California State Parks had “misplaced” $54 million very disturbing and frustrating. 

The mismanagement of funds at the State level should not be held against the dedicated employees and volunteers of Railtown. 

As a member of the Twain Harte Rotary Club, I know our community stepped up in a huge way to support the Rotary fund raisers that raised $75,000 over the last four months. 

With the $75,000 being matched by the Sonora Area Foundation, the $150,000 will keep Railtown open through June 2013. 

Although Rotary was scheduled to release the first of three $25,000 payments to the Parks Dept on July 31, these funds will not be disbursed until Rotary knows how the issue of the $54 million will be resolved. 

Rotary is committed to seeing that the money raised by the community will only be spent on Railtown. A committee of community leaders continue to meet to develop a business plan for Railtown that will make it the number one destination in central California. 

A viable and sustainable Railtown will be a critical component of the economic well being of Tuolumne County in the coming years.

John Zach 

Twain Harte

Don’t make a Mitt-stake in 2012

To the Editor,

The picture of cash bursting from his suit should be enough; or an elevator for his cars in one of his mansions; or his wife’s horsey-prancing hobby, “Dressage” or that not one of his 5 military-aged sons have ever enlisted; or refusing to disclose more than 2010 taxes and 2011 “summary,” despite the precedent set by his father and that he has Swiss and off-shore, tax-deferred accounts, all should be enough to see why, without fail, he doesn’t know what a doughnut is: Romney’s clueless to the plight of the working class because he’s the poster child for America’s one percent. 

Such elitist lifestyles have fallen on the back of the Common Man like a house on a witch in Oz, and a vote for Romney is a vote for Wall St., Monsanto, Sheldon Adelson, the brothers Koch and all lifetime members of the “Too Big to Fail” club. 

Like those Supreme judges who decreed, in Citizens United, corporations as “people” therefore, eligible to donate unlimited, anonymous amounts to political parties — insulting those whose checkbooks couldn’t cover the mortgage, saying corporate wealth doesn’t influence elections. 

Well, if B.S. was a sport — that won Olympic gold! But now that corporations are “people,” aren’t they beholden to laws, not just campaigns? 

Shouldn’t Freddie and Fannie be in prison, CitiCorp on trial and “people” like BP, Halliburton, JP Morgan on death row? 

I don’t despise wealth, earned or bequeathed; I despise avarice, hypocrisy and politicians sold to the highest bidder. Real people, like Hannity, Rush & egregious public servants, avoid truth and propagate lies because they can afford membership in Romney’s club. 

Don’t make a Mitt-stake in 2012.

M.C. Long

Sonora

Obama sign on Phoenix Lake Road

To the Editor,

The man who lives at the foot of Phoenix Lake with his strange caricature has to be admired, I suppose, for his tenacity and willingness to express his opinions. 

However, when I first drove drive by his place some time back, what originally struck me is that his cartoon-ish figure must be the construction paper project of a third-grader. 

Then I realized it wasn’t when I saw the various Letters to the Editor in this very space. 

But I feel he is expressing something more that I don’t like: apparent in his caricature is racism, and a downright mean and nasty attitude toward our president. 

Like the man or not, and I personally have mixed feelings, he is our duly-elected president. 

No matter what one’s politics, he deserves more respect than this third-grader’s apparition. 

What on earth is happening to our country? 

Roberta Goodwin

Sonora

 
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