
DOWNTOWN
BYE-BYE
The naysayers have spoken, so get used to saying,
"Goodbye, downtown development." The next big news will be Beam
and KGW pulling out of the project.
Can't blame them. Would you put your money on the
line if others are limiting the potential on your investments? Eugene
then will have to be very lucky to get another opportunity like
this. The word gets around in developers' circles.
The naysayers call themselves "progressives." My
dictionary says: progressive = moving forward: advancing.
They are thinking progressively all right, for advancing
their own profits and stifling competition. Because that what it's
all about. They only want progress in downtown if it doesn't hurt
their own wallet. We can't have another grocery store or natural
food store downtown. Gosh, people might choose to shop there. We
can't have people go to another art movie theater; otherwise they
are not forced to watch foreign movies in this old dusty place by
the university. We need to keep the rents low for nonprofits in
downtown. The naysayers have confused voters by misinforming them
about the true costs of urban renewal. Guess where I won't set my
foot in anymore: starts with K, S and B.
I still can vote with my wallet. So can you.
This development was a big chance for Eugene to
make a "great" downtown. To get something "great" one has to think
"great." As it is now, Eugene downtown is, mildly said, "uninspiring."
It is unappealing to shoppers, potential tenants and especially
tourists.
Isabell Norman, Eugene
NIKE
LOAN?
Dear Phil: Is it a gift, loan or what?
Some of you may not have noticed that the proposed
financing for the new UO basketball arena has funding coming from
state of Oregon Bonds partially backed by interest payments from
the Knight "gift."
At the recent meeting of the State Board of Higher
Education a question was asked as to whether the Knight funds could
be used to pay principal or just interest on the bonds. The UO president
said that the terms were yet to be worked out. Two points are relevant
here. First, bonds are a much more costly form of finance since
they involve interest payments over time, as well as the construction
cost of the arena. Are the Knight funds only "on loan" in the sense
that they cannot be used to build the arena but only to pay interest
on state of Oregon bonds? Second, to the extent that state bonds
are used to finance the arena there is a public subsidy going to
the program because state bonds used for this purpose cannot be
used for other state or university programs. The reason is because
these bonds "use up" some state borrowing capacity.
If the UO is in the dire financial predicament they
claim, why are they asking the state to divert borrowing capacity
to the "financially independent" athletic department? There is little
or no evidence that athletic programs benefit academic programs.
Why the subsidy?
Robert Olsen, economist, Eugene
KARMIC
HEARTBURN
I was a big fan and supporter of EW, until
you decided it was humorous to post a very mean-spirited category
(10/25) on the "Worst Service in Eugene." How ignorant for you to
attack local businesses which happen to advertise in your publication.
Does it make you feel good to know that you have now blemished the
résumés of some very hard working people? And for what?
Shame on you, and I hope you can still savor your next coveted tater
tot without a big dose of karmic heartburn.
EDITOR'S
NOTE: Just a reminder that voting in the Best of Eugene readers'
poll is by our readers, not our staff.
CHINA'S
FAILURE
Because of local activism, editorials and columns
on these pages, the work of Eugene photojournalist Paul Jeffrey
and such outreach efforts as the community schoolkit and efficient
stove projects, our county is probably a cut above most in its knowledge
of the humanitarian crisis still being waged in Darfur, Sudan. What
may be less clear to citizens is the role China plays in perpetuating
this debacle. And, as China prepares to host the Olympics —
a powerful symbol of international peace and brotherhood —
it is failing to do that which is within its power to help end the
genocide in Darfur!
China sells arms to the government of Sudan and
backs the Khartoum regime by purchasing 70 percent of the country's
oil exports. In its position on the U.N. Security Council, China
has not only watered down all efforts to deploy the robust peacekeeping
force that has been outlined but has also opposed sanctions against
the government as it continues to engage in human rights violations.
As the situation for Darfuri refugees has worsened, the Sino-Sudanese
ties have only grown closer.
Locally, we are asking citizens to participate in
a petition drive asking President Hu Jintao, as Sudan's primary
trading partner, to use his position to reverse these practices.
We urge county residents to download this petition at www.lcdarfurcoalition.org
and circulate it among friends, communities of faith and conscience,
and civil groups.
Americans, parents and grandparents, have not been
complacent when Chinese- made toys have endangered their children.
This is not a time for complacency when the endangered children
are not our own.
Our efforts to keep this crisis in the spotlight
bring hope to the people of Darfur.
"One People, One World"?
Marti Berger, Member, Lane County
Darfur Coalition
BEEPING
INTERSECTIONS
Regarding the (beep) aforementioned letter in (beep)
criticism of Dan Pegoda's cartoon, (beep) I am saddened that his
work (beep) was taken so (beep) seriously.
Living near a (beep) set of Accessible Pedestrian
Signals (beep) and knowing some visually impaired folks, I (beep)
appreciate the devices — even though (beep) they didn't prevent
a pedestrian (beep) from being hit by (beep) a car recently at that
intersection.
I (beep) also acknowledge the (beep) irritation
that comes from (beep) hearing those things making an (beep) audio
version of (beep) water torture.
Oh, eh, (beep) pardon me a moment ... (Whoosh! THWACK!
BEEeeeppp ...)
Thank you for indulging (beep? ... crunch!) me in
this bit of literary performance art.
G. B. Koerner, Eugene
KARMIC
JOY
We were thrilled to have Fairbanks Gallery (OSU
Department of Art) mentioned in your Best of Eugene issue (10/25).
As gallery director, I'd like to let you know that your kind words
and acknowledgement were heartwarming and most appreciated. Over
the years we have been honored to host a number of extraordinary
artists, including; Bill Viola, Sue Coe, Philip Pearlstein, Rick
Bartow, Wayne Thiebaud, Jerry Uelsmann, Ruth Bernhard, and Jacob
Lawrence, to name a few.
Our gallery program is now complemented with our
recently formed Visiting Artists & Scholars Lecture program,
now in its fourth year, which has sponsored free public lectures
by Do-Ho Suh, Bill Viola, Sue Coe, Philip Pearlstein, Harrell Fletcher,
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Ann Hamilton, Marian Abramovic, Douglas
Crimp and Rebecca Belmore, to name only a few. Maintaining a program
so rich in internationally renowned artists is a substantial task,
and our Art Department's VAS committee deserves kudos and recognition
for their passion and hard work in making this program so successful.
Our exhibits and lectures are free and open to the
public. We maintain an email notification list that the public can
sign up for by sending an email to drussell@oregonstate.edu and
including "subscribe" in the subject area, and their name in the
text area.
Thanks again for your coverage and your continual
attention to the numerous venues of fine art, music, dance, theater
and various combinations.
Douglas Russell, Director Fairbanks
Gallery, OSU Department of Art
CANNON
BLAST
What bothered me was not the justice of Chuck Adams'
criticism of the Springfield Mayor's Show (10/18) but the fact that
he had to fire off his cannon at a good-spirited community art exhibit.
I am certain he could find a subject more worthy
of his enormous talent.
Dennis Galloway, Eugene
CUM
AGAIN?
Howcum the 6th Street Grille is on 6th AVENUE? Howcum
13th is an avenue everywhere in Eugene except at Franklin, where
it's a street?
Howcum there's a sign near the train station pointing
us to "Amtrac"?
Howcum middle-aged guys insist on jogging in really
short shorts around Amazon Park? Do they really believe they are
members of the '77 Trail Blazers? BTW, guys — those are women's
shorts you're wearing.
Howcum there's a traffic sign near the Eugene Mission
at 1st and Blair that reads "No Turn Around at this Point"? Howcum
some people manage to notice little annoying things around town
and then get their rant published in EW?
Howcum?
Glenn Leonard, Eugene
CRIMINAL
TERRITORY
I applaud Congressman DeFazio for his cover antiwar
statement (11/1) but I have decided to give it more teeth [with
italicized inserted words]:
I am gravely concerned about the shitty justification
for military action in Iran and reports that the plan to attack
is in advanced rages. This is familiar criminal territory
for the Bush administration.
They used the same devious strategies to
drive us into war crimes in Iraq ... I do not intend to let
Congress fail the American people by authorizing criminal mass
murder a second time.
Bob Saxton, Eugene
NEW
TRIALS, ANYONE?
Recently writers have spoken of the disastrous war
in Iraq. I must take the opposite position and say that this war
is going exactly as planned. This war is not about freedom for Iraq
or the battle against terrorism but is a smokescreen. With public
attention being focused hysterically on the "war on terror" by the
Republican leadership and right wing media, no one is watching as
corporate America rewrites environmental, tax, regulatory, labor
and oversight laws, shifting the flow of capital to fill fewer and
fewer pockets. The deck is stacked ever more strongly against working
families. How greedy are these people?
One need but follow the profits of this war to discover
whether this nation's policies financially benefit one political
party or one class. Look at the no-bid contracts given to Bush and
Cheney cronies. Look at the billions of dollars "missing" in the
corrupt quagmire. And, by invading and occupying a nation of feuding
tribes, Bush has ensured years of war and profit taking for his
corporate masters. Dollars über alles!
As food for thought, I offer the following: Hess,
Goering, and those other German officials convicted and executed
during the Nuremberg trials were not convicted of being the leaders
of the Nazi party or of involvement in the millions of civilian
deaths surrounding the Holocaust and the occupation of Europe. Rather
they were convicted of and executed for "planning and waging an
aggressive war." New trials, anyone?
Kenneth A. Wilson, Springfield
DENIAL
= NO EXIT
There is no exit strategy for Iraq and never will
be as the real mission continues to be geopolitical presence and
domination of gas and oil regions. Iran and the entire Middle East
fall into this category as policy since the days of Henry Kissinger
and before.
Our gilded age dynasty rulers and their minions
are not true leaders and only speak for their narrow interests.
Rhetorical manipulations of propaganda, superstition and bold-faced
lies hold us and our ecosystems all hostage as one more expendable
resource for a massively unstable lifestyle.
Rule by denial and false claims of god, patriotism
and freedom (as roughshod exploitation) are cooking the golden goose
for us all. As petro-based infrastructure collapses to massive environmental
calamity and general socio-economic poverty, privatized neofeudalism
and neofascism are steadily filling the tragic gaps.
Leave the competition and wars of short-term domination.
Only honest insight and common resolution can create the will and
vision of long-term partnership to truly work together for real
change.
A rising tide of basic truth will either guide or
kill us as a civilization and life form.
Ralph Penunuri, Corvallis
POLITICS
OF POPPIES
In 2000, Afghanistan's production of the global
opium/heroin supply was 70 percent. In 2005, it was 87 percent;
in 2006, 92 percent.
This steady increase in annual poppy harvests has
occurred despite the country's occupation by U.S. military and coalition
forces since 2001. In fact, these harvests can be seen as a direct
result of U.S. intelligence agencies overseeing the distribution
routes for this very lucrative crop. For examples of complicity,
read "Who Benefits from the Afghan Opium Trade?" by Michel
Chossudovsky, Gary Webb's book Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras,
and the Crack Cocaine Explosion and Deep Cover by Mike
Levine.
Millions of drug users have been locked up and billions
of taxpayer dollars spent, yet an estimated 10 million people worldwide
are still heroin dependent, with over one million users residing
in the U.S.
Why has the War on Drugs failed so miserably? Looking
under its surface, this war was never meant to be won. It was created
as a cash cow — with myriad government agencies and their
corporate partners milking its never-ending wealth of subsidies.
During the 1960s and '70s, most of the world's heroin
supply originated in the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia. In the
1990s, the majority of heroin seized in the U.S. came from South
America. In this century, military forces and U.S. intelligence
agencies have relocated once again to produce this year's glaring
statistic: In 2007, Afghanistan supplied 95 percent of the world's
heroin.
Robert Simms, Corvallis
A
NEW WORLD VIEW
I read the news sites today. I read about veteran
soldiers failing to receive adequate treatment for their wounds,
physical and psychological. I read about Blackwater killing civilians
and brazenly calling them "armed combatants," hear about how our
forces have swell armor where one in 16 who are hit succumb to their
wounds, the rest left mangled. Double amputees earning less than
hired killers, our boys getting ground up for rich men's gain.
Dissent is not what we need. Our nation is crumbling,
our economy in shambles. Racial tensions are veiled in anti-immigration
and fueled by packagable stereotypes. We watch our words to not
sound anti-American or racist or ignorant. Freedom of speech is
a luxury that national security cannot afford. It is that freedom
which will be our salvation. If we cannot ask the hard questions
without punishment, if we cannot raise our small individual voices
in concert, as a population, we will be subjected by an oligarchy
of bankers. The same bankers consuming our taxes, raising ATM fees
and waging the never-ending war. We need to take back our nation
and return to reason and truth as opposed to simple authority.
If there is anything that you dotoday, please do
this: Go to www.zeitgeistmovie.comand
watch. Have an open mind, understand it is objective, aimed at changing
opinions. If you disagree, I urge you to research what you cannot
accept. When I first watched this movie, I was outraged yet skeptical.
I have researched much of the content and now have an entirely new
context with which to view the world.
Charlie Klausmeier, Eugene
PINK
SLIP FOR HARRY
Senate Majority Leader Reid is such a nice guy.
Bespectacled and soft-spoken, he'd make a perfect church deacon
or Presbyterian minister. A church mouse would be his friend; he'd
keep the kitty leashed. At the local bar, he'd down Shirley Temples
while puffing on a meerschaum. A bookkeeper for the Rotarians. A
marshal for the Shriners. Yes — that Harry is such a nice
guy.
It would be such a pleasure to fire him.
Weeks ago Sen. Russ Feingold proposed a censure
of Bush over the Iraq War, since both Reid and House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi have soft-pedaled the impeachment process against our king.
Neither thinks it's necessary. Now Pelosi admits that the Dems have
failed to deliver on the Iraq War. Well, speak for yourself, speaker
— and Harry, too.
America needs neither puffing pipes nor cleric's
collars, sugary drinks nor fat mice. We need a sweaty pipe fitter
wielding a hissing blowtorch. We need a Hulk Hogan wielding a folding
chair. We need The Exterminator on a roaring Harley. We need some
blood, sweat and tears. And a pink slip for Harry.
Add another for Nancy, who has taken Botox to a
new level by actually freezing herself in time. Before the 2006
elections, she promised not to impeach the King if she became Speaker.
Always good to telegraph your plans to the enemy just before the
troops align.
Promises kept!
The Harry and Nancy Show: A church mouse hugging
a nerveless kitty, both stoned on botoxed catnip. Find me a mastiff.
Tom Erwin, Springfield
UNBELIEVABLE
Today I received another in a long series of spam
letters from Dr. Dean, Democratic Party chair, entitled, "Unbelievable."
I typically respond to these spams, mostly for fun. I don't kid
myself that my responses or opinions float their way to the top
of the pond, but it makes me feel better. I thought I'd share today's
response. Hopefully a lower level party hack will read this, and
pass it upwards.
Unbelievable is right!
I can't believe, for instance, that the Dems in
Congress continue to fund this illegal and immoral occupation, a
war of aggression. This is in direct violation of the Geneva Convention,
and as such, an impeachable offense.
I can't believe that you won't vote for reviving
the constitutional right of habeas corpus.
I can't believe that the leading candidates for
president refuse to discuss impeachment.
I can't believe that Congress continues to refuse
to do their constitutionally required job and enforce the Constitution
by pursuing impeachment against this obviously illegal and corrupt
administration.
I can't believe that despite all of these catastrophic
failures on the Dems' part, that you continue to ask me for money
and support.
Frankly, I now view the Democratic Party as willing
co-conspirators in the illegal acts of this junta we call BushCo.
Prove me wrong, Dr. Dean. I beg you.
Jonathan Knight, Eugene
TIME
FOR COVER-UP
Instead of destroying Mac Court, condemning property,
borrowing $200 million to build a new basketball court and 12,500-seat
concert venue, why not put a cover on Autzen Stadium? It might cost
less, we could actually play basketball there, it has existing parking
lots and for a concert it could hold more than 60,000.
World-class music could be offered to our Northwest
region at a better price. Not only would the university and state
of Oregon make more money, but also the local hotels and restaurants
would increase their profits.
Ron Davis, Cottage Grove
FOOTBALL
FACTORY
In my 31 years in Oregon since moving from Illinois,
never did I hear an Oregonian show any interest in Illinois football
— until last week.
"Can the Illini beat Ohio State?" I repeatedly was
asked by fans aware that undefeated Ohio State had to lose a game
if the Ducks were to have a shot at the national title.
"I doubt it," I answered. I was wrong. Illinois
upset the Buckeyes, and Oregon's fate appears to be in its own hands
in battling Kansas and LSU for No. 1 the rest of the way.
And why not? Oregon has as much right to dominance
as any football factory (disguised as an institution of higher learning)
that puts computers into each player's locker area, plans to spend
$200 million for a new basketball emporium and hires for $400,000
a baseball coach for a sport it has not fielded in a quarter century.
George Beres, Eugene
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