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2002 |
Editorials Oh, for God's sake! There's a small pile of confetti
on my desk. I took an x-acto knife to all the money in my wallet to get
rid of the offensive "In God We Trust."
I don't know who we are supposed
to trust -- certainly not Martha Stewart, Arthur Andersen, Merrill Lynch
or WorldCom -- but I don't want to offend anyone when I fork over my cash.
I bought a bottle of white-out
so I can get rid of that embarrassing "endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights" bit in the Declaration of Independence.
Okay, I understand that some
people don't like any hint of the spiritual or metaphysical in their public
discourse. I'm pretty undemonstrative in that regard myself.
But the folks who would leach
every expression of faith in a higher power out of our civic culture are
stretching the fabric of our history and constitution to do it.
The First Amendment (of which
we newspaper folks are quite fond) states that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion..." In the context of the
times, that meant no state church, no "Church of America" mimicking the
Church of England.
The founders most certainly
did not intend that any reference to a deity be expunged from public life.
Those guys -- some of whom were notorious "free thinkers" -- invoked God
all the time, right out in public. Not in any self-righteous way; but
in the way of people who were making up history as they went along and
sought higher wisdom and strength wherever they could find it.
No one compels anyone to say
"under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance. No one compels anyone to recite
the pledge at all.
Yeah, kids might feel pressure,
but don't you think they feel more pressure to dress cool and listen to
the right music? Perhaps we should declare backwards ball caps, baggy
jeans and Britney Spears unconstitutional.
Now that's something I could
get behind.
Jim Cornelius, Editor Legislature's budget is dishonest So soon after Enron and WorldCom,
a cowardly and dishonest Oregon Legislature has put forth a budget that
needs accounting tricks to solve the state's budget crisis.
And they cry that they have
been working so hard. Let's see them make rent and day care and car insurance
and doctor's bills, let alone health insurance, on a wage of $10 or $12
or even $13 an hour. Then they can whine.
If it was the Oregon Legislature,
they wouldn't have to pay those bills. They would tell the landlord that
rather than pay the rent in December, they will pay it a few days later,
in January. That way, they can tell the bank where they are trying to
get a loan that their rent was actually less this year.
The bank normally wouldn't
loan money to buy chicken for dinner tonight, even though everybody agrees
the family shouldn't starve. The bank would ask hard questions, such as,
what will we have for dinner tomorrow night, and where will THAT money
come from?
Not the Oregon Legislature.
They are going to borrow money to pay the bills for this year by issuing
bonds that will take decades to pay off. So in the future, we will have
to pay for what we need then, AND we will be paying on a loan for this
year. What will we have for dinner tomorrow? How will we plug the budget
hole in two years? The Oregon Legislature will worry about that later.
Tell THAT to the bank.
There is a strong hint of
rain over the mountains. In fact, this is still Oregon, and it rains here
often enough, even on the "dry" side. The Oregon Legislature is going
to take the education endowment fund, call it a "rainy day" fund, and
pay some more bills. Then that, too, will be all gone.
As a rainy day fund, that
is like renting a towel in the middle of a storm instead of buying a coat.
Of course, if they buy a coat, they will have to admit that the sun doesn't
always shine.
And in the ultimate act of
cowardice, the Oregon Legislature is turning the hard decisions back to
the voters, so they can hold up their hands at election time and say,
"see... I didn't raise any taxes, my hands are clean."
Sometimes you can't do hard
work with clean hands. Accounting tricks, irresponsible borrowing, deficit
spending, all hidden under clever words of family values. What a tragedy
has befallen the Republican Party, what a tragedy for Oregon.
Eric Dolson, Publisher |
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