LETTERS IN THE EDITOR'S MAILBAG.Byline: The Register-Guard Don't give up right of way There is one more lesson that should be gleaned from the recent accident near Churchill High School that might prevent future tragedies. The good Samaritan Good Samaritan man who helped half-dead victim of thieves after a priest and a Levite had “passed by.” [N.T.: Luke 10:33] See : Helpfulness Good Samaritan who stopped in traffic to let the boy cross was trying to help. That person was being considerate and compassionate. But the fact is, that person in that car gave up his or her right of way. You should never give up your right of way. The concept of right of way was founded on the idea of keeping traffic moving and keeping everyone safe in the process. That boy had a bike and time on his hands. He could afford to wait for a break in traffic, or he could have gone down the street to a crosswalk. By stopping in mid-street, that driver put pressure on the boy to act in order to not hold up traffic. Yet that driver could not control the other lanes of traffic to ensure the child's safety. So, yes, that teenager should have been driving more conservatively. And yes, that young boy on the bike should have been more observant or should have waved the first car off and refused to cross. But the good Samaritan should not have stopped in the first place. Accidents happen when unforeseen events line up just right. Or wrong. And by giving up the right of way in traffic, that good Samaritan may have started a chain of events that caused one boy to die and gave another boy a hellish, lifelong memory. If you want to help someone, do it the right way. Jeff Greif Elmira Who will write Petraeus report United States Army General David Petraeus has given several reports on the state of Iraq:
Is anyone besides me wondering who beyond Gen. David Petraeus will be writing "The Petraeus Report"? Henry Dizney Eugene Upgrade world, don't destroy it I liked Justin Morell's devilish dev·il·ish adj. 1. Of, resembling, or characteristic of a devil, as: a. Malicious; evil. b. Mischievous, teasing, or annoying. 2. Excessive; extreme: devilish heat. Sept. 2 letter which concludes that "there also should be some space left to debate the flatness of the Earth and whether or not the common cold is caused by evil spirits." As a compromise position we could say that, yes, the Earth is flat according to Thomas Friedman's CEO-loving economic hypothesis and yes, the common cold is caused by a God-created virus. But this only shows that compromise is sometimes only a weird wicked witch of the West Wicked Witch of the West the terror of Oz. [Am. Lit.: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz] See : Evil Wicked Witch of the West uses her powers to upset the plans of Dorothy and her friends. [Am. Lit. and Cin. without real merit. The solution: wonderful witches! The six letters immediately following Morell's did an excellent job of debunking de·bunk tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug. "intelligent design" creationism creationism or creation science, belief in the biblical account of the creation of the world as described in Genesis, a characteristic especially of fundamentalist Protestantism (see fundamentalism). . The wonderful thing about science is that it is continuously upgrading itself, a trick most religions are incapable of learning due to excessive glorifying of ancient texts. Learning the mistakes of the past will help us learn how to survive our degrading world. We need to upgrade our world, not destroy it with stupid and immoral pollution and stupid and immoral wars. Bob D. Saxton Eugene Tasers: Cattle prods for the poor Is Eugene sliding into a police state? The process always seems to use an event of terror, like 9/11, to stun the populace (and human rights programs) into allowing the destruction of human and civil rights. Then, after anti-human rights laws are passed, domination by the police state and the loss of human rights for the marginalized follows. Here in Eugene, first came the tragic Ryan Salisbury shooting in the south hills. Immediately Tasers were snuck snuck v. Usage Problem A past tense and a past participle of sneak. See Usage Note at sneak. in, those horrible weapons that leave people writhing in the dust, begging for mercy. Though the police are clear that Tasers are unsafe to be used against armed people, they were marketed in Eugene as a way to stop "suicide by cop Suicide-by-cop is a suicide method in which someone deliberately acts in a threatening way towards a law enforcement officer, with the goal of provoking a lethal response, such as being shot to death. ." In reality, they are cattle prods for the restive poor. And I now worry about "Crisis Intervention crisis intervention Psychiatry The counseling of a person suffering from a stressful life event–eg, AIDS, cancer, death, divorce, by providing mental and moral support. See Hotline. Training," offered to the police as a way to gain control of dysfunctional, often delusional people without having to shoot them. Sounds good, but CIT n. 1. A citizen; an inhabitant of a city; a pert townsman; - used contemptuously. Which past endurance sting the tender cit. - Emerson. has a dangerous possible side effect. CIT training is sometimes led by those who see the dysfunctional as genetically defective, mentally defective, mentally, adj a mentally subnormal individual. A person in whom a basic nervous system defect may be assumed because of social and intellectual deficiencies (e.g., persons afflicted with microcephaly, hydrocephalus, or mongolism). ill, and so in need of forced drugging and incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment. Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes. . Writing as one who was nearly destroyed by a bizarre mental health system straight out of "Cuckoo's Nest," I worry for the future.Some cities simply haul away their lost and lonely, label them crazy, and if they resist, use Tasers as a terror weapon. CIT without human rights integration leads to "Big Nurse." Hugh Massengill Eugene Try cooling your diet I was very impressed with Leonardo DiCaprio's powerful documentary, "The 11th Hour." The film depicts the devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. impacts of global warming, including droughts, hurricanes and flooding of coastal areas. It features interviews with the brightest minds on our planet about the causes of this manmade environmental crisis and possible solutions. A powerful solution was suggested last November in a report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. The report found that meat production accounts for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming. That's more than automobiles! Carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. , the chief greenhouse gas, is emitted by burning forests to create animal pastures and combustion of fossil fuels to operate farm machinery, trucks, refrigeration refrigeration, process for drawing heat from substances to lower their temperature, often for purposes of preservation. Refrigeration in its modern, portable form also depends on insulating materials that are thin yet effective. equipment, factory farms and slaughterhouses. Much more damaging methane and nitrous oxide nitrous oxide or nitrogen (I) oxide, chemical compound, N2O, a colorless gas with a sweetish taste and odor. Its density is 1.977 grams per liter at STP. It is soluble in water, alcohol, ether, and other solvents. are released from digestive tracts of cattle and from animal waste cesspools, respectively. The good news is that each of us can do our part to reduce global warming on our next trip to the supermarket. More details are available at www.CoolYourDiet.org. Elijah Hennison Eugene It's disturbing, not appalling A reader flared up at The Register-Guard's use of the word "flare" to characterize a roadside painting with pizazz (letters, Sept. 4). Such solecisms cause me to be disturbed, annoyed, chagrined. But appalled? Heavens to Betsy Heavens to Betsy (H2B for short) was a punk rock band from Olympia, Washington. The members were Tracy Sawyer on drums and occasionally bass guitar, and Corin Tucker on guitar and vocals. ! To the back burner with world hunger and Iraq. The English language is succumbing to rampant corruption! The cited homonymic hom·o·nym n. 1. One of two or more words that have the same sound and often the same spelling but differ in meaning, such as bank (embankment) and bank (place where money is kept). 2. a. slip is clarified by exhaustive dictionary definitions of both words with their several synonyms. Wouldn't a simple, humorously sardonic sentence drive home the same point without a sledgehammer See Opteron. ? "I don't see the flare, it must have burned out. On the other hand, the painting does have a distinctive flair." My own peeve peeve tr.v. peeved, peev·ing, peeves To cause to be annoyed or resentful. See Synonyms at annoy. n. 1. A vexation; a grievance. 2. is the neutering neu·ter adj. 1. Grammar a. Neither masculine nor feminine in gender. b. Neither active nor passive; intransitive. Used of verbs. 2. a. of forceful adjectives by overkill overkill Vox populi An excess of anything . A clean shirt is nice, but awesome? The frequent use of "lay" for "lie" is irksome, but appalling? Jim Wood Eugene An update from `Shortdawg' This letter is to any of my radio listeners out there who might be wondering where I went. For roughly five years on 91.9 KRVM-FM public radio I was known by the on-air handle of Shortdawg. My primary gig was The Beatles Hour on Saturday mornings. Well, in late August I was fired as a volunteer disc jockey (can volunteers be fired?) without so much as a warning for supposedly violating station policy by taking Beatles requests - despite the fact that I had been doing so once a month for several years with no objections and was always inundated in·un·date tr.v. in·un·dat·ed, in·un·dat·ing, in·un·dates 1. To cover with water, especially floodwaters. 2. by calls from enthusiastic listeners who, as time went on and more and more programming became automated, were ever increasingly happy to hear a live presence in the broadcast booth. Moreover, several of those callers were going through deep emotional trauma (one was dying of cancer, for example; another had a son die), and they often told me that being able to talk to a sympathetic voice once a month and then request a favorite Beatles song brought them some small measure of solace in their otherwise pain-filled lives. So, to all those listeners who did call in with their requests and kind words during my years at KRVM, I just wanted to say, "thanks." Hopefully at some point in the future I'll be able to broadcast again, so stay tuned. Until then, I'm "Shortdawg out." Corey Albert Eugene Lanker's legacy was overlooked Oregon Public Broadcasting's recent documentary featuring the outstanding work of Register-Guard photographers gave readers a chance to appreciate the pictorial treasure that arrives on the porch each morning. If you travel and see other newspapers around the country you'll seldom find anything equal to what we have in Eugene. But one important name was missing from the documentary, that of Brian Lanker, and it was Lanker who started it all. Lanker, a Pulitzer-winning photographer from The Topeka Capital Journal, was hired by The Register-Guard at the age of 27 in the mid-1970s to overhaul the rather staid photography of the paper and introduce Eugene to true photojournalism. During his years at the paper he built a talented staff and wrested control of graphic presentation from the copy editors who had traditionally selected and cropped the pictures and done the layouts. Photographs, once little more than decorations on the page, became major elements of the stories, and the paper took on a sparkle it had never shown before. Lanker still lives in Eugene, but he left the paper years ago to do work for magazines like Life, Sports Illustrated and National Geographic, to publish books like the internationally acclaimed "I Dream a World," the story of black women in America; to direct a documentary about the combat artists of World War II for the Public Broadcasting System and to work for commercial accounts of some of the biggest corporations in the world. Nike comes to mind. The Register-Guard's magnificent photography, entrusted to other capable hands today, exists as part of Brian Lanker's legacy. Dave Emery Eugene |
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