Opinions and Backcover - Voices of Central Pennsylvania
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Opinions and Backcover - Voices of Central Pennsylvania
27 March 2012 Letters Please send letters to [email protected] Dear Voices, I must say I find offense in the article by Toby Carlson, February 2012, “The Frightening Trend of Racial Code Words”. I am Tea Party. I am highly educated, Catholic, and a historian. Mr. Carlson's assumptions are absolutely incorrect. He points to urban vs. rural, old vs. new, and takes class or station in life as his premise. It is obvious that he has not studied history or been paying attention to current events. As a Tea Party member, I and others only want the country to be what is founded on: personal responsibilty with limited government. Our Constitution is the greastest document in the world, and our founders' vision was not just for their time, but for all time. This administration has shredded that document beyond belief (i.e. Obamacare, school lunch policy, spending without consent, class warfare, higher taxes, avoiding the checks and balances of the system.) It is time to put the country back on track by ending extended entitlements and putting people back to work, by securing our border, by allowing only legal immigration, and by letting the individual decide what is right for them. Socialism doesn't work. History has proven that over and over again. Let our Contitutional Republic be as intended, and America will be the shining star as it should be to the rest of the world. John L. Flickinger State College [Ed. Because we love a good debate between friends, we extended an invitation to Mr. Carlson to reply to Mr. Flickinger. The response is found below.] Dear Voices, Voting habits of urban-liberal versus rural-conservative are well documented. Take Pennsylvania, for example: 16 of the most populous counties, plus cosmopolitan Centre County, voted for Obama in 2008. The remaining 50 or so counties, predominantly rural, voted for Mc Cain. This pattern was evident to me locally during 2008 when I counted the number of Obama versus McCain signs on people’s lawns while driving from State College to rural Millheim. Mr. Flickinger, like the Tea Party folks, expresses nostalgia for a lost America, the once and future “city on the hill.” But when was this golden age? Before the Civil War, when slavery existed? Before the 1920s, when women could not vote? Before Social Security was created in the 1930s? Before the Civil Rights bills were passed in the 1950s? Before Medicare was instituted in the 1960s? Before the clean water and clean air acts were passed by President Nixon in the 1970s? Are we to now assume that because President Obama wanted 40 million more Americans to have better health care that this country has slipped into decline? What kind of morality is this? The Tea Party may sense a decline in this country but I feel that the United States is a better country now than it was a century or even a generation ago. I think, moreover, that the Tea Party people tend to use the word “socialism” to refer to things they do not like or approve of. The Oxford dictionary definition hardly applies to contemporary America, let alone Europe. Toby Carlson State College ASK Cosmo Dear Cosmo, Have you noticed the increase of ads for internet dating services? They’ve got them for regular people, and senior citizens, and now there are ones especially for religious people. There’s Christianmingle.com for Christians and J-Date for Jews. I don’t know about Muslims. Are people more lonely today, or is this just another hi-tech industry hunting for people with computers? Do these things actually even work? Signed, Possible Player Dear Playing With Matches, First off, religious people qualify as regular people, don’t they? So do Muslims (on both counts). And by the way, there are plenty of Muslim dating sites. In addition to the subsets in the major franchises like E-harmony.com, Zoosk.com, and Match.com, there are individual sites such as SingleMuslim.com or ArabLounge.com. Wouldn’t it be awesome if their site music was “Girl from Ipanima” played on an Oud? Interestingly enough, ChristianMingle and J-Date are both operated by Spark.com, who proudly proclaims, “Combining the power of technology with our deep commitment to your happiness, our specialized Web sites aim to Campus and Culture from the Canine Perspective provide a fun and convenient meeting point for millions of singles each year.” So no, they’re not merely hunting for people with computers. They’re looking for specific people with specific demographics who want to hook up with folks of the same demographics. Apparently, the lonely devout are not meeting one another at church, temple or mosque, so why not—in the name of their happiness—sell them the ability to peek under the wimple, veil or burka on the intra-faith internet. A small sample of Spark.com’s lofty cruising zones includes the following dotcoms: AdventistSingles, AsianSingles, BlackSingles and BlackChristianSingles, CanadianPersonals, CatholicMingle, DeafSingles, GreekSingles, LatinSingles, MilitarySingles, InterracialSingles, LDSSingles (for the Mormons) and even the IndianMatrimonynetwork (perhaps to arrange a marriage the modern way). Unlike their many heathen counterparts, Spark sites like Christianmingle.com do not offer drop-down menus for men seeking men, or women seeking women. These folks have to drop down to the a la carte sites, of which there is no shortage. However, persons on such sites may not be what they appear to be. “HotTeen16” might be a 45 year-old man, “Little Lovely” might be a female Sumo, and “Ready4U” might be an NBC Dateline reporter casting an episode of “To Catch a Predator.” And “Sad Bachelor” might be some married dude sniffing around the fencerows to do a little extracurricular hoodwinking. see Cosmo, pg. 31 28 March 2012 Candidate calls for reform in Harrisburg by Christopher Lee I am running for the State House of Representatives to restore to Harrisburg the local values of our residents –Democrats, Republicans and independents alike. If you’ve ever visited the Boal Mansion Museum in Boalsburg, you know that I have glorious ancestors, but the glory is theirs. These ancestors founded Boalsburg, Penn State, the Republican Party and America. They established principles that today we call American values. In Harrisburg last year the legislature voted twice to rig elections and more recently to rig our laws to favor gas companies over the land-use regulation of our local municipalities. Like my ancestor Richard Henry Lee who signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776, I find it is time to stand up for our American values that have been abandoned in Harrisburg. The incumbent in the 171st district voted for the Congressional gerrymandering—or what we now call “Kerrymandering” and what political analyst Terry Madonna called “the worst gerrymander in modern Pennsylvania history.” Gerrymandering redraws legislative district boundaries to create one-party “safe districts” in which the incumbent of the dominant party can take his voters for granted, ignoring them and their values to pay attention instead to what the lobbyists want from him. That’s why lobbyists like the out-of-state American Legislative Exchange Council write our laws such as the voter suppression bill that the incumbent in the 171st District voted for last year which bars from voting the elderly, the poor and students who don’t have photo identification. I know I am running in the minority party in a one-party gerrymandered district, but my ancestor Frank Blair founded the Republican Party in Pittsburgh in 1856 so I know that Republicans in the 171st District from Boalsburg to Gerrymandering redraws legislative district boundaries to create one-party “safe districts” in which the incumbent of the dominant party can take his voters for granted, ignoring them and their values to pay attention instead to what the lobbyists want from him. Bellefonte and from Centre Hall to Millheim come from a long, honorable tradition that includes Abraham Lincoln who invested in transportation infrastructure, Teddy Roosevelt who protected natural areas and was a trust-buster and Dwight Eisenhower who warned us of the military-industrial complex. If Republican voters in the 171st District become aware that their incumbent no longer represents their values of conservation, fair elections and responsive government that invests in the future but instead has voted against all of these in the last year, they can justifiably vote for a moderate Democrat who shares their values and will represent their values more truly in Harrisburg. The incumbent also voted for House Bill 1950 about Marcellus shale gas wells which strips from our local municipalities the right to regulate gas wells which by this new law can be placed in residential zones without local regulation. The 171st current representative in Harrisburg didn’t just vote for HB 1950, he led the fight to pass it as chair of the House Finance Committee. While I am certainly in favor of American energy and cheap energy, I would not sacrifice our local quality of life to get it. However, gas and oil and energy companies from Texas and Oklahoma have donated thousands of dollars to the incumbent in the 171st District who has been described by Democracy Rising Executive Director Tim Potts as “pro-choice on corruption” for his “let it be” approach to reforming political corruption in the legislature. My experience in local government includes serving as Chairman of the Centre Region Council of Governments, Metropolitan Planning organization and Regional Planning Commission as well as chair of the Harris Township Board of Supervisors. I also serve on the Chamber of Business and Industry’s Government Affairs committee and Infrastructure Committee here in Centre County. I am a practical moderate who will look to govern from the middle, not from the ideological extremes. I run a small historic heritage site which helped me learn decades ago what see Candidate, pg. 29 Teamsters Local 8 Proudly Supports Local Youth Activities The Men and Women of Teamsters Local 8 Encourage Supporting Local Youth Activities 29 March 2012 from Candidate, pg. 28 they still haven’t learned today in Harrisburg—how to accomplish your mission while balancing expenditures and revenues. How things happen in Harrisburg determines what things happen. I will be a strong and tireless advocate, not a lip-service advocate, of real reform, including ending the gerrymandering that leaves the voters out in the cold and lets in lobbyists to get quick action on their agendas such as gambling and gas wells. Friends have warned me that by standing up I risk being put down with personal attacks, but these times call for someone to stand up for our shared American values, just as my ancestors did when their times called for it. If the media and the voters of the 171st can focus their attention on what government actions they want their representative to take for them—and not personalities or personal favors done—then they will recognize the radical positions taken by the incumbent who has voted to rig elections and to tilt the rules to favor producers over consumers—positions that do not respect the values of voters of any party in the American tradition. If the media and the voters of the 171st can focus their attention on what government actions they want their representative to take for them, then they will see the value in the vision for our government offered them by my candidacy for State House of Representatives from the 171st District. Whitey Blue on the Tea Party by David M. Silverman I was talking the other day to Whitey Blue, longtime Centre Area resident and hard-nose. Whitey, any thoughts about the Republican group that named themselves “The Tea Party”? “You bet! They finally have adopted a true American stance and name.” The original Tea Party was the group that favored throwing British trading ships’ cargo into the sea rather than pay taxes on it. Where’s the similarity? “The modern Tea Party wants to stop throwing our tax money into the pockets of the under-achieving masses.” Sudoku [Editor’s note: VOICES does not endorse political candidates, but we may run opinion pieces by those running for office.] “We find the idea a new, maintenance apartment at Foxd really appealing especially since w go south for the win – Pete and Marge C A fter living in the same house for 38 y g p excited to move to their new 2-bedroom apartment at Foxdale Village. “We looked at ever y retirement community in State College,” says Marge. “W hen we visited Foxdale, we felt such a warm feeling a nd we just knew this was the place for us.” Now, it’s your turn to enjoy the maintenance-free lifestyle at Foxdale. Our new apartments offer spacious living, patios, balconies, and more. Call 272-2117 now to f ind out which of our new apartments are still available. A Quaker-Directed Continuing Care Retirement Community Visit us at w w w.foxdalevillage.org. 500 East Marylyn n Avenue | State College, PA A 16801 (814) 238-3322 | (800) 253-4951 Instructions: Fill in the grid so every row, every column and every three-by-three box contains the digits 1 through 9. There is no math involved. You solve the puzzle with reason and logic. The solution to this month’s puzzle can be found on page 35 of this issue. By Peter Morris 30 March 2012 Continuing the fight for equal rights by Michele Hamilton “The world we want is the world we need.” Those were the words of Angela Davis, a feminist and civil rights leader, and they are particularly powerful now. I reflect on her words regularly for inspiration, as affirmation, and as the fuel to counsel and advocate—especially as I write this article. February was Black History Month. March is Women’s History Month. Both are times to reflect on the past and plan for the future. They are two months for reflecting on the lives of Dorothy Heights, Patricia Stephens, June Jordan, Audre Lorde and Loretta Ross. Each of these leaders fought for equality, both as women and as people of color. These are also months of frustration. Recently, I was at a local National Organization for Women (NOW) chapter meeting, and discussion lingered over cuts to Planned Parenthood, potential PA voter-ID requirements, attempts to shame people who receive public benefits (especially African-Americans) and the fact that homicide is still the number one killer of women in the United States. The frustration was palpable. Didn’t we “solve” these issues 20 years ago? In many ways it can feel like we are Sisyphus pushing the boulder up the mountain, only to watch it roll down, over and over again. This is when the words of Ms. Davis are most helpful. As an activist, I work to create, in my little part of the world, increased opportunity, which requires safety and equality. Every person engaged in progressive work—and it is work—whether paid or Lend us your voices by William Saas At a recent meeting, the VOICES editorial staff huddled around the following question: What, exactly, is VOICES? The result was two-hours-plus of enthusiastic give-and-take. There was talk of demographics (who reads us?), distribution (where can people find us?) and the future (where are we going?). Each question begat productive tangents, each tangent begat deeper questions. To stay sharp, we drank lots of coffee. I come to State College via Las Vegas, and, as I shared with the editorial staff, I had no idea what VOICES was when I first picked it up in Fall 2010. It certainly wasn’t the kind of weekly I’d grown used to back home (as another editor duly pointed out, we don’t advertise “escorts” in our backpages). Not that that’s a bad thing. Point is, my concept of what VOICES is and can be is not fixed yet. I’m still in the flirty getting-to-know-you phase. Still, as I sit writing this late Thursday evening in the VOICES office, deep in the bowels of the soon-to-reopen Webster’s cafe, I wonder if the editors’ discussion was not a bit misguided (if also with its heart squarely in the right place). Perhaps a better approach would be to ask, here and now: What is VOICES to you, the reader? Of course, you know that we are a nonprofit monthly news and culture magazine. You know that we are mostly volunteerrun (and that you can attend our weekly open writer meetings). And you know, we hope, that we offer a unique and distinctive voice in the midst of a largely one-sided media scene. These are all, in a sense, the givens. So what else is there? You tell us. In coming months we’d like to field and publish your thoughts on VOICES in the opinion section. What is VOICES to you? What would you like to see in the future? Lend us your voices! E-mail [email protected] with your thoughts. unpaid, ponders the different avenues that can be used to build a stronger, more affirming and equal society. I do this through my own work, within my faith community and through my volunteer opportunities. But what matters most is observing and listening to what is needed in our community. Who’s voices are not being heard in discourses on the direction of our county, state and nation? What innovative ways can we reach, inform, and motivate greater participation in politics—especially among women and people of color? How can people working on becoming anti-racist and anti-sexist engage a wider audience and show how these two issues intersect with disability rights, LGBTQ equality, economic and environmental justice and healthcare? As a woman of color, I stand in solidar- ity with others who want to bring about social justice. I do not have to provide all the answers. That’s not my role. I am part of a long line of freedom fighters (organized and not, paid or volunteer) from Sojourner Truth to Andrea Smith, Elaine Brown and the many unnamed and unknown women. I am also part of a current group of innovators including Vinika Porwal, Jasmin Rakestraw and Shani Robin. As a feminist, my role through the local NOW chapter, Ni-at-nee NOW, is the creation of a safer space for residents of Central Pennsylvania to engage in social and political issues on a local, state and national level. I invite you to join me in this process. Ni-at-nee NOW meets the first Thursday of every month. To contact Michele, e-mail: [email protected]. 31 March 2012 from Cosmo, pg. 27 Certainly these sites with overtly high moral profiles are completely free of fetishists, married people, adulterers, thieves, tax cheats, blasphemers, Democrats or similar sinners. I’m surprised, though, that their customer base appears to have given up on prayer, and has resorted to more worldly technology to mine for soulmates. I do enjoy the TV ads for ChristianMingle.com, where they say “Some people say they’ll wait for God to find them their match, when God is telling you to act now,” displayed with their trademarked tagline, “Find God’s match for you.TM” Nice pitch, and you can barely smell the brimstone from that mortal whopper they just told. It’s one thing to allege that whomever It’s one thing to allege that whomever their server serves up is God’s match for you, unless GOD is the acronym for their compatibility algorithm. But it’s quite another to claim definitively that God is telling you to act now. their server serves up is God’s match for you, unless GOD is the acronym for their compatibility algorithm. But it’s quite another to claim definitively that God is telling you to act now. Supposedly, that’s what Son of Sam’s dog was telling him, too. Bad dog! God dab! Is that a palindrome, or do I just got a code id by doze. Maybe it’s both—backwards AND tasteless. The Old Testament is full of stories about the Almighty speaking specifically to His chosen people, and telling them what to do. So that must mean that today’s chosen tribe includes every viewer within earshot during the timeslots these spots air throughout the day, throughout the land. I can only assume that the folks running these websites hold God in high regard, since they’ve enlisted Him as their Spokesdeity. They wouldn’t dream of claiming in front of the FCC and everyone that “God is telling you to act now,” if it weren’t the gospel truth. After all, it says right on our currency, “In God We Trust.” Now that’s totally an endorsement the Spark.com folks can get behind. As their website boasts, “On Valentine’s Day 2006, Spark Networks shares began trading on the American Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol ‘LOV.’” Lemmings Offer Volume? That much LOV does the ticker good, doesn’t it? I don’t know whether these dating sites actually work or not. They are, after all, being propagated on a medium that also supplies pop-ups with photos of “local hotties looking for sex in your area,” showing someone with a name like “Krystal” who is located in a nearby place like “Altoona.” Although you might want to keep “Krystal” away from your “area” unless you’re completely cootie-proofed. Believe it or not, there are actually sites specializing in bestiality dating – not that I checked, but I checked. I wouldn’t tell you something if it weren’t true. And I definitely wouldn’t tell you to act now. That’s simply not my place. But I do wonder what the drop-down menus are like on those sites: “man seeking animals” and “animal seeking perverts?” I do know that the point of all this sanctimonious cyber foreplay on the righteous sites is to eventually get “up close and personal,” and that’s when people get to find out whether these sites work or not. Someone may talk a good game online, but they still have to pass the sniff test in person. And to do that, they’re right back where we dogs start off in the first place—using our noses to obtain a second form of ID. Voices of Central Pa P.O. Box 10066 State College, Pa 16805 www.voicesweb.org ur o l l e se t a e l P ers s i t r adve hem t w a you s oices! in V PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID State College, Pa Permit No. 213