TownNews

Opinion

Thursday 02/04/2010
The problem is the unemployment not lack of health care

The American public has been trying to tell the leaders in Congress for weeks that the primary problem in the United States is not the lack of health care, but the fact that 20 percent of our fellow countrymen are unemployed.

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Tea for two...er, I mean 1,000

The Tea Party movement in our area is the real deal. I have realized that the unity of their passion is what makes this movement real. Smaller government, less taxes, and keeping the freedoms we enjoy today are their focus. Who doesn’t want that?  Hmm. The government, that’s who. Think about it, government is a system with no incentive for improvement. When there is not enough money to pay the bills, it borrows it and/or raises taxes to get it! Let’s compare. At some point in many of our lives we used an eight-track player as our preferred music listening device and rotary phones were the norm. Imagine if Apple had never improved upon that. Would you like to run around with and an eight-track player on your head? Why does Apple continue to improve? It’s simple – incentive!  The incentive is to create what people want and, in turn, generate revenue from the value they receive. Can you imagine no iPod or cell phone today? Apple would be doomed as a company. 

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Kokomo must educate itself out of recession

Manufacturing jobs are great, but the community can’t rely on them forever

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Letters to the editor February 3

REALTORS offer thanks to Wyman

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The ‘Scott’ heard around the world

As election returns from Massachusetts began to trickle in on Tuesday, Jan. 19, one could almost hear a feint roll of the drums and the shrill tune of a fife as modern-day minutemen from the Bay State, once again, declared their dissatisfaction with abusive government and taxation without representation. The unprecedented and staggering victory by Scott Brown in the election to fill Ted Kennedy’s former Senate seat, although bloodless, has sent just as strong a message as those who fought at Cambridge and the North Bridge in 1775. The message was simple and unmistakable, “We’re mad as hell, and we’re not going to take it anymore!”

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Helping those in need is not socialism

I recently read an article titled “Social Programs Are Not Socialism” and found it to be very informative. It was pointed out that when conservatives were in power no misery was unacceptable. People who could not afford food or were not able to purchase their medicines were forced to choose one over the other. The social programs President Ronald Reagan, President George Bush, and President George W. Bush so proudly gutted decreased productivity of already struggling Americans while saving no more than pocket change in our federal budget, their spin being that they claimed to have saved $100 million with these cuts, which in actuality amounted to 3/10ths of 1 percent of a $300 billion budget. Conservatives so often complain about taxes they pay for social programs when the fact is that social welfare programs improve people’s circumstances, which creates contributors. And that is the best way to keep from having to raise taxes.  Social programs go much deeper than just welfare. President Obama’s budget to increase Pell Grants for need-based student tuitions to college or trade schools is sure to bring out cries of socialism. Nothing could be further from the truth. Increasing a person’s education also increases his or her chances of gaining more meaningful employment. Put simply, people who make money pay taxes; people who don’t make money cost taxes. Another good reason to educate America’s  working class is the fact that the likelihood of incarceration decreases. It is estimated that an inmate costs taxpayers anywhere from $ 10,000 to $ 37,000 dollars annually. That savings alone could and would educate many people who other wise not be given that chance.

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Thursday 01/28/2010
What voters need is a third party

If the Republican Party thinks it won a big victory in Massachusetts last week, then it is in a lot of trouble. Even though it was officially recognized as a Republican victory, it was a victory for the thousands of Independent Americans across our great land who are tired of the politicians, Republican and Democrats, who are destroying the greatest country in the history of the world. As I have stated in previous articles, it is time to clean out the entire political monarchy in Washington, D.C., Democrats and Republicans, and replace them with men and women who have but one interest in being elected to the Congress of the United States, that interest being protecting the common good of the United States of America. This means no bowing to any special interest group that has as a goal of self-perpetuation and preservation at the expense of our country. 

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Delphi should go union at new plant

If companies are allowed to race to the bottom, everyone suffers

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KCS leaders respond to budget cuts

As leaders of Kokomo-Center Schools (KCS), we want to inform the people of Kokomo of how KCS is responding to the recent announcement by Gov. Mitch Daniels to cut $300 million from Indiana’s public school districts’ General Funds.  The response will be a cooperative effort.

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We the People aren’t going to sit back and take it anymore

With the election of Republican Scott Brown to the Massachusetts U.S. Senate seat last week, the tide toward Socialism has definitely turned in this country. Those in power in Washington, D.C., have been pushing their own agenda and weren’t listening to We the People. It’s ironic that the wakeup call to Washington came from Massachusetts, home of the original Boston Tea Party.

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The world is changing, the community has to change with it

As our community heads into 2010, we must continue to embrace the future of the local, U.S, and global economy and the opportunities they present. This is not to say that we are not, but the transition in key industry sectors and new, emerging markets will be the next horizon for quality job growth and capital investment. None of us can be reliant on where we have been.

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Thursday 01/21/2010
United Way struggles while We Care banks money

This is a subject I never wanted to address, but the issue will not leave my thought process.

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No pay raise for Congress is a good start

Congressmen Dan Burton and Joe Donnelly showed their constituents last week that they understand the difficulties of a recession. And they are willing to share in the pain. The two co-sponsored a bill that would eliminate a Congressional pay raise this year. That’s great. We hope they are willing to find more ways to save money.

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