Guest Commentary

Disabled Community is No Food Cart Foe

In the article on proposed changes to Temporary Use Rules and Food Carts, reporter Erin Marlowe accurately describes me as a "food cart junkie." I support the food cart cottage industry as a gear in Bend’s economic engine, as delivering delicious eats, as creating income for owners of undeveloped lots when carts parked there pay rent, and as incubation for bricks and mortar restaurants. For instance, Barrio evolved from the Soupcon and El Sancho carts.

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In reply to: Onward, Upward: Meet the unlikely face of Central Oregon’s marriage equality movement

Thank you for sharing the story of Bruce Morris and the HDC, their work is appreciated and will not doubt continue “the evolution” toward less separation and more respect for all people.

– Wendy Boyer

In reply to: Any Band > Nickelback: Detroit Lions fans (and the rest of the sensible world) would rather not have this band ruin Thanksgiving (Left Field, 11-9)

The only thing that pisses me off more than the capital gains tax rate is the fact that Nickelback can re record the same song every 4 years with different words and make millions off it!!!

– Travis Ehrenstrom

In reply to: Riding to the Rescue of the Klamath (The Glass Slipper, 11-16)

So there’s $536MM of federal funds and another $550MM in “non-federal funds.” Why do you hoist the canard that this only costs $536MM? What are the other non-federal funds? Where does this other money come from? Who pays that price tag? I can guess and I know I’ll be right.

So for a total of about $1.1 Billion, we get 4,600 jobs. That’s only $239,000 per job. Another great lib idea. Sounds like the good deal we got from Solyndra and the other bogus green energy jobs.

It was Thatcher (I think)that said, “the problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of someone else’s money.”

– Bill R

“...remarkable example of widely divergent interests coming together to compromise for the common good.”

Exactly why it most likely will not make it through Congress.”

– Joe

Why I Occupy

The Occupy Movement is all about economic justice without which we will not have social justice.

We are challenging an economic system built on the greed of banksters, corporados and the wealthy ruling elites emboldened and empowered by politicians, government officials and the legal system enforced by the police state whose duty is to protect and serve the 1 percent.

We are the 99 percent committed to changing this system of injustice based on exploitation, oppression, financial devastation and environmental degradation. We are determined to Occupy our minds with truth, occupy our streets, our parks, our towns and cities, our states and our country in solidarity with the 99percent throughout the world. We engage in civil disobedience, direct action and non-violent activities as we Occupy Wall St., Occupy Main St., Occupy Everywhere to achieve economic justice.

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