(letters
from June 8, 2006)
Dear Editor,
As concerned Olive citizens, and offended members of Olive Matters,
we take issue with your May 25, 2006 editorial. Either intentionally
or unwittingly, you have misinformed your readers when you claimed
that the Large Parcel Law being enacted in the next several
years should not concern Olive residents. Your attack on our
integrity by stating that we falsely manipulated our fellow
Olive citizens is absolutely unwarranted and malicious. Olive
citizens have no reason to fear members of Olive Matters. The
venom spewed from the pages of this paper, usually directed
against Olive, appears specifically formulated to manipulate
the minds and actions of its readers.
Is it your aim to create turmoil within Olive? Is it your hope
that we will let down our guard so that the Large Parcel can
be implemented against us again? Contrary to your claim that
you "take serious issue with those who sounded the false
alarm that Large Parcel is somehow still alive as an issue or
a threat to the town of Olive," we who sounded that alarm
present the following facts:
FACT ONE. The LP law is a state law which has never been amended
or rescinded and must be considered annually. It will certainly
be discussed this Summer despite your claim that the school
board will vote 4-3 against enacting it. It will remain alive
as there are board members who approve of this hideous rape
of their neighbor, Olive. These members and their constituents
are hoping that the next election will gain them enough votes
to reenact this law, which is nothing short of a Prescription
for Plunder.
FACT TWO. You claim that the 4-3 margin, which favors Olive,
will be maintained for at least several years. In actuality,
David Patterson's position comes up for election next year.
If he is defeated, the 4-3 margin may lie with those who will
reinstate the LP. What if Patterson decides not to run? What
if he or some other anti-LP member decides to step down due
to family responsibilities? Several years ago, when board member
Rosato gave up his seat, he was replaced by a pro-LP appointee.
The anti-LP margin of 4-3 is fragile at best. Therefore, the
issue is indeed not "effectively deader than Elvis."
FACT THREE. You raised the issue of balance on the board in
light of three members from Olive voting against the LP in 2005.
We don't recall you complaining about imbalance when the 2004
vote was 5-1 in favor of the LP with three Olive members voting
in favor of it. Herb Rosenfeld did not vote, and only David
Patterson saw how divisive this law is and wisely voted against
it. In fact nearly 90 percent of the school boards, whose districts
have LPs, decided to steer clear of this district destroying
demon. It is apparent that balance only concerns you when Olive
members vote against the LP, but not when they favor it.
The facts clearly reveal that the LP issue is very much alive.
Those of us who called our neighbors to vote did not do so to
frighten them. We find your insinuation underhanded and an attempt
to create turmoil between Olive citizens.
Members of Olive Matters will address any vital issue which
matters to Olive, and will vigorously fight for our town. Have
you any understanding of the financial damage the enactment
of the LP law had on Olive residents? How many of Olive residents
have you interviewed? How many personal stories have you, the
OLIVE PRESS, reported? How many Olive Matters meetings have
you ever asked to attend? Is it any wonder that we are incensed?
In the spirit of Reginald Bennett, whom you cite as being an
educator of the truth, divulge your "TRUE" position
on this LP issue. You have written that you "wish Olive
well in its efforts to exclude reservoir properties from Large
Parcel in the future, we certainly agree they shouldn't be included."
We challenge you to step up to the plate and do the right thing,
to write editorials and to encourage articles which expose this
evil law for the money grabbing divisive legislation that it
is. Inform your readers and their leaders at the school board,
county, and state levels that your paper is against the LP,
and explain why you are against it.
Finally, to date your newspaper has appeared to be anti-Olive.
It is based outside Olive, and to title it "The Olive Press"
because it is distributed in Olive is deceptive. Ever since
the LP issue raised its ugly tentacles, most of your articles
have been pro LP, and Olive school board members who are against
the LP considered one dimensional: Or, to quote your columnist,
Lisa Childers, "Olive centric." We challenge you to
treat Olive fairly, or to remove "Olive" from your
title. Reginald Bennett would expect nothing less.
John R. Tisch, Joseph Friedel, Marianne Hopkins,
Judith & Drew Boggess
Olive, NY
Dear Editor,
What a surprise it must have been to the Onteora School board
when they found out all of the problems that the newly hired
School Superintendent brought with him. But, should they have
been surprised? As reported Board President Dave Patterson said
that he was disappointed that the allegations involving more
then a dozen students had not been made available by Ulster
County Boces until a week after the Superintendent was hired.
Evidently the board accepted Boces recommendations and did little
or no research on their own. Perhaps a simple phone call by
a board member to the School District that Mr. Ferrara resigned
from might have alerted the board regarding the problems that
the superintendent had at that school. If they did contact the
district why wasn’t they informed of the problems. To
slant all of the blame on BOCES doesn’t seem appropriate.
At $565.00 per day and if those wages were paid to the Superintendent
for, lets say 21 days, the board spent almost $12,000.00 of
tax payers money and got very little or nothing for the money.
This school board is managing a $44,000,000.00 business, the
business being the school. Hopefully the School Board will give
the next Superintendent they hire a through back ground check
no matter who says what or what the con-tractor’s recommendations
are. I don’t think the tax payers in the Onteora school
district like any of their money being wasted. There’s
an old saying that’s been around for a long time. Trust
but verify.
William Warnecke
Glenford, NY
Dear Editor,
Our president 's speech to the West Point graduates today worries
me. His vision of taking the fight against terrorism "to
every shore and outpost in pursuit of enemies everywhere"
is frightening. This is not America that I know and love. We
have always been a country that was ready to give generously
to the needs of other nations-a country that was respected all
over the world. All this is being destroyed now. Bush 's new
agenda reminds me of how, with a similar vision of world domination,
the Nazis swept across Europe in the 1930's. One country after
another fell under their power and everyone believed that England
would be the next.
Terrorism can never be overcome with violence. For every terrorist
that we kill, one hundred others will come to the forefront.
The Cold War (a struggle the President referred to in his address)
was not won militarily; it was won through God's intervention
in history, with the peaceful fall of the Berlin Wall. Earlier,
America fought communism with only one result: we produced more
and more communists, which is why President Eisenhower used
the phrase the "domino theory" to describe the collapse
of one country after another to Soviet dominance. We will have
similar results with Bush's plan. Through using violence, we
will do nothing else but produce more terrorists who will wreak
devastation on the next generation. We can never export true
democracy. It has to be given from within a nation.
There must be a better way to protect our nation and the lives
of all people who long for peace. In these last years, despite
the endless religious talk that goes in Washington, we have
become a heathen nation that completely disregards the dignity
of human life and the integrity of other peoples on the planet.
There is a different message that has to spread if we truly
long for this freedom and democracy. This is the message of
peace and non-violence, which respects all nations and all people
from Damascus to Tehran, and from Kyoto to Darfur.
If we want peace, let's remember that Jesus is the Prince of
Peace who told us to love our enemies and to pray for those
who persecute us. This is the most powerful weapon to combat
all terror.
Johann Christoph Arnold, Pastor
Woodcrest Bruderhof
Rifton, NY
Dear Editor,
As someone who loves butterflies and plants gardens to provide
for them in all stages of their lives, I never thought I would
say kill as many caterpillars as possible. Of course I mean
the gypsy moth caterpillar. It is a truly disgusting task and
maybe a losing battle, but I will not let these greedy creatures
decimate my gardens.
Please do not kill the large black beetles, Carabus nemoralis,
that I hope you are seeing around. They are the only known predator
of the gypsy moths and they also eat slugs.
Cheer them on, they have an enormous task ahead of them.
Please pass the word around. Battle on garden warriors.
Maraleen Manos-Jones,
Shokan, NY
Dear Editor,
I must inquire as to why the Olive Press prints letters that
have no foundation in fact and/or have not been researched as
to valid sources such as documents or media. [Just a rhetorical
question].
Jill Paperno does a disservice to our young [or old] students
in her comments by letter to the Press of May 25, 2006. She
or anyone else in presenting their case for or against whatever
point begins by attacking the president of the United States
for being "selected" loses by default before discussion.
A presidential candidate might be selected if the election goes
into the House of Representatives as provided for by the Constitution.
But even then it would be a legal election process [Art II].
There is ample proof that George W. Bush whom I have attacked
a number of times won the election of 2000 according to the
U.S. Constitution and the laws of the state of Florida.
Ms. Paperno declares that "Choice Point" is the company
that will be gathering data from our phone conversations and
eMails. I believe the NSA has an "understanding" with
a couple [not all] phone companies to receive phone records
with NSA paying for the cost of collection. Then Ms. Paperno
really goes beyond the truth with her charge that "Choice
Point" gathered data for the state of Florida [brother
JEB's state] during the 2000 election campaign.
She is absolutely correct! It was indeed a "no bid"
contract for $4 million to list felons with the election officials.
Now this is where a person with hate in their heart and damage
on her mind goes overboard; the election officials were democrats
and they spent the money as was legal. These same officials
designed and produced the famous "punch" ballots that
caused "cross-eyeism" which is a "scrambling"
of the mind and facilitates illiteracy. The Florida Democrats
must be dumb cousins.
This fiasco was duly celebrated by the wire services and you
can do a Nexus on CNN's Bill Schneider. The felons listed were
not found to be "actually legally qualified citizens"
after all nor were they a black majority with Al Gore in mind.
Ms. Paperno says the President Select stated that when a communication
is monitored, "one end of the communication must be out
of the US". She then goes on to confirm the above as regards
the phone call records from AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth
and adds her own brand of humor about us being in a coal mine
or on a submarine. Good logic Ms. Paperno. Accuse us all of
being on Mars during the "News Hour" and you're the
only one that speaks to any issue with authority and accuracy.
The last [and only] time the NSA tapped a phone it was with
the blessing of "Prince" Willie [der schlickmeister]
on whose watch the law(s) was signed [Cong Record]. Lets play
the "blame game" fair and square. Geprge W. has enough
on his negative plate without piling on.
And certainly the mean old government of any stripe is going
to use IRS, SS and Medicare records to "getcha". They
did it with Gotti and others of his ilk. Well, let's hear it,
Jill. "Not fair"!
Gen. Hayden didn't change the 4th Ammendment; he and other [police]
officials have and will continue to "use" it. Ball's
in your court Ms. Paperno.
And why is the CIA not supposed to be [specifically] under the
military? The CIA has its Genesis in the military when I was
about 18 years old [during WWII as the OSS]. And you say erroneously
that our government was "set up" to be a democracy.
Wrong!! We are a republic. So said Ben Franklin upon exiting
Independence Hall when asked what kind of government have you
given us? His reply was, "a republic, madam; if you can
keep it". And that's why Mr. Gore lost even with a national
majority in 2000. Because of a republic where the small states
have a somewhat level playing field.
As far as living under a different form of government Ms. Paperno;
we have been doing that for 218 years [1788, adoption of the
1787 constitution]. Don't pray or wish too seriously. You may
get it.
And cutting back on phone calls or eMail is a good idea for
you.
You might reconsider letters to the editor also unless they
are supported by documented source rather than hate or hallucination.
May as well inform Mr. Thomas R. Siblo-Landsman that he left
out the fact that the oil companies own the "show",
the market is playing "catch-up" [$5-8 in Europe]
and you do nothing to rid us of George W. other than "liar,
liar; pants on fire" to maintain the status quo. Personally
I love the rich and "crafty". When was the last time
a local mendicant gave you a job Mr. Siblo-Landsman? And you
should praise the "well to do" with their SUV's who
continue to pay high prices at the pump thus generating tax
revenue which abets "class warfare".
Your favorite physicist, Eric J. Learner's "No Big Bang"
theory is challenged by a number of physicists, scientists and
"pointy headed" agnostics. Even the Catholic theologians
declare that if there was a "Big Bang" it was by divine
guidance; cool!
Learner's work on fusion under Clinton was dropped by G.W. as
a result of the liberal's opposition to what might be the end
result. Nuclear power plants are sitting unused on open, un
maintained properties while professor Learner is ahead of his
time. One must expire prior to becoming notoriously famous whether
it's a physicist or an artist. I still admire George Washington
who said, "I cannot tell a lie"; Richard Nixon who
said, "I can always tell a lie"; and Willie who said,
I can't tell the difference".
Glenn T. Anderson
Olivebridge, NY
Dear Editor,
To date, 93 journalists have died in Iraq. To repay them for
sacrificing their lives, our government is criminalizing them.
This must be because it's just too hard to track down terrorists.
It's way easier to find the NY Times "criminals" -
just look at their masthead.
Here's what the top lawyer in the U.S., Attorney General Gonzales
said about seeking to bring the NY Times up on charges for leaking
"classified" information. (The classified information
being the fact that the NSA is spying on all of our phone calls
and internet actions, and informing "We, the People"
about it.)
On ABC this Sunday, he said that he believes journalists can
be prosecuted for publishing classified information, due to
an obligation to national security. Huh?
As soon as General Hayden, (the leader that helped to put this
program into action) is made the head of the CIA, and Gonzales
proves that the President is not subject to the law, they will
be able to use this information to put journalists in jail,
or at least shut them down. As a reminder, the First Amendment
states that: "Congress shall make no law ...... abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press". Bye, bye, freedom
of the Press.
Here's the funny part. By present law, the people who leak the
information are breaking the law (that is presently on the books)
and not the journalists that report what they were told. It
was how we found out that Richard Nixon was indeed a "crook".
However, our laws are now being changed.
Now, if you don't mind having "crooks" at the helm,
then ok. Just sit back and watch. Hey, who needs newspapers?
The government doesn't, because they are too hard to track anyhow.
It's easier to track what you scan on the internet, or for that
matter, on the tv, which doesn't matter anyhow, cause it's by
and large owned and operated by the same folks, who report what
they're told to report by the Administration. And isn't it easier
to listen to propaganda?
It's so easy to believe that Saddam Hussein brought down the
towers, and that he had WMD's, and that he was a bad man who
we had to send our kids to get. Well, we got him. Now what?
Why are our kids still dying and losing uncounted limbs over
in Iraq? Maybe we don't even care about that.
If you want to learn more about the spying, look up ATT's whistleblower
Mark Klein on the internet and find out about the secret room
installed in their San Francisco switching center - a Defense
Dept. project that scoured databases across the country, scanning
our email, and our internet traffic, using AT&T and Sun
Microsystems servers with traffic analysis software from Narus.
Klein also noted that only persons with a clearance from the
NSA could enter this room.
The New York Times revealed that the spying program is vastly
bigger and was directly authorized by President Bush, as he
himself has now admitted, in violation of the Constitution,
but which Gonzales has given the OK to do.
Klein showed up at the Electronic Frontier Foundation unannounced
in January with his documents in hand. The EFF was preparing
a class-action lawsuit against AT&T for allegedly turning
over customer phone-record data to the NSA . It had l.88 trillion
entries. It appears doubtful that this investigation will be
able to proceed. Could your information be in their hands? Perhpas
you don't care, because you're not a radical leftie. But what
about the phone calls to your mistress? What about your stock
trades based on inside information? More to the point, what
about Democracy? Wasn't it great? Don't you want to pass it
on to your kids? Do we want to include Freedom of the Press
to commemorate this weekend, along with the young men and women
who have already lost their lives for us? Let's come together
and save Democracy.
Jill Paperno
Glenford, NY
Dear Editor,
In a conversation with Sheldon Boyce of Acorn Hill, I learned
that Jerry and Amy Rutledge do the mowing of the grass on the
Tongore Cemetery in Olivebridge which I recently visited around
Memorial Day. I would like to thank them publicly for doing
such a fine job. I was especially pleased to see how well cared
for the old part of the cemetery now appears. For the first
time I was able to locate the graves of two of my early ancestors
who were veterans of the Revolutionary War. The gravestones
are almost illegible but the graves are now marked with American
flags and the weeds and poison ivy are cleared away so I could
get close enough to just make out the names--Hendrick Krum and
Andries Davis. For many years my mother placed a white geranium
on the grave of my little brother who died at four years of
age many years ago before I was even born. I have tried to continue
the tradition. I was pleased to find the little plastic flower
I had placed there last year still quietly "blooming."
It had been carefully avoided by the cutting blade.
Thank you, Jerry and Amy, for your good work and for helping
so many ofus preserve some of our precious family memories.
Carol D.L. Wood
Glenford, NY