Letters to the Editor
softdog
Published Letters: 186 Editor's Choice: 8
-
Some Needed Perspective
[Read the article: How I learned to stop worrying and love the recession]
[Read more letters about this article: Here]http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/04/18/america/18food.php
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: Hunger bashed in the front gate of Haiti's presidential palace. Hunger poured onto the streets, burning tires and taking on soldiers and the police. Hunger sent the country's prime minister packing.
Haiti's hunger, that burn in the belly that so many here feel, has become fiercer than ever in recent days as global food prices spiral out of reach, spiking as much as 45 percent since the end of 2006 and turning Haitian staples like beans, corn and rice into closely guarded treasures.
Saint Louis Meriska's children ate two spoonfuls of rice apiece as their only meal recently and then went without any food the following day. His eyes downcast, his own stomach empty, the unemployed father said forlornly, "They look at me and say, 'Papa, I'm hungry,' and I have to look away. It's humiliating and it makes you angry."
That anger is palpable across the globe. The food crisis is not only being felt among the poor but is also eroding the gains of the working and middle classes, sowing volatile levels of discontent and putting new pressures on fragile governments.
In Cairo, the military is being put to work baking bread as rising food prices threaten to become the spark that ignites wider anger at a repressive government. In Burkina Faso and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, food riots are breaking out as never before. In reasonably prosperous Malaysia, the ruling coalition was nearly ousted by voters who cited food and fuel price increases as their main concerns.
"It's the worst crisis of its kind in more than 30 years," said Jeffrey Sachs, the economist and special adviser to the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. "It's a big deal and it's obviously threatening a lot of governments. There are a number of governments on the ropes, and I think there's more political fallout to come."
****
Even in Thailand, which produces 10 million more tons of rice than it consumes and is the world's largest rice exporter, supermarkets have placed signs limiting the amount of rice shoppers are allowed to purchase.
But there is also plenty of nervousness and confusion about how best to proceed and just how bad the impact may ultimately be, particularly as already strapped governments struggle to keep up their food subsidies.
"This is a perfect storm," President Elías Antonio Saca of El Salvador said Wednesday at the World Economic Forum on Latin America in Cancún, Mexico. "How long can we withstand the situation? We have to feed our people, and commodities are becoming scarce. This scandalous storm might become a hurricane that could upset not only our economies but also the stability of our countries."
****
Last month in Senegal, one of Africa's oldest and most stable democracies, police in riot gear beat and used tear gas against people protesting high food prices and later raided a television station that broadcast images of the event. Many Senegalese have expressed anger at President Abdoulaye Wade for spending lavishly on roads and five-star hotels for an Islamic summit meeting last month while many people are unable to afford rice or fish.
-
"Get Ready"? It's been going on from the start.
[Read the article: Obama, get ready for the "Clinton rules"]
[Read more letters about this article: Here]What is up with the implication in the headline that Obama hasn't already suffered the Clinton Rules?
The point is all Democrats are subject to those rules at all times.
Obama has been subject to them for most of the campaign except a tiny grace period when he was presumed doomed to second place and presumed to have fumbled a sure thing. When he was running for Senator, he was stalked in an absurdly extreme manner by Republican operatives with cameras, and yet the GOP was barely criticized for such tactics.
At times Clinton has been treated more unfairly because the rules were invented to get her, but the exceptionalism against Democrats has hit members of the party in all sorts of situations - not just campaigns but the ability for Dems to discuss anything.
So let's stop pretending on this. The worst in this campaign isn't coming from either candidate, it's being amplified by the right wing noise machine.
Remembering this would be far better than the latest slugfest between fanatics on both sides.
-
Nice Assumption
[Read the article: How I learned to stop worrying and love the recession]
[Read more letters about this article: Here]"I'm not talking about the "bitter" people who have been on the receiving end of the conservative great leap forward for the last 25 years, I'm talking about the habitués of Salon, many of whom theoretically have the time to push for change."
This is what mystifies me - why do you assume Salon doesn't have readers who are both? Can you not reconcile your mind to someone who is intelligent, online, perhaps even college educated, and still is stuck on the low rungs of the financial ladder?
Not every Salon reader benefitted from the dot bubble. Many never really got past the recession of George the First, or have been running in place ever since. The gravy trains only had a few passengers, everyone else had debt or didn't ride.
So if you want to grasp what's going on stop assuming you're at home in a monolithic group here.
