Opinion
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- Written by: Dave Gebhard
What is the foundation of a technological society? An educated workforce. The more technologically advanced, the more education is required.
Regretfully, there is a strong aversion to learning among many young people today. The feelings of hopelessness and lack of ambition is very common among our youth.
Our society seems to become more immature instead of mature, many seem to want something for nothing. Feelings of entitlement do not just describe politicians and the rich, but pervade our whole society.
Perhaps the reading we did in our youth made a difference. We need to instill, in the youth of today, the spirit of adventure that reading brings to all of us.
Reading leads to an open mind, which is necessary for students to accept knowledge, and nurtures the ability to apply knowledge to problems and work possibilities.
Knowledge, after all, assists one in applying the old saying, find a need and fill it, which usually leads to success.
Cutting education leads to our eventual stagnation. We are wasting minds that could be leading us into a bright future. We need innovation and creativity, just to stay on top.
We are no longer the largest market, in fact, Europe, India and especially China are larger and growing at a rapid pace, as we are dropping lower and lower comparatively.
America needs to invest in itself, we used to be one of the most educated countries. Children are not cookie cutter automatons, we need to educate all of them, as those who think out of the box are the ones who make the most radical discoveries.
Our infrastructure and education have taken a back seat to wars, and foreign policy through economic and military aid. Our priorities are skewed, our children should be first, not an afterthought.
America is turning into Europe, with the multi-generational super rich, and the rest of us. We now have the rich openly attempting to buy public office, unashamedly.
We all need to wake up, ignorant people are easy to rule, for they do not know the right questions to ask.
Dave Gebhard lives in Lakeport, Calif.
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- Written by: Michele Gillies
But an ad supporting Mitchell indicates that Rivero's old record is relevant because he is currently taking assistance with his campaign from someone who is under indictment by the feds.
This appears to be a reference to Tom Carter, who Rivero befriended after announcing his candidacy for sheriff last year.
Rivero has not denied the friendship. Rather, he has stated that people in America are innocent until proven guilty. I certainly agree with Rivero on that point.
Since this friendship was established after the indictment, though, Rivero cannot claim that this is just an “old friend” he'll support “until proven guilty.”
Carter has been a prominent figure in the party of people that accompany Rivero to the debates. He also works in Rivero's campaign booths at local events and provides Rivero with a train to use in local parades.
Carter was rearrested last month by the Drug Enforcement Administration. Rivero has released a video of him embracing Tom Carter after his release from the DEA's custody.
While that case was dropped, charges are still pending in another DEA case and the prison sentence associated with Carter's alleged crimes will be huge if he is found guilty.
So Rivero called Mitchell “corrupt” for hugging his longtime friend Russ Perdock within an hour of the now infamous boat crash of 2006. If we all apply the same logic, wouldn't Rivero be “corrupt” for befriending a man under federal indictment for alleged marijuana possession and distribution?
Michele Gillies lives in Hidden Valley Lake, Calif.
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- Written by: George Forman
Specifically the article states as follows: “The Interior secretary previously signed four ballot measures allowing four of the state's largest gaming tribes – Pechanga, Agua Caliente, Morongo and Sycuan – to expand their operations in exchange for $300 million in revenue to the state annually. 'Those guys aren't paying the money that they promised they were going to pay,' Schmit pointed out.”
These two sentences contain multiple misstatements: 1) the Secretary of the Interior did not sign any ballot measures; 2) the Compact Amendments that the voters approved in Propositions 94-97 did not obligate those tribes to pay $300 million to the State each year – the aggregate payments to the state on those tribes' existing machines was about $150 million (including the San Manuel Compact Amendment, which was not on the ballot), and higher payments would be due only if the tribes added machines, and because of the economic downturn, fewer machines have been added than had been hoped and anticipated; 3) the Sycuan Compact Amendment never has taken effect; 4) the state has not claimed that the tribes are failing to pay what is owed under the Compact Amendments; and 5) none of the Prop. 94097 Compact Amendments actually was approved by the Secretary of the Interior, who failed to take action on them within 45 days, thus deeming them approved to the extent consistent with IGRA.
As for "what's in it for the state now?", the state is obligated to negotiate in good faith, and through such negotiations may participate in the regulation of the tribe's gaming (for which the state is entitled to be compensated), otherwise protect its legitimate interests and receive the financial and other benefits that flow from the employment that tribal gaming facilities and offshoot businesses provide to surrounding communities. Congress never intended that the states be able to use tribal governments as cash cows for their general funds.
Finally, the statement that the statewide cap on machines is at about 75,000 also is incorrect. In fact, there is no statewide cap on the number of slot machines that can be operated at tribal casinos. Under the 1999 compacts, as interpreted in the Colusa decision, a total of 40,201 slot machine licenses were authorized, but each tribe with a 1999 compact may operate up to 350 machines without licenses for those machines, and the compact amendments that Gov. Schwarzenegger negotiated in 2004 allowed five tribes to operate unlimited numbers of slot machines.
George Forman is an attorney with Forman & Associates in San Rafael, Calif.
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- Written by: Randy Ridgel
Loren is a member of the United States Air Force with 25 years of service as an officer and enlisted man. He enlisted during the Reagan era with pride and a sense of duty.
Beginning with training as an intelligence analyst in Arabic language, he was an intelligence officer, which included working with unmanned aerial vehicles. His experience also included working as a counterintelligence and anti-terrorism expert.
During his nonmilitary time he worked in the cellular telephone and agro-feed industries and the family business, a retail nursery.
Loren has decided to put his active participation in the military on hold to run for U.S. in order to address what he considers to be more pressing threats to our national security and economic status.
Loren believes these threats are interrelated and include:
Unresponsive, irresponsible federal government;
Unsustainable spending and debt;
Government intrusion into private lives and businesses.
Please join us in supporting Loren Hanks. Sentiment is growing that we must build a better Congress. We need to remove entrenched incumbents.
For more information, please visit www.hanksforcongress.com. Your help with whatever you can afford, be it $25 or $500 – or anything in between – will be greatly appreciated. Send your contributions to Hanks for Congress 2010, P.O. Box 1595, Travis AFB, CA 94535.
Vote for Loren Hanks on Nov. 2, 2010.
Randy Ridgel is chairman of the Republican Party of Lake County. He lives in Kelseyville, Calif.
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