Asheville Daily Planet
RSS Facebook
Send us your Letters to the Editor
Please submit your Letters to the Editor by noon Thursday of each week, via e-mail, at letters@ashevilledailyplanet.com, or fax to 252-6567, or mail c/o The Daily Planet, P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, N.C. 28814-8490. Submissions will be accepted and printed at the discretion of the editor, space permitting. To place an ad online or in print, call 252-6565.
Letters to the Editor - September 13, 2006
Tuesday, 12 September 2006 18:53
Islamic terrorists, America
not morally comparable

In Professor Bill Walzës attempt (Aug. 16 Daily Planet) to blame the West for the current conflict he goes back only to the end of WWI, since when, he says, "the West has dealt arrogantly and selfishly with the Middle East." To quote him again: "What absolute and tragic nonsense."

In the centuries before then, the Ottoman Empire dealt quite "arrogantly and selfishly" with the Balkans in their attempt to impose Islam on Christian Europe. In the 15th century Islam "arrogantly and selfishly" invaded Spain before the arrogant and selfish Christians evicted them. In the eighth through eleventh centuries Muslims abandoned their initial tolerance and became quite arrogant and selfish as they destroyed or suppressed the numerous Jewish and Christian cultures and societies throughout the Middle East. The professor should learn history before attempting to give lessons.


His attempt at moral equivalence between Islamic terrorists, who purposely blow up Muslim markets and wedding parties, and we who bomb them, causing casualties among the civilians who shelter them, is pathetic. The black stuff that lay for centuries under the sands of the Middle East was given value only by Western culture. Rather than "exploit" it, we pay sometimes-extortionate prices for its use.

JERRY ORR, Black Mountain

Editorial on development

termed myopic, biased

I was so surprised at the recent unsigned opinion piece, "Development: Time to get a life" dated Aug. 30 on www.ashevilledailyplanet.com that I wrote the editor of the paper to find out who it was written by.


The lack of credibility associated with a published piece listing no author fits nicely with the lack of accurate information and disregard for citizensë expectations of a functional municipal government that follows the rules they enact.


The article asked if anyone but a single resident on Maxwell street (whose property and quality of life have been significantly impaired by Green Life Groceryës illegal loading dock) even cared about the development problems our city is struggling with.


The article suggests that any cityës development process can be summed up by "you canët always get what you want."


The editors, however, fail to mention that the three developments in question are illegal, violating the cityës Unified Development Ordinance. There is no confusion about this whatsoever, regardless of multiple ploys citing complex ordinances and conflicting rules ÇƒÓ even misinterpretations by city lawyer Bob Oast and head of planning and zoning Scott Shuford; misinterpretations that might otherwise have gone unnoticed were it not for the hard work and truth-seeking efforts of the Coalition of Asheville Neighborhoods.


Professional planners, everyday citizens and now an unbiased third-party review have all determined that Greenlife, Prudential and Staples are all operating outside the law. These are structures which should have never been permitted in the first place, but made it through Scott Shufordës planning and zoning department without any trouble, which has become the Asheville developerës expectation ... business as usual.


I, for one, simply canët believe the anonymous opinion published by the Daily Planet truly represents the "institutional views of the paper." If it did, the editors would be openly supporting a condition of lawlessness and lack of accountability within city government.


A cityës development process may result in some parties not getting what they want, but I would suggest that we can always achieve, at least, a legal outcome.


Who should be concerned about the rules governing development in Asheville and their enforcement? Everyone. Every citizen, every tourist  and especially those who have the potential ability to shape the opinion of everyday citizens ÇƒÓ the editors of the media.


Biased and myopic statements belittling factual information that highlights the grave state of affairs in the regulation and enforcement of Ashevilleës development process are unacceptable for any paper when published as anything other than a personal opinion piece.


We expect more from the "editorial staff" of this paper and hope that in the future, youëll do a better job of representing the facts and true public opinion, or at the very least ensuring that your opinion pieces lists the author so that we may more accurately distinguish personal opinion from true "institutional views."


Peter Brezny
, Asheville

Letter writer sees value
in fighting for rule of law

Iëm writing in response to your editorial: "Development: Time to get a life."


Frankly, Iëm shocked that you would publish such an insulting and one-sided editorial. Apparently you believe that fighting for the rule of law is not a worthwhile pastime?


This city banned billboards in 1997. Staples, in direct violation of our laws, installed four billboard-sized signs on their building.


You say we should ignore this? Doing so would render our sign size laws unenforceable, as Professor Owens indicated, as happened in a precedent in Boone and which fact your editorial failed to mention.

 In a recent survey, the Staple building was overwhelmingly picked as the example of what development should not look like. That look is a direct result of breaking our development laws.

We are not talking about a six-inch height violation, here, as you belittle the activists for doing; the signs are approximately five times the legal size limit.


Benjamin Gillum
, Asheville

Illegal immigrants blamed
for hurting working poor

One problem with the City Councilës lack of enthusiasm is that the discussion focused only on Chief Hoganës comments vis-?Ü-vis "major" criminal activities. Completely ignored were two other aspects:  


(1) That illegals were already committing criminal acts by definition of their status and since when did our law enforcement agencies get to "pick and choose" which laws theyëd uphold?


(2) The fact that many US citizens who might want jobs, e.g., construction work, are replaced by illegal workers who will accept much lower wages. Where is our "progressive" councilës concern for low-income U.S. citizens now? I thought "progressives" (liberals) were "all for" the "working man!" How can they scream for a "working wage" and then accept laborers who undercut our own citizens? That is blatant hypocrisy. But isnët that what liberals do routinely? Itës in their blood!


WALTER M. PLAUE
, Asheville
 



Error: Any articles to show

 


contact | home

Copyright ©2005-2015 Star Fleet Communications

224 Broadway St., Asheville, NC 28801 | P.O. Box 8490, Asheville, NC 28814
phone (828) 252-6565 | fax (828) 252-6567

a Cube Creative Design site