Growth is not good
EDITOR: Mr. Music’s resigned musings that acknowledge the commonly held “necessary and good” inevitability of (Barlow-styled) growth — the fundamental foundation of our contrived economy and the very source of our jobs, our stability, and even our survival — is certainly true at a superficial level.
Tragically, however, the other, seemingly invisible, deeper half of this slick equation, the one that we steadfastly ignore, is the indisputable fact that not only can we not continue to grow indefinitely, the dire consequences of its denial escalate in direct proportion to our belief in, and support of, this system. The current handwriting on the wall regarding our planet’s declining environment ought, by now, to confirm this simple truth.
Thus, there emerges here a coexistent inevitability; one that is necessary, not at all good, and portends the collapse of our society alongside the very possibility of the extinction of our species.
Robert Beauchamp
Sebastopol
Vote for change on June 5
EDITOR: For the first time in more than two decades, we the people of Sonoma County have a real choice for sheriff. Not just of three experienced candidates, but also of the kind of law enforcement we want for our county.
If you believe, as we do, that the relationship between law enforcement and the communities it serves is broken and that respect for all must be restored, the best choice is John Mutz.
We did not arrive at this conclusion easily. Our Sonoma County Democratic Clubs and the Sonoma County Democratic Party devoted many hours to promoting and hosting forums on the sheriff’s race, and interviewing and comparing the candidates. All have impressive resumes. All are aware of the challenges that lie ahead.
But only John Mutz has a track record of actually creating the change we need, of succeeding in the worst of circumstances. He was an LAPD station commander in 1992 when riots broke out following the beating of Rodney King.
He was able to mediate between cops and communities to defuse tensions and rebuild trust, and thereafter dedicated himself to bringing forward new initiatives in community-based policing, both in LA and nationwide.
He has an impressive list of endorsements, from members of law enforcement and local elected officials to well-respected community leaders, including our local Democratic Party, the Latino Political Action Committee of Sonoma County, the Press-Democrat (split endorsement), the Argus-Courier, as well as other local news, community, and labor organizations.
It’s hard to overstate the importance of this choice. The sheriff leads our county’s largest law enforcement agency (responsible for 1,550 square miles, two city police departments, 600 employees and two jails) and is likely to be at the forefront of federal immigration challenges.
We have a unique opportunity to bring 21st century, community-based policing to Sonoma County, evolving from a warrior to a guardian mentality, ensuring that each and every resident is treated with respect. It won’t come our way again soon.
Vote for change on June 5. Vote for John Mutz.
Sandy Reynolds, President, Santa Rosa Democratic Club
Rick Massell, President, Windsor/North County Democratic Club
Therese Horsting and Michele Larkey, Co-Chairs, Democratic Club of Southern Sonoma County
Beth Hadley, President, Sonoma Valley Democratic Club
Tom Amato, President, Oakmont Democratic Club
Caroline Banuelos, President, Sonoma County Latino Democratic Club

Previous articleHumanity First: Putting Down Syndrome on the map
Next articleAnaly, El Mo horsehiders bounced in NCS playoffs

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here