Letters to the Editor: Tests Are Needed To Promote the Best
Tests Are Needed To Promote the Best
Editor, Times-Dispatch: A recent news article, "U.S. Supreme Court Ruling Could Alter Hiring Practices," about the court's decision was more significant for what it did not say than for what it actually said. No one said, "Finally! A decision that rewards tested merit."
Long ago I was a college music teacher and sat on a committee for a clarinet position. We went through résumés and invited candidates for interviews. The man with the best paper résumé was interviewed. He spoke well about many topics. Time came for the audition, and we proposed the Mozart Concerto. The candidate did not know it -- a very bad sign, since it is the standard concerto that all clarinetists should know. He couldn't play it; his attempt was atrocious. Obviously, we did not hire him. The important point is that only the test of the audition revealed his ineptitude. We later learned his credentials were faked.
Later, I was education director at a school, in charge of hiring instructors. An applicant for an English position had several bold, all-caps, underscored headings on her résumé, beginning with the word STRENGHTS. I did not call her for an interview; her résumé was the first test of the skills I sought in a teacher, including spelling and proofreading. She failed.
Employment and promotion tests are necessary in many fields. Their foremost public function is to prevent unqualified persons from filling important positions. Without well-made tests, we might fly in planes piloted by unqualified pilots, undergo surgery performed by unqualified medical practitioners, or lose our home because an unqualified person fought the fire.
Employment or promotion tests cannot depend upon extraneous matters such as sex, ethnic background, religion, or the like; public welfare and safety demand that the best people be hired, regardless of other consequences.
John M. Ware.
Mechanicsville.
Why Doesn't Congress Inform Constituents?
Editor, Times-Dispatch: While I was talking to small-business owners about why they don't speak out to Congress and advocate for what they want or need when it comes to health care reform, one businessman responded that knowledge is power and they don't always feel in the loop when it comes to how different proposed pieces of legislation will affect business and, thus, feel powerless.
My question is this: How can members of Congress appropriately vote on legislation in a way that reflects the opinions of constituents when the constituents most affected admit they don't have the power to know what the heck is going on?
Members of Congress and those proposing legislation need to do a better job educating people in general, but especially the business owners currently charged with the burden of offering health care, about what these pieces of legislation mean in reality. If they can't explain that, then how can they expect constituents to be able to explain why they should feel compelled to vote for them? Knowledge is power, and to keep us unknowledgeable is to keep us powerless -- but maybe that's what they want.
Lauren Milam.
Richmond.
Nation Needs Forward-Looking GOP
Editor, Times-Dispatch: If they think about it, intelligent Republicans know how often their party has fought a futile rear-guard action against liberal ideas and programs now taken for granted by nearly all Americans.
Let me mention just a few key liberal initiatives once resisted by most Republicans, especially by those on the hard right:
- Social Security and unemployment insurance, which particularly in the years of the Great Depression rescued millions from destitution and despair;
- Measures to fight air pollution, clean up lakes and rivers, and guard the sanctity and beauty of our nation's vast wilderness preserves;
- The campaign for equal rights for women, now largely endorsed by even the most macho men -- and the civil rights movement, which finally dealt a death blow to Jim Crow.
It's probably uncomfortable for many Republicans to recall that, not so long ago, their party was almost entirely a white, male club; and worse still, that it often won Southern voters by playing the race card. (One of our most eminent conservatives, Bill Buckley, expressed regret in his later years for his once backward views on civil rights.) Republicans today may be quite right to fight liberal excesses; but it's only the blind ones who fail to recognize the liberal contribution to a great democratic America.
Must the Republican Party remain a backward-looking party, forever fighting rear-guard action, as it is doing now with respect to global warming and gay rights? Must it rely on attack dogs whose main theme is always liberal villainy? I don't think so. In my view, a healthy Republican Party will be an inclusive one, absorbing the wisdom of libertarians and constitutionalists, moderates and old-line conservatives. It will be a party that challenges with fresh ideas, not stale labels, and nourishes the Jeffersonian notion that, whatever our differences, we are all Americans. Irwin Shishko. Richmond.
Madoff's Sentence Compounds Injustice
Editor, Times-Dispatch: The rhetoric surrounding Bernard Madoff's 150-year sentence has been that of fantasy films and revenge plots. He is the phantasmic beast disguised as a 71-year-old human, which enables him to walk among us, and we are the innocent victims enacting our revenge.
But that's just a story filled with fictitious characters and surreal explanations of human behavior. The truth is that Bernard Madoff is a man, a human being, who made a criminal mistake that harmed the fiscal lives of thousands, including his own. The truth is that his victims deserve to have their fiscal wounds healed, and the public deserves to be protected from any future crimes he may enact. However, a sentence that will continue into his afterlife does not protect his victims. A sentence like this only serves to punish the beast.
Do we still live in a world where people would crowd the street if allowed to watch a guilty man be killed? When blood -- or billions of dollars -- is spilt, do we thirst for more? Maybe. Maybe we do if we are willing, almost gleefully, to subject another human being to shivs, rape, and other dehumanizing acts.
In a time when more and more studies are exposing the prevalence of mental illness among American criminals and the inability to prove causation between severity of sentences and number of crimes committed, we should question our acceptance of punishment as justice and strive for humaneness.
Punishment merely ensures more pain and assumes superiority. We should strive to be better than those we scrutinize, but when our primary goal is to punish offenders with less regard to protecting victims, we are no better. Two wrongs don't make a right.
Virginia Richardson.
Richmond.
Climate-Change Skeptics Misrepresent Science
Editor, Times-Dispatch: Letter-writers William Ryan and James Miller both essentially claim global warming is a myth.
Ryan quotes the science section from a Web site in England that claims the "UK Meteorological Office's Hadley Center for Climate Studies HadCRUT data . . . shows worldwide temperatures declining since 1998." I went to the Web site for the Hadley Center for Climate Prediction and Research and found that instead it says: "The rise in global surface temperature has averaged more than 0.15° C per decade since the mid-1970s. Warming has been unprecedented in at least the last 50 years, and the 17 warmest years have all occurred in the last 20 years." (http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climatechange/guide/bigpicture/fact2.html)
Miller also makes reference in his letter to the "UK Hadley Climate Research Unit" among several sites that, he claims, document that "global temperatures had significantly decreased" and effectively counter "the total global warming recorded in the past 100 years." As I showed above with direct links to the Hadley Center, this is false and totally contradictory to what they actually say.
He also references the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. I went to its Web site and, again, found information directly contradictory to what Miller would have us believe. Specifically, "In our analysis, 2008 is the ninth-warmest year in the period of instrumental measurements, which extends back to 1880. The 10 warmest years all occur within the 12-year period 1997-2008." (http://www.giss.nasa.gov/ research/news/20090223/)
I would encourage all readers to access the two sites noted above, both of which were referenced by Ryan and Miller, to see for themselves where the truth lies.
Rod Elser.
Powhatan.
Feds Shouldn't Make Health Care Decisions
Editor, Times-Dispatch: Apparently President Barack Obama doesn't think we should provide end-of-life care to the elderly or terminally ill, to cut down on health care costs. In his ABC News special about his health care plan, he made comments about how we spend too much money on procedures for patients who are going to die soon anyway. In fact, he even said, "Maybe you're better off not having the surgery, but taking the pain killer."
The last person who should be making decisions about whether or not I receive end-of-life care is some faceless bureaucrat in Washington. Medical treatment decisions, especially ones that can provide comfort and quality of life to someone who is on his deathbed, should be between the patient and the doctor. The decision of whether to have a certain medical procedure should be between the patient and his doctor. The decision of whether to have a certain medical procedure should be made on a case-by-case basis, instead of by some blanket federal mandate. Maybe some treatment will only extend a patient's life by a couple of months, but who is Obama to say it isn't worth it? Every human life has dignity and should be treated as such.
Robert Burch.
Midlothian.
Reader Reactions
“Remember that while moral victories may be personally satisfying, in our form of government, majority rules. “ OLD Grump
In our form of government the majority is supposed to rule but that hasn’t been so for many years. Lobbyists, special interest groups, minority’s, crimminals and illegal aliens are now determining many of our laws. Our court system is now so full of judges who think making laws is much easier than enforcing the existing ones.
This country is now under a President that told the people what they wanted to hear and they listened without asking for details. Now that the details are coming out they see that one indivdual is going to take actions that will be with us for many years to come. The majority has not and may never rule in this country. This type of statement needs to be forgotten
That’s funny, George Wallace and Bull Connor lived and died as democrats.
What Randy fails to mention is as soon as LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act he essentially ceded the south to the Republican party because all those racist Democrats (relics from the civil war) moved to the Republican party. Our grandfathers Democratic party was the Democratic party from the civil war, the people who were against reconstruction and for Jim Crow. As soon as the Democratic party started to shift towards being more like the Republican party of Lincoln old Democrats jumped ship with the final straw being the Civil Rights Acts and the elimination of Jim Crow. “How dare they protect the rights of southern blacks!“ Since they lost that battle, it’s on to the homosexuals, which is a battle they will also lose.
Mr. Shishko, ‘fighting rear-guard actions’ is not automatically a bad thing. The nation already has one ‘forward looking’ party and they are driving us into the poor house while trampling upon those ‘backward’ concepts like the Bill of Rights. Mr. Jefferson’s comment applied to a generation that, despite differences, agreed upon the basic principles in the Constitution. Heck, they wrote it!The same cannot be said today. Your letter points to the fact there are many, many people either hostile or willfully ignorant of the principles for which this nation is founded. There is no sense of community is this country because too many people are not willing to subcribe to a common set of values and principles. Instead, they ridicule and demonize ‘backward thinkers’ and ‘rear-guard’ actions. It’s their way or the highway. Mr. Shishko, your side is winning the argument, but you will reap what you sow because the standards and values you defend are no replacement for those upon which a stable social order is based.
While the Ponzi Scheme pulled off by Bernie Madoff is often referred to as the largest in history, it pales in comparison to the government-controlled one refer to as ‘Social Security’. Madoff scammed his investors out of billions, but Uncle Sham has us on the hook for TRILLIONS.
At least those who gave their fortunes to Mr. Madoff did so voluntarily. The rest of us poor saps out here have no choice when it comes to “investing” in the unconstitutional government-run system.
Now I know why the majority of people under thirty years of age answered a survey and believed that a UFO would land in their front yard before they would ever receive a Social Security check.
:-)
Oh, I am still trying to find anything about retirement mentioned in the Enumerated Powers (Article I, Section 8 of the US Constituiton) of the federal government.
~ So sayeth The Dutchman ~
Henry’s Ghost and Lauren
You beat me to it Henry.
The government “uses” lobbyist to feed them information, and they also request information from lobbyist.
Lobbyist have become a kind of volunteer government. They don’t get paid by government but do work for government. Well that’s how it’s portrayed. But in the course of this
patriotic volunteerism they also use their inside knowledge and connections to manipulate data , legislation and votes. I say “inside” because many lobbyist are former Congressmen, Armed Forces or Government Employees. They get paid more on the “outside” from lobbyist then they ever got while “inside” the government, which tends to corrupt the “inside” government also. Because now instead of representing the people who voted them into office, Government Officials are more likely to listen to lobbyists because, once they leave office or government, their first step will be to call up one of their connections to the outside world…the lobbyist. They will ask him to fulfil that promised job offer, either for themselves, or maybe for a relative, or friend. Because like a professional sports star, Congressmen may have a short career in the government and need to think ahead about their future.
When people talk about corruption in government….this is a breeding ground. Welcome to the “way things are” inside the beltway. By the way, this works for both political parties.
Amen to that, OG!
... and Randy, there you are whipping that old familiar boogeyman again. I’m reminded of the WW2 propaganda posters from all sides vilifying the Japs, Jews, Yankees, etc… through caricatures intended to depersonalize the enemy by boiling them as individuals down to a few highly exaggerated characteristics . Have you ever thought that maybe, just maybe, your conception of who liberals are and what they stand for is more a reflection of your prejudices and fears than it is of reality?
You’d do well to pay particular attention to the last paragraph of the Old Grump’s post. There’s a lot of wisdom in that statement.
Q:How did we end up with a Democratically controlled White House and Congress?
A: Reaction to the policies of a Republican controlled White House and Congress.
Q: How do we return to two-party governance?
A: Remember that while moral victories may be personally satisfying, in our form of government, majority rules. If 100% of a one-third minority of the electorate shows up at the polls, they still lose.
Q: How do you form a majority?
A: Be realistic. Recognize that America is (and always has been) a country of diverse cultures and beliefs—not just Pilgrims and Protestants. Find out what you have in common with people who don’t necessarily look, speak, or worship like you instead of trying to find out what makes you different, then nominate and elect candidates who appeal to a majority of common sense Americans rather than fawning at the feet of the manic fringes at either end of the ideological spectrum.
If you crawl out on a limb and saw it in two, the limb falls (and the woodsman with it)—not the tree.
Lauren,
Legislators listen to lobbyists. None of us have any say in government anymore. The only things they want from us are our tax dollars and votes, and if they don’t get either they manufacture them.
Mr. Shisko - Please be reminded that it was democrats who stood in the doorways of schools to prevent their integration, not, republicans. Please be reminded that the Civil Rights act of 1964 passed because of Republicans, not democrats. Please be reminded that in Alabama during the 1940’s and 1950’s, blacks were only allowed to register and vote in the Republican party (which is why Condoleeza Rice’s family are republicans). Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King, Jr.: both republicans. Oddly enough, when Republicans run on conservative principles, they do quite well - Bob Dole and John McCain proved that moderates, even maverick moderates, won’t beat a liberal. As for climate change, please bear in mind that the liberal violates the first rule of common sense: Don’t start any vast projects with any half vast ideas. In attempting to resolve a climatic phenomenon, the liberal has started the country down a path of questionable lifestyle changes that represent myopic and less than well thought out elements. Take a look at alternative energy initiatives: wind, solar and nuclear - wherever such an initiative is proposed, you’ll find a green liberal with a court injunction trying to stop it. Ethanol - how’s that workin’ out for you? The new light bulbs GE convinced George Bush to mandate? Yeah, guess what leaks out when they break?
Republicans do have a huge fault - they don’t fight liberals hard enough. It’s time to vote libertarian.
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