MAILBAG - July 5, 2001
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Thank you for your piece on Jeanette Lawrence and her campaign to help
Haitian children, (“Resident’s mission is to help Haitian children,” June
21).
We get so caught up in our own day-to-day existence, we forget that we
are so lucky to live in a country where we have so many opportunities
available to us. I salute Lawrence for her efforts and hope that her
story inspired others to do more to help others less fortunate.
SUSAN R. DRAVO
Fountain Valley
Reader shares environmentalists’ perspective
While I was on the Independent Web site looking for a way to send a
letter to the Community Forum, I read Vic Leipzig and Louann Murray’s
article on the energy crisis and sacrificing the environment for energy
in the short-term (“Don’t shortchange our environment,” June 7).
I also read with interest their call for alternative and renewable
energy. I share their perspective.
The city of Huntington Beach is also looking at fuel cells and
approaching it in such a way that it will be a win for the taxpayers as
well.
I would hope that they would mention the fact that good work is being
done to logically approach the energy situation in spite of the federal
and state government’s apparent willingness to sacrifice the environment
for energy.
Good column. Keep up the good work.
MIKE MERLO
Huntington Beach
DARE program proven ineffective in the classroom
DARE has been ineffective at every school that I have worked at since
my first experience with it in San Diego in the early 1990s. I know the
reason. Children that are raised in a society that is continuously
passing new laws and regulations see exactly how their parents react and
it causes them to have little respect for the law weather the parents are
law abiding or not.
I have been a counselor at three different schools since DARE came on
the scene and I can tell you from direct contact with the students and
parents that it does not work. Children are no longer raised to respect
law enforcement because most American parents are frustrated with laws
that restrict personal choices in private homes. Lawmakers pass new laws
every year that restrict personal choice, a concept the founding fathers
did their best to prevent with our Constitution.
Police every year become more removed from the rest of society as
average Americans feel that the police have too much power and the
ability to manipulate situations to make good people feel unjustly
persecuted for actions that used to be a matter of personal choice.
The numerous counts of officers breaking the law as they are also
being paid by taxpayers to uphold the law does not help the situation.
Why should children take to heart the words of a person in a uniform that
makes their parents nervous at best. I have had numerous conversations
with young children and their parents on the subject of drugs and almost
all agree that if anything the DARE program causes curiosity in children.
MATT JERGE
Huntington Beach
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