Election is over, get those signs...
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Election is over, get those signs down
All right, people ... the fat lady has sung. Let’s get those awful
election signs down ... NOW! What a blight they have been on our
beautiful city. And shame on those who posted two and three signs at
each location. You know who you are!
PEG RICHIE
Huntington Beach
Not all serial killers come from Wisconsin
From “REEL CRITICS -- All hallowed classics”:
“Psycho (1960, directed by Alfred Hitchcock). Forget the remakes
and sequels, this is the one that made people afraid to shower again.
Anthony Perkins plays an amateur taxidermist who runs a little motel
and has some serious issues with his mother. In addition to being a
horror classic, this is a visually innovative movie that pushed the
envelope in film production. Like “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and
“Silence of the Lambs,” “Psycho” is based on the antics of Wisconsin
serial killer Ed Gein. It’s funny how Wisconsin has a knack for
producing people like Ed Gein and Jeffery Dahmer. It must be the
cheese.”
While we can claim Ed Gein as a native son, Dahmer was a native of
Ohio, where his first victim was found buried in the back yard of his
childhood home. Although it is surely true that Wisconsin cheese is
far superior to that produced in California, you can’t blame Dahmer
on any of our dairy products.
There may be a link, however. Some years ago when our license
plate was being redesigned, the Wisconsin State Journal in Madison
sponsored a contest to pick a new slogan for the plate. In the end,
of course, there was no support for removing “America’s Dairyland,”
but my favorite entry was a knock off on the New Hampshire slogan:
“Eat Cheese or Die”!
My other favorite, for the Francophile: “Come Smell Our Dairy
Air”!
On, Wisconsin!
PETER CHRISTIANSON
Huntington Beach
Parkside should be left to nature
The Shea/Parkside property should be left alone to return to its
natural state -- an open space wetland for plants and wildlife. Some
property is truly not developable. This is the case with the Parkside
site.
DAVE HAMILTON
Huntington Beach
I think, definitely, as far as Parkside is concerned, the area
should be restored as wetlands. We don’t need more homes. It will
mean more traffic, more congestion, and we definitely don’t need
that.
ARMOND TAYLOR
Huntington Beach
Pancake house perfect for Downtown
The Strand is perfect for the new Downtown. Now I noticed City
Editor Danette Goulet mentioned the IHOP is coming here. Everyone I
talk to on my daily walk to the beach is anxiously awaiting its
opening. And we are really salivating and anxious to eat their
delicious food and we are definitely going to be eating there often.
So I think it will all fit in perfect with the new The Strand.
ICEY CINOCCO
Huntington Beach
Praise Christian Church is all wrong
I’m an activist for the fireman, I’ve been for five years, and I
think this thing about the Praise Christian Church, I think the
church is all wrong. Fire Chief Michael Dolder knows what he’s doing.
You want a fire? He’s preventing lives from being lost. You’ve got to
follow law. The Bible says you have to do what Caesar says. You have
to abide by the rules ....You can’t do what you want. That’s wrong,
and I think this is very insulting to the fireman. I don’t think they
did a thing wrong. They don’t want to obey the rules. If they got
burned, who would save them --the fireman.
VIRGINIA SIMMS
Huntington Beach
City should just let old buildings be
I was at a meeting because of the Parkside issue and I listened to
the minister there, and the city and the Planning Commission tried to
make a judgment on this church building on Goldenwest Street.
It is an old building, and they want to use it as a church. But
after reading your article in the Independent, the Fire Department is
going through a lot of gymnastics.
They’re quoting this and that and so on and so forth and have put
the church on a defensive. That’s happened many times in the city,
I’m sure. It seems to me that the city had to have some kind of a
grandfather clause to allow these buildings to continue to operate
and not go through this bureaucracy of who signs what and who does
this and that.
For a city of 200,000 people, it sounds like its kind of
rinky-dink, and I’ve been here for 35 years living in the city and I
take issue with the way they go about this kind of business. When you
have old buildings and old streets and so on, so forth, there should
be some accommodation. You should be more straightforward. It sounds
like you’re being dishonest, so the attorneys have to get in there.
FRED DE NUCCIO
Huntington Beach
Ad ban doesn’t violate 1st Amendment
I don’t think this violates the 1st Amendment at all because
there’s a difference between freedom of speech and advertising. And
this law is not about what they’re pulling and towing behind the
airplanes, it’s about the noise pollution over our city and the
unsafe banners they’re towing.
I’ve lived here for many years and have been a beach-goer for many
years, and it’s very annoying to sit at the beach and all you hear
all day long is the planes going over with advertisings that I don’t
need to see. So, I really hope the council sticks to its guns and
keeps these planes out of the air.
CORINNE HOFFMAN
Huntington Beach
No, I don’t think the aerial advertising violates the 1st
Amendment. We are talking about noise pollution here. If everyone
wanted to voice their opinion via the 1st Amendment, the noise
pollution would be even more intolerable than it is now. In addition,
what happened to good taste? I just now saw the planes flying over my
home today with an aborted fetus. It’s beyond disgusting. Noise
pollution is not good for one.
CHARLOTTE NELSON
Huntington Beach
I do not think that the ban on aerial advertising violates our
free-speech rights. It’s an issue that concerns noise pollution. As a
person involved in aviation, I realize that John Wayne Airport, and
many other airports in the area, have noise abatement laws
procedures. Why wouldn’t we be held accountable, or pilots flying low
creating noise pollution be subject to the same noise laws? So again,
they’re distorting the issue.
JOHN PERONE
Huntington Beach
City’s aerial ad ban is totally ridiculous
The city’s ban on aerial advertising is absolutely ridiculous.
It’s lovely to see these things floating around the sky, and these
idiots that complain, I don’t know what’s wrong with them.
I think the city’s ban on aerial advertising violates free speech
and there’s nothing wrong with aerial advertising. These people that
complain, I don’t know what’s wrong with them.
RUTH FEERER
Huntington Beach
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