| Did
            you see that it took over six hours in delays for people in Utah to
            get on a plane after the Olympics were over. How about any business
            taking a person’s money, promising them a specific time to render
            services and then screw everything up. Would that business survive
            in the real world? It would if it’s the airline industry living
            off $5 billion in taxpayer relief funds. Does that make any sense? 
 Gov.
            Ryan is all hot at AFSCME because they refuse to submit to a year’s
            freeze on wages that would help keep their own members’ jobs.
            Doesn’t anyone remember that last year employees of the Capital
            Area Career Center took a wage freeze to protect their jobs? Now
            they are faced with a 20 percent reduction in funding that will send
            many employees packing. Is the governor’s word really worth
            believing? While
            we are on wages, let’s not forget that the governor, staff and
            area lawmakers will get their raise of 3.8 percent this next year.
            Why? They have to take it because the state constitution says they
            have to. Where did this constitution come from? Mars? The one I know
            about was written and is continually rewritten by these same
            individuals. Just say "no" to a wage increase and repeal
            the rule. Isn’t that the fair thing to do? Or am I just crazy? 
 How
            is it that 95 Illinois communities will receive $23.5 million in
            funds for water and sewer projects but Lincoln isn’t on the list?
            Don’t tell me this is just going to the big boys. Have any of you
            heard of just two of these towns? Alexis, Alma, Atwood, Bluford,
            Buda, Colp, Gorham, Granville. Stop. That’s enough. Ninety-five
            towns, counties and cities get free funding but not us. Somebody
            explain this one to me please. (See http://wwww.state.il.us/PressReleases/ShowPressRelease.cfm?SubjectID=
 1&RecNum=1717)
 
 Three
            weeks ago the governor said privatization of the food industry in
            state-run institutions would save the state $20 million next year.
            Now the official figure is $15 million. Where did we lose $5 million
            in just three weeks, and why isn’t anyone asking? 
  
             [to top of second column in this
            article]
             |   What
            about this craziness that the FDA isn’t checking on imports of
            meat and poultry to the U.S. to see if they meet quality standards.
            Are they waiting for "mad cow" or "crazy
            chicken" to hit us before they get off their duffs and do their
            job? They also fielded a yearlong trial of companies doing their
            own inspections to see how that would work. The answer, according to
            the GAO, is that the findings weren’t conclusive because the FDA
            didn’t keep proper track of the study nor use other FDA-inspected
            companies to form a comparison. Did everyone at FDA graduate from
            the Cleveland school system or what? 
 Speaking
            of the GAO. Did you know that the 2000 census came in 355 million
            under the $4.5 billion budget? What happened to this money? The
            Department of Commerce passed it out to other agencies that needed
            more funds than Congress had appropriated for them. Our tax dollars
            at work again. 
 Lastly,
            have you noticed all the vegetarian and animal rights groups now
            pushing to have their way with us? It isn’t good enough that we
            carnivores live and let live with these "veggies"? Now
            most of the world is supposed to be forced to give up all the foods
            they like because this meager percentage of the population demand
            that we sit around eating nuts and berries. They
            say they are doing it for our health. Why is it then that Americans
            have a longer life span today than at anytime in the history of the
            world? If meat and diary products are so bad for us, why aren’t we
            all dying off at age 25 with a Big Mac and fries clutched in our
            hands. I
            would never tell someone else what they can or cannot eat, so I sure
            don’t appreciate them telling me. I have compromised a little
            toward this tofu generation. I only eat bacon or steaks that have
            come from animals that have died of natural causes or in their
            sleep. Can’t we all get along? I’ll eat to that. [Mike
Fak]
             Reply to
          Fak
          (not for publication): mikefak@msn.com Response
          to Fak’s commentary: ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
         | 
      
            | The
            Lincoln Courier has carried several articles regarding the claim by
            Alderman Glenn Shelton that there is racial profiling in this
            community. Alderman Verl Prather as well as Chief of Police Richard
            Montcalm have taken umbrage with Shelton’s claim and show records
            that they believe invalidate Alderman Shelton’s Martin Luther King
            Day remarks that there is a higher rate of incidence for a black to
            be pulled over than a white within the city limits. Jeff
            Nelson, managing editor of The Courier, wrote a Feb. 6 opinion piece
            stating he believes that the numbers crunch showing 5 percent of the
            tickets being issued to the 2 percent of the community that is
            African-American backs up Shelton’s claim. The same statistics
            were validated by the Lincoln Daily News in an article on the
            same date. Comments by readers in letters to the editor claim police
            officers have "favorite" targets as they patrol and
            protect. Tough words to be written in small-town community
            newspapers. Tougher decisions face us to look at the entire
            situation with honesty. I
            look for numbers in a story more than anything else. Numbers, you
            see, are an exact science. They never lie, they never exaggerate. A
            number by its very definition is always the truth. We haven’t
            heard numbers, however, in this issue. We have heard percentages,
            and percentages, although a distant cousin in the world of math, are
            a favorite haunt of those trying to take away the reality of
            mathematics. What I mean is, if there is one incident and it
            increases to two, the reality is one more such incident has
            occurred. Percentagewise, however, one could say that the problem
            has gone up 100 percent. Sorry
            if I’m drifting on you, but what I am saying is that I want
            numbers, not percentages, before I pass judgment either way on the
            issue. What is 5 percent, and of what? What is 2 percent? I need
            those facts to sort out my opinion. And
            still, after my queries are answered, I believe we need to look past
            Shelton and the police force and look at ourselves. Being
            an officer of the law isn’t a very easy task, especially in a
            small town. Stop someone and issue them a citation, and immediately
            you are in the doghouse with that person, their family, their
            friends. Remain on the force for several years and those
            animosities, justified or not, can build. I
            got nailed for $75 a few years ago by a young cop for not having my
            seatbelt on. Was I, in fact, guilty? I was. But I still grumble
            under my breath when I see that patrolman drive by in his squad car.
            Was the cost of the infraction his fault or mine? Now that the check
            has cleared and time has healed the financial wound, I can admit the
            fault was mine.  
             [to top of second column in this
            article]
             | 
            I
            was once profiled. As a 21-year-old I was thrown against a car,
            frisked and nearly hauled off to jail because I and my rusty old
            "tater" car were in the affluent suburb of Forest Hills at
            2 a.m. Did I look suspicious? Probably. Would I, if I had been in
            those policemen’s shoes, decide to check me out as well? Again,
            probably. Did the fact four squad cars pinned me against the curb,
            frisked me and scattered all the papers in the car about tell me
            they were overreacting? Still another probably. It took many years
            for that night to slip off the front page in my memory. Maybe I have
            gotten mellow in my later years. Today,
            more than ever, I realize that the moment you place that police
            shield on your chest doesn’t automatically remove a person from
            being a member of the human race, complete with strengths and
            weaknesses. It
            seems that the issue of community bias is falling squarely on the
            Police Department, and I find that unfortunate. I had the pleasure
            of being police and fire commissioner 13 years ago when Chief
            Montcalm tested for the force. Through the years in all my
            conversations with him, I have never heard a single slur nor
            disparaging remark come from his lips against anyone due to their
            race, religion or personal lifestyle. To be honest, I can say that
            of very few of us, including myself, in this community. The cops I
            personally know are good people trying to do a job without having
            their personal lives disrupted by those of us who cannot separate
            their being a cop from the individuals they are. I
            know Reverend Shelton and have always found him to be an honest,
            forthright individual with a wonderful sense of self as well as an
            engaging sense of humor. I cannot for a moment believe he has not
            measured every public comment he has made on this issue. And
            so where are we? We are, of course, where every small American town
            is in these days we live in. We have biases against people of other
            races. We find those of another religion or lifestyle or handicap
            too different to not find a moment to tell and laugh at a joke told
            at their expense. We even look down on others because they are less
            affluent or more wealthy than we are. We
            are so much better than we were 50 years ago as an
            "accepting" nation, but again let’s be honest. We are
            still a very long way from needing to go to a trophy store and
            buying ourselves plaques commemorating our humanity. Bias
            in Lincoln? How about everywhere in this world. It’s good to talk
            about it. Having Shelton or the police force solely under this
            microscope just isn’t reality. Perhaps we need to take the time to
            pull ourselves over and check ourselves out. No flashing lights are
            needed. Just the solitude of a moment’s reflection to look within
            one’s own heart. [Mike
Fak]
             Reply to
          Fak
          (not for publication): mikefak@msn.com Response
          to Fak’s commentary: ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
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