SLAIN OFFICER
Paper, letter writer were wrong on 'parade'
Rarely has a letter to the editor made me more angry ("Slain officer deserves honors, but 'parade' wasn't necessary," Dec. 6). Does the writer not understand grief and how every police officer no doubt thinks, "There but for the grace of God go I"?
The cost of the "parade" (a very offensive word to use) is infinitesimal to the degree of grief it expressed both for the slain police officer and his widow and children. As to why this particular letter is the featured Letter of the Day, perhaps the Editorial Board could explain.
CHARLOTTE FRAMPTON, APPLE VALLEY
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BUFFETT'S CASE
Plenty of evidence backs his tax argument
Edward Conrad's Dec. 5 commentary claims that Warren Buffett used "superficial and flawed" evidence to make his case for supporting higher taxes on the wealthy ("Buffett can 'take it.' America can't"). Conrad, a former partner at Bain Capital LLC, radically exceeds Buffet's so-called flawed evidence in scraping the bottom of the barrel for supporting evidence to support his ideology for low taxes on the wealthy.
He says that economic growth requires investment that comes from these low taxes. The wealthy now have some of the lowest taxes in modern history, with a gross abundance of cash sitting on the sidelines. So why isn't this cash being invested in economic growth?
In the 1990s under President Bill Clinton, with a major increase in tax rates, we had some of the longest and largest increases in economic growth in our history. Conrad fails to recognize the enormous stimulative effect of a pro-science administration.
Under the Bush anti-science administration, we had some of our best and brightest minds lured to Wall Street and the finance industry to suck wealth from the middle class to the upper class rather than focus on the kind of true innovation that grows our economy for everyone. This, of course, ended with the worst worldwide economic crash since the Great Depression.