While President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron were having a news conference in Paris celebrating the 100th anniversary of the U.S. entry into World War I, Liu Xiaobo, the well-known Chinese dissident and Nobel Peace Peace winner, lay dying (literally) of stage IV liver cancer in a heavily guarded hospital, unable to see his wife. In response to a question from a Chinese journalist as to what Trump and Macron thought personally of Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump and Macron managed only praise. Trump said, "Well, he's a friend of mine. I have great respect for him … . A great leader. He's a very talented man. I think he's a very good man." Macron commented, "I have a lot of respect for President Xi … ."
Wow. I felt sad that these two presidents could praise a leader who imprisoned Liu Xiaobo for 10 years for initiating a petition calling for democracy, didn't allow his release for timely treatment of his liver cancer and kept his wife from him under house arrest. It would have been a nod to Liu's heroism in defense of democracy and liberty if Trump or Macron would have at least mentioned their concern for Liu's well-being during their news conference. The rest of us, however, can remember Liu. We can thank him for his bravery in negotiating the safe passage of protesters during the Tiananmen Square uprising. We can honor him by taking his words to heart — words written before his trial: "Hatred can rot a person's wisdom and conscience. An enemy mentality will poison the spirit of a nation and inflame brutal life and death struggles, destroy a society's tolerance and humanity, and hinder a country's advance toward freedom and democracy."
Judy Ostendorff, Bloomington
SUN COUNTRY AIRLINES
A new CEO is named. What will it mean for passengers?
Oh-oh. Looks like you can kiss those Sun Country Airlines perks goodbye soon, like the free carry-on bag and soft drinks.
The "hometown airline" said goodbye this week to its previous CEO, Zarir Erani, and said hello to its new CEO, Jude Bricker, who comes from Allegiant — an ultra-low-cost airline that charges lots of passenger fees. I could be wrong, but Sun Country may adopt the current U.S. airline industry business model more aggressively. You know, the nickel-and-dime model, charging customers fees on just about everything.
It wouldn't exactly be a surprise. The U.S. domestic airlines are largely run by the finance guys, who long ago concluded that charging their customers added fees is the wave of the future — the wave they need to ride for primary, top-line revenue growth.
And what a wave it is. During 2016, airlines pulled in $41 billion in "ancillary" customer fees. And as I write this, I'm sure there is an airline senior manager, somewhere in the U.S., now dreaming up what other fees you can be charged for on your next flight.
Guess I'd better get used to those added-value, optional-service fees. And to those comfortable, paper-thin seats. Hey, wait a minute — I can pay another fee, to avoid paying all the standard fees. Awesome!
Neil F. Anderson, Richfield
HEALTH CARE BILL
Here's one way to describe the latest Senate plan
Here's a parable that I think fits the current U.S. Senate health care plan: "A member of Congress walks along the beach and sees a man drowning. He thinks: I could save that man. But if I do, I have taken away his choice to sink or swim. Anyway, he is not worthy of my help. So he passes the man by. But first, he sees the man's clothing on the beach, so he rifles the guy's pockets and extracts the cash to share with his more deserving rich friends and donors."