Posted inCulture

X-miss : Or what I miss about solstice

In the US recycling is a cool thing & communities brag about 40-50 % involvement. Here nothing makes it to the dump (if there is one) exceptstuff that can be composted. Forget things like metal, glass or wood, even plastic is picked up before the city trash collectors get to it. The city trash collectors don't even realize that they have a shitty job (in American minds),
– Eddie H. writing from Viet Nam

X-miss in America is bi-polar. On one hand, there are tens of thousands of articles on the perfect gifts, the perfect decorations, the perfect tree, the perfect turkey and punch and cookies and antacid. On the other hand, there are pious calls to give to others, to cut back, make gifts, give green, buy a live tree, teach the kids not to be greedy, to not grow into adults who wander the streets of “charming” towns with that vapid and irritated look of “Done it, seen it all, how tedious” on their faces.

Posted inFood & Drink

The Identity Crisis: Your stereotypical drinker

Your stereotypical drinker.

I am often asked if you can tell a person by what they drink, and of course I can.

Rum and Coke? You're laid back and uncreative. You aren't worried about drinking caffeine and sugar until 2 a.m. and you don't care much for ambiance. You usually hang out with one other friend and you'd rather chill at the bar than shake your booty.
Tic Tac?(orange rum dropped into orange juice and red bull) You were born after 1986. You spend a considerable amount of time primping yourself before you leave the house and you always have an entourage. You never drink alone and you have one intention at the bar – to hook up.

Posted inCulture

Our Picks for 12/9 – 12/17: Aaron Meyer, Cross Nats Blow-Out Bash and more

Aaron Meyer Holiday Concert
friday 11
How often do you get to see holiday concerts by a “rock violinist?” This is actually the first time the esteemed Aaron Meyer, one of the Northwest's most well-known players, has performed his holiday show in Bend. Turn to page 23 for more. $25. Tickets at www.bendticket.com. 7pm. Old Stone Church, 157 NW Greenwood Ave.

Posted inOpinion

A Touching Fairy Tale About Taxes

We give opponents of Measure 66 and 67 the BOOT.

Like all good politicians, the late Ronald Reagan understood that the best way to drive a message home to people was not with dry statistics but with stories – anecdotes about ordinary folks like themselves. (Some of Reagan's stories were true and others were not, but that wasn't the point; the point was they were effective.)
Taking a page from the Reagan playbook, opponents of Measures 66 and 67 tried to tell Oregonians a story. The story was told in the first person by Carol Leuthold, who with her husband owns a dairy farm in Tillamook, in a letter mass-mailed to voters.

Posted inOpinion

Bowl Me Over: Copenhagen climate change, Tiger's troubles and the BS in the BCS

Copenhagen climate change, Tiger's troubles and the BS in the BCS.

The author has been sent on the road to discover a lost country formerly known as America. He is reporting from the Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen, convincing attendees that everything's fine, no need to worry, and that President Obama isn't really president, on assignment for Or-Bust.com and The Source Weekly.

No wonder our credit cards are about to be taken away. Jim Inhofe (R-OK) has declared himself a “one-man truth squad” while ambushing President Obama's trip to the Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen, mumbling repetitiously, “greatest hoax ever perpetrated… Every day something new comes out that debunks the science… ” This is the same fine elected representative from Oklahoma (born in Iowa) who cites the Bible during major policy decisions (Jesus is a lobbyist for the petroleum and coal industries, if you didn't know) and has coined the term “Climategate,” saying ever so respectfully at the Environment and Public Works Committee, “We won, you lost, now get a life.” One ray of hope locally is Madeline (Moey) Newbold, a Redmond high grad, studying at the University of Oregon who raised enough money to send herself to Copenhagen where she is blogging about the summit at http://www.moeyincph.blogspot.com/

Posted inOpinion

Winter Weather Banter

It got really cold, dontcha know?

Unless you're stranded in a woodstove-heated cabin outside Sisters you've probably had the chance to gather that the only acceptable topic of conversation over the past few days in Bend is the weather, or specifically the temperature. (It got really cold, dontcha know?) This is more evidence that, despite our traction tires and abundant mountain snowfall, Bend is still not a winter town. We drive around in blinding snowstorms without our lights on. (Hey, I can see fine!) We don't change the summer diesel out of our school bus fleet, stranding students on street corners.

Posted inOpinion

Embrace The (Cyclo) Cross

As many of you are already aware, the USA Cycling Cyclocross National Championships will take place in Bend's Old Mill District and on the grounds of Deschutes Brewery from December 10-13. In addition to the races themselves, a weeklong celebration of cycling has been planned, featuring art exhibits, parties, film premiers and more taking place throughout the city. Registration for this event has already broken records for a Cyclocross National Championship and we are expecting upwards of 4,000 total visitors.

Posted inOpinion

Let's Eat Local

Letter to the Editor.

Why is it that in a state like Oregon that has its own personal fertile crescent of agriculture in the Willamette Valley that we in Bend are stuck shelling out money in our local and chain markets to buy produce from all over the country, and yes, all over the world. I walked into Safeway yesterday and found asparagus from Peru. Peru! Granted, Safeway isn't exactly your mom and pop grocer, but even Nature's has only a tiny selection, or a few selections, of locally grown organic produce come winter, like potatoes, some salad greens and garlic. I guess the winter season makes things difficult. But does it have to?

Posted inOpinion

Obama The Stonewaller

Letter to the Editor.

We were informed some time ago that President Obama, or should I say “Stonewall” Obama, said in 1996 that: “I favor legalizing same-sex marriages, and would fight efforts to prohibit such marriages.” But, during his 2004 U.S. Senate bid, he cited his Christian faiths as grounds for his belief that marriage is between a man and a woman!?” Apparently, he had no Christian faith in 1996! The Bible and Jesus say many things important about family and love, but neither explicitly defines marriage as between one man and one woman!

Posted inOpinion

Letter of the Week: Wars For Jobs

This week's letter comes from Sue Bastian who, with more than just a hint of sarcasm, points out that war may just be the answer to our economic woes, if not our foreign policy woes. Thanks for the letter Sue. You can pick up your victor's spoils, a bag of Strictly Organic coffee, at our office, 704 NW Georgia.

30,000 additional soldiers bumps the total to 100,000-plus U.S. jobs to establish a democratic police state in Afghanistan.
Jobs in the privatized military with companies such as Halliburton will be needed to supply food, transport and security as soldiers destroy infrastructure, schools and hospitals which will then need to be repaired and replaced. Jobs in the oil industry will be needed to drill, process and transport gazillion gallons of fuel to move soldiers hither and yon. Jobs for mercenaries such as Blackwater USA will need hired guns in the privatized war effort.

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