Posted inNews

Dudley Tries to Get in the Tax Game

Republican Chris Dudley, the former Portland Trail Blazer who wants to be Oregon’s governor, is challenging Chicago Mayor Richard Daley to go one-on-one – but it’s not clear what game he wants to play.
Daley has gotten attention over the past week by predicting he’ll be able to lure businesses away from Oregon to Chicago after the passage of Measures 66 and 67.

Posted inCulture

Our Picks for 2/3 – 2/11: Art Walk, Cash’d Out, Slightly Stoopid and more

First Friday Art Walkfriday 5After taking January off, the First Friday Art Walk is back on with all the usual suspects (downtown, Old Mill, Northwest Crossing and beyond) showing off local, regional and national artists. Hit our Local Arts listings for a complete gallery guide.
Cash'd Out
friday 5Tribute bands can sometimes wander into dangerously corny territory, but that doesn't seem to be the case with this San Diego-based Johnny Cash cover band. Their covers of mostly early Cash numbers (including all the classics, of course) are eerily on target – down to the twang of the guitar and the smoothly deep vocals that made Cash an American legend. Larry and His Flask open. $12/door. All ages. 9pm. Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave.After Hours Art Party friday 6After doing the walk of art (our second favorite walk, behind the walk of life, of course), you can keep your creative appreciation muscles flexed by hitting up the Silver Moon where you'll see live painting from Erik Hoogen and music from Mindscape. $5. 9pm. Silver Moon Brewing Co., 24 NW Greenwood Ave.

Posted inNews

A Pet Problem: A Bend couple turn their dog's injuries into a chance for change

Zoe was the runt of the litter. Of the 10 collies she was born alongside in Southern California, she was the smallest, often fighting with her siblings for food and was the last puppy of the brood to leave the breeder.
It was John and Caren Burton who took Zoe into their home just east of Bend. Zoe took to her new owners and her new high-desert terrain, gradually shaking off the timidity of her infancy and, like so many pet animals, became a member of the family.
John and Caren went as far as to bestow upon her a middle name: Autumn, reflecting the hue of her coat, which John referred to as “the color of fall golden wheat.” She would often accompany the Burtons on their trips, riding in the car without complaint, and in her six years Zoe had only been left in another's care a handful of times.

Posted inOpinion

Ripped From The Headlines: Torn gets ripped, Obama woodsheds Congress and more!

The author has been sent on the road to discover a lost country formerly known as America. He is reporting from the Super Bowl (really his couch, a bottle and bookie only a reach away), hating the guy who loves the commercials – on assignment for Or-Bust.com and The Source Weekly.
Busted Piggy Banks
President Obama is doing more damage control than Toyota. Gas pedals sticking to the floor and sending cars out of control at high speed (stop, think, put the car in neutral, people) is much like government spending. The new $3.6-trillion budget is akin to a panhandler trying to sell a Hummer (err, let's say Porsche) and will increase our deficit by $1.6 trillion over ten years, a reality that the White House defended by pointing out that Obama inherited a $1.3 trillion deficit from Bush. Does any of this make sense? Of course not. We're dealing with D.C. here, where our money and morals are mere talking points. The budget does include cuts: Bush's attempt to explore the moon (so much cheese still undiscovered), border security (shhh, don't tell Mexico), and a bunch of programs that fix the environment and actually help people but are no longer compelling sound-bites on television and YouTube.

Posted inOpinion

Mayor Daley's Raid on Oregon

When you're the mayor of a decaying Rust Belt city, you naturally are inclined to grasp at any straw of hope that seems to present itself, so we probably shouldn't be too hard on Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley.
His Honor has been bragging loudly about how Oregon's passage of Measures 66 and 67, which modestly increased taxes on affluent individuals and big businesses, is going to prove to be a windfall for America's former Second (now Third) City.
“It will help our economic development immediately,” Daley told the Chicago Sun-Times. “You'd better believe it. We'll be out in Oregon enticing corporations to relocate to Chicago.”
Daley couldn't resist throwing in some faux populist, anti-progressive-tax rhetoric: “I've always thought America stands for [rewarding success]. … I never knew it's a class war – that those who succeed in life are the ones that have to bear all the burden. … It will be a whole change in America that those who succeed and work hard, we're gonna tax 'em more than anyone else.”

Posted inOpinion

Letter of the Week: Democracy loses

This week's letter come from Sue Bastian who takes direct aim at the recent Supreme Court decision that removed campaign spending restrictions on corporations in federal elections, a move that is expected to increase Corporate America's influence on our government. Thanks for the letter Sue. You can pick up your winner's spoils, a bag of Strictly Organic Coffee at our office, 704 NW Georgia – no corporate influence peddling required.

The Supremes pounded the final nail in the coffin of democracy with their recent decision to unleash the few remaining restraints on the corporados and banksters to own and control government.
In 1886, the Supremes granted personhood to corporations endowing these artificial entities (legal fictions) with all the rights of real persons except the right to vote.
In 1976, the Supremes ruled that money is synonymous with free speech essentially deciding that corporations could buy elections using money as an expression of free speech. Now corporations could vote.
The McCain-Feingold Act in 2002 restricted some of the more onerous practices of corporations in federal elections.

Posted inOpinion

The Fallacy of Freedom

Freedom is a funny thing, or maybe not. It takes on gravity when we are told that America was attacked on 9/11 because, “they (whoever they might be) hate our freedoms.”
Funny that what most citizens hate is the erosion of individual freedoms in the USA after 9/11. As someone said, 'If freedom was the main reason for the attacks, Holland should have been attacked a long time ago.
Some of freedom's irony lies in the definition of the word. For the most of the working and middle class folks of the world, it means having individual rights and freedom from exploitation. For the wealthy elite (and their agents, the politicians) it means freedom to exploit and freedom from interference in any of their escapades.

Posted inOpinion

The Bully's Sour Grapes

That's what the editorial in the January 28 editorial sounded like to me. Over these past months, I have increasingly wondered what was driving the Bulletin's almost hysterical opposition to the ballot Measures 66 and 67.
I understand the loss of people's confidence in government, in part because of the influence of lobbyists. Government has a sacred trust to provide for the welfare of the whole people – not just those who can get them re-elected. Equally sacred is the task of a free press to tell not only the truth but to care for the welfare of the whole people – not simply the advertising accounts that fund the paper. In my life, I have known individual reporters and publishers who worked hard to be independent – even of those who funded them. Alas, I have not seen that in The Bulletin, either in its editorials or staff articles, in this campaign.

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