I have a hard time understanding why it is that anything and everything Obama does is so wrong. He has been trashed and badmouthed by everyone that did not vote for him. George Bush was such a pinhead and did nothing for the country for eight years, and there was little to nothing said about it. But Obama has been in the White House a year, and it seems as if people expect him to clean up the mess that Bush made in one year. Why aren’t we giving him a chance? We have the GOP fighting him on all sides, and he can’t do it unless he has help. So why can’t we stop criticizing him and agree to help? That would be the right thing to do. Stop the politics and try to get the country up and running again. We all will be better for it.
Cecilia Henderson
Kingsport
On this page, are posted items received from Douglass Alumni and Riverview residents, some of them amusing, some of them very serious.. this is also the Opinion-Editor page of the website. View older items by clicking "Older Posts" at the bottom of this page.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Vision for Riverview ignored
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
Why and how does the black community of Kingsport celebrate Martin Luther King Day year after year, seemingly with no outcome? Are we celebrating just to make us feel good about our blackness? I’m a black woman who gave this city a vision that will forever change lives in Riverview, yet no one ever mentions it. They sweep it under the rug. They ignore it, and some don’t even believe it for whatever reason. Kingsport Tomorrow did not give the city this vision; neither did anyone else. I attended church in Riverview for years and asked God why does a handful of people live so impoverished — not a handful of black people, but people. As God gave it to me, I began to sketch what Riverview should and could be. When little Jalisa Ferguson was shot and killed and Kingsport was looking for a way to change Riverview, I felt it was time to share what I had with Mayor Wright, and the rest is bad history. I told the truth, and if anyone wants to hear the rest of the story, call me and I will gladly tell you.
If the black community wants to promote truth, they would start first at home with this vision. What would King think of the fact that a black woman gave such a vision and she is ignored? Didn’t he stand for truth, justice, equality and fairness for all? Anyone deserves credit for their work, black or white. Some know the truth and yet ignore it, but celebrate a man who walked in truth. There are two responsible parties here: the city and the black community. This vision will never bloom to its full potential because it’s built on lies. When you march in a parade celebrating a man of truth, you decimate his name when you know the truth and continue not to walk in it.
Nancy Senior
Kingsport
Why and how does the black community of Kingsport celebrate Martin Luther King Day year after year, seemingly with no outcome? Are we celebrating just to make us feel good about our blackness? I’m a black woman who gave this city a vision that will forever change lives in Riverview, yet no one ever mentions it. They sweep it under the rug. They ignore it, and some don’t even believe it for whatever reason. Kingsport Tomorrow did not give the city this vision; neither did anyone else. I attended church in Riverview for years and asked God why does a handful of people live so impoverished — not a handful of black people, but people. As God gave it to me, I began to sketch what Riverview should and could be. When little Jalisa Ferguson was shot and killed and Kingsport was looking for a way to change Riverview, I felt it was time to share what I had with Mayor Wright, and the rest is bad history. I told the truth, and if anyone wants to hear the rest of the story, call me and I will gladly tell you.
If the black community wants to promote truth, they would start first at home with this vision. What would King think of the fact that a black woman gave such a vision and she is ignored? Didn’t he stand for truth, justice, equality and fairness for all? Anyone deserves credit for their work, black or white. Some know the truth and yet ignore it, but celebrate a man who walked in truth. There are two responsible parties here: the city and the black community. This vision will never bloom to its full potential because it’s built on lies. When you march in a parade celebrating a man of truth, you decimate his name when you know the truth and continue not to walk in it.
Nancy Senior
Kingsport
Monday, January 4, 2010
Center vs. Complex
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
I went to the website to see the new name. What Mr. McCartt alluded to is exactly why I did not like the name complex. Douglass High School is an historic site and dropping the word "community" would have been a better idea than calling it a "complex" and adding someone's name, especially Mr. Dobbins' name.
Center: hub, heart, core, interior, inside
Complex: multifaceted, compound, composite, multipart
I do not like the connotation and hope the name will be reconsidered because "complex" does not reflect what the Black community represented.
Rosemary Gray
I went to the website to see the new name. What Mr. McCartt alluded to is exactly why I did not like the name complex. Douglass High School is an historic site and dropping the word "community" would have been a better idea than calling it a "complex" and adding someone's name, especially Mr. Dobbins' name.
Center: hub, heart, core, interior, inside
Complex: multifaceted, compound, composite, multipart
I do not like the connotation and hope the name will be reconsidered because "complex" does not reflect what the Black community represented.
Rosemary Gray
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