Author Archives: Pamela

Pamela Fitzsimmons lives in Portland, Ore., and was a reporter and editor at newspapers in California and Washington state for more than 25 years.

She grew up in Medford, Ore., a working-class town that was once populated with pear orchards and formerly home to lumber mills, fruit-packing houses and excellent public schools (among the required reading in senior year: Arthur Koestler’s “Darkness at Noon”). She worked her way through the University of Oregon as a forest fire lookout for the U.S. Forest Service, stationed on mountains in the Umpqua, Wallowa-Whitman and Willamette national forests.

In the decade of the 90’s, like hundreds of other reporters in Southern California, she wrote about gangs, drugs, deteriorating schools, urban sprawl, poverty and its offsprings: more babies, more poverty, more social problems. In her case, the focus was on San Bernardino where smog obscured the San Bernardino mountains, and there was never a hint of orange blossoms in the air.

By the time she returned to the Pacific Northwest, parts of it were starting to look like San Bernardino, minus the smog. Gangs, strip-commercial sprawl, declining schools, the meth epidemic, illegal immigration – California’s bad dreams had moved north. Didn’t anyone read the news and see this coming?

The Enemy of the Press

What a sorry spectacle to see America’s First Amendment-privileged press pleading their case to a public that has every right not to trust them. “We are not the enemy of the people,” Marjorie Pritchard, deputy managing editor of The Boston Globe’s editorial page, said in explaining her paper’s coordinated effort to have American newspapers editorialize […]

The Media’s Minstrel Show

Portland, Ore., wallows in guilt for being “the whitest big city in America” as if that were, in and of itself, a bad thing. Portland is actually something much worse: It is the most race-obsessed city in America. Thanks to the media – local and national – Portland can’t get over, won’t get over its […]

Occupy ICE: A Portland cesspool

The one-month anniversary this week of the Occupy encampment at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Portland, Ore., ended with a quiet thud – not the day of action and celebration it was supposed to be. “Organizers behind #OccupyICEPDX are celebrating one month of collective resistance in a movement that has spread across […]

Going Postal? Me Too!

It’s amazing more newsrooms haven’t been shot up by the likes of Jarrod Ramos. The news business angers somebody every day, and newsrooms are often readily accessible, especially smaller newspapers. Open the door to many smaller newspapers during regular business hours, and you can walk right in, usually to be greeted by a receptionist. The […]

Our ‘Queer and Caramel’ Future

Gay Pride Month has started to resemble that song, “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?” It’s a challenge for civil rights movements that have had success. How do you find new things to protest? You create new outrages. When a man named David Eugene Pierce, living as a woman named Gigi Eugene Pierce, was […]

‘Please Do Something!’

How can a country that can’t handle a stupid tweet from Roseanne Barr possibly do anything about school shootings? We can hit the delete key on someone who has offended the wrong people, and make her disappear. We can’t do that with killers. We can’t even judge them too harshly. We offer them a seat […]

Where the Stealing is Easy

George Soros doesn’t have to worry about anyone swiping his name and $8 billion in wealth. It’s the ordinary people who have to fight to hang on to what they have. Nevertheless, Soros wants to help the thieves. As it is now in America, you’re lucky to find anybody who cares if your name and […]

A Good Shoot or Bad Shoot?

The loss of a life isn’t always tragic. Sometimes it makes perfect sense. Take John A. Elifritz, for instance. On his last day on earth in Portland, Ore., Elifritz, 48, acted like a man with a long criminal history and a meth habit. After several hours of threatening to cut his own throat, menacing other […]

Our Dangerous Fixation on Race

While an American city’s municipal government was held ransom in a cyber attack, our national obsession with race took priority: Another black martyr was born, this time in a Sacramento backyard. The timing of Stephon Clark’s death couldn’t have been better for the Black Lives Matter movement, which has been capitalizing on the 50th anniversary […]

Nurturing Our ‘Freddy Kruegers’

One of the best things that ever happened to Noah Schultz was being treated like an adult when he was 17 years old. He was dealing drugs – had been since he was 12 – when he pistol-whipped another drug dealer in Portland, Ore. It was April 2009, and Schultz wasn’t much concerned about the […]