Category Archives: Morality

Having Fun In Prison

Twenty years from now, how many pen pals will Aurora, Colo., killer James Holmes have? Andrew Metz has several, and he murdered only two people. He told the Oregon State Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision earlier this month he looks forward to a future that he hopes will include starting a family. (Interested? Check […]

The Next Rodney King

Somewhere there’s a young, black American male looking to hit it big on the Blue Lotto. A young, black man who has dropped out of school, has used drugs, spent some time in jail and has weighed the career options that seem available to him – hip-hop star, football or basketball star, drug dealer – […]

America’s Transit of Venus

What kind of civilization will America be in December 2117? Will it be reduced to a once-extravagant wonder, a country whose glory days are found in history books that nobody reads anymore? In Shirley Hazzard’s 1980 novel, “The Transit of Venus,” a prosperous New York attorney tells his wife, a young woman from Australia: “Our […]

When Justice Isn’t in the Cards

What a mockery justice becomes when guilt and innocence mean nothing. Consider the case of Brian Banks, who served five years in prison for a rape he didn’t commit — but pleaded no contest to. He was cleared of all charges last week. His record is now clean. Banks, a 6-foot-4, 225-pound football star at […]

AG’s Race Goes Up in Smoke

If politics makes for strange bedfellows, Ellen Rosenblum’s husband might be wondering who she’s curling up with, now that she’s running for Oregon Attorney General. Or perhaps Richard Meeker doesn’t care. As publisher of Willamette Week newspaper he’ll gladly take money from advertisers selling the hottest girls (“Give in to your wildest fantasies!”) or pushing […]

Headline News From the After Life

In the 1998 Japanese film “After Life,” the recently deceased arrive at a celestial way station (it looks like a social services bureaucracy), where they are assigned caseworkers who help them find a moment in their lives that they can relive for all eternity. At one point, the caseworkers complain about how boring and predictable […]

Dr. Strangelove Will See You Now

How sacred is your life? How much should be spent to insure your health? With the continuing debate over President Obama’s health care reform, the questions are worth considering. Personally, my life isn’t as sacred as it used to be. A few months after Obama’s health care reform passed, my insurance carrier dropped me because […]

The Week That Wasn’t

“Trust Women Week” ended a couple of days ago, and had a friend not e-mailed me about it, I would have never known it was happening. Sadly, I don’t trust women. Neither do I trust Planned Parenthood, People for the American Way, MoveOn.org and the other usual groups who are supposed to be fighting for […]

Helplessness and the Status Quo

In Portland, Ore., school officials are struggling with a disconnect between how the city sees itself (very livable and very special) and the poor performance of its public schools (almost half of high school students don’t graduate in four years). Fifth-year seniors are becoming a trend. “The stigma of a fifth year is not what […]

A Day of Licentious Benevolence

I once worked for a newspaper editor who decided that on each day between Thanksgiving and Christmas we would strive for a “Santa presence” in the paper. Preferably, a picture of Santa. Or a story with a reference to Santa. This idea was probably cooked up by somebody in advertising to appeal to the business […]