Category Archives: Portland

Newspapers: ‘Nobody Knows Anything’

Every time you read a news story that mentions the president’s “jobs bill,” pause and consider that the journalist who wrote those words is living under the likely threat of losing his or her job. What’s it like to write about the decline in solid, middle-class jobs knowing your own might be next? It’s not […]

King and ‘the Gangstahs’

What happens to a dream deferred? Ask anyone. We’ve all had dreams deferred. Langston Hughes asked if a dream deferred festers like a sore — and then runs, or does it stink like rotten meat, or sag like a heavy load. What he led up to in his poem Harlem was that a dream deferred […]

Downsizing High-Tech’s Future

In the 1990’s, I was so busy as a newspaper reporter in California I didn’t notice that men like my father were losing their work in the Oregon sawmills. When I came home on vacation one summer, I saw a bumper sticker on my dad’s pickup truck: “Save a logger, eat an owl.” I’d heard […]

Journalism’s Agony and Ecstasy

One of the most under-reported stories in 21st Century America is the daily grind of so many workplaces, courtesy of our high-tech supremacists. Monologist Mike Daisey, who likes to say he served three years at Amazon.com, wants more stories about labor. He brought one of them to Portland, a monologue called JOURNALISM. Daisey billed his […]

Taxing Portland’s Art Spirit

Has there ever been a more inspirational work of art than the dollar sign? It mesmerizes everyone from the Dalai Lama to the humblest public employee. His Holiness recently blessed the city of Portland with a visit that drew at least 10,000 to Memorial Coliseum where he offered his usual advice: Scorn wealth and materialism. […]

Portland’s NIMBY Elite

When registered sex offender Thomas Henry Madison of Gresham, Ore., turned up six months ago at a neighborhood meeting protesting a sex offender clinic, he was tossed out. That protest was in the Inner Southeast Portland enclave of Sellwood/Moreland, and those neighbors succeeded in shutting down the clinic. Last week, Madison was back at a […]

Benson Tech Played as a Pawn

There it was on the front page of The Epoch Times, an international newspaper distributed throughout the Oregon state Capitol Building: “Only Half of Grads Use Their Degrees.” Too bad Gov. John Kitzhaber doesn’t at least peruse the headlines of this Chinese-based weekly. “Nearly one-half of college graduates in the United States are overqualified for […]

“That (Cop’s) Crazy”

Christopher Dorner’s law enforcement career did not turn out like he had planned, and no doubt he had big plans. Dorner was a police officer at a time when blacks were rising through America’s law enforcement ranks, and were even becoming chiefs. The Los Angeles Police Department had its first black chief in 1992. Like […]

Brainwashing a Terrorist

The prolonged adolescence of Mohamed O. Mohamud has ended with a guilty verdict. Now he can show he’s an adult by ordering his attorneys not to file an appeal on his behalf. It won’t be easy. Chief defense attorney Stephen Sady has already said there will be an appeal. Is this really what Mohamud wants? […]

Taking Care of Mother

What a beautiful bomb. That much is certain after FBI undercover agents showed Mohamed O. Mohamud the bomb he wanted to detonate in downtown Portland, Ore. Six 55-gallon barrels, supposedly filled with diesel fuel and nails (to act as shrapnel) were secured in the back of a van to be parked near Pioneer Courthouse Square. […]