GOP's love of Big Oil
Re "GOP's Barton defends BP, at party's peril," June 18
Outrageous is too mild a term to characterize Rep. Joe L. Barton's (R-Tex.) criticism of President Obama's negotiation with BP to provide a $20-billion gulf relief fund.
GOP's love of Big Oil
Re "GOP's Barton defends BP, at party's peril," June 18
Outrageous is too mild a term to characterize Rep. Joe L. Barton's (R-Tex.) criticism of President Obama's negotiation with BP to provide a $20-billion gulf relief fund.
In referring to this compensation (without a cap) for the victims of the oil giant's culpability that resulted in the death of 11 individuals and the most devastating environmental disaster in our nation's history as a "shakedown," he has revealed the way Republicans view the president.
This type of behavior — favoring powerful corporations over the public interest — reveals how dangerous it would be should the Republicans take control of Congress in November.
Republican Party leaders' pressuring Barton to issue an apology will not offset the negative reaction of the American public.
Joseph M. Ellis
Woodland Hills
A British oil company commits an environmental atrocity in the United States, devastating an entire region for generations to come.
Obama takes the first step in holding BP accountable and Rep. Barton has the gall to apologize to the British, calling this a "shakedown"?
I'd like to be the first to nominate Barton for the " Benedict Arnold" award of the year!
David B. Caspole
Pasadena
Republicans would side with Satan if it meant slamming Obama at the same time.
Maralys Wills
Santa Ana
Everything about this spill shows how completely dysfunctional America is as a society: our flawed relationship to nature, our inept public sector governance, the irresponsibility of corporations, the venal posturing of our political parties, the gleeful hectoring of the media. What a spectacle!
Arthur Hoyle
Pacific Palisades
Re "Viewing booms as a bust, officials turn to barges," June 20
Word of Tony Hayward's lovely sailing yacht, which he found time to enjoy over the weekend, was the ultimate proof of the BP CEO's tin ear when it comes to public perception.
I guess he got his life back … too bad all those other folks on the gulf coast can't enjoy a pristine day of ocean recreation, too.
It is hard to conceive that he could get to where he is and be so totally, monumentally stupid! What was he thinking?
Claudia Rosenfeld
Camarillo
Cudahy 'gritty'? It just isn't so
Re "Maywood to drop police force," June 17
As the principal of the largest school in the city of Cudahy, I am saddened to learn that the city of Maywood will be disbanding its police force, which has served our school and community with dignity and professionalism for many years.
But I am outraged that The Times described our community as "gritty." Our crime rate is lower than that of similar cities. Our schools outperform others in neighboring areas. And our hardworking families are dedicated to their children and community improvement.
In no way would I want the parents and students at my school thinking that their community was denigrated in the press, and I have no doubt that the principals of the other LAUSD schools patrolled by the Maywood-Cudahy Police Department would agree with me. Our children and families thrive under difficult circumstances.
I invite The Times to come to my school and report on the real stories of Cudahy and Maywood.
Sharon L. Sweet
Cudahy
The writer is the principal of the Elizabeth Learning Center.
Why healthcare costs so much
Re "Healthcare's high-cost traps," Opinion, June 17
As a retired orthopedic surgeon, I agree with physician Stella Fitzgibbons regarding the demands of the American public and the rising costs of healthcare.
I am reminded of a speech I once heard by Dr. C. Everett Koop, former U.S. surgeon general, who said, "The American people want three things: top-quality, gold-plated healthcare, free access to any doctor of their choosing, and they want it cheap. They can have any two of these, but not all three."
Harold Forney, M.D.
Carlsbad
Fitzgibbons writes of a Mrs. B who has a likely diagnosis of a benign ulcer which can probably be treated at home with pills.
Fitzgibbons then asks with skepticism if we should "opt for more precise, and far more expensive, tests in which a specialist examines [a patient's] innards with a fiber-optic scope," which "in rare cases ... catches something an X-ray can't." The doctor is concerned about the cost of such "gold-plated treatment" and feels that reform won't work unless these costs are controlled.
The real question is what kind of care she would want her mother to receive, and what cost controls would be applied to the "important" people in our society.
Stuart Alan Chapman
Los Angeles
After reading Fitzgibbons' essay, I concluded it was nice to see the death panels are alive and well.
She demonstrated that once you invite government into the controlling position in healthcare, the idea of saving tax dollars by reducing care and letting the old just die will follow closely behind.
Michael Cregan
Santa Barbara