August 24-30, 2006
Slant : Feedback
Letters to the EditorThe Roots are a great band, period. They transcend categories and play in a league of their own. Hopefully their continued existence will be an inspiration for other aspiring hip-hop artists to put intelligence, consciousness and individuality back in a musical genre in dire need of fresh air.
Duane Mashore
West PhiladelphiaTodd Kimmel
Via E-mailAnyway, big ups to CP for a job well done.
Aaron Luis Levinson
Fishtown
Please withhold my name so I won't be targeted for arrest.
Name Withheld
Hilliard, Fla.Stan White
Dillon, Colo.Bill Fried
Boston
I wanted to thank you for your attention to a problem that seems simple to solve and would stop making criminals out of thousands of Americans. Hopefully, one day our politicians will at the very least begin to address this issue. This is such an easy fix if somehow we can find the people with the political will.
Mark Kelch
San Antonio, Texas
One of the crucial issues of why there is this bullshit war on drugs is to employ a huge multitrillion dollar cadre of police, judges, lawyers, prison suppliers, etc. Give free drugs, drug education, psychiatric and psychological support to those who are the lost souls and this "problem" would drastically diminish in a few generations.
Name Withheld
Via e-mail
Philadelphia is a small town and we have only been here for two years, so it is a real blow to our fledgling reputations to have the City Paper print this one-sided story. It is not with surprise that within your large circulation there are people we know, and it has not been easy fielding all the phone calls and e-mails asking what are we going to do. Last but not least, these comments appear to anyone with Internet access in the top listings of a Google search, which has left an unwarranted stain on our integrity as private citizens and has the potential to harm our standing far beyond Philadelphia.
Dawn Woodward
South PhillyHilary Kinney
Corporate Project Manager, Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company
I find it very disturbing that [A. D. Amorosi] could attack the credibility of an individual without first researching the truth of the attack. I think that it is very important to know the "rumors" about Edmund Rek are just that. I know for a fact that he is a very talented chef, and his credentials extend beyond that of Johnson & Wales and Park Hyatt.
I am curious what the motive behind publishing such an article was. It reminds me of 7th grade when all the girls would pass notes to one another trying to make each other look bad. To all involved in this vindictive attack: Grow up.
Laura Ozcoskun
Annapolis, Md.
We may soon hear more promises from either the PGCB (or the casino operators themselves) of extra neighborhood-impact compensations where the casinos will be built. Such compensation can include money for schools, gambling-addiction clinics, neighborhood associations and even local emergency services. However, there is absolutely nothing written in the law that says they must comply. Basically they are making promises that they don't have to keep. And seeing how the PGCB operates and the way casino operators historically operate, should we believe those promises?
Sean Benjamin
Fishtown
But, here's the thing: Despite Second Amendment whining by pro-gunners, the fact is that gun laws work. It's no coincidence that Pennsylvania's neighbors New Jersey and New York have both far more stringent handgun-background-check and permitting systems and far lower statewide per-capita rates of gun violence. It is much more difficult for bad guys, straw purchasers and gun traffickers to get their hands on guns in the Garden and Empire states than in Pennsylvania. Nor is it a coincidence that two New Jersey cities, Camden and Trenton, suffer disproportionately high rates of gun violence, as they're both only bridge rides away from Pennsylvania's menacing and efficient gun black market, where illegal guns are as easy to get as groceries.
Contrary to Schimmel's knee-jerk skepticism, we can slow the flow of illegal handguns to the mean streets, thereby diminishing supply, raising prices and making it far less likely that every kid in Point Breeze, Kensington, East Camden, Chester and dozens of bullet-riddled neighborhoods on both sides of the Delaware will have a handgun in his pocket and use it. We can do so by gaining enactment of a statewide One Handgun a Month law in Pennsylvania that will dramatically reduce the movement of guns from legal sale at Pa. gun shops to illegal street sale.
Yes, getting it done will be difficult and take time and long-term commitment, but not even Vince Fumo, busy these days doing the gun lobby's business by trying distraction after distraction, will be able to stop the growing momentum forever.
Finally, while it may feel good, a Philly-only solution won't work. There are many more gun shops in the suburbs than the city, which would be the only beneficiaries of a Philly-only approach. Happily, a growing coalition of concerned citizens and organizations called PATH (Pennsylvanians Against Handgun Trafficking) is busy stoking the fire of life-saving change (see www.PATHCoalition.org). It deserves City Paper's support.
Bryan Miller
Executive Director, Ceasefire NJ
We get all-new laws. We get border guards to keep those bad boys from buying guns in the suburbs and bringing them into our walled city. The new laws impede the law-abiding and make self-defense a big hassle but we solve the problem of straw buyers. What's a criminal to do?
How about staking out a cop's house and burglarizing it? Wow. A barely used Glock! For free. We could disarm the police to put an end to that worry. By the time they respond to your 911 call, they are already too late anyway.
Laws need to be enforced against the people committing the crimes. Those laws that only prevent the rest of us fromprotecting ourselves do nothing but make us better victims. We have an attitude in Philadelphia that we are suffering from a "law"deficiency. Has anyone checked to see what laws are already on thebooks and how they are being enforced?
The criminal-justice system is broken. The police, district attorney, courts and prisons need to meetand work out ways to get the relatively small number of violent repeat offenders from shooting each other on our streets or keep them in jail. They are bad shots. Maybe a target-practice program for gangbangers would help.
Morris Klein
Center City

