Letters, 9/7: Measures not objective
David Moshman’s Aug. 30 community column seems logical, but it deceptively diverts attention from the main reason why affirmative action is so necessary for overcoming our unfortunate legacies of racial and gender discrimination. It is not at all just a matter of diversity; it is a matter of fairness.
The fact is that most of the “objective” measures we use to assess others are not fully objective. There is overwhelming evidence showing that test scores, faculty evaluations, interview skills and personal communications depend, partially but significantly, on one’s cultural background.
All other things equal, an upper-middle-class white male will perform better on standard exams, will use the more appropriate verbal and body language, and will appear to “fit” the job better than someone of a different social or cultural background. Because race, gender and ethnic background are systematically related to the social, gender and ethnic biases in standard tests, school grades, job assessment procedures, the sincere personal judgments of interviewers and many other so-called “objective” measures commonly used to qualify people, it is also true that race, gender and ethnic background are perfectly valid criteria for a college or employer to apply in seeking to accurately judge a person’s true expected performance.
Justice Lewis Powell noted exactly that in California Regents vs. Bakke; what that case prohibited was absolute quotas and completely separate acceptance procedures. Prohibiting reasonable and objective adjustments of faulty and biased assessment procedures, as the Nebraska ballot issue would do, is a step away from fairness.
The “diversity issue” is a different issue, and it was used to reaffirm the California Regents vs. Bakke decision by the much more conservative Supreme Court in 2003. But, as the original Supreme Court decision made clear, diversity is not the only, or even the most important, justification for affirmative action.
The Nebraska initiative, by claiming objectivity and fairness, merely continues the cultural oppression of our white male society: You’d better learn to think, act and look like a white male, or you will not have equal rights.
Hendrik Van den Berg, LincolnNot just her safety at risk
In response to Sara Graham’s letter (Aug. 27) regarding the seat belt law, I’m not pro or con on the value of passing a law to make this a primary violation, but her thought that it is her choice and does not affect anyone else’s safety but her own has no merit.
She mentions herself you could be thrown from your car if you are not wearing your seat belt. Logic would tell you that if the driver was ejected from his or her vehicle, the operator no longer has control of said vehicle, obviously putting others’ safety at risk if the vehicle is still in motion.
Randy Wilson, Lincoln
Race isn’t important
There will be those who don’t want to vote for Barack Obama because of his mixed blood. If the truth were known, most of us are mixed blood of some kind. Way back in time, my great-grandparents were on the Trail of Tears from Georgia to Arkansas.
My kin were in the Civil War, mixed blood both of them, father and son. They were rebels and fought for the south. My grandmother had Native blood in her, but how much nobody knows. People were ashamed of being part Native not too long ago; now it seems some are ashamed to put a good man in office because he is of mixed blood.
I would make a guess that more than a third of the population of the United States is of mixed blood if they would admit it. I’m part Cherokee. The United States is a melting pot of all races. I bet the mixed blood and other races outnumber the Anglos, so the day of the white supreme race are numbered, if not over, for the United States.
I vote for the man, not the party. I want to see our troops home. We have troops scattered all over the world. Do you realize what that costs the taxpayer, and in lives. The now-single mothers without husbands.
Our government had the knowledge to stop the Sept. 11, 2001, attack but let it slip by. How long would it take for the Mideast to settle down if we just pulled out and let them fight it out? Let them spend their money instead of ours. We are not making friends trying to play world cop.
I don’t care who Obama’s daddy was. He will get my vote.
Joe Smith, Johnson
Peace through strength
Regarding the letter “Like war? Vote McCain” (LJS, Sept. 3): I am not an expert on history, but I believe several European countries tried to negotiate with Adolf Hitler. Where did that take us?
I will cast my vote for John McCain and Sarah Palin, not for war, but rather for peace through strength. As a veteran, stating that a POW likes war is an insult to all vets.
Leland Foote, Lincoln
Choice of Palin insulting
I find Sen. John McCain’s choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as running mate insulting.
What, Sen. McCain, qualifies this woman to go toe to toe with such volatile foreign leaders as Vladimir Putin and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? Her bachelor’s degree in journalism (her highest degree completed), or her experience as a local sportscaster? To attempt to entice those voters inspired by the accomplishments of Sen. Hillary Clinton with a woman whose resume boasts such accomplishments as “Miss Alaska runner-up,” “PTA member” and “hockey mom” suggests that McCain views women as little more than window dressing, and that one is just as good as another.
This viewpoint is an antiquated one, which citizens of the 21st century have abandoned as ridiculous.
Bonnie Fitzgerald, Omaha
Rocky road ahead
Americans feel the solitary confinement of credit dependence, one paycheck from catastrophe. Outrageous credit card rates, variable mortgage rates and payday advances have created a “beggar my neighbor” predator society in which the powerful prey upon the weak. The government is your enemy till you need a friend. Deregulation hasn’t helped the little guy. Credit card interest rates were regulated until the Supreme Court allowed South Dakota to remove them.
Finance has replaced manufacturing as the fulcrum of our society. Unions represent only 7 percent of the work force. The credit system, carefully crafted by lobbyists over the past 30 years, like a giant slow-moving glacier may be descending into an abyss.
Americans have a sharecropper relationship with their creditors. Paying their bills is beyond their means. Over the past decade, Congress steadily deregulated credit scams and made it more difficult for people to declare bankruptcy.
The goal of corporations is profit. The goals of government are far more complex. By outsourcing government to private contractors, President Bush has substituted corporate profit for the public welfare.
The Bush system of corporate democracy has privatized the profits of government spending through capitalist cronyism but socialized the risk to the taxpayer.
Creative government accounting and off-budget spending would send everyone to prison in the private sector. On the other hand, perhaps Ken Lay and the boys shared their ideas with the government. Today, three-fourths of the American people think we are headed in the wrong direction economically.
American politics is dominated by trivia and misinformation. If the past eight years is prologue to the future, America faces a very rocky road. If a politician means what he says and says what he means, we had better pay more attention to what he says.
This election may be decided by issues, personalities, party labels or race. I hope we get it right.
Roger L. Green, Scottsbluff
Birth control an issue
Watching CNN on Monday, the issue of Sarah Palin’s pregnant daughter was discussed by a panel of experts. One point made clearly by CNN contributor Bill Bennett was that the teen was going to “keep the baby.”
Then a CNN reporter in Alaska discussed what people were saying there about the issue. She included that Palin was a strong supporter of teaching only abstinence as birth control in schools.
Bennett admonished the reporter that she was politicizing the issue.
So, it’s okay for him to politicize the issue of “keeping the baby” (anti-abortion), but the issue of the federal government only allowing public schools to teach abstinence as birth control to the peril of losing federal funding is off limits?
While I agree with Sen. Barack Obama’s comments aired at the same time that “candidates’ families are off limits,” I think the right better not make an issue about “keeping the baby” if they don’t want all the studies, statistics and other data that show teaching only abstinence doesn’t work made a major issue in the campaign.
Steve Poots, Seward

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MarkyMark wrote on September 7, 2008 8:37 am:
Why stereotype every situation? I am glad you are not on the cabinet. It is shear insanity in this world, not to attempt negotiations first on every potential international problem. My guess is that you are only upset because Dick Cheney isn't running for president. "
interesting wrote on September 7, 2008 8:49 am:
RELeland wrote on September 7, 2008 9:38 am:
Saline County wrote on September 7, 2008 9:46 am:
Gerard Harbison wrote on September 7, 2008 10:36 am:
Knowledge and skill have no gender or race, Dr. van den Berg. "
Enlighten me wrote on September 7, 2008 11:04 am:
Huh wrote on September 7, 2008 11:54 am:
DFB wrote on September 7, 2008 12:14 pm:
Talking to the other side may not always prevent war, but refusing to talk increases dramatically the chance of war.
I am a Vietnam vet and know first hand what war is like and I would rather have our leaders at least try and talk and not end up in war rather than refuse to talk and end up in war.
As for McCain, no one is saying he wants war because he was a POW. That is a right wing myth propagated by Rush and his ilk.
Before you throw your support behind McCain because he was a POW, you better do some research and find out exactly what he did as a POW. He actually was a collaborator with the North Vietnamese by accepting special treatment and volunteering classified military info. "
Zoomie wrote on September 7, 2008 12:42 pm:
McSame has promised (and demonstrated) that his "gut" reaction to anything he doesn't like in international affairs is to push for a military challange, and as any decent historian can tell you, war should be the last option as it demonstrates a total failure of diplomacy (which is NOT the same as acquiesing).
And Roger, you are exactly right, Republicans hate "socialism"...until it comes time to socialise the risk to protect corporate profits by shifting the risk to taxpayers. If you doubt that, explain why Bush Friday afternoon quietly ordered the effective nationalization of the mortgage industry by ordering the seizure of Fannie Mae and Feddie Mac! Literally hundreds of billions in losses will now shift to taxpayers, in a bailout that will dwarf the S&L scandal of the '80s, and over $5 trillion in mortgage debt will belong to the Federal gov't! While ordinary shareholders will lose all; preferred shareholders will get only cents on the dollar; but debtors (mostly foreign national banks, such as China and Japan) will get all their money! Let's remember Fannie/Freddie WERE gov't agencies, once upon a time. Then the GOP pushed through laws privatizing them, followed by banking/financial deregulation (same as the S&L) which led to excess, abuse, no enforcement, eventual collapse! And we taxpayers pay the cost!! One immediate result? Friday evening, representatives of the US auto industry are now asking for a $50 BILLION loan from the gov't! "
CS wrote on September 7, 2008 12:56 pm:
Preferences wrong wrote on September 7, 2008 1:54 pm:
MarkyMark wrote on September 7, 2008 2:04 pm:
When they finally had all the power for 6 years, they grew the biggest government ever and weren't even responsible to pay for it. That ain't spin, that's the facts. "
Yes to No wrote on September 7, 2008 4:16 pm:
MarkyMark wrote on September 7, 2008 4:32 pm:
It's almost a warm fuzzy feeling when the Republicans talk about the Middle Class.
AND, they do it every four years just like clockwork. "
Good Grief wrote on September 7, 2008 4:37 pm:
Now that is some twisted logic. No wonder America is in the condition it is in. "
UnAmerican wrote on September 7, 2008 4:41 pm:
If My wife or daughters were victims of a rape and they want an abortion, why can't they have it? Because Sarah Palin says so? By the way, she also proclaims the "morning after" pill after a rape is a sin...so....all the rape victims in America are forced to carry the "demon seed" to term. Get this woman out of government. "
Greg wrote on September 7, 2008 7:45 pm:
yes wrote on September 7, 2008 8:37 pm:
boiling affirmative action down to individuals will always undermine the purpose for which is was enacted - to take a few small steps toward righting massive systemic wrongs.
I am a white female. I understand how affirmative action works. I understand that I might be passed over for a position somewhere by a person of color who is equally qualified. Knowing what kind of privileges I've had in my life and will likely continue to receive makes me OK WITH THAT. "
Fence sitter wrote on September 7, 2008 8:55 pm:
Brian wrote on September 7, 2008 10:32 pm:
Bonnie . . . your statements are absolutely sexest and insulting. Take out Obama's European tour this summer and he and Sarah Palin have the same amount of international experience.
Obama is a joke. He can't speak without a teleprompter and his statements following the Russian attack on Georgia clearly show he doesn't have a firm grasp on international relations or on how the UN works. He and his wife have bad mouthed this country many times. It is on the record. I do not agree with McCain on everything, but I know this . . . he loves this country dearly and would sacrafice himself for it. I can't say the same for Obama. "
From Palin to Seat belts wrote on September 7, 2008 10:39 pm:
On the issue of seat belts, I think anyone who does not put on a seat belt and wants to drive should be required by law to carry extra liability and health insurance. People that are thrown from cars, have more serious injuries or deaths that result from such actions. Seat belts save lives, and save you from more serious injuries, but if you choose not to wear one you must be responsible and have better health insurance and or a higher liability insurance to cover your choice. "
Unappreciative wrote on September 8, 2008 12:17 am:
and even NO credit to his "white" grandparents who raised him the biggest
part of his childhood. I have heard NOTHING as to what his maternal
grandfather did except go to college on the GI bill. He calls his mother
"a nice lady" but is more talk-a-tive of his father who "wasn't around to
raise him." I take away from every time I've listened to his story, that
he didn't appreciate being sent back to Hawawii and rebelled because
the school wasn't black. I hate to tell him, but he is very lite skinned
and DOES have half white blood in his veins. He has been toooo pushy
and will walk over anybody, according to all the news stories, to get
to the top. He constantly says he didn't have a "father" figure but my
guess is that he was unappreciative of his white grandfather. Shows
little appreciation of all the fathers who have been killed in the wars
and all the children who didn't have a father figure either, but their
fathers gave their lives so HE could have freedom!!!! "
JR wrote on September 8, 2008 12:44 am:
Peace through strength wrote on September 8, 2008 7:12 am:
Just a lowly bachelors degree wrote on September 8, 2008 9:17 am:
I guess I will give up my dream of being considered for high elective office. Alas, I only have a lowly bachelor's degree. Do you realize that your "only-advanced-degrees-need-apply" litmus test disqualifies (among others) Presidents Truman (no college); Kennedy (bachelor's degree); LBJ (bahcelor's degree from - gasp - a state teacher's college); and Reagan (bachelor's degree). None of them could relate well with people on the international stage. "
Pay attention a little wrote on September 8, 2008 9:58 am:
Abortion wrote on September 8, 2008 11:37 am:
Reality wrote on September 8, 2008 11:39 am:
No Yes to No wrote on September 8, 2008 11:48 am:
As I understand it, here is a conservative’s idea of planned parenthood:
- Oppose sex education – What you don’t know won’t hurt you.
- Birth control is wrong - abstinence only!
- What?!? You're pregnant!
- No abortion for you!
- And you better not expect my taxes to pay for any sort of assistance, cause it's your own darn fault. "