Give back pay raise
by Sean Carpenter
Daily Local
Monday, December 29, 2008
There is nothing restricting Barbara McIlvaine Smith and Andy Dinneman from returning their COLA pay raise to the Pennsylvania Treasury. In fact, this is exactly what Rep. Curt Schroder, R-155th, is doing. Hopefully all our other representatives will be so concerned about our deficit to do the same thing, and finally see fit to repeal the COLA pay raise entirely.
They are simply performing another political trick with our taxes.
Why can’t McIlvaine Smith and Dinneman give the money back to the Pennsylvania Treasury, and back to the taxpayers of this state?
Please, let’s focus on the message
by Jane Gilvary
Daily Local
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
In response to Ms. Karen Porter’s recent letter to the editor citing how the cré�che outside of the Chester County Courthouse is offensive because it portrays Jesus as non-Middle Eastern, I’d like to point out that Ms. Porter, who claims to be a lifelong Christian, is indeed correct. Jesus was a Jew from the town of Nazareth, which is located in the Middle East. Ms. Porter’s accuracy ends there.
Nazareth’s first inhabitants were Canaanites, Israelites, and Galilean Jews, all of whom were primarily white. And while many Middle Easterners are indeed darker skinned, most ancient and modern depictions are of Jesus as a white male. While definitive proof of Christ’s skin color might never be proven until He comes again in glory, riding on a cloud, shining like the sun as the trumpets roar, I hardly think it offensive that a manger scene portrays him as white. Are we about changing history for the sake of political correctness? True Christians know that Jesus died for everyone, not just white people.
As a “lifelong Christian” perhaps Ms. Porter should direct her spiritual and editorial energies to praying for the folks behind the “atheist tree” that looms over the cré�che, obscenely proclaiming that both God and Christ are frauds. At Christmas, nothing could be more offensive than to mock the faith of devout believers by placing a “Tree of Knowledge” next to the infant Savior.
More important than Christ’s ethnic origin, however, is his message to “love one another” and it is God’s greatest commandment. Taking the focus off of that message by complaining about a couple of statues is just plain wrong.



