Credit: Mary Contrary

FEMINISM FOR ALL

RE: One Day At a Time [Oct 28, in which columnist Ann Romano comments on the wage-equality issues being brought to attention in Hollywood].

DEAR MERCURYโ€”Ann Romano has written in this week’s One Day at a Time about how Hollywood actresses are complaining about not being paid as much as their male counterparts in recent films. That’s a good pointโ€”they should be paid as much. However, this strikes me as just the sort of opportunist, self-centered, narrow-focus feminism I was just reading about in Bell Hooks’ Feminism Is for Everybody. Hooks writes about the way the early feminist movement tended to be co-opted by higher class white women who used it as a means to demand more equitable income for themselves in higher paid professions, while turning a deaf ear and a blind eye to the plight of women of color and poor women. I would respect these millionaire Hollywood actresses more if they showed their true commitment to feminism by making a public show of support for, say, the $15 an hour campaign for fast food workers, rather than merely using one plank of feminist movement to aggrandize and enrich themselves.

Reed Bellhooks

TOO CLOSE TO HOME

RE: “No-Cause Evictions Affect Monster Population” [Halloween Issue Feature, Oct 28] a guide to the city’s housing situations for freshly relocated monsters, and “The City Promises More Affordable Housing Funds. Will It Follow Through?” [News, Oct 28].

DEAR MERCURYโ€”I know you are doing your cutesy Halloween spoof article thing, and I will give it to you that it was mostly cute. Gotta draw the line at the no-cause eviction spoof, though. Not enough laugh for the soulless cynicism you are attempting to trade it in for.

Carlos Covarrubias

SIRSโ€”The issues of affordable housing and homelessness are direct offshoots of our capitalistic system, which is the economic equivalent of the law of the jungle: the strong survive and prosper, and the weak end up on the streets. Nowhere in that great system are there provisions for making affordable housing available to those who need it, or helping the homeless. Our society has come to regard homelessness and affordable housing as problems that can’t be solved, even though many other countries in the world have successfully addressed these issues. It all comes back to the pornographically unequal distribution of wealth in this country and the world, that, under the capitalistic system, continues to funnel more and more wealth to the top, and less and less to the bottom. Until the majority of those in this country get concerned with these issues, and do something about them from a humanitarian standpoint, the present situation will only worsen.

Marco

DEAR MERCURYโ€”I’m so sick of the whining about rent increases. This is the way it ALWAYS works, dumbasses. The poor/starving artists (of which I am one) move into a slum, make it hip, then the wealthier take over while the poor/artists move on to coolify another area/town (and you’d better get used to it ’cause millions will be flooding here in the next 10-20 years). But unlike most of you assholes, I worked my ass off, saved my meager wages, didn’t spend all my spare cash on weed, beer, cigarettes, and restaurant food, didn’t get into credit card debt (not one penny in debt), and DIDN’T HAVE FUCKING CHILDREN I COULDN’T POSSIBLY TAKE CARE OF PROPERLY! Instead, I eventually bought a small, cheap, piece-of-shit house (only $520/month mortgage) and spent thousands of hours fixing it up with free supplies from Craigslist. Now it’s worth a fortune and in less than two years, when I’m 38, I’ll be living rent free while sitting on a very nice retirement fund. And yes, this does make me better than you. I’m staying, and I’m glad you’re getting pushed out.

NAWD

WELL OOOH LA-LA, NAWD! While we wouldn’t say we share your same level of disdain toward those who didn’t get in on the ground floor of Portland’s surge in home values, we do appreciate your assertive nature. Ye shall be rewarded, with two tickets to the Laurelhurst Theater, which one hopes will never leave to “coolify” someplace else.

7 replies on “Letters to the Editor”

  1. Agreed NAWD, it isn’t that hard to buy a house if you are willing to rent out rooms and work on it yourself. I bought my first house before I could buy beer and I was making about 8k a year while putting myself through school. I spent my spare time fixing it up, traded it for another house rinsed and repeated a couple more times and now 15 years in I own most of a pretty nice house and look forward to having it paid off.

  2. Hey NAWD, you wouldn’t happen to be a white male, would you? You probably didn’t notice, but that triple you hit…yeah, you started on third base. More bootstrap bullshit.

  3. I’m an “old fool” in my 70s and NAWD’s recent letter to you is the BEST letter to any publication I have ever read, and I agree with the content wholeheartedly . Seeing the “big picture ” and try to save all one can is the best way to come out ahead. I did the same thing that Nawd did, but I bought 2 small houses. I ended up way ahead! Good for Nawd and “good for me”!

  4. Just so we’re all on the same page, “Ann Romano” is the pen name of the several people who write/contribute to the One Day At A Time column. Its a tongue-in-cheek charade. One of the bigger clues that its written by more than one person is the contradictive opinions that pop up from time to time, etc. Another clue is ‘Ann’ has no Twitter profile when no real gossip columnist in 2015 is without one.

  5. NAWD, good for you. Anyone who has an argument with what was stated by said person is a complete waste of air. Hard work and living within ones means does pay off. Don’t expect society to take care of what you should be taking care of yourself. Stop whining and start self-reflection if you disagree.

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