STUFFED
RE: โOverkillโ [Feature, Jan 17], Jenni Mooreโs story about Portlandโs obsession with taxidermy. โAt least in Alaska, the showcasing of bears, moose, and bobcats makes some logical sense,โ Moore wrote, adding that in ways notably less authentic, โa growing plethora of Portland businesses have embraced deer heads and other taxidermy mounts as an integral part of our aesthetic identity.โ Moore continued, โFor me, Portlandโs majority whiteness has something to do with the explosive prevalence of this โwoodsyโ vibe. As a biracial person (half Black, half white), Iโve noticed Iโve never had to worry about seeing taxidermy decor in a Black or brown personโs home or businessโbut if you know of any, Iโll take note and steer the fuck clear.โ
Iโm Black and I collect bones and taxidermy. I find bones on hikes and only purchase vintage taxidermy pieces, as I donโt wish to contribute to trophy hunting. Iโm not really sure why you felt the need to generalize collectors as you did, but we come from many different walks of lifeโand yes, some of us are Black.
nomadnoir
I think its fair to say that people whose heritage includes slavery and living in constant fear of being murdered by a white man with a gun who sees living things as nothing more than objects to be possessed and hung on the wall have every right in the world to be creeped out when they see a dead animalโs head glorified as a trophy.
Aurelius141
Mooreโs fear of taxidermy is completely rational. What more direct an emblem of white colonial predation is there than a room full of exotic heads? What person wouldnโt feel at odds with blazing neon signage that announces, โMy respect for others is predicated on what I can prove about myself through killing themโ? The broader question is, โWhy the fuck are the rest of us cool with this?โ
Walker
Why hasnโt someone filled the niche for vegan taxidermy? Imagine stuffed and mounted heads of cauliflower adorning the walls of your favorite plant-based business. Potatoes skinned and filled with sawdust (recycled, natch) in daring poses that capture the look of wild potatoes. Someone needs to do this STAT.
quakerpracter
THE NIMBYS STRIKE BACK
RE: โHall Monitor: Incoming Calls โ [News, Jan 17], Dirk VanderHartโs column about Lake Oswego attorney and Pearl District resident Jeff Merrick, whoโs hoping to unite Portland NIMBYs against homelessness. One of Merrickโs proposed solutions: โHow about we do what they did in the 1920s and 1930s?โ he asked, referencing the Multnomah County Poor Farm, where the county once sent its destitute and disabled to work the fields.
Providing work opportunities should be on the table. After all, countless homeless advocates continually claim that a large percentage of the population is homeless due to a job loss, lack of ability to pay rent, or some other such misfortune, rather than drug use, not being willing to follow the rules of society, etc. So letโs help the people who want to work.
FlavioSuave
Being poor and homeless is not a crime. Work farms are the same thing as prisonโthey deprive people of freedom, in violation of due process and other Constitutional protections.
BobotheMuppet
Dirk, please delete the intellectually sloppy term โNIMBYโ from your vocabulary. NIMBYS = voters, residents, neighbors. To pretend that untreated schizophrenics defecating on your lawn and tweekers stealing the grill from your apartment balcony are something that Portlanders should humbly accept is bullpucky. When you call people in Lents NIMBYS for being upset about campers, you are taking the kind of faux-progressive snobby position I canโt stand.
Reverend Bite Me
โNIMBYs.โ The
Mercury has never been against name-calling those with whom they disagree. Name-calling is a tactic of one who has no valid argument. Itโs childish, immature, and petty.
Douglas_Banter
Quakerpracter, your vegan taxidermy idea has all the signs of being Portlandโs next stupid fad! Congrats. You win the Mercuryโs letter of the weekโand two tickets to the Laurelhurst Theater, where the only trophies on the walls are some pretty neat movie posters.

NIMBY is only perceived as a pejorative term or an insult because the people engaged in NIMBYism are being called out on their shitty behavior, and they want to hold onto the illusion they aren’t being shitty. The term itself is nothing more than an accurate descriptor of people who don’t want new things built near them.
FlavioSuave: What about homeless people who engage in “shitty” behavior? Can we have an derogatory name applied to them by the media?