We in Staunton have a choice to make. It is up to us. Shall we choose solar energy ? Twenty one years ago, I was adopted into the Shenandoah family, Wolf Clan, Oneida Nation of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy (People of the Long House). White people call them Iroquois. We are taught to listen to our elders, learn to respect and act responsibly. Oren Lyons, 93, Wolf Clan, is an Onondaga Chief, and world leader of peace who teaches — The Earth is our Mother. She gives everything we need for life. Imagine a living pine tree clinging to a cliff; getting all it needs for life from the earth. We are like that pine tree. Our Mother Earth provides, but time is running out. We have little time to make changes in order to survive. The economy of nations will be broken by natural disasters. We see more disasters every year: hurricanes, snow melt, coastlines washing into the seas, wild fires, drought, flooding, on and on. The haze today brings this reality to Staunton, VA. We must fol
A critical element for the proper functioning of a democracy is the free and open exchange of ideas and opinions. Indeed, this is a time in our history when access to the facts and discourse about them are vitally necessary for the very survival of our country. From the earliest editions of newspapers in colonial America, letters to the editor (LTEs) have given the general public a neutral forum in which to convey different points of view to the newspapers’ readerships at large. While historically LTEs have played an important role in enabling political discourse between those of different political persuasions, today they are frequently the only way for citizens to come together in an unbiased setting to exchange their views. Indeed, while other media—television, radio, internet—generally offer forums oriented to distinct, compartmentalized audiences, newspapers by contrast enable the raw, direct and honest expressions of the opinions of their readers to be juxtaposed alongside the vi