It is very enlightening with the paper’s editors for taking a stand questioning the “selectivity enforcement” regarding raids on the polish community in the Broad Street area of our city.
With their further questioning if the Spanish community "if they are in compliance with the English- first requirement."
The Department of Consumer Protection Agents could have communicated the violations in a less punitive ---and less dramatic way the editorial remarked.
Again The Herald’s stand that all ethnic communities should receive equal scrutiny is commendable.
fs
Monday, February 13, 2012
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6 comments:
Nothing will change since these enforcement agents work for Danny Boy like his little personal Gestapo and they targeted a group that Democrats normally couldn't care less about. Had these store owners all been Spanish or black there would no doubt be thousands of liberals turning out in protest, but since they are white and business owners to boot, Democrats will simply not give a damn.
I hope these Polish people are paying attention to the total lack of response from the Democrats on this, but that is hoping too much as they will still probably turn out in masses to vote for the same Democrats who are destroying their businesses.
The Herald has no credibility here since it helped put theses people in office, knowing full well that they would use selective enforcement as a political tool.
The Herald didn't put these people into office. 14% of the voters did. A whooping 73% did not bother to vote.
The Polish community also split their votes between Pawlak and Bernacki.
Guess the Broad Street merchants regret giving the key to Broad Street to O'Brien and Murphy. What better way to thank them than a raid.
The Herald kept O'Brien's image on it's home page throughout the entire mayoral election gratis. They did the same for Murphy. These were unreported in kind contributions.
You all know who people have been saying for some time controls what is printed in the Herald!
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