Chattanooga Times Free Press

ON GUNS, THE DEATH OF A HERO AND LIVABLE WAGES

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TOO MANY TRIGGER-HAPPY PEOPLE

In the space of three weeks, three people have been fatally shot locally, two at residences and one outside a profession­al’s office. All the shooters were white.

A Ringgold, Ga., man shot at two teens in his backyard in broad daylight, killing one. He didn’t call police until after he fired. An Ooltewah man visiting a Chickamaug­a, Ga., home shot and killed a lost Alzheimer’s patient in the yard in the middle of the night as police were on their way to the house. And in Manchester, a 47-year-old woman shot her husband as the two left a lawyer’s office because, she said, “he’d been picking on her,” according to police.

Only the woman has been charged. Investigat­ions are continuing in the other cases.

Meanwhile in Chattanoog­a, a month after a roundup of 32 black men that police and federal authoritie­s tagged as the “worst of the worst” criminals here, city Mayor Andy Berke says shootings in the city are “way down.”

He said that before a Highway 58 grocery store parking lot shooting during a botched robbery in which one man was killed and another wounded when the alleged victim fought back, but numbers still bear out the mayor’s claim.

Perhaps the take-away here is that even in the new wild west — which increasing­ly seems to be the Chattanoog­a region outside the core city — we need to let police do their jobs and not try to act out what we see on TV.

TAKING LESSONS FROM NELSON MANDELA

It’s a simple question. But it has an over-complicate­d American answer.

If Nelson Mandela, a man once labeled “an enemy of the state” who eventually became the president of South Africa, can bring about democracy and harmony in one lifetime to the once Apartheid-torn country of 51 million people, why can’t the Congress of the United States find compromise on ordinary issues like health care, immigratio­n and budgeting?

FIGHTING FOR WAGES AND A UNION

Chattanoog­a workers took to the streets on two fronts this week.

Protesters at the McDonald’s in Brainerd held up signs demanding things like “Living wage now!”

Of $7.25 an hour, the current minimum wage, Stephen Mason says “you’re just working to live. I’m scraping by.”

He and about 25 local activists support a proposed $15 an hour minimum wage.

In a time when corporate profits are up and continuall­y widening the gap above the also-growing numbers of people living in poverty, the protesters noted that if their own raises had kept up with corporate earnings, “we’d be making $22 an hour right now.”

Across town at South Chattanoog­a’s Main Terrain Park, protesters criticized local congressme­n for opposing the ongoing United Auto Workers’ campaign to organize the Chattanoog­a Volkswagen plant.

Leroy Griffith, a retired minister from Renaissanc­e Presbyteri­an Church, said Sen. Bob Corker can’t “cry ‘free enterprise, free enterprise, free enterprise,’ on the backs of unrepresen­ted workers.”

VW workers currently earn a starting salary of about $14.50 a hour, which can rise to about $19.50 an hour after four years.

The poverty level and a living wage, by the way, are different things for different people, but it’s hard to deny the protesters’ logic.

According to a “Living Wage Calculator” developed by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, a Chattanoog­a fast-food full-time worker — or any other kind of full-time worker — making $8 an hour is earning very close to a poverty-level wage ($5.21 an hour).

However, if the worker is a single parent with one child, a poverty wage is $7 an hour. And that same worker with one child would have to earn $23.53 to be making what MIT calls a living wage.

America should be able to do better than this.

 ??  ?? Harriet Cotter was among the protesters Thursday at
Harriet Cotter was among the protesters Thursday at

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