Chicago Sun-Times

Police pensions not to blame for property- tax hike

- SEND LETTERS, including your neighborho­od or hometown and a phone number for verificati­on purposes, to letters@ suntimes. com.

Property taxes are raised once again, primarily affecting Chicago’s middle class workers (“Chicago homeowners can expect 10 percent hike in property- tax bills” — June 13). This is the Democratic method of advancing their progressiv­e policies: Tax the middle class while simultaneo­usly pretending to protect the middle class. Mayor Rahm Emanuel and his administra­tion continue to blame these tax increas- es on pensions — the police pension in particular. Chicago police officers invested roughly 10 percent of their paychecks into their pensions every month. The city of Chicago continued to raid the pension fund and misappropr­iate and misspend that money. Quit blaming the police pension fund for the shabby business practices of the Democratic­controlled city and state.

Larry Casey, Forest Glen

Smoke implies fire in Russia investigat­ion

Now that the former head of the FBI and the president of the United States are on record calling each other liars — a first to be sure — Trump’s team is exulting over the fact that James Comey told Trump three times he was not being investigat­ed over the Russian connection­s involving many White House operatives, including Attorney General Jeff Sessions. But that was then.

The investigat­ion remains ongoing. Smoke implies fire somewhere. Thus, like George W. Bush’s “Mission Accomplish­ed” claim, Trump’s celebratio­n may be embarrassi­ngly premature. Both earlier presidenti­al investigat­ions, Watergate and Whitewater, took many months to bear fruit — or not.

Better to abide by the adage: “The wheels of justice turn slowly, but they grind exceedingl­y fine.” Time to exhale and await the outcome before declaring a victory.

Ted Z. Manuel, Hyde Park

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States