Good luck to business owners in protest of inspection fees
By
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To the editor:
Though I am not a downtown business owner I heartily applaud the business owners for organizing the petition move and wish them all good fortune with their "mini-tea party".
I want to add that their protest of the deceptive and self-serving actions instigated by local public employees and elected people are much more important than they probably realize.
We live in a time when our national and state governments are in dire need of a good spanking by We, the People. President B.O. got a little of that in Massachusetts recently... and still hopes it was a fluke. But it really wasn't and it indicates that a very effective means for us to get the message of dissatisfaction to Washington and Columbus is to first show we are willing to make our Displeasure (or Anger) thoroughly understood by the government shysters in our local communities.
In the recent past and at the moment, it seems the tail has been wagging the dog in Hillsboro but this incident over the hated inspections can change that and bring change at the State level too. And that could send a clear message Washington.
There are currently three men - Bill Horne, Clifford Rosenberger, and Jacob Dawson - each hoping we will elect them to the 86th District in the Ohio House of Representatives. For now - they all are trying to figure out how to please us (and how to not displease us).
You can bet your stockyards that they are watching this fire inspection confrontation like hawks. If they see We, the People, go after aggressive public employees and arrogant elected officials with blood in our eye and no intention whatsoever of taking "no" for an answer, those three candidates will see and remember that they can expect some very real unpleasantness if they go to Columbus and start thinking they are not accountable to us back home. And that will be a very good thing both locally and in Columbus and maybe even the District of Carpetbaggers.
And I would add there are more than a few legal, yet much more aggressive, ways than a simple petition to make arrogant local officials/bureaucrats wish to Heaven they had not acted toward the Public in Bad Faith.
Sincerely,
Jim Moore
Hillsboro
To the editor:
Though I am not a downtown business owner I heartily applaud the business owners for organizing the petition move and wish them all good fortune with their "mini-tea party."
I want to add that their protest of the deceptive and self-serving actions instigated by local public employees and elected people are much more important than they probably realize.
We live in a time when our national and state governments are in dire need of a good spanking by We, the People. President B.O. got a little of that in Massachusetts recently... and still hopes it was a fluke. But it really wasn't and it indicates that a very effective means for us to get the message of dissatisfaction to Washington and Columbus is to first show we are willing to make our Displeasure (or Anger) thoroughly understood by the government shysters in our local communities.
In the recent past and at the moment, it seems the tail has been wagging the dog in Hillsboro but this incident over the hated inspections can change that and bring change at the State level too. And that could send a clear message Washington.
There are currently three men - Bill Horne, Clifford Rosenberger, and Jacob Dawson - each hoping we will elect them to the 86th District in the Ohio House of Representatives. For now - they all are trying to figure out how to please us (and how to not displease us).
You can bet your stockyards that they are watching this fire inspection confrontation like hawks. If they see We, the People, go after aggressive public employees and arrogant elected officials with blood in our eye and no intention whatsoever of taking "no" for an answer, those three candidates will see and remember that they can expect some very real unpleasantness if they go to Columbus and start thinking they are not accountable to us back home. And that will be a very good thing both locally and in Columbus and maybe even the District of Carpetbaggers.
And I would add there are more than a few legal, yet much more aggressive, ways than a simple petition to make arrogant local officials/bureaucrats wish to Heaven they had not acted toward the Public in Bad Faith.
Sincerely,
Jim Moore
Hillsboro
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