Readers write: Important principles in education; How art divides us; Fairness and taxes
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Important principles in education
The March 28 cover story, 鈥Education鈥檚 Mr. Fix-it?,鈥 provides important food for thought. There are some basic principles, however, that should be kept in mind. Our society simply will not pay salaries to teachers that can compete with those of most high-level professions 鈥 we need to be extremely grateful for and respect the significant numbers of outstanding individuals who find much of their reward through enlightening young minds. Perhaps some unions have gone a bit too far, but we can find the proper balance. Secondly, public education must remain truly 鈥減ublic.鈥 Education and health care are not discretionary purchases. They must be universally available in order to keep a strong society and economy.
Dr. Allan Hauer
Corrales, New Mexico
How art divides us
The March 21 Monitor鈥檚 View 鈥From Timbuktu, an art crime provides a timeless lesson鈥 describes a group charged with war crimes for the destruction of cultural monuments that they claimed were contrary to their theology. Just a few pages earlier, a different article (鈥淥n campus, a new civil rights era rises鈥) began with describing a university that removed a stained-glass window of a historical figure from a building because of students鈥 moral objections to the scene being depicted. How do we decide where to draw the line that makes these two events so different 鈥 one a moral victory and the other a crime?
Elaine Reynolds
Findlay, Ohio
Fairness and taxes
Regarding the April 11 Upfront column, 鈥Simple good, fair better鈥: In baseball, whether a ball is fair or foul depends not on any intrinsic property of where the ball lands, but on rules agreed to by all players. In politics, nothing is agreed to by all. In taxation, as in all political realms, fairness lies at the very root of complexity. Fairness and simplicity cannot coexist.
Eric Klieber
Cleveland Heights, Ohio