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Page 20 THE VILLADOM TIMES IV • November 6, 2013
Is voting relevant?
The temptation not to go out and vote is always with
us. One fall, when a school district had a referendum, the
staff members were delighted because a raw, rainy Novem-
ber day conjured up the hope that senior voters would stay
home while parents with school-age children would brave
the weather and approve the bonding so the kids could
enjoy a private-quality education at public expense.
There is, of course, a flip side. People who care enough
about their kids to support a first-rate school system are
generally educated people with money, which can mean a
modicum of intelligence and self-control. The kids are kept
busy enough with homework, sports, and clubs so they have
minimal time to loiter and get into trouble. There actually
is a fringe benefit for older folks to having quality schools
that transcends the fantasy that good teachers and lots of
technology can expand IQs. The schools around here work,
in most cases really well, because of the kind of people
they attract. Barring school violence or drug abuse, most of
these kids would do well in any school, but just any school
would not attract the kind of parents who care.
In most towns, the school budget vote no longer belongs
to the voters. The state now allows districts that move their
school board elections to the date of the general election
in November to skip a budget vote as long as the spend-
ing plan remains within the state-mandated cap, which is
currently two percent. Residents are stuck with last year’s
budget plus two percent unless the school board wants to
take a wild fling and cater to the fantasy that computers can
improve IQs as reliably as a sensible diet, weight lifting,
and running develop strong, healthy bodies.
IQ is intrinsic and there are no vitamins or exercises that
improve it. If parents want to believe IQ can be improved
by great teaching and state-of-the-art computers, some
of them may vote for a 10 percent school tax increase or
approve more bonding and hope for a storm that keeps
older people home, but does not short-circuit the electricity
to the voting machines. The fact that most towns no longer
have a shot at voting on a school budget is one more reason
to roll over and go back to sleep or to go straight to and
from work on Election Day.
Dare we take that option? If people get out of the habit
of voting because the single most important fiscal vote is
no longer under their control, will they get out of the habit
of voting in elections where they might change something
for the better?
They might, but the chances of having a choice are
slim. Most Americans no longer smoke. Most people who do
not smoke want cigarette production curtailed because the
clear evidence that smoking causes cancer and contributes
to heart disease means every smoker is a liability to the
insurance portfolio of the entire community. People who
take care of themselves may ask why they should pay for
health care for people who smoke, drink excessively, eat
red meat at every meal, or neglect any exercise.
Many people desperately want gun control to the point
of abrogating the Second Amendment. Many others want
to be able to buy a handgun in a hardware store by flash-
ing a driver’s license. Neither of these options makes sense.
People who live in isolated areas or engage in high-risk jobs
need firearms for their protection. However, a free flow of
firearms to headstrong youngsters and obvious psychotics
is a genuine menace to public health, though perhaps not
vaguely comparable to drunk driving, habitual speeding,
or cigarette smoking. That issue has also been taken out of
the voters’ hands. The sort of money that manufacturers
pay to the government for the right to manufacture guns,
like the excise taxes paid on cigarettes, renders the gun
manufacturers and the cigarette manufacturers politically
bullet-proof. Do you still support the war in Afghanistan? Did you
support the war in Iraq? I am not talking about showing
respect for the Americans who were brave enough to serve,
or wanting to make sure that those were wounded or psy-
chologically disrupted receive the care they need. I mean
do you believe we should still have troops there? I think
most Americans do not. I think the troops are still there.
This shows the power that public opinion has in the United
States. Even the veterans’ groups disagreed with bombing
Syria. They were right.
If a candidate who promised to pull our forces back to
the countries where they are actually wanted -- and gradu-
ally back to the continental United States -- were to run for
office, he or she would probably carry a majority vote of
those people who are not heavily invested overseas. If the
United States still had a draft, which I never want to see
again, that peaceful candidate would probably capture the
youth vote with ease. A couple of people I knew from col-
lege volunteered, some accepted being drafted, and many
pulled every string they could to get out of serving at all.
However, such a candidate will never get the kind of fund-
ing now needed to carry a national election because the
people with strong commitments to priorities most other
Americans do not share are very often the biggest cam-
paign contributors.
Does anybody fail to understand that the minimum
wage is an absurdity? They should try living on it. Yet one
party is heavily funded by people who think Americans
can live on $7.25 an hour.
We are now producing more college graduates than
we are ever likely to need, and enormous government
subsidies to education beyond high school are producing
a future demographic superabundance of nominally edu-
cated people who will be faced with trying to subsist on the
minimum wage. The other party, or large elements therein,
cannot be budged from the idea that making every Ameri-
can a college graduate will somehow make us a stronger,
happier nation.
Lastly, the ultimate fantasy is that we can somehow vote
our way back to the kind of prosperity we enjoyed from the
1950s through the first decade of the present century. Our
prosperity in those days had a brutally simple explanation:
Two of the world’s great manufacturing powers, Japan and
Germany, had been bombed into rubble; two of the others,
Britain and France, were in an end-cycle as major powers
that began with their catastrophic losses and huge indebt-
edness from World War I and continued through World
War II. The last two players, Russia and China, were stuck
with an economic system where brutal governments and
foolish economic theories discouraged sensible politics and
economics. That slate was wiped clean a decade before the
century ended when the Soviet Union mercifully collapsed
and China verged away from communism.
The United States now has competitors all over the globe
who make most of the stuff we make, but they do it better
or cheaper. We will not vote them out of existence at will.
While some people in these countries focus on conspicu-
ous consumption as Americans did in the 1950s and 1960s,
more of them focus on cultivating a viable lifestyle for their
citizens that does not involve multiple cars per family, daily
consumption of red meat, air conditioning outside hospi-
tals, or college for people who do not belong there. China
is so much bigger than we are that China’s Number Two
status was inevitable.
Japan has about a third of our population with an aging
work force and is still Number Three. Germany, which has
a smaller population than Japan and an aging work force,
is Number Four in export goods. South Korea, incidentally,
now has a higher per capita income and a higher standard
of living than the United States. We will not vote ourselves
back to an exclusive control of the world’s heavy manufac-
turing. Why vote at all? Voting is a good habit to maintain.
At the local level, you can still send the elected officials
a message about your concerns. On the national level, you
can investigate which politicians were responsible for the
shutdown absurdity, and show them what you think -- and
that you are still capable of thinking. I think they need to
know that.
Letters to the Editor
Candidate promises to offer
energy, non-partisanship, dedication
Dear Editor:
As a candidate for Mahwah Township Council, permit
me to offer you three reasons to vote for me next week.
First, I am action-oriented. As a member of the Mahwah
Environmental Commission for nearly three years, I
recently project managed the first annual Mahwah Parks
Day. I have written several articles for our town newsletter
and for our master plan. I am presently working on Mah-
wah’s Sustainable Jersey certification. I have experience
lobbying in Trenton, so I know how to gather divergent
views and make decisions based on the consensus opinion.
Secondly, I am the least partisan candidate. Mahwah’s
invisible politics is one of two factions, those with “Team
Laforet” and those opposed. I like Mayor Laforet and
respect his office, but one faction has opposite views. I
have no allegiance to either camp, and I naturally gravitate
toward a balance of opinions before presenting a decision
based on a majority view.
Finally, I am a community person. I have coached street
hockey for five years and roller hockey for two years. I have
volunteered on a search and rescue team for eight years. I
now wish to represent your views on the council because
I believe I am the best candidate to do so effectively. I
respectfully ask you to place your vote for me on Nov. 5.
Gregg Sgambati
Mahwah It is the policy of the Villadom TIMES to have a signed
copy of letters to the editor in our files. Please fax a signed
copy to (201) 670-4745 or drop a signed copy in the mail
to Villadom Times, P.O. Box 96, Midland Park, NJ 07432.
Signed letters may also be dropped off at our office located
at 333 Godwin Avenue in Midland Park.
Scholarship fundraiser
(continued from page 4)
that, because of everyone’s effort, over $15,000 in scholar-
ships have been awarded to date.”
The scholarship fund was created in 2005 in memory of
24 year-old Patrick Roe, a lieutenant in Company #2 who
died in an accident.
First responders, neighboring fire departments, and
various motorcycle clubs played a key role in the success
of this year’s benefit. Event organizers acknowledged the
support and contributions of local businesses, including
Mahwah Bar & Grill, the Mason Jar, Shirt Man, the Sign
Shop, F&M Expressions, F&M Motor Works, Elkwood
Construction, Superior Glass & Metal, Master Fire & Elec-
tric, MaryAnn’s Gourmet Market, American Trademark,
Ramapo Tree & Shrub, Bagel Express, Baron Pools, Saddle
River Liquors, Cycle City of NY, Troufer Construction Co.,
Mahwah Wine & Liquors, Van Natta Mechanical Corp.,
Mahwah Honda, Cadillac of Mahwah, TMD Maintenance,
LLC, the Furry Godmother Pet Sitting, Mahwah Educa-
tion Association, Suburban Caps, Ramsey Auto Group,
Locomotion Powersports, the Fountain Spa, Liberty Hyun-
dai, the Russell Clemons Band, Shani Hawkins Xquisite
Design, and Ruth Hawkins Best Little Frame Shop.
Trophies and awards were provided by the Malone
Family, Mahwah Fire Companies #3 and #4 and the
Mahwah Board of Firematic Officers.
Droz noted that plans or next year’s event are under way.
The 2014 poker run is scheduled for Sept. 28.