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Shelved ‘entertainment’ frustrates patients
I need to make an appointment with one of my doctors. Of course I was put on hold while they looked after the people before me. They say it’s only six minutes away from the living.
That was the longest six minutes I’ve ever waited. Yes, there was music for a while, then a two-minute commercial about practice, and then back to music. On TV, we can mute this crap until the movie returns, but in this case, it just goes on and on.
When the sweet-voiced girl finally found me and made an appointment, I asked her if most people seemed pissed off when she answered the phone. Her answer was yes, they have. I assured her it had nothing to do with her (because she sounded like an angel on the phone). Then I told her to call and hear all the crap their patients were going through.
I thank her and wish her a great weekend.
Bill Richardson
churubsko
West End has a better location as a prison
On September 5, DJ E-Clyps published an article about the Allen County jail placement.
Suddenly, the current government could see the southeast of the city. “Let’s build a new prison there, and nobody will care.” Well, guess what, they do.
For the past 10 years, all we’ve heard is downtown, downtown, and so on. Everything has to be developed in the city center, for whom? Fat pockets.
I can’t afford to live or visit the city center. And, I think, there are not many residents in the east, southeast and northeast of the city.
Put that prison in the southwest or northwest. They pay more taxes; let them enjoy the fruits of their labor. Also far from the northeast quadrant.
KV Kahn
fort wayne
miss the point
Diana Smith (Express, Sept. 2) wants a list of Democrats who also benefit from college subsidies. She missed the point at all.
Maybe it would be different if she wanted a list of Democrats who got aid and booed students getting loan forgiveness. Republicans think it’s wrong to offer help to students, even if the vaults tip them.
Jane Wardland
fort wayne
Focus on sexual harm to most students
Sometimes, after an article in The Journal Gazette is written, you find yourself saying, “Did they actually print it?” I’m referring to a September 4th story titled “College Students Without Lo back to school”.
The subject of this AP article is that some young men and women returning to college this fall are focused not on studies, campus activities or the direction of their lives, but abortion. The choice of which school to attend can be influenced by state laws governing abortion. Some stories focus on the sexuality of students who realize that viable abortion is no longer a method of birth control.
I believe this article is detrimental to the millions of students who seek career options, academic success, new friendships, and new ideas in college rather than seeking sexual partners without the protections of on-demand abortion.
If intimate sexual relationships are affected by abortion restrictions, perhaps couples can find other ways to express their love and compassion. We can only hope.
Mike Macmillan
fort wayne
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