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OPINION | BRENDA LOOPER: Oh, to have power | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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OPINION | BRENDA LOOPER: Oh, to have power | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


More than one wise person in my life has told me that I’ll never be able to please everyone. Heck, I can’t even please all cats, so why would I think humans were any easier?

I wouldn’t. Cats tend to be much easier, especially if you have some bites of egg or chicken on you. I’m usually most offensive to cats when I cough or sneeze in their general vicinity, as it’s apparently a great insult to their ancestors (I apologize a lot when I cat-sit during allergy season), or I forget for a few hours to clean their litterbox (usually because I’m writing and/or editing for this job).

If only my critics (and those of other people at the paper) were as easily assuaged and could understand that I’m not all-powerful (I’m not even mid-powerful) and can only work with what I have.

What I have much of the time, just as with other newspapers across the country that aren’t nationwide, is a limited number and range of letters for the Voices page. So when someone complains about vitriol on the page when I’ve so often pleaded for people at large to appeal to their better angels, well … I have to remind that I’m, again, not all-powerful.

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Oh, if only I were …

There’d be a lot fewer people placing the lives of all women (including trans women) in danger by, oh, let’s say claiming that an athlete born female who is competing in women’s boxing in the Olympics is actually a man. Considering her country of Algeria is not exactly LGBTQ-friendly, she could be in real danger upon her return home (with an Olympic medal, at least a bronze as of this writing), simply because she doesn’t fit some people’s image of a woman, despite being born and living as a female her entire life.

The International Boxing Association, which is heavily influenced by its Russian sponsors, had disqualified that boxer and another woman from its 2023 world championships, claiming they “pretended to be women” and “tried to deceive their colleagues,” according to Mother Jones. The tests that supposedly revealed XY chromosomes haven’t been clarified by the group. And it wouldn’t matter anyway, since women can have XY chromosomes and still be women (like those who have Swyer Syndrome).

American non-binary Olympic athlete Nikki Hiltz commented on the controversy on their Instagram account: “Anti-trans rhetoric is anti-woman. These people aren’t ‘protecting women’s sports,’ they are enforcing rigid gender norms and anyone who doesn’t fit perfectly into those norms is targeted and vilified.”

People would think before they spoke, wrote, or posted on social media. Words are powerful, especially in the hands of someone well-known, so when people like J.K. Rowling (whom I once admired) post things like her accusation about the Olympic boxer, it’s hard not to lose faith in humans as a species. Watching how low people will go to hurt others for no reason other than they don’t fit an image or believe as others do is disheartening, and not at all what I was taught as a child.

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There would be more letters to the editor coming in every day that didn’t insult specific other readers (public figures and amorphous groups don’t apply, within reason); go on and on about things that have been proved fraudulent, especially without citing sources; use form letters or plagiarism (citing sources applies to more than just fraudulent claims; don’t try to pass off someone else’s work as your own); didn’t rehash imagined slights from other readers or politicians not even relevant now; weren’t the same writers ignoring the 30-day cooling-off period; and weren’t just the same talking points over and over.

You know I’m no fan of politics, but that doesn’t mean politics is verboten in letters; heck, we’d be lucky to have one letter a day if that were the case. The plain fact is that not as many people write letters to the editor anymore, and some newspapers have even begun eliminating them (the Bellingham Herald in Washington, for example, calls them “a thing of the past” and “too difficult to verify and generally rife with misinformation,” according to the Post Alley blog). For now, anyway, we plan to keep running letters, but readers have to remember that Voices can only work with what it gets. We get more liberal to center-right letters than very conservative ones, and more of them tend to be written in a way that they can pass fact-checks with little trouble. I would absolutely love to get more letters, period, but more letters from conservative readers would be wonderful.

But ya know, none of this matters in the big picture because someone will always find a way to be offended. Some seem to even think that the right to be offended is in the Bill of Rights.

If you want to complain, feel free; it’s your right. However, that doesn’t then mean no one can complain about what you said or did. That’s the thing about living here in the U.S., where we are all entitled to the same rights … and oops, there’s no right to be free from criticism.

Sorry ’bout that.

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Assistant Editor Brenda Looper is editor of the Voices page. Email her at blooper@adgnewsroom.com. Read her blog at blooper0223.wordpress.com.



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Arkansas needs balanced strategy to address educator concerns about AI

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Arkansas needs balanced strategy to address educator concerns about AI


COMMENTARY: While AI can offer transformative support for students who need it, it also risks eroding the foundational skills we are trying to help them acquire. Arkansas needs a balanced strategy that prioritizes accessibility without sacrificing rigor.



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Congressional subcommittee to hold hearing in Little Rock on ‘failures’ of local housing authority | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Congressional subcommittee to hold hearing in Little Rock on ‘failures’ of local housing authority | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


Joseph Flaherty

jflaherty@adgnewsroom.com

Joseph Flaherty covers the city of Little Rock for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. A graduate of Middlebury College and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, he has worked for the newspaper since 2020.

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11 people arrested in connection with various charges in Northwest Arkansas | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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11 people arrested in connection with various charges in Northwest Arkansas | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


Arrests

Benton County Sheriff’s Office

Scott Minor, 45, of Elm Street in Jefferson City, Mo., was arrested Friday on suspicion of computer child pornography and sexually grooming a child. Minor was being held Monday in the Benton County Jail with a $150,000 bond set.

Bentonville

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Damond Drake, 52, of West Highland Drive in Rogers was arrested Saturday on suspicion of delivery of methamphetamine or cocaine. Drake was being held Monday in the Benton County Jail with no bond set.

Fayetteville

Cornelius Anderson, 33, of Dawn Street in Fayetteville was arrested Saturday on suspicion of third-degree assault on a family member, third-degree domestic battery, first-degree criminal mischief and theft of property. Anderson remained at the Washington County Detention Center Monday in lieu of $5,000 bond.

Eduard Korshakov, 37, of Prairie Dunes Trail in Fayetteville was arrested Saturday on suspicion of aggravated assault on a family or household member, kidnapping, first-degree false imprisonment, third-degree domestic battery and interference with emergency communications. Korshakov remained at the Washington County Detention Center Monday in lieu of $25,000 bond.

Efrain Quiroz, 29, of North Shamblin Avenue in Fayetteville was arrested Sunday on suspicion of second-degree battery and second-degree endangering the welfare of a minor. Quiroz remained at the Washington County Detention Center Monday in lieu of $25,000 bond.

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Leo Ward, 21, of West Tanner Drive in Fayetteville was arrested Sunday on suspicion of aggravated residential burglary and stalking. Ward was released from the Washington County Detention Center Monday on $25,000 bond.

Rogers

John Jenkins, 21, of Arkansas 351 in Jonesboro was arrested Saturday on suspicion of fraudulent use of credit/debit card. Jenkins was being held Monday in the Benton County Jail with no bond set.

Springdale

Ashlyn Neal, 19, of Powell Street in Springdale was arrested Saturday on suspicion of kidnapping, second-degree battery, endangering the welfare of a minor, resisting arrest and obstruction of government operations. Neal was released from the Washington County Detention Center Saturday on $5,000 bond.

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Jose Neal, 37, of South Powell Street in Springdale was arrested Saturday on suspicion of second-degree domestic battery, third-degree domestic battery, interference with emergency communications and resisting arrest. Neal was released from the Washington County Detention Center Saturday on $5,000 bond.

Skyler Shane, 31, of Highway 62 in Westville, Ok., was arrested Sunday on suspicion of Possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance with intent to deliver, simultaneous possession of drugs and a firearm, carrying a prohibited weapon and disorderly conduct. Shane was released from the Washington County Detention Center Sunday on $3,500 bond.

University of Arkansas Police Department

Celso Adame-Gallegos, 19 of Jade Street in Springdale was arrested Friday on suspicion of possession of a Schedule VI controlled substance with intent to deliver. Adame-Gallegos was released from the Washington County Detention Center Saturday on $5,000 bond.

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