February 2, 2011 The Page 19 Portland Observer Black History Month Q einiqn OYlHO -Ib first AMENDMENT SU6GESTÎONS New Prices Effective May 1 ,2 0 1 0 Martin Cleaning Service Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning Residential & Commercial Services Minimum Service CHG $45.00 A sm all distance/travel charge m ay be applied CARPET CLEANING 2 Cleaning Areas or more $30.00 Each Area Pre-Spray Traffic Areas (Includes: I small Hallway) S econd AMENDMENT SOLUTIONS 1 Cleaning Area (only) $40.00 Includes Pre-Spray Traffic Area (Hallway Extra) Stairs (12-16 stairs - With Other Services): $25.00 tUECAUSW . - a t ciAVfc HtCfcSSAW/ "To D Ê S P R O V O U R WA lT»»z Wanted: Gun Laws for 21 st-Century Weapons Our need to evolve with the times D onald K aul B e f o re th e T ucson shootings are lost forever in the m ists o f tim e, w e m ight do well to ponder the various re­ actions to the outrage. President Barack O bam a responded as a presi dent should, w ith dignity and eloquence I thought his speech at the m em orial service in A rizona w as one o f his strongest. He set the bar pretty high. "If this tragedy prom pts reflection and d e ­ bate, as it should, let's m ake sure it's w orthy o f those w e have lost," he said. A m en to that. H ouse S peaker John B oehner, w ho has set the leadership bar fairly low during his tim e in C ongress, didn't clear it. Justifying the H ouse not passing a resolution to honor the victim s, he said, "W e feel a litany o f unw anted em otions that no reso lu tio n co u ld possib ly capture." B oehner choked up a little w hen he said it, but he also chokes up at basketball gam es. He then refused the president's offer o f a ride to A rizona for the m em orial, preferring to stay a few m inutes at a sim ilar W ashington event b e­ fore going o ff to a fund-raiser. C ongress responded in a congressional way. It issued sym pathetic noises and then talked by about increasing s e c u rity -fo r m em bers o f C o n ­ gress. N o m urm ur on gun control legislation. The A m erican p e o p le - a lot o f th e m -re - sponded by buying guns. G un sales surged in the w ake o f the shooting. A pparently people see them selves standing in a shopping m all, taking dead aim on a gunm an w ho's spraying the place w ith bullets, and bringing him dow n with a single shot. Lots o f luck w ith that. Life seldom im itates C lint E astw ood m ovies. Even w hen it does, you rarely get to be C lint. Sarah Palin, the R epublican Party's an sw er to E va Peron, took the opportunity to excoriate "journalists and pundits" w ho dared to link the som etim es-violent rhetoric she and her T ea Party cohort use in political battle. "W ithin hours o f a tragedy unfolding, jo u r­ nalists and pundits should not be m an u factu r­ ing a blo o d libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence that they purport to condem n," she said. "That is reprehensible." In o th er w ords, sh e—the D ivine S arah—is the victim here, not the people lying in their blood in T ucson. In any case, "blood libel"—an ancient and absurd b elief am ong anti-S em ites that Jew s use the blood o f C hristian children in religious ritu ­ als—is a curious phrase to use in connection with the gunning dow n o f a Jew ish law m aker. "W e know violence isn't the answ er," said Sarah. "W hen we take up arm s, w e re talking about o u r vote." O r, to quote H um pty D um pty: "W hen I use a w ord, it m eans ju st w hat I choose it to m e a n - neither m ore nor less." I guess it was just bad luck that Ms. Palin put a gun sight over G abrielle G iffords' district during the run-up to last year's elections. Poor Palin; poor, poor Palin. She ju st can't catch a break. I know I am speaking to the w ind. But after all is said and done, the T ucson shootings stand as a condem nation o f our gun la w s -o r lack o f them. T o believe, as the Suprem e C ourt seem s to do, that the C onstitution guarantees the right o f ev ery person to buy a w eapon that can kill dozens in seconds is to believe that the m en w ho w rote that docum ent w ere idiots. T hey w eren't. They w ere 18th-century c re a ­ tures o f the E nlightenm ent w ho w ere conscious o f their lim itations in laying dow n rules for the form ation o f a nation. T he country w ould evolve, they knew , and the C onstitution w ould have to ex p an d and evolve w ith it. W eapons o f the 21st century aren't those o f the 18th. Yet a m ajority o f our S uprem e C ourt chooses to ignore the "w ell-regulated M ilitia" part o f the Second A m endm ent and focus ex clu siv ely on citizens' right to bear arm s. For this they w ent to law school? I fear that "Suprem e C ourt" is b ecom ing an oxym oron, like "jum bo shrim p." OtherWords columnist Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Mich. Area/Orientai Rugs. $25.00 Minimum Area/Orientai Rugs (Wool): $40.00Minimum Heavily Soiled Area: Additional $10.00 each area (Requiring Extensive Pre-Spraying) UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Sofa: $69.00 Loveseat: $49.00 Sectional: $109 - $139 Chair or Recliner $25 - $49 Throw Pillows (With Other Services): $5.00 % ADDITIONAL SERVICES • Area & Oriental Rug Cleaning • Auto/Boat/RV Cleaning • Deodorizing & Pet Odor Treatment • Spot & Stain Removal Service • Scotchguard Protection • Minor Water Damage Services SEE CURRENT FLYER FOR ADDITIONAL PRICES & SERVICES Call for Appointment (503) 281-3949