Dawson County news. (Dawsonville, Georgia) 2015-current, April 27, 2022, Image 5
PAGE 5A Send a letter to the editor to P.O. Box 1600, Dawsonville, GA 30534; fax (706) 265-3276; or email to editor@dawsonnews.com. DawsonOpinion WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2021 This is a page of opinion — ours, yours and others. Signed columns and cartoons are the opinions of the writers and artists, and they may not reflect our views. No such thing as a stupid question During school, I heard there was no such thing as a stupid question, only ques tions that people weren’t brave enough to ask. I wasn’t so sure about that then, and sometimes, I still wonder about that. But it was my freshman year of high school and I had my fair share of silly and stupid situations. The first thing I discovered was that high school was a lot different than middle school. A’s were easy in middle school. High school brought with it geometry and a foreign language requirement. For the first time, I found myself straggling with schoolwork. “What is wrong with you?"’ Granny demanded. “You ain’t never brought home anything less than an A.” I didn’t know. “She’s boycrazy,” she declared to my mother. “That’s what’s the matter. She’s got boys on the brain instead of her studies.” That may have been kind of true. But, honestly, boys weren’t my priority, especially not when there were books, music, makeup, and hair products to buy. “It’s harder in 9th grade,” I said in my defense. “Geometry makes absolutely no sense - there’s shapes involved! And I am really having a hard time in Spanish. I don’t understand it at all. It’s like Greek to me.” Mama looked up from her crossword. “Except it’s not Greek, Kitten. It’s Spanish. Have you talked to your teacher?” “No,” I replied forlornly. I hadn’t. I tried to keep a low profile in the class, lest she call on me. The teacher was a lovely woman from Argentina and Spanish was her native language. The majority of our class was done in Spanish only so we’d come to be fluent in speaking it. I was drowning. We had Latin in 1st grade - shouldn’t that count as my foreign language? I felt horrible, too, because I wanted to team Spanish, along with French and Italian. But if the first few weeks were any indication, speaking anoth er language was not going to be in my future. “You did good in Algebra last year,” Granny said, still focused on the math. “You was taking it with high schoolers.” “What can I say? I peaked early.” Of course, the Redhead Prime did not find that funny at all. Pop and Bobby both tried to help me with geome try, it being something they used every day in roof ing. After one particularly tough session, my uncle declared it was just good that I had other strengths. When it came time for a parent-teacher conference, Mama was determined to get to the bottom of things. One teacher immediately started off by saying I was talking constantly in class, but somehow had an A.“I’ve moved her several times,” the teacher added. “She still talks.” Another teacher said, “I tried that; she will talk to the wall. Even moved her next to someone she didn’t like and they still talked.” Mama said my Spanish teacher looked utterly bewildered. “She has never said a word in my class. She’s the quietest student I have.” “My Sudie is the quietest student you have?” Mama asked, confused. My teacher nodded. “Short girl, curly black hair, green eyes?” My Spanish teacher nodded again. “She’s extreme ly quiet. I sometimes forget she’s in there. But she seems to be having a hard time with some of the verbs and comprehension so far.” She recognized me by my failures. It felt like there was so much to team, that I was overwhelmed and would never get the hang of it. “One thing your first grade teacher said was you asked “why” more than any other kid she’s ever taught,” Mama said. “Maybe you need to ask more questions.” I had asked ques tions; I still didn’t understand. “Maybe you’re not asking the right questions,” Mama stressed. “There may be someone else in your class that don’t understand it either and if you ask, they may team, too,” Granny inteijected. I knew all of that. I was a dorky nerd and pretty comfortable with my lot in life. But, I was bringing home something less than an A, and that was cause for alarm. “Is there anything in particular you’re straggling with that you could ask your Spanish teacher to explain better?” Mama asked. Actually, there was. The next day in class, my teacher asked a question and ended it with por favor. I took a deep breath and raised my hand. “Si, Sudie?” “What are you building?” “Que?” “What are you building? I’ve been wondering for weeks now. You keep saying four by four, and I’m wondering what you’re building.” The class went silent and my teacher broke her rale of speaking Spanish in the classroom. “Senorita, I’m not saying four by four. I’m saying por favor. Por favor means please.” She looked as confused as I normally did. “Does that help clarify?” I nodded, hearing a few snickers from my class mates. I was embrassed, of course, but if only I had asked that stupid question sooner, I may have had a better grade. Sudie Crouch is an award winning humor columnist and author of "The Dahlman Files: A Tony Dahlman Paranormal Mystery." SUDIE CROUCH Columnist NOW WHERE DO WE TURN to for FAKE NEW5? * *■ :>••• A Y/fy'.' ; yfy DR. ANDERSON The time is coming when we will look like normal again By Dr. Larry Anderson Anderson Family Medicine I may have some good news for a change. We were in Greenville for a Rotary District Conference. Something was different the next morning. All the shields were gone from the front desk. I was told it was a corporate decision. It was very different to see so many people not wearing masks, no shields in front of people. No, I am not advocating that you do this yet but the time is coming when we will look like normal again. Still have the flu to deal with. Get your vaccine and stay away from sick people. Avian Influenza (AI) is still a problem. You may have noticed this at the grocery store. Egg prices are going up as are chicken prices. This is due partially by the death of millions of egg-laying hens and broil ers. May also noticed that free range eggs and birds are getting scarce. You will recall that wild birds flying over a flock of free range chickens and turkeys will often drop their calling cards. This is how the AI is spread. These birds have been moved indoors for their protection. Wild birds such as Bald Eagles, Herons and many others are dying or being culled because of infections from this virus. Be careful. Pay attention to your home flocks. Protect them. The Ukraine is still suf fering losses. War crimes seem to be at the forefront. There is always something more that we can do. Have you made the phone call, text or email yet? When you are through reading this column you will have enough time before supper is on the table to make a call. Take a stand. Do some thing. Pray for the Ukrainians to have peace and safety and for the Russians to go home. Thanks for reading. LETTERTOTHE EDITOR Local elections and growth Our county is in the middle of a new population growth burst. Most of the people here do not want our county to look like Forsyth but it likely will. There are no real tools in Georgia law avail-able to any elect ed leaders to stop this. They can cause the costs of development to go up in an attempt to slow it. But many will oppose those efforts. The city and the county can pass rules of development that favor more expenses for builders and those can make a real positive dif ference in the appearance and func tionality of the result. The influen tial land owners who want to cash in now with land sales will push back. Some politi-cal balance will be struck which will not satisfy either side of the debate. We will look a lot like Cobb and Forsyth and Cherokee if the conflict of zoning and ordinances are reason ably settled. If unfettered develop ment is encouraged and adopted we will end up worse than those coun ties. Crowded, jammed up roads, and ugly as an old garbage can to boot. Our local leaders are faced with the infrastructure problems of water supplies, sewer services, school capacities, and roads. The school system seems capable of managing and have so far, but the numbers of new people will begin to press them. My guess is school capacity will fall short in the coming years. Water and sewer for the county are not in the hands of the elected officials. So far, Etowah Water and Sewer has been well managed as a business and charged the real costs of service. It has not run sewer all over the place and that has restricted high density to limited areas. The city is going to be short on both water and modern sewer and seems to support more of both to support high density development. Our roads are already a mess and there are no major plans even in the works to begin the fix. To do it right the country would have to go into debt with bonds to borrow the money now and take the financial risk in the out years. This means that in the future there would be less funding for the fun stuff like parks not to mention police and fire. We are going to elect new leaders locally. You need to ask them point ed questions about what they sup port and what they oppose. If they respond with “I just love my county or city,” elect someone else that can think about the big problems. Love is good but it is not enough. Good governing is about making hard choices and living with the results. Gary Pichon Marble Hill