June 15, 2000
The Pier's management solution
The Pier in downtown St. Petersburg has the makings for financial success. It is popular with visitors (reportedly 2-million a year) and retailers (who fill all available space). Yet the bottom line is topsy-turvy, much like the upside-down pyramid that houses The Pier's shops and restaurants.
Aiding the wealthy
Phasing out the estate tax was sold as protection for small businesses and farms but it's really just another way for Republicans to keep the wealthy comfortable.
Executions show appalling lack of humanity
It is with great sadness that I read the account of the death of Bennie Demps at the hands of the state of Florida. Mary Jo Melone, a media witness, in her June 11 column How death sentence turns killer into martyr, recounted the details of his last minutes. I applaud her courage and her fearlessness in stating the truth as she sees it -- a viewpoint I share.
Perspective
Taking jobs, alienating customers
For weeks Americans have been told that the outsourcing of high-tech jobs is good for our economy. So said Greg Mankiw, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers in a recent report signed by President Bush. So, too, writes Thomas Friedman of the New York Times in articles praising the rise of call centers in India used for everything from making airline reservations and reading medical X-ray films to providing tech support for American computer firms.
Philip Gailey: Democrats fall off campaign finance reform wagon Well, what do you know. Soft money is back, and it's making hypocrites of all those Democrats who fervently championed the McCain-Feingold campaign reform law, not to mention those Republicans who objected to the law's restrictions on issue advocacy.
Bill Maxwell: Who is for the farm worker? Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is touting legislation to improve the lives of Florida's 300,000-plus farm workers, who endure institutional and systemic injustices each day in our fields and groves and their personal lives.
Robyn E. Blumner: For some defendants, an American gulag In Bernard Malamud's masterpiece The Fixer, inmate Yakov Bok was subjected to psychological torture in a Soviet gulag through the humiliations of constant shackling and repeated strip searches.

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