Picayune does not need alcohol. Let’s face it — alcohol breeds crime, and our city is better than this!
In a 2001 article, researcher Kwaben Gyimah-Brempong found that “alcohol availability is positively and significantly related to total, property and violent crime rates and homicides” (Southern Economic Journal, July 2001). Crimes such as “domestic violence, assault, burglary and grand theft” are “linked to the availability of alcohol in a community” (Institute for Public Strategies, Ventura County Limits, June 2005).
Are we really interested in bringing additional crime to Picayune? In an April 2006 study by the U.S. Department of Justice, research indicates that “high alcohol outlet density is a reliable predictor of violent and other crimes. In an examination of alcohol availability and homicide in New Orleans, a 10 percent higher off-sale outlet density was predicted to result in a 2.4 percent higher homicide rate.” That was three years ago. Has anything changed? The U.S. Department of Justice Report on Alcohol and Crime also found that “alcohol abuse was a factor in 40 percent of violent crimes committed in the U.S.” (November 2003).
You must ask yourselves what are you really willing to sacrifice about our community for a few restaurants? You have the right to disagree with what our local government officials are pursuing. You have the right to decide in what kind of city you want to raise your children and live your life.
This alcohol referendum is not about bringing in new business. It’s about making sin legal so people will feel better about themselves. I know it’s not politically correct to talk about “sin,” but, too bad. I’m not a politically correct person. I’m just one who is standing up for what is right. It’s time to take a stand, Picayune. It’s time to stop holding back. It’s time to stop being afraid. Be bold, Christians! I don’t drink alcohol because I don’t need to. There is more to life than satisfying the carnal nature.
Picayune will not fall apart if we don’t sell alcohol. We have existed since 1904, through the Great Depression and two World Wars. We will live on! I urge you to find the good that remains in our community and fight for it!
Call me a hoity-toity or a goody-goody. I don’t care. My reputation speaks for itself. “[God] alone is my rock and my salvation; He is my fortress, I will never be shaken.”
Melinda Dukes
Letters
Alcohol definitely not needed in Picayune
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Poplarville Library needs friends
Editor:
April was membership month for the Friends of the Poplarville Public Library. While the Friends group is always seeking new members, April is the month that the staff members at the library are allowed to actively promote membership in the Friends by asking patrons if they would like to join. Unfortunately, during the entire month of April only one new member joined the group. -
Hales must have a problem with cutting spending
Editor:
Mr. Hales again purposes a county sales tax. Mr. Hales does not know how to use the words “cut spending”. He has voted for everything to increase spending over the past sixteen years. The cost of the county government is not the fault of the current new members of the board of supervisors. -
Letters To The Editor
The Democrats truly lost track of history.
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Why are telemarketers with a personal agenda exempt from the “No Call List”?
Why are telemarketers with a personal agenda exempt from the “No Call List”?
I’m on the Mississippi ‘no call list’.
My family and I sat down to dinner last night at 7 p.m. (Oct. 17). At 7:10 p.m., we received a telephone call from a fast-talking, pro-life ‘Christian’ group saying they were call 33,000 Mississippians at the same time and that we were all in a live “town hall meeting” and, if we stayed on the line, we could ask questions. Of course, it turned out to be a pre-recorded call. My dinner got cold while I tried to figure out who was calling and to discover a way to delete my number from their calling list. -
Reader has problem with utility bills
Gentlemen:
Even if rental spaces are vacant, I still have to pay the City’s utility bill for each space. At that rate, my utilities are $4,800; whereas, taxes on my building are $4,500. -
Shock and grief on 9-11
Editor:
I spent September 11, 2001, as much of the world did: on the Internet, sharing in the global outpouring of shock and grief. I will never forget the juxtaposition of the ruined skyscrapers against an appalling blue sky. Americans of all backgrounds queued to give blood, to donate, to enlist in an imminent war. Others sought ways to serve at home through national service. -
Writer opposes Contraflow
Editor:
And to all officials that have to do with starting Contraflow traffic.
Do not, do not do Contraflow traffic. Let the people go on about their way, they know where they are going. -
Anger over checkpoint
Editor:
Mississippi State Troopers had a roadblock/checkpoint set up at the intersection of Hwy 603 & Hwy 43 in Kiln on Saturday morning July 30. As my wife and I approached this check point we were not worried, as my Dodge Ram Pickup was in good running order with all proper documentation. -
From a senior’s point of view:
Editor:
We the public (people) have been lied to and have no idea where our taxed monies have been spent. All could not have been spent on the wars.
First: the federal taxes paid in the years we worked; were to run the country. Or so I thought and with any luck some left over. -
Why I am a member of the Democratic Party
In response to your article prior to the Primary Election about the demise of the Democratic Party in Pearl River County, I am a Democrat and proud to say so. Let me outline my reasons for being a member of this demonized party.
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Poplarville Library needs friends



