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Two articles in the Nov. 18 Minnesota section of the Star Tribune offer persuasive evidence that there are two systems of justice in the state, one for the wealthy and another for the poor. "Court: Teen to be tried as adult" (page B1) tells us the tragic story of Husayn Braveheart, a Native teen from South Dakota's Pine Ridge Indian Reservation placed in foster care at age 6. Understandably angry, he bounced around the deplorably under-resourced foster care system until he predictably ended up running with the wrong crowd in the "foster care to prison pipeline." He was 15 and caught carjacking, with a bad history, and he is now on the way to at least 12 years in adult prison. Does anyone believe he will come out ready to be a productive member of society?
Conversely, on page B5 we see "Ex-snack food exec gets plea deal in $300K theft," where we find that Thomas J. Wiechmann will serve no time after being charged with over $300,000 in theft. If he behaves, the charge will be reduced to a misdemeanor, and he can argue for a shorter probation at sentencing than the three years in the deal. Based on the story, he managed to steal thousands of dollars a year for at least the last six of his 24 years with the company. There is so much money floating around for execs that this theft was not missed for at least six years. Not a day in jail for stealing over $300,000!
What if just $100,000 in resources was available to prop up Braveheart when he was abandoned at age 6? Most of us could not imagine what his life was like, but it is not hard to picture what the pocket change slopping around executive compensation could do to improve the lives of Braveheart and many like him. Heaven forbid we consider raising taxes to try to improve the lives of "those people." Instead we pay for the crime and incarceration caused by those who cannot afford what it takes to become a crooked snack food exec.
Tom Salkowski, Buffalo, Minn.
CRYPTOCURRENCY
Not worth the pollution
I see that the U.S. government is concerned about the investors in the FTX collapse ("Troubled FTX owes $3B to its main creditors," Nov. 22). I have not seen any concern about crypto data "mining" using tremendous amounts of electrical power to develop cryptocurrency. I do not think most citizens understand how much this so-called mining has the potential to exacerbate climate change. These mining operations depend on vast arrays of computers churning out calculations that as far as I know have no redeeming value. The resulting power necessary for cooling is tremendous and has resulted in closed coal power plants being reopened in order to satisfy the ravenous amounts of electrical power needed. Crypto "mining" needs to be regulated or eliminated. At the least, the power consumption needs to be reduced, the "mining" computers need to perform useful calculations and the needed power should come from non-fossil-fuel sources.
Last month, the Star Tribune had an excellent article about crypto "mining" where they pointed out that a "mining" operation has been approved for Jamestown, N.D., where the power needed would be twice the power needed for the entire city of 16,000 people! ("Beware of the crypto 'Wild West,'" Oct. 23.) This is happening all over the world!