Shame on the Star Tribune for printing "OUCH!" in huge letters with a story about the flu vaccine ("OUCH! Helping kids cope with shots," Sept. 28). The vaccine does not hurt. I received a flu shot this year and jokingly asked the nurse if she even used a needle! The irresponsible headline does nothing other than scare people away from a potentially lifesaving preventive treatment. Remember that there is no good treatment for influenza and it can kill — especially the young, old, and those with lung problems. Everyone should get their vaccine unless allergic, and the newspaper should be careful in its coverage.
Dr. Paul Bock, St. Louis Park
INCOME TAXES
Of math and facts and fairness and plain old common sense
A Sept. 29 letter proposed to provide fact-checking about tax math "for those [readers] who are bad enough at math to be Democrats." Misrepresenting the data in a government source based on "adjusted gross income" and tax shares (yes, I read and analyzed that source, and no reasonable conclusion that the very wealthy already pay a fair share of their income in taxes can be drawn there) and ignoring Donald Trump's telling debate declaration that "smart" wealthy people pay no taxes at all, do not make the letter's author a fact-checker but rather a partisan who uses statistics to mislead. Both the debate and the letter demonstrated well that snarky arrogance and misrepresented "facts" are not persuasive.
Mike Tillmann, Owatonna, Minn.
• • •
I accept the Sept. 29 letter writer's facts. The rich do pay more income tax than average people. But I am self-employed and pay almost 10 percent of my income in payroll taxes. The 1 percent hardly ever pay even 2 percent in payroll taxes. I bought a car and will pay 3 percent of my income in sales taxes. Hardly any in the 1 percent pay even 2 percent of their income in sales taxes. I pay 5 percent of my income in property taxes, and only a few of the 1 percent pay that much in property taxes. Licenses and fees also are less of a burden on the rich. Many of the 1 percent also get most of their income from capital gains and dividends, which have been taxed at lower rates for 18 years now. So for income tax to be "fair," the 1 percent should pay at least quadruple the rate of what average people pay to make up for their advantages in all the other taxes.
Stop the sob stories. The regular tax rate of 10 percent for the poor and almost 40 percent for the rich is exactly right. Recall that we have a national debt due to taxes not covering spending. If you first support massive cuts in the military and CIA and NSA and INS, etc., until we have a budget surplus, then we talk about who should get tax cuts. Anyone who offers tax cuts in a deficit situation should be laughed at like the idiot they are.
Carl Selness, Golden Valley
LONE-WOLF ATTACKS
Not to worry! It's just another bout of terrorism …
Peter Kropotkin, Johann Most, Alexander Berkman, Leon Czolgosz, unions, the Weathermen, Timothy McVeigh, and anarchists of all stripes and nationalities — what do all of these have in common? They were all mentioned in the same breath as terrorists, from 1886 to the present, by Bloomberg View's Steve Mihm. His opinion, "Lone wolf attacks: America has lived through an 'age of terror' before," appeared on Sept. 25. His obvious goal was to minimize the significance of terrorism as a threat.
I appreciate the attempt to instill hopefulness, but Mihm also displays a lot of wishful thinking and lack of foresight. Several factors are being ignored.
• While U.S. violence is reducing overall, terrorism statistics are small, but growing fast.


