Serving the High Plains

More important issues at hand than statues

It’s finally over.

The bronze of Don Juan de Oñate astride his horse is gone. Native Americans, antifa, Black Lives Matter and everyone associated with the various and sundry movements can rejoice.

Racism is over.

Much like the questions of pro or anti-abortion, gun control, gay marriage and love/hate the cops, the pro and anti-Oñate folks will never find middle ground. Both sides have their collective heels dug in deep, ready for the long haul.

The statue was unveiled Oct. 12, 1992. The $108,000 price tag was insignificant to the millions wasted on a visitor center with no vision or proper management. Jefe Emilio Naranjo once prognosticated the center’s attendance would eclipse that of Carlsbad Caverns’.

The online petition to remove Don Juan’s likeness from the former visitor center in Alcalde fed right into the current atmosphere of racism, bigotry and each group’s firm belief they have the answer to what the country needs. None of them have all the answers but can’t listen to the other side (and hear) long enough to have an erudite discussion.

The local petition was clearly driven by the animus we’re experiencing as everyone jumps on the George Floyd bandwagon, using the poor guy’s death as their own personal calling card. Protesters and posers used his death and afterlife for their own devices. It was pitiful. Have we not seen enough Al Sharpton speeches over a coffin in our lifetimes?

We will give the petition folks the benefit of the doubt that they’re just trying to address what they see as social injustice. However, their petition comes with interesting timing.

This will undoubtedly reignite the embers of discontent by local Indian pueblo dwellers and kick-start the old favorite argument of why we hate/love Oñate.

We could sure save a lot of time if each side would put forward their favorite arguments, which everyone has heard, each side can say the other is dead wrong, then we can get back to perhaps addressing issues that matter.

Does anyone care about the failed education system, our drug and alcohol abuse pandemic, our homeless/vagrant/panhandling problem and the fact local governments will not be able to pay the bills much longer with their current revenue stream and projections?

— Rio Grande Sun