Geez! What Do Those People Want from Us?…
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, November 19, 2011
Lower taxes are nice. Lower taxes are helpful. But there’s more to building Michigan’s economy than lower taxes….
Comics and Comments from John Auchter
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, November 19, 2011
Lower taxes are nice. Lower taxes are helpful. But there’s more to building Michigan’s economy than lower taxes….
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, November 12, 2011
Basic summary: A Republican State Representative, Paul Scott of Grand Blanc, was successfully recalled from office this past election. The effort to recall him was largely funded by the Michigan Teachers Union (the MEA), which skews heavily toward the Democrats. Republican-leaning special interest groups have vowed revenge. For analogies, I flirted with Pandora’s Box and Rock ‘em Sock ‘em Robots, but eventually settled on the hammer.
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, November 5, 2011
Without fail, candidates like the one in the cartoon show up every election cycle. It’s important not to elect them. Just doing my part…
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, October 29, 2011
Our governor, Rick Snyder, comes from the business world, not politics. It’s probably his chief virtue as far as Michigan voters are concerned. But the reality is that it leaves him unprepared at times. In this instance, a proposed second bridge to Canada at Detroit and a few miles from the existing Ambassador Bridge got bogged down and shot down in the state legislature recently. Some Democrats suddenly got concerned about neighborhoods near the new bridge (not that there hadn’t been plenty of time to raise concerns earlier) and many Republicans are basically on the payroll of the owner of the Ambassador Bridge (who obviously is very much opposed to the competition). Meanwhile, Canada is a little dumbfounded because they had already agreed to foot the bill to build the bridge. Yeah, I don’t get it either….
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, October 22, 2011
In an earlier version of this comic one of the shouts coming out of the capitol building in panel one was: “Your job is to shut up and take standardized tests!” I liked it because it seemed to distill the basic attitude of Republican legislators toward students. (And to be equally unfair, if it were a Democrat legislator it would have been: “Your job is to shut up!” That’s it. Because the Democrats never seem to be organized enough to have an agenda.)
In any case, it was too wordy, so I likely would have dropped it anyway. But for a while I tried to couple it with what the Republican legislators thought their job is. In other words, “Our job is to <something>, your job is to shut up and take standardized tests!” But for the life of me I couldn’t come up with what that <something> was. I mean, if you are so philosophically against the government having any sort of role in improving the lives of its citizens that you can’t pass anti-bullying legislation, what exactly do you think your job as a government official is?
Fortunately, my school district, Grandville, and several others in West Michigan have been proactive in establishing mental health awareness programs, and the results have been nothing but positive. Grandville has been blessed to have Christy Buck (that’s her in panel two) and the Mental Health Foundation of West Michigan behind these efforts. A recent article in the Grand Rapids Press summarizes this nicely: Classroom lessons in mental health could save young lives.
Students in other Michigan school districts should be equally as blessed. What do you say GOP legislators? Are you ready to step up?
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, October 15, 2011
I always wished I could draw skylines like New Yorker cartoonists do….
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, October 8, 2011
It’s not that I can’t be snobby. I take a very dim view of mass-produced light beers. My musical tastes run purposely to the unique and away from widely popular. (The new Ben Folds CD arrived yesterday, and I’m beyond thrilled.) And even at my poorest stage in life I could never bring myself to buy the store-brand toaster pasties in lieu of the opulent deliciousness of Kellogg’s PopTarts.
But when it comes to art, I have no tolerance for the snobs — you know, like art critics. The ones who, whether art world educated or self-certified, feel the need to school everybody about what is beyond our ability to understand and what is beneath contempt. (There is no middle ground.) They have come out every year for ArtPrize, but this year they came out with a vengeance. And it’s not as if they don’t have some good points — heck, even Rick DeVos admitted that there was a lot of “crazy crap” strewn about Grand Rapids. It’s the snarky, pretentious way with which they generally delivered it.
Anyway, as a supposed artist who sometimes struggles mightily with the actual art part, I guess I’m predisposed to take a punk rock view of this. Which is, if somebody feels they have something to say, then they should bang it out. If you’re passionate, it’s worth creating. It may not turn out. In fact, it likely won’t turn out, but you shouldn’t let somebody else’s certification criteria stop you. As Ben Folds says, you don’t want to have regrets:
I thought about the hours wasted
Watching TV, drinking beer
I thought about the things I thought about
Until immobilized with fear
And all the great ideas I had
And how we just made fun
Of those who had the guts to try and fail
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, October 1, 2011
Check out this article on MLive inspired by this cartoon and (if you dare) the subsequent comments to get an idea of how disfunctionaly West Michigan’s relationship with Detroit can be….
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, September 24, 2011
It’s ArtPrize time again in Grand Rapids. Definitely worth your while to check it out!
Originally published in the Grand Rapids Press, September 17, 2011
Yeah, nothing like a personal property tax cartoon to enthrall and split the collective side of my reading public. Did you get it? Those darn assessments on business equipment, amortization, schedules, depreciation, and whatnot. What a hoot! Next week perhaps some wry barbs involving annuity calculations….