Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

So, we should just let them die?

More than 130,000 migrants and asylum seekers are estimated to have arrived in Europe by sea so far this year, compared with 80,000 last year. More than 1,800 people have died in the Mediterranean so far this year that we’ve learned of. Yes, 1,800. And the ocean can swallow people faster than can be traced.

The United Kingdom this week announced that it will not support any future search-and-rescue operations from Gibraltar to prevent migrants and refugees drowning in the Mediterranean Sea, stating that “such operations can encourage more people to attempt the dangerous crossing to enter Europe.” 

A UN spokesman: “To bank on the rise in the number of dead migrants to act as deterrence for future migrants and asylum seekers is appalling. ... It’s like saying, let them die because this is a good deterrence.”

Meanwhile, in the good old USA, the Liberty Alliance and Conservativebyte.com folks are lamenting the Border Patrol erecting new rescue beacons in the desert near Tucson, bringing the number to 83. The beacons are part of the Blue Light of Life campaign designed to warn illegal immigrants of the danger to life of crossing desert stretches and to give them aid if they try and do so. Since 1999, 2,600 people have been found dead along that stretch of the border. Since the beacons went up, the rate has dropped by 44 percent. 

But the rate of traffic through more dangerous terrain, the desert mountains, has increased and the overall death rate has not changed. Why? Because the Border Patrol thought making the dangerous mountains a more ominous deterrent would work. Nope, it just killed more people there.

These migrants aren’t trying to break the law. They don’t need deterrents. They need sanctuary, compassion, and — if we really want to solve the problem — solutions back in their homelands. 

The absence of regulated open migration channels for migrants drives migration further underground, increases their risks and entrenches smuggling mafias and crooked employers, resulting in more deaths at sea, in the deserts, and more human rights violations.

The UN spokesman: “... governments that do not support search-and-rescue efforts have reduced themselves to the same level as the smugglers. They are preying on the precariousness of the migrants and asylum seekers, robbing them of their dignity and playing with their lives.”

Peter Riva, a former resident of Amenia Union, now lives in New Mexico.

Latest News

Sharon Audubon Birdfest

Sharon Audubon Center naturalist and volunteer coordinator Bethany Sheffer shows off Mandala, a red-tailed hawk who lost an eye after being hit by a car more than a decade ago.

Alec Linden

SHARON – Drizzle and chill couldn’t quell bird enthusiasts Saturday, May 9, for the Sharon Audubon Center’s Birdfest, an all-out avian fete in celebration of World Migratory Bird Day.

The internationally recognized effort is meant to bring awareness to the safety and wellbeing of the billions of migratory birds that return to their summer breeding grounds each spring.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sharon voters reject controversial school budget, 114-99

The May 8 town meeting and budget vote were moved from Sharon Town Hall to Sharon Center School to accommodate what officials said was the largest turnout for a Sharon budget meeting in recent years.

Alec Linden

SHARON – More than 200 residents packed the Sharon Center School gymnasium Friday, May 8, where voters narrowly rejected the Sharon Board of Education's proposed 2026-2027 spending plan by a vote of 114-99, sending the budget back to the Board of Finance after weeks of heated debate over school funding.

The rejected proposal – the ninth version of the budget since deliberations began months ago – carried a bottom line of $4,165,513 for the elementary school, unchanged from last year. The flat budget came after the BOF ordered the BOE in early April to remove nearly $70,000 from its spending plan.

Keep ReadingShow less

Liane McGhee

Liane McGhee
Liane McGhee
Liane McGhee

Liane McGhee, a woman defined by her strength of will, generosity, and unwavering devotion to her family, passed away leaving a legacy of love and cherished memories.

Born Liane Victoria Conklin on May 27, 1957, in Sharon, CT, she grew up on Fish Street in Millerton, a place that remained close to her heart throughout her life. A proud graduate of the Webutuck High School Class of 1975, Liane soon began the most significant chapter of her life when she married Bill McGhee on August 7, 1976. Together, they built a life centered on family and shared values.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

‘Women Laughing’ celebrates New Yorker cartoonists

Ten New Yorker cartoonists gather around a table in a scene from “Women Laughing.”

Eric Korenman

There is something deceptively simple about a New Yorker cartoon. A few lines, a handful of words — usually fewer than a dozen — and suddenly an entire worldview has been distilled into a single panel.

There is also something delightfully subversive about watching a room full of women sit around a table drawing them. Not necessarily because it seems unusual now — thankfully — but because “Women Laughing,” screening May 9 at The Moviehouse in Millerton, reminds us that for much of The New Yorker’s history, such a gathering would have been nearly impossible to imagine.

Keep ReadingShow less

By any other name: becoming Lena Hall

By any other name: becoming Lena Hall

In “Your Friends and Neighbors,” Lena Hall’s character is also a musician.

Courtesy Apple TV
At a certain point you stop asking who people want you to be and start figuring out who you already are.
Lena Hall

There is a moment in conversation with actress and musician Lena Hall when the question of identity lands with unusual force.

“Well,” she said, pausing to consider it, “who am I really?”

Keep ReadingShow less
Remembering Todd Snider at The Colonial Theatre

“A Love Letter to Handsome John” screens at The Colonial Theatre on May 8.

Provided

Fans of the late singer-songwriter Todd Snider will have a rare opportunity to gather in celebration of his life and music when “A Love Letter to Handsome John,” a documentary by Otis Gibbs, screens for one night only at The Colonial Theatre in North Canaan on Friday, May 8.

Presented by Wilder House Berkshires and The Colonial Theatre, the 54-minute film began as a tribute to Snider’s friend and mentor, folk legend John Prine. Instead, following Snider’s death last November at age 59, it became something more intimate: a portrait of the alt-country pioneer during the final year of his life.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.