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More Realities of Prop. 13

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You must have been hard up for a subject to have to select Proposition 13 to pick on (“Don’t Be a ‘Girlie Man,’ ” by Lee Green, April 17). Green did a good knee-jerk attack of something he knows nothing about. I am more than 90 years old and living on Social Security and a small income from investments, but I pay more than $300 a month in taxes to live in my home. If politicians and their left-wing special interest people spent existing tax money honestly and wisely, there wouldn’t be such a howl to raise property taxes.

James Kerr

Laguna Beach

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Thank you for at last printing some sense about Proposition 13, which is nothing less than rent control for homeowners. When my subsidized neighbors call a plumber or have a roof repaired, I wonder if they also expect those services to be supplied at 1970s prices. Or is it only local government that is supposed to live in a time warp?

Craig Zerouni

Los Angeles

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As Green concedes, Proposition 13 was born out of citizen frustration “over rocketing property taxes and government indifference.” I haven’t seen any changes! How about a new proposition? One that says, like risk insurance, that the more you have to lose, the higher the premium. Let those who have the most to lose pay the piper.

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Paul Thornquist

Thousand Oaks

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If Green or anyone else feels that Proposition 13 is unfair and wants to help, they don’t have to wait until it is changed. They can just make out a check and send it to Sacramento. Why hurt the rest of us who are grateful that Proposition 13 has allowed us to stay in our homes?

Terri Blazell

West Covina

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