  | 
| A hemmed-in house has become Seattle’s shrine to defiance.
                        
            Photo Credit            Ian C. Bates for The New York Times         | 
RE A Tiny House in Seattle
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/14/opinion/a-tiny-house-in-seattle.html?ref=international
    
    Dear Editor,
    
    Thank you for publishing Barry Martin's reality check on the story
    of Edith Macefield and her tiny house in Seattle... "she was neither
    the “anticorporate crusader” or the “old fool, blinded by
    stubbornness” that you wrote about, in describing the views of
    some."
    
    Happily hyping Disney's movie "UP" the original report you published
    “
House
      That Wouldn’t Budge (or Float Away) Faces a Last Stand” should
    have at least glanced at Barry Martin's book 
Under
        One Roof: Lessons I Learned From a Tough Old Woman in a Little
        Old House.  I haven't read the book yet, but
    will after seeing Barry Martin's fascinating letter and then reading
    a very easy to find online description about his book:
 "The
      story of Barry Martin and Edith Macefield is a tale of balance and
      compassion, of giving enough without giving too much, of helping
      our elderly loved ones through the tough times without taking away
      their dignity."
      
    Seems to me, at the end of the day, there are many nice people
    and there are some not so nice people everywhere, in every walk of
    life, and there are countless personal motives for people to do what
    they do. Here in America, we have homes and we have businesses that
    help provide jobs so that people can have homes. We also have local
    zoning as well as neighborhood associations which help keep some
    very pleasant neighborhoods family friendly so that, as time passes
    and some people pass on or move away, other individuals and families
    are more likely to move in and invest in their earnings as well as
    their time and energy into maintaining a pleasant home and
    neighborhood. 
    
    Life is much more complex and interconnected than big bad corporate
    entity VS real people.  Jobs matter, personal effort matters, and so
    does 
good
      reporting by reliable newspapers so that we the people might
    be motivated to help build support for better policies by
    corporations, 
colleges,
    government, local business, as well as any other organization 
(and
      noble character) that influences life today.  Jobs matter,
    individuals matter, letters to the editor matter, stories matter,
    attention to detail matters, upholding the rule of fair and just
    laws matters immensely and so do volunteer efforts and the arts...
    and how we raise our children- what we teach them to see and explore
    and think about. 
    
    Sincerely,
    Anne Selden Annab
American homemaker & 
poet