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Will They Ever Get It, And Do They Care?

March 24, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By

Jerry Waxman

 

The great trumpeter and American icon, Louis Armstrong, was once asked by an interviewer “What is Jazz?” Armstrong responded “Man, if I have to explain it to you, you’ll never know,” or words to that effect. That statement currently applies to today’s right wing assault on all forms of governing bodies. They really don’t “get it.” Getting it is something more than either knowing or understanding, which are purely intellectual concepts. Getting involves a visceral reaction as well. The great con man, Werner Erhard (nee Jackie Rosenberg, a Philadelphia used car salesman) used the term in his EST trainings in just that way. Erhard/Rosenberg would tell his assembled audiences not to question what he or his other trainers said. Instead, they were supposed to “get it.” The by-product of the EST training was for people to see things in a clear, unmuddled way.

The current breed of right wing politicians now in power have no desire or need to “get it.” They are ideologically controlled through the vast network of right wing think tanks and Chamber of Commerce money to think and act in lockstep to policies that were designed to completely dismantle all concepts of FDR’s New Deal, which raised the standard of living for everyone in this country, not just the rich. The New Deal provided for the proliferation of labor unions and afforded even the most disadvantaged among us the prospect of a dignified retirement. The New Deal made the Middle Class a working partner with the Owner/Managerial Class. The forces working against the New Deal are still out there and they have been working tirelessly since 1955 (Brown v Board of Ed.) on regaining the upper hand. Since Ronald Reagan’s ascendency they have made huge gains and in their thinking they’re on a roll and there’s no need to stop.

If you think that Scott Walker or any other Republican governor is worried about his poll numbers or that he may be recalled you can forget it. His future employment and income is assured. He’ll immediately become a corporate lobbyist or a fellow at one of the big think tanks, as will the minions of others who, lemming-like, follow in the same path. They care about their marching orders; they do not care one iota about their subjects …oops!…constituents. There are enough Democrats in Congress, as well as our President, who have bought into the “starve the beast” and “don’t tax the rich” philosophy (at least to some extent) just to keep their jobs that it is unconscionable to anyone with progressive leanings. These Democrats don’t “get it” either.

Unfortunately, here in Florida we have a situation where neither our governor nor our legislators can be recalled so, basically they can do what they want almost at will. The assault on teachers is in full swing and more is coming. No amount of protest will nullify that at the present time, yet elements in the state are beginning to organize and the future is nowhere near bleak. Awake the State and other similar organizations are going to the grass roots and a movement is starting to build. It will take time and lots of organization but there is a growing feeling of unrest in most neighborhoods and every one of these organizations is going to be converting that negative energy into positive action. When average citizens “get it” things will change.

How not to be part of the problem

The Irish philosopher Edmund Burke wrote “The only thing necessary for the triumph [of evil] is for good men to do nothing.”  Radio and TV host Thom Hartmann always closes his program with the words “Tag, you’re it!” Eldridge Cleaver in 1969 paraphrased an old African proverb, “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.” It’s a wakeup call for ordinary people to get involved. Theologian Martin Niemoller’s famous statement First They Came referred to the Nazi takeover in Germany and the lack of resistance to it. The idea is that you and I, ordinary everyday people need to unite together to reverse the current abuses heaped on us.  Write letters (not e-mails) in your own hand to your elected representatives outlining your dissatisfaction with their policies. Write letters to the editor. Support your local public schools in letters to the school board. Make it a point to attend at least one local rally supporting a good or protesting a bad government action. Go on line and read news and opinion from several sources. Get involved, get off the couch, DVR the “Real Housewives” and get to know your neighbors and their reactions to the issues. The walk will do you good. Attend a city or county commission meeting and see the craziness that happens there. Voting in a presidential election every four years is not enough. Floridians in general got the government they deserved because too few good people were involved or engaged. It’s not a matter of money; it’s a matter of too many good people doing nothing. Buy American when and where possible and look for the union label.

Florida needs to fight back

Here’s a novel idea, especially if you’re a teacher: If you graduated from a college or university outside Florida then contact your school president, dean of admissions and board of governors informing them of the current funding and legislative situations here. Plead with them nicely to not accept students from Florida public schools because, despite your best efforts, educational policies from the top down have severely restricted your students’ ability to do the required work at your alma mater and you have concerns that they would be inadequate. Make these institutions aware of the backward attitudes in this state. Here’s another: Rick Scott will produce zero meaningful jobs in Florida. One major global concern is starting its exodus out of the central part of the state because of the loss of high speed rail. One third of its workforce is being transferred to North Carolina almost immediately. Almost 1000 high paying executive and technical jobs will leave this local economy, and these people are going to have to sell their homes at much less value than they bought them for. Not good for local Florida businesses or property taxes. So, get in touch with Fortune’s list of 500 and get in touch with anyone whose stock is publicly traded. Write to their CEO’s, their board chairmen and their shareholders magazines and let them know what kind of a crook Rick Scott is. Cite his company’s Medicare fraud conviction and his taking the fifth an unprecedented number of times. Let them know that, contrary to his claims, Florida is not a place for them to do business. The dearth of real cultural and first class educational facilities, a non-existent public transit system, and a woefully undereducated work force would be contradictory to their expansion or relocation plans. The more people do this, the less these companies will be inclined to invest in Florida. Yes, it may hurt us a little economically, but…hey!…..we’re already hurt and we have been for twelve years, and we’ll remain this way until Rick Scott and the Republican legislature is gone. I’ll bet that at least half of the schools and executives you write to have no clue as to what’s going on in this state. They need to be awakened as well.

Getting it

We need to emphasize that since the election of Ronald Reagan people have been lied to for thirty years about the role of government and government workers in our society. It took thirty years to get this way and it will take a lot of time to reverse these lies and myths. Here are some pointers on how we can stop the lies and myths:

§  All governments, local, statewide and national exist to serve (not rule) their respective constituencies.

§  All people involved in government including our elected officials are public servants and ultimately answer to us.

§  Government is there to deal with quality of life issues that affect everyone, i.e. clean air, clean water, clean streets, education, health, law enforcement, fire protection and other things that within government’s realm.

§  All citizens are entitled to these basic services that we’ll call things of common interest.

§  These services are necessarily paid for by property taxes and service fees on a local level, sales taxes at the state level and income taxes on a national level. In a county the size of Orange it takes a lot of people to serve the public and give them the services they demand. Quality of life necessities must not be regarded as free market commodities.

§  Public employees at local levels are paid less than their private sector counterparts. Their pensions and benefits were negotiated as a part of their total compensation package, in lieu of salary, based on previous property tax valuations.

§   Local and state non-elected public employees were in no way responsible for the economic collapse and are in no way responsible for any economic shortfalls. The fault lies with legislative policies which neither adequately nor properly address our society’s obligation

§  Cutting taxes for people who can well afford to pay them and cutting services for people who rely on them is today’s equivalent of ancient and medieval “Bloodletting.”

§  Eliminating public sector jobs and services in order to balance the budget will just further depress meaningful economic recovery.

§  Governments are supposed to serve us, not make a profit on us. If government is not serving us properly, it is our responsibility to do something about it.

§  Public School Teachers are well trained, highly regarded professionals, to whom we as a society have entrusted our children’s futures. They deserve our admiration and respect.

The assault on our public education system is especially troubling and is going to require a lot more work to reverse the damage, but if we don’t get teachers fired up to defend themselves and if we don’t get parents and guardians to see the harm that’s being done to their children it will cost us dearly. Got it? If not, you’d better “Get it.”

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Education, Political

The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of

March 16, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

 

“To see you through
Till you’re everything you want to be

It can’t be true, but
This time the dream’s on me”

 

Search the song catalogs from ASCAP or BMI and you’ll probably find thousands with the word dream, or it’s plural in the title and in the song itself. It can be used as a noun or a verb or an adjective or even an adverb. It’s a great word for emphasis and has a certain rhyme quality with scheme (I Can’t Get Started), supreme, beam, gleam, steam, seem, cream and team. Probably every song writer has used it more times than they care to count. Why not? The dictionary provides a plethora of uses and moods for the word, ranging from hope and desire to hallucinate and nightmare. We all love to dream in one way or other. The 1941 Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer song cited above depicted the hopes and dreams of a band of travelling musicians, living in boxcars, in the movie, Blues in the Night, just looking to be seen as respectable. Dreams provide a release from some of the reality we face. I’ll wager that if I took the time I could take a line from song A and a phrase from song B and mix and match lines, word and phrases from all of the available material in songs C,D…………ad infinitum that I could write a convincing article or story. In my piano playing days I could easily play four or five sets a night for a solid week without ever repeating a title that had the word in it.

 

Dreams keep hope alive. Dreams themselves are not important-the subjects of them are. Cervantes chased the impossible dream knowing full well that he would never see it through to fruition, however it gave him his reason d’ etre. Four words spoken by Martin Luther King inspired a nation. Late 19th Century industrial empires were envisioned by dreamers and built on the toil of everyday labor. European immigration was fostered by the dream of “Streets paved with gold” in the land of opportunity, which is still the reason people come here. It also saw the dreams of labor leaders like Samuel Gompers start to grow. By the early 20th Century labor was becoming firmly established in the industrial and transportation trades with leaders like John L Lewis and A Philip Randolph and their followers fulfilling their dreams. On March 25, 1911 146 young women had their dreams cut short in a devastating fire at the Triangle Shirwaist factory that exposed horrendous sweat shop conditions in the New York Garment Industry. That tragedy gave rise to the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and many of the social reforms in New York.  Upton Sinclair’s Novel, The Jungle, caused a sensation in 1906 by exposing the horrid working conditions in Chicago’s stockyards. It took nearly 30 years before the residents of the neighborhood were organized by Saul Alinsky to actually clean them up. In short, all of these people were chasing what we call “The American Dream.” America’s labor movement helped millions of them achieve it.

 

The dream may yet be alive today but the opportunities to achieve it are less and less. Under the sponsorship of Moveon.org a series of national rallies called Defending the Dream were staged all over the country on March 15 in order to keep the dream alive for average working people, you know, the middle class. In Orlando, Moveon.org council member Falcon Taylor got the word out and assembled scores of people to demonstrate in Lake Eola Park. Many people were there to support Wisconsin and protest against the war on the middle class.

 

Falcon Taylor opened the rally by requesting a moment of silence for the victims of the earthquake in Japan and then outlined all of the issues which the group was fighting for. Mary Burnette, a retired teacher extolled the intrinsic value of teachers and all public sector employees which is being ignored by the Florida Legislature in favor of budget cutting. The crowd showed its enthusiasm chanting

“The people, united, will never be divided!” Sue Casterline spoke about the disparity of wealth between the 400 people who have as much wealth as half the population of the country combined. Patty Duffy, a physical therapist who treats elderly patients, works hard to get funding for them, yet meets resistance from the authorities. She pleaded with the crowd to attend ever rally and grow in numbers. Special guest speaker, former Congressman Alan Grayson responding to the chant, “Don’t cut teachers, don’t cut cops, collect the taxes from the top!” said that we owe something to our teachers, police, fire fighters, hospital workers and other public servants and that we need to fight for those jobs and benefits.

 

There was a short strategy discussion on how to deal with conservative legislators before the last speaker, Shayan Elahi, who came here 21 years ago from Pakistan, spoke about the opportunities that still exist here, excoriating the Republicans for creating our bad economy over the decade they have been in charge in Florida. There will be future gatherings and the crowds are expected to grow.

 

Florida is in the awakening stages. Last week’s Awake the State rallies are just the beginning. People here have not completely shaken the cobwebs off and have not yet gotten the sleep out of their eyes, but the movement is growing, as it is in other states being shown the way by the crowds in Wisconsin. One thing is for sure, no one at the Lake Eola rally was wishing Rick Scott pleasant dreams, unless they include a visit from Freddy Krueger.

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Filed Under: Political

The Awakening

March 10, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

 

There’s something different happening in the State of Florida, something unique. After almost thirteen years of Republican rule (certainly not governance) ordinary Floridians, you know, the people that our governors and legislators refer to as “The taxpayers” that they claim to represent are beginning to awaken from their corporately induced stupor to the realization that something is very wrong in this state. After Rick Scott’s inauguration (for which he invested $73,000,000.00 in his election) groups like Progress Florida, Florida Watch Action and America votes (just to name a few) started up a Facebook page called Awake the State which quickly grew in large numbers to people across the state. If Rick Scott invested that kind of money in his election, it’s because as a CEO he expects a good return on his investment. He doesn’t give a damn about ordinary people-only what their tax money can do for him. Anyone want to bet that Scott leaves office at least $100,000,000.00 richer than the day he took the oath? That’s what CEOs care about.

A March 8 date was set for rallies throughout the state to protest Rick Scott’s and his veto proof majority’s budget cutting agenda. On their Facebook pages there were over 30 rallies scheduled and probably a few more that did not make the pages. Reports of large crowds started to filter in from across the state, not just in the major cities but in the outlying and rural districts as well. The message was clear:  “Your actions are hurting all but the wealthiest Floridians.  We deserve better”! Reports of 100 or 200 and more people came from counties not necessarily known for their progressive views. Osceola County reported a crowd of over 120 people which is a huge number. In perspective that’s like filling the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day. The health care rallies of 2009 paled by comparison. In Orlando there was definitely a shift in the atmosphere. There was something real, something palpable and visceral about what was happening. It evoked memories from the first season of Miami Vice, with Don Johnson tearing through the Miami streets in his replica Ferrari Daytona Spyder 365 GTS with Phil Collins’s mysterioso hit In the Air Tonight playing as background music.

The Orlando rally was organized early on and a crowd of over 300 marchers started out at 4:30 PM from the IBEW hall and marched to the Orlando Chamber of Commerce, about a mile away. There was a crowd of at least 200 waiting for them when they arrived led by bagpipers to the tune of God Bless America. By the time the rally was in full swing there were well over 600 people taking part; ordinary people from all walks of life, not just public employees but small merchants, lawyers, doctors, regular working people, or, again, as our politicians like to call them, “The Taxpayers,” the people they claim to represent.  The Orlando sentinel actually covered the event and gave it a small amount of front page space, which is more than they did for what is going on in Wisconsin. Sentinel political columnist Scott Maxwell (of Jeopardy fame) wrote favorably on the rally in his Wednesday column in section B.

Denise Diaz of Jobs With Justice acted as host for the event, introducing several speakers, including ex congressman from Orlando, Alan Grayson, who said that Florida is going to look more like Somalia than a state in our union. Grayson was well received with huge cheers by the crowd before, during and after his speech. Isabel Chipungu, a teacher at Ocoee Elementary school and an avowed conservative gave an impassioned speech defending teachers. Wayne Bernoska, an Orlando fire fighter/paramedic spoke solidly in favor of standing up to Republican politicians. Adding a little humor to the proceedings Bernoska added that the Tea Party rally in Tallahassee was rained on and they blamed all of the assembled for it. Gracie Fowler, a young single mother who is graduating college this year spoke up about the much needed public parks for her children to play in. Host Diaz agreed citing that the Chamber of Commerce, which pays no taxes, has a nice clean well maintained park next door, yet the neighborhoods where people do pay taxes have poorly maintained parks, some of which may close due to budget cuts. By far, the most dramatic speaker was Antonio Austin who is severely handicapped. This is not an easy video to watch, but it is extremely rewarding to hear Austin’s struggle to lead a normal life. Budget cuts would severely limit his ability to function.

The rally broke up around 6:30 PM and everyone left in an orderly fashion. Most of the union heads attending stated that this is only the first of many demonstrations throughout the state. The next big demonstration planned is for April 7. Several community activists in attendance said that there is a real charged energy in the air that they haven’t felt since the 2008 election.  The key to success is to keep that energy going. After all, “The Taxpayers” deserve nothing less. On March 8 the people started to wake up. Let’s see what happens when they’re fully awake.

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Filed Under: Political

“This is Only the Beginning”

March 8, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

 

 

At 5:15 PM on March 7 the Orange County Florida CTA president, Mike Cahill opened his hastily put together rally with those words, referring to the Florida Legislature opening session on March 8. Today’s rally was a precursor to a statewide “Awake The State” series of demonstrations taking place that day to protest the Legislature’s and Governor Rick Scott’s draconian budget measures for the next fiscal year. Today’s rally at CTA’s headquarters was strictly about the difficulties that teachers and their unions all over the state will face.

“They told us that this was about the children yet they cut $700.00 per child out of the budget for this year” said Cahill. He added that Florida teachers on average are paid $9000.00 less than the national average. “They’re going the wrong way!” Cahill concluded with a call for everyone to support the Wisconsin unions and 14 senators who are challenging the governor and legislature in that state.

Other speakers included Grace Cabrera who told the crowd “We proved them wrong on SB 6 last year and we must do it again” referring to Governor Crist’s veto of last year’s controversial teacher evaluation bill. Crist vetoed the bill after pressure from both teacher and community groups. Barbara Wright stressed the point that testing is not teaching and that students need caring qualified teachers to help them achieve their maximum potential, and that legislators in Tallahassee are far more responsible for student failures than teachers are. Referring to SB 736, this year’s version of SB 6 Wright said “What they call their staff research is pure propaganda”.

Legislators were challenged by Jennifer Summers to spend one week in a classroom to see what teachers are up against. She surmised that none of them could handle it, yet they want to control what teachers do. Retired teacher Ulysses Floyd wondered if these legislators were paying any attention when they were students in his and other retired teachers’ classes. “What did we do wrong?” he said, referring to their complete lack of understanding of what schools need.

Chris Shirk cited a recent Vanderbilt University study among others that show merit pay for teachers just doesn’t work even when the stakes are as high as $15,000.00 per teacher, yet these studies are disregarded in the legislature. She also cited USDE statistics that show no changes in student gains because of testing, but the legislature pays no attention. CTA VP Diana Moore explained that teacher pensions are actually deferred compensation for work that has already been performed in lieu of salary. Elton Wright brought the crowd to its feet by citing the phrase “more perfect union” from the preamble to the US Constitution, by asking legislators “Why are you trying to tear down this union?”

Tomorrow the CTA will be one of many Central Florida unions that will be demonstrating their solidarity at the Awake the State rally at the Orlando Chamber of Commerce in Senator Beth Johnson Park 59 South Ivanhoe Blvd. The rally begins at 5:30 PM.

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Filed Under: Political

WHERE’S OUR A-TEAM?

March 3, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

“Nah, he’s a toon. You can drop anything you want on his head, he’ll shake it off.”

Those were the words spoken by R.K. Maroon, the studio head in Who Framed Roger Rabbit.? This is exactly the feeling I’m getting, not just from the goings on in Wisconsin, but in too many states where the same mantra is being played out by Republicans as well as in the U.S. House of Representatives. I feel we’re living in a cartoon world where you can substitute people like Scott Walker or Chris Christie for Judge Doom using funding and weapons from The Koch Brothers (Substitutes for Marvin Acme) to get rid of the toons and Toon Town for their own greedy purposes.

What has been happening is that ordinary citizens have been getting together to push back on these villainous types, but they are resilient and they never stop coming back at you. We need a bunch of our own rapid response people to meet these challenges.  Let’s go back to that old 1980’s TV series The A-Team, basically a live action cartoon, which in its first season was loads of fun to watch. They were four renegade former military special ops misfits with various and sundry skills who are pitted against the bad guys at least twice in each episode.  In their first encounter they completely defeat the half dozen or so bad guys with a force that would at least break bones or cause concussions. Cars and buildings blow up and all sorts of mayhem happens, yet fifteen minutes later they’re at it again sans bruises or bandages. More mayhem and at the end of each episode the bad guys and their bosses are sent off to jail, at least until the next episode begins.

This is a formula which has worked well for at least a thousand years. The whole Robin Hood legend is a fiction that was generated during the reign of Richard the Lion Hearted. Richard himself was a valiant warrior who spent hardly any time in England and actually spoke very little English. Every society had their legends as well. Cervantes publication of Don Quixote was a push back against governmental abuse, and of course in Mexico and Southern California we have the still popular legend of Zorro. In the twentieth century popular newspaper serial cartoons featuring Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon eventually became movie serials. Rogers and Gordon were constantly fighting Killer Kane and Ming the Merciless whose sole aims were galaxy and universal domination. Let’s not forget that the nineteenth century detective Sherlock Holmes was always struggling to defeat his arch nemesis Professor Moriarty.

Cartoons and the cartoon mentality have become part of our culture. Who can forget the newsreel photos of Mayor LaGuardia reading the comic pages to New York’s children during the 1945 newspaper strike? My generation grew up on them. In Philadelphia back in the 1950’s when we went to the Saturday matinees our heroes were (in no particular order) Popeye, Woody Woodpecker, Mighty Mouse, Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Daffy Duck, Tweety Bird, Road Runner  and lots of others. They also had their nemeses (again in no particular order) Bluto (also known as Brutus), Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Marvin the Martian, Black Pete, Sylvester the cat, Wile E. Coyote et al. Each week one of these characters would be facing their arch foe and would narrowly pluck out a victory after some very frantic and violent escapades in which the villain gets clobbered by dynamite or an anvil or falling off a cliff, yet in the next frame they’re back at their pursuits. Those cartoons are still running on cable television. The local CBS affiliate featured a puppet named Willie the Worm who featured Farmer Alfalfa and Toonerville Trolley cartoons from the silent era with Willie’s narration. The local NBC affiliate had a commercial artist named “Chuckwagon” Pete (father of actor Peter Boyle) who introduced us to cartoons as well as Hopalong Cassidy, John Wayne, Hoot Gibson, Tom Mix and Bob Steele westerns on Frontier Playhouse. Those westerns were basically live action cartoon variations on the Robin Hood legend. In the mid fifties we were introduced to the Mouseketeers. Warner Bros and Walter Lantz quickly followed suit with shows of their own.

In 1957 Hanna Barbera introduced Huckleberry Hound and a whole host of characters including Yogi Bear. Most of the character voices and actions lampooned personalities of the day. Jay Ward took it a step further in 1959 when he introduced Rocket J Squirrel and Bullwinkle the Moose who caused a sensation fighting the evil Boris Badenov, Natasha and Fearless Leader. Ward added satire to the mix which came at the height of the Cold War. He also introduced Mr. Peabody and his boy, Sherman, Dudley Do Right, George of the Jungle and reinvigorated Edward Everett Horton’s career. Hanna Barbera quickly responded with two satiric series of their own: The Flintstones and The Jetsons. Cartoon characters were used in many commercials, notably Bert and Harry Piel for Piel’s Beer.  You have to go some to remember Crusader Rabbit and his companion, Rags the Tiger, or Johnny Quest, but they were all part of our growing up. In the 60’s Japanese animation brought us Speed Racer, Astro Boy and Gigantor. Who can forget Josie and the Pussycats or Scooby-Doo? William Windom starred in a series called My World and Welcome to it based on the stories and cartoons of James Thurber. Many people today still buy newspapers mainly for the comic section. God forbid they should miss reading Doonesbury or Dilbert or Blondie or Beetle Bailey. Even eleven years after his death Charles Schulz Peanuts is still a highly popular comic strip. Lest we forget, I haven’t even mentioned Dr. Seuss and his impact on children, or any of Walt Disney’s animated full length movies, which my three year old granddaughter adores. Superman, Batman, Green Hornet, Wonder Woman, Spider Man and The Hulk had their own series on TV. Superman, Batman, and Spiderman became movie franchises along with scores of other superheroes that got their start on the comic pages of newspapers or in comic books. When we became adults we never quite gave up the altruistic goodness of our heroes, nor the dastardly deeds of their arch foes. So, it might be a good exercise to view today’s politicians through a cartoon character’s lens.

Just imagine that today’s generic Republican politician is a combination of Snidely Whiplash, The Brain and Judge Doom. Compare that to the generic Democratic mix of Dudley Do Right and Ferdinand the Bull. Outrageous?  I don’t think so. Just take a look at today’s senators and reps and see for yourselves. We know what the Republicans are about, but what are the Democrats about? It’s okay to be well intentioned but it is NOT okay to be inept and impotent in the way you handle it, which is why the Democrats took such a bad beating in November. Our A Team needs to be Bugs Bunny to their Elmer Fudd, Popeye to their Bluto or Rocky to their Boris. The people of Wisconsin need our A Team more than ever in their valiant fight to beat back the regressive forces of Snidely Whiplash and company. This is not a time to shy away from the fight because they are not going to stop. After all, they’re drawn that way (I’m sorry. I couldn’t resist it.) There is no choice here-we either beat them or we get The Dip.

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Things Go Bitter with Koch

February 26, 2011 by Jerry Waxman 1 Comment

By Jerry Waxman

The real drama being played out in Wisconsin and Indiana, and several states to come has been in the planning stages for decades. As long as the economy had the illusion of being healthy and politics had not yet degenerated to the radical ends it now occupies, we were not aware of it being more than just a loony fringe faction. FDR had the luxury that President Obama has never enjoyed; he had more than three years of the Great Depression to welcome him into the White House, which made passage of his economic reforms easier in a country in much more desperate shape. Many of those reforms formed the safety net we still enjoy that kept us from similar devastation. That era also marked the rise of the labor unions and the Great American Middle Class.

Many wealthy and powerful people tried to overthrow the Roosevelt Administration, Including Prescott Bush (father of GHWB and Grandfather of GWB), the Du Ponts and others. It is possible that they could have succeeded but their plans were thwarted by Marine Corps General Smedley Butler who had actually been approached to lead the rebellion. Butler blew the whistle and took a lot of ridicule for it, yet a congressional committee accepted Butler’s report and claimed the charges to be accurate however, no action was ever taken.

World War II brought almost full employment either in uniform or in defense plants and after the war the greatest period of expansion and prosperity in American history went forward well into the 1980’s. People like the Du Pont and Bush families were always against New Deal Politics and never forgot what happened in 1934, and along the way gathered other wealthy and powerful allies. The conservatives in congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act in 1947 (over President Truman’s veto) which limited the unions’ striking power. The first signs of social unrest happened with Earl Warren’s appointment to the Supreme Court as Chief Justice. President Eisenhower appointed him in 1953 and shortly afterward the Warren Court handed down a series of progressive decisions that no one expected from Earl Warren. Most notable was the groundbreaking Brown v Board of Education in 1954 which ended segregation in the public schools, but was also the launching pad for the ultra conservative movement.

Within one year Professor Milton Friedman of the University of Chicago was not only espousing his supply side economic theories, he was also advocating school choice and school vouchers. Historically, the John Birch Society was founded in 1958, but founder Robert Welch and another founding member, Fred Koch had been fighting against the kind of social justice and commercial regulation that was happening in this country as we enjoyed our great prosperity. Once the John Birch Society was formed it immediately went to work against our participation in the UN, fighting communism, working against civil rights as well as asking the congress to impeach Earl Warren. Both Welch and Koch were successful businessmen with highly conservative views. Welch made his money in the candy business, his greatest marketing success being the “Sugar Daddy”. Koch was a chemical engineer who had the entrepreneurial spirit to build his own refineries. Because of certain domestic conflicts Koch decided to work in Russia and several other countries during the 1930’s. When he returned to the US his company finally became Koch Industries.  His experiences with Russia and Stalin made him a staunch anti-communist.

The John Birch Society was considered way too radical for mainstream Republicans of the time, and they were denounced regularly by top conservatives led by William Buckley. They worked mainly under the radar for many years but the next opportunity came in 1964 when Barry Goldwater’s “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice” speech gave them the impetus to set up a framework for establishing “Think Tanks” which would foster the conservative point of view to a place of prominence. These men had the money and the resolve and the patience necessary to grow the movement, in small incremental steps. Along the way they picked up other allies like Richard Mellon Scaife and Joe Coors who likewise funded their share of conservative think tanks. At this point in history David Koch became president of Koch Industries following the retirement of his father in 1966. Koch and his brother Charles were raised on the principles which they still espouse.

Add to this mixture a Virginia tobacco lawyer named Lewis Powell. Although he personally was not involved in Brown v Board of Education, his firm represented some Virginia districts that came under the umbrella of the Brown case. Being essentially a tobacco lobbyist Powell was very familiar with the workings of the legal system dealing with governments and their regulating agencies. Two months prior to Richard Nixon nominating him to the Supreme Court in 1971 he issued what has become known as the “Powell Memorandum” (also known as the Powell Manifesto) which is the founding document for the current conservative movement, to the US Chamber of Commerce. The Memorandum attacked recent government regulations and showed how to lobby against them. It called for corporations to get active politically to fight for lower taxes, less regulation as well as attacking public education and union involvement in politics. The Powell memorandum showed the Chamber what steps it could take in shaping public opinion.

It didn’t happen overnight, but by 1980 all the elements were in place for Ronald Reagan’s election to the presidency. Many of Milton Friedman’s radical economic policies were starting to take hold. Jimmy Carter gave the impression of being weak and the Iranian hostage crisis was not going well. It was Carter’s undoing. Once Reagan became president he started putting much of Powell’s suggestions to work, as well as giving Friedman’s destructive policies legitimacy. Reagan, citing Carter’s weaker points drove home the idea that Government was too big and didn’t work well. The statements were untrue but Reagan framed his argument well and nobody on the left did anything serious to challenge him.

Reagan had had a checkered career, actually starting out as a staunch supporter of FDR and the New Deal. That started to change, however, after WW II and especially after his being elected as president of the Screen Actors Guild. Lew Wasserman, president of MCA and Hollywood’s biggest power broker, saw something in Reagan other than his mediocre acting talents because he became Reagan’s personal agent and kept him alive during his declining acting years. Wasserman basically engineered the SAG election because he needed a compliant accomplice in building his entertainment empire. During the Red Scare Reagan testified in front of HUAC, named names and as SAG president never lifted a finger to defend any of his members. He also as president of SAG sold out his members on several occasions, most notably the “Great Giveaway” which denied residuals to actors on any films produced before 1960. Reagan also sold out his union when AFTRA was formed resulting in a much weaker union, a real benefit to MCA which owned Revue Productions, a major TV producer of series and sitcoms. Wasserman rewarded him by making him host of The General Electric Theater at a base salary of $125,000.00 per year plus other perks. During his tenure as SAG president he bent and stretched the rules blatantly in favor of his corporate masters. Sag was named a co-conspirator in the 1962 Justice Dept investigation of MCA due to Reagan’s rules violations.  When the Federal Government forced the MCA breakup Reagan avoided prosecution as part of the deal, but the experience changed him to become a small government Republican, mentored by ex MCA and GE executives. Reagan’s complete capitulation to Wasserman served him well in his political career and helped him win his bid for Governor of California in 1966. Once he became president it was time for his real trickery. By now all of the right wing think tankers and funders had gotten his ear and he took full advantage of it. The time line between the relative wealth of the middle class now and then starts with his election. His firing of the PATCO air traffic controllers set the stage for the coming assault on unions over the next 30 years.

If you check the rise of the corporate oligarchy in this country this is where it also begins. In the 1970’s and early 1980’s there was still a vibrant textile and garment industry in this country. Garment manufacturers were major employers in the large cities and since the Triangle Fire in 1911 they were for the most part unionized by either the Amalgamated Clothing Workers or the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. In cities like Philadelphia the garment industry was the second largest employer in the city. As manufacturers looked for cheaper labor they moved south taking advantage of local communities tax breaks. The unions followed and there was a large participation although not as complete as in the north. For many years ownership management and labor got along, working out their problems together. The proliferation of the automobile fostered the UAW and as an off-shoot the Teamsters. The Longshoremen, Steelworkers Railroad Workers and lots of other unions proliferated. Of course, there were also problems with certain unions and their organized crime affiliations. Jimmy Hoffa became a household name as a symbol of union corruption. The United Mine Workers were also plagued with corruption. United Mine Workers President, W.A.”Tony” Boyle, was eventually convicted of the 1969 murder of his arch rival Jock Yablonski and his wife and daughter during a bitter campaign. For all the good the UMW did in its history this was a terrible black mark. Union membership is at an all time low because of all the job losses in these industries due to the lack of an industrial base. Careers that used to be in this country are now in emerging third world countries, careers that used to raise families here.

Public employee unions gained prominence starting in the late 50’s when Mayor Wagner of New York allowed them to organize. JFK expanded that to federal employees and today public employee unions outnumber their private counterparts. Conservatives in general would love to see the end of unions altogether but specifically the end of public employee unions. Their arguments always state that government can’t afford them and it is always about the money they cost. That doesn’t make a lot of sense, since all unions ask for is a negotiated fair share. Unions have no say in any management decisions. They do not create or implement policy. Basically public employee union members do what they are told to do. In many cases they sacrifice money that they could make in the private sector for the job and pension security of working for the people. Retirement pension is actually deferred compensation for that which they have already earned. If there is a financial crisis it was caused by their employers, the politicians who passed bad financial laws, or didn’t invest in infrastructure, or used public money to finance private sports complexes, or lowered taxes on people who don’t deserve those breaks, or put us into two financially draining meaningless wars, or didn’t prosecute Wall Street thieves, etc….etc…..etc. Another bad argument is that public unions are unnecessary since those employees work for the public. They may be public employees, but so are their bosses and elected officials who in an ideal world may treat them fairly, but this is not an ideal world. Who protects a teacher from a bad principal or school administrator? Who protects any employee from unfair discrimination by a superior?  No one in that chain of command would dare. Only a union can protect a rank and file employee from administrative abuse.

So, this brings us to the present. The title of this essay is actually a pun of the very successful 1963 slogan for Coca Cola. When we refer to the Kochs from here on we’re referring to all the conservative billionaires (including Rupert Murdoch) the same way we would refer to Kleenex as all tissues. We’re all well aware that the purpose of Scott Walker’s initiative is to break the power of and neutralize public employee unions, and that this would also be the beginning of the end of any union’s ability to spend money on Democratic candidates. It would also allow the systematic rape of the state’s assets for the benefit of people like the Kochs, who could purchase at bargain prices any utility and charge dearly for the service.The kind of money that the Kochs have through their various PACs, foundations and such is so enormous that there’s no way the average citizen or combined strength of all the unions can come even close, so how do we counter?

It is happening in Madison right now. It’s not an infection; it’s a spirit and it needs to embrace every one of us. If we all don’t stand up for Wisconsin’s brave senators and public employees now there may never be another time. Pastor Martin Niemoller spoke of it in his famous “First They Came” statement about Nazi Germany where because he failed to act and speak out about the persecution of Communists, Trade Unionists and Jews there was no one left to speak out when they came for him. This is the time to break Scott Walker and absolutely no mercy should be shown. The twelve senators, whom Walker is vilifying for not doing their jobs, are doing precisely that. They owe him nothing. They represent constituents in their individual districts who so far have supported them. They must stand firm and not give an inch and we must support them in this.

Another way to support them is to boycott any products made by Georgia Pacific, a flagship industry of Koch Industries. GP markets paper products in every supermarket under brands Brawny, Angel Soft, Quilted Northern, Dixie Cups, Sparkle, Vanity Fair and Mardi Gras. GP papers are in ever office supply store, but there are other brands you can buy. At Home Depot and Lowe’s GP is a major supplier of plywoods, but you can tell the store managers that you would prefer someone else’s products. If we do that with enough supermarkets and home improvement stores they might make some changes. We can’t possibly put GP out of business but it is one way we can voice our displeasure, and if enough of us do it their P&L statements will reflect that.

We must be as staunch and resolute in our opposition to these policies, to these tactics and strategies as they are in promoting them. There are many millions of us against relatively few of them. If we stand together and back the people of Wisconsin we will win this first battle in breaking the power of their money. There will be other battles in other states and we must be ready to fight them, but if we beat them in Wisconsin we’ll win everywhere. If there is to be a bitter pill to be taken, then it’s time for the Kochs to take it.

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Remembering Important Lessons From Our Teachers

January 5, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By

Jerry Waxman

It’s funny how some people can impact your life in incalculable ways. In 1993 I was stage managing, musical directing and rehearsing my friends, Roger, a good actor and promising playwright who can’t sing a note, and Ellen, a terrific actress who can sing well but doesn’t think she can, for a duet in the Neil Simon adaptation of Chekov’s “The Good Doctor”.  I wrote out Roger’s melody along with accompanying left hand chords and tempos so he could practice at home with his own piano. He was too terrified. In desperation I finally had the two of them speak the lines in rhythmic tempo and underscored the music in the background. Roger did tell me, however, that his piano teacher was very impressed with my use of chord structure, syncopation and counterpoint. This was flattering but my intention was not to impress his piano teacher; it was to help Roger sing the song. At some point during the two week rehearsal process Roger told me that his favorite piano player was Billy Taylor, and then it all clicked.

Billy Taylor has been in my life since the first time I heard him in 1954. He is one of the most honored and respected musical artists of the last 60 years having attained a degree of accomplishment that is staggering in scope. The newspaper obituaries have covered his career, his educational initiatives, his Kennedy Center triumphs, his innovative Jazzmobile in New York and his entrepreneurship with radio and television broadcasting. What I didn’t get from them was a sense of the man’s music. When he arrived in New York in 1944 within two weeks he was playing with Ben Webster. From that point he continually went forward and never looked back.  He spoke at length about being mentored by the legendary Art Tatum which had to be the greatest honor ever bestowed on any modern pianist. Legend has it that of all of Tatum’s heirs apparent he favored Taylor the most and handed him his mantle upon his death in 1956.

In the early 50’s there were a lot of excellent people playing great piano. Tatum was at the height of his powers. Nat King Cole, a stalwart of the piano in the 40’s, branched out into popular vocal music. John Lewis teamed up with Milt Jackson to form the Modern Jazz Quartet. Bud Powell moved to Europe. Duke Jordan, Al Haig and Dodo Marmarosa were fixtures in the Bebop movement. Gil Evans was hard at work creating Miles Davis. Dave Brubeck was touring every college in the US.  Erroll Garner’s and Oscar Peterson’s careers were taking off skyward.  Marian McPartland, ensconced at the Hickory House, Dorothy Donegan, Blossom Dearie and Hazel Scott were all following their career paths, trail blazed by the formidable Mary Lou Williams. George Shearing was turning out hit after hit. Lennie Tristano, Ahmad Jamal and Bernard Peiffer were creating a sensation with their own new ideas. Russ Freeman was tearing up the West Coast with Chet Baker.  Bill Evans, Ellis Marsalis, Dave Frishberg, Phineas Newborn Jr., Hampton Hawes and Randy Weston were just coming on the scene. Teddy Wilson and Earl Hines continued their brand of swing piano. Thelonius Monk was…….Thelonius Monk. Ray Bryant, Horace Silver and Bobby Timmons were making big names for themselves and Hank Jones, Tommy Flanagan and Red Garland were the best sidemen in the business. When they visited Birdland, Billy Taylor was the house pianist. Charlie Parker asked him to fill in for the ailing Al Haig in 1949 and after that gig he began a two year stint playing with and for all the great names

In an almost seventy year career he continued to record scores of albums, do concert dates, teach, advocate and innovate well into the just departed decade. He never looked, acted or sounded his age and he constantly grew as an artist. He was timeless and ageless. There are three levels to his playing that are important to note. First is his ability to please your ear. He always sounds good. Second is his virtuosity. He makes it look and sound easy no matter how complex. Third is his innovative drive. He makes you take the journey with him, from start to finish with no predictable outcome. This is best exemplified by his 1957 recording of Harry Warren’s “There Will Never be Another You”, a standard ballad from the 1942 film “Iceland” that John Payne sang to Sonja Henie.

The piece is constructed in a much faster tempo than written and Taylor opens with a hard two handed approach with left-handed harmonics similar to Bud Powell’s driving style. Throughout the eight choruses he never once repeats any idea other than a one note ascension that becomes a three note harmonic ascension. Each idea is new and different and culminates in chorus seven with a completely independent left hand counterpoint melody worthy of Glenn Gould or Oscar Levant. Chorus eight starts out in locked hand chords and then swings its way to an almost classical finish.  It’s a really incredible journey.

His 1967 album “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free” contains his hit composition of the same name as well as the finest piano version of Clare Fischer’s beautiful “Pensativa”  that I’ve ever heard, weaving in an intoxicating blues coda as counter to a seductive bossa nova beat.  Again, he takes us on a remarkable journey.

Obviously he learned his lessons well, and he imparted his knowledge to us through his playing. I remember trying to get WLIB on my radio when he was on the air even though we had a great 24 hour jazz station (WHAT FM) in Philadelphia. The difference was that Taylor approached his audience as eager dedicated students and not mere listeners.

So, Roger’s remark reminded me of how Billy Taylor impacted me. The music I wrote for Roger had been subliminally influenced by that left-handed counterpoint.

Barely a week before Taylor’s death Central Florida lost another fabulous player, composer and educator, Harold Blanchard. As a player Blanchard was world class. His many compositions won coveted awards and he was one of the few people in modern music to meld the disciplines between jazz, the blues and classical music. His greatest virtue was as a teacher and mentor to young musicians. I once watched him teaching an improvisational class in deconstructing Jerome Kern’s “All the Things You Are” to its basics so  there could be room for the musicians to take different directions with it. It was the same process that I had used to teach the same song to my daughter, Nancy over twenty years ago, a process that I learned from Billy Taylor.

The modern music world lost giants in 2010. In addition to Billy Taylor and Harold Blanchard we lost Hank Jones, James Moody, Buddy Collette, John Bunch and scores of others who will be difficult to replace. All of them were supreme musicians as well as educators and mentors to untold hundreds if not thousands of musical students. Thankfully, we still have elder statesmen like Marian McPartland, Dave Brubeck, George Shearing, Ellis Marsalis, Mc Coy Tyner, Randy Weston, Ramsey Lewis and others who are still active and productive, as well as their musical legacies: Monty Alexander, Kenny Barron, Herbie Hancock, Mulgrew Miller, Keith Jarrett, Bill Charlap, the incredible newcomer, Ehud Asherie and many others who will pick up the mantle and do it justice.

The one thing that conjoins the arts and science is the imagination. Albert Einstein once famously said that imagination is more important than knowledge. It’s the one thing that separates artists and real scientists from being only technicians. All educators, administrators and politicians responsible for the success or failure of our public schools need to understand the value of an arts and science education. That education stimulates the mind and imagination and increases the learning potential of young students more than any other tool we have, yet it is given short shrift by those who fund our schools. That attitude is wrong and no amount of “accountability” or testing is going to make the situation any better. Every one of the musicians I’ve cited here was driven by their imagination. It is what made them who they are. It is what compelled them to practice untold hours to achieve what they thought was possible. It is that inner ear or eye that tells you what is possible.

As I’m writing this I hear Billy Taylor’s voice on the radio in a public service announcement extolling the virtues of music education. It is a message we all need to listen to.

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The Silly Season

August 11, 2010 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By

Jerry Waxman

 

 

Jeff                 “I’ve made a haul in all the mortgage rackets, from which rip-roaring rich I happen to be.

                        I’ll create jobs in all the income brackets. Vote for me, vote for me, vote for me…….”

 

Marco             “My purse has yet to know a silver lining. My credit card will fix that just wait and see.

                        I’m in foreclosure but I’ll not be whining. Vote for me, vote for me, vote for me…….”

 

Charlie           “A mediocre white haired politician, with no distinguished record for you to see.

                        My marriage gave a goose to my position. Vote for me, vote for me, vote for me….”

I can’t help it. Cole Porter’s wickedly witty Tom, Dick and Harry from his musical, Kiss Me Kate, always comes to mind when The Silly Season takes over and candidates come a’ courting. On any given day candidates are appearing at Hob Nobs, PAC meetings, religious services Chamber of Commerce events, homeowner associations and professional association meetings. They are hosting fund raising parties in local restaurants, bowling alleys, house parties and charter boats. Some run legitimate campaigns and some become more outrageous with each new day. I call it The Silly Season but it is dead serious business, and the future of Florida lies in the balance.

There’s no sillier matchup in the Governor’s race than the one between Bill McCollum and Rick Scott to see who can be more macho. Neither of them have a stellar record to run on. Scott is a member of that new political phenomenon of super wealthy individuals who think they know how to run the government because they achieved a measure of success in business. McCollum made his reputation by exploiting wedge and divisive issues without tackling any of Florida’s real problems. McCollum is a known political quantity and Scott isn’t, however Scott’s company and several of his executives were prosecuted in the largest Medicare fraud ever. Scott wasn’t implicated, but you have to wonder that as CEO if a fraud that large escaped his attention how is he ever going to handle that Tallahassee mob? Why should the public trust a guy who didn’t know what was going on in his own company?

Most of the buzz in Florida’s US Senate race is concentrated on Marco Rubio and Charlie Crist, but the more interesting race is for the Democratic Party’s nominee between Kendrick Meek and Jeff Greene. Both men claim to be progressive and they are from two different backgrounds. Meek’s Mother, Carrie Meek, was an educator who came to Miami in 1961 to assist in the desegregation of Miami-Dade Community College. Her community activism led her into politics and in 1978 she was elected to the Florida House of Representatives. She became a state senator in 1982 and in 1992 she was elected to congress as the first African American from Florida since Reconstruction.

Kendrick Meek was born in Miami and graduated from Florida A&M. He joined the Florida Highway Patrol and eventually became the first African American captain on the force. Up until this time Meek has run almost unopposed for every elective office, however, he has a solid record of legislative accomplishment. He doesn’t boast about his record either-he leaves that to his wife, Leslie, who constantly regales audiences about his classic sit-in with Jeb Bush over Bush’s efforts to do away with Affirmative Action and substitute his One Florida Initiative (by executive Order). Meek and another legislator, Tony Hill, actually forced Bush’s hand and stood him down-the only legislators to do so. Meek also was the driving force behind the Florida Class size amendment, amassing more than 500,000 signatures to get it on the 2002 ballot. The full effect of the amendment will be activated this year.

To hear the Florida Democratic establishment talk of Jeff Greene one would think he was Benedict Arnold, Simon Legree, Boris Badenov, Torquemada, Filthy McNasty and Mr. Applegate all rolled into one entity. Greene has had a credibility and ethics problem because of his past lifestyle and investment portfolio. He ran for office as a Republican in California. Greene’s people refute this, citing that as a private citizen he has the right to associate with whomever he pleases and that none of his investments were illegal, immoral or unethical despite the Democrats allegations about profiting on the backs of unfortunate people. Green himself states that his investments were a hedge to protect his business from the impending real estate bubble. “I never imagined that it would go so far” said Greene. Greene also says that his flirtation with being a Republican was almost thirty years ago and mostly due to his youthful naivete’.

His parents were Democrats from New England and moved to Florida in 1970 as the New England Textile industry started to decline and his father’s business failed. His mother is still a Palm Beach County resident. Greene helped support himself through various menial jobs at area hotels like The Breakers in Palm Beach. His higher education includes Johns Hopkins and Harvard Business School. Greene built a successful real estate business in California and was wealthy prior to the housing and foreclosure crisis. He was a lifelong bachelor until he wed in 2007. He and his wife, Mei Sze, have an infant son, Malcolm, who is almost eleven months old.

The race is causing consternation in Central Florida Democratic circles. Greene has the money to hire people and some early Meek supporters are now on the Greene Payroll. The Greene people are being treated like pariahs at Democratic functions, yet they gamely show up and at times are not allowed to speak up for their candidate. Meek has the solid support of the Central Florida labor unions and Democratic clubs, yet Greene continues to make inroads through his targeted advertising and mass mailings. The Tallahassee Democrat actually endorsed Greene over Meek citing Greene for his “edge and an energy that make him want to push beyond the usual talking points”, remarking, “We like the toughness he would bring to the office.”  On the stump Greene is personable, relaxed and willing to submit to tough questioning. He did make a recent gaffe regarding his trip that ended up in Cuba, however in subsequent meetings with the press he explained his misspeaking satisfactorily.

The two candidates are very close on most of the issues. When asked by reporters last week at the Beardall Senior Center in Orlando Greene replied that he and Meek are both Democrats and that they should be close on them. He continues to claim that Meek is a failed career politician, which is an unfair statement as Meek has never lost an election and has an extremely progressive voting record and is as tough a fighter as the Democrats have in Congress. Meek sees his career as one of a public servant and not a politician. His supporters agree with this assessment. Meek has started to fight back citing Green’s questionable real estate deals in California, and his twisting of the facts about Meek’s mother’s consulting rewards. The negativity serves neither of them well. Both men have strong enough assets to campaign on their merits alone. Both are likeable and engaging and they both have strong ideas. Meek’s campaign is more people oriented, while Greene focuses on economic issues and job creation. If either candidate has any stump weakness it is that Greene doesn’t spend enough time on people issues and Meek doesn’t spend enough time on economic and job issues. Greene consented to a short interview in which he attempted to outline the way he would create jobs. He admits that government must play a role in helping the process.

Greene has the kind of drive it takes to both get known and influence people. He claims that he cannot be bought by any special interest and that he will change the way business is done in Washington. That is ambitious, yet way too optimistic. As a freshman senator he’s low man on the totem pole and if the Establishment Democrats hold any grudge he’s not going to get any choice committee assignments. His best option would be to use his money and start his own lobbying firm to influence every other politician. That could change things, except that’s becoming what he says he’s against. Meek, on the other hand, despite his solid record of progressive legislation has a name recognition factor among Democrats. His victory over Jeb Bush and the class size amendment alone should have made him a household name in Florida. His historic petition drive (over 112,000 signatures statewide) to get on the ballot is the first time in Florida history that anyone has qualified in that manner. It would have been a lot cheaper to just pay the qualifying fee but Meek is determined to stay grass roots and identify with the people, and that’s how he runs his campaign.

On Tuesday, August 10 Meek and Greene met for another debate in Orlando. The taping took place at 2:00 PM for later broadcast throughout the state. The press room was full of reporters from all over the state. The result was more of the same. More time was spent attacking each other or defending themselves that the issues were left out to dry. Greene kept hammering away at Meek, blaming him as the personification of a Washington establishment that doesn’t work. Meek kept referring to Greene’s past colorful relationships and allegedly questionable real estate transactions. Staff members on both sides claimed victory, with Greene’s staffers actually handing out victory press releases before the debate was over. The only loser in this debate is the voting public, who, once again, has been denied a robust debate on the real issues and could wind up electing any Tom, Harry or Dick.

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Our History Challenged House of Representatives

August 1, 2010 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By

Jerry Waxman

All during the mid 1960’s through the early 1970’s life was pretty carefree in this country. We had a thriving economy and the Cold War kept our military machinery humming right along. Our investment in NASA was paying off handsomely and our exports were outperforming our imports. Occasionally there were protests about Vietnam or nuclear weapons though they were not given serious treatment until the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago.  We thrilled at Israel’s victories because we had both Saudi Arabia and Iran in our back pockets and nobody else in the Middle East mattered. We twenty-somethings had graduated high school and college during the conformist years of the Eisenhower Administration and on into the Camelot years of JFK.  We knew all about “Duck and Cover”, teenage drinking, R&B, The Blackboard Jungle and other cultural things because we had experienced it firsthand. Sputnik was launched when I was in 10th grade. Francis Gary Powers U-2 spy plane was shot down when I was a senior. In college we witnessed The Berlin Wall, The Bay of Pigs fiasco and The Cuban Missile Crisis. If we couldn’t avoid the draft we joined the Reserves or the National Guard.

None of this made a huge impact on my crowd. It was just Cold War business as usual. We were all working and making (for that time) good money. On the summer weekends we travelled to Atlantic City and nearby environs (Somers Point, NJ a la “Eddie and the Cruisers”) for lots of fun in the sun. The Harlem Club on Kentucky Avenue in Atlantic City was the midnight starting point of our revelry which ended at around 7:00 AM at the Dunes in Somers Point. In between there were lots of other bars. If we were hungry (and sober) enough it was back to The Harlem Club for its Breakfast Show. Drummer Chris Columbo’s quintet was the popular band and drew the biggest crowd. The one number that drove the crowd wild was the Len Barry and the Dovells hit “You Can’t Sit Down”, which Columbo retitled NAACP (this was during the height of the Civil Rights movement). In this case the acronym was not for the organization; Columbo explained, it stood for “Never Antagonize Adam Clayton Powell”.

Okay, it’s a long prologue but I think you might be getting the point. Powell was the charismatic and controversial US Congressman from New York City whose district included Harlem. He was first elected to congress in 1944 and served until 1970 with a little time off for being expelled. He became chairman of the powerful Education and Labor Committee and used his power to enact social legislation in large numbers. In one legislative session alone he steered 50 bills out of committee to final passage. This was during JFK’s New Frontier and LBJ’s Great Society days. He was a force to be dealt with.

He was expelled from congress in March 1967 for allegations of corruption. Not to be taken lightly he won reelection in 1968. He did pay a fine and he lost his seniority but he was reseated in congress and he is still regarded as a hero in New York. I could give you dozens of footnotes on him and his career but I’m not going to. Your homework is to research him yourself. His declining health after 1968 affected his attendance and in 1970 he was no longer the force he had been. He lost in the primary to a Korean War veteran named Charles Rangel.

No matter what congress did to Powell he ultimately prevailed. The same will happen with Rangel. If he chooses to run again he will win because he’s loved in his district and he’s still an effective legislator. Over a forty year period there’s bound to be several incidents in his career that could be questionable, and yes they should be fully investigated. Charlie Rangel will ultimately come out on top, and the members of the House need to be reminded of Adam Clayton Powell’s legacy because it will surely come back to haunt them.

All of a sudden prominent conservatives like William Kristol and Mitch McConnell are advising their minions to keep quiet about this and let the process wind its way to completion. They know that their side has a much more serious ethics problem and they surely don’t want to completely open that Pandora’s Box.

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Strangers When We Meet

June 9, 2010 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

as reported to The Huffington Post

“….I had that feeling of self pity…..what to do, what to do, what to do…The outlook was decidedly blue…”

Ira Gershwin’s very introspective and timeless lyric comes to mind when I think of the future consequences of the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Today is World Ocean Day and as part of that observance The Huffington Post is reporting on meetups from all over the world. The Orlando meetup was held at the Stardust Video and Coffee, a popular gathering place that has all kinds of nooks and crannies to use your wireless laptop or notebook and browse the thousands of videos, CDs and books that lines its walls. One room has a small bandstand while the other has a sort of stage, so poetry readings, meetings of this type and bands of all stripes use this place on a very frequent basis. There is a limited menu and they serve all kinds of coffee and other drinks. The atmosphere is very friendly, and conducive to people just hanging out and having a good time. This meeting attracted a very diverse group.

The meeting organizer, Kia Misowitz, who works in video production, and her husband, Michael hosted this event. Attendees were:  Ed Ronsani, a computer programmer and data maven; Ken Montgomery, an associate of Kia’s; Cathy Hettinger, a chemical engineer; Vickie Carlie, an architect and full time activist; Connie Graham, a zoologist who works for Save the Manatee Club; Mary Cecelia, owner of a graphic design firm working in Advertising and Marketing; Tobias and Tammie Hassberger, distributors of a non-toxic cleanup product; Lawrence Hefler, Marketing Director for a solar energy company; Ashley Hooper, a graduate student in Behavior Analysis  and Lisa Manzo, a community activist. This was the first time that any of these people met, yet they all had the same purpose for meeting-“What can we do about it?”

Ideas and opinions came fast and furious and the assembled agreed that positive action is what’s needed and that the focus should be on educating the public. Ideas were offered to grow the group from fourteen activists, plan fund-raising events, take part in cleanup efforts, lobby legislators in Florida to add a non drilling amendment on the November ballot, lobby the federal government to come up with a clean energy policy with definite time goals to stop using oil and implement solar, wind and other renewable forms of energy. Discussions varied on the finer points. Cathy Hettinger opined that just enforcing existing regulations would go a long way to getting the oil companies and other industries to clean up their act, and that thirty years of deregulation has left the federal government in a position where it has no expertise when it comes to this kind of disaster. The Bush administration staffed all of its departments with industry friendly people that threw regulations out the window and in too many cases got into bed with the industries that they were supposed to regulate.

The meeting ended around 10:00 PM and everyone felt some positive energy from the evening’s discussion. Kia promised to mail us her notes on the evening and set an agenda for a future one. That positive feeling lasted for me until I got home and learned that Bill Halter had narrowly lost in the Arkansas primary. The White House also OK’d off-shore drilling in the shallow waters of the Gulf. Stricter regulation, Yes, but still it is the wrong message to send, despite the pressure from legislators in the Gulf states. Their claims that thousands of jobs are at stake should have fallen on deaf ears, since those thousands of people could be learning a new trade in solar energy. Change, the way we want it to happen, the way we need it to happen, and the way it must happen is going to be a slow, slow process. I hope I live to see it.

“I hope my children live to see….a land like my country used to be”—Dave Frishberg

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