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Alan Grayson at the Hungry i

August 31, 2013 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

At the Hungry I

“Comedy is a serious business. A serious business with only one purpose-to make you laugh” W.C.Fields

 

If you’re of a certain age you remember the Hungry i, the legendary San Francisco club where a whole slew of comedians and musicians got their start. Founded in 1950 the club operated through the mid sixties until the political scene, comedy and music started to change. Performers who either got their start or enhanced their careers include (although not limited to) Bill Cosby, Lenny Bruce The Kingston Trio, Mort Sahl, Glenn Yarborough, Tom Lehrer, The Limelighters, Vince Guaraldi, Godfrey Cambridge, Professor Irwin Corey, Dick Cavett, Woody Allen, Orson Bean, Shelley Berman and Barbra Streisand. Many of them recorded live albums there so the name became synonymous with comedy and folk music. John Phillips prior to founding the Mamas and the Papas led the house band. The room itself was just that; bare walls with a performance area.

It was supposed to be an Orange County Democratic Party social event with a hook. If you bought a raffle ticket for $25.00 you could win a dinner with the congressman. The place was a beer and wine bar near upscale Baldwin Park in Orlando. It was supposed to last an hour and a half from 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM. The back room of the place reminded me of the Hungry i. The place was packed with anticipation. I was there as a participant in the event and I had no intention of writing about it. I’ve written about Alan Grayson many times. It’s not that hard. He’s a newsmaker and he’s never boring; you also never know what to expect from him which makes him very interesting. He’s become Alan Grayson 3.0, the humorist.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Entertainment, Political, Uncategorized Tagged With: Alan Grayson, comedy, The Hungry i

“Congressman Mica, We’re from the union and we’re here to help.”

September 2, 2011 by Jerry Waxman 1 Comment

By Jerry Waxman

Since the ascendency of Ronald Reagan every time conservative Republicans either run for office or stand for re-election their main talking points are how wasteful and inefficient the federal government is. Their prophecy is self-fulfilling because they prove it every day they are in office. They know how to campaign well, but they just don’t (or don’t want to) govern well. John Mica of Florida’s 7th congressional district is no exception. He’s represented his district for the last eighteen years and since January he has been the chairman of the powerful House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

 

Florida’s 7th district is a masterful example of gerrymandering in that Mica lives in the city of Winter Park yet represents people in Seminole County, Volusia County and other counties as far north as Jacksonville. Somehow, strangely, the city of Sanford escapes his district, belonging instead to Corrine Brown of Florida’s District Three. District Three is another marvel of gerrymandering. It looks like a small dog with its head in Jacksonville and its hind legs down in the Pine Hills and Oakridge sections of Orlando. Its tail is interpolated into District Seven as the city of Sanford. What is not in her district is the Sanford/Orlando airport, which is about on the boundary line of the two districts. By 2002 Mica had already served on the House Transportation Committee for ten years, so these things are not done without a reason.

 

As part of the Republican agenda of lessening the impact of unions Mica insisted on legislation that would sharply curtail union activities as a requisite to passing the FAA Reauthorization bill in July. There was no resolution and the FAA shut down all unnecessary operations on July 22. This action caused millions of dollars in tax revenue to go uncollected, as well as the loss of thousands of jobs and construction starts, which in an economy as fragile as the one we are in is not good news for anyone. A temporary measure was passed later that extended FAA authorization until September 15th. Congress, of course, has been on vacation and is just now coming back into session, so there is a narrow window of opportunity to pass a clean bill.

 

During the congressional recess period Mica had to come home to face the voters and he got earfuls from many quarters. Earlier in August Dana Milbank of the Washington Post had this to report:

 

The usually biting chairman of the House Transportation Committee spoke with remorse about the standoff, which caused furloughs of 74,000 people, delays to airport safety projects and the loss of hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.

“I’ve had a brutal week, getting beat up by everybody,” Mica told me, minutes after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced a deal that would end the shutdown, at least until Congress returns next month. “I didn’t know it would cause this much consternation,” he said. “Now I’ve just got to get the broom and the shovel and clean up the mess.” Switching metaphors, he said he wanted “to unclog the toilet, but it backed up. So I don’t know what to do, what to say.”

The labor unions who deal with the FAA sprang into action with a plan to deal with Mica’s dilemma, but not in an adversarial way. Spearheaded by the Communications Workers of America they visited all five of Mica’s district offices Friday with brooms, dust pans, plungers and other cleaning up paraphernalia to take back to Washington to aid him in his cleanup effort.

 

The group at the Maitland office was headed by Washington D.C. based CWA Mobilization Director Eileen Toback and CWA local President “Dave” Skinner. The group marched into Mica’s office and received a warm welcome from the secretary. She introduced the office’s district director, Dick Hartke, who graciously allowed several people to speak. At the end of the meeting everyone was invited to sign a guest list for a personal response from Mica. Someone said softly “just make sure you’re not going to wind up on Dan Webster’s list!” Here’s a video of Dave Skinner being interviewed. Here’s a video of the entire meeting with Hartke.

 

It’s probably a much bigger mess than the CWA and all the other unions think, so if you are so inclined here’s a list of all five (Really? He needs five? Talk about inefficiency and waste! ) offices so that if you are so inclined you could send him some more cleaning supplies:

 

Maitland:  100 East Sybellia Ave. Suite 340,  Maitland, FL. 32751

 

Palatka: 2509 Crill Ave, suite 200,  Palatka, FL 32177

 

St. Augustine:  3000 North Ponce de Leon Drive, Suite 1  St. Augustine, FL. 32084

 

Ormond Beach:  770 W. Granada Blvd. Suite 315, Ormond Beach, FL. 32174

 

Deltona:  840 Deltona Blvd.  Suite G,  Deltona, FL. 32725

 

Just one more thing…..someone include some disinfectant spray.  Just because he may clean up the mess, you can be sure that the malodor will linger on.

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Political, Uncategorized

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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Filed Under: Arts, Education, Uncategorized

No, I’m not Bitter…..Really.

November 6, 2009 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

 

By Jerry Waxman

Heeny Majesky…Johnny Gee….Eddie Joost, Johnny Pesky…….Thornton Lee; Danny Gardella…….

Van Lingle Mungo……………….

About the only thing that George Will and I do agree on is our undying, unyielding, unrequited love of Baseball. We’re also both at an age where the names in Dave Frishberg’s hauntingly beautiful oeuvre to the game, Van Lingle Mungo, were instantly recognizable and, in some cases, still playing in the major leagues. These were the years just after WWII and prior to Baseball’s expansion. The Braves were still in Boston and the St. Louis Browns had not yet moved to Baltimore to become the Orioles. The Athletics were languishing in Philadelphia and New York had three major league teams. We Philadelphians hadn’t had much to brag about in Baseball for close to twenty years until 1950. That was the year we surviving Philly natives have indelibly burned into our memories as though it were yesterday.

Phillies owner Bob Carpenter, a member of the DuPont family, had been building the team for several years and by 1950 had a good team in place, with three future Hall of Famers on the roster: Robin Roberts, Curt Simmons and Richie Ashburn. Through the farm system they had a good infield with Granny Hamner at shortstop and Willie “Puddin’ Head” Jones at third base. Veterans included Eddie Waitkus at first base and Dick Sisler (son of Hall of Famer George Sisler) in left field. Waitkus was the inspiration for Bernard Malamud’s novel, The Natural, having been shot in the chest by a deranged female fan in Chicago. Home grown power hitter Del Ennis was the right fielder. Ennis had the career stats to get into the Hall but never made it and today he is virtually unknown by the sports writers. Jim Konstanty, their ace relief pitcher, was so good that year he was voted the National League MVP. The Whiz Kids were scrappy and were in first place for a large part of the season, but they started to sag in the last week of the season and blew a seven game lead to two games when they met the Dodgers. If the Dodgers took the last series there would be a tie for first place and there would be a three game playoff between them for the NL title. As good as the Phillies were they were facing guys named Don Newcomb, Carl Erskine, Carl Furillo, Pee Wee Reese, Gil Hodges, Roy Campanella and Jackie Robinson. These guys could hurt you at any time. In the final game the score was tied 1-1 in the bottom of the ninth inning. Cal Abrams represented the winning run for Brooklyn, but Center Fielder Richie Ashburn made the throw of his career and got Abrams out at home plate. In the top of the tenth inning Dick Sisler hit a three run home run and the Whiz Kids clinched the pennant. That meant the New York Yankees. If they thought the Dodgers were tough they were now facing Casey Stengel’s guys: Joe DiMaggio, Phil Rizzuto, Yogi Berra, Billy Martin, Gene Woodling, Hank Bauer, Allie Reynolds, Vic Raschi, Whitey Ford and others who could hurt you worse. To add another obstacle, Curt Simmons was called up into the military for a tour of duty in Korea and was unavailable for the series. Manager Eddie Sawyer had to put Konstanty into the starting rotation.

When you are eight years old and your team is in the World Series you are in heaven. My prized possessions were an autographed team ball and yearbook, as well as an official Phillies cap. I treasured the signatures, even the ones by Putsy Caballero, Milo Candini, Bill (Swish) Nicholson and Mike Goliat-names lost in the archives. The euphoria didn’t last long because the Yankees won in four straight games. That’s tragedy for an eight year old.

Watching Robin Roberts and Jim Bunning (yes, that Jim Bunning) throw ceremonial baseballs the other evening brought a lump to my throat and opened up a flood of memories. It’s not easy to watch your team play so well and just not be able to beat the Yankees; not after 59 years waiting for your revenge. Here’s the tough part. I can’t hate the Yankee players from 1950 or 2009. They do their job and they do it well. You can’t hate Yogi, or Rizzuto or DiMaggio. Actually, I got to spend some time with Joe DiMaggio as he was a frequent visitor to Downtown Hollywood, Florida and we hung out at the same restaurants in his declining years. He visited my theater on occasion and he was an absolute gentleman to the end. I don’t have to like this year’s Yankees but I certainly have to respect them.

Here’s the difference. The 1950 Whiz Kids never again approached the level of play that they had in that season. It would be 14 agonizing years before the Phillies, with Jim Bunning, would come close only to blow a six game lead in the last week of the season because of Gene Mauch’s stupid decision to use Bunning and Chris Short every other start. The Cardinals, with Curt Simmons went to the series that year. This time the Phillies were the series champs last year and they are going to be a great team for a long time. Wait til next year.

Eddie Basinski……….Ernie Lombardi………..Huey Mulcahey……………Van Lingle…………. Van Lingle…………Mungo

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Filed Under: Entertainment, Uncategorized

Seniors to Humana-“Don’t Lie to us!”

October 1, 2009 by Jerry Waxman 1 Comment

By Jerry Waxman  as submitted to and published in the Huffington Post 10/01/09

DSCF0136 

Tony Fransetta pointing the finger at Humana

Don’t mess with these seniors!

The press conference started at 12:00 on Tuesday outside of Humana’s headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida. This wasn’t the usual group of activists rallying for health care reform; this was a 21st century version of the Over the Hill Gang, although there were no wheel chairs or walkers in sight. The seniors in this group were members of the Florida Alliance For Retired Americans, with over 200,000 active members in the state, and they are very upset with Humana for its recent scare tactics aimed at seniors regarding health care reform. Tony Fransetta, a Korean war veteran and president of FLARA, chastised Humana for its recent letter to its Medicare Advantage clients stating that under the new laws proposed they could lose benefits.

Fransetta read from his open letter to Humana’s CEO, Michael McCallister, “The Florida Alliance for Retired Americans denounces recent mailings to Medicare Advantage recipients. These mailings are a shameful attempt to protect your profits and they are spreading misinformation about health insurance reform. We demand that you immediately cease and desist from sending further mailings and apologize to those seniors who have received this misleading mail from Humana.

We are very disappointed and saddened at Humana’s deliberate attempts to misinform Medicare Advantage recipients about health insurance reform in order to bolster your bottom line.

We all know that Humana makes outrageous profits because of Medicare Advantage overpayments. All seniors, whether or not in Medicare Advantage, are now paying an extra $43.20 a year in Medicare premiums because of these overpayments to Humana and other insurance companies. More than 31 million Medicare beneficiaries are now forced to pay this extra premium money, which goes to your profit margin, not health care for seniors.

It’s time to make Medicare work for seniors, not Humana and the insurance industry. Many seniors know the truth and are working hard to make health insurance reform a reality.

The Florida Alliance for Retired Americans and its members and allies across Florida and the nation will continue to work to ensure that our hard earned tax dollars go toward health care for which they were intended and not unethical insurance company schemes.

Fransetta then told the assembled that the Department of Health and Human Services Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in a letter dated Sept. 18 had ordered Humana to cease and desist from their current letter writing citing that the information was confusing and misleading.

Once the conference ended Fransetta and his seniors went into the office to present Humana with an enlarged copy of the letter. The office manager tried to duck them but Fransetta’s group would not be denied. Once the manager appeared he tried to empty the office stating that it was a place of business, but the seniors forced a face to face confrontation. Fransetta told the manager in no uncertain terms that what Humana was doing was wrong and that his own office tactics were abominable. He presented the letter with instructions to forward it to Humana’s CEO.

  Presenting to Humana

Presenting the letter to Humana

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Political, Uncategorized

Let’s Not Bury ACORN Yet

September 25, 2009 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

 

“A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes” is a quote attributed to Mark Twain and it is quite apropos considering what’s going on in politics today. ACORN has been around almost forty years and the public for the most part never heard of it until a year ago when allegations of voter fraud propped up. The charges were made by right wing operatives who have been trying to discredit ACORN for years. Last year the timing was perfect to try to tie in Barack Obama, a former “community organizer” with ACORN and William Ayres. There were a few people working with ACORN who falsified voter registration forms and those people were properly dealt with. No executives or board members were charged with any wrongdoing.

The reason for all this is simple: it’s all about voter suppression. Through ACORN’s community organizing efforts millions of people who would not normally be part of the process registered and voted. Their efforts affected many outcomes and the right wing sees its power slipping away. These most recent efforts are merely a continuation to discredit a valuable and important community organization and discredit our president at the same time. It is also no coincidence that these tapes have surfaced just as we’re entering the critical stages of health care reform; ACORN has a huge stake in getting real reform passed. Their clients are the people who need it most. I feel like I’m watching a sadistic Road Runner cartoon. No matter how many times that coyote falls flat on his face he continues the chase relentlessly. After all, he only has to win once.

“The Evil that men do lives after them. The good is oft interred with their bones.”

The “birthers”, “teabaggers” and such show a real ignorance of history every time they open their mouths. Now they are going after appointed “Czars” and making comparisons to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin in the way things are being done by our administration. Allegations of communism and socialism abound and if you ask any of these people what a Czar is they can’t tell you. So here’s a short history lesson for those so challenged. Prior to World War I Nikolas Romanov using the title Czar ruled Russia. Kaiser Wilhelm of the Hapsburg family ruled Germany. The words Kaiser and Czar are derived from Julius Caesar and the emperors of Rome who bore his name. The word Caesar has come to mean something like “supreme ruler”.  It’s just such a shame when people show their ignorance as arrogantly as these groups do. Anyway, the point of this exercise is to give some historical perspective to ACORN’s problems and show that we’ve been there in the past, even in the waning days of the Roman Republic, and the parallels are amazing. The politics of Rome prior to the formation of the Empire were amazingly complicated, but some things were clear: wealth trickled up, influence and legislation could be bought and reform was met with hostility.

Julius Caesar was arguably the most talented leader in the history of Rome. He was a brilliant military leader, strategist, politician and “community organizer”. He was an outstanding writer and a masterful orator, second only to Cicero, who was his bitter political opponent. He was also a social reformer working hard to include all of his conquered subjects as Roman citizens with full rights, and basically setting up his own personal Veterans Administration for soldiers under his command. Much of what ACORN does was ideated by him. He out-thought, out-fought and out-bought his rivals and in doing so amassed fabulous wealth and stature which he intended to share with the citizenry. His fatal flaw was his willingness to forgive his enemies, who should have been put to death, including Brutus and several of the conspirators for past transgressions. Brutus made a big mistake because Caesar had willed him much of the captured Gallic territories for his own domain. While Caesar was immensely popular among the Roman citizenry, he had his enemies and detractors in the Senate who tried to instill the fear in the populace that he would actually become King. His proposed land and agricultural reforms would have diminished the Senate’s power and very much lessened the Patrician influence in government. No wonder they resisted. He reluctantly refused the crown knowing that politically it was the wise thing to do. The sixty conspirators acted on the 15th of March in the year 44 B.C. and assassinated him just prior to his embarking on another military campaign to complete some of Pompey’s unfinished business which would have given him more fame, glory and unrivaled power.

“…so are they all, all honorable men…”

The conspirators spoke to the throngs of mourners and almost convinced them that their acts were justified as he was about to become the great oppressor and they acted on behalf of all Rome. During this brief period the conspirators wanted to do away with Caesar’s chief lieutenant, Marc Antony but Brutus convinced them to spare him, which was another big mistake. Shakespeare has immortalized Antony’s address to the crowd in one of the most famous quoted passages in history. Whatever Antony did say that day it swayed the crowd and Rome to vengeance. The actual Roman Empire did not come into existence for another twenty years but the stage had been set for the sunset of the five hundred year old Republic. By attempting to “Save Our Republic” the conspirators actually hastened its demise.

Let’s fast forward about 1700 years to the Massachusetts county of Essex in the year 1692. From February 1692 through May 1693 a series of accusations and trials took place in Salem and other cities accusing certain people, mostly single women who were not part of the mainstream of the area, of practicing witchcraft. In 1689 Salem had founded its own church and ordained its first minister, Samuel Parris. Forget what you learned in 6th grade. These Puritans were theocrats who wrote their own rules. What they did to the Indians after the first Thanksgiving doesn’t get taught in schools. Women held no rank in society and were perceived to be more lustful and susceptible to Satan than men. When a single woman or recent widow inherited land she was a ripe candidate for the church to take it from her by hook or by crook. Parris was not above this devious behavior so he condoned the trials, in fact members of his family were some of the accusers. This crowd could teach today’s subprime lenders a thing or two about stealing property. The trials had all the atmosphere of a kangaroo court. Overall, more than twenty people were executed and several more died in prison. There have been volumes written about this. Here’s a quick lookup about it. The facts are that no one in authority at the time tried to stop the proceedings because they had too much to gain by allowing it to happen. This was definitely a dark period in both American and religious history. Okay, Massachusetts was not yet a state and we were not yet a country with a constitution, so let’s fast forward a couple hundred more years to the late 1940’s.

It was a time when you reported your neighbor for any suspicious activity. Once the definite threat of world domination by Fascism was put to rest, the fear of world domination by Communism, dormant since the Thirties, reappeared. There were communists everywhere, in government, in Hollywood, in labor unions, at the local supermarket….everywhere. They were hiding under your bed as well as their evil teachers were indoctrinating your children. Even Eleanor Roosevelt was under investigation. Enter the House Un-American Activities Committee with their trusty companion, The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations headed by Senator Joseph McCarthy, aided and abetted by J. Edgar Hoover’s F.B.I. and other government organizations. All you had to do was disagree with someone about official policy and you were pegged a “red”.  The biggest beneficiary of this period was Richard Nixon, who played it for all it was worth and built his entire political career on it. The Red Scare gripped this country with fear for several years before some people figured out it was all a hoax. Careers were destroyed and peoples’ reputations were ruined all in the name of patriotism. Actor Philip Loeb was blacklisted, and although he was never charged and he cooperated fully with the committee, he was never cleared by them. He begged them to clear his name and they never did. He ultimately committed suicide in 1955. In the movie, The Front, actor Zero Mostel’s character, Hecky Brown, was based in part on Philip Loeb.

The Red Scare went on unchecked for about five years before someone actually stood up and exposed it. Playwright Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible about the Salem Witch Trials using actual trial records as part of his text. The play was an unabashed expose’ of McCarthyism, in fact Miller was quoted as saying “The more I read into the Salem panic, the more it touched off corresponding images of common experiences in the fifties.”  The next person to stand up to McCarthy was broadcaster Edward R. Murrow, who in a series of reports on McCarthy revealed him to be dishonest, reckless and abusive. The tide had started to turn. Murrow ended his broadcast with this statement: “We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. We must remember always that accusation is not proof and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we are not descended from fearful men.” The final demise came a year later during the Army-McCarthy hearings which were televised and the country got the chance to see McCarthy’s underhanded tactics live. The reign of terror had finally ended for the time being. Subsequently, the Senate censured McCarthy, HUAC lost most of its power, and many of the convictions brought about during this period were overturned by the courts. Joe McCarthy died in 1957, but his legacy lives on. McCarthyism is an underlying reason why Democrats are perceived as soft on communism and weak on defense, and Democrats have never done much to dispel that idea.

So, let’s see how all this affects ACORN’s situation today. Original founder and CEO Wade Rathke was fired a year and a half ago when it was disclosed that his brother, Dale, embezzled approximately one million dollars in 2000. CEO Rathke covered it up for seven years until the facts came surfaced. Bertha Lewis took over as CEO and immediately started reforming and restructuring all functions of the organization, including policies and board of directors. Someone anonymously made up the loss. She appointed a blue ribbon panel of advisors in early 2009 to help her with the transition:

  • John Podesta, President and CEO, Center for American Progress
  • Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, Board Member, RFK Foundation, former MD Lt. Governor
  • Andrew Stern, International President, Service Employees International Union
  • Henry Cisneros, Executive Chairman, Cityview
  • John Banks, Vice President of Government Relations Con Ed
  • Eric Eve, Senior VP of Global Consumer Group, Community Relations, Citigroup
  • Harvey Hirschfeld, President, Lawcash
  • Dave Beckwith, Executive Director, Needmor Fund

Since the fall of 2008, ACORN’s new management team has instituted a set of changes, including:

  • The establishment of a new senior management team of the organization;
  • Revamping of ACORN’s board structure, including the establishment of new oversight committees with new resourcing to those committees;
  • Processes to hire a new auditor, CFO, and other key management positions.

ACORN workers and volunteers have been on the front lines of the foreclosure crisis and health care reform battles and they work long hard hours for meager compensation. They also take their jobs very seriously. We’re not talking big money here. Bertha Lewis makes an annual salary that is less than most Orange County school teachers make. The office supervisors make considerably less and the average worker is lucky to be making above minimum wage. Many of the people who work in the Orange County office are volunteers. Sometimes they have to wait extra time for their paychecks as resources are not always immediately available. There’s really nothing to hide. Any investigation launched into ACORN’s finances will reveal that the overwhelming amount of dollars goes directly into client services. And that 56 million dollars that keeps popping up? Over a 15 year period that’s a drop in the bucket. By the way, any investigation will find that a large portion of that money went to aid people that the federal government failed to help-Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Wilma victims.

“Listen…….do you want to know a secret?…….

It’s the best kept secret in all of the media. ACORN receives less than 5% of its operating budget from the federal government. Here’s another secret: EVERYBODY IN CONGRESS KNOWS IT! That’s why it was so easy for them to throw ACORN under the bus. It’s just an easy way for these phonies (especially the spineless Democrats) to appear to be resolute. Shakespeare said it best-“A plague on both your houses.”  This is an organization that gets its hands dirty, constantly, in neighborhoods where most of us shudder to think about, serving people who desperately need help. ACORN is there every day doing what we in our churches and synagogues, the private sector and local governments have neglected to do for decades.

Shortly after the videos were made public Bertha Lewis issued this statement:

“As a result of the indefensible action of a handful of our employees, I am, in consultation with ACORN’s Executive Committee, immediately ordering a halt to any new intakes into ACORN’s service programs until completion of an independent review. I have also communicated with ACORN’s independent Advisory Council, and they will assist ACORN in naming an independent auditor and investigator to conduct a thorough review of all of the organizations relevant systems and processes. That reviewer, to be named within 48 hours, will make recommendations directly to me and to the full ACORN Board. We enter this process with a commitment that all recommendations will be implemented.”

Ms. Lewis is specifically ordering the following steps be taken effective noon eastern on September 16, 2009:

  • No new intakes will be accepted into ACORN’s offices for service programs, effective immediately;
  • An immediate in-service training for all frontline staff has been ordered within 48 hours;
  • ACORN’s independent Advisory Council will help select an independent auditor/reviewer no later than September 18th to review all of the systems and processes called into question by the videos.

On Tuesday of this week, ACORN selected former Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger to lead the independent review of the organizational systems and processes surrounding the social services of the organization. Mr. Harshbarger, now Senior Counsel to the Firm of Proskauer Rose LLP, is also the former President and CEO of Common Cause, the good government organization.

 

“You have meddled with the primal forces of Nature, Mr. Beale, and I won’t have it!”

It’s time for ACORN to get back to basics-what made it work in the first place. Mention the name Saul Alinsky to any conservative and it’s sure to cause at least heartburn if not a downright stroke in them, and for good reason. Saul Alinsky’s methods of organizing worked then and they still work today. His first major accomplishment was to do what Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle, did not do. While Sinclair exposed the conditions in the Chicago stockyards, Alinsky actually cleaned them up thirty years later. He didn’t care how big they were or how well connected they were or how wealthy they were; when he decided to take them on he won. His methods were unique, unorthodox and at times outrageous and they were also very effective. ACORN was founded on the Alinsky model in 1970 to work in depressed areas in Little Rock, Arkansas. Yes, for a short period of time they are not going to be as effective at preventing foreclosures, or getting necessary health care to clients, however, they are now free to get back into the neglected areas of the inner cities and organize these communities into action. In a way Congress has done them a favor but a word of caution to the wise: “When men sow the wind it is rational to expect that they will reap the whirlwind.”-Frederick Douglass. It’s his take on a passage from the bible and it is a stern warning to politicians about the validity of Newtonian physical laws. Recent actions to defund ACORN were so hastily concocted and so broadly written (as to not be an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder) that they will affect any enterprises that are currently doing business with our government, such as Halliburton, Blackwater and lots of corrupt government contractors.

Before we decide to condemn, let’s get an honest assessment of the situation. No obfuscation, no stonewalling, no excuses, no cover-up. If something’s wrong it gets fixed with full disclosure and no opacity. If ACORN is guilty of anything it is at worst poor judgment. It needs to make sure that its employees are properly trained and managed with regular progress and performance reports. This organization has nothing to hide, but it does have something to fear and here’s where everyone can help. The battle to clear its name is going to be costly because ACORN is being tried in the media and the media is withholding facts that help ACORN’s case. Until or unless John Roberts and Co. completely subverts our individual rights we’re still supposed to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. That’s also supposing that any laws have actually been broken. So far only the two Republican operatives have violated any laws and that’s being looked into by ACORN. ACORN has also initiated legal action against Giles and O’Keefe and it will be interesting to see how that plays out, especially in the MSM. It’s also going to be interesting to see where their defense money comes from. Kudos to Rachel Maddow for her erudite, eloquent and well researched segment, The Truth About the Lies Against ACORN, it’s a real eye opener, and special thanks to all the bloggers on HP who have written on this.  Here’s how to help. Go on to ACORN’s website now http://www.acorn.org/ and give whatever you can afford. 66,882,230 of us voted for change in the last election. If every one of us gave only $10.00 ACORN would have the resources to do its good works without fear or interruption or distraction. It would also show our spineless Democrats in congress what fools and cowards they consistently prove themselves to be.

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