
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Stuff Only I Would Notice

Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Extraordinary Every Time
![]() |
Washington's Inauguration, 1789 |
Did you watch any of the second inauguration of President Obama and Vice President Biden? I know some Americans aren't as happy or impressed with it as I am, given the very polarized atmosphere everywhere. I can't help but wonder how I'd be feeling if this had been Mitt Romney's inauguration. However you voted, this event that happens every four years remains one of the more remarkable success stories in world history. The orderly transition or continuation of power based on the will of the people is gaining momentum thanks in no small part to our own example. Even so, it is still far from a common occurence in many countries across the globe. Through all the years of this messy experiment we call a democratic republic, the move from one Presidential administration to another has never meant a military coup or someone appointing himself dictator. Many people are bemoaning how our President is threatening to take away their constiututional rights or how our republic is supposedly dead or dying. They're just plain wrong. I point to history and to all those times when civil war, depression, scandal, slavery, armed attack and moves to abolish basic rights failed to deny Americans their day to see a new administration peacefully and orderly sworn into office. We've seen worse, yet the process begun in 1789 endures. The result of an election may not always be to our liking, but an inauguration like this one on Martin Luther King Jr. Day is something to celebrate.
Friday, January 18, 2013
A New Low For The Gun Lobby
![]() |
NRA Ad: Over The Top? |
Really, I wanted to get away from blogging about the gun control issue for a week, but no. Did you see the National Rifle Association's shameless ad referring to our "elitist" President's children being under armed guard while everyone else's kids are supposedly denied that kind of protection? Then the following day the Tea Party, Rush Limbaugh and other right wingers attack President Obama for sharing the stage with school children while presenting his gun control proposals. The Tea Party's Facebook even equated that with Hitler's, Stalin's or Saddam's use of children in propaganda! Isn't the Tea Party supposed to be founded and focused on curbing government spending? A TP spokesperson said on CNN their group "doesn't get involved in social issues." What a load of crap! When you have to bring Hitler into the debate, you've given up any moral high ground. If I hear one more gun control opponent mention how much better Ronald Reagan was for preserving the Second Amendment, I would remind then that Reagan also favored an assault weapons ban. No, I don't want Obama, a New World Order or any UN black helicopters to come in and take law abiding citizens' shotguns and handguns away (even if I could). At the same time, the NRA and the even more reactionary Gun Owners of America cannot simply slander our President without bringing anything to the table except a guarantee to have more guns in circulation. Yes, a school system in Ohio wants to arm all the custodians! The truth is, the NRA's Wayne LaPierre and the rest of the key lobbyists for gun manufacturers have only managed to spread fear and anger among much of the gun-owning population. They don't care about anything else, and the ad invoking the Obama children proves that. They've been drunk with power over our culture and politics for way too long, and I hope you'll join me and other Americans interested in a real discussion on gun violence. Next week, I'll try to lighten up!
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Talk Radio's Shameful Role
![]() |
Alex Jones |
Sunday, January 6, 2013
No Big Deal!
Happy New Year! I don't normally set out to make New Years' resolutions, but this year a few observations on my part seemed to dictate the need. So much of what we get all worked up about is not even real. Call it that serenity prayer message if you like. If it's not relevant to my priorities, then it should be a nonissue. In all aspects of life, I see so many people getting worked up over the need to be absolutely right about everything. Some people got so angry over the plans of some whacked out Kansas cult or an outrageous $100 million suit brought by some sleazy publicity hungry lawyer that it actually got in the way of the memory of the victims in the Sandy Hook school massacre and marred the healing process. The best way to deal with these upsetting distractions is to ignore them as much as possible, since they will eventually pass. Likewise, there are irritants we are exposed to in our everyday life that may frazzle but quickly fizzle. I can't control most things other people do in my ever changing personal and professional "news cycle". Some of it may affect me. Even less is serious. So much of what people stress over isn't even real. That was something I forgot for about five minutes today before counting to ten. So much of the drama in books, movies and TV is based on what "could" happen. I resolve not to let it drive my attitude toward life.
Friday, December 28, 2012
A Christmas Surprise

Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Time To Stand Up
![]() |
Abraham Lincoln, March 6, 1865 |
I saw the movie Lincoln the day after the Newtown school
massacre. The movie focused on the
drive to get the 13th Amendment to the Constitution passed by the House before
the end of the Civil War. The amendment
outlawed slavery. You might think that after
four years of war costing 600,000 American lives with the South in absolute
ruins, the abolition of slavery would have sailed through the House after
passing the Senate. Instead, President
Lincoln faced daunting obstacles, especially from House Democrats. There were people close to his own
administration who thought his amendment was lost and he couldn't get the
votes. The powerful forces of
resistance in the North - as well as the slaveholding border states which did
not secede - provided almost as great an impediment to change as the armed
uprising of the ten Confederate states of the South. The permanent nationwide end to slavery was
by no means guaranteed. Lincoln was a
shrewd politician, but he was resolute in making sure the end of the Civil War
meant slavery anywhere in the United States was gone for good. If a bloody Civil War couldn't eradicate
this shameful institution from our society, what would it take? There was more than a century of work to be
done, but President Lincoln prevailed.
We have seen our 2nd
Amendment uncompromisingly defended by a powerful gun lobby for decades, led by
the leadership and lobbyists of the National Rifle Association. The NRA typically stays silent immediately
after any mass shootings, and that pattern has continued after the Newtown
tragedy. With the murder of twenty
innocent young children and six adults, their unfounded fear mongering about
the administration attacking 2nd Amendment rights has run its course. This time, Newtown has changed
everything. Politicians, clergy and
other disgusted citizens are not backing down.
Has any rational supporter of gun restrictions advocated outlawing
handguns for defending your home or rifles for hunting? No.
Does anyone think reinstating the assault weapons ban will totally end
our problems? Of course not. Do we have to look at how we've emphasized
the entertainment value of violence throughout our culture? That's at least as important in addressing
the root causes. We need to rethink our
mental health system and focus on personal responsibility. Addressing our culture of violence should
be this generation's call to action.
President Obama is determined to prevail.
One more thought... Does
government need to "put God back" in our schools, as some
suggest? Look at the beautiful,
innocent victims at Sandy Hook Elementary School along with the heroes who
worked to protect them and those who comfort their families. How can you believe in God and think God
ever left because of a 1963 Supreme Court ruling? God is where you choose to find Him.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
What Can We Finally Learn From This?

Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Radio Pranks
![]() |
DJs Michael Christian & Mel Greig |
As radio prank calls go, this one seems tame by comparison. Australian radio personality Mel Greig pretended to be Queen Elizabeth checking with the hospital on the condition of Prince William's wife Kate Middleton and managed to get answers from a nurse there. After the call was revealed to be a hoax, the nurse later committed suicide. The DJs involved have been suspended and are obviously devastated. The suspension may be appropriate, since their careers are not the number one concern at the moment. Beyond this unintended tragedy, I am reminded of prank radio station phone calls and stunts that have made their unwitting targets look very bad and could have easily led to equally disastrous results. Here in the New London market alone, there was a DJ who made outrageous prank calls and got people extremely upset - all in the name of shock value entertainment. In another instance our WBMW morning show was the target of syndicated shock jocks Opie & Anthony, who had an axe to grind with the owner of our station and decided to take it out on me and my co-host. They'd take audio clips from our show and make fun of us as "whitebread local radio". A couple of their stooges even prank-called us, joking about something personal to do with my co-host. At the time we ignored them and they predictably moved on within two days to trash someone else. As broadcasters, being a target can be a hazard of the occupation, but most are not expecting to be ridiculed in front of a less than sympathetic audience. Radio personalities repeatedly prove there's plenty of money and ratings in making others look bad, but once in a while there are consequences.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
The Phony War
![]() |
From MSNBC |
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Party vs. Ideology

Monday, November 19, 2012
Twinkies Will Live On - Will Good Jobs?

Thursday, November 15, 2012
Setting A Poor Example

Wednesday, November 7, 2012
What's Apparent - To Me, Anyway

- President Obama is not a radical left socialist - not even close.
- Make Election Day a national holiday. If we have to cpombine it with Veterans Day, so be it. Voting should be as accessible as possible. While we exercise our right, we should take time to recognize our veterans who served to make this happen.
- Obamacare is essentially Romneycare. You can run but you can't hide from that.
- Romney never spelled out an original economic plan. His projections for North American energy independence and adding 12 million new jobs are the same as what many economists expect to happen if we stay with Obama.
- Paul Ryan didn't help the GOP cause. The VP choice excited many conservatives who weren't going anywhere else anyway. Romney's debate coach Rob Portman could have helped them win Ohio, while Ryan's home state of Wisconsin has been terribly polarized by its governor's union-busting.
- Mitt Romney's 47% speech video showed his real attitude. It would have been over after that if it hadn't been for President Obama's lackluster first debate performance.
- Ethnic demographic trends are working against the Republican party. Generational changes are hurting them as well. Go with what resonates with the mainstream and not with what the average right wing talk show listener wants to hear.
- Mainstream Republicans - what's left of them - need to stand up to the Tea Party members. As Obama found out in 2010, a wide mandate does not last forever. Achievements through compromise can.
- The primary system has become an ideological litmus test that produces candidates who will say anything to placate their base while dragging more and more big money into a longer and longer political season leaving much of the electorate on the cynical sidelines.
- Money can't buy enough votes. Linda McMahon taught that valuable lesson.
- All in all, America still works!
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Storm Coverage: How Essential Am I?
Here we go again. This time 60 million people could be in the crosshairs of Hurricane Sandy or her effects in a storm that is expected to linger longer than most. I was asked to man the Mohegan Sun studio of 102.3 The Wolf on Monday evening - at the height of it all. At first I thought I'd have to evacuate where I live anyway, so why not hunker down in a massive complex where I'm hardly likely to even notice the effects of Sandy? Then I started to hear revised forecasts calling for strong wind and rain to begin even sooner and the increased likelihood of our station simulcasting everything from the Cumulus New London broadcast center anyway. That begged the question: Why would I want to risk my safety to watch over live coverage from somewhere else? I remember too well the drive in to the studio during Tropical Storm Irene last year. Being a hardcore radio guy, I am normally the first to jump in when there's an emergency. When the cable and internet go out and newspaper delivery often gets disrupted, radio rules! If they need me to take part in the active coverage out of New London, I'd be open to that. It's not my first rodeo with this radio storm coverage thing, but if they're covered at broadcast central I'll opt to stay safe by the time things get wild. We'll see. I hope you don't go out in this storm unless you absolutely have to.
UPDATE 11/2: I went in early Monday as the storm was just getting started and pulled a marathon air shift from Mohegan Sun, being there from 2pm to midnight with no regrets. No doubt I lucked out with the storm winds and rain decreasing by midnight and getting my own power back a day later. When I see the aftermath of devastation up and down the East coast, I appreciate what I have.
UPDATE 11/2: I went in early Monday as the storm was just getting started and pulled a marathon air shift from Mohegan Sun, being there from 2pm to midnight with no regrets. No doubt I lucked out with the storm winds and rain decreasing by midnight and getting my own power back a day later. When I see the aftermath of devastation up and down the East coast, I appreciate what I have.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Hooked On House Hunters

Monday, October 15, 2012
The Best Money Can Buy?
![]() |
Rep. Chris Murphy & Linda McMahon |
It's a good thing Connecticut isn't a swing state in the presidential race. We already are being bombarded by political ads in the U.S. Senate race between Representative Chris Murphy and WWE CEO Linda McMahon. Last Friday I saw Chris Murphy at a campaign stop in Colchester. The audience posed very thoughtful questions and I thought Murphy gave some reasonable and specific answers. I wished the overall tone of the race could be so civil. While at least one well-funded pro-Murphy PAC has done some serious mud slinging, Murphy's own ads have taken more of a high road. Linda McMahon has financed her own election bid, presenting a more female-friendly image than her last Senate race. I don't begrudge her wealth; it can be used for a lot of good. I'll take her word over her opponent's about being pro-choice on abortion, but I don't believe for a minute McMahon would have any effective voice on that issue amid a national Republican party that is so dominated by the far right. Some of her statements on job creation, energy policy and deficit reduction are full of - as George W. Bush put it - "fuzzy math" talking points big on cuts and short on revenue that VP Joe Biden rightly called into question last week. The attacks on Murphy's personal finances from 2003 and the endless negative ads only serve to bring the discourse deeper into mud and Connecticut voters lose. By financing herself, McMahon could have changed the attack ad strategy. Instead, she made it worse.
Monday, October 8, 2012
The Region Shudders Again
![]() |
Mohegan Sun, Uncasville |
This hits especially hard right before the holidays. Perhaps the recent layoffs of 300 workers at Mohegan Sun Casino shouldn't come as a complete surprise. Nonetheless, it is a big blow to an already struggling eastern Connecticut economy. Revenue is down as out of state casinos and a shaky recovery take their toll, but I can't help but wonder whether massive layoffs should always be the first option. There is no doubt this region has historically depended far too much on a few giant companies like EB and Pfizer. This leaves us susceptible to the decisions of too few. New London County is not a remote market; it is halfway between New York and Boston with a great harbor and tourist attractions. There is no reason why this region can't diversify. If I ran a major financial or tech company, I'd prefer New London and vicinity over the traffic and costs that choke growth in places downstate like Fairfield County. How big a wakeup call do we need? I appreciate what our resort casinos offer; They are two of the finest in the world and I hope they can thrive for workers and the tribal owners. That doesn't mean we should bet everything on them.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
MSNBC: Try The Decaf

Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Bitten By The Radio Bug
This ancient image from the late fifties is the first photographic evidence of my interest in playing records. The idea of playing records on the radio wouldn't come along until I was in junior high school. After a brief fascination with tape recorders similar to the ones used in the opening scenes of TV's Mission: Impossible, I received my very own GE AM clock radio as a 1966 Christmas gift from my grandmother. She had a lot to do with my burgeoning broadcasting obsession. When I felt like getting away from the world, I would explore the sometimes static-filled dial to find stations seldom heard when my parents had control of the radio. There was some decent radio close by in New Haven, but Hartford had the classic Top 40 battle between WPOP and WDRC. New York Top 40 station WABC had Dan Ingram, my favorite air personality of all time, but WMCA's "Good Guys" gave them a run for the money. At night, CKLW the "Big 8" would boom in from "The Motor City" while WLS and WCFL could also be heard after sunset from Chicago. Early personality-driven talk radio on stations like WBZ/Boston caught my attention, too. I eventually knew the call letters of hundreds of stations. My grandmother influenced my radio interest in another way in 1970 when she arranged a tour of WELI's Radio Towers Park outside New Haven. She knew the wife of WELI's music director, a wonderful gentleman named Nick Papp. He showed me around the studios of one of the classier stations in Connecticut. I was awestruck. Still, it would be a few more years before I actually take the plunge. I fell hard for radio, which is why I still try to keep it in my life.
Monday, September 17, 2012
In His Own Words

There are 47 percent of the people who will vote for the president no matter what. All right, there are 47 percent who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it. That that's an entitlement. And the government should give it to them. And they will vote for this president no matter what…These are people who pay no income tax. My job is is not to worry about those people. I'll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Coach Calhoun Retires
![]() |
Coach Jim Calhoun |
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
9/11 Plus 11

Sunday, September 9, 2012
Morgan Freeman Not Dead
![]() |
Morgan Freeman |
I have developed a healthy skepticism about anything posted on Facebook. Earlier today, a post from a Facebook friend directed to my name asking me to click on a photo album turned out to be the work of a hacker. Now I see a post from another FB friend saying Morgan Freeman had died Thursday of "a artery rupture." The poor grammar was my first clue that the story was suspect. The cruel post also asked everyone to click "like" to pay your respects. When I didn't see any other posts from legitimate news organizations (or Fox News), I Googled Morgan Freeman to learn that this was the latest in a series of online celebrity death hoaxes. One less credible website did give his date of death as September 12, 2012... That was weird. We can all breathe a sigh of relief that as of now this talented man is still with us and as productive as ever. I tend to be a trusting person, but anonymous internet misinformation along with the half truths and outright lies our politicians right say into the camera breed more than a hint of cynicism in the most naive of us.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Don't Go There

With a stubbornly high 8.2% U.S. unemployment rate, you may think the Democrats would want to avoid the question over how we're doing now versus four years ago. That would be a mistake. Let's meet the question head on and take a snapshot of September 2008. According to the Center for American Progress, the United States lost a total of 605,000 jobs in the first eight months of 2008, including 84,000 in August 2008. In August 2008, the unemployment rate was 6.1%—the highest level since September 2003. Factoring in inflation, hourly wages were only 0.2% higher, and weekly wages were actually 0.8% lower in July 2008 than in March 2001. The share of people with employer-provided health insurance dropped from 64.2% in 2000 to 59.3% in 2007. Household debt averaged 132.4% of disposable income in the first quarter of 2008. New home sales in July 2008 were 35.3% lower than a year earlier. All prices rose by 24.5% from March 2001 to July 2008. One in 11 mortgages was delinquent or in foreclosure. Since March 2001, foreigners had bought 82.6% of all new treasury debt. In the first 11 months of the fiscal year 2008, which runs through September 30, the deficit amounted to $486 billion, up from $212 billion a year earlier.
Keep in mind that this was just the beginning of a downward slide that culminated in the next six months with millions more job losses and massive bailouts aimed at staving off a replay of the Great Depression. I remember some very good times leading up to September 2008, when MGM Grand at Foxwoods opened with great fanfare. Only months later, my radio employer told us cutbacks could be coming and the revenue from my direct mail advertising sales plunged 50%. That radio company is thriving today and I've recouped much of the advertising losses since then. There's plenty of room for improvement as public sector jobs targeted by the Tea Party have inflated today's unemployment numbers, but the GOP really doesn't want to paint 2008 as the good old days. That would NOT make Clint Eastwood's or Mitt Romney's day!
Monday, August 27, 2012
Obama: Moderate Republican?
The orchestrated
infomercials that are the Republican and Democratic national conventions are
getting set to saturate the news channels while most Americans would rather
watch football or "reality" shows.
When I saw the endorsement of President Obama by Florida's former GOP
governor Charlie Crist, it struck me how fitting this was. Tea Party
first-termers ruling the US House and many statehouses since the 2010 sweep
don't know the meaning of the word "compromise." Now "moderate" has become as much
of a dirty word as "liberal" to many right wingers. Has this intractable stance advanced the
agenda of the traditional Republican Party?
While Mitt Romney pledges
North American energy independence by 2020, the Obama administration already
has us on that course with an all-of-the-above approach that includes more oil
drilling and natural gas exploration. Obamacare is Romneycare, and many
Republicans were originally out front on individual mandates. The GOP can trace
health care reform efforts back to Nixon.
With the ultra-rich Romney paying 13% in taxes are we really stifling
job creation taxes are lower than they've been in decades? By recent past GOP standards, I’d say no. Are "Obama's EPA" and other
government agencies really strangling us with regulation compared to previous
administrations? No again. In Afghanistan, the troop surge could have
been a page out of the Bush/Cheney playbook. Obama constantly gets pelted with
the "socialist" label, yet evidence of that is scant. If we were on
such a sharply left-leaning trend, why are some hardline liberals less
enthusiastic about him now than in 2008?
On social issues, President Obama did not exactly lead the charge to
accept gay marriage any more than Abe Lincoln started out as a fiery abolitionist,
but both knew when the time had come. It took the absolutely outrageous claims
of the extreme right and a shift in public attitudes for Obama to
"evolve" in favor of it. The radical right wing agenda is driving
younger generations, minorities and more women away from the mainstream. Now with pre-election movies slamming his
role as commander-in-chief and conspiracy theorists claiming the government is
buying up all the bullets to put down its own citizens, President Obama has an
even greater opportunity to be the adult in the room.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Quebec: La Belle Provence
Opposite the Quebec Parliament, Quebec City |
Some folks go to the same vacation spots year after year. I'd rather spend my limited vacation time exploring a different spot each trip, but I made an exception by returning to this beautiful city I last visited back in 1995. For all its old world European charm, the Quebec City area appeared to have grown considerably. The heavy traffic and ever present highway construction provided the best evidence of that. I'm not sure whether or not my attempts at French past "bon jour" made for more confusion than just starting off in English. In this nerve center of French Canadian culture where Quebec fleur-du-lis flags seem to outnumber Canadian maple leaf ones, it seemed appropriate to at least make the initial attempt. I never got far in the Francophone world, as they'd hand us English language menus after I said two words. Most locals will oblige in English. There's something so high-class about being surrounded by French speakers in even the more moderately priced Quebec chain restaurants like St-Hubert (great chicken and mini desserts!) and Normandin (nice hotels too). The big attraction is downtown Old (Vieux) Quebec itself, full of cafes, shoppes, live music and historic treasures. Nightlife in Old Quebec has to be experienced.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Olympic Highs, Political Lows
![]() |
London Olympics Closing |
The games of the 30th Olympiad closed with the same level of well-orchestrated spectacle that ushered them in a couple of weeks earlier. The British hosts were more than capable of seeing it through to success and proving the naysayers wrong. American athletes led the U.S. to the top of the medal count. Coming off a high like that, we now find ourselves in the thick of a very nasty political season on this side of the pond. Governor Romney is hoping his selection of Congressman Paul Ryan will bring him something he has been lacking: credibility among Tea Party conservatives. With the GOP VP selection, the slugfest will only intensify. The negativity spewed by big-bucks Super PACs brought on by the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision has already generated many inaccuracies and even outrageous, bold-faced lies in a barrage of political ads. While Republicans have led the way with bending the facts about taxes and jobs, it only took the distasteful claim of one Obama Super PAC ad to even the score. Equating Bain Capital with a laid-off worker's wife losing health coverage, getting cancer and dying was a disgusting and far flung charcter assassination. Although the ad never aired the Democratic National Committee doesn't control it, the President should have at least condemned it. That would have differentiated President Obama from GOP candidates afraid to anger a very radicalized right wing. I don't see many gold medals being given out for political courage between now and November.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Hitting The Trails
![]() |
At Bluff Point, Groton |
This summer of record breaking heat has undoubtedly deterred many
would-be hikers from exploring every corner of eastern Connecticut. That may
explain why Linda, Oreo and I had an entire park to ourselves this weekend when
we decided to check out the Falls River Nature Preserve in the Ivoryton section
of Essex. This very walkable and well shaded system of trails must be one of
the best kept secrets in the region. As much as I appreciate quiet, it was just
a tad creepy being the only humans there. Summer heat aside, this has been an
exceptional year for walking the trails, beginning with a long hike around
Devil's Hopyard State Park on an unusually mild New Year's Day. Rocky Neck
beach also made for an ideal January dog walk as temperatures soared. I head to the state
parks more in spring and fall, when fees are practically nonexistent. Groton's
Bluff Point trails take some time, but the views along the way are fantastic.
Closer to my home, the old railroad trails connecting Colchester and Hebron are
straight, level and not so narrow. I'm always struck by how friendly people you
see along the way can be when you have an easygoing dog at your side. These
walks are welcome breaks from the constant point to point driving I do during
the week. The destination is not the big deal.
Monday, July 30, 2012
A Slippery Slope

Conservatives have taken up the defense of Chick-fil-A's right to freedom
of speech and religion. Fox News and Cumulus Media* commentator/host Mike
Huckabee has inserted himself right into the thick of the debate, and the right
wing could not have found a more inappropriate leader on this issue. He
recently agreed with a caller who characterized gay men as child molesters,
giving that false assumption as a good reason why the Boy Scouts are right in
not allowing gay scoutmasters. Huckabee's record of homophobic statements is
outrageous. An individual's views are one thing, but Chick-fil-A has also put
their corporate money where their mouth is. That could cost them a lot of
goodwill in what has been an impressive American success story based on some
otherwise solid values. It is sad to find them on the wrong side of history
this time.
*The above opinions are my own and should not be construed as the opinions of management of Cumulus Media Inc. or its affiliates.
Monday, July 23, 2012
A Common Thread
![]() |
Aurora, Colorado Shooting Scene |
We are at a loss to explain what would prompt someone to carry out a senseless act of violence like the Aurora, Colorado movie theatre massacre. As time goes by, the background of a disturbed shooter, accounts of survivors and stories of exceptional people will fade from the headlines. The impact of this tragedy will not go away, given the possibility of a similar incident happening again. The conversation about violence in America never seems to get far. Nobody is remotely suggesting responsible gun owners should be totally deprived of a Second Amendment right to bear arms, yet a well-funded effort by the NRA has both political parties afraid to even bring up the topic of a nationwide assault weapons ban. Mayor Bloomberg is a billionaire and an independent, so he can afford to speak up. Then there's the issue of increasing levels of violence in movies. The latest Batman movie was touted as more shocking than ever with an even more dastardly villain than Heath Ledger's Joker. Of course, the only resolution is total annihilation. This increasingly dark narrative now runs through all the superhero movies along with other action features designed to top their predecessors. Does this desensitize a mostly young audience? Are we to accept this as the new norm because a Hollywood movie raked in $160,000,000 in an opening weekend? Will we have to pass through metal detectors just to take in movie?
Look at another sad news headline. The Penn State football sexual assault scandal resulted in harsh fines on the school along with the disgraced legacy of coach Joe Paterno. People in power turned a blind eye to protect a multi-million dollar sports franchise instead of doing the right thing. For all the severity of the penalty, I can't believe Penn State could still take the field this season. 2012 will stand out as the year we saw the effect of big money having its way like never before. The Citizens United Supreme Court decision now enables Super PACs to drown out voices who are not as well funded. When we can't even have the beginnings of a real discourse in the political arena, we are in big trouble. And how's that drug war going?
Thursday, July 19, 2012
You Didn't Build That
![]() |
From NY Daily News |
Why are Republicans pouncing on a portion of this speech made by President Obama last week in Roanoke, Virginia? Because they took it out of context to attack it as a slap against private business initiative. Here's the unedited relevant portion of his speech, most of which never aired on Fox News. You decide:
There are a lot of wealthy, successful Americans who agree with me -- because they want to give something back. They know they didn’t -- look, if you’ve been successful, you didn’t get there on your own. You didn’t get there on your own. I’m always struck by people who think, well, it must be because I was just so smart. There are a lot of smart people out there. It must be because I worked harder than everybody else. Let me tell you something -- there are a whole bunch of hardworking people out there.
If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help. There was a great teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive. Somebody invested in roads and bridges. If you’ve got a business -- you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that happen. The Internet didn’t get invented on its own. Government research created the Internet so that all the companies could make money off the Internet.
The point is, is that when we succeed, we succeed because of our individual initiative, but also because we do things together. There are some things, just like fighting fires, we don’t do on our own. I mean, imagine if everybody had their own fire service. That would be a hard way to organize fighting fires.
So we say to ourselves, ever since the founding of this country, you know what, there are some things we do better together. That’s how we funded the GI Bill. That’s how we created the middle class. That’s how we built the Golden Gate Bridge or the Hoover Dam. That’s how we invented the Internet. That’s how we sent a man to the moon. We rise or fall together as one nation and as one people, and that’s the reason I’m running for President -- because I still believe in that idea. You’re not on your own, we’re in this together.
So all these issues go back to that first campaign that I talked about, because everything has to do with how do we help middle-class families, working people, strivers, doers -- how do we help them succeed? How do we make sure that their hard work pays off?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)