Black Lives Matter in LA vetoes this.
Makes him highly recommended.
The good and the bad, emphasis on Trib and Sun-Times
Black Lives Matter in LA vetoes this.
Makes him highly recommended.
Or should be; he’s not commenting.
Tale told by a fool, signifying (something?) . . .
Sunday sermons, weekday observations
Do you think the end times are coming?
Find fuel for that expectation in the Drudge Report, where headlines tell the tale:
Exorcisms soar…
‘The true religion of America’: Why one TV mogul going all in on sports…
Horse racing: ‘Conveyor belt for slaughter’…Violent and drunk monkeys attack tourists in paradise beach…
Smugglers sawing through new sections of wall!
Ebola screening at airport…
Debt surpasses $23 trillion!
Days of terrifying darkness, cold and hunger amid PG&E’s sweeping power blackouts…
Mouth cancer record high. Oral sex to blame?
Inside CA’s black-market nightmare spawned by law gutting shoplifting penalties…
Downtown Hong Kong becomes battleground as night falls…
Planeloads of Cash From Russia Shipped to Venezuela…
Chile’s fiery anger fueled by fears of poverty in old age…
Brazil in ‘civil war,’ says head of Congress’ pro-gun faction…
President’s son suggests using dictatorship-era tactics on leftist foes…Hillary laughs when asked how…
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Shut up, she said . . .
. . . which some or many might have missed.
Matt Baron found the trustee’s “sustained table-pounding, finger-pointing diatribe that occupied the better part of four minutes” “deeply dismaying,” he wrote.
“The irony and hypocrisy [were] thick.” The board was working on a statement affirming “its commitment to, um, a variety of viewpoints, among other lofty aspirations.”
Lofty indeed.
He offered a “broader context.” In his more than “six years of serving on local government boards,” he had “never witnessed anything remotely resembling such a scene.”
Moreover, and more telling, as a newspaper reporter he had covered
hundreds of local government meetings—including some that were wildly dysfunctional—the only close analogy would be the three-ring circus that was the Town of Cicero’s public proceedings. And even by that measure, Trustee Buchanan established a new low for conduct.
I concur, after 40 years of watching boards and meetings, often taking notes, especially…
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A “table-pounding, finger-pointing diatribe”
Change is good. Right?
Publisher Dan Haley’s pitch for his new business model:
“Oak Park would not be the same place if the Wednesday Journal had not been here the past 40 years.”
Had never asked myself that question, an interesting one.
In any case, the issue is joined.
“To most people in our situation, I would say face the reality that our model is broken,” [Haley] said. “There was a process I went through of saying, ‘It’s not your fault, Dan. The world changed around you, and now you have to adapt to it.
Instead:
“Accept the reality, have faith in your community that they will see the value in the work you’ve done over time. … You have a foundation of readership and advertisers, you are in great shape. Be proud of the asset that has been built, and take that asset in a new way.”
That’s sales talk, and where would…
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A tale of the Western suburbs . . .
I googled “buchanan oak park shut up” and NOT UNTIL the 11th Google page, ten sightings each page, did I find NO COVERAGE of Trustee Buchanan’s ordering three fellow trustees, including the mayor, to stay out of an important discussion — while apparently unbeknownst to her, SOMEONE WAS VIDEOING THE WHOLE THING.
But it’s all about the other trustee she told to shut up because he’s a white man! A sordid story from once the biggest village in the world!
It’s a tragedy but largely a self-inflicted one. True, the country was ravaged by ISIS for five years but that conflict slowed to a skirmish months ago.
The fact remains that Iraq is a socialist basket case—a disaster of big government, central planning, and “leaders” with sticky fingers.
Yes, yet another socialist basket case among so many that it’s hard to keep up with their number.
How come the Chinese do like they do?
As China continues to make massive inroads into the global economy, they’re going to continue to push their will upon foreign corporations and nations. Among their imperialistic totalitarian prerogatives is to make sure nobody says anything bad about them.
This is why the entire nation of China has had the character of Winnie the Pooh banned just because someone criticized President-for-life Xi Jinping by saying he looked like him.
Money is powerful. Financial pressure is another kind of diplomacy for these people.
But it does, Mr. Chinese TV. That’s the difference (in this matter) between you and us. Precisely so.
via Chinese State Television Vows ‘Retribution’ Against N.B.A.’s Adam Silver – The New York Times