To the NY 23 victor go the — what?

Yesterday’s loser in NY 23, Doug Hoffman, is in for a hard time as a Republican?

Hoffman’s candidacy generated much talk of a civil war in the GOP. Ironically, it is [the winner, Bill] Owens who is about to learn firsthand what it’s like to belong to a majority that brooks no dissent.

That’s Stephen Spruiell at National Review Online, who has more:

When Blue Dogs voiced their concerns over the speed at which Pelosi was attempting to ram the health-care overhaul through the House, their fellow Democrats responded with contemptuous sneers.

Rep. Maxine Waters, the liberal lawmaker from California, criticized Rahm Emanuel’s strategy of recruiting conservative Democrats to run in right-leaning districts, saying that Emanuel’s “chickens have come home to roost.” Former DNC chief Howard Dean warned of primary challenges for Blue Dogs if they didn’t support the public option.

And those will be his seatmates and/or fellows in politics between now and the next election in less than a year?

 

Park National double-crossed?

Today’s Trib reports a letter from banker Michael Kelly to Oak Park-based FBOP employees that more or less blames FDIC for its going under — rules change did them in, he says.

Kelly, who lives in next-door-to-Oak Park River Forest (IL), has been quite a financial supporter of Christ the King Jesuit College Prep on the West Side, on the former Resurrection parish school property.

Don Harmon on the move

Not sure what this means.  On the surface, it seems that Harmon is making his move, Davis is dithering and losing out — as he is bound to, being so obviously left-wing and an unreliable campaigner to boot.

Sen. Don Harmon has filed for 7th District State Central Committeeman against Congressman Danny Davis. Davis has filed for Congress and Cook County Board President. He has until next Monday to decide which office to seek.

That is, I don’t know if it’s a surprise or what it represents by way of guard-changing.

Wimp city

Dennis Byrne finds much to complain about in Illinois and Chicago corruption:

Chicago is wimp city. A city full of obsequious voters, businesses and civic groups that have been repeatedly swindled, scammed and hosed by local politicians. Yet, with each betrayal, the serfs continue to grovel before such liege lords as Mayor Richard M. Daley and House Speaker Michael Madigan and beg for more of the same. Nothing is egregious enough to inspire insurrection by the city and state’s vassals.

Overstated?  Take plastics, into which The Graduate was urged to go on his big day:

Daley now is fighting to keep a huge national plastics industry convention from fleeing Chicago, its 40-year home. The show brought in $95.3 million last June, but it appears the exhibitors are fed up with the extravagant costs they must pay to riggers, tradesmen and other organized workers at McCormick Place. As the trade publication Plastics News reported, Daley met Wednesday in his office with convention officials to plead with them to stay.

Won’t you stay here, Bill Plastics, won’t you stay here?

As trade show exhibitor Tim Hanrahan explained in the publication, it cost $345 to get four cases of Pepsi to his booth. “The invoice breaks down to $254 for the four cases of Pepsi, a 21 percent service charge, and a 10.25 percent Illinois state sales tax, a 3 percent Chicago soft drink tax, a tax on the service charge and a food and beverage tax. Government taxes totaled $38.06, which is more than the legitimate retail price of the soft drinks,” he said. “I could go on. A $640 TV stand rental is another good example,” he said. “But you get the point.”

Taxes, we got taxes.  Like California:

In America’s federal system, some states, such as California, offer residents a “package deal” that bundles numerous and ambitious public benefits with the high taxes needed to pay for them. Other states, such as Texas, offer packages combining modest benefits and low taxes. These alternatives, of course, define the basic argument between liberals and conservatives over what it means to get the size and scope of government right.

Thus spake William Voegeli in LA Times, in a shortened version of a City Journal article.

[T]here’s an intense debate over which model is more admirable and sustainable. What is surprising is the growing evidence that the low-benefit/low-tax package not only succeeds on its own terms but also according to the criteria used to defend its opposite. In other words, the superior public goods that supposedly justify the high taxes just aren’t being delivered.

Take California, where taxes are high and things aren’t working, vs. Texas, where they are low and things are.  Take Chicago, where a $95.3 million convention is considering saying adieu, my friends, adieu, can no longer stay with you, and the big news is budget crunch and threatened services.  Please?

 

Laura W: Let chips fall

It was amazing.  The Nov. 2 column by Laura Washington left me speechless, which since I’m a gabby fellow does not often happen.  [See LW’s lede for model here.]

It’s about this bunch of Chi Trib retirees getting together to do so-called public service reporting — all white, almost all male of a certain age.

So what?  It’s their nickel, their time, requiring no federal money.  Let ‘em go, forget about it.  That’s my advice.  They will succeed or they won’t.  In this day there are no news monopolies, so the market will decide.

As for so-called diversity, which is Laura’s requirement, please.  In lieu of fast-disappearing professionalism, the only diversity that matters is political.  Socio-political-economic, I suppose.  O’Shea and friends are not likely to supply that, especially if NYTimes is their anchor buyer.

Ascension Democrats in Oak Park

Oak Parker Susan Jordan describes “a bizarre round of communications” after she discovered that Democrat Party operatives were behind a health care forum at Ascension Catholic Church.

She called the Archdiocesan Respect Life Office to make sure she had church policy right as regards “issue advocacy” on church property, then called the Ascension parishioner friend, Kathleen Masters, who had alerted her to the event, set for Sept. 20.  Jordan is a member of another Oak Park parish, St. Edmund.  She had been interested and had perused the flyer and found that its co-sponsors included Obama’s Organizing for America and the Democratic Party of Oak Park.

She thought it was a mistake, since the forum was set for the all-purpose, much-used and in-demand Pine Room at Ascension.  That’s when the “bizarre round” began, a two-week process.

She told Masters what the Respect Life office had told her.  Masters told her pastor, Fr. Larry McNally, who agreed it had to be a mistake.  The event had to be non-partisan, he said.  The mistake would be corrected.

But it wasn’t.  A revised version of the flyer had the same sponsors, a week before the event.  New flyers were produced not quite two days before the event — “sanitized,” said Jordan, who

later learned that the Democratic Party of Oak Park had paid for nearly 1,000 fliers (clearly stating the political co-sponsorship) that were widely distributed throughout Oak Park in the weeks prior to the event.

And the panel was stacked:

The panel of doctors included Dr. David Scheiner, touted as “President Obama’s personal physician for 21 years.”  . . . . Each of the four panelists promoted only . . . single payer/universal healthcare. This was . . . a political rally masquerading as a parish forum.

Discussion was controlled:

Attendees were required to write questions on cards and present them to volunteers for submission to the moderator; absolutely no direct questions or comments from the audience.

A question about taxpayer funding of abortion provoked the forum’s “most glaring moment.”

Dr. Scheiner responded that “abortion is an issue that has been debated for decades; it really should not be part of the conversation on healthcare reform.”

His answer was greeted with “enthusiastic applause.”  The pastor, Fr. McNally, said nothing.  Neither did Rev. Richard Hynes, Director of the archdiocesan Department of Evangelization, Catechesis, and Worship, say anything.

(McNally made a similar statement from the pulpit during the 2004 presidential election, also eliciting applause, during mass.)

Jordan “sat in amazement.”

[T]he round of communications in the weeks prior to the event included a promise by Father McNally to the Archdiocesan Respect Life Office that he would “clearly address the pro-life issues in his opening remarks.”

He didn’t, she said, instead mentioning the bishops’ policy on health care and saying copies were available at the back of the hall.

Abortion was a no-go zone, but panel members

frequently mentioned the number of deaths attributed to the lack of health insurance, as reported by a recent study in the American Journal of Public Health by Harvard researchers. That number is estimated at 45,000 deaths per year-or . . . “an unnecessary death . . . every 12 minutes.”

Jordan comments:

Contrast that figure with the estimated 1,200,000 unnecessary deaths that occur every year from abortion: over 3,515 per day, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

She heard she had been fingered by McNally:

On the day of the event, I received an e-mail [from an ally, a mole?] informing me that the Chancery had received a communication from Father McNally indicating his concern that I was “behind an effort to be disruptive to Ascension’s planned talk … relating to healthcare reform … one of Cardinal George’s Cabinet members has even been told to attend the event as a mediator.”

She assumed the mediator was Fr. Hynes, the evangelization director, and not the armed cop who was also present, but Hynes remained silent.

Overhearing talk of hate mail sent to Fr. McNally, she ran over what she had said in the previous weeks.

I had said I would invite “every pro-life doctor I knew” to the forum: again, with the (false) expectation that this would be a true forum — welcoming a range of viewpoints.

Several did come.  Dr. Christopher Clardy walked out after the first five minutes; he called her later to say “what a waste of time” it was, “a political rally on church property!” 

Dr. George Dietz was there, wearing a pro-life button.  His written question for the panel was refused. 

And Dr. Robert Dolehide was there with his wife Eileen, who asked about putting pro-life materials on the table at the back of the parish hall. She was told to “get [her] own table.”

Fr. McNally had an entirely different view of the whole business.  He told Wednesday Journal of Oak Park & River Forest he was pleased with the forum and “would do it over again.” 

“I thought it was very fair. I didn’t feel we were promoting anything other than answering questions from folks.  I thought it was very good.  I really did.  I thought, boy, this turned out to be terrific.  It was just an emotional two hours.  It was a very positive experience.” 

Moreover, he said he “was already in the process of removing the political groups as sponsors before the archdiocese got involved” and blamed Jordan’s parish for interfering:

“If St. Edmund’s would have kindly called me, I would have told them that, instead of running downtown, which really annoyed me,” McNally said. “It was all taken care of behind the scenes. I just wish their pro-life committee would have just called me. I would have said that we’re fixing that. I’m really just frustrated she didn’t call me because I would have told her that, you know, things were being corrected.”

Catholics and ACORN in Chicago

Can’t we Catholics all get along?  Or get things straight? 

In the October 23, 2009 issue of the Catholic New World, there is an article entitled: “Local CCHD [Catholic Campaign for Human Development] effort address concerns over ACORN,” a statement was made that the leaders of Catholic Citizens of Illinois have said they will not boycott the campaign this year. This is not true.

Catholic Citizens is a conservative group.  The New World is published by the archdiocese, giver of money to ACORN, the heavily besmirched organization of community organizations on the Alinsky model.  Cath Citizens have opposed this giving, having hosted and heard out the man from the Capital Research Center, which keeps track of who gives what to whom.

Capital Research Center analyzes organizations that promote the growth of government and identifies viable private alternatives to government regulatory and entitlement programs.

Cath Citizens also pay attention to what’s found by Bellarmine Veritas Ministry, “a Catholic grass-roots organizing ministry dedicated to truth and action” that foreswears creation of “faceless political power and revolution,” arguing that “all true power comes from God alone.”  They seek instead “to instill the fearless hope that comes from walking in light and truth.”

I spell this out, or let them do so, because it emphasizes the central, in my view, critique of Alinskyism, with its embracing of the power principle and its making success depend on the enemy’s reaction. 

Monsignor Robert Fox in Harlem in the 60s also rejected the social ju-jitsu that Alinsky promoted (and sold to assorted Catholic prelates), instead urging parishioners to take back mean streets with candle-light processions.  (I wrote about it for my employer, Ave Maria Magazine, in 1968.)  “The people, yes” was his implied motto, but as people assert their freedom, not as they force others to comply.

At issue now is whether Catholic Citizens will boycott the Catholic Campaign, as it did last year, over issues related to ACORN.  The local campaign director, Rey [sic] Flores, says they will not, according to the New World.

Wrong-o, says Cath Citizens head woman Mary Anne Hackett: “This is not true.”

Meeting with Flores and the archdiocese’s head man for Peace and Justice, Hackett and three Cath Citizens board members (she and two others? not clear)

reiterated [their] position that the name of the CCHD had been irreparably damaged by recent revelations of donations to ACORN, [its] community organizing which in some cases had involved pro-abortion groups, and [its involvement in] voter fraud in over 12 states and that we are unable to support it [CCHD] as it presently operates.

They would cooperate, but “No promise [of support] was made by the members of Catholic Citizens who were present at the meeting.”

Oops.  Back to the drawing board for Rey Flores and — who knows? — the New World too.  At least the latter has to do something — run a skinback or stand its ground one way or another. 

The writer may have been (inadvertently) misled by Flores, but it’s important that she and her newspaper get this straight — online right now and in a week or so when their next hard copy comes out.

Don’t slam the door, leave the lights on

Sun-Times front-pager, dominating it, is about former heavyweight champ Ernie Terrell bailing out of Roseland.

“You can’t live here and be safe anymore,” Terrell said. “Me and my wife, I guess we gotta get outta here.”

Terrell:

Ernie Terrell

Case of black flight succeeding the much more publicized white variety of 40 years ago.  Leave it to the writer, who in his lede says:

Do you know who lives on this block? Ernie Terrell. The heavyweight champion. Right there in that bungalow.

That’s the pitch a Roseland Realtor would give house hunters checking out the 11100 block of Parnell in the early ’70s — back when white people couldn’t flee to the suburbs fast enough. [italics added]

White people fleeing, we know about that, having heard it often enough.  But blacks were moving into Roseland then, en masse

The Terrells

were the first black family on the block. In just a few years, the entire neighborhood went from an enclave of Dutch and Italian families to 99 percent black folks.

Whites flee, blacks “move in.”  Whoa.  Blacks were fleeing too, as Terrell is fleeing now.  Thus it has ever been.

How newspapers do so well

Opened my Chi Trib on this Sunday morning, feast of Christ the King, being the last Sunday in October (apparently no more: bishops’s site calls it only “Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time in ordinary time,” making it prosaic as all get-out), and found another sad, sad story about people for whom THINGS ARE NOT WORKING OUT. 

Trib offers such on a regular basis and has been doing so for a long time.  Editors have a penchant for such things.  Their idea of a grabber headline is a sad, sad story.  Why is this?

A safe home. A good job. Stability for their children after years on the run from death threats and the mayhem of war — that is what the Iraqi refugees envisioned when told they were coming to America.

Instead, one family is assigned an apartment on Chicago’s North Side so full of cockroaches and filth they couldn’t stay the night.

A veterinarian from southern Iraq relies on relatives in Karbala to pay his rent in Chicago, upending the traditional immigrant experience.

An Iraqi mother of three, unable to pay her rent with her husband still in the Middle East, finds little help warding off the predatory advances of male acquaintances offering assistance.

Iraqi mother of three:

Iraqi mother

Stop, stop, enough already!  On to the sports page!  Those who enjoy beating themselves up, keep reading!

Later:

Reader D: Take heart, JB — the Feast of Christ the King will be celebrated Nov. 22, 2009. Apparently something was revised in 1969 and the last Sunday in October is not the feast day any more. Gershwin abides even today: “No, no, they can’t take that away from me.”

Reader B:  the iraqi story leaves me somewhat spechless.  don’t know what to make of it. so many aspects..  am sharing it with others however. –b

Ed.: If the careful reader does not know what to make of it, it’s a busted story (as a play is busted on the f-ball field).  Focus, people!

In union there is no showing the door

This fellow got a public service award from Harvard, his alma mater, and this is how he talks at that citadel of progressivism:

Extended school days and mandatory summer classes are required if the achievement gap is going to close, said [Geoffrey Canada]. Teachers need to be paid top salaries, and the ones who don’t perform need to be shown the door, he said, of the crop of “lousy” teachers who too often populate schools in urban and poor areas. In addition, school administrators and officials must be held accountable. [italics added]

In the audience was Robert Coles, famed psychiatrist and author, after whom the award and accompanying “Call of Service” lecture is named.

Canada here:

Teachers-G_ Canada_edited

How showing the door to non-performing teachers sits with the unions is an important and easily answered question.