MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Frank Rich in describing O’Donnell the candidate for Biden’s old Senate seat in Delaware gave the best description of the Republican Party I have come across in some time:
She gives populist cover to the billionaires and corporate interests that have been steadily annexing the Tea Party movement and busily plotting to cash in their chips if the G.O.P. prevails.
You see Frank is saying that there is propaganda at work in all of this disinformation. I get mad at the NYT and at Rich. I mean how can you relate to a guy named Rich anyhow?
But Frank is on 'our side'. Always has been, really. ha!!!
This tea party frenzy has been about how the repubs have been able to rope the angry folks who aint got nothin' into believin that somehow, the dems are at fault.
What we need is a Huey Long.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmFQu_8u1TU
I was reading about Texas Governor Perry today and his particular brand of graft really struck me.
The Dallas Morning News came out with a story this weekend that Texas Gov. Rick Perry used the state's Emerging Technology Fund to funnel some $16 million to firms that were backed by major donors to his campaign.
Created in 2005, Perry pushed for the fund, which is meant to encourage the development of new technology and attract researchers to the state. The grants -- which have totaled $173 million since the fund's creation -- are overseen by the governor's office and must be approved by the governor himself.
The lieutenant governor and speaker of the state house must also sign off, the News reports, but they wait for governor's go-ahead before doing so.
On Perry’s own blog site you will be linked to gems like this:
Gov. Rick Perry today announced the state is investing $2.9 million through the Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF) in three Houston area companies for the development and commercialization of their innovative biomedical technologies.
Ricky is so proud of this fund.
If you recall, back in March of last year we learned that:
From the center of a Houston hardware store, Gov. Rick Perry ignited a debate about Texas job cuts, business taxes and President Barack Obama’s so-called economic stimulus program Thursday by rejecting the federal government’s offer of $555 million in aid to the unemployed.
And this from today:
"If you care about America, if you care about taking this country back, you find you a tea party. Get involved," Perry shouted to thousands who gathered in Tyler in East Texas to see him with conservative talk show host Glenn Beck in April.
But as Perry campaigns for a third full term, he may have to look for a tea party himself. While members of the movement say Perry is preferable to Democrat Bill White, many are focusing their energy on down-ballot races, not the top-of-the-ticket contest.
After all, Perry's record after 10 years as governor shows that he wields government power comfortably. And after 25 years in public life, he's hardly an outsider.
He advocated seizing land from private owners to make way for the now-defunct Trans-Texas Corridor toll road and he ordered school age girls in Texas to be vaccinated against the HPV virus — an order that the Legislature overrode. He accepted stimulus money from Washington to balance the state budget. State agencies under his control seized more than 400 children from a polygamist compound in West Texas where men were suspected of marrying underage girls; eventually, many were returned to their parents. He endorsed moderate Rudolph Giuliani for president in early 2008, then John McCain. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D9IKVTQ80.html
Except for saving underage girls from a fate worse than death (no snark intended), I have no love for Governor Perry. If you recall he is the idiot who feels that pursuant to some treaties between the Republic of Texas and the USA in the 1840’s, secession is more than just a possibility in his mind.
And did you notice on his site that he likes to kind of call his state a republic?
I was intrigued by this now-defunct trans Texas Corridor, however.
So The Gov said to Texicans,
Give me fund
Texas said “Gov
You must be putting us on”
Perry said “No”
Texas said “What”
“You can do what you want to do
But we all gotta run”
So Texas said where do you want this bribin’ done
Perry said
“Right on Highway 61”
I followed up the link provided by TPM and found this in the Dallas News:
Significant Perry donors are affiliated. Among them:
•$2.75 million to Terrabon Inc., a Houston company. Its backers have included Phil Adams, a college friend of Perry's who has given his campaign at least $314,000.
•$1.75 million to Gradalis Inc., a Carrollton firm. Among its investors has been Dr. James R. Leininger, who has contributed more than $264,000 to Perry's campaigns.
•$1.5 million to ThromboVision Inc., a Houston company. One of its investors was Charles W. Tate, who has donated more than $424,000 to Perry.
•$4.5 million to Convergen Lifesciences Inc. of Austin. The company was founded by David G. Nance, a former Perry appointee who has given the governor $80,000.
•$2 million to Seno Medical Instruments Inc. of San Antonio. Its investors have included Southwest Business Corp. and its subsidiaries, whose chairman, Charles Amato, gave Perry more than $32,000.
•$975,000 to Carbon Nanotechnologies Inc. of Houston. At the time of the award, one investor was William A. McMinn, who has contributed $152,000 to Perry.
The tea parties are idiots for following repubs. All Perry will ever do, all he has ever done, is funnel monies to the corporations who support him and deny the teapartiers' own economic interests.
EIPILOGUE
Corporate America finished the second quarter with "near-historic" profits, largely by cutting costs, laying off employees and streamlining operations, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Profits for companies in the S&P 500 soared 38 percent from the same period last year, hitting $189 billion, the WSJ says, the sixth-highest quarterly total ever. S&P analysts expect the trend to have continued in the third quarter.
Since 2008, corporate profits increased 10 percent -- but revenue was down 6 percent, the WSJ says. To achieve the impressive quarterly results, companies have had, as the WSJ puts it, to "streamline" their operations. This means firing workers, outsourcing labor and shuttering unprofitable (or less profitable) divisions.
The robust state of corporate profits presents a paradox: companies won't spend their money until the economy improves, but the economy won't improve until they spend their money. An increase in hiring, for example, would help drive a recovery. The New York Times reports this "chicken-and-egg" phenomenon, noting that near-zero interest rates have encouraged companies to borrow money and simply hoard it because, as the NYT puts it, "they can." Combined, companies have $1.6 trillion in cash, the paper notes. In the first quarter of this year, their cash reserves represented the highest percentage of assets since 1964.
"They are still holding on to more cash in the same way that Noah built the ark," Gluskin Sheff chief economist David Rosenberg told the NYT.
PREVIOUS VERSION POSTED AT: http://onceuponaparadigm.wordpress.com/2010/10/04/lord-governor-perry/#c...
Comments
More reason to vote. I am glad I don't live in Texas. Florida is bad enough with republicans in charge. Actually I like the idea that they seceed.
by trkingmomoe on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 1:34am
Oh my goodness Momoe, you are here so quick!!! I just got through with my third edit. hahahaah
You, Momoe, are the writer of the day. hahahahaha
I am glad I do not live in Texas tooooooooooooooo.
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 1:37am
I wrote it last night and spent more time getting it transfered out of works and on to this site then it took to write it. I posted it finially on TPMaholics and then copied it over to here. LOL I will do some more of these little histories about women. Thanks for the award.
by trkingmomoe on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 1:42am
Yes you will, you will do plenty.
But I have to write things ten times to get the feel of it, as they say.
That is fine and dandy.
That is what a writer has to do.
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 1:54am
"Jew Fatigue." I'm just gonna put that down here, Dick, so's you'll get another 1,000 hits from pissed off people searching for it.
Plus, Ted Doppelganger.
(Still laughing.)
*counter at 30 reads*
by quinn esq on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 7:37am
Did you ever read my baseball memory I sent you on DD's other blog? Or did you ignore me because I dissed your fatwad Posterous? :oP
And wasn't it "Ted Koppelganger"? Pretty funny, altogether.
by we are stardust on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 9:46am
Yep, thanks for the Walker story. Has a hockey player's attitude.
As for Posterous, at least we're not troubled by Jew Fatigue over there. Ha!
by quinn esq on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 2:45pm
Koppelganger had this manner of phrasing things and kind of resembled Alfred E. Newman; that has got to have something to do with the fact that I cannot stop laughing either. I wikied him to make sure he is not dead. He is ten years older than me and that makes him about 104.
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 9:43am
Texas, Texas.... How I often wish the south had won the Civil War and gained their independence. Think about it.
by David Seaton on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 8:09am
Now imagine that you are a slave.
by Rootman on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 8:13am
I'd move north.
by David Seaton on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 8:18am
Pursuant to the treaties leading up to Texas becoming part of the Union, Governor Perry opined that slavery was never that bad anyway and that he is bringing it back so that Texans can enjoy 100% 'employment', the Texas way. hahahaha
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 9:44am
(General Philip Henry Sheridan)
I've been in Texas multiple times now. Conferences, live events, even worked on a movie there once. (Wasn't too bad, either, for a low-buck direct-to-DVD'er!) If I'm paid to go to Texas, I'll do it. I won't bother going voluntarily.
Most of me wishes they would secede. As long as some Hill Country friends get to emigrate, that is. You can have the rest of that mess of a state.
Perry isn't doing anything other than what George Washington Plunkitt of the long-gone Tammany machine of New York described as "honest graft" - most of the time. It's those other times when he needs adult supervision. And the late, great, much-lamented Molly Ivins did say he had good hair. That's important, isn't it?
by Austin Train on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 10:36am
Honest graft? I am writing this one down.
932 grand to one company that gave him 130 grand. hhahaah
Lawyers get a third so I suppose 1/9th or so aint that bad. hahaa
I would give anything to have a tape of the conversation between the rep of that company and the governor's aide that led to the 'contribution'. I mean how exactly was the supplication phrased?
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 10:47am
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/George_Washington_Plunkitt
by Austin Train on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 10:58am
Going further on a direction not related to Plunkitt - thus, it gets its own reply...
I grew up on the West Side of Chicago, during the mayoral terms of Daley the Elder. For most of my life there, he was the only mayor the city had.
(I suggest "Boss" by Mike Royko as an outstanding overview of Daley's time as mayor.)
In January of 1967, Chicago was effectively paralyzed by a massive blizzard, getting close to three feet of snow in the course of one day. On the second night, my mother woke us and called us to the front window. There, at about 2 AM, a front-end loader was clearing our little one-way side street.
In other parts of town, arterial streets were still nearly waist-deep in snow.
We lived in Ward 31, represented in the City Council by Thomas Keane. Chicagoans of a certain age will need no reference beyond his name. For the rest of you, Google is your friend.
That is today's illustration of the value of connections in politics - and life.
Thus endeth the lesson.
by Austin Train on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 11:06am
I'm reading Edward Rutherford's "New York" right now, and the graft seems no different than in the colonial days when the King's representatives sold public contracts for their own personal gain. Unfortunately, I think Perry has plenty of company from the Democratic side of the aisle right now, and the problem will only be exacerbated by the Citizens United case and the advent of 501c nonprofits which are popping up now like weeds before the election, as they're not required to disclose the source of their contributions. It feels like we're at the beginning of an intelligence test for the American people, and so far we're not acing it.
by miguelitoh2o on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 8:18pm
BTW, here's Bob Herbert's piece from today's NYAT on Boehner and his own special approach to graft:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/05/opinion/05herbert.html?ref=opinion
by miguelitoh2o on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 8:31pm
well of course you hand out bribes on the floor of the House Miguel, that is where the repub reps are. I mean during vacations and stuff they scatter like ants after the hill is burned up. hahahah
by Richard Day on Tue, 10/05/2010 - 9:02pm