Angry New Yorker

Friday, December 31, 2004
 
We'd hope to let the year pass quietly into the deep, but, true to form, The New York Times pulls us back in.

Are We Stingy? No. Are the New York Times' Editorial Page Editors Liberals? Yes.

The New York Times ends the year with an idiotic editorial (Are we Stingy? Yes. , available here) that pulls off the liberal equivalent of a triple-play by tweaking Bush, striking up the band for a chorus of "The U.S. is the worst", and tossing it over to third to praise both Europe and the U.N.

First, the NY Times is populated by leftists with a superiority complex - granted, not all, but there are more people there who can't logically reason their way out of a paper bag than there are those who can rationally see and digest both sides of an issue. That's a fact.

Second, this insane rush to dump money at the tsunami catastrophe is both foolish and counter-productive. The end result will be, again, waste and fraud on a massive scale fueled by the understandable and righteous wishes of well-intentioned people around the world.

The proper way to gin up the necessary resources is to FIRST get a rough handle on the disaster; THEN, determine how much would be immediately needed; and FINALLY, get countries to pledge to pony up over time the funds as money is spent on the immediate relief and on longer term reconstructive aid. The one way most definitely NOT to go about financing the operation is the way the New York Times supports: namely, get countries to engage in one-upmanship of "I pledged more money than you to prove I'm not stingy."

Unfortunately, however, in addition to its heavy contingent of leftists, the Times must be heavily strewn with people from single-child families. As folks from families with plenty of kids we learned early on that engaging in "oh, yeah! are too!" battles never accomplished anything. Sadly, it's a lesson the Times has yet to master.

UPDATE: According to Andew S. Natsios (bio here), U.S. Agency for Int'l Development Administrator, www.usaid.gov, who sounds like a very reasonable and rationale person (e.g. "don't send in your used clothing, ... cans of food"; press conference available via C-SPAN, here), stated that according to actual figures, (see press conference link, supra, at time 14:44 of 1:02:21), regarding levels of contributions OECD figures reveal the U.S. contributed US $2.4 billion last year, s 40% of ALL contributions by ALL countries, making the U.S. the largest single aid contributor by far. Stick that in your pipe New York Times and U.N.

UPDATE II: (the following via Instapundit.com)

STINGINESS UPDATE: Over $7.5 million raised by Amazon.com so far.

UPDATE: It's over $8.5 million now.

MORE: U.S. government aid is now up to $350 million.

ARE AMERICANS STINGY? Daniel Drezner and Bruce Bartlett look at the numbers.

Day by Day has its own take, too:

123004dbd.jpg



UPDATE III The amazing Belmont Club notes the U.N. is better at taking credit than at actually accomplishing anything of substance, and loves to deny "legitimacy" to any actions not under the U.N. baby-blue flag of failure. Read it all here.

Also, Michael J. Totten gives the mindless Clare Short a full broadside for her comments (here), such as, "[i]t is the only body that has the moral authority [to carry on this relief effort]." D'oh!! Say what?! Read Totten's dead-on salvo,
First Stingy, Now Unilateral - here.


Monday, December 20, 2004
 
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year

Barring any major news, or items we can't resist skewering between now and Jan. 1, 2005, this will be the last post of 2004. It's been a long year, and since one of the most important hard drives here apparently accepted the offer of early retirement (i.e. it failed) this morning, we're going to be busy.

Still, this news story from the New York Times captured our interest for several reasons:

Report Sees Rail Expansion as Crucial for Manhattan

By SEWELL CHAN

Published: December 20, 2004

Job growth in the New York metropolitan region will stagnate without a major expansion of commuter rail and subway access to Midtown and Lower Manhattan over the next 20 years, according to a report to be released by New York University today.

The full story is available here, and the report by the Rudin Center for Transportation Policy & Management referenced in the story is entitled, well, we don't know what the title is because The N.Y. Times' poor reporting fails to name it. And as far as we can tell, it isn't yet available on the Rudin Center website. But the Times' headline is both indicative and damning. Rail expansion crucial for Manhattan? Ahem, I think that should read "crucial for New York City." Granted the latte and croissant crowd at the Times readily forgets New York City isn't just Manhattan and four warehouse areas, but folks, please, try to make it a little less obvious next time, eh?

Second, the story continues with the observation that:
"'[w]e've gone through 40 years where we've really forgotten about the significance of building new capacity,' said Rosemary Scanlon, an author of the report. (The Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, which connects Brooklyn and Staten Island, was completed in 1964.) 'All of the major cities in the world seem able to grab hold of what they need to expand and grow. We seem to be myopic about it.'"
Really? Paris, Tokyo and London have been doing exactly what to significantly expand and grow in the same period? Not to excuse NYC's shortcomings -- which are both many and deep -- but NYC has had a regional transit plan sitting in a drawer [see description of 1968 Program for Action, details available here] for something like 40 years, with no movement post-Robert Moses. Ms. Scanlon report is just another periodic push to get it, or something, going.

Third, the reports' authors hoist a blatant falsehood on the reporter, who doesn't know any better. Namely,
"[w]e've had suburbanization in the region, as in all regions, but during the same time, the relative strength of Manhattan as an employment center and as a generator of personal income has grown," said Mr. Seeley, who retired in 1997 after a career at the Port Authority and the city government. "It's become more dominant. This is not a centrifugal region like Los Angeles."
This could not be flatly more untrue. If anything, Manhattan's role as the employment center of the area has diminished, as edge cities have taken hold, and as company after company has moved major back offices to Brooklyn and New Jersey. Granted, Manhattan's position and prestige as a job center remains, but it's far from becoming "more dominant." Would Mr. Seeley take off his Port Authority rose-colored glasses for a moment he would instantly see this.

Finally, the report ends on both a cautious and ironic note:

Because the report calls for increased rail access, and not vehicular traffic, its recommendations are unlikely to be controversial among neighborhood advocates and environmentalists concerned about preservation of public space. [ed. note - Massive construction projects underground haven't cause any controversy, cost overruns or neighborhood opposition? Hmmm. See, e.g. Boston's Big Dig] But its call for major public investment - at a time when the state faces rising education, health care and pension costs - may be unrealistic. [ed. note - The understatement of the year.]

"We have to ask ourselves what's the price if we don't do these projects," said Elliot G. Sander, the director of the Rudin Center and a former city transportation commissioner. "New York risks the possibility of having a real ceiling on the economic growth of the financial capital of the country."

"Earth to Mr. Sander. Come in, Mr. Sander!" New York not only "risks the possibility" of a ceiling on economic growth, that ceiling is already firmly in place and is made of steel-reinforced, foot-thick concrete. This is not to say that NYC couldn't somehow pull of the nose-dive it's just entering -- only that someone needs to pull up on the stick soon.

UPDATE
We've since found the report discussed, Rosemary Scanlon and Edward S. Seeley Jr., At Capacity: The Need for More Rail Access to the Manhattan CBD, Nov. 2004, and it's available as a PDF here.


Thursday, December 16, 2004
 
A Must Read...

Deroy Murdock in today's National Review Online, hits the nail on the head perfectly in his essay "President Pataki -- Cannot Be" here. Some highlights:

Hudson Institute president Herbert London notes that California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's $105.3 billion fiscal year 2005 budget spends $2,967 per capita on 35.5 million citizens. New York's $101.3 billion fiscal plan, in contrast, spends $5,276 per capita on 19.2 million people. Even worse, New York's 20th consecutive delayed budget was due April 1 but was adopted August 11. While state legislators are mainly to blame, the largely unassertive, often invisible Pataki neither can inspire nor dragoon lawmakers into adult behavior.

"It's difficult to imagine that Pataki has a future as a national leader after he's brought New York to its knees," London says. "Not everyone in America knows George Pataki, but those who know Pataki don't want him to do for America what he's done for New York."

And more
New Yorkers pay $141 in combined state and local taxes per $1,000 in income. America's highest tax burden is 26 percent above the national average. Local taxes alone are 71 percent above average. These Citizens Budget Commission figures are for fiscal year 2000 and do not reflect subsequent state and local tax hikes that have uglified this picture.
Get the picture?



Tuesday, December 14, 2004
 
The NYC Council's Way is to "Beat Them Into Submission"

NY1.com reports that:

"Landlords Face Higher Fines For Heat Violations

DECEMBER 14TH, 2004
Landlords who don't turn up the heat may have to pay up. The City Council Committee on Housing and Buildings voted unanimously Tuesday to increase penalties for landlords who do not provide tenants with adequate heat and hot water during winter months. Violators could wind up paying $500 a day. The current penalty is $250. "


So with heating oil up 40% from last winter (see NYSERDA Home Heating Prices), what's the City Council's answer? Adding to smaller landlords problems. That makes little sense, but it's typical of Gifford Miller's media hounding, and the City Council's know-nothing, everyone-can-pay-anything approach to governing. Money? Don't talk to us about money. It grows on trees here, right?


Monday, December 13, 2004
 
More MTA MADNESS

And the MTA wonders why no one believes its books... submitted for your disapproval, this following tale of triteness from today's New York Times:
December 11, 2004

Facing Deficit, M.T.A. Gave a 22% Raise to Its Director

By SEWELL CHAN

The chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which is seeking a fare increase and new state taxes to stanch a growing budget deficit, approved a 22 percent pay raise for the authority's executive director last year; the raise took effect last January.

The action by the chairman, Peter S. Kalikow, raised the annual salary of the authority's highest-paid officer, Katherine N. Lapp, to $235,000 from $192,500.

* * *

The salary of Ms. Lapp, a lawyer who was appointed in 2002, is in line with that of heads at other major urban transit systems.

The top official of the metropolitan transit agency in Boston is paid $225,000; in Chicago, $197,750; in Los Angeles, $302,375; in the San Francisco Bay area, $269,717; and in Washington, $259,088, officials with the five transit agencies said this week.

Direct comparisons with other urban transit systems are difficult, however, because of the New York system's size and because it is an amalgamation of two commuter railroads, a bus system on Long Island and New York City Transit, the largest component. Each of the four transit agencies has its own history, organizational culture and administrative staff and operates with relative autonomy.

* * *

In April 2002, the president of New York City Transit, Lawrence G. Reuter, negotiated a new contract with the authority. His salary rose by 23 percent, to $225,000 from $182,500.

A year later, in April 2003, the president of Metro-North Railroad, Peter Cannito, renegotiated his contract and received a 25 percent pay increase, to $215,000 from $172,500.

In October 2003, the senior vice president for operations at the Long Island Rail Road, James J. Dermody, was named its president. He is paid $215,000, the same as Mr. Cannito. He previously made $172,010.

Two other agency heads also received substantial salary increases last year.

Michael C. Ascher, the president of M.T.A. Bridges and Tunnels - also known as the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority - received a new contract, raising his salary to $182,500 from $157,500.

Read the entire article here.


 

From Gotham Gazette... [ed. note - does this surprise anyone?]


New York State is the Least Economically Free State in the Nation

A new report by the California-based Pacific Research Institute (PRI) and Forbes magazine has concluded that New York State is the least economically free state in the nation. The 2004 U.S. Economic Freedom Index ranked New York at or near the bottom of the list in four of five measures considered in the study: government size (50), welfare spending (50), regulatory (42), fiscal (47), and judicial (8).

The report can be found here.



Friday, December 10, 2004
 
We May Be Angry, but the British Are Out of Their Minds...


As a kid I thought the British were both cool and tough. Beatles and British Empire -- guys with big mustaches in Pith helmets enduring it all. You didn't mess with a people who'd successfully resisted every invasion of the British isle, kept a stiff upper lip and had the sheer gall to fight in day-glow RED uniforms [obviously they no longer wear redcoats, but still...].

So it's with no small dismay that the Brits, as a society not individually, today appear to be a majority of ultra pacifists and pensive hand-wringers (personified perhaps a bit too Monty Pythonish by the current crop of BBC's correspondents). The Belmont Club (here) launches a scathing exegesis on the U.K.'s practice of criminally charging homeowners who've killed robbers. It's now finally, stirred up a hornet's nest of controversy in Britain. (E.g. >Dr. Ian Stephen, What To Do When Your Home is Burgled, The Scotsman, Dec. 1, 2004, here (recommending "[w]hen individuals are confronted by intruders . . . Direct contact should be avoided whenever possible. If unavoidable, the victim should adopt a state of active passivity. . . . . be careful what you say or do and give up valuables without a struggle.")

The reason this is even noteworthy here in the U.S. is no one thinks twice (well, almost no one) as to whether you have the right to use deadly force should some miscreant burst into your home during the night while your daughter's asleep in the next room and your wife is under the covers. After all, that's what pump action 12-guage shotguns are for; and why racking one is perhaps the single most distinctive sound in the gun world. It's ironic that the bedrock precept that a man's home is his inviolative castle came to us from the British when they've apparently since lost grasp of the concept, and, adding insult to injury, haven't implemented the power of the broken windows theory. (See Theodore Dalrymple, The Frivolity of Evil, available here; and more here).


 
Our Carefree Governor and Legislature At It Again - Spending Like There's No Tomorrow (with Bloomberg's Full Support)

As Steve Malanga notes (here) in today's Daily News, the Javitts Center, and indeed the whole idea of urban-renovation-by-convention-center, is a white elephant destined to be a sinkhole of taxpayer money.
Bigger Javits big waste of $
Thursday, December 9th, 2004

Despite New York State's huge budget deficits and high debt, our fiscally carefree political leaders in Albany just approved a $1.4 billion expansion of the Javits Convention Center, including a $500 million hotel next door. With the debate over a Jets stadium soaking up most of the attention about the future of the far West Side, New Yorkers have not focused on what a boondoggle the expansion of the convention center is.

Too bad. While opponents of the stadium cite examples from around the country that show sports facilities do not generate much economic payback, they ignore similar hard data on convention centers, which independent experts consider lousy generators of new economic activity, consistently failing to achieve the results that supporters predict for them.

Convention centers flop because cities have been building them at an astounding rate, piling up inventory faster than the industry can use it. In the 1980s, 104 cities and counties constructed convention centers. In the 1990s, 100 cities built or expanded centers, and so far this decade, about 40 more projects are underway, adding about 8 million square feet of space in an industry where demand is not growing very much.



Thursday, December 09, 2004
 
Proof That 4 out of 5 Dentists Prefer Quinnipiac University?

More "proof" that polls should be abandoned. NY1.com runs with a poll that concludes, according to NY1.com, that "New Yorkers across the state overwhelmingly agree with a court-appointed panel’s recommendation to give the city’s public schools billions in extra funding, according to a new survey." The press release and poll results from Quinnipiac are available here and it's chock-full of non-sequiter goodness, though my favorite is a quote from Maurice Carroll, director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, who wry observes:
"It might look different when they get the bill, but for now, New Yorkers from Montauk to Jamestown agree with the court-appointed panel's finding that New York City school children should get billions in extra help"
Gee, ya think? If it isn't costing you anything in the here and now, nearly everyone's for more spending from some nebulous "other" -- everyone except fiscal conservatives that is, which is a rare breed in this state indeed.

One point not noted by NY1, because it doesn't fit in with the ra-ra NYC-boosterism mantra, is that the same poll indicates that 24% of the respondents answers "very dissatisifed" to the question of "[i]n general, how satisfied are you with the way things are going in New York State today? Are you very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, somewhat dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied?"

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
18. A court appointed panel has found that an additional 5.6 billion dollars must be spent on New York City's public school students every year to give them a sound basic education. Do you agree or disagree with the panel's finding?

                        Tot     Rep     Dem     Ind     Men     Wom

Agree 61% 42% 76% 58% 57% 64%
Disagree 31 49 17 34 35 28
DK/NA 8 9 7 8 8 8


UpState..... UpState
Urban Othr Total NYC Sub Wht Blk

Agree 46% 47% 47% 76% 62% 55% 81%
Disagree 44 42 43 19 28 36 16
DK/NA 10 10 10 4 10 10 3



Wednesday, December 08, 2004
 
Crime and Real Estate

Had the classic work of literature been flipped around and written in NYC, it's title would have been more appropriately Crime and Real Estate, rather than Crime and Punishment, because nothing drives people crazier, or to greater desperation than real estate in New York City.

The following unfortunate news story was expected for ages by those who live here... the only surprise is the scenario hasn't happened sooner, or more often: namely, a landlord driven to the financial and psychological edge by a rent control tenant paying a laughable pittance in rent finally takes matters into his own hands. But there are some very suspicious, and patently incorrect items in the story.

For starters, the reporter Mr./Ms.? Kilgannon, states "[the father of the tenants attacked] said he and his wife, May, moved into the Ithaca Street building in 1964 and had always paid $400 a month in rent." I don't think so. $400 a month rent in 1964, at a time when a good yearly salary was, perhaps, $5000. I'd double-check that at The New York Times.

Second, if the rent was $400 in 1964 -- which it clearly wasn't -- there's no way it would remain $400 forty years later. Two major problems with rent control in NYC (not to be confused with rent stabilization) is that rents for rent control units can only rise a small set amount based on the original pre-1971 rent amount AND that people, like these sons, can "inherit" a rent control apartment when they clearly should not and are then subsidized by the landlord and other tenants.
Queens Landlord Convicted in Plot to Kill Two Tenants
By COREY KILGANNON

December 8, 2004

A Queens landlord was found guilty yesterday of trying to plot the murder of two tenants paying $400 a month for an apartment in his building, so that he could rent out their apartment to new tenants for at least $1,500 a month.

A jury in State Supreme Court in Queens found the landlord, Juan Basagoitia, 50, guilty of hiring two other tenants in the building to kill William Lavery, 35, and his brother, David Lavery, 40, who had lived in the three-bedroom apartment on the third floor since childhood.

The brothers, who were badly injured in the attack but survived, legally assumed the lease in recent years from their father, George Lavery, who first took the apartment in 1964 at the same rent.

* * *

After their arrests, they told the police that Mr. Basagoitia had agreed to pay them $2,500 to kill the brothers. Mr. Basagoitia, 50, a Bolivian immigrant who bought the building in 1997, was then arrested also.

* * *

He said he and his wife, May, moved into the Ithaca Street building in 1964 and had always paid $400 a month in rent. Mr. Basagoitia bought the building, a brownstone, in 1996, he said, and immediately began having a lawyer send eviction letters to the Laverys.

Mr. Lavery said his sons legally assumed the lease in 1997, but were harassed repeatedly by Mr. Basagoitia, at one point being taken to housing court. The apartment was ransacked and burglarized several times, he said, and they suspected Mr. Basagoitia each time, he said.

Read the entire story here.



Tuesday, December 07, 2004
 
A Day That Continues to Live in Infamy

Although much of the press has allowed the day to past unrecognized, today's anniversary of the day that will live in infamy has renewed meaning in a time of war. Below are some bonafide websites to support our troops, and here's the inspiring and noble story of Sgt. Rafael Peralta, who gave his life for his men in Fallaja with:
"an act living up to the heroes of the Marine Corps’ past, such as Medal of Honor recipients Pfc. James LaBelle and Lance Cpl. Richard A. Anderson, Peralta – in his last fleeting moments of consciousness- reached out and pulled the grenade into his body. LaBelle fought on Iwo Jima and Anderson in Vietnam, both died saving their fellow Marines by smothering the blast of enemy grenades." (Read the entire story of Sgt. Peralta here.)
To support the troops consider:
Angry New Yorker does not support actions like that of this deserter. Canada can have him; we certainly don't want him. But I'd much rather see him extradited, court-martialed, and if found guilty (is there any doubt?), tossed into military prison where he can ponder the error of his ways.
Soldier looks to Canada
TORONTO — An Army private seeking refugee status in Canada after refusing to
serve in Iraq told immigration officials on Monday that the war is illegal and would
have forced him to commit war crimes.
Pfc. Jeremy Hinzman, 26, fled from Fort Bragg, N.C., on Jan. 2 and lives in Toronto with his 31-year-oldwife, Nga Nguyen, and 2-year-old son, Liam. Hinzman told the Immigration andRefugee Board the war in Iraq was illegal and fighting in it would have made him a war criminal. He also said he would be persecuted if forced to return to the United States.
A member of the 82nd Airborne Division, Hinzman could face charges as a deserter
if sent home and face up to five years in prison. He left his unit about two weeks after learning his outfit would be sent to Iraq.
- Stars and Stripes, Mideast Ed., Dec. 8, 2004, at 6, available at http://estripes.osd.mil/download/MID21208


 
An Insult to Nannies

A week ago I wondered when New York State would take the next step in its ongoing march to the all-encompassing nanny state (see "NY Passes Law Requiring Young Skateboarders To Wear Helmets" here). Little did I know, however, that Canada was determined to surpass its neighbor to the south. This in via Tim Blair, via the incomparable Mark Steyn:

"For years, Mark Steyn has been using "federal bicycling-helmet regulations" as a mocking nanny-state gag. Little did he know that helmet regulators were so insanely serious:

I should have known better. The other day, a private member's bill was introduced in the Ontario legislature requiring every grown-up, before mounting a bicycle anywhere in the province, from Niagara Falls to Hudson's Bay, to strap him or herself into a helmet. Needless to say, the bill was approved on its second reading unanimously ...

To call this a "nanny state" is an insult to nannies. When Baron von Trapp hired Maria to look after all the little von Trapps, he didn't object to her and the kids riding their bicycles down the lane while singing "Do-Re-Mi" unhelmeted. Forty years on, the gal who was 16 going on 17 and the telegraph boy who was 17 going on 18 are 56 going on 57 and 57 going on 58, but in Ontario they're still not old enough to ride a bicycle without government supervision ...

Chris Gilham, who runs the website cycle-helmets.com, has analyzed the impact of similar laws in Australia. One consequence is that fewer people bicycle and thus what was meant to be a public health benefit is, in fact, a public health disaster--"mass discouragement of society's most popular exercise at a time of soaring obesity."


 
New York's Senate Says Who Cares if New York Can Compete With Other States?


That's essentially the message from the New York State Senate as it voted 51-7 Monday to override Governor George Pataki's veto of a minimum wage bill previously passed by the Senate in August to raise the minimum wage from $5.15 an hour to $7.15 an hour by 2007. January 1 will see the wage pop up to $6, followed by a rise on New Year’s Day each of the following two years, to $6.75 in 2006, and $7.15 in 2007. But why should the Senate care? Their jobs are virtually lifetime sinecures.



Monday, December 06, 2004
 
Required Reading

Commentary Magazine is required reading around here, and the Dec. 2004 issue contains a frightening and prophetic article, by David Pryce-Jones, called The Islamization of Europe?.

Europe is facing big trouble from the growing number of unassimilated Islamofascists in its midst, and it's high time Europe and the West got off its relativistic, secular butt and started acting... otherwise say goodbye to Europe and hello to Eurabia. We're certainly not looking forward to Iran getting the atomic bomb shortly-- thanks to EU appeasement and cowardice.

Read the entire article here, or as an Acrobat PDF here.


 
This is considered progress in New York City

The U.S. Mail dropped off an unwelcome envelope today; namely, my quarterly NYC Real Estate tax bill, which as always is up again [indeed, since 2001 the real estate tax for my house is up nearly 40% in total.] The NYC Dept. of Finance Commissioner, Martha E. Stark, a long-time civil servant dating back to the Dinkins administration, pats herself on the back in the accompanying letter "Introducing the Dept. of Finance's New Statement of Account" saying "I am pleased to introduce . . . [a] new Statement of Account. * * * designed to give you a comprehensive simple summary of charges on your account."

Well, hi-di-ho, aren't you NYC civil servants just grand. It took until 2004 to actually put the info together so someone other than the minions at the Finance Dept. could make heads or tails of a property statement without a blue ribbon panel of tax experts. BUT, the "new" statement leaves OFF several crucial bits of info (and it remains to be seen whether a yearly statement will now provide the missing bits). First, the assessment calculations are nowhere to be found, though in its credit the DOF, for the first time, lists the Combined Tax Rate, now 15.0940% with its constitute parts. Second, the assessed amount is NOWHERE to be found, and this is the real crucial item because the period within which to challenge an assessment runs out, I believe, in four months. I'll have to log on to the DOF site at http://www.nyc.gov/html/dof/html/realprop.html and see if any corresponding changes have occurred there, but I bet dollars to donuts there haven't been any.

UPDATE: The Dept. of Finance site actually now offers a great deal of background info, albeit, it's hardly intuitive. I can't see my mother or grandmother EVER being able to find anything there, but that doesn't change the fact that my market value assessment has popped by nearly $200k, according to the city, since 2001. It's the stealth tax increase they don't tell you about.


 
HEY, BBC! Stay out of U.S. Immigration Issues!

A report by the BBC World Service' "Outlook" program last Friday left me, true to my title, pretty angry. The segment was described thus:

Families Separated by Deportation
The tough enforcement of US immigration laws has brought the number of people deported to record levels. The effect has been the break-up of more and more families as the law catches up with one parent while children born in the States are left behind. We hear from a mother now back in Honduras about the heart-breaking separation from her child in New York.

The BBC correspondent interviewed this mother summarily deported from the U.S. in 2004 -- AFTER COMING TO NEW YORK CITY ILLEGALLY IN 1994! What the report doesn't mention, but an astute listener discerns immediately, is that, despite being here for 10 years, she apparently doesn't speak English (or, alternatively, the BBC didn't want to be guilty of violating her "language rights" and so the interview was held completely in Spanish, with the interpreter giving us the gist in English of her tearful situation.) What the report also doesn't note is that while deportations may be at record levels, so is illegal immigration. And a tough approach like this, could persuade others like this "mother" to, perhaps, think twice before wading across the Rio Grande, or disappearing into the underground after landing at J.F.K.

The report is available here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/ram/outlook_fri.ram




 
Hey 9/11 Families, Please Do Everyone a Favor. Stay Silent

Since when do we give the victims of tragedies a veto over national policy? Did the victims' families in Pearl Harbor get to decide policy in prosecuting WWII? Were they gathered on the Mall in Washington to demand Congress act to safeguard the Pacific? I ask because a handful of the 9/11 families gathered at the site of the former World Trade Center for the cameras over the weekend to pressure Congress into passing the current intelligence legislation (see 9/11 Families Push Congress To Overhaul Intelligence, available at here). Even the ever detestable City Council Speaker Gifford Miller launched his usual mindless pandering, stating "[w]e want the speaker of the House to start listening to his conscience and stop listening to those few colleagues who don’t want to give up a certain amount of turf and are frustrating these necessary reforms." Hey, Miller! Listen to this: shut up, and focus on NYC.

I wager neither the families, nor Miller, has actually read the proposed legislation, and don't have a clue as to what the disputes are actually about at bottom. Why can I say this confident in its accuracy? Because it's nearly impossible to find the text of the proposed bills at either the House or Senate websites. Go try it. The nearest I've come is this:

Intelligence, reform of U.S. operations S.190, S.2774, S.2811, S.2840, S.2845* H.R.10*, H.R.4104, H.R.4584, H.R.5024, H.R.5040, H.R.5050, H.R.5223



UPDATE: Apparently agreement has been reached on the legislation. More details to come.


Thursday, December 02, 2004
 
One question: why only "Communities of Color"?

"Mayor Bloomberg Announces $5 Million Increase in Health Department HIV Prevention Budget for Communities of Color


Mayor Bloomberg and Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) Commissioner Dr. Frieden today announced a permanent addition of $5 million to DOHMH's budget to fight HIV/AIDS in communities of color. The Mayor also announced that significant progress has been made in the City's fight against HIV/AIDS in the past year, including increased availability of rapid HIV testing at Department of Homeless Services intake sites, STD clinics, and Rikers Island and the establishment of syringe exchange programs in Queens.
Wednesday, December 1, 2004
ArrowRead the press release
ArrowWatch the video in dial-up or broadband "



Wednesday, December 01, 2004
 
Work for the city, but live outside it?

We've always found NYC's various residency requirements, which require people who work in certain jobs for the city to live within the five boros, absolutely insane, and have wondered how they've passed constitutional scrutiny (see U.S. Const. art. iv, sec. 2, cl.1 (detailing privileges and immunities clause).
Yet, the NYS Court of Appeals (our highest state court) just decided that NYC employees who live outside New York City, can be summarily fired without an administrative hearing. We'll have more to say about this when we have a chance to digest the full decisions - In the Matter of Francisco Felix v. New York City Department of Citywide Adminstrative Services, available here as a PDF.

Update: Having now read the decision, the Court of Appeals was absolutely right in this case -- at least with its application of the residency requirement. I also remembered that the P&I clause applies to states, and not municipalities, though there is a gray line. Still, given the price of real estate in NYC and it's rise since 1986, when Mayor Koch slapped the residency requirement on, the idea of requiring NYC employees to live in NYC (yes, I know when you phrase it that way it sounds like a no-brainer) is a long-term prescription for disaster.


 
The end is in sight ...

For any hope of tax relief in New York State given yesterday's report recommendation of an extra $14 billion over five years for the NYC school system comes to pass. [The full "Report and Recommendations of the Judicial Referees" document is available here as a PDF.]

So, where the hell is this extra money going to come from, when both NYS and NYC are teetering on the brink of fiscal implosion? The report doesn't say. And let's not forget that this initial largesse is then followed by an extra $5.8 billion a year after the fifth year. To put this obscene amount of money into a bit of perspective, remember that Congress authorized $87 billion for the Iraq war to pay for troop needs, and andhelp get an entire country of 25 million people on their feet. Granted that was an amount for one fiscal year, but according to the Referee's R&R, "in New York City, [there are] 1.1 million children, in more than 1,300 schools across five counties." (R&R of Judicial Referees, at 2). I rather doubt that figure, given there at most 8.5 to 9 million people in NYC -- not counting illegal aliens, who put a large strain on public services in the city.

Bottomline: there's only one place to get this money, namely, your pocket in the form of new taxes, "fees", tolls, tariffs, convenience charges, surcharges, etc., etc.. Mayor Bloomberg has been a major disappoint in the past year regarding education. He took office with the mantra that more money wasn't the solution to NYC's school woes. Now he's knuckled under to the teacher's union, who at this very moment is asking for a 14% salary increase (since they've been without a contract since last year), leaving it to Pataki to grow a spine and fight this nonsense.
For a comprehensive look at this situation, E.J. McMahon's article in today's NY Post Online, available here, notes:

Under one scenario, the state and city would agree to evenly divide the
cost of a court ruling modeled on the referees' report. Including the debt
service on new capital borrowing, that would require Albany and City Hall to
each somehow come up with an extra $3.2 billion a year (in 2004-05 dollars) by
2008-09.
***
In truth, the referees' recommendation in the CFE case is a fiscal fantasy. And like all fantasies, it is based on myth.
The first myth: More money is all that's needed to fix New York City's schools.
The second myth: Billions of dollars in new state aid can somehow be raised without ultimately raising taxes on New York City residents.
The next two months — before the judge issues a ruling based on the referees' report — represent a shrinking window of opportunity for Pataki to hammer out a more fiscally sane settlement."

And NY1.com provides a good overview...

Court Panel Recommends NYC Receive $14 Billion In School Funding
NOVEMBER 30TH, 2004
From NY1.com

A court-appointed panel on Tuesday recommended New York City’s public schools receive an additional $14 billion in funding over the next five years in response to a landmark lawsuit. [Ed. note - the full referee panel report is available here as a PDF].

Under the proposal issued by the three special masters, the city’s Department of Education would get an extra $1.4 billion more a year every year for the next four years from the state for school operations. Ultimately, the new school funding would hit $5.6 billion a year starting in the summer of 2008.

In addition, the panel went even further, saying the city should also get an additional $9.2 billion for school construction and repairs.

The report from the special masters will now go to Justice Leland DeGrasse, who will likely issue a final decision in January on how much funding Albany lawmakers will have to allocate for the city.

“Enough is enough. [Governor George] Pataki, [state Senate Majority Leader Joe] Bruno, [Assembly Speaker Sheldon] Silver – get your troops in line, [because] it’s time to do business on behalf of the children of New York City,” said Manhattan City Councilman Robert Jackson.

The court appointed the three-member panel in the summer after the state Legislature and Pataki failed to agree on education funding reform. Last year, the state’s highest court ruled that the state’s funding formula shortchanges the city’s public school students.

The decision stemmed from a lawsuit that was filed over a decade ago by a coalition of activists and parents called the Campaign for Fiscal Equity. Councilman Jackson, then just a parent in Manhattan, first sued in 1991, charging Albany was shortchanging New York City students.

“What it reflects is that when anybody takes a careful look at the magnitude of the needs for additional resources in this city, even the most conservative numbers get surpassed,” said Michael Rebell of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity.

“It’s time to implement this court's decision,” said Speaker Silver. “Nine years of appeals by the governor have to end.”

Representatives from both the city and state presented their arguments at hearings held by the panel. The city asked the state to provide an additional $5.3 billion in education funding over the next five years, as well as $6.6 billion for school repairs and construction.

The state only wanted to contribute $2 billion more, and also requested control of how the money is spent. Mayor Michael Bloomberg rejected that idea, since the state Legislature gave him control over city schools in 2002.

Bloomberg praised Tuesday's report, saying it affirmed what he has been arguing all along.

However, Pataki says he's not convinced the panel's recommendations are sound. The governor's office released a statement saying: “We are particularly concerned that the recommendations appear to reject any type of real reform and fail to overhaul the current accountability system, while recommending a substantial infusion of new spending."

While the state can appeal the judge's final ruling, the governor on Tuesday repeated his stance that he’d like to negotiate an agreement outside of the courtroom.



Wednesday, November 24, 2004
 
Nanny State Redux

Anyone care to hazard a guess when our paternal nanny state finally passes a law requiring everyone just walking down the street to wear a helmet? Don't laugh... it's coming. First they came for the bicyclists, then the roller bladers, and now the skateboarders. ;-)

From NY1.com

NY Passes Law Requiring Young Skateboarders To Wear Helmets

NOVEMBER 24TH, 2004
Parents thinking of buying their kids a skateboard for Christmas will soon be legally required to supply a helmet as well. That’s because Governor George Pataki on Wednesday signed a new law requiring any skateboarder under the age of 14 to wear a helmet. The law extends a measure that previously only covered bicyclists and roller bladers. The new law also makes it illegal for skateboarders to hitch a ride on the back of cars and buses. The legislation takes effect January 1st.




Wednesday, November 17, 2004
 

Good news... Read the entire article here.

Bush Does Better, and Other Election Results In NYC
by Andrew Beveridge
November, 2004


Among the thousands of Americans posting pictures of themselves apologizing to the world for the election of George W. Bush on SorryEverybody.com are surely a sizeable number of New Yorkers. After all, three quarters of the voters in New York City, we have been told again and again since November 3, pulled the lever for John Kerry for president. But this, as it turns out, may be even less than the slim consolation it has been for Kerry supporters this month. The fact is, Bush did better in New York City than he did four years ago.

Bush had a total of 544,359, or 24.5 percent of the vote in New York City. In 2000, he had only 18.2 percent.

Kerry received 74.3 percent; in 2000, Gore received 77.9 percent. The percentage for Bush increased in every borough except Manhattan. Bush actually received the majority of voters in Staten Island (56.7 percent). In 2000, Gore received the majority.

Indeed, looking at all 3142 counties in the United States, Staten Island had the 20th highest increase in support for Bush. Brooklyn had the 105th highest increase.

Nationally, Bush did better among every category of voter except the young and very old (over 85.) Why should we expect New York City to be any different?

Election Results 2004
Bronx
82.3%
16.7%
0.7%
0.3%
-3.9%
4.9%
New York 81.7%
16.6%
1.4%
0.3%
1.9%
2.4%
Queens 70.8%
28.0%
0.9%
0.3%
-4.2%
6.0%
Richmond 42.1%
56.7%
0.8%
0.4%
-9.8%
11.7%
Total 74.3% 24.5% 1.0% 0.3% -3.6% 6.2%

Election Results 2000
Bronx
86.3%
11.8%
1.4%

0.6%

Kings 80.6%
15.7%
3.2%

0.5%

New York 79.8%
14.2%
5.5%
0.5%
Queens 75.0%
22.0%
2.5%
0.6%
Richmond 51.9%
45.0%
2.5%
0.6%




 
More MTA Madness

The thing speaks for itself... and the MTA wants to hike our fares. I don't think so.

MTA spends $1M on staff cars

BY JOSHUA ROBIN
Newsday Staff Writer

Nearly 70 Bridges and Tunnels employees at the financially troubled MTA are given $1 million worth of cars to commute to and from work, according to records obtained by Newsday.

The subsidiary's fleet is the largest among the more than 130 vehicles that Metropolitan Transportation Authority employees may use for commuting. By contrast, only three of the top officials at the MTA's headquarters are assigned cars. At NYC Transit -- which employs more than 25 times the number of people than at Bridges and Tunnels -- only 46 people are assigned cars.

The Bridges and Tunnels figure exceeds even the number of vehicles in the agency's 61-vehicle law enforcement fleet.
Read the entire article here.




Monday, November 15, 2004
 
To think I once earnestly supported the ACLU. But as a former Eagle Scout, I've found the ACLU's effective "jihad " against the Boy Scouts indicative of s wrong with the left these days. Still, one thing's for certain, the ACLU will never get a dime from me again. Ever.

Military Bases Warned on Boy Scouts
Mon Nov 15, 4:46 PM


By MIKE ROBINSON, Associated Press Writer

CHICAGO - The Pentagon (news - web sites) has agreed to warn military bases worldwide that they should not directly sponsor Boy Scout troops, partially resolving claims that the government has improperly supported a group that requires members to believe in God.


The settlement, announced Monday, came in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (news - web sites) of Illinois, which says American military units have sponsored hundreds of Boy Scout troops.

"If our Constitution's promise of religious liberty is to be a reality, the government should not be administering religious oaths or discriminating based on religious beliefs," said ACLU attorney Adam Schwartz.

The Pentagon said it has long had a rule against sponsorship of non-federal organizations and denied the rule had been violated. But it agreed to send a message to posts worldwide warning them not to sponsor Boy Scout troops or other such groups.



Read the entire thing here.


Thursday, November 11, 2004
 
The Autumn edition of City Journal is out. I read every article of every issue, and I'm better for it.



City Journal Autumn 2004.


Autumn 2004.


A quarterly magazine of urban affairs, published by The Manhattan Institute, edited by Myron Magnet.


Heather Mac Donald
Homeland Security? Not Yet
Political correctness still makes us pull our punches.

Steven Malanga
The Myth of the Working Poor
Two Americas? The scaremongering bestsellers that say so are economically illiterate.

Kay S. Hymowitz
Dads in the ‘Hood
Black America starts facing up to the tragedy of the Accidental Father.

Robert P. George & David L. Tubbs
Why We Need a Marriage Amendment
An imperial judiciary won’t leave same-sex marriage to the states.

Peter Huber & Mark P. Mills
Can Terrorists Turn Out Gotham’s Lights?
Here’s how to strengthen our vulnerable power grid.

Robert Adam, Franck Lohsen McCrery, Peter Pennoyer, Richard Sammons, John Simpson, Thomas Gordon Smith, & Alexander Stoddart
Reimagining the Far West Side
Renowned architects bring the classical New York skyscraper tradition into the twenty-first century.

Urbanities

Jonathan Rose
The Classics in the Slums

John Fund
How to Steal an Election

Stefan Kanfer
Sondheim vs. Sondheim

Departments

In Prospect

Soundings

The Truth About Iraq
Give Us the Money
We Don’t Need Car Alarms
I Wed Thee, and Thee, and Thee
Rather Not
Spinning the Economy Down
Torn Jeans
What’s the Matter with Thomas Franks?
Inclusive Failure

Theodore Dalrymple
Oh, to be in England
The Frivolity of Evil

Letters

Contributors

Howard Husock
Stafford Diarist
The Prince of Poisoners




Tuesday, November 09, 2004
 
And some people wonder why I'm the angry New Yorker....

Voter Turnout In New York Was Among Lowest In Nation

NOVEMBER 09TH, 2004

Despite long lines at the polls in the city, voter turnout across the state on Election Day last week was among the lowest in the country. Only about 46 percent of New York's voting age population cast ballots for president, a drop of 1.5 percent from 2000. The figures are based on unofficial voter returns. The turnout puts New York 46th in the nation out of all 50 states. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Maine and New Hampshire topped the list with turnouts around 70 percent.



 
The New York City Madness continues...
The issue isn't that we don't spend enough money on our school here in New York City. We spend more per capita than any place else in the country, except Washington, D.C.. But we waste more than anyone else, too, thanks to the Teacher's Union headlook and redtape that would plug Mount
Vesuvius.

from NY1.com
City Council To Probe School Supply Shortage

NOVEMBER 09TH, 2004

The City Council wants to know why teachers in the city’s public schools are paying for supplies out of their own pockets, including toiletries.

The Council’s Education Committee is holding a hearing Tuesday to look into supply shortages in school bathrooms, such as paper towels toilet paper and soap. Some parents say the have also bought the supplies themselves.

The Department of Education says parents are never required to buy supplies, adding that it is well stocked with toiletries.

Teachers can get reimbursed up to $200 a year for the things they buy for the classroom, but many say they spend far more than that. A previous Council survey found the average teacher spent $400 of his or her own money on supplies last year.

“There's no news in that story,” Schools Chancellor Joel Klein said Monday. “You know, when I was a teacher in 1969, I spent my own money. I remember it. I was teaching set theory to sixth grade mathematics students and I bought at a five and dime with my own money.”

However, Klein did say he is committed to fighting for more resources for schools.


Monday, November 08, 2004
 
Rednecks Unite?

The incomparable Mark Steyn in the UK's The Daily Telegraph pulls the curtain back from the EuroElites and calls it the way it is:

Believe it or not, it wasn't just rednecks who voted for Bush
By Mark Steyn
(Filed: 11/07/2004)

"The big question after Tuesday was: will it just be more of the same in George W Bush's second term, or will there be a change of tone? And apparently it's the latter. The great European thinkers have decided that instead of doing another four years of lame Bush-is-a-moron cracks they're going to do four years of lame Americans-are-morons cracks. Inaugurating the new second-term outreach was Brian Reade in the Daily Mirror, who attributed the President's victory to: "The self-righteous, gun-totin', military-lovin', sister-marryin', abortion-hatin', gay-loathin', foreigner-despisin', non-passport-ownin' rednecks, who believe God gave America the biggest dick in the world so it could urinate on the rest of us and make their land 'free and strong'."


Well, that's certainly why I supported Bush, but I'm not sure it entirely accounts for the other 59,459,765."
Read the whole thing here.


Sunday, November 07, 2004
 
Bush's Mandate

According to C-SPAN's latest vote tally as of Nov. 7th, Bush's popular vote tally is even larger at :
Total Votes % Electoral States Won
Bush 59,651,290 51 286 31
Kerry 56,158,908 48 252 20


Friday, November 05, 2004
 
No surprise here. It's become the equivalent of a parlor trick in politics these days to announce an outrageous fee hike, and then slip in a much lower, but still sizable increase while those, not realizing the shell game being played before them, breath a sigh of relief. MTA, we're on to you, too. OPEN YOUR BOOKS!!!

FROM NY1.COM
MTA: Fare Hikes Likely Lower Than Expected
NOVEMBER 05TH, 2004

Just last week it looked like subway and bus fares were about to go through the roof, with the price of a monthly MetroCard going all the way to $84.

But Thursday, top MTA officials reversed course, saying that may not be necessary. With more tax revenue pouring in than expected, [ed. note - shocked! shocked! to find more tax revenue. My word!]the agency now appears likely to settle on a more moderate fare increase.

The cost of a monthly MetroCard would go up from $70 to just $76 - a sizable increase, but not as much as the $84 price tag the MTA was talking about last week.

The other big change is in express bus fares, which had been slated to go up by $2 each way. Now the MTA is recommending just a $1 increase, from $4 to $5.
{Just a $1 increase?!? Earth to NY1 -- that's a 25% increase. That ain't "just" in my book.]

Weekly MetroCards would still go from $21 to $24, as proposed earlier, and tolls on MTA bridges and tunnels would go from $4 to $4.50, or, on the smaller crossings, from $2 to $2.25.

The increased revenue - about $300 million - would also eliminate the need for layoffs. The MTA had previously threatened to lay off about 1,200 workers. [ed. note - threatened? I wish they'd layoff 1,200 of those do-nothing folks I've seen working at the MTA]

While the MTA still plans to go ahead with plans to close down 164 booths, the clerks will remain as roving customer service agents. [ed. note - roving customer service agents" -- oh, sure, that means they'll be roving right over to the coffee shop.]Also, plans to cut back on off-peak bus service will be phased in much more slowly.

Also, the G train will be saved. The MTA had proposed cutting the line in half so that it would terminate at Court Square in Long Island City at all times.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg says with the city's budget problems, it does not have enough money to bail out the MTA. He also says the agency has to figure out how to run more efficiently.

“I’ve started to work with each of the agency heads and say, ‘You’re going to have to cut three percent the rest of this year, which would translate into six percent if it was for a whole year next year,’ and they’re going to have to do the same thing," Bloomberg said Friday on his weekly radio show.



Thursday, November 04, 2004
 
A friend on the left comments...
"Driving through Bush Country, looking Jewish with Massachusetts plates on my Lexus, I felt really self-conscious. 51 percent of the electorate looked the other way and re-elected a President who started a war with a far-away country that was no threat to the US. Why do people like me feel so scared of what this country has become? Simple. How do we know they won't go to war with us? "
Now I should note that the author of these words, a former friend, who unilaterally decided that I, having revealed myself to be a republican, was no longer worthy of continued friendship or even continued communications, is very well known in the tech community. But to answer his rhetorical questions (and we on the right are the "simple-minded" ones, eh?) the reason you feel scared, sir, is almost the same reason we on the right felt scared until the election results were in: you don't trust us; we don't trust your world-view. But there's a subtle though profound difference between the two, which is revealed by the very question "how do we know they won't go to war with us?" Ahem, Republicans (or as the left calls us "Repubs" or "Rethugs") haven't been vandalizing Kerry supporters' property, stealing Kerry signs, shooting up local democrat party headquarters, or spewing 24x7 venom (for a sample I point you to the Daily Kos comment areas, here , for a taste of the post-election post mortum underway on the left, or the idiotic Jane Smiley's mindbending diabtribe, in Why Americans Hate Democrats—A Dialogue. The unteachable ignorance of the red states, which states "Cheney is the capitalist arm and Bush is the religious arm. They know no boundaries or rules. They are predatory and resentful, amoral, avaricious, and arrogant.").

My former friend then continues to ratchet up the gall quotient by saying:
Speaking as a person who has lived in blue states all my life (a variety of them) I was pretty shocked that Bush was re-elected. I think you guys [who voted for Bush] sold out too cheap, but now we're going to find out what it feels like to have a government that doesn't reflect our values, and I understand this is something you've been living with for a long time. But the problem is, I still don't think you've got it. We're all going to find out that there are much more important values that Bush and his team don't share, generosity to the poor, respect for human life (Iraqis are people too), a love of the freedoms passed down from our forefathers, and on and on. (emphasis added).
What utter unadulterated bullshit. What a sparkling exemplar of why the democrats lost, and why they will continue to lose nationally should they hold onto to such a false reading of reality. Read between the lines. He's saying, "only the left cares about the poor", "only the left respects human life", "only the left loves the freedoms passed down from our forefathers." I could Fisk further, but seriously, why bother?

On the plus side, the French, Germans and those skuttling diplomats in the U.N. are now on notice that the American people are on to them. That means, you, too, Kofi.


Wednesday, November 03, 2004
 
Bush Wins. Kerry Loses. The Country Looks to the Future.

Although I have about 50-pages of work stuff to read, plus a few projects to finish, all I could concentrate on was the election results. At 2:30 a.m. EST it looks like Bush will wind up with a final electoral tally of 281, barring some last minute radical shifts in Ohio's current vote count.

But with this finally over, we now have to get to work in defusing the rabid, foaming ultra-left folks and sit them down around the table to see how we can work together. Those like Michael Moore, et al. are lost causes. But for other more reasonable democrats, like many of my friends, it's time to get back to the business at hand. Good bye ex-Senator Edwards. Good-bye Senator Kerry. Hello America.


Monday, November 01, 2004
 
After what has seemed like a near-eternity the campaigns are now just about over. Tomorrow we all vote, and we here at Angry New Yorker fervently hope President Bush is re-elected.


 
Southpark Tweaks Puff Daddy's Insipid "Vote or Die" Nonsense

I don't usually call upon Southpark for inspiration, but this election season has been so crazy I suppose you just have to take your humor where you can. And SouthPark's episode this week where the students have to vote for a new mascot (I won't go into details), spoofed "Puff Daddy" brilliantly with a rendition of a Vote or Die rap that was too close for rap comfort to the truth. I'm still laughing.


Monday, October 25, 2004
 
Bill Clinton Proves He's An Ass With a Cigar
To think I voted for him the first time. Well, fool me once I suppose. Today he disgraced himself and his now utterly discredit party with even more comments unworthy of an ex-class president, let alone prior president of the U.S. Question to the democrats: If you do *shudder* win the election, how the hell do you think you're going to govern at all when you've done *nothing* for the last year but demonize and bad mouth Republicans? What?? I couldn't hear anything.

And this choice bit from the Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler -- truly classic.

Iraq Missing Explosives, Kerry Missing Brains

"John Kerry is whining like a two-year old over the 380 tons of conventional explosives missing in Iraq.

Earth to John. The Iraq Survey Group said

'In searching for retained stocks of chemical munitions, ISG has had to contend with the almost unbelievable scale of Iraq's conventional weapons armory, which dwarfs by orders of magnitude the physical size of any conceivable stock of chemical weapons. For example, there are approximately 130 known Iraqi Ammunition Storage Points (ASP), many of which exceed 50 square miles in size and hold an estimated 600,000 tons of artillery shells, rockets, aviation bombs and other ordinance.'

The amount Kerry is screaming about is 0.063% of the total amount, less than 1% of the round-off error in the estimates, a number eerily similar to the odds of his getting three Purple Hearts in four months without a scar to show for it.

Saddam's stockpile of conventional explosives exceeded that of all other countries except the US, and he had the stuff all over the place. But instead of debating all this let's just act like the moonbats and claim that these explosives never actually existed."




 
Does this suprise anyone? From today's NY1.com



City Transit In Financial Crisis, Watchdogs Say








OCTOBER 25TH, 2004

New York City’s mass transit system is in crisis, according to a group of transportation and economic leaders.

In a letter to Governor George Pataki and Mayor Michael Bloomberg, five leaders, including the heads of the Straphangers Campaign and the Transport Workers Union, called the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s budget deficits a “potential disaster.” They are urging the state and city to provide more aid. [ed. note -- where does this magical "aid" come from, Mr. Russianoff? The transit tooth fairy? ]

“In the long run,” said Gene Russianoff, the head of the Straphangers Campaign, “the only answer is for Governor Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg to devise a plan. Otherwise, we’re talking about a fare hike in 2005 and 2006 in 2007, coupled with service cuts. And that’s intolerable.”

Bloomberg, however, has said that the city cannot afford to boost its subsidies and that the MTA has to run more efficiently with the money it has.

Next year, the MTA is planning to raise the prices of unlimited-ride MetroCards, commuter rail tickets, bridge and tunnel tolls and express buses to reduce a steep shortfall. (The base fare of $2 would remain the same.) And more increases could come in 2006.

“If they’re going to be increasing fares, they probably shouldn’t be cutting service,” said one straphanger. “I don’t know how the budget works, but hopefully they can budget better.”

* * *

At a committee meeting Monday, MTA board members weighed two options for next year, raising fares a lot (including boosting the price of monthly MetroCards from $70 to $84 ) or smaller hikes ($76 monthly cards) with service cuts.

“It just seems to me that if we’re going to go to our riding public and say to them we’re going to raise your fare, and while we raise it, we’re going to cut your service, you’re looking for problems that need not exist in the year 2005,” said Barry Feinstein, an influential board member.

Public hearings will be held next week on the fare hikes proposed for next year.





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