Sunday, July 28, 2013

 

Sex and the City

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis
Sex and the City
In a recent Shouts and Murmurs page, the department of The New Yorker magazine devoted to take-no-prisoners sarcastic tales and unloading about contemporary people of fame, we were treated to three morality stories, called Bloomberg's Fables. First, about a thirsty mouse who fatally tapped a sixty-eight ounce soda bottle, with a horrifying moral conclusion, threatening horrible death for anyone engaging in such excesses? Then, about a builder named Ratner who saved a raccoon's life by boldly removing a glass shard from the potentially bacteria ridden animal's paw. The moral was not to underestimate the kindness of billionaire magnates who make our city great. What touched me most was the third tale, about the famous large hawk living on the ledge of a Fifth Avenue coop building, who had trouble catching pigeons, until he gathered them and offered his leadership in protecting them from other predators. Thereafter he could catch the gullible foolish birds at will, and eat them, feathers and all. The moral here was twofold, not to elect potential tyrants, and to rescind the term-limit restriction once more, giving the Mayor a chance for four more years of rule.
This, an imagined wish for four more years of Bloomberg becomes almost real for some New Yorkers, looking at the several sorry and disgraceful candidates who want to represent New York City, the pride of the US and the financial capital of the world. Ex-Congressman Anthony Weiner, who resigned two years ago after discoveries of sexual exhibitionism, almost had a t distinct majority of Democrats , at 52% topping the next ranking Mayoral candidate, Speaker of the City Council Christine Quinn, at 20%, and leaving Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, former City Treasurer Bill Thomson and the invisible George McDonald in low numbers. Now after a disclosure of some 10 more sex incidents, Weiner is down to 16%, and Quinn leads at 25%; nevertheless, he intends to continue running, armored with his poor wife Hana Abedin's forgivance, despite the pols' and news media asking, almost begging him to quit. Another, City Comptroller John Liu has faded from the Mayoral candidates list in the pollster ratings, with the Feds investigating fundraising irregularities, for which his young woman campaign treasurer was arrested. Similarly, Democratic NYS Senate leader Malcolm Smith is in trouble for allegedly bribing NYC GOP leaders to be designated a Republican Mayoral candidate, expecting to make mincemeat of the legitimate ones, Joseph Lhota and supermarket magnate. John Catsimatidis . In that context, an interesting Rep candidate would be Jamie Dimond aka Jimmy Diamond, CEO of JPMorganChase, but he has enough trebles of his own, and needs no ego graft, having been offered and rejecting the Secretary of Treasury post in the Obama cabinet.,
That's all for Mayoralty; there's another rehabilitated sex case asking for pardon, ex-Governor Eliot Spitzer who resigned in 2009, after having found to be a regular patron in a bordello, and taking a paid prostitute to out of town government conferences and meetings. A last minute candidate for Comptroller, with his populist reputation of the Sheriff of Wall Street and a huge personal fortune spent in petitioning and advertising, he easily outscores the regular, Manhattan BP Scott Stringer. Yet one more, Brooklyn Dem leader, Assemblyman Vito Lopez, age 72 (nicknamed Gropez), forced to resign by the Ethics Committee, will run for a safe set in City Counsel. How’s that for sticking it in your eye, New York!
Why are we New Yorkers gifted with such a surfeit of misbehaving politicians? Well, blame it on history. New York City always attracted the best and the brightest, generous givers and greedy takers, and also the most daring and adventurous men and women, from all over the US if not the world. NYS legislature has always been subject to manipulators and there may be at times as many as a small handful of elected lawmakers in jail and another such number under state and federal investigation, Democrats as well as Republicans. Right now, remember the Tres Amigos around Pedro Espada. Jr. and the leaders implicated by Malcolm Smith. For starters we had land grant weaseling soon after Henry Hudson sighted shore, with both Dutch and English settlers, then Boss Tweed and “ honest and dishonest graft,” as defined by the fictional Plunket of Tammany Hall; more recent graft has been checked by the frequently revived Moreland Commission, As for discovering politicians’ sexual peccadilloes,, your main hounddogs seem to be the super market print media news trackers.
Wally Dobelis thanks The New Yorker and Jim Windolf,. The NYTimes and local media,

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


Sunday, January 13, 2013

 

The Passing of a neighbor, Capt .Thomas Liggett, USMC ret.

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis The Passing of a neighbor, Capt .Thomas Liggett, USMC ret. Capt. Thomas Liggett, USMC ret, died on Sunday, January 6, 2013, at age 94, in a Riverdale hospice. Best known to our East Side community as a United Nations observer, he was , since 1970, the publisher and editor of World Peace News, a one-man organization also known for its annual World Peace Seminars, which attracted likeminded speakers from all parts of the world. Tom Liggett, a New Yorker, after graduating NYU in 1941, enlisted in the US Navy pilot program. By the time the new 2nd Lieutenant brought his SBD Dauntless attack/scout /dive bomber to Guadalcanal, the war in the Pacific was in full action, with Japanese cruisers bombing during the day and Japanese airplanes attacking at night. Kamikaze attacks were frequent, and of the 80 newcomers to the air command in 1943 only 13 survived unscathed, Moved to the F4F Corsair, Tom’s VMF512 USMC squadron was trained for the European war, particularly to attack the German V-1 rocket sites alongside the English Channel that were destroying British cities and the national morale. Only after the war he found out for sure that the Marine pilots were being prepared for Kamikaze suicide missions, and that the training was discontinued when the Secretary of War Gen. George C. Marshal , eventually the author of the peace plan, stopped the action in principle. Tom continued bombing the Japanese positions from the board the new USS Gilbert Islands, in Borneo and the Philippines, when he was injured and moved to serve on land, eventually as CO of the Naval Air Station in Goleta, Sta Barbara County, where Navy pilots received final training. He ended the war service in California, with a Distinguished Flying Cross and several air medals, got married and brought up two daughters, while editing newspapers, teaching writing and writing a distinguished children’s book, Pigeon Fly Home (1956). But peace and man’s inhumanity to man was on his mind, as it was for many likeminded people who saw action in WWII, and in 1970 the modern day Aeneas decided to break fresh ground, come back East and dedicate the rest of his life to peace, monitoring the actions at the United Nations, moving them towards peaceful initiatives, with a thought to world government, and recording his and their associates’ observations by publishing a monthly, World Peace News. It was an efficient busy publication, largely printing edited reports and correspondents’ notes, attracting many national and international activists. The names of some of the participants in the WPN Annual Conferences in 30 plus years alone indicate the caliber of thought. To mention a few, the speakers included the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh of Notre Dame, Prof Otto Nathan of NYU (Albert Einstein’s closest friend and collaborator) Isaac Asimov , Roger Nash Baldwin (ACLU), Jean Baugniet, David Brower, Norman Cousins, Luther H. Evans, Max Habicht, Hari Vishnu Kamath, Jean Roche, Zenon Rossides, Harold Taylor (University of Chicago),Alfred de Grazia ((Velikovsky Catastrophism scholar) George S. Wise: Mildred Blake, William H. D. Cox, Jr.(founder of the American Movement for World Government, he was a co-publisher of the World Peace News), Carl Frost, Ralph M. Goldman, ,Charles Guettel, Henry L. H anson, Tom Hudgens, John Kiang, Carmel Kussman, Mortimer Lipsky, William Bross Lloyd, Jr.,Guy Marchand, Lilian T. Mowrer, Stewart Ogilvy, Josephine Rubin, Bennet Skewes-Cox, Alfred C. Williams, and Edith Wynner of the Rosika Schwimmer World Peace organization. This family became friends of Tom and Sue Liggetts’ through membership in Charles Kinsolving’s Murray Hill Reform Democratic Club. We had a joint interest in hiking in NYS great forests, and Tom Liggett’s great enthusiasm for kayaks. The great Klepper Fold-Boat vendor in the US was on Union Square, and Tom kept their four-seater kayak in his trunk, assembling it every weekend. We cruised the Jamaica Bay many times, staying overnight in some of the gull and duck rich islands, watched all night by the male guards who occasionally ventured into dive attacks to scare away the tent people. As our ages advanced, interests and strengths changed, and eventually touching base with each other became limited to holiday greetings. It was therefore with great regrets that we received Sue Liggett’s call of the sad news. Our condolences to Sue and daughters Judith and Rosanne (please address Sue Nancy Liggett, 300 E. 33 Street, apt. 7P, NY, NY 10016). Further news will follow as received (please address wally@ix.netcom.com)

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


Sunday, December 16, 2012

 

Happy Holidays 2012/13; better news are coming

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis
 
Happy Holidays; better news are coming
This Holiday Season must be the most trying one for us East Midtown New Yorkers, both domestically and offshore. We Americans are painfully absorbing changes in the outside world, such as the UN’s membership recognizing the Palestinian Authority as a government, the rising of Hamas powers in Egypt, Israel’s threats to sabotage the two state concept, and President Omaha’s warning of action if Syria uses chemical weapons against the rebels.
Domestically, the horror of a murder of two dozen small children and adults in bucolic Connecticut countryside by a young recluse with a huge hidden mental deficiency, just 50plus miles north, has destroyed the holiday peace of mind for millions of parents. That came on top of the destruction wrought by the 14-foot Sandy waves on our own territory, Manhattan’s East Side, and long Island/ New Jersey beach properties, six weeks earlier.
But New Yorkers are resilient and can deal with trouble. We note that a bus ride on strangely silent Second Avenue M15 line, from Stuyvesant Town to the UN Tower, is now uncommonly fast, without wheelchair traffic. Our proud Hospital Alley was brutally hurt by Sandy, but now, at the suddenly empty loading stops of the large health centers, there are signs of rebirth. Although broken electronics in the basement caverns of the hospitals will take months and billions of dollars to repair, the work is getting done. At the NYU Langone Medical Center, roped off for patients, trucks full of replacement parts are unloading. The new Langone building on East 38th Street came on line this summer, just on time to absorb some transfers. As to the small stores catering to the hospital staff and transient patient needs, not all are surviving the coming reconstruction period, but many lights are up.
As for people, they could not be nicer. Young people do not jump ahead to grab taxis where another person has been waiting. In super markets, people wave each other ahead. Even the usual laggards who are taking forever to bring out their credit cards and cash seem to have learned. An occasional nudge of “I don’t have all that much time left in my life” with a smile helps, but go gently, gently.
We had the good luck to be the recipients of an incredibly kind action by a limousine driver. As we tried to stop at a hydrant to unload the car (a borrowed one, ours died in Stuyvesant Town Garage No.5 flood), a young, impeccably dressed man knocked on the window, and, speaking with a Mediterranean accent , told me he had a spot east of my illegal one, and to drive around the lock and look for him. I thanked and took off, worried about the traffic, but there he was, waving. Seeing me recognizing him, he jumped in the black car and took off, not waiting for thank yous. It was a wonderful spot, good for three days.
Good bless you, kind stranger; maybe there is reward for years of pulling out of my space for strangers while waiting for the family to assemble. And for tightening up spaces to make room for other street parkers, of which I was one in my younger days (it is starting again). Driving and parking gets the worst out in us, anger management courses notwithstanding. “Let me share this with you” works better than reprimands. In a “gotcha” situation, let the culprit be a co- discoverer of the solution, if you know what I mean. The latter method should also work in foreign affairs. State Department, please copy.
As for the US foreign affairs troubles, we see some lightening up. In Egypt, President Mohammed Morsi has declared US to be a lover of peace and a good ally. Unfortunately, the next day he decided to reform the constitution, unilaterally. Bur the peace he agreed to has held, and as of Sunday 12/16 the Hamas aerial attacks on Israel have not resumed. Russia has found some interests in curing the Syria situation, which helps. The North Korea/ Iran potential end-of-world scenario has to soften down gradually.
I have some real good news, although not on a world scale. The AXA-Equitable insurance people are donating the 1930 Thomas Hart Benton’s 10-panel mural America Today to the Metropolitan Museum collection. The foremost American Realist (with Grant Woods, who painted the American Gothic), Benton gave impetus to the Work Progress Administration’s mural programs. Benton’s mural series was commissioned by the New School for Social Research, and the paintings decorated their classroom walls until 1982, when the needy school had to sell them. Two years later the murals moved to the lobby of AXA-Equitable Life building at 787 Seventh Avenue, and in 1996 traveled again, to the insurer’s new space at 1290 Avenue of the Americas. In February 2012 the building’s owner, Vornado Realty, renovated the offices, and the murals went into storage. Now donated to the Met, the art will move in another three years to the landmarked Whitney Museum of American Art landmarked Marcel Breuer building on Madison Avenue, to be taken over by the Met (the Whitney will travel downtown, to the meatpacking district). If you would like to see the remarkable art, there are a few copies of a 1985 catalog published by the Equitable and Williams College Museum, available in the antiquarian bookstores (also on internet via Abebooksit). Better yet, if you google AXA/Equitable & Benton, then test a few links, you will find the entire series as an exhibit, viewable one by one. The subjects of the 10 murals range from Instruments of Power (e.g. steam engines), City Activities (dancers), then five regionals (farmers, laborers), steel workers and coal miners, a powerful array. It is truly a magnificent gift to the city.
Wally Dobelis and the staff of T&V also wish magnificent gifts, particularly of health and wellness, to our readers, and a good holiday season, Christmas, Chanukah, Quanta, and a Happy New Year.


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

 

Sea barrier for future Sandys

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis Think of a sea barrier for future Sandys The hurricane named Sandy is still the major interest the T&V neighborhood, since our largest community the ST/PCV area, with 56 residential buildings and 11,250 apartments (25,000 residents) is not fully recovered, and neither is the Wall Street area, our major employer. The combined hurricane and Northwester storm generated a gigantic wave which blew down New York and neighboring state sea shore properties , killed over a hundred innocents and destroyed the lives of thousands.. This was not a new contingency, in the 1938 hurricane floods in New York 60 lives were lost, and we can look back to recent large destructive floods m New Orleans, LA and the entire Gulf, (Katrina,Camilla and Donna . 2005 and after), on the NC barrier islands where the Wright brothers learned to fly (20 destructive storms since 1965), on Dolphin Island with a bridge to Mobile, AL ( destroyed every three years ) and Irene (five deaths in NY, 2011).The recovery funding has been mostly via taxpayer money and subsided insurance. These are all important cases that show the foolishness of building and rebuilding the same homes year after year, sometimes with national flood insurance (highly subsidized) and FEMA (taxpayer subsidy) the main payers. Sometimes, as for Sandy, the homeowner policy writer will argue that the damage is not covered, since it was not caused by wind or rain, and sometimes, through government (Gov. Ciomo ) intervention, the high wind deductible for water damage will be waived. Some taxpayers have balked; certain towns, imn NC have refused property tax increases, as long as rhe usual "repair and break again" rhythm comtiniues. And why should it. Smart comminmities auch as those of Flotida Keys, require that new consrruction be planned several feet above the 100 year water high mark. Homes are being fitted with composite concrete block corners and supports, with the underspace kept uncluttered, for the hurricane raised water to pass through. The marinas, much damaged by the annual hurricanes, some heavy ones conemporaneous witk Katrina, lost their accessability when the storms picked up and carried away the simple wooden walkways. They are being refitted nowadays with heavy planks of a composite material, punched through with holes, to let the owerflow waters recede. Windbreaker planks edging the marinas are being removed, to protect the docks from head-on wave damage, and boat owners are expected to take their craft to higher properties (prearranged rentals available) or storage marinas.This regimentation may be endurable in the Keys, where wave damage has always been a factor and homes have constructed accordingly; in the high priced seacoast communities further north people have sometimes invested heavily in beachfront summer homes, in some cases actually living in them year round, and this suggestion , coming from environmentalist sources, may be an anathema. Even while global warming is happening, and the seas are rising, why should this be “in my life?” To serious people, playing “just one more time” should by now be in the past. Serious planning is necessary particularly in New York, where multistory hausing and business structures are at risk., Granted that the surge from Huricane Sandy was 14 feet high, the most since1938. one must consider that if the wave that Hurricane Irene produced in 2011 had risen one more f oot it would have flooded the subeays. Protection for our downtown New York cannot be provided just by building higher up, the cities have been built at river estuaries since the origins of civilization. Protection for the the apartment buildings and offices requires high cost engineering, phased over the period of several decades. Major European cities have had sea and wave protectors for ages. NYC has had offers from several European firms to build sea barriers; the one protecting the Dutch cities and St. Petersburg envisions barrier walls in the ocean, from the Rockaway Peninsula to Sandy Hook, while a Dutch firm sees a central wall at first, then supported by left and right arms. The cost? Whatever it takes is not bad, considering that Sandy destroyed an estimated $20B of property and 10-30B of business activity. Netherlands, a country the size of VT and NH combined, where 2/3ds of an 16 M population live below sea level, has the most barriers. It also has its maintenance in place, with scheduled work to stop whatever perils can be endangering the structure. This is no longer just a little Dutch boy sticking his finger in the hole and saving a nation, the project is a proof that wave barriers can be effective for ages, even to the extent of reclaiming land. NY needs the barriers just to slow down the sea surge, not to stop it. It might really be a good idea for the environmentalists and the city and state to get to gether, soonest, on a plan; five miles of a barrier wall might save us from more Sandys. Wally Dobelis and the staff of T&V wish a happy belated Thanksgiving to all of our readers

Labels: , ,


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

 

Sandy, cvontinued

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis Sandy, cvontinued The hurricane mildly named Sandy is still the overwehelming event for this ST/PCV dominated neigghbourhood. There have been three weeks of post-WWII atmosphere for our placid upper middle class population, of retirees with walking sticks and young people with baby carriages. Our neighborhood, almost suburban in character but better in its green qualities, walkable and cosy, was chosen to be hit by Mother Nature with vengeance not seen since the 1938 Long Island Hurricane (no nice names then). This, despite the relative mildness of Hurricanes Irene in 2011 and Herta in 2008 brought to mind that man is not the ruler of the Universe as we know it. Past experience is not necessarily a forecast of future events, and overwhelming egos bolstered with money cannot buy life in Lucullan luxury on the sunny beach. On the other hand, we also learned that compassion and desire to help others has not died, as evidenced by the Ivy League grads who rolled up their sleeves and helped clean up the destroyed Rockaway and Staten Island fiber board walls and broken floors and ocean refuse washed ashore and ..oh well.. everything. And the nice Gramercy ladies who boughr 500 pairs of socks and underwear to bring to the distressed, and were ashamrd of their good cars (luckily, not polished clean) and Princeton shirts. That is called compassion, and desire to help others, a feeling that is coexistent with the typical NewYorker's desire to earn much and advance fast, a faculty that all of us hasve and that comes out in times of distress. It is the context, when some of the privileged handing out donations to the distressed that brings out the contrast. In the Rockaways, a refuge, some say the society's bad corner, to hide the outcasts, the contrast is so evident to evoke negative feelings. ever so often, when the refugees of Somalia and Sierra Leone and outcasts of Latin America meet the natives. I expected to get some positive stories, even jokes, of good feeling. but none came through in the e-mail Sandy was not like 9/11/2001, when enemy terrorists attacked us, and anger against the bombers was the dominant emotion. One true bitter joke came through,when a squatter in Stuyvesant Square Park watching a Rhode Island nursery truck labeled as hired by Mayor Bloomberg's Committee work, bitterly referred to His Honor as the second best in NYC's history. When I asked to identify the best, he sneered and declared: "everyone else.' justifying his anger by the Mayor's late cancellation of the Newe York Marathon, after the NYM chairman had challenged the appropriatenerss of the event. Other stories:\ A friend, questioned after the lights in midtown T&V area returned (that is not counting our poor SP/PCV area, which suffered longer and still continues to be be in some darkness, along the Avenure C perimeter) self-demeaningly declared that the event was sufferable, although Scotch whiskey after October 31 was too warm, but he managed to survive with a gin and Blaody Mary mix. Upon further questioning, the stoic –admitted that he had a dozen eggs and some cans of soup, and the use of the gas oven. For news he had the telephone – the old dial-up unit worked but the push button portable died. He offered one rule ,pertinent to blackout sufferers ; “do not look for the portable radio after dark,” but was able to find flashlights, for emergency. The commentator, who is also a Luddite, refusing to acknowledge the role of TV and Internet in our lives , also managed to walk up and down the stairs several times, for food when life returned to the neighbourhood, so the locked-up feeling that most highriser inhabitants suffered , was not his complaint. This rejection of Internet and e-mail is not unusual in our up-to-date T&V area. Among retirees, anger towards Internet is not uncommon, and many retireees, who used the digital systems in their business lives, find a distinct relief in shedding the shackles of technology. Nevetheless, even those opponents often eventually invest in an unit, to keep in touch with the kids, and correspondence, in a polite format. Of course , then comes the digital phone with texting, an even more repulsive intruder, with its terse abbreviation-ridden formant, so there’s no real escape from the rudeness the 21st Century. One commentator, preservationist Jack Taylor, offered another rule: ‘”do not build above the 4th Floor,” a recommendation I do not quite know how to respond to, not having lived that low ever, except for holidays.He also brought out another proof of the old technology coming to rescue of the new environment, his 1956 Olivetti typewriter, dated in Glasgow, 1956. from the authorized purveyer to HRH the Duke of Edinburgh. Wally Dobelis also thanks New York Times, the old reliable.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

 

Post-election wishes and Sandy comments

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobelis Post-election wishes and Sandy comments This is a message of best wishes to President Barack Obama, and a prayer. How can any man, mild Barry or harsh Mitt, expect to steer the world to survival, in the pervasive atmosphere of the concurrent crises, actually catastrophies, of internal economic recession, Mideastern terrors, European collapse and , above all, the longterm fatal to Planet Earth climate change? The prayer is for our internal strife to come to its senses, and the Mitch McConnell and Grover Norquist types, who destroyed the recovery attempts for two years , and the righteous leftwing Democrats who want a few more tax bucks from the plutos , come to an agreement in the interests of the social compact, the source of humanities’ survival and progress since the Neandertals turned domestic (look it up, google Hobbes, Locke).There are ways of compromise without rubbing the adversaries noses in dirt, such as using cuts of certain tax exemptions for revenue fromhigh income earners. The political scene stands in contrast to the wonderful humanitarian effort and the cooperation of neighbors we see in the coping with and in the curing of the wounds of hurricane Sandy and its Northwester baby brother. Some signs of good sense and return to sanity good emerge when a Conservative stalwart, like publisher Christopher Ruddy of the Newsmax corporation, analyses the sources of the GOP defeat. To begin, he lists the easy excuses, such as the two hurricanes, starting with the Tampa storms of late August, bumping off star speaker Marco Rubio, dutto Mitt Romney’s sypathetic biography, and allowing the injecting of Clint Eastwood’s inanities. But Mitt recovered in the first Denver debate in October, and held, until Sandy, on October 29, gave the President a chance to show leadership . Ruddy calls Gov. Chris Christie’s gratitude a treachery [btw, where does that place the McConnell and Norquist actions?], but has other , more weighty reasons to demean the Republican campaign. No.1, the Romney choice of inexperienced Paul Ryan for VP, almost unexplicable, and showing lack of political wisdom.. No. 2 was the Ryan Budget Plan, abolishing Medicare in 10 years.. When Romney realized his error and downplayed Ryan, it was too late . [Incidentally, there are polls showing 55% vote for Romney among older white men and women, as opposed to Obama’s dominance with over 50% votes in all other demographic and ethnic catergories, which seem to point to generational selfishness . Sort of like après moi la deluge, hein? Again, think of the social compact]. No. 3 mistake, energizing the conservative base vote, instead of the middle (sometimes called the “Clinton Democrats”), seems like preaching to the choir. No. 4, the absence of a plan, a promise of 12 Million jobs without the “how to” information, is a bit much for even the conservatives, as is No.5, a crushing optimism, reminding the rational Republican voters of the grand tax cutting schemes, from Jack Kemp to Newt Gingrich. Christopher Ruddy ends with regretting the absence of hard rhetoric, the kind Romney used against Gingrich, and is appalled at the dissing of Hispanics. Whether this realistic attitude will prevail among the social Conservatives, cooling the no-tax and religious extremists, is questionable. Certainly the Liberals seem determined not to let Obama give any way in what is turning into a “soak the rich” credo. The ultimate threat, “falling off the cliff” at NewYear’s, increasing and then selectively reducing taxes is too histrionic for this aging country, but it may come to that, alas But if anyone listens to my 60 years experience in risk analysis and consensus-forming, a compromise requires total effort of refraining from demeaning the opponent, of guilt making, and a requirement to find items of consensus, making the stubborn opponent a co-author. It can work in settling US budget, and Iran’s A-bomb, if the fear of the of the shiite ayatollahs from the 1B sunni muslims can be stilled. It is very simple if the Iranians stop nuclear development, we promise that Arab League will stop asking for their own nukes,As TR said, be humble but carry a big stick.I sometimes think I am living in a world of ignorants and those unwilling to rearn, a return to Neanderthal era. W. J. Clinton is a great president and post-president because he learned these family relationship clues while still in 8th grade. . Back to Sandy. Besides the national political im pact and the tremendous destructive effects in NJ, Staten Island and the Rockaways, Sandy has hugely affected T&V Country. Stuy Town/PCV are still suffering outages, particularly along Avenue C, all in purported safe Zone B territory, that will take much time and heartaches to repair.The loss includes the destruction of hundreds of automobiles in the ST garages. My car died in Garage 5, when it was overwhelmed by a six-foot wave on October 29. The owner, QuikPark, was not answering phone calls, the garage phone registered “busy” and still is, and no positive information was available until we personally visited on Election Day, to verify the bad news. Allstate ‘s affirmation and acceptance of a claim-by- phone report came November 8, and I retrieved my papers and license plates a day later (the garage workers were very cooperative and wore paper breathing masks, to prevent inhaling the mold spores) Traveling back and forth –I had to supply an Allen wrenth to retrieve the plates – I learned from other tenants about the 1993 flood, a much more shallow one, and of Geico inspectors writing on-the-spot claim checks (not verified). None were seen, but a Travelers’ man estimated total car loss from Sandy as 250,000 vehicles, 20,000 for his company and equal amounts for Allstate, State Farm and Geico, for starters. Waiting for the 14 Street bus, I got to talk with ConEd workers from the huge plant across from the garage, and heard that maybe 200 electric motors – elevator, pump, other utility - have been flooded in the downtown area, and there are no lights (zero, nada) in the Wall Street community, particularly alown Water Street. I know for a fact that a major insurance company had five feet of water in its lobby, flooding all the utilities, mechanical and electronic, and has shut its offices for two months They are trying to connect incoming phone calls to employees’ homes, wher technicians try to work on home gear, accessing data bases in safe out-of- town backup facilities. This slow-down of our world-power financial community is not advertised, and people are working 24/7 to clear salt water residues from sensitive equipment , to get us up as soon as possible. We will survive and prevail, and the T&V working people will soon be able to take the recovered subway trains to their Wall Street jobs. Those who deny global warming do not belong in our government , Many thanks to the East Greenwich Garden people and their cherrypicker from Rhode Island, who came to help clean up NYC two weeks ago, currently clearing up .Stuyvesant Square Park tree damage. I’ll do Sandy stories later, send some to wally@ix.netcom.com.

Labels: , , , , , , ,


Thursday, November 01, 2012

 

Devastating hurricane Sandy

LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobeli Devastating hurricane Sandy On the afternoon of Monday, September, 29, Sandy the hurricane put out the electric lights in Lower Manhattan, from about 30th Street o, leaving the T&V country in total darkness, partly lifted on Thursday September 1. As of this writing Stuyvesant Town /PCV is only partly lit, and hot water and heat cannot be expected to be fully restore before Sunday Nov.11, if then. Sandy destroyed parts of each borough, and killed local population, particularly in Staten Island, where people were slow to move into shelters, and really crippled New Jersey. Tis is the worst storm since the 1938 New England hurricane (that was before the cute naming convention), far exceeding those of 1992, 2002, 2008 Hanna and even the 2011 Irene. I am writing these lines on Sunday, with a deadline on Tuesday, two days before the Presidential Election, and using the voting statistics, we can say that some seven states (VA, PA, WV, MD, NJ, NC, OH) have suffered electric system damages that will affect the election outcome. NY and FL have paper ballot alternatives, with optical scanners to automate the counting in their damaged districts. OCRs have been found to be unreliable and error prone in some instances, so we may look forward to a slow validation, unless the balloting results are really overwhelmingly one-sided. A call to ACLU in DC, to find whether the citizen groups plan an action to secure a delay brought in a request for my deadline info, so there may be some action forthcoming. At least one legal opinion, from Heritage Foundation, finds that the President cannot extend the time, but what about the Supreme Court? Stay tuned. Anyway, in preparation for the blackout, we bought extra Dcells for the portable radio, and AA batteries for four or five small flashlights, plus some food (the gas stove was expected to function, and it did), and gallon bottles of drinking water. filled the bathtub, remembering Mayor Koch’s favorite line for past water shortages, “if it’s yellow, let it mellow, if it’s brown, flush it down.” Believe me, this hunkering down and waiting the storm out was nerve-racking, and WNYC, though we love it, is tiring on 24/7 basis. Looking out the window on near empty streets, locked up stores, with no cars moving is spooky and reminds one of those horror movies of ragged humans surviving the Apocalypse. Ditto, walking on pitch black hallways and stairs for exercise, saying hello to inquisitive floor mates, flashlight in hand, clutching the banister. In two days three neighbor ladies knocked at the door, inquiring about our health, and about borrowing batteries and bath water. We declined the opportunity for a joint expedition outside, the 300 steps down, and then back up would be too much. We were prisoners of our high riser, and shuddered thinking of the people in the real 52 story skyscrapers near Carnegie Hall, where the broken construction gear hanging down threatened the entire neighborhood. Fortunately, in Brooklyn our athletic son found a way to drive across the East River and take us, our two cats and suitcases down the stairs. We borrowed the car and drove upstate to our cabin near Albany, which lost five trees to Hurricane Irene in 2011, worrying about broken pines on the road. But it was fine and the storm had barely touched, and the heat came on, as did the TV, although the news was scary. Only Governor Chris Christy and President Barak Obama, in one brief human moment, made it possible to dream that maybe some day soon there will be a United States with cooperation and compassion, instead of political parties , like jungle animals, baring their teeth at each other and crouching in the jungle , ready to leap at each other. The Star Wars-type term “garbage planet Earth” came up somewhere, reminding one that there are people who sacrifice the health of this one and only universe we have, for short-term profit. The old Gov Mitt Romney knew it, but now he has forgotten. And the animals in the jungle are ready to cut Christie’s throat. About the same time, call it the brief rebirth of humanity say, the lights came back in my high riser, and in a lot more of lower Manhattan. Alas, no heat and hot water, as announced by ConEd, maybe not until November 11. Alas, there were no lights in poor suffering Stuyvesant Town, where the Avenue C-side garage holds the family car, inaccessible. Worse, we known not whether it was destroyed by a high wave washing into ST/PCV, rated Zone B, the garage company , heard from via SP?PCV bulletin on the internet now recommends advising the insurance company. Incidentally, this series of events recommends everybody, even not company- literate elders, get on Internet. E-mail is child’s play, compared to iPhone, and it retains records. If your apartment management does not recommend it, they are negligent fools, and if you do not accept it and act accordingly, you are worse. It is self defense, we live in perilous times and if you do not defend yourself with instant information, offered free, you can become a burden to society. The Staten Island and Jersey Shore people who did not heed and take care of themselves and evacuate, have themselves to blame. Screaming at society when your neglect brought on the suffering is wrong. Good luck to the President elected on Nov. 6, and may we all again learn to live with each other, and let social benefit be the guiding light.

Labels: ,


 
LOOKING AHEAD by Wally Dobeli Devastating hurricane brings good hopes for the Presidency On the afternoon of Monday, September, 29, Sandy the hurricane put out the electric lights in Lower Manhattan, from about 30th Street o, leaving the T&V country in total darkness, partly lifted on Thursday September 1. As of this writing Stuyvesant Town /PCV is only partly lit, and hot water and heat cannot be expected to be fully restore before Sunday Nov.11, if then. Sandy destroyed parts of each borough, and killed local population, particularly in Staten Island, where people were slow to move into shelters, and really crippled New Jersey. Tis is the worst storm since the 1938 New England hurricane (that was before the cute naming convention), far exceeding those of 1992, 2002, 2008 Hanna and even the 2011 Irene. I am writing these lines on Sunday, with a deadline on Tuesday, two days before the Presidential Election, and using the voting statistics, we can say that some seven states (VA, PA, WV, MD, NJ, NC, OH) have suffered electric system damages that will affect the election outcome. NY and FL have paper ballot alternatives, with optical scanners to automate the counting in their damaged districts. OCRs have been found to be unreliable and error prone in some instances, so we may look forward to a slow validation, unless the balloting results are really overwhelmingly one-sided. A call to ACLU in DC, to find whether the citizen groups plan an action to secure a delay brought in a request for my deadline info, so there may be some action forthcoming. At least one legal opinion, from Heritage Foundation, finds that the President cannot extend the time, but what about the Supreme Court? Stay tuned. Anyway, in preparation for the blackout, we bought extra Dcells for the portable radio, and AA batteries for four or five small flashlights, plus some food (the gas stove was expected to function, and it did), and gallon bottles of drinking water. filled the bathtub, remembering Mayor Koch’s favorite line for past water shortages, “if it’s yellow, let it mellow, if it’s brown, flush it down.” Believe me, this hunkering down and waiting the storm out was nerve-racking, and WNYC, though we love it, is tiring on 24/7 basis. Looking out the window on near empty streets, locked up stores, with no cars moving is spooky and reminds one of those horror movies of ragged humans surviving the Apocalypse. Ditto, walking on pitch black hallways and stairs for exercise, saying hello to inquisitive floor mates, flashlight in hand, clutching the banister. In two days three neighbor ladies knocked at the door, inquiring about our health, and about borrowing batteries and bath water. We declined the opportunity for a joint expedition outside, the 300 steps down, and then back up would be too much. We were prisoners of our high riser, and shuddered thinking of the people in the real 52 story skyscrapers near Carnegie Hall, where the broken construction gear hanging down threatened the entire neighborhood. Fortunately, in Brooklyn our athletic son found a way to drive across the East River and take us, our two cats and suitcases down the stairs. We borrowed the car and drove upstate to our cabin near Albany, which lost five trees to Hurricane Irene in 2011, worrying about broken pines on the road. But it was fine and the storm had barely touched, and the heat came on, as did the TV, although the news was scary. Only Governor Chris Christy and President Barak Obama, in one brief human moment, made it possible to dream that maybe some day soon there will be a United States with cooperation and compassion, instead of political parties , like jungle animals, baring their teeth at each other and crouching in the jungle , ready to leap at each other. The Star Wars-type term “garbage planet Earth” came up somewhere, reminding one that there are people who sacrifice the health of this one and only universe we have, for short-term profit. The old Gov Mitt Romney knew it, but now he has forgotten. And the animals in the jungle are ready to cut Christie’s throat. About the same time, call it the brief rebirth of humanity say, the lights came back in my high riser, and in a lot more of lower Manhattan. Alas, no heat and hot water, as announced by ConEd, maybe not until November 11. Alas, there were no lights in poor suffering Stuyvesant Town, where the Avenue C-side garage holds the family car, inaccessible. Worse, we known not whether it was destroyed by a high wave washing into ST/PCV, rated Zone B, the garage company , heard from via SP?PCV bulletin on the internet now recommends advising the insurance company. Incidentally, this series of events recommends everybody, even not company- literate elders, get on Internet. E-mail is child’s play, compared to iPhone, and it retains records. If your apartment management does not recommend it, they are negligent fools, and if you do not accept it and act accordingly, you are worse. It is self defense, we live in perilous times and if you do not defend yourself with instant information, offered free, you can become a burden to society. The Staten Island and Jersey Shore people who did not heed and take care of themselves and evacuate, have themselves to blame. Screaming at society when your neglect brought on the suffering is wrong. Good luck to the President elected on Nov. 6, and may we all again learn to live with each other, and let social benefit be the guiding light.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?