17 April 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON A $4 MILLION DISCOUNT…

1223 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

It was good to see three school board members voted against the fire sale of the Cleveland schools downtown administration building. But wait.

Unfortunately, the majority voted to sell the historic building to Drury Hotels of St. Louis. The deal: more than $4 million below the appraised price. Who’s counting the pennies?

No one – at least in reports I’ve seen – has said a word about the land that goes with the building, enough apparently to build a new hotel and use the revitalized historic building for upscale digs. That was the plan when years ago developer John Ferchill tried to get his greedy hands on the site.

I wonder what goodies Mayor Jackson will throw at the hotel developers. We must help downtown business, you know.

Ferchill was fought off by an elected school board, particularly its black members. Even Mike White, then a state senator, opposed the move. It was a political plus for him at that point. Black power.

Now we have a Mayoral school board, nearly invisible.

“We need to put the focus on education and put this issue aside,” said school board member Eric Wobser. He called it forward thinking. Wobser easily flipped off more than 80 years of history. As part of the Continue Reading »

17 April 2013

TAYLOR MALI: CONVICTION IS IMPORTANT…

0828 by Jeff Hess

My blog-sis Shamash sends us this wonderful poem from Taylor Mali.

16 April 2013

WHEN THE SELF IS OK, THE WORLD IS OK…

2025 by Jeff Hess

We can very well make friends with our suffering as part of our effort to transform it. If we recognize it and call it by its true name, then we can make peace with it and not suffer as much. When we see the pain in the world caused by all the suffering, we want to help the world suffer less. But we begin with ourselves. We have to produce peace in ourselves and reduce the suffering in ourselves first, because we represent the world. Peace, love and happiness begin with ourselves. The suffering we see out in the world is reflected in the suffering, fear and anger inside. So when we take care of ourselves, we are taking the first step toward taking care of the world. p. 27

From Good Citizens: Creating Enlightened Society by Thich Nhat Hanh

Previously…

Found in my electronic chapbook.

16 April 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON SQUARING FOR THE GAMBLERS…

1223 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

I had to chuckle reading Steve Litt’s lead on his umpteenth piece ballyhooing a revamp of Public Square.

“Cleveland’s drab and gray Public Square…” Litt starts the latest propaganda push for more downtown public dollars. Public Square is an essential property for the city. Is that why we put a gambling joint at its doorstep? To dress up the place.

Good thinking.

Litt didn’t mention that the present configuration of Public Square was the lady bountiful project of Iris Vail, the wife of former Plain Dealer Publisher Tom Vail. It gave me my chuckle.

Of course, helping to lead the latest grab ($40 million to start) for public monies for Public Square is Plain Dealer Publisher and CEO Terrance Egger. Was it ever so! Change is sooo hard.

They just never do stop. They can’t help themselves.

You’d think there was nothing else in town that really needed attention.

Watching a TV news clip of neighbors protests the rape and murder of two women and another almost victim in a small east side area I noticed Continue Reading »

13 April 2013

DAVID ALLEN DOES AT DO…

1532 by Jeff Hess

I don’t think Allen offers any new information, but, like all purveyors of productivity porn, repackages basic truths discovered so far back in History that we have no way of assigning proper credit.

This is not to suggest that Allen is a hack or in any way misappropriating others’ ideas. Basic truths must be reinterpreted in every generation so that they may be embraced as present discoveries and not simply as moldy mutterings of our parents.

13 April 2013

I PICK 10 OF THE WELSH 57…

1512 by Jeff Hess

From Ian Welsh’s Golden Laws of Prosperity

1. Implement policy which is as good for as many people as possible.
6. Enforce the doctrine of first sale.
10. Do not allow the private sector to pillage the social sector.
25. Enforce accountability on decision makers, especially corporate decision-makers.
31. Reduce barriers to entry in new industries.
35. Treat credit as a utility and regulate all credit grantors as utilities.
38. Do not have large standing armies.
42. Do not make reintegration of criminals effectively impossible.
43. Make sure your population eats healthily.
47. Do not allow suburbs which do not allow light businesses or have covenants.

I don’t agree with all 57 principles (hell, I’m not sure I understand all 57), but I think they’re all good starting points, in the wake of the economic rapine of the last decade, for discussion.

12 April 2013

CLEVELAND: THE CENTER OF THE UNIVERSE…

0428 by Jeff Hess

xkcd 140412
We can dream can’t we…?

9 April 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON HIS UNFORESEEN JOURNEY…

1246 by Jeff Hess

roldo 130315

Roldo Bartimole writes:

As I reach the age of 80 it is hard for me to believe that my life has taken roads that I would never have foreseen. It has been an unexpected life journey. So I take liberty now to speak of it.

Never would I have believed as a youngster that I would become a radically different person than I ever could have imagined of myself. I am timid, if anything. Truth is, early in life, I had no special expectations for myself. No great or even strong goals. I took the most general of subjects in high school. I could have anticipated life as a clerk, having worked in my dad’s butcher/grocery store. Only because of the GI bill did I even think of college. After two years in the Army, I entered business school at Northeastern University, hardly a choice I would have made years later.

It was 50 years ago my path changed. What I saw and experienced did it. I was working at the Bridgeport Sunday Post, my hometown paper. I had worked sports for the morning edition in 1959, left for a news position in Haverhill, Mass. I was lured back months later with an offer to be an assistant to the Sunday editor.

In January, 1963 the New Yorker magazine published a historic piece by Dwight McDonald entitled “Our Invisible Poor.” It was a book review of Michael Harrington’s “The Other America – Poverty in the United States.” Together these writings prompted (or shamed) President John F. Kennedy’s War on Poverty.

Similarly, the times prodded me. I looked at the 1960 U. S. Census of Bridgeport, Conn. And I was on my way to change. I saw too much to be a mere bystander. I chose three of the poorest census tracts to examine.

My travels showed me the location of the worst poverty Continue Reading »

8 April 2013

HOW ARE THESE WORDS ALIKE…?

0408 by Jeff Hess

What do sanction, oversight, left, dust, seed, stone, trim, cleave, resign, fast, fast, weather, screen and help all have incommon?

They’re are all contronyms or, I think much more colorfully, Janus words.

7 April 2013

THE POWER OF THE 0.05 PERCENT…

0814 by Jeff Hess

One of my undergraduate Political Science professors first made Lessig’s argument to me nearly a third of a century ago in the year the Lesters elected Ronald Reagan to his first term as President. The problem has only grown worse.

Is there a possibility that, short of a third revolution in the United States — I count Reconstruction as a second American Revolution — We The People can triumph over the Lesters? Of course. Will we? I have my doubts, but I am hopeful.

Are you?

24 March 2013

TIM COMMENTS ON UNBALANCING POWER…

0913 by Jeff Hess

Tim Russo copied me this morning on a letter he’s written to Brent Larkin regarding the former director of the Plain Dealer’s editorial page’s essay in this morning’s PD.

Brent,

I’m not clear on your column today against splitting downtown into 3 wards. It seems your entire argument is, well, “because.”

More representation among more council members seems the ideal of competition. Do downtown “business leaders” like competition or not? Don’t voters get a better hearing for issues if there are more seats at the table? Remember them…you know, voters? Do you care about voters, or just “business leaders”, most of whom don’t even live in the city?

Of course it’s easer for “business leaders” located downtown to deal with one person. Fewer checks to write, fewer palms to grease, I get it. How is that democratic? Why should Mr. Landed Gentry Commuting From Gates Mills Dude have an easier time with city council than a mother in Glenville, a kid in Clark Fulton, a coffee shop owner in Clifton?

The population growth downtown argues for more representation across more wards, not the opposite as you contend. The only people who will benefit from concentration of power downtown are people who don’t live in the city, wouldn’t live in the city, and don’t need another advantage over the rest of Cleveland’s residents.

Downtown getting three voices instead of one, in a shrinking city, is a really, really good idea. I unreservedly applaud it. If you’re going to defend stove piping power for the already powerful, Brent, you probably ought to come up with a better argument than “because”.

Tim

24 March 2013

IF THE GOAL IS WORTHY THEN THE PATH IS CLEAR…

0714 by Jeff Hess

post secret 130324

This morning I intended to delete Post Secret from my current blogroll.

At the bottom of today’s posting, I found the above.

I like to think this final postcard is a farewell message from the Post Secret universe.

21 March 2013

NED WHELAN, 1943-2013…

1008 by Jeff Hess

NED WHELAN – HE COULD TELL THE TRUTH

By Roldo Bartimole

How do you do aggressive, honest reporting? Ned Whelan, who died Wednesday, days after an accidental fall, showed exactly how. He died in Phoenix, visiting his daughter. He was 70.

As a Plain Dealer reporter in 1970, Whelan covered a meeting of the Bluecoats, an organization of the top corporate executives in town. The Bluecoats support police killed on duty with financial help for family and children.

The situation was an introduction by top corporate Cleveland elite, Fred Coolidge Crawford. He was then board chairman emeritus of TRW, Inc., a major American corporation based here and on the boards of other major corporations.

In his talk Crawford uttered two racist “jokes.” Whelan was covering the meeting for the Plain Dealer. He had the courage to write into his article the essence of this elite’s attempt at humor. Of course, the material never made it to the newspaper the next day. Ned’s honesty was killed. Left on the cutting floor by editors.

I wrote at the time that “Such incidents usually die with self-censorship by reporters,” not so with Whelan. He wrote it.

Someone, maybe even Whelan, as I remember it, sent me the actual edited copy. The material missing in the PD appeared only in my newsletter Point of View in November 23 1970.

Whelan wrote: “Crawford told two racial jokes to the all-white audience.

“In prefacing one joke, he commented upon someone being ‘black-balled.’

“Crawford then added: ‘I guess it takes two black balls to get elected in this city’.”

He injected this racial slur to an audience of police officers. All white.

He also made another racist comment about a “colored boy” and a general, a joke in a Step ‘n Fetchit dialect, Whelan reported. The joke didn’t even require any racial references.

Whelan must have known he was taking a chance. He probably expected to be edited by his bosses. Reporters often don’t want to make their editors uncomfortable. So they leave uncomfortable material out of their stories.

Whelan didn’t.

Carl Stokes, the first black elected mayor in a major U. S. city, of course, was mayor at the time.

Whelan continued: “The remark elicited a mixture of laughs and agitation.

“Reston (New York Times noted editorial leader and guest speaker) did not comment upon Crawford’s digression.”

Some people don’t speak out against obvious racism. That helps it along.

It takes courage to write what Whelan did. This was a time of high racial tensions. Crawford was one of the most lauded of corporate leaders. He was speaking to an all-white crowd of police and corporate executives.

One can be sure that he expected not to be quoted in a manner that would bring him disgrace.

Whelan did quote Crawford, however. But the TRW boss’s confidence of editorial protection proved valid. The inherent sense of censorship at the Plain Dealer for the chosen didn’t fail him.

Ned had very conservative opinions, very opposite of mine. I’ve sometimes taken jabs at him but he was always gracious and kind when we met. I’ll miss him. It is a very sad ending.

19 March 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON BYRDING PD REPORTERS…*

1339 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

Okay Plain Dealer reporters: the outlook is dark and tragic. No easy way to put it.

So take advantage of the Newhouse family’s bad situation of caring more about making money than serving the public.

If they’re going to go to three days start now producing some hard hitting stuff that tests management’s mealy-mouthed approach to informing the public.

Let’s see some hard hits.

People are hungry for it. They know they’re not getting it. They know the papers are too frightened to turn up the heat on the 1 percent and the rest of the wealthy. They know you’re a friend of the powerful, not the weak. It’s not hard to figure out. That’s why the paper has lost 166,000 since 1994 and continues to lose support.

Stop giving free rides to so-called leaders. Where have they gotten us?

Let’s get into the most impoverished parts of Cleveland where people are suffering and tell their stories. Go to the people who try to meet some of these needs, whether they are social workers or radicals and find the stories. They’re out Continue Reading »

17 March 2013

FACEBOOK AND TWITTER: GONE, GONE, GONE…

0726 by Jeff Hess

Facebook A

This morning I decided that Facebook and Twitter are distractions in my life. I’ve deleted both. I invited all of my Facebook friends to an event as a way of announcing my departure and I’ve uploaded this post to Twitter to let my followers there know as well.

I’m undecided about Have Coffee Will Write and The Writing On The Wall so for now, they’ll remain.

Do all you can to make today a good day…

11 March 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON NAYMIK, CLEVELAND SPORTS…

1425 by Jeff Hess

frank jackson 130311

Roldo Bartimole writes:

My former colleague Mark Naymik opened what should be a serious discussion on sports funding. We both worked at the Free Times.

At least I hope it opened the debate. It’s long overdue.

He casts Council President Martin Sweeney as the heavy in the failure of the city to pursue some of the football stadium naming rights money – put at $100 million – for the city.

After all the stadium was built by the city, on city land, is financed by the city and its upkeep cost are borne by the city. And it pays no property taxes. So profits go to the team owner, not the city. Does that make sense? To anyone?

Why Naymik didn’t mention Mayor Frank Jackson I don’t know. Mayor Jackson has the bully pulpit to put some pressure on Browns owner Jimmy Haslam. Naymik says Haslam has Sweeney under a spell. Jackson too apparently. Jackson is still the mayor, isn’t he?

Actually, he has everybody under a spell. Especially the community’s watchdog, the Plain Dealer.

He follows Al Lerner in that occupation.

Lerner, by the way, didn’t have naming rights. But really, he did. He had two giant electronic boards placed at each end of the stadium. Very visible from the lakeside drive. And clearly noticeable from Continue Reading »

13 February 2013

KEEF ON WHY DORNER IS IMPORTANT…

0721 by Jeff Hess

keef 130213

Driving between students yesterday I pulled up behiund a white van with this bumper sticker. I don’t think I’ve ever had such a visceral response in my life. If I had had a bumper sticker with an arrow that said “Racist Bigot On Board” I would have chased down the van and pasted my opinion on the bumper.

I told a student on Monday that we are getting better about acceptance but that the fight is far from over.

6 February 2013

ROLDO RIGHTS ON FRANK JACKSON’S FAULT LINE…

1241 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

We have a No Fault Cleveland City Hall.

– A No Fault Mayor Frank Jackson.
– A No Fault Police Chief Frank McGrath.
– A No Fault Safety Director Marty Flask.
– A No Fault Cleveland Police Force.

HELL, nobody’s responsible for Anything in Cleveland.

What a wonderful world where no one is to blame for anything. The best of all worlds. No consequences. Impunity to them all.
Except for those who suffer the consequences of this madness. Two dead citizens and their families.

Apparently in Jackson’s world no one who works for him merits any blame for anything.

Jackson rejects the findings by Atty. Gen. Mike DeWine’s report that the police chase and gunning down of two citizens was Continue Reading »

4 February 2013

NO ONE WHO DRAWS A SALARY WILL BE SAFE…

0759 by Jeff Hess

derf 130204

People are naturally terrified when the economy is not growing. Technical change becomes the great evil, and gives people something concrete to blame for their economic woes. It also provides a handy scare tactic for those want to squeeze wages and workers, and a cover for politicians who push austerity policies and object to government intervention in the economy. During his first term, President Obama sometimes echoed this line of thought in remarks about the rise of things like ATMs, suggesting that because automation causes unemployment, there’s not a lot the government can do. (Never mind the incredible proliferation of banks on every corner staffed with what appear to be humans.)

4 February 2013

HOW DO YOU, HOW DO WE ALL, CARRY ON…?

0703 by Jeff Hess

We see ourselves everywhere because every moment we produce thoughts, speech and actions that continue us in the world. p. 25

From Good Citizens: Creating Enlightened Society by Thich Nhat Hanh

Previously…

Found in my electronic chapbook.

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