A Case Of Mistaken Identity At The Boston Herald

Editorial in Tuesday’s Boston Herald:

Tolman’s two hats

During his 17 years on Beacon Hill Sen. Warren Tolman (D-Brighton) has been a loyal footsoldier in the cause of organized labor. Last week the Massachusetts chapter of the AFL-CIO made an honest man of him — or tried to — by electing him president of the 400,000-member chapter.

And frankly he really is a good choice — a smart, civilized and articulate combatant for the cause to replace the thuggish Robert Haynes, whose act had truly grown tired.

Tolman’s election came on the first day of a three-day convention. But soon after he told the State House News Service that he had no intention of actually resigning his Senate seat until passage of the supplementary budget (see above), which was voted on last Thursday and the passage of a casino gambling bill.

“Those are two pieces I’ve been working on,” he told the News Service.

Isn’t that special!

Now the Senate has scheduled two sessions this week — today and Thursday — for further debate on the casino bill and presumably Tolman will still be hanging in there, wearing two hats and waiting to vote.

That is without question a disgrace — and one which the State Ethics Commission should take a careful look at before he disgraces himself and his Senate colleagues.

Except it’s Steven – not Warren (former state senator, current chin-stroker) – who’s the Tolman in question.

The Herald web edition made – but failed to note – the correction.

Maybe the headline should’ve been:

Tolmans’ two names

Just sayin’.

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NYT’s Bruni: MA Senate Race ‘Sadly Petty’

New York Times op-ed columnist Frank Bruni has exceedingly low expectations for the expected Elizabeth Warren-Scott Brown Senate smackdown in Massachusetts:

I have my doubts that Elizabeth Warren is elitist and I’m not convinced Scott Brown is sexist, but I’m sure of this: we just got our first glimpse of how sadly petty and predictably reductive the 2012 U.S. Senate campaign in Massachusetts is bound to be.

Bruni is referring to Warren’s “I kept my clothes on”/Brown’s “Thank God” rumpus currently occupying everyone from Michael Graham to Nancy Pelosi.

Memo to Bruni: There’s over a year to go until election day. Keep your shirt on.

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Bachmann-Number Overage

From Monday’s Boston Globe piece on Michele Bachmann’s effort to reinsert herself into the New Hampshire GOP presidential primary picture:

Bachmann portrayed herself as a fighter who spent five years opposing [Barack] Obama’s initiatives in Washington.

That’s swell, except Obama’s only been president for two years and nine months. As for his two years as U.S. Senator, he had no initiatives, only a burgeoning history of being bored by political office.

Or detached – see this piece by New York Post columnist Michael Goodwin.

Nut graf:

The reports are not good, disturbing even. I have heard basically the same story four times in the last 10 days, and the people doing the talking are in New York and Washington and are spread across the political spectrum.

The gist is this: President Obama has become a lone wolf, a stranger to his own government. He talks mostly, and sometimes only, to friend and adviser Valerie Jarrett and to David Axelrod, his political strategist.

Everybody else, including members of his Cabinet, have little face time with him except for brief meetings that serve as photo ops. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner both have complained, according to people who have talked to them, that they are shut out of important decisions.

For a president who’s proven himself surprisingly tone-deaf (given his pitch-perfect 2008 campaign), that’s not good to hear. 

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Tanks For The Memories

Crash of ’29 = Hindenburg Crash  = Red Sox Crash, according to Tank McNamara:

Nuf ced.

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It’s Good To LIve In A Two-Daily Town (Whitey Bulger Dime-Dropper Edition)

Immutable rule of newspaper physics: For every Boston Globe action, there’s an equal and apposite Boston Herald reaction.

Case in point: the Globe’s Whitey Bulger’s life in exile lid-ripper, which revealed that Icelandic beauty Anna Bjornsdottir – late of Noxzema and Vidal Sassoon commercials, and a former Santa Monica neighbor of Bulger and his girlfriend Catherine Grieg – “ended one of the longest and most expansive manhunts in FBI history and brought Bulger home to face charges that he had killed 19 people.”

And ended up with Bjornsdottir receiving a $2 million reward.

Which just got the Herald started:

Safety of tipster feared

‘Huge risk’ vs. $2M reward for Whitey

The outing of an Icelandic woman as the snitch who dimed out Southie mobster James “Whitey” Bulger could put her in danger and may have a chilling effect on other witnesses who could think twice before coming forward, former prosecutors warn.

The FBI — which vowed confidentiality to the tipster — also could take a hit if it comes out that the agency was involved in the leak, experts say. The FBI did not return calls yesterday.

There’s at least a half-dozen follow-up stories in those two paragraphs.

Details to follow.

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Tumblr Class (Warfare)

Sunday’s New York Times featured a piece about the online occupations of the Occupy Wall Street set.

Among them: the WeArethe99Percent blog on Tumbler.

As it happens, the hardworking staff is also a Tumblrer, so we checked out the blog and this is some of what we found:

I am 59 years old with a Master’s degree. I do not have a full time job. I have four part time jobs. I never stop working. My $40,000 in student loan debt has become $60,000 from periodic  forbearance. My payments are $400.00 a month, which I pay most of the year (when it is not in periodic forbearance, which is not often). My credit card companies raised my interest rates from 18% to 31% even though I have never been late with one payment. I make minimum payments every month – for years – the debt doesn’t go down. I will be dead,and these debts will never be paid.  I have healthcare because my wife goes to work at a job she hates everyday.  We are grateful for that. We are grateful for the work we are a.ble to do. We are grateful that now our voices will be heard

 

I am over 25,000$ in debt. I have serious panic and anxiety attacks but the medication costs 150$ a month. Im a single parent who can’t afford to live on my own. Half of my family can’t find work (father, neice, brother ) and the rest of us cannot afford to live on our own (me, sister, her adult son) so we live together. My daughter sleeps on a mattress on the floor in my room, and i work so much i often get less than 1 hour a day to spend with her. My other sister found work on the road, so im taking care of her two boys as well. I’m forced to call about bills each month to tell them i can’t pay till next month. I travel and work 60hrs a week as a manager, and yet i still make less than the cost of living. My mother died last year because she couldn’t afford the treatment she needed to attempt to survive, and now my father is sick as well. Im worried that my daughter will have a worse life than the hell we live in now. I have worked my life away for the last 14yrs and i can pack everything i own into the back of a pickup truck because i sold everything else to pay bills. I hope the 1% understand i will fight for a better country for my daughter, so if it comes to that… Im happy i can say… WE ARE THE 99% we need liveable wages, a ban on outsourcing, CEO wage caps, return of real benefits, raise min wage and freeze inflation!

 

I grew up in a mill town in West Michigan

The mill closed 15 years ago after a corporation purchased it to “eliminate competition”.  Hundreds were unemployed as a result.

I went to college so I wouldn’t have to work in a car parts factory like the majority of friends I went to High School with who come home coughing up blood after working 11+ hour shifts.

Graduated with a 3.4 GPA and $40,000 in debt.

Unemployed and living with my mother who makes $12,000 a year.

Wal-Mart wouldn’t hire me, saying I was OVERQUALIFIED.

My Dad is in his mid-60s and nowhere near retiring.

My credit is shot due to unpaid medical bills.

I will never own a house.

I lost the majority of my belongings in an apartment fire last year.  The landlord neglected to put in either fire detectors or a fire extinguisher in the building.  He has evaded all my attempts to recover my $600 security deposit.

I have $2.85 in my bank account.

Despite this, I consider myself one of the fortunate members of the 99%

OCCUPY WALL STREET OCCUPY EVERYTHING 

Not surprisingly, many of the comments about WeArethe99Percent go something like this:

So I follow wearethe99percent…

which is the blog of the OccupyWallstreet movement. People go on there and post their testimonials and the hardships they go through—it is the most depressing shit ever.  

It also feels like the most underreported shit ever – the Times piece notwithstanding.

Or is the hardworking staff missing something?

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Campaign Outsider Whitey Bulger E-Book Alert (pat. pending)

Totally excellent front-page piece in Sunday’s Boston Globe on Whitey Bulger’s life in exile.

Two immediate results:

1) Forget that thing about the Icelandic dime-dropper being an FBI fabrication:

The Icelandic beauty [Anna Bjornsdottir], who gained minor fame decades ago starring in Vidal Sassoon and Noxzema commercials, was home in Reykjavik, Iceland, when she saw a CNN report on the FBI’s latest effort to track the 82-year-old Bulger and his 60-year-old girlfriend, Catherine Greig. Bjornsdottir recognized them immediately as the Gaskos, her former neighbors . . . an ocean away on Third Street [in Santa Monica].

With a phone call to the FBI, Bjornsdottir ended one of the longest and most expansive manhunts in FBI history and brought Bulger home to face charges that he had killed 19 people, some of whose bodies were unearthed while the gangster was posing as a retiree in Southern California.

2) Look for a new Whitey e-book to join the trio of QwikLit qwikies the Globe has already produced.

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Facebook Is Totally Stalking Me

Memo to Mark Zuckerberg:

Get out of my Facebook! Enough with the emails saying, “Here’s some activity you may have missed on Facebook.”

No, I haven’t missed it – I’ve IGNORED it. There’s a difference.

Unfortunately, Facebook marks are just there for the plucking, as helpful posts like this one on All Facebook show:

How To Use Facebook’s Timeline For Marketing

You can advance your business by enabling Facebook’s timelineon your profile and posting content that promotes your brand.

Only those who have installed Facebook’s Developer application on their profiles can see timelines as of this writing, but sometime soon they will become visible to all users of the site.

Excellent! And Marky Z wonder why I “miss” things on Tracebook.

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NYT Jobs Fair

Today’s New York Times Sunday Review is a Steve Jobsarama, with four – count ’em, four – hagiographic pieces on the lgendary Apple co-founder.

Start with columnist Tom Friedman’s Where Have You Gone, Joe DiMaggio? op-ed paean:

THE melancholy over Steve Jobs’s passing is not just about the loss of the inventor of so many products we enjoy. It is also about the loss of someone who personified so many of the leadership traits we know are missing from our national politics. Those traits jump out of every Jobs obituary: He was someone who did not read the polls but changed the polls by giving people what he was certain they wanted and needed before they knew it; he was someone who was ready to pursue his vision in the face of long odds over multiple years; and, most of all, he was someone who earned the respect of his colleagues, not by going easy on them but by constantly pushing them out of their comfort zones and, in the process, inspiring ordinary people to do extraordinary things.

Of course, every Friedman column needs a toe-curler, and this one doesn’t disappoint:

 What is John Boehner’s vision? I laugh just thinking about the question. What is President Obama’s vision? I cry just thinking about the question.

Yoicks.

Then there’s Ross Douthat’s column, “Up From Ugliness”:

FROM the 1960s through the 1980s, the United States of America conducted a long experiment in ugliness. Our architects grew bored with beauty, our designers tired of elegance, our urban planners decided that function should trump form. We bulldozed row houses and threw up housing projects. We built public buildings out of raw concrete. We wore leisure suits and shoulder pads, buried heart-of-pine floors under shag carpeting, and paneled our automobiles with artificial wood.

Jobs, thankfully, rescued us from that design hell.

Next up: the human-interest angle compliments of Gish Jen’s My Muse Was an Apple Computer:

No one in the world particularly cared if you wrote and, of course, you knew the computer didn’t care, either. But it was waiting for you to type something. It was not inert and passive, like the page. It was listening. It was your ally. It was your audience. And with it — on it — whatever — you could try things. You were not wasting paper; you were not making a racket.

Some might say the blank page was more alive – and more intensely personal – than the blank screen, but why get technical about it?

Next in the Times Jobsapalooza is Christopher Bonanos with The Man Who Inspired Jobs,  a shoutout to another great innovator:

IN the memorials to Steven P. Jobs this week, Apple’s co-founder was compared with the world’s great inventor-entrepreneurs: Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Alexander Graham Bell. Yet virtually none of the obituaries mentioned the man Jobs himself considered his hero, the person on whose career he explicitly modeled his own: Edwin H. Land, the genius domus of Polaroid Corporation and inventor of instant photography.

All those pieces are well worth reading, but the one that probably means the most is the fifth Jobs piece in the Times, the definitely not hagiographic Against Nostalgia by Mike Daisey.

Nut graf:

The Steve Jobs who founded Apple as an anarchic company promoting the message of freedom, whose first projects with Stephen Wozniak were pirate boxes and computers with open schematics, would be taken aback by the future that Apple is forging. Today there is no tech company that looks more like the Big Brother from Apple’s iconic 1984 commercial than Apple itself, a testament to how quickly power can corrupt.

Appleniks, take note.

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What Did You Wear In The (Class) War, Mommy?

In the ’60s, the question was What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?

Nowadays it’s all about the clothes – at least according to New York magazine’s The Cut blog:

If You Haven’t Been Dressing Up to Protest on Wall Street, You’re Doing It Wrong

A protest within a protest is beginning to emerge in the Occupy Wall Street movement. One blogger–protester believes that this stand against greed and materialism would be strengthened if her comrades just pretended like they were into that kind of thing themselves. Andrea Chalupa suggests in her Huffington Post essay that the best way to beat the enemy is to dress like them:

When my friend and I met up last week to go to Occupy Wall Street, I wore my long flowing pin stripe skirt, a black-and-white vintage blouse, and a nude pair of shiny ballet flats. After the police brutality at the start of the occupation, dressing chic seemed both a fun and safe thing to do. If the NYPD tried to arrest me for marching, I would simply say, “Excuse me, I was on my way to Tiffany to buy a watch.” If you look like you can spend money — even if you can’t — they’re more likely to leave you alone.

No advice, though, about the best outfits to be tasered in.

 

 

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