The protest. Photograph provided by Faith Community of St. Sabina |
Saturday, December 31, 2016
EXTRA: St. Sabina marches on MI Av.
How will Michigan Avenue crowd respond to so visual homicide protest?
I
remember a time some three decades ago when I covered a protest march in the
District of Columbia – one that passed through the upscale Georgetown
neighborhood.
PFLEGER: Leading 100s on 'invasion' of Mich. Ave. |
To
be honest, I don’t even remember what the “cause” was. But what stuck in my
mind was the reaction of people who thought they were out for a good time
Saturday night, only to find the sight of all these great unwashed peoples
ruining their time.
I
REMEMBER BECAUSE I tried to interview several people who were spectators; none of whom wanted to
talk, all of whom seemed confused about the point and probably felt like their
night out was spoiled.
This
comes to my mind because I won’t be surprised if there’s a similar reaction to
a protest march being planned for Saturday night – also known as New Year’s
Eve.
For
Rev. Michael Pfleger of the St. Sabina Catholic parish in the Auburn/Gresham
neighborhood plans to come downtown Saturday. Although he’s not headed
here in anticipation of consuming too much alcohol and doing a countdown early
Sunday to the beginning of 2017.
If
anything, his count will be up – and one that I’m sure he feels is going up too
high. Although I suspect many of us are going to try to downplay its significance.
HIS
‘CAUSE’ RELATES to the homicide rate for Chicago during 2016. We won’t know
until early next week what the final tally will be, but it would seem we’re
going to have a higher rate than any year since 1997. We’re likely to have something
like 760 to 770 people killed during this year due to urban violence.
Now
I know in the past that I have mocked the people who are getting worked up over
the homicide rate increase, primarily because I remember back some three
decades ago (the late 1980s, to be exact) when the homicide rate for Chicago
would fall just short of 1,000 people per year.
Although
I have to concede that getting into the 700s (and having some naysayers way too
eager to point out how close to 800 we are) is a problem we ought to be
concerned about.
One
death attributable to violence by another human being is a tragedy for the
family impacted. Having so many hundreds of families having to endure these
circumstances is truly embarrassing for our city.
PFLEGER
PLANS TO try to illustrate the number with his protest march, which is to have
people bearing two-foot-high crosses with the names of each victim – marching in
a parade along Michigan Avenue. It’s going to be a visual sight – one that I’m
sure will make many of the New Year’s partygoers feel a bit squeamish.
And
probably will cause some to try to dismiss Pfleger in the way they usually do –
just another loudmouthed troublemaker, and when is Cardinal Blasé Cupich going
to get around to giving him the boot!?!
As
though Pfleger is the problem because he points out what we ought to regard as
the problem – but which too many of us ignore because there are large swaths of
the city where urban violence isn’t a problem.
It
becomes way too easy for people to think of the violence as something that
doesn’t impact them, and most likely is something that only affects “those
people” who just can’t learn to live like civilized human beings.
YET
BEFORE ONE gets the impression that this is a diatribe, consider that many of
the people who are eager to highlight the city’s homicide rate have their own
political agenda – in many cases to make “those people” look bad in their own
minds. Which makes it easier for them mentally to commit all kinds of
impersonal actions against them.
Particularly
when it comes to political activity – the oncoming era of the Trump presidency
is going to be particularly harsh and the people most eager to see it happen
are those of a certain racial perspective.
There
are so many statistics and mathematical formulas that can make many other
places appear to be more violent than Chicago – even though some will want to
cite the lower tallies for New York and Los Angeles this year as some sort of
be-all and end-all on the issue.
Which
means the sight of all those crosses Saturday night are going to be something
of a reality check – even though many of those who see them will probably try
to convince themselves that it really didn’t happen. They just had too much to
drink!
-30-
Friday, December 30, 2016
EXTRA: Only 95 more “shopping days” ‘til baseball’s Opening Day
I
sit here in a Midwestern winter chill eagerly counting down the days until
baseball’s season for 2017 resumes activity.
And
not just because I want to see some live game action – I also want the
recurrence of warm weather. One of the reasons that baseball is the best game,
it’s played in the best weather conditions – even though I’m old enough to remember
the snowfall of ’77 when the Chicago White Sox kicked off the season (and
existence of the Blue Jays) in Toronto.
Or there’s the 69-day countdown to the beginning of the World Baseball Classic, which pits against each other the national teams of 16 countries with aspirations of wanting to claim to be the best in the world.
YES,
I FIND this countdown to be much more pleasant than the one already existing on
the Internet by which you can be informed of just how many more days remain
until Election Day 2020 (1,403, to be exact).
The
idea of a pitcher’s duel, or even a sloppy slugfest, comes across as much more
interesting than anything having to do with feeding into Donald Trump’s ego any
more than it already is over-bloated. Particularly if it is accompanied by a Polish sausage and a scorecard -- which I invariably will be the only person in my section of seating who can actually fill it out!
So
it is 95 more days until the baseball season begins April 2 with the New York
Yankees traveling to Tampa, Fla., to play the Rays, who get to kick off the
season because this year is their 20th season of existence.
Other
teams begin play the next day, with the White Sox kicking off the season
against the Detroit Tigers, while the Chicago Cubs venture off to St. Louis,
where the Cardinals will begin their ’17 quest to prove to the world what all
their fans seriously believe – that the Cubs’ World Series title of 2016 was the
biggest of baseball flukes!
OF
COURSE, SOME of us might find it hard to wait three more months for meaningful baseball.
In
which case, keep in mind that we’re only 33 days away from the beginning of the
Caribbean Series – the week-long tourney beginning Feb. 1 that will give us a
baseball champion from Latin America.
Counting down the days 'til I can sit out here again and watch baseball |
Or there’s the 69-day countdown to the beginning of the World Baseball Classic, which pits against each other the national teams of 16 countries with aspirations of wanting to claim to be the best in the world.
But
then, if none of this is appealing to you (although I can’t help but wonder
why), then there’s always the old standby countdown – only 359 more shopping
days ‘til Christmas!
-30-
$1.6 million? Rahm's a political pauper, at least when compared to Gov. Bruce
The
reports were in the Chicago Sun-Times on Thursday – Mayor Rahm Emanuel has
managed to raise some $1.6 million from various sources during 2016 – which gives
him a nice chunk of change to start off his re-election fund he will need three
years from now.
It makes me feel old to admit that I remember a time when I’d be thinking that made Emanuel overwhelming and dominant and someone who could not be messed with on Election Day.
So Rauner juggled about the funds and now has an intimidating financial base from which to campaign. It may well take a J.B. Pritzker (of Hyatt Hotels fortune) as the Democratic challenger in order to be able to match the Rauner funds.
Of course, those labor interests likely will be devoting some significant attention to the Rauner race as well – because dumping the governor would be their highest priority, perhaps even more than helping Emanuel come up with so much cash that he scares away any potential challengers.
EMANUEL: Labor wants Rahm back in '19 |
It makes me feel old to admit that I remember a time when I’d be thinking that made Emanuel overwhelming and dominant and someone who could not be messed with on Election Day.
YET
WITH THE modern circumstances, I have to admit my initial react was to think to
myself something along the lines of, “$1.6 million? What a cheapskate!”
Largely
because it was just a week ago that Gov. Bruce Rauner juggled some money around
his political bank accounts so as to provide $50 million for the fund he will
be relying upon for his 2018 re-election bid.
Of
course, there is one difference. Rauner is looking not only to get himself
re-elected as governor, he also wants to be able to help out in the campaigns
of various candidates for the General Assembly.
Because
the biggest problem (at least as he views it) for Rauner is that he has had to
deal with a state Legislature that does not agree with any of the measures he
wants to impose – and has been more than willing to tell him to stuff it!
A
GOVERNOR RAUNER paired up with the existing legislative circumstances will
result in no significant change. There also are, of course, those people who
would say that dumping Rauner himself is the key to breaking the deadlock.
All
I know is that Rauner is making it clear he’s more than willing to use the
personal fortune he amassed as a venture capitalist in order to keep the post
that cost him some $65 million to win back in 2014.
It’s
really a sign of how the business-oriented folks want government to look out
for their interests over all else, to the point where they’re now willing to
run for office themselves. Because they saw that political people couldn’t be
trusted – they might actually put the needs of the electorate above all else.
RAUNER: Makes Emanuel look like a pauper |
So Rauner juggled about the funds and now has an intimidating financial base from which to campaign. It may well take a J.B. Pritzker (of Hyatt Hotels fortune) as the Democratic challenger in order to be able to match the Rauner funds.
ALL
OF WHICH makes the Emanuel campaign fund appear all-the-more miniscule. Of
course, Emanuel won’t have to go through as competitive a fight as Rauner will.
I
don’t doubt someone will come forth in 2019 claiming to be a candidate of the
people to challenge the political pomposity that is the Emanuel persona. But
once he makes it past the primary, he’s in.
Unlike
Rauner, who will have to focus primary attention on making sure no wiseacre
Republican thinks of challenging him, then taking on the Democratic political
structure of Chicago and Illinois.
Which
is what is largely responsible for the Emanuel money.
THE
CHICAGOLAND OPERATORS Joint Labor-Management PAC and the International Union of
Operating Engineers local 399 political education fund both gave the maximum
amount of cash they could for this year to the mayor, and likely will come up
with more money in future years.
PRITZKER: Can he match Rauner' s money? |
Of course, those labor interests likely will be devoting some significant attention to the Rauner race as well – because dumping the governor would be their highest priority, perhaps even more than helping Emanuel come up with so much cash that he scares away any potential challengers.
And
now that they see the $50 million figure that Rauner has concocted for himself,
they’re going to have to get busy on trying to help any aspiring gubernatorial
challenger match it.
Because
money has become far too significant a factor in determining just whom we vote
for on Election Day. Particularly when too many people vote knee-jerk for
whichever name they most recognize from all the televised campaign ads they see
trashing one another.
-30-
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Has Chicago become an island of sanity in “red” sea of bigoted nonsense?
My
initial reaction to the Election Night results across the nation were to feel
fortunate that Illinois, with Chicago in particular, had proved to be a bastion
of sanity.
While
the bulk of the nation seems to have gone goofy over the notion of Donald J.
Trump capable of being in charge, it would appear that we have maintained a bit
of sense. Or we’re not caught up in the stupidity prevailing elsewhere.
They
wanted to wear their swastika armbands and get up close to those older
residents who had come to this country in the years following the German Holocaust.
As though implying that the day would come when they’d be back in a death camp –
and this time, they wouldn’t come out alive!
There's a reason we now flip the "bird" at this building |
THAT
ATTITUDE GOT reinforced after I stumbled my way Wednesday through the nation’s
news reports, what with the attitudes of bigotry being on the rise seeming
somewhat scary. I feel fortunate that we don’t have things as blatant in
Chicago as in elsewhere.
And
before you snicker at my naivete, I know full well the history of Chicago (it
was here that Martin Luther King, Jr., got hit in the head with a brick) and
the attitudes that still prevail. I know full well there are those parts of the
city where certain types of people ought not seriously think of entering –
unless they’re looking to provoke an outburst!
The
report that most intrigued me was a Washington Post report about the situation in
Whitefish, Mont. It seems that the mother of a prominent white supremacist
activist/writer has opened a business there, has white supremacist activists
taking her up as their pet cause!
The
activists are upset that many local residents of Whitefish don’t like having
her around and would prefer she get lost! As in leave, sell her property, and
donate a chunk of the proceeds from the sale to a civil rights organization of
their choosing.
Wishing they could be spared nonsense |
ALL
OF WHICH has neo-Nazi activists inclined to want to go to Whitefish to engage
in protests on behalf of the mother – whom it seems doesn’t really know much
about her son’s activities and isn’t really the kind of person who’d naturally
be connected to these Nutzis.
The
situation has become so heated that Montana’s governor and attorney general,
along with senators and representative, have all signed a letter expressing
their support for the locals – and against any white supremacist activity
deciding to use their state as the site of their efforts to assert their
control over the situation.
I’m
old enough to remember when would-be Nazis wanted to march in Skokie and know
at heart that they really weren’t interested in expressing any view – it was
about intimidation.
It was all about intimidation, not expression, back in '77 in Skokie |
NOT
THAT THESE nitwits would have ever been capable of pulling this off. Just as I
doubt that these crackpots wanting to visit Whitefish would really be capable
of forcing themselves on the local residents – whom it seems don’t want their
town to carry a racist taint.
Which
is what some of these activists now carry considering that they feel emboldened
by the presidential victory of Donald J. Trump – whom no matter how much he
says otherwise got elected through their political support. For Trump to deny
the fact comes across as ridiculous as those neo-Nazi types who try denying
that Jewish people were harassed back in the Germany of the 1930s.
Then,
there are the ongoing legal proceedings concerning Dylann Roof. He’s that South
Carolina punk who thinks he showed how much of a man he really is by walking
into a black-oriented church and opening fire – killing nine.
Roof
has been found guilty and could face the death penalty. Prosecutors already
have their list of witnesses they want to call to try to persuade jurors to
grant a death sentence.
ROOF: Sees self as hero. Will anyone else? |
BY
COMPARISON, ROOF said in court Wednesday he’s not planning to call anybody to
defend himself. Although he does want to make a statement in court.
Likely
to be some self-righteous bit of nonsense he’ll spew about the propriety of his
actions. In his own mind, he’s a revolutionary who was taking action to fight
for the same cause that was advanced with Trump’s political victory.
For
all we know, he’ll go to his death strapped to the gurney with the lethal
injection going into his veins – thinking that history will remember him
heroically.
Which
may be the most tragic part of the Trump political victory – is that it
reinforces the nonsense these kind of people like to spew about our society.
And that while not every person who backed Trump with their vote can be
classified as “racist,” it can be said that they’re willing to look the other
way at the repulsiveness of the people whose side they’re now on!
-30-
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Could Obama have beaten Trump? We might as well argue ’05 Sox vs. ’16 Cubs, it won’t happen in reality
I’m
trying to figure out who’s the bigger nitwit at the White House these days –
the guy who’s on his way out or the one who soon will be in; and probably is
envisioning a bonfire of all the building’s belongings on the grounds that they’re
contaminated by the touch of the previous occupant.
Seriously, I can’t help but find the whole “debate” a trifle silly about whether Barack Obama would have beaten Donald Trump in a head-to-head election.
We talk about the legacy of Obama. The GOP legacy of this era is one of pure obstructionism.
In fact, if we’re going to have theoretical debates for which there is no definitive answer, I’d just as soon argue whether the ’05 World Series-winning Chicago White Sox really would knock this year’s World Series-winning Chicago Cubs flat on their backs.
OBAMA: Could he beat Trump? Maybe! |
Seriously, I can’t help but find the whole “debate” a trifle silly about whether Barack Obama would have beaten Donald Trump in a head-to-head election.
THE
BRAWL WAS inspired by Obama saying he would have beaten Trump if he could have
run against him. Obama tried to raise the intellectual level of the discussion
by saying how he thought Hillary Clinton was too timid and perhaps didn’t
properly address the harsh level of attacks she drew from Trump backers.
But
the simple fact is that Obama did NOT run against Trump. He couldn’t have. The
U.S. constitution makes it clear that every president since John F. Kennedy has
been ineligible to serve more than two terms of his own.
Obama’s
eight years are nearly over. He had his chance, and it is time for the nation
to move on.
One
can make a serious argument about whether the direction the country is taking
is one of incredible stupidity and pettiness, but it is the direction we are
headed in. Those with a problem ought to be devoting their efforts to working
to ensure that great harm does not befall the nation just because Donald J.
Trump has an overbloated ego.
SO
IT REALLY doesn’t matter much whether we believe Obama could have won again.
Reality reflects that he solidly defeated John McCain and Mitt Romney and had
his eight years in office – which will come to its end on Jan. 20.
Reality
will also show that those eight years were thwarted largely by a partisan
policy set forth by Republicans that certainly was not willing to put the good
of the American people ahead of their own political leanings. But that is a
shame that many of these Republican officials will have to live with.
TRUMP: Biggest presidential ego? Of course! |
We talk about the legacy of Obama. The GOP legacy of this era is one of pure obstructionism.
Which
means that when now Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said his
goal was to make sure Barack Obama was a one-term president, we ought to
consider that he failed in that attempt. In fact, Obama’s approval rating
during the week of Christmas this year (according to the Gallup Organization)
was 56 percent.
THAT
MAY BE the basis for which Obama thinks he is loved by enough people that he
could have won another term. Although I also think there are those who are willing
to like Obama – now that they know he’s on his way out!
Trump,
of course, is using his latest Tweet from a twit to say “No way.” Or actually, “NO
WAY!” The man seriously believes he’s beloved. Not fully appreciating that it
is the quirks of the Electoral College that made him president, and that his
presidency will carry an asterisk bigger than anyone would dream of putting on Barry
Bonds’ home run records.
I
say that because I note Trump’s 46 percent of the vote. That’s 54 percent
against him, and a potential butt-whuppin’ if only Clinton had been able to
take it all – instead of splitting it up with the Libertarian, Green and other
fringe presidential candidates.
I
don’t know who would have won an Obama/Trump brawl – it’s possible that Trump
could have got the bigot vote worked up enough into making this election cycle
a “race war” of sorts even more than he actually did. The very people who are
publicly saying they will turn on Trump if he doesn’t follow through with all
the rancid talk he spewed during the campaign.
BUT
THAT IS so theoretical. Thinking about it would give me a brain cramp bigger
than the majority of this country experienced back on Nov. 9 when we learned
Trump REALLY WAS likely to become president someday. Thinking about it is a
waste of our mental capacity, and our time.
We’d
be better off arguing whether Superman would beat up Batman, or vice versa.
The winner? |
In fact, if we’re going to have theoretical debates for which there is no definitive answer, I’d just as soon argue whether the ’05 World Series-winning Chicago White Sox really would knock this year’s World Series-winning Chicago Cubs flat on their backs.
Because
at least that debate would likely be held while consuming a beer or two by
sports fans, and wouldn’t be inclined to result in a brawl by someone convinced
he’s defending the honor of his “race” by defending the name of Ivanka’s daddy.
-30-
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
EXTRA: No more for 'mystery' woman packing flamethrower and an M-16
I
still recall a moment from a bus tour of Chicago I once took – not one of those
floofy types of tours with a double-decker bus where we see the Hancock
Building and other downtown structures.
This one was of the Calumet area of Chicago on the Southeast Side, and I still remember at one point our bus was passing through The Bush when the guide pointed out a dumpy little storefront at 85th Street and Burley Avenue – telling us that it was used as a set for that 1980 film “The Blues Brothers.”
\
SURE ENOUGH IT was the building that once had the sign on it identifying it as the “Curl Up and Dye” hair salon – which appeared in one scene where Carrie Fisher (who was the mystery woman out to kill John Belushi’s “Jake Blues” character) was reading the field manual for the proper way to use a flamethrower.
NOT
EXACTLY THE kind of place that would be expected to have a Hollywood-style
tinge to it. Although the nearby 95th Street bridge over the Calumet
River is the one that will forevermore live for the scene where the Blues
Brothers drove their car over its open expanse.
Fisher, who appeared in, and directed, a string of films during an interesting career that also included authoring some books, is no longer with us physically. Although her memory will live on through the output of her work -- which really does consist of more than just an absurd hairdo or a "gold" bikini -- that we’ll be able to check out for decades to come.
This one was of the Calumet area of Chicago on the Southeast Side, and I still remember at one point our bus was passing through The Bush when the guide pointed out a dumpy little storefront at 85th Street and Burley Avenue – telling us that it was used as a set for that 1980 film “The Blues Brothers.”
\
SURE ENOUGH IT was the building that once had the sign on it identifying it as the “Curl Up and Dye” hair salon – which appeared in one scene where Carrie Fisher (who was the mystery woman out to kill John Belushi’s “Jake Blues” character) was reading the field manual for the proper way to use a flamethrower.
Just
one of several weapons she burnished during that film (ultimately relying on an
M-16 military-style assault rifle for the scene where she finally caught up
with Jake, her one-time fiancé who had spurned her).
As
a native of the nearby South Chicago neighborhood, it always amused me to think
that Fisher (who by that point had already given us her hair-bun adorned
performance in Star Wars that most people are remembering Tuesday as the high
point of her career) was actually once in The Bush.
Which
was, at its peak, a neighborhood for the people who actually lived in the
nearby steel mills that used to exist, and now is a place for their extended
families who for whatever reason haven’t been able to move on with their lives.
That is what popped into my mind when I learned Tuesday that Fisher, who was 60
(which is barely older than I am), died from complications due to that heart
attack she suffered during the Christmas holiday weekend while riding on an
airplane.
Fisher, who appeared in, and directed, a string of films during an interesting career that also included authoring some books, is no longer with us physically. Although her memory will live on through the output of her work -- which really does consist of more than just an absurd hairdo or a "gold" bikini -- that we’ll be able to check out for decades to come.
Then, there's the great unanswered question -- is Fisher's mystery woman character now traversing the heavens in search of Belushi's "Jake Blues" still seeking revenge? Or does Jake finally "do right" by his woman, and they spend eternity happily ever after?
-30-
We’re back in the mess again! That short-term budget deal ends Saturday
Remember
how our state’s public officials came up with a temporary solution to their
inability for a year to pass anything resembling an operating budget for state
government?
Temporary because it only provided a budget for the first half of the state’s fiscal year. Come the second half, we’d be right back in the same mess of a situation that we’ve been in since the arrival of Bruce Rauner as governor who seems more concerned with messing with organized labor rather than actually governing the state.
In fact, the only real movement on the issue is as the various factions try to orchestrate circumstances and spew rhetoric meant to imply it’s the other guy’s fault.
THERE’S A REASON that government is semi-jokingly referred to by its practitioners as “doing the people’s business.” It’s supposed to be about us, not them.
The mood of the Statehouse turns as black as this Turn of the Century postcard come Sunday |
Temporary because it only provided a budget for the first half of the state’s fiscal year. Come the second half, we’d be right back in the same mess of a situation that we’ve been in since the arrival of Bruce Rauner as governor who seems more concerned with messing with organized labor rather than actually governing the state.
WELL,
THE MESS has arrived. Because the half-year for which there was a spending plan
in place ends as of Saturday.
Sunday
is not only the beginning of a new calendar year, it is the end of the time
period for which that short-term budget covered.
And
because that short-term budget didn’t make anything resembling significant cuts
(it pretty much kept everything at a status-quo level even though it was clear
to everybody that somebody was going to have to take a hit financially), we’re
even deeper into the mess now than we were back in May or June.
In
fact, I’d argue we’re so far deep I wonder if it is possible for us to dig our
way out.
BECAUSE
THE LATEST circumstances is we have our officials refusing to even meet to
consider negotiations toward a spending plan that would keep state government
operating.
Can't we just say both Rauner ... |
In fact, the only real movement on the issue is as the various factions try to orchestrate circumstances and spew rhetoric meant to imply it’s the other guy’s fault.
We’re
into placing blame. Pointing fingers. Trying to spin things so as to avoid
having to take blame for the mess that our state confronts these days.
There
is no “winning” this situation. At least not in any way that doesn’t wind up
imposing greater harm on the Illinois electorate – who in theory are the very
people for whom the government officials are supposed to be working.
... and Madigan are stubborn? |
THERE’S A REASON that government is semi-jokingly referred to by its practitioners as “doing the people’s business.” It’s supposed to be about us, not them.
Now
I’m going to concede that for something to happen, everybody is going to have
to give something up to a degree that everybody will feel like they lost. Years
from now when they see how little things have changed, they’re going to look
back and wonder why anyone thought the chaos we’re seeing today was ever worth
it!
Although
for those people who want to play partisan politics and claim it’s all Mike
Madigan’s fault, keep in mind that he is representing the interests of a
significant segment of Illinois society.
You
really want to know how to get rid of Mike Madigan as Illinois House speaker?
Just have him make the concessions that Rauner has been demanding of him and
you’ll see how quickly people turn on him. There are those who are fully
convinced he IS sticking up for their interests.
AS
FOR RAUNER, I always thought his “turnaround” agenda was a lot of bunk –
particularly because it went so counter to the mood of the state as a whole.
There was no way he should ever have expected the General Assembly to go along
with his desires.
Or
at least the Legislature as it has been constructed in recent years.
So
when Rauner spends time (and money) trying to work toward electing more
sympathetic legislators come 2018, that I get. That I comprehend. I don’t agree
with it, but it is a responsible reaction – maybe he’ll get lucky and be able
to impose his changes in an altered partisan political situation
Until
then, his stubbornly putting a hold on the ability of government to operate
does nothing more than create chaos – and could wind up backfiring if it turns
out that the only person people in Illinois despise more than the speaker of
the Illinois House of Representatives is none other than Rauner himself.
-30-
Monday, December 26, 2016
Blagojevich wants a commutation? Is he better off asking “President Trump”
If
there were truly a sense of cosmic justice in our political world, President
Barack Obama would choose to do absolutely nothing with the request by former
Gov. Rod Blagojevich – who’d like it if Obama would grant Milorod a “Get Out of
Jail, Free” card.
It was reported last week that Blagojevich, who currently is serving a 14-year federal prison term and isn’t scheduled for release until 2024, filed a request with the president for commutation of his sentence.
For whatever reason, during the six or so years that Blagojevich was governor – he only ruled on about 1,000 clemency petitions. At the point in time he was impeached, there were some 3,000 cases left unresolved.
Does anyone think that Obama, who was never that close with Blagojevich during the time that the two of them were colleagues, of sorts, on the Illinois political scene, would actually be inclined to grant anything to him. Particularly for all the flack he'd have to take publicly if he were to even consider such a request!
BLAGOJEVICH: Let me out now!!! |
It was reported last week that Blagojevich, who currently is serving a 14-year federal prison term and isn’t scheduled for release until 2024, filed a request with the president for commutation of his sentence.
WHICH
IN BASIC language means that Obama would decide the time Blagojevich already
has served at a federal correctional center in Colorado is sufficient
punishment for his criminal conviction.
In
short, he’s begging that he be released from prison now and that he be set free
at age 60 – rather than having to continue rotting in a prison cell until he
hits age 68 – as is currently scheduled.
Personally,
I don’t expect Obama to actually grant Blagojevich his request. But there is a
sense in which I think it would be so apropos if Obama were to somehow manage
to lose track of all the final actions he has to take care of before Noon on
Jan. 20 – which is the time at which his presidential authority ceases to exist
and the clown show to be known as the Trump presidency begins.
I
actually think that Obama acknowledging the request would be much better than
Blagojevich ever granted back in the days when he was our state’s governor and
had his own powers of clemency and pardon to grant as he saw fit.
FOR
BLAGOJEVICH WAS one of those people who believed he didn’t really want to be
bothered taking the time to consider criminal cases.
Perhaps
it dated back to his days just out of law school when he was an assistant state’s
attorney in Cook County – meaning he had a certain respect for the legal
process and presumed it wouldn’t be right for him to do anything that would
undermine it.
Or
maybe Blagojevich just had a lazy streak when it came to such issues.
OBAMA: Will he 'Blago' Rod's request? |
For whatever reason, during the six or so years that Blagojevich was governor – he only ruled on about 1,000 clemency petitions. At the point in time he was impeached, there were some 3,000 cases left unresolved.
THIS
WAS JUST a man who didn’t want to be bothered.
As
it was, Blagojevich’s lieutenant governor went on to become Gov. Pat Quinn, and
he would up having to deal with the backlog, ultimately issuing decisions on
nearly 5,000 clemency requests (and granting about 1,800 of them).
The
backlog didn’t really get caught up until our current governor, Bruce Rauner,
who earlier this year issued a statement saying the state was finally caught up
– although Rauner wound up rejecting all but 3 percent of the requests he ruled
on.
That
might be a cold-hearted view for a governor to have, but the reality of
clemency is that it is up to the whim of a particular governor. It makes me
wonder how many cases might have had a chance of being considered IF ONLY
Blagojevich had got off his duff and taken this particular duty of his office a
bit more seriously. Because it is understandable that when faced with an overload of cases, the chances of all of them getting a legitimate viewing decreases significantly.
ALSO,
IT’S NOT like Blagojevich is asking for a pardon – which would mean a clearing
of his record AFTER he served the entirety of his prison sentence. He wants to
get out early – even though federal judges have already ruled his 14-year
prison term isn’t overly harsh (despite those of us who think it is a tad too
long) in a purely legal context.
TRUMP: Would he rule better for Rod? |
Does anyone think that Obama, who was never that close with Blagojevich during the time that the two of them were colleagues, of sorts, on the Illinois political scene, would actually be inclined to grant anything to him. Particularly for all the flack he'd have to take publicly if he were to even consider such a request!
Considering
that Blagojevich considered Obama to be a rival who stole public attention he
thought ought to be rightfully is, Obama’s reaction to this request could well
be a sign of how much bigger a man he is.
Although
I still think the proper reaction might well be for Obama to do nothing and
leave Rod’s fate to the future president – a fat chance that would have any
chance of succeeding.
-30-
Saturday, December 24, 2016
Happy holidaze! Now get your behind away from the Internet, have a real life!
We’re
in a pretty intense holiday weekend; not only is it Christmas Eve and Day, it’s
also the beginning of the Eight Days of Hanukkah and we’ll soon be in Kwanzaa.
A holiday for just about any faith or occasion one would want to celebrate. And boy, do we need it.
I
always get a kick out of hearing Chuck Berry’s take on “Merry Christmas, Baby.”
I always find Celia Cruz’ Spanish-language version of “Jingle Bells” (“Soy Feliz
en la Navidad,” when translated en Español) to be cheerful.
Best wishes to you if you happened to have chance to pass this holiday decoration on your way out of town for the weekend. Photographs by Gregory Tejeda |
A holiday for just about any faith or occasion one would want to celebrate. And boy, do we need it.
FOR
WE WENT through a hellish campaign cycle that particularly dragged out the
ugliest of tensions that separate us in our society. We definitely need
something all around to alleviate such hostile feelings – particularly for those
who saw the final election results come out this week and still can’t get over
the fact that Hillary Clinton could clean Donald Trump’s clock by some 2.9
million votes.
And
still lose!!!
So
it is with even stronger-than-usual feelings that I say anybody actually
reading this commentary on Saturday or Sunday needs to get a life. Log off the
computer or whatever device you happen to be using to access the Internet and
go do something in the real world. Celebrate. Be merry, jolly or downright
joyful.
There
is nothing that will be in the blogosphere during this holiday weekend of any
great significance that you can’t wait until Monday to read all about it.
ALTHOUGH
FOR THOSE of you who just need to see something visual before logging off for
the day, I’m digging out a couple of audio/video links on off-beat Christmas-themed
songs.
It's also the beginning of Hanukkah on Saturday. Or does mentioning that fact constitute "war" on X-mas (whose spelling that way is the truly offensive act). |
Then
there’s always that old cartoon take of “Hardrock, Coco and Joe” that many of
us Chicago natives remember seeing as kids while watching “Ray Rayner and
Friends” on television just before the holidays.
I
pick it because it was always a particular favorite of my brother Christopher,
whose lack of presence in my life the past year continues to leave a sore spot for
me emotionally.
-30-
Friday, December 23, 2016
Cancel Christmas -- subversive idea, or one more true to meaning of holiday?
A
Facebook “friend” of mine (as in someone who used to be a daily part of my life
but whom I haven’t seen face-to-face in years) posted an intriguing thought
Thursday – cancel Christmas and instead donate whatever money you’d have spent
to a charity.
I’m sure there are some people to whom the very thought of “cancelling” Christmas is something they’re going to find repulsive – they’ll probably think this is part of the ongoing “War on Christmas” that they perceive because some people have the nerve to acknowledge there are other holidays of religious significance that occur around this time of year.
Does this sight make you feel merry as you leave (or return to) Chicago? Photograph by Gregory Tejeda |
I’m sure there are some people to whom the very thought of “cancelling” Christmas is something they’re going to find repulsive – they’ll probably think this is part of the ongoing “War on Christmas” that they perceive because some people have the nerve to acknowledge there are other holidays of religious significance that occur around this time of year.
BUT
THERE IS a part of me that does find the idea intriguing enough to wonder if it
would actually be more in the spirit of Christmas to think of what you can do
to make others happy – rather than the usual gift-giving orgy.
It
also catches me at a holiday season which I will be the first to admit will be
a bit more low-key than some Christmas celebrations in the past.
With
both my brother and mother gone and my father having converted to Judaism, I
don’t have immediate family with whom to get all worked up over images of Santa
Claus or repeated watchings of little Ralphie wanting the BB gun, then nearly
shooting his eye out, in “A Christmas Story.”
While
my father and step-mother do always include me in their Hanukkah celebrations,
this year is also taking a turn because of scheduling conflicts.
WHILE
THEY WILL do the ritual of lighting the candles on the eight nights of Hannukah
beginning Saturday night, the actual celebration where family gets together and
there will be some gift exchanges is being put off until some time in January.
Even
then, there aren’t any really young children in that part of the family. So
watching kids get all anxious to open presents is something of the past.
So
the idea of doing something of a more charitable nature is an idea swirling about
my head. Although being able to pick a single charity with which to do
something of significance is something I’d have to think long-and-hard about.
I
suppose I could make several small donations and claim to have spread my good
will around. But then I’d hear the spirit of my brother, Christopher, telling
me that I’m being a cheapskate by not doing something truly significant for
somebody.
THIS
HOLIDAY SEASON will be a lower-key one, and perhaps that is to be expected with
the passage of time. I can’t envision the holiday ever meaning as much to me in
life as it did back when I was something like eight or nine years old.
So
perhaps the idea of “cancelling” Christmas is something to be considered.
Although
it wouldn’t truly be cancelling Christmas as much as the idea of downplaying
all the trivial nonsense that is associated with the winter holidays and that
we have been bombarded with by retailers since back before Halloween as they
desperately try to get us to buy, buy and buy any many consumer goods as
possible.
Which
may make for a Very Merry Christmas, a Happy Hanukkah or a nifty Kwanzaa for
retailers – whom I’ve always suspected view the holidays as something created
for the betterment of their financial bottom line. They probably thought “A
Christmas Carol” (everybody with sense knows British actor Alastair Sim is the only real "Ebenezer Scrooge") was a wonderful story UNTIL that Scrooge character got all
soft and wimpy after being visited by all those Christmas spirits.
THE
REALITY IS that the commercial atmosphere cheapens the holiday to the point
where the idea of taking a pass on the consumerism almost feels like a celebration
more faithful to the real purpose of these holidays.
There
has to be a more serious reason for the celebrations people are going to do
this weekend than whether or not my niece, Meira (she’s soon going to turn 14)
actually gets the Timberland-brand boots she has been hinting at wanting for
months now.
Besides,
I suspect that whatever I actually wind up doing Saturday night into Sunday
will wind up being more relaxing, which is something I can actually use
following what has been a chaotic year.
A
chance to chill out, at least until some editor somewhere makes a frantic call
to me saying there’s empty space somewhere that needs to be filled, and I’d
better get off my duff and write something to fill it so that an advertisement promoting post-Christmas holiday sales can be sold right next to it!
-30-
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Illinois no longer growing ‘too slowly,’ it’s losing a few misguided individuals
I’m
never sure just what to make of the Illinois population figures.
Our state was at an all-time high in this decade – although the recent estimates released this week indicate we’ve dropped a few people during the past two years.
Which already has the political geeks out there ranting and raging and trying to assess blame! It’s Madigan’s fault, say the Bruce Rauner people. Because naturally, everything is the fault of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago.
I know personally, I don’t have any interest in leaving the area – even though I do some work these days that takes me across that not-quite impenetrable barrier known as State Line Road and over into Indiana. Even into what some people regard as the depths of Gary – the one-time Steel City, the City of the Century or the Murder Capital of the Nation (even though it really isn’t).
Too many view this sign in rear-view mirror |
Our state was at an all-time high in this decade – although the recent estimates released this week indicate we’ve dropped a few people during the past two years.
BUT
WE’RE ON the decline in terms of political representation, largely because
other states can show larger population growths in percentages compared to
Illinois. And since the number of members of Congress is a set figure, those
states have to get a larger share of the
total.
I
take as an example the official Census Bureau population count from 1960, when
Illinois had 10.11 million people living here – of which some 3.5 million were
residents of Chicago proper.
Compare
that to the most recent official population count (taken in 2010) that showed
Illinois with 12.83 million people (of which about 2.7 million were city
residents, but when the suburbs all get added in put the Chicago metro area
somewhere in the area of just over 8 million people.
Of
just whom more than half bothered to cram their way into Millennium Park last
month for the official Chicago Cubs Finally Won Something in Our Lifetimes
celebration (if you believe the Cubbie propaganda).
BUT
THE ‘NEWS’ that came up this week was the unofficial estimate the Census Bureau
released of the nation’s population – an attempt to reflect on recent changes,
even though the next official population count won’t be until 2020.
Illinois,
which supposedly peaked at 12.88 million people in mid-2013, has since dropped
by some 37,500 people. We now unofficially have 12,801,539 people who live in
our state.
It’s
no longer a matter of Illinois isn’t growing fast enough compared to
southwestern states. We’re actually losing people.
Is this view really more pleasant? My feet were firmly planted on Illinois soil when I took this photograph of Indiana. |
Which already has the political geeks out there ranting and raging and trying to assess blame! It’s Madigan’s fault, say the Bruce Rauner people. Because naturally, everything is the fault of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago.
They'll miss it after they're gone! |
MY
GUESS IS that if the Cubs fail to repeat as World Series champions during the
upcoming 2017 season, we’ll hear that it’s Madigan’s fault.
While
others are equally quick to spew the trash talk that it’s Rauner’s fault. After
all, the drop has begun about the time he began his gubernatorial campaign and
term.
We’re
supposed to believe that the 37,500 former Illinois residents all fled because
they’re tired of our partisan political brawls. They want to live in a place
where political people behave like grown-ups.
Fat
chance finding such a place! My own observation is that political people in
general have a touch of ego, mixed with arrogance and seasoned with a lack of
intelligence. Illinois isn’t unique in that regard.
PERSONALLY,
I’D BE inclined to think the weather is more of a factor in terms of people
wanting to leave this state, or the Midwest in general. Except that the weather
here during the winter months has always been absurdly cold, and it didn’t stop
the growth of the past.
Even
if it were, then I’d have to say we’re better off without those so weak-willed
that they have to have a perpetual 82-degree and sunshiny temperature in order
to survive.
Just think of those people who won't be on hand in that future year when we get an all-Chicago World Series and the White Sox achieve ultimate victory over a certain other ball club. |
I know personally, I don’t have any interest in leaving the area – even though I do some work these days that takes me across that not-quite impenetrable barrier known as State Line Road and over into Indiana. Even into what some people regard as the depths of Gary – the one-time Steel City, the City of the Century or the Murder Capital of the Nation (even though it really isn’t).
All
I know is that every time I do my business, I always feel a certain twinge of
relief every time I drive back along Interstate 80 and see the back of the sign
marking the Illinois/Indiana border. Because it means I’ve returned to the Land
of Lincoln where things make sense – even if it means some 37,500 people are
too clueless to realize that!
-30-
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Illinois likely will have to set common standard for all for minimum wage
The
Cook County Board a couple of months ago voted to gradually increase the
minimum wage for suburban-based companies to pay their employees, hoping in
part it could jolt the Illinois General Assembly into taking action.
Yet
it seems that all that has been created is a certain level of uncertaintly –
that and a sense that Cook County could become a checkerboard, of sorts, of
having to keep track which municipalities require their businesses to pay
better than others.
FOR
WHILE THE county board imposed a standard that will gradually increase the
minimum wage in Cook County to $13 per hour by 2020 (similar to the
already-enacted Chicago City Council measure that boosts the minimum wage from
the current $8.50 by 2019), it would seem there are places that just don’t want
to go along.
Earlier
this month, city officials in Oak Forest (a southwestern suburb near Orland
Park and all those shopping malls) passed a measure opting out of the county-enacted
minimum wage requirement.
Local
officials weren’t eager to spew all kinds of hostile rhetoric against paying
workers a decent wage (although the argument can be made that some types of
work aren’t worth as much as others). But their votes to opt-out spoke loud
enough.
Although
it contrasts with the actions of Calumet City, a suburb that borders up both
against Chicago proper and the Illinois/Indiana state line (it also happens to
be the community I lived in while growing up).
THERE,
CITY OFFICIALS voted to create a referendum question for the April 4 municipal
election ballot.
Voters
in Calumet City will not only pick a mayor and aldermen (most likely returning
long-time officeholder Michelle Markiewicz Qualkinbush as mayor even though
state Rep. Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City, is contemplating challenging her),
they will decide “yes” or “no” on whether the minimum wage ought to go up to
$15.
Which,
by the way, is the dollar figure that activists across the country are calling
for in their own efforts to try to make jobs at Burger King or Wal-mart into
something that a person could earn a living at – instead of just taking in some
extra money.
The
Chicago-based Centro de Trabajadores Unidos issued a statement Tuesday praising
the south suburb for taking their action, and even including provisions that
the minimum wage would apply to all workers – including those in the restaurant
industry.
CONSIDERING
THAT I had a mother who, for the bulk of her life worked jobs either as a
waitress or cashier (the best job she ever had was her last, as a supermarket
cashier because it provided her a health insurance package along with her
minimum wage salary), I’m fully aware of how restaurants don’t have to pay
their help much.
The
argument is made that the waitresses get money in their pockets in the form of
tips, which is the reason why I always make sure to leave a respectable
gratuity for the people who serve me. And look down on those people who try to
claim they’re making a profound statement by not tipping – even though all it
really means is they’re cheap!
Now
I don’t know how the residents of my former home city will vote on this
referendum (or if they’ll be like many other municipality voters and decide
this election cycle isn’t worth their time). But I wonder how many people would
express some support for this issue – if given the chance to comment.
Because
I’m also sure that Oak Forest-expressed attitude, which was largely influenced by
the city’s chamber of commerce, is coming from businesses that will view a
higher salary as merely a blow to their financial bottom line.
SINCE
I’M AWARE of other municipalities that have also considered an opt-out – Elk Grove
Village, Barrington, Prospect Heights, Arlington Heights, Barrington Hills,
Palatine, Wheeling and Rosemont all either have, or are considering, taking similar
actions.
Hence,
the checkerboard – as in people who have to rely on such work for anything resembling
an income will have to keep track of “good” towns to work in and “bad” ones.
While I’m sure some small businesses will insist on locating in the latter to
bolster themselves financially without having to invest more in their
interests.
Which
sounds more like a case for confusion across Cook County – accounting for almost
half of Illinois’ population when Chicago proper is included. It really is an
issue our state Legislature will have to address.
Except
that we have the partisan conditions that prevent our state from even approving
itself a proper operating budget and a governor claiming his delay is in the
name of economic “reform” – I can already hear his objections to the idea of
paying the hired help so much as a dime more in salary and this issue being
added to the list of grievances the state has.
-30-
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