Tuesday, April 25, 2023

I'll think of you every step of the way ♪♪♫

 


        In the Whitney Houston movie, her father came across as a "piece of work."  I didn't like him; he was a user.  Spending her money almost as fast as she could earn it.  And when she questions him, he takes a "bossy," controlling tone.

        Grrrrh.  I wanted to open up a can of bitch-slap on him....


        And when I think back -- Beyoncé and her father had a wrangle over money, too.  She has distanced her business from him.


        I never understand these situations where there is so much money, enough to "go around" (if you want to run things that way), and people still fight over it!

-----------------------------------------

"Saving All My Love for You"

"How Will I Know"

"So Emotional"

"I Will Always Love You"


-------------------------- What a voice.


I remember being introduced to Whitney Houston's songs through music videos on MTV, on my first color television set.


-30-

Monday, April 24, 2023

white tulips on Park Avenue

 

record producer Clive Davis


On You Tube there is a channel called Action Kid (it appears as ActionKid).  This kid walks around New York City filming, and it's as if we viewers get to take the walk too!  It's very cool.


He films sometimes in other locations, too -- he had some videos from Florida, and he did some in Boston, Massachusetts, along with other places.


But the majority of videos are of various neighborhoods and landmarks in New York City.  It seems like his narration is most animated and there's more of it on the NYC ones -- I think he is a native of the city, so he knows the most about the areas he covers there.


His accent sounds (to me) kind of like that of Jerry Seinfeld, which means the Action Kid might be from Long Island.

        On his walk today (or yesterday) he was on Park Avenue and there are all these tulips -- he would walk for a while and then say, "OK we're coming to the end of the yellow tulips, and on the next block it looks like we've got purple..."

___________________________


On Netflix now, there's a movie called Whitney Houston:  I Wanna Dance with Somebody.

I thought it was very well done.  I noticed the actor Stanley Tucci in the credits and thought, 'Well he must be playing Clive Davis because what other role would there be in this, for him?'

        And then when "Clive Davis" first appeared in the movie -- in a rainy scene with umbrellas -- I thought it was the real Clive Davis -- I wondered, 'maybe this film is going to mix some scenes with the real person in it, and some scenes with actors...?'

        But it wasn't -- it was Stanley Tucci.  He has some kind of magic.  I looked at the screen, knew it was Stanley Tucci -- all I could see was Clive Davis.

        It reminded me of the film Nixon (1995 - dir. by Oliver Stone) -- Anthony Hopkins does not "look like" Richard Nixon, but he becomes Richard Nixon for the movie.  Some kind of acting genius.  Or acting charisma.


Also available to watch on Netflix is Clive Davis:  The Soundtrack Of Our Lives -- an excellent documentary, with so much music in it that you will remember!


-30-

Friday, April 21, 2023

great - glorious - giddy

 

painting of the Trump Tower Clock in New York City, by Mawra Tahreem


------------- [excerpt from Disloyal:  A Memoir, by Michael Cohen.  Copyright 2020, Skyhorse Publishing] -----------------


...I had a taste for public speaking and the spotlight, especially with the admiring gaze of Donald Trump looking up at me.

        Then it came:  the applause.

        "What a great speech," said Trump, offering the praise that I was quickly learning had an aphrodisiacal impact on me.  "Man, you are a great speaker."

        Still worked up, I sat and took my printed speech from my breast pocket, autographed it and handed it to Trump with a flourish.  'Here, Mr. Trump, now you will remember me forever," I said.

        "I will," Trump said, pocketing the speech.  "I will."


        A few days later, I received a package containing my speech, now in a gilt gold frame, with a note from Trump in his usual dense handwriting on the page saying, "You are a great speaker and a great friend.  Donald."


        After the excitement, days and weeks passed quietly as the renovations on Trump Park Avenue continued and I wondered if I'd ever again have the chance to work for Mr. Trump.  Then, one day, Trump's longtime assistant and occasional The Apprentice co-star Rhona Graff called asking if I had time to talk to Trump.  I did--of course I did.  I could think of nothing better than talking to Trump, helping Trump, pleasing Trump.

        "Michael, my man, did you get my gift?" Trump boomed on the speakerphone a second later.

        "I did," I replied, thanking him profusely for such a thoughtful gesture.

        We congratulated each other and ourselves on our glorious victory, the mutual reinforcement serving as a way for our newly forming bond to strengthen.

        "Listen, I need you to handle another issue for me," Trump said.  "Actually, it's cleaning up a mistake Don made.  Are you free to stop by today, at around noon, say?"


        "For you, I will make myself available," I replied, again giddy at this further indication of Trump's belief in me, inviting thoughts of where this might eventually lead for someone who'd occupied the role of fan and onlooker to Trump, but was now on the way to becoming an advocate and intimate.

        "Donald Trump just called me again for another project," I called out proudly to my younger brother, Bryan, also an attorney with an office next door, as I pulled on my jacket.

        "Very nice," Bryan replied, sardonically.  "But maybe this time see if he intends on paying you for your time."

-------------------------------------------------

-30-

Thursday, April 20, 2023

man who walks the hillsides in the sweet summer sun

 


I've been watching episodes of That Girl, the Sixties TV series, on You Tube.  (uploader:  FilmRise Television)  A factor in that show's success is the charisma of Marlo Thomas -- you just want to watch what she does, and listen to what she says...

        (Younger viewers may know Marlo Thomas more from Friends, as Rachel's mom.)


        I got to thinking about charisma.

        A good person can have charisma, and a bad person can have charisma.

        In a room full of talented actors and actresses, some may have charisma, and some may not have it.


What is charisma?  It's a kind of vibration originating, I think, in the person's spirit.  It draws other people.  We notice someone, and if they have charisma, we want to keep on watching them, whatever they are doing.  If they're talking, then we want to listen to what they have to say.


A You Tuber I listen to sometimes talked about meeting Bill Clinton at an event:  she said emphatically, "And let me tell you, he has got charisma, up one side and down the other!"


It was funny -- I had not heard that expression in a long time -- as soon as I heard her say, "charisma, up one" I knew she was going to follow with "side and down the other"...


U.S. presidents during my lifetime who had charisma:

Clinton

Kennedy

Nixon

Obama

________________________________

...and Donald Trump, for a lot of people.


I guess I felt Mr. Trump's charisma back in the '80s.  He got publicity.  He was written about.  I read a Vanity Fair article about him and Ivana and their New York City apartment with a waterfall in it, and an elevator that opened right into one of their rooms.

        Why was I reading that?

        Something about his presence -- even in the abstract -- caught my attention and made me curious to learn more.


I bought his book, The Art of the Deal -- in paperback -- and read it.  Or -- most of it, I think.


I remember lying out suntanning, and reading that, and arriving at the realization that his policy for "having success" was --

* get tax abatements

* get born

...although not in that order.

        I laid the book down on the grass next to my lawn chair.

______________________________


While a person with charisma can catch our attention, it doesn't mean they are a good person, or qualified for any particular job.  Jessica Flanigan, associate professor of leadership studies and philosophy, politics, economics, and law at the University of Richmond, has advised --

"No matter how appealing a candidate seems, it's always important to look carefully at the issues.  Voting on the basis of charm and charisma alone isn't worth the risk."

        [The article quoting this professor can be read at website Fast Company.  Title:  "It's time to stop talking about politicians' charisma."]


When I looked up quotations about charisma, amongst the "spiritual leadership" babble was a British essayist named Pico Iyer saying that "places have charisma, as much as people do."

        I kind of liked that.  Places.  I would tend to express it by saying that a place has a mystique.  But you could say charisma -- I can see that.


-30-

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

every time I look at you

 

Belasco Theatre on Broadway in New York City

Oscar Levant


"Every time I look at you I get a fierce desire to be lonesome."

~ Oscar Levant

The title of yesterday's That Girl episode,

"Stop the Presses, I Want to Get Off"

is a take-off on two expressions:


one is "Stop the presses!" which people used to say in the newspaper business, and the other is

"Stop the world, I want to get off!"

...I used to hear that one when I was a little kid, but have not heard it in a long time.  I think it meant -- things are too chaotic, or tough, or something -- I must escape! -- sort of... -- oh, wait a minute wait a minute, "Stop the World -- I Want to Get Off" was not an expression, it was the title of a musical play, 1961.  

Book, music, and lyrics written by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley.  [Wikipedia]


        According to Oscar Levant, the play's title was derived from a graffito.


(Never heard "graffito" before -- the singular of graffiti.)


I've heard the name Oscar Levant, but who is that?

[Wikipedia] -- Oscar Levant was an American concert pianist, composer, conductor, author, radio game show panelist, television talk show host, comedian, and actor. --------------------- [end / Wik. excerpt]


Well -- that guy didn't have -- enough -- careers...


1906 - 1972


And now, in 2023, there's a play about Oscar Levant titled Good Night, Oscar.  It will begin its run at New York City's Belasco Theater on April 24th -- next Monday.

        Steven Spielberg is one of the financial backers of the play.

        The actor who will play Oscar Levant onstage is Sean Hayes, whom you might remember from the situation-comedy Will & Grace.


(The Internet! -- one thing leads to another...)

____________________________


-30-

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

good writing is like a windowpane

 


There's a phenomenon that I notice once in a while, and I contemplate it:  I don't think there's a term for it.  (Googled it, but got information about other things, so maybe this isn't a "thing," officially.)


It's when someone thinks they are good at something because someone close to them is good at it.


examples:


* I got the impression that Hillary Clinton thinks she is better at politics than she is, because she is married to Bill Clinton.

        Like -- he's good at it, so she is too.

* Very similar dynamic I notice with Donald Trump's sons:  they think they have relevant thoughts to share about governance and policy ideas, because their dad can get in front of a microphone and cause a tempest in a teapot by running his mouth.


my view:  Mrs. Clinton is not that good at campaigning.  And Don Jr. and Eric are not good at political debate or having anything intelligent to say about current issues or proposals.

_____________________________


I think there are two causes for this phenomenon:

One is, the relatives (whether it's a wife or sons or whatever) feel love for the person who is good at the thing, and they help the person who's good at it, so after a while ego slips in and says, "I help him a lot, we are all a team and I am good at campaigning and discussing issues, too."

No -- not so much.


And the other thing is, this phenomenon can happen if the job, or task, does not require specialized knowledge, or appears not to require specialized knowledge and skill.

        For example, if you have a production plant and you have maintenance people who have the skills to fix the chiller when it stops working, these people's spouses and kids probably don't say, "Hey, I also know how to fix the chiller!"

        Because fixing a chiller is mechanical, and physical, and if it isn't fixed right it isn't going to work right -- one cannot bullshit one's way through.


Politics and campaigning -- done well -- does need some knowledge and talent, but the lack of those isn't as obvious as with the chiller.

        You can fake it, by just speaking into the microphone and, well -- these days, simply trashing people.


Everybody can talk on a microphone -- everybody can wave at crowds and read a speech or whatever.  The Trump brothers can act contemptuous in front of a camera.  And to do this, they don't need special classes or experience or talent, or knowledge of how to use tools and how to fix chillers.


In other words, in politics, you can just completely blow smoke and not accomplish anything.  While on the other hand, we are not going to call Hillary Clinton or Eric Trump to fix a chiller.

        We wouldn't even call their relatives who are good at politics and entertainment -- Bill Clinton and Donald Trump -- to fix a chiller.

____________________________

________________________


I was playing the situation-comedy That Girl (1966 - 1971) from You Tube, and there's an episode in Season 5 which illustrates this phenomenon so well!

Ann Marie (played by Marlo Thomas) is an actress trying to make it in New York.

Her boyfriend (and in the fifth season, fiancé) Donald Hollinger (played by Ted Bessell) is a reporter for a magazine called NewsView.  (Fictional publication -- it would have been like TIME or Newsweek.)


Ann is at a modeling job and after they're done taking pictures she hears the guys in charge talking about a fashion designer from Europe who is coming in at Kennedy Airport and they want to cover the story and get an interview, but they don't have anyone to send.


Ann would like to earn money, so she volunteers to go and cover the story.  I think she says something like, "My fiancé works for NewsView magazine, so I have some knowledge of reporting."

        ...Something like that, so they give her the job with a really low amount of money (she doesn't do the math, she just takes it) and they're only going to pay her at all if they like the story she writes.


(Yikes.)


And they know Ann is engaged to Donald the NewsView writer, so they figure she will get help from him.


        So she tells Donald about it, she's all excited, and he points out the money isn't good, and he has a little moment of "Why did they ask you to write a story on this? -- you're - uh - not a reporter" but he doesn't act jealous or anything, that she's got a job in his career area, and he agrees to help her.  He writes questions for her to use if she gets the interview, etc.


Well -- it's so funny -- because --

        First, he volunteers to help her with the interview questions, then first thing you know he's writing the story from her notes, at the typewriter in her apartment -- and she's asleep on the couch!


Secondly, we gradually become aware, as Donald starts to figure out, these two magazine guys who made this deal with Ann were counting on Don writing the story, and he is one of the best magazine writers in the city! - So they're pulling a fast one -- getting his talent and experience for the price of her desperation to make a little money.  (And it is very little.)


In the process of events, Ann briefly gets into a deluded frame of mind where she thinks she is a good writer, even though Donald wrote the article.

        When he points this out, she gets mad and they have a little disagreement, sitcom-style.

        ("Now you have to be a writer?  I thought you were an actress!")


He goes to the root of the problem -- the two guys who made the deal with Ann -- and says, "I'm going to ask you a question, and you're going to answer truthfully, or I'm going to punch you."


Donald is not the kind of man who is frequently offering to punch people, so it's pretty surprising and funny.


And the point I took from the whole thing is -- That's what I've been talking about!  Ann is being like Hillary Clinton and the Trump boys:  because her boyfriend is a writer, now suddenly she's a writer. ...


------------------------- Oh! -- found it, it's Season 5, Episode 10 -- title, "Stop the Presses, I Want to Get Off".


-30-

Friday, April 14, 2023

follow the Yellow Brick Road

 

Lionel Barrymore and Billie Burke in Dinner At Eight


Earlier this week I was mentioning some movies that are currently on Netflix -- add to the list,

Smokey and the Bandit

and

Psycho.

_________________________

_____________________


a Capsule about Billie Burke

_______________

"Are you a good witch?  Or a bad witch?"

"Click your heels together three times..."

"You have no power here!  Begone, before somebody drops a house on you!"


Growing up watching The Wizard of Oz once a year on television, we all heard Glinda, the Good Witch of the North say these iconic lines.  We can hear them without having the movie playing -- they are imprinted on our Memories.


The actress playing Glinda was Billie Burke.


She also appeared in 

The Man Who Came to Dinner  (1942)

Father of the Bride  (1950)

Father's Little Dividend  (1951)

Dinner at Eight  (1933)



These movies are highlights, and favorites of mine -- however, Billie Burke worked a lot, over the course of a long career,

on Broadway

on radio

in silent films

and in sound films.

        Her list of credits is quite extensive.


She was offered the part of Aunt Pittypat in Gone With the Wind, but she declined it.



Billie Burke also wrote a couple of books:  an autobiography titled With A Feather On My Nose is still in print, and available on Kindle from Amazon.


She was born August 7, 1884 in Washington, D.C., and died May 14, 1970 in Los Angeles.



Her lilting, trembly voice was a memorable characteristic, along with her "Broadway British" accent.


Her father was born in Knox County, Ohio.  His career was being a singing clown in circuses.  (Apparently back then it was a "one-ring" circus, and there was more singing, and wisecracking with the audience.  Kind of like vaudeville...)



Billie Burke's full name was

Mary William Ethelbert Appleton Burke.



Her first acting job was on-stage in London's West End (like our NYC Broadway) in a play called The School Girl, in 1903.


Her final screen appearance was in Sergeant Rutledge (1960), a western directed by John Ford.


----------------- [excerpt from With A Feather On My Nose] -------------------

        On one occasion when it was necessary for Father to travel all over Europe, Mother went with him and left me for almost two years to continue my education in London.  I stayed at the home of the Beatty Kingstons.  

Mr. Kingston had been music critic of the London Times, and it was in this home that I had my first real introduction to British family life.  

        There is a thing about the English that people of no other nationality seem able to manage, and it is this:  the British set the most formal standards for their living but themselves are able to toss them aside and achieve a mixture of formality and laissez faire which baffles and bewilders everybody else.

______________________


-30-

Thursday, April 13, 2023

♫♪ flying on her broomstick, thumbing for a hitch

 




a recent headline said,

Bragg Sues Jim Jordan in Move to Block Interference in Trump Case

_____________________________


commenters said:

(New York City)

Jim Jordan just got a heaping dose of reality, courtesy of Alvin Bragg.  Don't mess with the Manhattan D.A.'s office.


(Boston)

Jordan's actions are a laughable yet sorry attempt at interfering in a State's legal system.


--------------------------- It makes me think of The Wizard Of Oz -- Glinda the Good Witch telling the Wicked Witch of the West,

"You have no power here!  Now begone, before somebody drops a house on  you!"


-30-

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

brass

 


------------ [excerpt from Disloyal, by Michael Cohen -- Skyhorse Publishing, copyright 2020] -----------------------


        "It's Donald Trump, Jr. on line one," she said.


        I was half expecting the call.  I knew the younger Trump from my recent purchase of three units in the new Trump Park Avenue, a project then under construction to be converted into my family home; two one-bedroom units and a two-bedroom apartment on the 10th floor of what had been the high-society Delmonico Hotel were being consolidated into a single residence with sweeping views of the iconic avenue from the living room running half the length of the building.  

Don Jr. was handling the construction job on behalf of the Trump Organization, so we talked often.


        I picked up the call -- news about the Trump Park Avenue, or TPA as insiders knew it, was a welcome distraction from my routine legal work....


        "Hey, D, what's up?  How are things going at TPA?" I said.

        "I'm not calling about TPA," Trump Jr. said.  "Can you meet with me and my dad at his office?  It's about something else and very important.  My dad thinks you could be very helpful."


        Everything with the Trumps was always "very," I would learn, but I didn't hesitate.  A meeting with Donald Trump?  Hell, yeah.  I'd met Trump once before a few years earlier...but that had only been in passing.


        Within minutes, I was walking excitedly up Fifth Avenue towards Trump Tower.  To me, the elder Trump wasn't just a celebrity and billionaire real estate developer.  As an undergraduate at American University, in Washington, DC, I'd read The Art of the Deal when it was published in the 1980s not once but twice, and I considered the book a masterpiece....

...the self-portrait of Trump contained in those pages, however fictional and far from the truth, had enthralled me.  

        Secretly, in my heart of hearts, I thought I possessed some of Trump's best qualities.  I saw myself as deal-driven, relentless, a hard worker, never afraid....I already had wealth but I wanted it all:  power, the good life, public acclaim, fame, big deals, fast cars, private planes, the excess and glamour and zest for life that Trump appeared to personify so effortlessly.



...Entering the revolving doors of Trump Tower, with an appointment with the proprietor, I was in awe at the majesty of the famous atrium:  the grand escalator, the pink marble walls, the brass of the place, literally and metaphorically.  The sheer scale and class of the building were incredible, at least to my way of thinking.  The building had been designed to create such an impression, of course, but it worked on me.


        Presenting myself at the security desk, I was told that Mr. Trump was expecting me.  This acknowledgement of my existence by the great man provided a jolt of excitement.  Escorted to the 26th floor, headquarters of the Trump operation, I was greeted by a beautiful young blonde woman who also said that Mr. Trump was expecting me -- giving me another moment of pleasure.  I was immediately ushered through glass doors into a large office with a sweeping view of Fifth Avenue and Central Park.


        Sitting behind a large, cluttered desk was the elder Trump, talking loudly on a call on speakerphone.  To me, the hulking Trump was even larger in life than he appeared on television.  

His presence filled the room, as I surveyed the office, an homage to Trump, with a vanity wall boasting scores of magazine covers with Trump's image, along with shelves packed with glass awards and deal mementoes and sports memorabilia, including a garish and glittering version of Mike Tyson's heavyweight world champion belt.  

        Three red-velvet executive Egg chairs were arranged in front of Trump's desk, with Don Jr. seated in one and the Chief Financial Officer of the Trump Organization, Allen Weisselberg, in the other.  I was directed to sit in the middle seat, where I waited as Trump conducted what seemed to be a private conversation with us all listening in.



        The call over, Trump yelled out for a Diet Coke, stood, and offered his hand to me....

        "Don tells me great things about you," Trump said, as half a dozen employees of the company filed into the office and arranged themselves behind me, standing at attention.  "You do know I gave you a great deal on your new apartment," Trump continued.


I blinked.  

I didn't know what to say in reply.  

This was Trump's first tell, if I'd had the ability to see what was unfolding, but events were moving so fast and in such a tantalizing way that I didn't have the presence of mind to consider what had just occurred.  

I had paid the asking price on the Park Avenue apartment; there had been no discount or special consideration -- it had never even come up.  



        But there it was:  within the first few seconds of our meeting, Donald Trump had lied to me, directly, demonstrably and without doubt.  


What was I supposed to do, if I had possessed the wherewithal to gather my wits and take on the implications?  Call Trump on it?  The lie seemed silly, harmless, and childish, the kind of fib that was pointless to contest; it occurred to me that Trump might actually believe it, too.  


In a matter of a couple of sentences, with no conscious thought or understanding of what was actually happening, I had given my unspoken consent to start to play along in a charade that I would come to learn was all-devouring and deadly serious.



-30-

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

♪ ♫ next stop, Chi-town, Lido put the money down

 


news

Bragg Sues Jim Jordan in Move to Block Interference in Trump Case

NYT


        The word lido has kind of puzzled me for decades... (What is a lido?  Is it someone's name? - Lido?)


When I was in high school, in a town near ours was a nightclub called The Lido.  I was never in it.  I had heard the name.  It sounded glamorous and kind of sketchy at the same time.


And if you watch episodes of The Love Boat on You Tube, you will hear them refer to "the Lido Deck."  (The various decks have names.)


And the Boz Scaggs song, "Lido Shuffle," - YAY!  (Listen to it on You Tube.)


So I finally asked Google what does lido  mean -- in Italian it means "shore" or "bank".  (Not a bank where you deposit money, but rather the 'bank' of a river.)

        The Italian root derives from litus, the Latin word for "shore."


I remember at some point in time, maybe when I was still in high school, or maybe a couple years later, a classmate told me The Lido had burned down.

        "Oh, that's too bad."

        Yeah, I heard it was a friction fire," he replied.

        I asked him what that is, and he said, "Haven't you heard of a friction fire?  The mortgage was rubbing against the insurance policy."


I never heard that expression -- friction fire -- before or since.  I don't know that I even knew what insurance fraud was -- I hadn't yet watched enough episodes of Law & Order or Murder, She Wrote.


It seemed funny, to me -- that someone from our little school in our little town would talk so -- gangster-y -- as if he knew all about such shady characters and their below-board activities.  Like he was wise to the wise guys.


And, I guess we know how rumors go -- it's much more intriguing to say it was "a friction fire" than to admit it was an accident -- faulty wiring or something....


-30-

Monday, April 10, 2023

so if you ever meet the midnight rambler

 

1977



2020



news


The two elected representatives in the Tennessee state legislature who were expelled last week by Republicans were --

Justin Jones

Justin Pearson.

        (And here I thought all the guys in that generation were named Dylan...)


        In Memphis, the Shelby County Board of Commissioners is set to consider sending Mr. Pearson back to the legislature on Wednesday.

        Today, local officials in Nashville voted unanimously to appoint Mr. Jones back to his seat in the state House of Representatives.

_________________________________


In Newport News, Virginia, the mother of the six-year-old who shot his teacher is going to be charged.

-------------------- [end of news]


________________________

___________________


-------------------- Why is that city named "Newport News"?  I don't get it.  It isn't a newspaper, it's a whole town.

        A Google search of this question shows that the Newport part of the name is for a 17th-century ship captain but, according to The Virginian-Pilot online, "the origin of the 'News' part of the city's name is a mystery."

__________________________


on Amazon Prime now:

The Family    (2013 - De Niro, a dark comedy)

Something Wild    (1986 - Ray Liotta)

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel    (a series - it's good!)


on Netflix

The Sting    (only until April 30)

American Hustle    (about the ABSCAM FBI "sting")

Charlie Wilson's War    (true story, if you haven't seen this, watch it for sure!)

Murder Mystery 2    (Aniston - Sandler)

Play Misty for Me    (scary)


books

Disloyal

    by Michael Cohen

Revenge

    by Michael Cohen


-------------------- [excerpt from Disloyal, Skyhorse Publishing, copyright 2020]


Chapter One

The Apprentice


Donald Trump's seduction began the way it would continue for years, with flattery, proximity to celebrity and power, and my own out-of-control ambitions and desires.  For me, it started on a nondescript day in the fall of 2006.  

At the time, I was a successful, if little-known, middle-aged midtown Manhattan attorney and businessman on the make, sitting in a tidy nondescript office with two of everything arranged before me on my desk, a function of my obsessive nature:  two staplers, two tape dispensers, two phones, two cups with sharpened pencils.  I was thirty-nine and I worked for the mid-sized white-shoe law firm Phillips Nizer.  


As a lawyer I'd long had a busy practice in personal injury and medical malpractice, but my real passion and talent was in dealmaking, and I had accumulated a multi-million dollar fortune in the rough-and-tumble taxi medallion industry.  

        Wealthy, with a beautiful wife and two healthy, happy young children, I had just purchased an apartment in the Trump Park Avenue building for $4.9 million and I tooled around the city in a Bentley and considered myself semi-retired.


        I had it made, in other words, but I didn't know that I was on the precipice of a mid-life crisis that would lead to an all-consuming fixation and my downfall.


        On this fall day, in 2006, sitting at my desk doing the paper-pushing drone work of practicing the law, my secretary buzzed on the intercom.


        "It's Donald Trump, Jr. on line one," she said.

----------------------------- [end / excerpt]



(me, screaming at the book:  "No!  Don't answer it!  Don't! - Don't answer it! - The call is coming from inside the house! - Aaaaaaaauuuuuuugggggghhh!!!")


-30-

Friday, April 7, 2023

beat their swords into plowshares

 


headline today

Tennessee vote marks latest GOP move to stifle dissent, experts say


-------------------- [article] ------------ Tennessee Republicans' dramatic expulsion of two Democrats who agitated for gun control in the state Capitol after a mass killing is the latest move by Republican state leaders around the country to stifle dissent and expand their power base, free speech experts say.


In Montana, Texas, Florida, Virginia and elsewhere, Republicans have moved in other ways to silence opposition in recent months, actions that might ultimately erode the country's democratic ideals, they said.


"This Tennessee case is an example of norm-eroding legislative tactics that will further disrupt a healthy political system," said Jake Grumbach, an associate professor of political science at the University of Washington.  

        The expulsion of the legislators is a "more extreme version" of earlier GOP tactics, such as recent restrictions Republicans placed on incoming Democratic governors in Wisconsin and, to a lesser degree, Michigan, he said.



After hours of emotional debate Thursday before a packed gallery, the Tennessee House voted to expel two members who had shouted slogans with a bullhorn during a protest inside the Capitol last week, days after a shooting at a Christian school in Nashville left three 9-year-old students and three adults dead.  

        A third Democratic legislator, who did not use a bullhorn but stood during the brief protest, kept her seat as Republicans narrowly failed to marshal two-thirds of the vote against her.



Republican leaders said the lawmakers who quickly became known as the "Tennessee Three" -- Reps. Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, who were expelled, and Rep. Gloria Johnson, who was not -- had violated the body's rules of decorum during the March 30 protest.  House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R), in an interview with a Knoxville radio station, deemed their actions an "insurrection" equivalent to or worse than that at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.



In Thursday's expulsion session, Republicans said their motivation centered on decorum, not power.  Rep. Gino Bulso (R) accused the Democrats of conducting "a mutiny" and "a severe violation of our constitution."


"You don't truly understand why you're standing there today," Rep. Andrew Farmer (R) told Pearson.  "Just because you don't get your way, you can't come to the well, bring your friends and throw a temper tantrum with an adolescent bull horn."


Aaron Terr, director of public advocacy for the nonprofit Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression in Philadelphia, said the legislature has the authority to set rules of procedure and decorum, and those rules should be enforced "fairly and evenly, and not used as a pretext to punish members based on their views."  If the House took action against a member for speech outside the chamber, he said, that would raise serious First Amendment issues.


Jones, the first to be expelled, called the move a dangerous "signal for authoritarianism" in a local news interview after the vote.


"This is a historic day for Tennessee, but it marks a very dark day for Tennessee because it will signal to the nation that there is no democracy in this state," Jones said during the debate before he was expelled.  "It will signal to the nation that if it can happen here in Tennessee, it's coming to your state next.  And that is why the nation is watching us, what we do here."


According to some who have studied authoritarian behavior, it has already come to some states.


In Florida, Republican Governor Ron DeSantis's administration has made it more difficult for protesters who disagree with him to hold rallies at the state Capitol, and he fired an elected prosecutor who objected to the governor's stance on abortion rights.


DeSantis has been unapologetic about his use of power as he approaches an expected campaign for president.


"My view was I may have received 50 percent of the vote, but I earned 100 percent of the executive power, and I intended to use it to advance our agenda," DeSantis said at a recent gathering, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.


Florida's government implemented new state regulations this year requiring groups that want to hold rallies or events at the Capitol to be sponsored by a state agency or lawmaker.  Democrats and liberal advocates say that is hard to do in a state where Republicans control the governor's mansion and have supermajorities in both the House of Representatives and Senate.



Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Florida), who at 26 is the youngest member of Congress, said in an interview Thursday that the Tennessee expulsions felt "personal" to him.  Frost is Afro-Cuban and got his start in politics as an activist with the March For Our Lives gun-control group that grew out of the 2018 mass killing at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.  

        The two expelled Tennessee legislators were Black and the one who survived was White.



"It seems Black and Brown, newly elected people and a woman who stood up and said, 'Enough is enough' and now they are being expelled?" said Frost.  "All they did is chant with their people about ending gun violence."


Frost said the expulsions represent the corrosive nature of U.S. politics, which he said Democrats and liberals need a better strategy to fight.


"I find it very alarming, and I think what we are seeing is the Republican Party is really completely shifting to this very far right, authoritarian-type of fascist ideology where they really have gone to using the power that they do have to silence political enemies, to ram through agendas that people don't want, and to use the power of the executive, or when they have majorities in these states, to poke people into submission," Frost said.


Nikki Fried, chairwoman of the Florida Democratic Party, said the growing tension within statehouses has meant legislative leaders are now effectively silencing even residents from speaking out in opposition to proposals.  In Florida, it's common for people to travel for hours to Tallahassee to testify -- only to find out they are allowed to speak for 30 seconds.


"You are seeing the nation just sort of burst at its seams with political tension," Fried said.  On Monday night, she was among 11 abortion rights protesters who were arrested while holding a sit-in in front of Tallahassee's city hall.  She said abortion rights activists chose to hold their demonstration at city hall because they feared a harsh response from the state if they protested without a permit on nearby Capitol grounds.


Other Republican governors and legislatures in recent months also have attempted to make it more difficult for Democrats to voice dissent -- or simply retain their seats.


In Montana, Republican lawmakers are advancing legislation that would open up next year's Senate primary to allow the top two vote-getters in the primary -- no matter their party -- slots on the general-election ballot.


The move has been criticized by Democrats as a maneuver to stymie the reelection of Senator Jon Tester, the long-serving Democrat seeking a fourth term, because it would only be applicable to the 2024 Senate election.  

        Third-party candidates, who in the past have cut into Republican candidates' totals, would probably not be on the general election ballot, which could set up a defeat for Tester, the sole remaining Democrat elected statewide.



Montana Republicans said the ballot change was a test run for future elections.  They noted that two other states, California and Washington, also use the top-two primary system.


In Virginia, Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) tried to force a county school board to hold new elections, which would have shortened the terms of members he disagreed with.  State observers said the governor's move, which failed, was unprecedented in the state's modern history.  Separately, state Attorney General Jason Miyares (R) sought to expand the limited powers of the attorney general's office at the expense of more liberal local prosecutors, although Democrats blocked the effort.


In Texas, a small but vocal group of House Republicans tried to end the chamber's longtime tradition of having committee chairs from both parties, although Republican House Speaker Dade Phelan and his supporters ultimately stopped that proposal from reaching the floor for a vote.  The state Republican Party ran radio ads chiding their highest-ranking House leader.


In multiple other Republican-run states, including Missouri and Mississippi, state lawmakers have sought the power to dismiss local elected Democratic prosecutors or to get control of the criminal justice system and policing.


Ken Paulson, director of the Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State University, said the expulsions of the Tennessee lawmakers are "unprecedented" in the history of the state, and "certainly not common practice anywhere in America."



The Tennessee House has expelled members only three times in history, according to a report from the state's attorney general's office.  In 1866, six lawmakers were expelled "for the contempt of the authority of this House," because they tried to prevent the state from granting citizenship to former enslaved people.  

In 1980, a member was expelled for seeking a bribe in exchange for tanking a piece of legislation.  And in 2016, a representative was expelled amid state and federal investigations for sexual misconduct.



"What we saw from the so-called Tennessee Three was an act of frustration and despair," Paulson said.  "We just had one of the most extraordinary tragedies in the history of this city.  We saw there appears to be no path to gun violence reform in the state.  So they picked up bullhorns.


"The state legislature has every right to manage the decorum of its workplace," Paulson continued, "but it is absolutely not right to punish lawmakers or citizens for the exercise of free speech."


Although it was the latest in a long line of school killings both in Tennessee and across the United States, the shooting at the Covenant School hit especially hard for many legislators who had personal relationships with some of the victims from church and Little League.  Republican Governor Bill Lee's wife, Maria, knew two of the slain adults, both educators, for years and was to dine with one of them the evening of the shooting, he has said.


Lee, who made legislation allowing the carrying of a handgun without a permit a hallmark of his administration, this week announced plans to deliver $140 million to arm guards at Tennessee schools.  But neither he nor the Republican leadership would commit to further gun-control measures in the wake of the Covenant School tragedy, further inflaming protesters.  Lee's spokeswoman, Jade Byers, has not responded to requests for an interview.

---------------------------- [Friday, April 7, 2023.  Washington Post.  Writers:  Annie Gowen and Tim Craig.  Contributors:  Matt Brown and Maria Luisa Paúl.]



some of the Reader Comments:


\\   The title of this article should simply be, "GOP Declares War on Republicanism"


\\   Republicans want to cancel democracy.


\\   What just happened tin Tennessee confirms we are now a banana republic.


\\   It isn't just dissent the GOP hates, it's any opposition at all.  This is fascism in America, pure and simple.


\\   For  me, the irony is I am not in favor of gun control right now and did not support the stand of the 3 representatives....because we might need the guns to fight the fascists.  

        But that does not mean I am not outraged by their expulsion.  Pure fascism.


\\   If someone(s) violates rules of decorum on the floor, reprimand or, at most, censure them.  Removing them is just a blatant abuse of power.


\\   Censure is indeed already in the rule book.  Expulsion was a made-up solution.


\\   How can a person be both pro-life and also pro-assault weapons?


\\   Public money spent on turning schools into armed, locked-down fortresses is a tax subsidy for gun manufacturers.


\\   How long until the GOP starts saying that people seeking gun control are infringing on the "free speech" rights of the shooter and that murder is "protected free speech"?


\\   it's no coincidence that the (Tennessee) gop allowed the white woman to stay in her elected office but expelled the two elected black guys...

sadly, there's no shame to their (gop) racist game


\\   "Decorum" in Tennessee means "black people shouldn't get too uppity"


\\   How is this grounds for removal but screaming insults at the president during the State Of The Union speech was not?  What a bunch of fascist hypocrites.


\\   So the narrative being peddled is that the expulsion of these representatives was warranted because they disrupted official proceedings.  The selective enforcement of the "rules" only emboldens the weak and cowardly.  This can only end badly.


\\   Members of the state legislature who were speaking out about sensible gun reform were getting death threats on the day of the school shooting last week.  That's the mentality of the neanderthals in the state.


\\   So, Tennessee Republicans do not believe in free speech?

        They only believe in certain parts of the Constitution when they think it can suit them?

        Those who were ousted have solid grounds for a lawsuit and should take action.



\\   If Blue State tax dollars have to go to Red States to keep them afloat, shouldn't Blue State governments get to decide how they want their money spent?





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