Extreme Unction and Dysfunction

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REPORT OF the New York State Senate Select Committee to Investigate the Facts and Circumstances Surrounding the Conviction of Hiram Monserrate on October 15, 2009:

The Select Committee concludes and believes that sanctions against Senators should only be imposed in cases of serious misconduct. Expulsion should be considered only in the most egregious circumstances. Having considered the available evidence and evaluated the facts relating to the conduct that provided the basis for Senator Monserrate’s conviction, the Select Committee finds that this case is serious enough to warrant a severe sanction. In doing so, we are mindful that ultimately, the voters of Senator Monserrate’s district, where he plans to run for re-election, will decide whether or not he is returned to office…

The Capital Gains Mass Tax Fraud

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As I've written repeatedly, two kinds of people have been getting richer for the past 30 years: the executives who sit on each other's boards and vote each other higher and higher pay, and today's senior citizens, the richest in history, particularly retired public employees, whose unions control state and local governments while cheating their younger members and the public. As I have demonstrated each year, most recently in my previous post, the retired, especially retired public employees, pay vastly lower taxes on the very same income — or even a lower income — than moderate and middle income young families. Presumably as part of the same self-dealing and institutional mass rape that provides them with higher incomes.  One should not be surprised, therefore, that the rich pay lower taxes too. And since in this era of Generation Greed ideologies are frauds, one should not be surprised that policies that provide massive public advantages for the privately better off have bi-partisan support.

Religious Unity

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Religious Unity

 

By Michael Boyajian

 

To perpetuate my world unity and concurrent peace beliefs I had been searching for common denominators that would unify all the world’s religions.  The nearest I came was to identify that all seemed to espouse doing right.  In some cases I discovered a denominator between a few different religions but no pattern of unity throughout. 

The Long Arm of New York Politics

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The Long Arm of New York Politics

 

By Michael Boyajian

 

Most voters would be surprised to learn that the government of the State of New York is being run out of a small liquor store in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.  The owner of the store is the head of the New York State Conservative Party, Mike Long, and when he is not hawking Thunderbird and Night Train he is pulling the levers of power in Albany.

Taxes and Generational Equity in 2009: Here We Go Again

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It’s tax time again, and time to take stock of how the events of the past year have affected two fictional couples, the Young Hopefuls, now both age 30 with a four-year-old child, and the Senior Voters, now both age 70. You may recall that in 2007 each couple had an income of $100,000, with the Young Hopefuls paying $33,028 in federal, state and local taxes and the Senior Voters $14,169 on the very same cash income, even though the senior citizen couple in this example had far more wealth and non-cash benefits such as health insurance.

Things got worse for the Young Hopefuls in 2008, as the recession caused Ms. Hopeful to be laid off from her moderate income job and Mr. Hopeful’s self employment income to drop, while the Senior Voters, who are “living on fixed incomes” benefitted from automatic inflation adjustments for their Social Security and pension. The Senior Voters paid $13,453 in federal, state and local income and property taxes on their income of $102,593, or 13.1% of it. The Young Hopefuls paid more taxes — $16,070, on their far lower income of just $57,000, or 32.1% of it. So what happened to these couples in 2009?

Did “Flatbush Life Newspaper” put a hex on Kevin Parker?

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Believe me when I say I didn’t want to touch Kevin Parker -as the subject of one of my columns- again. I have taken enough flack over the years for writing the truths about him and his anger-management issues. So I was quite happy as time went by, to see my columns vindicated time after time, by Mr. Parker’s own public behavior(s); while continuing to sit on information I have been privy to about his private bad behaviors for some time now. Information I have chosen not to release, since no matter what others may think, this isn’t personal on my part. I just strongly believe that electeds should be held to a higher standard of behavior (both private and public), given that they are role models for our youth; and also given that we have chosen them to represent the best in all of us, at one of the highest levels of government: the legislature.

In the Land of the Legally Blind, the One-Eyed Trouser Snake is King (a couple of new jokes have now been added)

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All week while continuing to avoiding writing my Harold Ford piece, I’ve been receiving the same inquiry again and again in different forms.

A friend writes:

"What do you hear about the DP NY Times story? [unnamed Times Reporters] told me in 2008 that they had identified 17 women on gov. payroll who did DP. But, they would not write since NYT doesn't do sex lives. They were desperately searching for use of gov. or campaign money paying for hotels, etc. [Name withheld] and others would not talk since they had been promised jobs by the new Gov.

Rumors all over Albany have DP's resignation imminent. One source claims Times found DP owes big bucks to [unnamed major investor in  AEG] for gambling debts. I knew he did [unnamed cola product], screwed around with women on the payroll, drank too much and didn't like to go to work, lied freely, etc. But, I can't believe he was a gambler (still don't). Rumor says DP made [unnamed Chief of Staff] call [unnamed Times publisher] and threaten to release [unnamed Times publisher's] affair with [unnamed daughter of Dead President]. [Unnamed Chief of Staff and Counsel], etc. are looking to bail out.”

It’s Beautiful To See That Some New York City Council Members Are Continuing To Help Haitians Weeks After The Earthquake Hit

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The way mainstream media operates, you will usually find that  after the “big” story dies down -and after the flaming headlines have simmered- there is little follow up to the initial newsworthy event. So lately, you will hardly find coverage from the aftermath of the latest cataclysm to affect the Caribbean nation of Haiti. And yet for the millions of Haitians affected by the disastrous earthquake 12thJanuary, 2010, life must go on. And life for most Haitians continue to be challenging -even more so than it was before the earthquake hit. For Caribbean-Americans like me, it is really nice to see that many members of the New York city council are still finding ways to help the Haitian community at large.

Historic Housing Discrimination on Long Island

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Historic Housing Discrimination on Long Island

 

By Michael Boyajian

 

Thomas J. Sugrue has written a groundbreaking book, Sweet Land of Liberty, which addresses historic housing discrimination in the nation’s suburbs in the 1960s.

 

At one point Sugrue states that William Levitt, the founder of Levittown, would not sell his homes to black families for fear that whites would not buy his homes knowing that blacks would also be living there.  A high ranking official at the New York State Division of Human Rights states that to this day she often wonders how different her life would be if her father had been allowed to buy a home in Levittown.