Why Petition Challenges Don’t Bother Me Much
|A lot of people wonder why I raise little complaints about ballot access challenges.
As regular readers of this department are aware, I have dedicated a perhaps inordinate amount of prose to the coverage of fringe candidates.
Mitt Puts Foot in Mouth Again
|The Gateway (Old Dirty Bastard Edition) [NOTE: Title Does Not Refer To Ed Towns] [UPDATED]
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GZA meets ODB.
Bill Cosby: Trayvon Martin Case is about guns, not race
|The Gateway (Queens Crap Edition)
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Today, I feel impelled to ask what they put in the water in the County of Queens.
Who Are Those Similar Natural Gas Customers?
|We try to be thrifty with our energy use around my house, so it’s natural for us to wonder how we are doing, compared with those in similar circumstances. To evaluate if there is something else we could be doing to use less. In the month to March 13, for example, we used 131 therms of natural gas according to our National Grid bill, for heating, hot water and cooking. Is that a lot or a little?
It seems that either National Grid sort of wants us to know, or there is some regulation requiring them to tell us. More likely the latter, based on the quality of information provided. According to our bill, “similar customers’ average usage high/low range” was 37 therms to 297. So what does that tell me about our 131? Nothing.
The Gateway (Pesach Almost Over, Can’t Wait to Have a Beer Edition)
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The author notes: "Judge Jonah Goldstein, a 1940s Republican from New York, said famously, 'The Jews have three veltn (worlds): di velt (this world), yene velt (the next world) and Roosevelt.'”
Hillary2016? It Could Happen
|It's bright yellow, and is from the Iowa caucuses. I remember the night well in Des Moines at her victory night celebration.
Posters and Politics
|The Daily News had an article yesterday about the big money owed by former (and future) Mayoral candidates Bill Thompson, John Liu and Bill de Blasio for campaign infractions four years ago. “Putting signs on public property is a campaign no-no, and each citation carries a $75 fine” according to the News. Well yes that is the law, and always has been. But to understand what this city used to be, and still is under the surface, and might be going back to, you have to consider the way it used to be enforced.
Against challengers who were not a part of the political machine, but not against incumbents. The fines for the incumbents would be waved as long as they eventually took the signs down. Now just imagine that you are an ordinary citizen, an outsider, upset about the way things are going, and decide to run for a public office, as I did in 2004. But you did not know about this little tradition. You see other candidates putting up signs, so you put up signs, say 500 little photocopies. And then they come after you not for $37,500, but for $187,500, because they issue a new ticket every day. They can go after your house, if you have one. They can go after your paycheck, if haven’t had to leave your job because you were a candidate. The judges, all put on the bench by the local pols, might reach an accommodation if you had leaned your lesson. And not about putting signs on public property.
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