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Message Forum - GENERAL

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09/21/23 10:54 PM #16658    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Hi Stephen, thank you for your nice note....Love, Joanie


09/22/23 12:11 PM #16659    

 

Jack Mallory

Good to see all the faces, hear all the voices!

 

The photographer, photographed. Thanks, Deb!


09/22/23 01:57 PM #16660    

 

Jerome Weiner (Bookin-Weiner)

Looking forward to seeing our classmate Jerry Morgan on an upcoming visit to Maui next month. Had been long planned and glad we can make it now.

Like Jerry M, I've been reading the posts, but haven't had much to say lately.


09/22/23 09:47 PM #16661    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jerome, say hi to Jerry for me. Its nice you will be seeing him.

Jack, love that photo. Love, Joanie


09/28/23 12:51 PM #16662    

 

Jay Shackford

Sept. 28, 2023

 

“A Little Bit Dumber”

By Dead-Center Shacks

 

“Every time I hear you, I feel a little bit dumber,” said Nikki Haley in response to business executive Vivek Ramaswamy during last night’s debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California.  

 

I don’t know about you guys —but after watching the entire debate and post-game shows I do not feel the least bit enlightened, which means, I guess, I’m dumbstruck like Nikki that the Grand Old Party (GOP) that once stood for small government, lower taxes and a strong national defense is now falling so far down the rat hole that it is impossible to explain what the Republican Party actually stands for.  Poor Ronald Reagan, he must be turning in his grave.   

 

Why didn’t someone ask about the 800-pound Gorilla who wasn’t in the room—the guy that called for the execution of the Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff Mark Milley just last week.   If Trump's convicted of any one of the 91 felony charges now pending, would you still support Trump if he’s chosen as the GOP nominee for President?  I know it was asked during the first debate but it’s a question worth asking in every debate. 

 

Do you still consider Donald Trump a “genius businessman” even though a New York Supreme Court Justice overseeing a $250 million New York State civil lawsuit against Trump ruled that the twice impeached, four times indicted ex-President repeatedly committed fraud over the past couple of decades by inflating the value of his assets to get favorable loans from financial institutions?  

 

These weren’t minor accounting mishaps.  Trump claimed that he was living in a 30,000 square foot condo in his prized Trump Tower, three times its actual size of 11,000 square feet resulting in an over-valuation between $114-207 million dollars.  Trump claimed his Westchester, NY estate was worth $300 million — 10 times its actual value of $30 million.  It goes on and on.  His actual $200 million share in his Wall Street skyscraper, Trump claimed, was worth more than $500 million and his $16 million golf courses were worth more than $50 million.  Everything included, Trump overvalued his assets between $800 million and $2 billion.  

 

As always, Trump lied and cheated his way to the top of the New York real estate world — much as he did in his race for the presidency in 2015-16 when many dissatisfied voters were quoted as saying at the time that they wanted a candidate with Trump’s business success to take over the White House. It was all a lie.  

 

 

 


09/29/23 05:55 AM #16663    

 

Jack Mallory

********

Red maples turn first. 

 


09/29/23 11:40 AM #16664    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jay, good article about the state of the Republican party with candidates that look nothing like the past ones who wanted small government and a strong defense. There was nothing to learn from the debate except how far they will go to court the maga extremists.

Jack, that was a great article showing how much Biden supports Democracy and the Constitution and realizes the threat we are under from the Maga Republicans guided by their dictator Donald Trump. Love, Joanie

09/29/23 12:58 PM #16665    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Jay i always enjoy you opinion pieces

 


09/29/23 04:30 PM #16666    

 

Jay Shackford

Thanks guys....


10/04/23 05:39 PM #16667    

 

Jack Mallory

October in NH. More than makes up for rain, cold, ice, sleet, snow . . . 
 


 

 





10/05/23 12:27 PM #16668    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Great shots Jack. 👍Love, Joanie

10/18/23 11:07 AM #16669    

 

Jerry Morgan

Aloha All...

Will be doing lunch today with a classmate and spouse at an excellent Vietnamese place over here. I will have them bring the leftovers back and share the wealth. Let me know real quick your spice level: Mild, Medium or Burn The Back of Your Eyeballs Out.

10/19/23 11:47 AM #16670    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Sounds so nice Jerry...enjoy the lunch. For me, medium is ok. Love, Joanie

10/19/23 12:14 PM #16671    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

I completely forgot to post a photo of my son's wedding in DC on September 23. It was beautiful even though Hurricane Ophelia turned it from an outside to an inside wedding. There were 250 people (too many in my opinion) and it was officiated by my son's former boss Sen Chris Murphy who had such nice things to say about Jesse that I cried. That's me in the green dress.


10/19/23 05:23 PM #16672    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow, Joan, your son's wedding photo is so beautiful. Also, by the way, I love Chris Murphy. He is such a wonderful person. I see him on news shows sometimes. Love his work on gun safety. Congrats on his beautiful wedding. Thanks for sharing the photo. Love, Joanie

10/20/23 09:57 AM #16673    

 

Jerry Morgan

Well I am sending my lovely guests back to deal with the crazies over there: Jordan, Greene and Gaetz to the tune of the MAGA Nut Job. Good luck with that. Maybe we will get lucky and see some of these criminals in jail where they belong.

Unfortunately, you are leaving too soon I think. We had a great time at least Linda and I thought so. Our friends seemed relaxed and smiling when we parted. Either, you guys were having a good time or you were glad to be getting rid of us. I choose to think you were enjoying yourselves.The only complaints I recall: Ate too much really good food, visit too short.

I have a question for Jerry. Did you guys get to the coconut college and if so how was it?

Finally, I hope the trip to S. F. was uneventful and you guys spent some quality time with your family.

Hopefully, catch you next time over here or in the bucket.

Aloha my friends until we meet again.

And I have proof I am not a bot.

Only makes sense if you recall my quirky sense of humor.

10/23/23 12:51 PM #16674    

 

Jerome Weiner (Bookin-Weiner)

Now that we are back home in Maryland, I can report that we did, indeed, have a lovely lunch and discussion with my fellow "Jerry" in Maui last week. There was so much food that we had left overs for a couple of days!

It's always a treat, every time we make it to Maui. I can also report that while some areas of the island were devastated by the wildfire in August, most of it was spared and they are starving for visitors and their spending.

We did check out the coconut farm - enough to find out that there was no availability while we were on Maui and that even if there had been we couldn't afford its VERY high tariff!

Looking forward to another get together of the BCC64 Jerrys, either here in MD or there in paradise!


10/24/23 08:16 AM #16675    

 

Jack Mallory

Good to see all the posts--I need diversion from the news. 
 

32 degrees here this morning, and foggy. But still hoping to get another week or two of paddling in. Just the walks in the woods are beautiful this time of year. 
 


 

 


10/24/23 11:24 AM #16676    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jerome thank you for your nice mention of your visit with Jerry. So glad you got there for a nice visit.
Jack, love the pictures. Love, Joanie

10/28/23 12:22 AM #16677    

 

Jerry Morgan

Glad to know about the farm before we went there Jerry. They must be coconuts.. Guess Guy Fieri and family must have gotten a discount. Hell I've got white hair too. Maybe I can get us in free.

Anyway glad you all had a good time

10/30/23 09:16 AM #16678    

 

Jay Shackford

On October 29, 1929, the U.S. stock market crashed. It had been rocked five days before, when heavy trading early in the day drove it down, but leading bankers had seen the mounting crisis and moved in to stabilize the markets before the end of the day. October 24 left small investors broken but the system intact. On Monday, October 28, the market slid again, with a key industrial average dropping 49 points.

And then, on October 29, the crisis hit. When the gong in the great hall of the New York Stock Exchange hit at ten o’clock, the market opened with heavy trading, all of it downward. When the ticker tape finally showed the day’s transactions, two and a half hours later, it documented that more than 16 million shares had changed hands and the industrial average had dropped another 43 points. 

Black Tuesday was the beginning of the end. The market continued to drop. By November the industrial average stood at half of what it had been two months before. By 1932, manufacturing output was less than it had been in 1913; foreign trade plummeted from $10 billion to $3 billion in the three years after 1929, and agricultural prices fell by more than half. By 1932 a million people in New York City were out of work; by 1933, thirteen million people—one person of every four in the labor force—were unemployed. Unable to pay rent or mortgages, people lived in shelters made of packing boxes.

While the administration of Republican president Herbert Hoover preached that Americans could combat the Depression with thrift, morality, and individualism, voters looked carefully at the businessmen who only years before had seemed to be pillars of society and saw they had plundered ordinary Americans. The business boom of the 1920s had increased worker productivity by about 43%, but wages did not rise. Those profits, along with tax cuts and stock market dividends, meant that wealth moved upward: in 1929, 5% of the population received one third of the nation’s income.

In 1932, nearly 58% of voters turned to Democratic president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who promised them a “New Deal”: a government that would work for everyone, not just for the wealthy and well connected.

As soon as Roosevelt was in office, Democrats began to pass laws protecting workers’ rights, providing government jobs, regulating business and banking, and beginning to chip away at the racial segregation of the American South. New Deal policies employed more than 8.5 million people, built more than 650,000 miles of highways, built or repaired more than 120,000 bridges, and put up more than 125,000 buildings. They regulated banking and the stock market and gave workers the right to bargain collectively. They established minimum wages and maximum hours for work. They provided a basic social safety net and regulated food and drug safety. 

When he took office in 1953, Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower built on this system, adding to the nation’s infrastructure with the Federal-Aid Highway Act, which provided $25 billion to build 41,000 miles of highway across the country; adding the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to the government and calling for a national healthcare system; and nominating former Republican governor of California Earl Warren as chief justice of the Supreme Court to protect civil rights. Eisenhower also insisted on the vital importance of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to stop the Soviet Union from spreading communism throughout Europe.

Eisenhower called his vision “a middle way between untrammeled freedom of the individual and the demands of the welfare of the whole Nation.” The system worked: between 1945 and 1960 the nation’s gross national product (GNP) jumped by 250%, from $200 billion to $500 billion. 

But while the vast majority of Americans of both parties liked the new system that had helped the nation to recover from the Depression and to equip the Allies to win World War II, a group of Republican businessmen and their libertarian allies at places like the National Association of Manufacturers insisted that the system proved both parties had been corrupted by communism. They inundated newspapers, radio, and magazines with the message that the government must stay out of the economy to return the nation to the policies of the 1920s. 

Their position got little traction until the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision declaring segregation in public schools unconstitutional. That decision enabled them to divide the American people by insisting that the popular new government simply redistributed tax dollars from hardworking white taxpayers to undeserving minorities. 

A promise to cut the taxes that funded social services and the business regulations they insisted hampered business growth fueled the election of Ronald Reagan for president in 1980. But by 1986 administration officials recognized that tax cuts that were driving the deficit up despite dramatic cuts to social services were so unpopular that they needed footsoldiers to back businessmen. So, Reagan backed the creation of an organization that brought together big businessmen, evangelical Christians, and social conservatives behind his agenda. “Traditional Republican business groups can provide the resources,” leader of Americans for Tax Reform Grover Norquist explained, “but these groups can provide the votes.” 

By 1989, Norquist’s friend Ralph Reed turned evangelical Christians into a permanent political pressure group. The Christian Coalition rallied evangelicals behind the Republican Party, calling for the dismantling of the post–World War II government services and protections for civil rights—including abortion—they disliked. 

As Republicans could reliably turn out religious voters over abortion, that evangelical base has become more and more important to the Republican Party. Now it has put one of its own in the House Speaker’s chair, just two places from the presidency. On October 25, after three weeks of being unable to unite behind a speaker after extremists tossed out Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), the Republican conference coalesced behind Representative Mike Johnson (R-LA) in part because he was obscure enough to have avoided scrutiny.

Since then, his past has been unearthed, showing interviews in which he asserted that we do not live in a democracy but in a “Biblical republic.” He told a Fox News Channel interviewer that to discover his worldview, one simply had to “go pick up a Bible off your shelf and read it. That’s my worldview.” 

Johnson is staunchly against abortion rights and gay rights, including same-sex marriage, and says that immigration is “the true existential threat to the country.” In a 2016 sermon he warned that the 1960s and 1970s undermined “the foundations of religion and morality in the U.S.” and that attempts to address climate change, for example, are an attempt to destroy capitalism. 

Like other adherents of Christian nationalism, Johnson appears to reject the central premise of democracy: that we have a right to be treated equally before the law. And while his wife, Kelly, noted last year on a podcast that only about 4% of Americans “still adhere to a Biblical worldview,” they appear to reject the idea we have the right to a say in our government. In 2021, Johnson was a key player in the congressional attempt to overturn the lawful results of the 2020 presidential election. 

In his rejection of democracy, Johnson echoes authoritarian leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, both of whom have the loyal support of America’s far right. Such leaders claim that the multiculturalism at the heart of democracy ruins nations. The welcoming of various races and ethnicities through immigration or affirmative action undermines national purity, they say, while the equality of LGBTQ+ individuals and women undermines morality. Johnson has direct ties to these regimes: his 2018 campaign accepted money from a group of Russian nationals, and he has said he does not support additional funding for Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. 

The rejection of democracy in favor of Christian authoritarianism at the highest levels of our government is an astonishing outcome of the attempt to prevent another Great Depression by creating a government that worked for ordinary Americans rather than a few wealthy men. 

But here we are. 

After Johnson’s election as speaker, extremist Republican Matt Gaetz of Florida spelled out what it meant for the party…and for the country: “MAGA is ascendant,” Gaetz told former Trump advisor Steve Bannon, “and if you don’t think that moving from Kevin McCarthy to MAGA Mike Johnson shows the ascendance of this movement, and where the power of the Republican Party truly lies, then you’re not paying attention.”

Notes:

William E. Leuchtenberg, Perils of Prosperity, 1914–1932, pp. 246–249.

John Kenneth Galbraith, The Great Crash, pp. 171–179. 

Alan Brinkley and Ellen Fitzpatrick, America in Modern Times: Since 1890, p. 407. 

https://www.newsweek.com/house-speaker-mike-johnson-donations-russia-butina-1838501

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2023/10/mike-johnson-america-speaker-house/

https://thehill.com/homenews/house/4275944-gaetz-johnson-victory-proves-maga-power/

https://www.dailysignal.com/2022/04/21/americans-have-3-big-concerns-inflation-immigration-and-incompetence-rep-mike-johnson-says/

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/26/opinion/mike-johnson-trump-speaker.html

Twitter (X):

RonFilipkowski/status/1717718043525099743

FaceTheNation/status/1718663526951395708

 

 


11/22/23 09:26 AM #16679    

 

Thomas Stecher

Why am I no onger getting email from the class website?  How can I restore my connection?


11/23/23 08:01 AM #16680    

 

Thomas Stecher

If anyone can help me to reconnect to the class website, please contact me by email at rehcets@gmail.com, not through the website.  I can't get the website.  And no, emails are not ging to spam.  


11/23/23 11:59 AM #16681    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Thomas, if you're able to post this to the forum, you appear to have access. I will send you an email from the forum which will have a link to the Class of 64. You might also look at the top of this page on the right corner. Click on the person icon and a drop-down menu will give you all sorts of options for how you are to be contacted. I hope this helps.


11/24/23 07:15 AM #16682    

 

Jim Boone

I have not recieved anything since 9/22 either. Hope all is well out there.

Jim


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