Mario and Andrew; Derivatives, Education: A Disaster; Zenyatta the Magnificent…

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 28-06-2010

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Andrew Cuomo, current New York State Attorney General, just announced his candidacy for NY Governor. Mr. Cuomo, to Mr. Gripes, seems perfectly suited to take on the entrenched ossification that poses as the state legislature. Take a cursory glance at the countenance of Mr. Cuomo, and you’ll comprehend why immediately: unlike many politicians, Mr. Cuomo can barely conceal his anger and his accumulative resentments. He’ll pummel those corrupt and lily-livered legislators to a pulp.
One problem, though: with Andrew, New Yorkers are compelled to deal with Mario, his father, once again. This is a pact with the devil. The elder Cuomo, to Mr. Gripes, was an abject failure as governor of New York, and, to a dispirited liberal, a colossal disappointment. Talk, talk, talk, blah, blah, blah: big words, fine diction, and liberalism’s demise were Mr. Cuomo’s only legacies. Any substantial achievements? None. Mario Cuomo was 100% hot air, 1,000% baloney, and 2,000% old, antique politics. And, what an ego: he turns a question regarding his son’s seemingly overwhelming lead over all challengers into an prolonged explanation of how the Great Mario beat Ed Koch when no one gave him a chance.

Please, Mario, give us New Yorkers a break: yes, continue raking in those $60,000 fees for those gorgeous, polysyllabic and inconsequential speeches, but stay the hell away from Albany.
Even Bob Costas, a most articulate sports announcer, was rendered virtually speechless: “preposterous” was his one-word description of Stephen Strasburg’s pitching debut for the Washington Nationals –14 strikeouts, including seven in a row at the conclusion of his night, and the victory, with a capacity crowd of 40,000 standing and cheering with every pitch. For one evening, we were reminded again that baseball is America’s everlasting, elegant national pastime, not quite ready to be usurped by a bunch of 370-pound, steroid-bloated Popeyes crushing each other with bone-splintering force in howling, sub-zero climes.


In 2009, The Federal government allotted in its budget
$ 150 billion for education. Consider this: outlays by the Federal government account for o  nly 10% of total funding for education; 90% of the monies come from state and local governments. Just extrapolate that out: in 2009, $1.5 trillion was spent on public education in America. Mr. Gripes can come to only one conclusion: we must be insane.
This country has spent many trillions of dollars on public-school education of our children over the past 50 years, and has there been a thimbleful of improvement? Nope, the system has essentially collapsed. Public schools, especially in urban areas, are a disgrace.

Mr. Gripes, in fact, would wager the equity in his coop that half of all high-school graduates in inner-city  schools don’t possess a nine-grade reading level. Oh sure, I know there’ll be a million more position papers and a million more overpaid consultants telling us taxpayers that all we need to do is throw even more money at the problem, and schools soon will be producing graduates fully capable of facing an increasingly complicated, sophisticated labor market. Yeah, and Humpty-Dumpty was put back together again, too.
One approach that’s not going to work is the now fashionable trend of tying a teacher’s performance evaluation and professional advancement to test scores of students; if my livelihood were tied to scores of my students, you can bet my only approach in the classroom would be gearing instruction directly to that test, which is probably not in the students’ best interests. How about charter schools? A fine concept, creating schools with much smaller class sizes. But, in cities with 1,000,000 or more kids attending public schools, it’s equivalent to Mrs. O’Leary throwing a pail of water on the Chicago Fire – too little, too late to make a dent in the massive problem. And, the teachers union is now a huge obstructionist element in all of this – they’re only concerned with their aging constituents’ tenure rights and spiraling pension benefits.
Mr. Gripes does offer one possible solution to this horrific and expensive situation: have every student take an aptitude-skills test as they enter seventh grade: diligent and capable children interested in college are directed one way; the others learn a trade, based on their aptitude proclivities: perhaps a career in auto mechanics, a physical trainer, a physician’s assistant, a dental hygienist, a chef, fashion design, computer repair, or any of a hundred different substantive livelihoods. Let’s be proactive, instead of making kids take irrelevant courses in algebra, earth science or the history of Mesopotamia. That’s a waste of time.
Yes, Mr. Gripes expects to be soundly criticized by Great-Society, pie-in-the-sky, arteriosclerotic liberals for selling the kids short, but, be real, Lyndon Johnson’s ridiculously grandiose plans for education were abysmal failures; let’s at least stop the hemorrhaging of cash that we’ve endured for half-a-century. All-points-bulletin to all the head-in-the-sand ostriches out there: we’re broke.
Derivatives? Mr. Gripes has for months tried to get his arms around what the hell a derivative is, and he must confess he’s still doesn’t fully grasp the concept. Yes, it’s a futures contract of some sort, but after that, I’m stumped. One fact he does know: in the mortgage-securities market, it’s fundamentally a ‘side-bet’ on whether the mortgage market will rise or fall, and a wrong bet can cause huge losses, if leverage levels are overextended. It’s very, very dangerous, as Americans found out a couple of years ago. And, a derivative is not crucial for the financial markets to function. That leads to one conclusion: let’s just ban them. I know, of course, that Wall Street loves derivatives; financial institutions made $29 billion off of them in 2009.

The argument that derivatives, of no intrinsic value in the functioning of American capital markets, should be allowed just so Wall Street traders can earn egregious fortunes, falls apart when juxtaposed against the explicit perils these instruments can pose. For a change, can the collective will of this country rise up in protest, and tell Wall Street, ‘Enough is enough. The financial health and security of the country comes first. You can take your derivatives and shove it.’ Unfortunately, a supine Congress, awash with Wall Street millions, doesn’t have the cajones or the integrity to terminate permanently the great gamble of derivatives trading.
Zenyatta – Mr. Gripes loves horseracing, and not for the reason you’d think. Sure, one of the great thrills of being on this earth is observing an intrepid steed on which you possess a $20 ticket ‘on the nose’ thunder down the stretch, gliding to an easy victory of five or six lengths. That’s undiluted elation.
But, to Mr. Gripes, and my betting acquaintances will not accept this, it’s the animal alone that’s the great allure of horse racing.

If my readers ever have the opportunity to stand near a thoroughbred racehorse, it’s a breathtaking experience: all of the animal’s extraordinary genetic gifts just jump out: beauty, sinew, willfulness, grace, pride, poise, and, above all, overwhelming strength. Other stellar qualities emerge from the races: courage, perseverance, an unquenchable desire to run faster than his competitors, and sheer athleticism.
At this moment, right under our noses, all of us may be witnessing the most spectacular racehorse of them all. I know, I know, Secretariat was magnificent, but he usually won by fifteen or 20 lengths – there was no drama. This horse wins in a breathtaking fashion.
The horse is Zenyatta. And, delightfully, Zenyatta is not one of those head-case, emotionally brittle male race horses. She’s in fact a filly, and has won each one of her 17 races. She doesn’t bore herself silly reading dreary authors like Toni Morrison and Louise May Alcott or bone up on suffrage history to give herself a confidence boost in dealing with stronger, nastier, and angrier males. With a derisive sneer, she just whooshes by them all and wins.
And, here’s what makes Zenyatta so exciting: she gives all her competitors a head start; 300 yards out of the gate, she settles invariably into last place, way, way behind, and remains there for most of the race. As the race comes out of the final turn, heading down the stretch toward the finish line, she picks up her pace and starts her kick, picking off horses as if they’re standing still. 150 yards from the finish, Zenyatta, having passed 8 or 9 horses, is now running with a champion’s confidence; she’s running effortlessly, ears up, tail straight out, beating the crap out of the rest of the field. The indomitable Zenyatta will not be denied.
In the 2009 Breeders Cup Classic last November, she ran against the best stallions in the world. Indeed, this race was a little more difficult for her, but at the end there she was, flying past champion thoroughbreds one-by-one, to win again by a neck.
The track announcer, as Zenyatta **crossed the finish line, blurted out just one word, accentuating and elongating each syllable: ‘U-N—B –E—L-I-E-V—A—B-L-E!!
May you run for 100 years, Zenyatta.
** Hyperlink of a typical Zenyatta race: Right ‘click’, then ‘open hyperlink.’
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Jim Israel


June 28, 2010

Has-Been Harrison, Delusional CEOs, The Great Ichiro

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Baseball, Uncategorized | Posted on 04-06-2010

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By Jim Israel

June 4, 2010

E-mail: jamesisrael77@yahoo.com

It’s Time to Go…Let’s study for a moment a film [now on DVD] that Mr. Gripes has no intention of ever viewing, but for whom one brief glance at a theatre trailer told him everything he needed to know:  that is, the movie stunk. The film is ‘Extraordinary Measures,’ starring that old, leathery stegosaurus Harrison Ford. The plot? My readers, undoubtedly observers of too many bad films themselves, have certainly seen a version of this a million times: A stylish, yuppie couple is confronted with a horrific scenario: their child, angelic in mien, comes down with a debilitating illness, and no one can furnish a diagnosis as the child’s condition worsens.

Remote, despotic doctors turn them away, telling the parents they can do nothing. The desperate parents have no place to turn to. Then, a miracle happens: they fortuitously meet our humble hero, himself long shunned by the medical establishment, who initiates a fight against a ferocious bureaucracy and heartless doctors; lo-and-behold, the child’s life is saved. It’s Hollywood tear-jerking garbage, and it’s been a theme that’s been recycled for eons. In this version, Mr. Ford is the savior, exclaiming at one point in a bellow of outrage, as he sits at his desk, “No one tells me how to run my lab!” Imagine: these words emerge from the mouth of the same person who years ago fought off a gazillion slithery snakes, rescued voluptuous damsels from the clutches of swarthy, scimitar-wielding criminals, and halted runaway vehicles while hanging on to the roof by his fingernails. Now, he’s behind a desk, running a laboratory. Whoopee.

Final worldwide box-office receipts: $11 million, which was probably a fraction of the amount of cash some poor sap-producer was compelled to folk over for Mr. Ford’s services. Stick a folk in him. Harrison, you’re done.

_____________________________________________

Saving themselves from themselves – Let’s get something straight right off the bat: Mr. Gripes, despite his often oracular, know-it-all tone, doesn’t for one minute think he’s as smart or as shrewd as most of those top-dog chief executives we hear and read about so much. Hey, to get to be king-of-the-hill of any large institution certainly takes a lot of brains, patience, tenacity and superior social skills. But, Mr. Gripes is certain of this: almost to a man, these big shots are not only totally wrong, they’re borderline hysterical about one issue: regulation.

Lately, with great impetus from the right’s almost pathological screed about free enterprise, Big Business screams constantly that profits in their particular industry will be severely diminished and their ability to run their businesses crippled if powerful regulations are put in place.

Mr. Gripes takes an entirely different tack: he thinks an intelligent, properly managed, no-loophole regulatory climate is a boon to industry. In fact, strong oversight measures may indeed save these very institutions from destroying themselves in an orgy of greed not dissimilar to the debacle we’ve witnessed over the past few years. As history has shown repeatedly, boom times plant the seeds of institutional euphoria and amnesia, which lead to self-immolation. Regulation can act as a buffer.

Look at the awful British Petroleum oil-spill in the Gulf, for example: if the oil industry had invested just $500,000 [per rig] in a shut-down safety device, instead of going all-out to defeat a proposal that would have mandated the use of the mechanism on drilling platforms [I’m not surprised it was defeated – after all, since 2002, the oil industry has spent a mind-boggling $893 million on lobbying efforts.], this whole sordid, costly mess could possibly have been avoided. By rejecting a piece of safety equipment costing a picayune half-a-million dollars, BP will end up squandering tens of billions of its hard-earned assets.

To get this regulation defeated, the oil companies very likely lied about its efficacy as well; they persuaded Congress that the safety equipment did not work, even as European countries reported this particular gizmo in their oil fields has operated successfully and without problems for years. BP is a prime example of how a company’s insistence on short-term profits over prudent long-term management of its resources eventually causes great damage to the institution.

How about the big banks and Wall Street? Institutions such as Citicorp, in their pell-mell stampede for profits, simply lost their heads, and put their very institutions at risk with their over-leveraged loans, off-the-balance-sheet obfuscations, and a host of other barely legal stratagems. And, where did it get Citicorp in the end? When the dust cleared after the apocalypse of 2008, Citicorp had given back TEN years of profit, basically falling into insolvency. Mr. Gripes will say it again: Citicorp, and essentially every other large financial institution, in the absence of firm oversight and accountability, ran off the cliff, jeopardizing their very existence. If there had been tough regulations without exceptions in place, and competent individuals to implement them, Citicorp would still be today a sound, profitable and proud institution, instead of a shell of its former self. That’s irrefutable.

But, unfortunately, these corporations never learn. The allure of huge year-end bonuses propels senior management to game the system constantly – deception and concealment are the orders of the day still. That inevitably leads to big trouble. Just the other day, Mr. Gripes read in the Wall Street Journal that, even after all the losses and all the shame, Citicorp still creates fictitious quarterly statements; Mr. Gripes is no expert on this, but the legerdemain involved offloading some assets to create a false picture of reduced liabilities and less leverage. At its essence, it’s really a blatant manipulation of the stock price, and that’s patently dishonest. Yet they’re still doing this. Companies just cannot help themselves.

My point: Regulations, done correctly, save avaricious corporations, in their insatiable and all-consuming drive for profit now, from an ultimate demise. Never underestimate, readers, the ability of businesses to run blindly over cliffs in their maniacal push for returns. Staggering, runaway profits always bring on rampant institution-wide denial. Regulations and rules would prevent these companies from injuring themselves, or even committing suicide.

Ronnie on the $50 Bill, Boom Times Forever….

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 09-05-2010

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May 09, 2010

www.mistergripes.com

Ronnie on the $50 Bill – It’s been bandied about lately by Tea Party members and Republican operatives that Ronald Reagan’s portrait should appear on the American fifty-dollar bill. Ah, all you cowboys, how about pulling up on those reins just a little bit, OK?

If Mr. Reagan’s countenance should one day happen to grace a $50 bill, Mr. Gripes will raise his hand and insist on his own candidate for the $100 bill: Minnie Mouse.

Recent revisionist history emanating from certain quarters posits that Mr. Reagan was one of the greatest Presidents in American history. Before Mr. Reagan is officially beatified, please permit Mr. Gripes to remind his readers of a couple of less-than-glittering moments of his Presidency:

You all recall the humiliating crisis of 1979-80 in which Iranian students seized and held hostage 61 Americans for over a year? They were released, after a seemingly interminable period of 444 days, on the very day of Mr. Reagan’s inauguration. Iran’s been a detested enemy ever since.

In his second term, in 1985, Mr. Reagan, secretly made a deal with the very same hated enemy. It went something like this: we’ll sell Iran arms, [without telling our citizens because we’re actually prohibited legally from doing this], then we’ll take the cash from that deal, and buy weapons for the Contras in Nicaguagua. The Contras will overthrow Ortega and his Communists in Nicaragua with those weapons. [In fact, 1,500 missiles were sold to Iran over three years.] To our addled President, he might have thought he was taking a look at a great movie script.

There was a slight problem, though: the money-for-arms deal was essentially treason, not only countermanding a law of Congress, but, worse to Mr. Gripes, Mr. Reagan actually arming the very enemy that had imprisoned and held hostage fellow Americans. Bill Clinton would have been lynched; God only knows what medieval torture would have been meted out to Barack Obama. Eventually the whole secret arrangement was discovered, and the Communists in Nicaragua remained in power; once again, the rest of the world laughed heartily at the imbecilic Americans.

Allow me at this point to offer a light interlude. Mr. Gripes was intrigued by an altogether frivolous detail of this swap: to get into the good graces of the Ayatollah as the exchange was being worked out, a birthday cake was delivered to him by Robert McFarland, a National Security Council senior official. Yep, a birthday cake for the Ayatollah: I’ve always wondered if there were frosting and candles on that cake; did Mr. McFarland serenade the Most Revered One with ‘Happy Birthday’, too?

Let’s move on: President Reagan, these days trumpeted as our fearless President not intimidated by the big, bad Commies and their Berlin Wall, apparently did not dare make any significant decisions without input from his wife’s astrologer [Joan Quigley].

Donald Regan, the President’s former chief-of-staff, wrote in his memoirs that Nancy Reagan relied often on her astrologer to determine the most favorable days and times for the President to fly on Air Force One or schedule meetings with foreign leaders. If Ms. Quigley indicated that Mr. Reagan’s astrological signs were unfavorable, designated days, and even weeks in some instances, were blocked off on his calendar as periods that no significant work, or even travel, was to occur. In fact, Mr. Reagan’s calendar book was color-coded to indicate which days were acceptable or unacceptable for Presidential activities. My God, this is the presumptive Leader of the Free World we’re talking about.  Ceasing to write at this moment, Mr. Gripes leans back in his chair, and shakes his head in stunned incredulity.

Let’s pretend to eavesdrop on a conversation between Nancy and the President:

“Honey, can I have a moment of your time?”

“Yeah, Ronnie, but make it quick. I’m having lunch with our dear friend Ida Lupino.”

“Ah, well, I’m planning to go to Reykjavík in a couple of weeks to sign a nuclear non-proliferation treaty with General Secretary Gorbachev. Is that OK with you?”

Angrily, “Ronnie, how many times do I have to tell you: unless all of Jupiter’s moons are in alignment with the trailing star of the Big Dipper and Tip O’Neill’s belly button, you’re under no circumstances to have anything to do with that Russian, OK?”

Softly, “But, honey, the arrangements have been all set. He’ll be real mad.”

“Listen, don’t cross me — the answer is still no. Just tell Gorby to cool his jets, and that you’ll sign that agreement next month, on the 14th at 3:32 a.m., OK?

One last thing, Ronnie: because you’ve been disobedient and a bad boy, there’ll be no red jelly beans in your bedtime goody bag tonight.”

But don’t despair, guys.  Considering how things are done in this cockeyed country these days, I’ll wager George W.’s portrait will be on the $5 bill next week.

____________________________

Only Boom Times – In retrospect, the vast majority of Americans believed that the boom times were going to last forever. Forget about a collapse; the very idea of an economic downturn was scuffed at by virtually all of us. Roger Lowenstein, in his book The End of Wall Street, describes those frothy times as “a gale of mass hallucination.”

Looking back on his own behavior, as someone who in his gut has always mistrusted mass movements as irrational and potentially destructive, and who is a contrarian by nature, Mr. Gripes can only mutter, “What the hell was I thinking?”

Worse, Mr. Gripes perceived signs early on that, indeed, the fox was being ushered into the henhouse, and there’d be one hell of a reckoning down the road.

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, hoping to be reappointed by newly elected George W. Bush, approved the huge tax cuts proposed by the new administration. Mr. Greenspan, in essence, went against his own belief system developed over half-a-century. The chairman’s imprimatur to proceed with deficits was sufficient to push through the tax-cut legislation; its passage was the end of the lofty goal of a national balanced budget. Huge short-term profits over long-term stability and a financial free-for-all became the mantra for the American economy. [President Bill Clinton, incidentally, was successful in balancing his last budget.] The astonishing fiscal irresponsibility and lack of institutional discipline that ensued were certainly foreshadowed by Mr. Greenspan’s blatant disregard of his own fiduciary duty as the country’s No. #1 regulator.

Another omen: Mr. Gripes happened to catch on C-Span very early in Mr. Bush’s first term a Congressional hearing in which Harvey Pitt, chairman of the Securities Exchange Commission, testified. Someone on the committee mentioned to Mr. Pitt that there was extra money available for the SEC to utilize for investigative matters, i.e., to look for crooks. Mr. Pitt, to Mr. Gripes’ great surprise, refused the additional funds, asserting he had enough on hand. Consider that for a moment: a Federal agency turning down money. That never happens. Mr. Gripes was flabbergasted. What’s Mr. Pitt doing?

Now, it all makes sense. Congressional hearings, especially when ‘friendly’ witnesses are being questioned, are rarely spontaneous. The witness is often appraised of subjects likely to come up, and even a rehearsal of questions and answers may occur. My suspicion is that Mr. Pitt knew very well that he’d have the opportunity to turn down that money. The SEC chairman, perhaps with Administration connivance, refused those funds for a very specific reason: he was signaling to the huge cartels [Wall Street, Oil, Pharmaceuticals, Real Estate, Insurance, et al.] not to worry:  free-market forces will be unleashed, and there’d be no meddling regulators messing with the huge corporations from now on.

And that’s exactly what occurred – financial institutions leveraging loans at 20-, 30-to-1 [Bear, Stearns was king: 42-1]; lenders permitting knucklehead homebuyers earning $60,000 salaries to be approved for $600,000 mortgages; borrowers with no proof of income obtaining $500,000 loans; absolutely worthless securities receiving ‘AAA’ ratings; Wall Street firms and commercial banks fabricating off-the-books, ‘independent’ entities to create an illusion of less debt, thereby enhancing quarterly statements. Sure, it’s called Wall Street down there in the financial district, but, let’s be honest, it was the rootin’-and-tootin’ Wild West for almost a decade.

Do you recall the old Westerns in which the cattle rustlers and stagecoach bandits ride into town, guns blazing, scaring the daylights out of law-abiding citizens? The sheriff and his deputies throw down their badges, and ride like hell out of Dodge City. That was big business in America a few years ago. My goodness, we were so stupid.

Jim Israel May 10, 2010

www.mistergripes.com

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The Delightful Sarah P; Haiti: $ Down the Drain; NCAA ‘Fix’…

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 29-04-2010

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By Mister Gripes [James Israel]                    www.  mistergripes.com April 28, 2010

Ms. Palin, Thank God…For enthusiasts like Mr. Gripes, political theatre in this country all too frequently devolves into old, desiccated, sclerotic white guys – Harry Reid, Mitch McConnell, Orin Hatch come immediately to mind – mouthing party lines and boring everyone. Sarah Palin, just like the Lone Ranger, has come to the rescue. She continues to be an absolute delight. A month ago, I happened to come across on FOX an interview Glenn Beck, another Wonder of the Western World, conducted with the lovely Ms. Palin.

I gather this was to be her coming-out party on the station, with a new Sarah Palin displaying, finally, a nuanced and intricate mastery of national governance. I’m afraid it didn’t go as planned.

Mr. Beck starts out with a lollypop question: ‘Who’s your favorite Founding Father?” The ex-governor, taken aback, pauses, freezes, and finally answers, “All of them.” Translation: ‘What the bleep is a founding father? Larry King? The sperm-donor for Octomom? Roger Ailes?  I haven’t a clue. Who the hell is Glenn Beck, anyway?  You sure Katie Couric didn’t supply that question?’ Ms. Palin was stumped.

Mr. Beck, himself at sea now, tosses a follow-up lollypop at Ms. Palin: “What about George Washington?” Ms. Palin starts talking about Mr. Washington’s retirement to Mount Vernon after independence was achieved, with a hope that his public service was over for good. Later, summoned away from his beloved farm and anointed as the country’s first citizen-politician, he reluctantly agreed to be the country’s first President.  Mr. Beck then muses aloud, “Yes, he was a citizen-politician, leaving the farm and taking on the burdens of the Presidency. That’s a good description of you, isn’t it?” Ms. Palin, now broadly smiling and in the full throes of false modesty, concurs. Right then, Mr. Gripes sat up straight, and exclaimed, “What!!” Sarah Palin was never a citizen-politician; in fact, she was the opposite, a politician-citizen. After all, she was already a state governor who gave up public service, becoming a private citizen, so she could get her hands on millions of dollars just waiting for her. As Gary Cooper would say, ‘She up and quit.’ Sarah, don’t bother laying that ‘I’m so humble’ attitude on Mr. Gripes. It won’t work. But, maybe you can’t blame her – George would never have been President if there was a talk show opportunity hanging out there for him on CNN.

The Spat — Do you recall, dear readers, the dispute over subscriber fees that ABC Television and Cablevision waged for a few months that culminated in Cablevision suspending its telecast of the Academy Awards for a short time? Was there any protest from citizens during and after this clash between mighty cartel companies? Not a whisper. We as consumers just sat there and took a couple of left hooks to the solar plexus. Think about that. Once, not long ago, Americans would have been outraged that they had become pawns in the titanic battles between monopolies. We’ve become inured to taking blows like this one; we feel powerless. And we are, simply because our elected officials do not represent our interests any longer. The vast, all-powerful monopolies control, through bribes disguised as campaign contributions, the levers of our government. Our representatives and senators are charlatans. The politicians couldn’t be happier that there’s such an apathetic, listless voting public – that sentiment guarantees their perpetual re-elections.

Haiti: $$ Down the Drain? – A conference a few weeks ago in Port-au-Prince estimated that that it’ll take $11.5 billion in funds to rebuild the Haitian infrastructure – the roads, the schools, the electrical grid, the sewage system, etc. And, the United States promised an aid package of $1.3 billion, and that’s only for starters.

Mr. Gripes immediately raises his hand, and articulates very loudly just two syllables: No mas. On this issue, I’m right there with the wild and wooly guys in the Tea Party. Since the end of World War II, it’s always the United States that’s shelled out vast, unaccounted-for sums in foreign aid. I plea, “America’s days of being the deaf-and-dumb sugar daddy are over.” Just imagine how many trillions we’ve given to all those tin-horn dictators. The autocrats learned how to play the game: just say the words ‘Russia,’ ‘Communist’ or, these days, ‘Bin Laden’ and the dollars rain down like the monsoons in Malaysia. And, lest it’s forgotten, we’re broke. It’s no t even our money that we’d be doling out now; all we’ll be doing is borrowing more money, accruing more interest, and ratcheting up our already monstrous debt to China.

Haiti? Yikes. In a world in which the vast majority of countries operate solely through bribery and corruption, Haiti may win the gold medal for thievery.  Here’s one beautiful example of Haitian criminality: once upon a time, Haiti had a national railroad system. Now? Not a trace. Years ago, ‘Papa Doc’ Duvalier, the most vicious, murderous plunderer of all the Haitian dictators, decided to obliterate the entire rail network. Every piece – tracks, locomotives, passenger cars, depots – was melted down and sold for scrap. That money then was hijacked by Duvalier, made into gold bars, and squirreled away in banks abroad. Haiti was and is a full-blooded kleptocracy, i.e., a government operated by robbers.

Mr. Gripes is not totally hardened. I understand food, medicine, and temporary shelters must be delivered to that country to forestall famine and illness. The charities certainly are up to that task, and I commend them for their humane efforts. In this one situation, if 30% of the charity-aid monies disappear into the Haitian ethers, as much as it bugs the hell out of Mr. Gripes, that’s the price we have to pay to keep people alive.

But, regarding the permanent reconstruction efforts, America must take responsibility for preventing the Haitian political caste from getting their larcenous hands on our money. Haiti has been, and continues to be, a failed state. [Admit that obvious fact, please, Bill Clinton.] Simply put, Haitian corruption is astounding in its breath. America just can’t shovel billions of dollars down there any longer.

So, here’s my basic plan for rebuilding Haiti: an international agency ought to be created – with huge input from donor countries such as the United States, China, France, Britain, i.e., the big powers. Put in place in Port-au-Prince an organization that will coordinate every facet of the rebuilding from the streets up. Haitian politicians – all of them — cannot be anywhere near the cash or in any leadership position, simple as that. Let’s put, say, the Army Corps of Engineers in charge of distributing the money, and organizing a systematic, timely ‘blueprint’ for the reconstruction of Haiti.

There’ll be incredible resistance to a plan like this, of course – screams from the politicians about respecting ‘Haitian sovereignty’ and the return of ‘Yankee imperialism’. The loudest  protesters will surely be the Haitian political class, who have ripped off, beaten, murdered, macheted and imprisoned citizens for 200 years; they will scream the Haitian ‘people’ must have a say in earthquake-aid distribution.

Mr. Gripes has a plan for the opposition as well: let’s have a honest [That’ll never happen, of course] plebiscite. Vote for one of two options: A. the Haitian government will be in charge of the aid, and apportion the money as it deems fit, versus, B. the United States will have the sole responsibility of distributing the money as it deems fit. Guess who’ll win? Option B’, by about 93% to 7%. Enough of that ‘imperialism’ garbage.

NCAA: The Fix Is In – Yeah, I know, I know. Butler, which plays in a mid-level basketball conference, gets to the finals of the 2010 NCAA Basketball tournament. And all you basketball cognoscenti out there know what that means: every hack, burnt-out sportswriter alive will bring up the movie ‘Hoosiers’ in their columns. God help us all. ‘Hoosiers’, in spite of all the reverential and extravagant praises slathered upon it by fans and media, is arguably the most cliché-ridden film ever made.

Let’s count the ways: A basketball coach, summarily fired from an authentic basketball power for committing an egregious infraction, is blackballed, and can’t find a job anywhere except in some Palookaville deep in the sticks [Cliché #1]; there he befriends a kind, attractive woman, who knows Coach has a heart of gold under a steely, gruff exterior [Cliché #2]; Coach throws off the team his immature, disobedient star, only to let him return later after he’s seen the errors of his ways [Cliché #3}; Star player becomes hero as team, from the lowest division, keeps beating much bigger schools in the state tournament [Cliché #4 and #5]; team comes together as one and reaches finals, although a prohibitive underdog [Cliché #6]. Team wins final game and state tournament on a last-second shot by now-rehabilitated star [Cliché #7]. More clichés abound, but I know I’m getting real tedious.

Real life doesn’t resemble ‘Hoosiers’ one bit, I’m afraid, although sanctimonious sportswriters, who absolutely know better, often assert that sentiment. It’s nothing but fairy-tale mythology, like Zeus living on top of a big mountain in Greece. Mr. Gripes has a better chance of becoming a Tibetan goat-herder one day than a lower-seeded team has of winning the NCAA tournament.

The big shots always win. The tournament is, in a sense, rigged. No, money is not given players to shave points, thereby affecting point spreads. It’s a little more complicated than that: the high-school player of NBA-caliber, can’t-miss talent always ends up at the 15 or so powerhouse teams that dominate the sport year-in, year-out. Why does that happen 100% of the time? Let’s just say there’re material ‘inducements’, usually well concealed [example: a Mercedes ‘loaned’ to an ‘uncle’ of a star], as well as payoffs to ‘street agents’ who then guide their star charges to matriculate at particular big-time schools. Come on, readers, doesn’t the not-so-felicitous term ‘street agent’ by itself tell you all you need to know about the extent of the sewage in college basketball? The Cornells and Princetons of this world, which run honest programs placing academics over athletics, will never win this tournament in 500 years.

‘Bad Girls Club,’ Every 2 Years, The Olympics, Without Tears……

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 18-03-2010

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By Jim Israel, aka ‘Mr. Gripes’ mistergripes.com                     March 14, 2010

‘Bad Girls Club’….During his convalescence from ankle surgery, Mr. Gripes was compelled to recline, day after day, on the living-room sofa. Writing and, for that matter, reading were out of the question due to constant post-operative pain. Consequently, his main recreational activity devolved to observing day-time television. Yikes. If any of my readers has any doubts about the collapse of the American hegemony, take a week off and just watch cable. It’s become an overflowing sewage basin.

Let’s examine the American women’s liberation movement, for instance. It is in deep, deep trouble. Oh sure, those anxious upper-class mothers in Chappaqua, or Westport, or Orinda will move mountains to get their oh-so-gifted, over-privileged daughters into law schools, and self-anointed feminists, ecstatic that schools are graduating these days more female lawyers than male, envision the dawning of a matriarchal America. Sorry, ladies, it’s not to be: women’s liberation is now narrowly limited to one social stratum, the wealthy and powerful. Throw in college students wasting their time on a ridiculous major like Women’s Studies and that’s the extent of the women’s movement.

Mr. Gripes may appear a bit jaundiced, but I implode you to take a look at the cable reality show, ‘Bad Girls Club.’ A half-dozen young women, in their twenties, are selected to live together in a plush home in some warm southern city. These women do not resemble Susan B. Antony and her suffragettes on the picket lines in the least: they get drunk, they fight, even throwing punches and pulling hair, they form cliques, and they scheme against each other. And, good Lord, do they curse, constantly, with a complexity and fluidity not even a marine clamoring onto Omaha Beach could ever imagine. A backdrop to all this is an unremitting lusting for boys, boys, boys and sex, sex, sex. The damage to the movement is so obvious: every stereotypical feminine trait that women have spent decades insisting is belittling and false is nevertheless accentuated, even trumpeted, on the show.

And, here’s the factor that makes all this so depressing: your nine-, ten-, or 11-year-old daughter, at her most impressionable and innocent age, at home from school in the late afternoon, plops down in front of the television, and avidly watches this filth.  And, the effluvia keeps on coming down stream:  Mr. Gripes noticed the other day there’s a new show out: it’s called RuPaul’s Drag Race, and features some kind of competition between drag queens – imagine your daughter watching this train wreck. Feminism for the next generation is dead on arrival. That’s the way reality T.V. works: it takes fundamental core values and sensibilities, and eviscerates them, favoring always the most vile human behavior.

‘Fear and Loathing in the Heartland’…We all hear the identical refrain each election cycle: ‘There’s so much anger out there in the hinterlands….there’s a huge shake-up in Washington brewing… Incumbents are extremely nervous about November.’ Every two years, it’s always the same media line: revolution is upon us. But nothing changes. Yes, there’ll be a few more or less Democrats or Republicans in Congress, but fundamentally the system is stuck, paralyzed. There’ll be no big changes in November 2010. I’ll give you two reasons: first, Mr. Gripes admits there’s a lot of fear and disgust among the electorate; voters, though, almost to a man, while vehemently insisting ‘they’re all crooks and thieves down there in D.C.’, in the same sentence assert, ‘but our guy is a good guy, and I’m voting for him again.’ Americans are as slow, dumb and obstinate as donkeys, and virtually never vote their own man [or woman] out. In reality, only death, illness or scandal manages to dislodge any of these clowns.

Second reason: the system is rigged before any elections take place. In state capitols, whichever party controls the legislature passes gerrymandering laws that create in perpetuity safe seats for both parties – authentic bipartisanship is at work for once when incumbent Republicans and Democrats carve out no-contest districts, statewide and national,  in backroom deals with each other – Stalin’s Politburo in Moscow circa 1952 couldn’t have done a better job gaming the system.

We, the voters, have sustained this sham for a long, long time. Shame on us. But, there’s another ‘enabler’ afoot here: the media. Choosing to ignore completely any coverage of gerrymandered electoral districts, the media – TV and print – instead go along with the myth that a revolution is close at hand. They – political reporters – surely know better than Mr. Gripes that the rotten system never changes, but the idea that peasants in the countryside, armed with pitchforks, are marching into Paris, hell-bent on killing all the occupants of the palace, makes for a far more dramatic narrative than the rather forlorn and drab theme that our government apparatus is absolutely, undeniably broken beyond repair. Even those self-righteous popinjays, Matthews and Olbermann, should be ashamed of their negligence.

The Olympics, Without Tears…I know, I know, all you American jingoists out there, with the buttons popping off your Ralph Lauren dress shirts because you’re so proud that the good, old U.S.A. showed all those little pissant countries out there who’s still the boss. But, let’s just hold on for a minute.

Alas, it wasn’t a fair fight. The United States, despite all its troubles, still excels at one tremendous skill: using its money and clout to fix the system to its advantage. Oh, we’re so good at that. Isn’t that so, Wall Street?

So, let’s parse some elements of the past two weeks:

My readers surely have seen that rough schemata of a typical man’s brain: 50% of the cerebrum occupied by ‘sex’, 35% ‘money’, 20% ‘food.’ You know what I’m talking about, right? Well, if we did a similar ‘map’ of the countries NBC showcased on its telecast, 99.8% of Earth would be ‘U.S.A.,’ and 0.2% the rest of the world, an area no bigger than Mineola, New York. The jingoism was appalling. I  I posed this question after the last Olympics, too: why does a country, so rich, so powerful, so confident of its own democratic underpinnings, need to resort to a banana-republic cry for approval, and breast-thumping nationalism? Mr. Gripes cannot figure that out.

I’ve always been very suspicious of nationalism. It’s dangerous. It can unleash the mob. It causes wars, and enmity among peoples. In fact, by a matter of degrees, all that ‘U.S.A., U.S.A.’ chanting that went on in Vancouver is nothing but a variation of those 1930’s nighttime rallies in Nuremberg.

Besides, the ‘victory’ for America in amassing the most medals – and, boy, did this country obsess about them – was a hollow one. NBC, undoubtedly encouraged by this country, rigged the system. Paying $12 billion for the Olympics over the past 10 years gave the network a lot of clout. And, NBC sure used it. Case in point: NBC, looking at the whole panorama of the Winter Games, saw an opportunity: it needed more events to fill all those broadcast hours, and needed more American medals to juice ratings. Eureka! Snowboarding, mogul skiing, halfpipe, and aerials were added as medal events a decade ago. Come on, these competitions are akin to dancing bears at the carnival, essentially sideshows, and certainly not remotely related to an authentic sport like Nordic skiing, for example. What a country this is: the competitors in these events two or three years ago were eighth-grade drop-outs who spent their days running from truancy cops and skateboarding off of roofs into empty pools and onto tops of cars, scaring the crap out of the neighbors. Now, they’re lionized gold medal winners. Mind-boggling. NBC was undeterred: if the myopic Americans desperately want those medals, we’ll get ‘em. The system was scammed.

One final observation: NBC , technically brilliant with its telecasts [the cross-country coverage was uniformly fantastic, with virtually every race, ranging from 3 miles to 30 miles, decided in the last 50 yards], sometimes ran off the track in its reverence for itself.

The smug Matt Lauer: I turn the TV on the first day of competition, Saturday, hoping for perhaps a skier careening down a mountain at 80, 90 miles an hour. What do I see, instead? A replay of Mr. Lauer, Olympic torch in hand, clad in an all-white gym suit, trudging slowly – and I mean s_l_o_w_l_y — down a Vancouver highway. My God. He looked like a walking Tampon applicator. Afterwards, in that false modesty of his, he says he was “lucky” to have been chosen to carry the torch. Mr. Lauer, ‘luck’ had nothing to do with it. With those 12 billion bucks your network spent on the Games, if you wanted to ski-jump, somehow they’d find a spot for you on the American team.

A couple of hours later, I regretfully came across Lester Holt gamely, but very gingerly, stumbling down the ice, stone in hand, attempting to master the sport of curling. [An aside: why did NBC opt to televise about 10,000 hours of curling, a sport fully reminiscent of shuffleboard, the soporific game of choice my ancient, half-demented Jewish relatives played in Boca Raton long ago? I defy anyone to watch more than 10 minutes without nodding off.] Mr. Holt looked anxious, as if he were about to fall face-forward onto the hard, cold ice. An enlightening experience for viewers?  Not for a second. The only person enlightened was Mr. Holt, who probably knelt in front of a teleprompter afterwards, embracing the machine, and promising never again to desert it.

I have this one last piece of advice for the NBC big-shots: viewers are only interested in the great athletes and the competitions, and could care less about your millionaire, self- important reporters. That goes for all of them: the insufferable Tom Brokaw, the too-cutesy Meredith Viera, the stuffed-shirt Al Michaels, Al Roker and his run-amok ego, et al., should just shut up and go away for the two weeks.

An archive of some past columns appears on my website, mistergripes.com…

March 8, 2010

Tiger, Big Al, Elvis, Pakistan…

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 10-01-2010

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January 10, 2010

Tiger’s Not Alone … Sure, Mr. Woods was incredibly reckless chasing and bedding women all over the country, and he’s probably destroyed his family as a result. But, let’s deal with reality: his behavior, in comparison with other professional athletes, is not abnormal. I’d venture to say fidelity is the rare aberration. Rich, handsome, young, vigorous men with nothing to do meeting young, pretty and adventurous women in gaudy surroundings: those guys might as well have a bull’s-eye target on their backs. Spontaneous combustion is inevitable.

Jim Bouton, a pitcher for the Yankees and other clubs in the 1970s, describes in one of his books an incident that occurred at the end of a two-week road trip [He was with the Seattle Pilots at the time.]  As the team’s plane is being wheeled into an arrival gate at Sea-Tec, with wives and girl friends waiting inside the terminal, one of his teammates, catcher Jim Pagliaroni, stands up at the front of the cabin, and exclaims to all his teammates, “OK, guys, act horny.”  That comment cost the unfortunate Mr. Pagliaroni his marriage later, but he spoke the truth.

D.L. Hughley, the comedian, sums up Tiger’s escapades much more concisely, “Fourteen? Hell, that’s a bad week in the NBA.”

Big Al’s Not Happy… It’s inevitable: Al Sharpton will capitalize on any event, grand or petty, to gain some publicity and, let’s never forget, increase the cash flow to his quasi-political enterprises. And, sure enough, the Tiger Woods affair provided an opportunity. Mr. Gripes, though, was surprised at the tack Mr. Sharpton took: he criticized Mr. Woods for selecting only white women as lovers, and extolled the superiority of black women as mistresses. Mr. Sharpton may not realize it, but his comments are definitively racist.  Things sure have changed, though: seventy or 80 years ago, black men were lynched in the American South for merely looking at white women. Now, a black man is excoriated by another black man for copulating with only white women. Everything’s been turned upside-down. God, Mr. Gripes loves this insane, perplexing, moronic, wack-job country. It’s one huge three-ring circus.

Don’t despair long, Big Al. In a month or two, you’ll pick up the phone, and Mr. Woods will be on the other end: “Hi, Al. Yeah, it’s been rough, but at least the kids are adapting well in Sweden. Listen, Big Guy, can you do me a favor: You got Tyra Banks’ phone number?’ Yep, Tiger will come through for you.

Elvis’ 75th… This past Friday, Elvis Presley turned 75. Mr. Gripes will never miss an opportunity to comment on the phenomenon of ‘The King.’ One of the appeals of Mr. Presley was his sly, smart sense of humor. It’s a side of Mr. Presley that every one of his fans adores.

Here’s a little vignette: Elvis, upon his return to America after a year or so of army duty in Germany, conducts a news conference in hot Memphis. The sweating writers, clad in short-sleeve white shirts and black ties, looking as old and wrinkled as bull crocodiles, are the perfect foil for the incredibly young, handsome and irrepressibly hip Elvis. One of these dinosaurs gets up and asks Elvis, “Is Rock n Roll dead?” Mr. Presley, a smirk slowing creasing across his face, says simply in that lovely Southern drawl of his, “Rock n roll might be dead, but something awfully good is gonna have to take its place.” Perfect. Elvis, we’ll be blowing out candles on your birthday cake 1,000 years from now.

NYC, the Apocalypse …Here’s a fact that nearly knocked Mr. Gripes off his computer chair when he saw it: New York, its acreage 1/350th the size of the United States, has on its payroll a workforce equal to one-seventh the size of the entire Federal workforce.  That’s unfathomable. Readers, consider the mandated-pension tsunami coming: baby-boomers have just begun to retire, and there’ll be a crush of retirees from now on. As Mr. Gripes explained to a friend the other day, this rusting relic of a ship is beginning to take on a lot water even now; sure, it might take 10, 15, 20 years, but New York City is going belly-up. Mr. Gripes peers in through the front windows of those shimmering restaurants where you can get spaghetti-and-meatballs for only $75 a pop, and observes that no one cares. The good times will roll on forever, just like in the Weimar Republic.

A Scary Prospect…President Obama commits another 30,000 troops to Afghanistan, and billions more in aid to create a national security force, to improve living conditions for Afghan citizens, to build schools, blah, blah, blah. We old-timers have heard this song as far back as when Lyndon Johnson lied to us about Vietnam’s golden prospects 40 years ago.  Come on:  all those billions will disappear in a miasma of corruption and larceny, as America will be played for a dumb fool once more. Let’s face it, and I’m certain Mr. Obama knows this: a country with a bloody tribal history of 4,000 years simply doesn’t change in 10 years. Cohesive security force? That’s just not going to happen ever. It’s all a fairy tale.

This time, though, the generals and Mr. Obama are not duped: they simply do not want to scare Americans half to death. Let’s be frank: their grandiose plans are only a plausible cover for the real reason America cannot abandon Afghanistan. After all, Afghanistan, geopolitically, should mean no more to us than some distant state like Tajikistan. There’s just one reason we stay in that desolate, ruined country: its neighbor, Pakistan. Pakistan is now a volatile, tottering country on the verge of chaos and break-up. And – this is key – Pakistan possesses a large nuclear arsenal. The military theatre scenario that scares the hell of Mssrs. Petraeus and Obama is not that difficult to discern.

Let’s connect the dots:  For the Pashtun nation, there are no borders between Pakistan and Afghanistan; their loyalties to a man are to the Pashtun tribe that stretches across northern Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Taliban in Afghanistan, abetted by Al Qaeda, are attempting to destabilize and terrorize the Pashtuns up in the north. Let’s suppose they’re successful, driving out governmental forces and creating a terror state; the chaos then inexorably moves across to the Pashtun area in Pakistan, northern Pakistan is destabilized, and the Taliban take over there, too. Abetted by Al Qaeda, the Taliban intensify the struggle across all of Pakistan as the corrupt Pakistan military and national government are not up to the task. Then the nightmare: The Taliban, with Al Qaeda lurking, topple the central Pakistan government.  And, guess who now gets their hands on the country’s nuclear arsenal? The specter of that horror is why we fight the fight now in Afghanistan.

That possibility alone keeps President Obama up at night.

www.mistergripes.com

jamesisrael77@yahoo.com

Tiger, Eastwood’s Invictus, The AK-47

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 16-12-2009

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12-16-2009

Tiger– Don’t expect any sympathy for Mr. Woods in this quarter. I’m no less curious than anyone else as to how this public figure, whose entire persona was based on a reputation of steely discipline and an iron will, succumbed so easily to what essentially are the ‘wet dreams’ of sixteen-year-olds. Yes, any heterosexual male over the age of 14 understands perfectly well the allure of beautiful, available women. It’s a biological imperative: gorgeous women are intoxicating. At least Odysseus, passing the island of Circe where stunning Sirens, the very first ‘VIP hostesses’, resided, and who were crying out for him, had the foresight to tie himself to a mast as he sailed by. Not Tiger Woods – he couldn’t even drive by a Perkins Pancake House 10 minutes from his home in Florida without hitting on an eight-dollar-an-hour waitress. Mr. Gripes has no sympathy for fools. One other thing about Mr. Woods that leaves Mr. Gripes cold: he’s cheap. It’s customary for golf professionals after a tournament to tip the clubhouse boys who assisted them during the event – polishing shoes, taking care of the bags, retrieving drinks, laundry, the menial jobs. Archrival Phil Michelson, after one such four-day tournament this year, gave to the three kids helping out $500 apiece. Mr. Woods? He didn’t tip any of them one nickel. Nada. He’s a billionaire. Tiger, you’re a chump.

Invictus – Mr. Gripes will never plunk down his ten bucks to see this film, out last Friday. At his advanced age, Mr. Gripes has finally mastered a technique of sniffing out bad movies before he’s even read any reviews. And, Invictus, I know in my bones, is a movie that I must avoid. Let me enumerate my reasons:       1. Clint Eastwood [director]: Mr. Eastwood specializes these days in movies that resemble three-layer cakes – hokum, on top of cliché, on top of cornball. His films are as nuanced as bulldozers, and as inert as a scrod filet on ice…2. Morgan Freeman: Mr. Freeman hasn’t turned down a movie role in 20 years; he’s in everything – and, alas, once you get pass that great voice, he’s dull, dull, dull. Plus, exacerbating his somnolent mien, he’s portraying Nelson Mandela, a monumental, historic figure certainly, but not exactly Mr. Excitement. 3. Matt Damon: Mr. Damon, who consorts with pretty-boy actors and gorgeous starlets out there in sun-splashed Malibu, somehow nabbed the role of captain of a South African national rugby team. Who’s kidding whom? Rugby in South Africa is top-notch, and from the perspective of a former player, ferociously and viciously competitive. I’m sorry, Matt, but tofu salad and spicy tuna rolls are not normally present at the training table. One muscular forearm to Mr. Damon’s $40,000 worth of bridgework, and he’d shatter into a thousand pieces, like expensive crystal….4. Finally, the plot: South Africa, riven by black and white distrust, becomes united as all its citizens, whatever their skin color, root as one for its rugby team’s victory in a championship match. That’s Mr. Eastwood alright: Let’s all get the Kleenex out, and shed copious tears over warmed-over clichés.  Don’t believe it for a second: the motif of a country coming together over a sports event to create a permanent harmony is maudlin Hollywood horse crap.

AK-47 – The weapon of choice for terrorists around the globe is the AK-47, a light, versatile sub-machine gun originally manufactured in Russia, but now prevalent in every third-world, distressed country.

In Africa, one AK-47 costs $30.00. That’s all.

That’s why Africa arguably finds itself in a hopeless, doomed condition. The Congo, Somalia, Sudan and many other countries have no functioning governments – they’re essentially rogue states. Sure, sham ‘governments’ exist, but there’re actually no legitimate legal systems, no functioning heads of states, no tax systems, and no national transportation systems. An enterprising young criminal, to fund an armed militia of, say, 50 men, needs only $1,500 to create his own army. In the Congo, the one country I know something about, there are thousands of these militias, armed with AK-47’s, who set up road blocks to extract ‘tolls’ from trucks and cars, and freely maraud the villages nearby, stealing, raping, and killing. The AK-47 is the curse of Africa. Worse, there’s apparently no strong countervailing force capable of disarming the militias, most of which are composed of young teenage boys.  The United States, which used to be the only country that really gave a damn about Africa, got severely burned by an adventure in Somalia [Remember ‘Blackhawk Down’?], and, correctly I think, withdrew from any additional humanitarian initiatives. Nothing’s going to get better over there for a long, long time.

Unfortunately, that leaves just one country heavily involved in the continent at the moment: China. They don’t give a damn, either, about anyone’s welfare, but they do have the money and intent to buy up the huge precious-metal assets essential to maintain the massive industrial engines of major powers. China has figured out it does not need to build up a huge military presence. By purchasing vast natural resources all over the world, especially in Africa, they’ll be able one day to strangle American industry by charging exorbitant prices, or even withholding vital metals, i.e., titanium, platinum, chromium, from us. They’ll have cornered the market. America and the West better wake up. Mr. Gripes, though, is not optimistic. Instead of dealing with problems threatening the country’s survival, we’re bogged down with abortion rights, same sex marriage and spurious Kenyan birth certificates. Just a hunch, but I’ll wager that the Roman Empire, obsessively preoccupied with its internal petty, irrelevant disputes, expired in just such a fashion.

Archived columns found at www.mistergripes.com

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Jim Israel                                                                                                                             December 16, 2009

$10,000 Belt, Pirates, Tall Boots…..

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 02-12-2009

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by James Israel, aka Mister Gripes                                December 1, 2009

Quick Jabs….

Item: A professional football player is fined $10,000 by the National Football League for not wearing a belt of a mandated color to match his uniform. This actually happened a few weeks ago: Just consider a couple of factors for a moment: 67% of the players in the league are black [and that number’s increasing every year], and all the owners are rich white men. Mr. Gripes had a single visceral response to this news:  We’re back on an antebellum cotton plantation outside Savannah, circa 1855. The plantation owner, worried about controlling his unruly slaves, threatens, “Listen, boy, tie up your pants with that rope real quick, or you’re gonna get a whipping.” That, Mr. Gripes is certain, was essentially the reaction of every black player in the league. The billionaire owners, in accruing money and power, lost their moral compass and humanity a long time ago, so I don’t blame them. The real villain here is the players union, with its black leaders, who permitted an indignity of this magnitude to occur. ‘Uncle Tom’, a notion that’s almost disappeared from our national psyche, is apparently alive and flourishing.

Ever notice the shortest guys wear the longest shorts? They resemble dwarfs, absolutely the opposite impression they’d like to display to the young ladies. Look in the mirror, guys.

Let’s play word association….’Ike Turner?’ Your instant thought: ‘He beat his wife, Tina.’ That’s it, right?  Get over it. Despite the disgrace and humiliation Mr. Turner brought on himself, he indisputably was a musical genius. Mr. Gripes’ favorite music is 1940’s/50’s rock and roll. It’s the most sublime music ever created. And, the late Ike Turner, when Tina Turner was lead singer in his band, produced some of the finest rhythm-and-blues. [Incidentally, it was called ‘race music’ in the ‘40s.] Once she left the band, Ms. Turner never again sounded so celestial. The lovely, honeyed voice that was discovered and nurtured by Mr. Turner was gone. What Tina Turner turns out these days is nothing but a lot of yelling and screaming. Ike Turner belongs in the Hall of Fame; Tina decidedly does not.

So many Americans expend so much energy denigrating and vilifying Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. Mr. Gripes just doesn’t get it. The venom and hatred that pours from the mouths of her detractors are so disproportionate to her actual power. Astonishing.  Her predecessor, Dennis Hastert, holding the identical position, engendered not a thimble’s worth of criticism, so something’s amiss. Mr. Gripes, as one would guess, has a theory: Ms. Pelosi, obviously a competent, confident and successful woman, on some level frightens or threatens men. What that fear or threat may be I’m not sophisticated enough to know, but it is evident that Ms. Pelosi’s most egregious sin, for a lot of men, is her gender.

The word that pops into Mr. Gripes’ head when he observes television political pundit George Will is ‘persnickety.’ It’s as if Mr. Will emerged, with bow tie in place and supercilious demeanor intact, from some 19th-century, Thomas Hardy novel. Another Gripesian ad-hominem observation:  the countenance of Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky never changes: always clenched and pained, he looks like he’s just consumed a large glass of warm, rancid milk.

Mr. Gripes understands that he may be tiptoeing on terra incognita at this juncture, but he’d like to comment briefly on the incomprehensible phenomenon called ‘women’s fashion.’ Two months ago, women’s tall boots were not at all visible in New York. Virtually overnight, at mach-6 speed, every other woman now owns a pair and is wearing them. To a disturbingly straight male, the velocity and momentum at which women pick up on a trend is totally mysterious: one day a particular fashion is non-existent, the next day there’s a million pair of boots pounding the pavement. Mr. Gripes is not complaining: there’s something very tribal and life-affirming about the byzantine world that is women’s fashion. And, apart from a faint resemblance to the Prussian Army officer corps, the boots on women look great.

Allow me, dear readers, to add a brief historical note:  I happened to go to school across the street from one of the ‘Seven Sisters’ women’s colleges. The students at that school were very bright and assertive, I recall. In the autumn of 1964, Mr. Gripes observed that many of the women there, perhaps in defiance, were wearing men’s construction boots; I had never seen women wear boots of any kind previously. To this day, I’m certain I was present, like the Three Wise Men, at a Creation: boots became very ‘hip’ soon after. I’ve always believed that those strong, powerful women on the other side of Broadway paved the way for the stylish, sexy boots women wear today.

His critics accuse him of every venality: he’s Hitler, he’s Stalin, he’s Hugo Chavez, he’s a Communist, he’s a fascist, he’s a traitor, he’s ‘taken our country from us,’ he’s setting up death camps, his friends are terrorists, he’s not even an American. Despite the savagery emanating from radio jocks who conduct themselves like spoiled, insolent, loud-mouthed, ill-mannered children, Barack Obama manages to maintain a civility, a grace, a commitment to hard work, an eloquence and appreciation of language,  a reverence for education and scholarship, and, yes, even an optimism. His accusers are greatly diminished in comparison.

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Pirates, Again…

It’s getting worse. Once upon a time, just a few months ago, the pirates off the coast of Somalia boarded only huge cargo ships, and took the crews hostage. That activity has become a more difficult feat lately, as countries of the shippers have taken steps to deter the criminals. So, a month ago, the little bastards perpetrated an even more despicable crime: they kidnapped off a sailboat a couple enjoying a vacation on the high seas. The scenario becomes more chilling: the kidnappers transported the couple to land, hustled them into cars that were last seen speeding rapidly into the interior, as another bunch of competing bastards were in hot pursuit in order to steal away the two people so they could hold them for ransom.

Just imagine how terrified these two captives feel. As stated in an earlier column, Mr. Gripes continues to push for some action: the United States, Britain, France and all affected nations assemble a 1,000-strong ‘Dirty Dozen’ commando squad, pinpoint exactly where all the pirates are [I’m sure the United States has that information], and initiate a raid, with concussive bombs, Predator drones, and grenades, to eradicate these pirates. If an Audi or Jaguar or Mercedes is spotted on some rutted road in the interior, destroy it. The idea that these criminals, who incredibly have amassed $100 million in ransom money this year, are riding around in luxury automobiles in villages that make slums in Haiti look like Dubai, just infuriates Mr. Gripes. Let’s clean ‘em out for good. If hostages die, well, that’s the price of ridding the world of these gutless, pitiless vermin.

And, if the Somalia government objects, my response would be, ‘Tough sh_t, Sherlock. You’re a broken state. When did you plundering thieves last protect your own citizens? They’ve been terrified and defenseless for years in the face of the all the murderous warlords running amok in their midst. You’ve allowed your people to be raped, macheteed, and slaughtered. The population would welcome an eradication of these lawless criminals, and thank us for it.’ Mr. Gripes at the moment sits at his desk, gripping its edges tightly, seething and furious that this behavior has been allowed to continue with impunity. Locate them.  Identify them. Eliminate them.

Ayn Rand, of the Fed-

As a young man, Mr. Gripes was compelled in despotic classrooms to read books he wouldn’t dare use now even as doorstops – execrable, turgid, impenetrable garbage. One stands out as among the worst – The Fountainhead, by Ayn Rand. A 340-pound, strong-as-an-ox professional nose tackle like NY Jet Chris Jenkins would have difficulties bench-pressing the weighty tome – a brisk read, at, get this, 600-or-so pages and 500,000 words. But, miracles do happen in our great land: this worthless and silly novel, its architect-hero a comic-book character of unblemished character who fights and wins battles to build skyscrapers against meddling bureaucrats, resembling no one more than the fabled personage of Mighty Mouse, was to become the ‘Koran’ for the true believers of the free-market philosophy. It gets crazier: one of Ms. Rand’s acolytes, who regularly sat at her knee to soak in her half-baked aphorisms 60 years ago, was none other than the beloved Alan Greenspan.

Decades later, Mr. Greenspan, his fervor for free markets unabated, became Fed chairman. Still wedded to the concept that only the ‘pure’ free markets can correctly and successfully guide a huge economy like ours, Mr. Greenspan tossed the dice, and lost. Take a look now at your 401[k]: Mr. Greenspan’s Fed policies, in channeling Ms. Rand’s economic theories, were a colossal, disastrous mistake.

You see, my always astute readers, Mr. Greenspan overlooked one huge flaw in his cockeyed calculations: free markets do not exist in America. Our national mythology insists they do, but that’s a false notion. I’m not talking about two bodegas across the street from each other; they compete for customers fairly and judiciously, through pricing and product. No, it’s the mega-industries that destroy any free market ethos. Telecom, Big Pharma, real estate developers, defense contractors, Wall Street, insurers: billion-dollar industries spend millions and millions, in political contributions [all legal, of course] to influence cash-crazy politicians, who subsequently pass laws that eviscerate competition.

Just take a look at your own cable television situation: there’s no choice involved – the telecom companies essentially divided up territories among themselves, with a single company in each proscribed zone. The consumer can get his services only from that one designated provider, or go without. Congress allowed this to occur, after reaping millions from telecom lobbyists. Free market competition? Bull crap. ‘Monopoly’ is the operative word.

Ayn Rand, who evinced not a sliver of humor in her novels, did come up with one uproarious, entirely accurate nickname for Alan Greenspan during his visits to her Los Angeles home in the 1950’s: she called him ‘The Undertaker.’ Prescient, too. Mr. Gripes, ever the wordsmith, could never have found a more fitting appellation for our illustrious chairman. Bullseye, Ms. Rand. Perfect.

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Short Jabs, Ex-Gov Palin, Little League

Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 21-10-2009

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Rabbit Punches…

The ‘foot-in-mouth’ act of Joe Biden is sure wearing thin. That ‘aw-shucks-I’m-just-a-blue-collar-guy-from-Scranton’ posture may work in Allentown, but it won’t with someone like Vladimir Putin. Mr. Biden would be chopped into mincemeat.

I’m really tired of Don Imus constantly pleading for money for his rodeo camp for kids.  Give it a rest, I-Man, will you please. Better yet, close it down.

The Daily News sports columnist Mike Lupica has the textbook persona of the pipsqueak he is: pugnacious, obnoxious and a know-it-all.  Every one of his columns these days loudly proclaims one diagnosis: ‘burnout.’ Mr. Gripes cannot read or listen to him any longer.

One thought jumps out whenever I observe Bob Woodward of Watergate fame: he’s lost his fastball. There is no cachet to Mr. Woodward any longer.  His smug countenance says it all: I’m famous, I’m rich, and I’m in so, so tight with the political fat-cat fraternity. Mr. Woodward has become a classic American sell-out.

John McCain’s ‘maverick’ days are over. He’s once again nothing but a war-thirsty, ‘let’s commit another 100,000 troops’ conservative. Mr. McCain’s countenance tells it all: anger, frustration, humiliation and a thinly veiled hatred for the guy who whipped his ass, President Obama.

The hip-hop music craze seems to be fading. Thank God. The complete collapse of Western civilization has been pushed back a few weeks.

Clothes don’t always make the man: David Gregory of NBC, who dresses as if his underwear were Armani, can’t hold a candle to the late Tim Russert, who looked like he bought his suits off the rack at Burlington Coat Factory, at 2 for $159.99.

Whenever I see Diane Sawyer on her morning show, I’m reminded of how a New York Times entertainment reporter once described her act: she exudes a “creamy insincerity.” Perfect.

After observing Alan Greenspan testifying before a Senate committee a couple of months ago, I finally pinned down the character defect that very nearly brought down the American economy: he is a man who does not take counsel from anyone kindly – he listens only to himself. Hubris, the Greeks call it.

Forget the garment business – it’s in Bangladesh now. New York City’s largest growth industry these days is traffic tickets.  It feels like there are a million of those parking ticket maidens out there every day writing summonses at 8:01 am. Shame on you, Mayor Bloomberg. Nothing new though: New Yorkers have been treated with insolence by its leaders for decades – we’re long-suffering fools and suckers.

If David Letterman’s intent was to make light of his affairs with staffers by intentionally evoking laughter on his show, he’s nothing but a low-rent skunk.

Roman Polanski forced a 13-year-old to ingest Quaaludes and drink champagne before he raped her vaginally, orally and anally. Twenty-five years in maximum security seem a just prison term. And, throw into the cell Whoopi, Penelope, Scorsese and Woody, his idiotic supporters, while you’re at it.

Since 2002, there’s been a net loss of 700,000 automobile manufacturing jobs in the Midwest alone.  I traveled through Cleveland, Detroit and their environs this summer: a tableau of desolation and deserted, gutted downtowns that resemble Dresden in April 1945. We’re in a heap of trouble, folks.

No one’s going around trumpeting their net worth these days, are they?

Baseball has traditionally been played by ‘boys of summer,’ yet If the 2009 World Series goes to a seventh game, the game will take place on the night of November 5rd. Insane.

I miss very much my best friend of 45 years, Gerry Z. Gerry was a man of incredible talents: he was a fine musician, made his living as a nuclear physicist and in his youth played tight end for the Detroit Lions for a couple of years. Wherever you are, Big Z, I hope you’re at a piano, playing some Bach, and looking forward to a blissful Sunday afternoon of watching football. Life is so unfair and painful when close friends die.

Ms. Palin – Put yourself in Governor Sarah Palin’s shoes [$500 Manolos, of course, compliments of the NRC] – you’d probably do the same thing: it’s a couple of days after the November election, you’ve spent the past 90 days crisscrossing the country speaking to frenzied, adoring crowds, even upstaging the party’s Presidential candidate, flying on private jets, staying at $1,000-a-night hotels, adorned in $150,000 worth of Neiman clothes purchased with a Republican Party credit card, with no heavy lifting for months.

And, now you’re disembarking from a plane in Anchorage, to no cheers, no crowds, no nothing, just an unsettling quiet on a cold, drizzly evening. Tomorrow you’re governor again, and it’s back to dealing with simpleton legislators and mind-numbing issues like mineral rights and highway funding; plus, those damn Democrats and their ethics committee want to look at your per-diem expense accounts, of all things.  Besides that, in a half-hour, you’ll have to get reacquainted with that slacker husband, start cleaning up after all those squealing children again, and, to top it off, deal with that lazy bum, Levi, who not only knocked up your daughter but now sits around the house doing nothing but eating pizza and drinking beer.

And, look what’s out there if only you were unencumbered with a governor’s responsibilities and prohibitions: oodles and oodles of cash. Low-hanging fruit like gazillion-dollar book deals and speaking engagements all over the world at $50,000 to $250,000 a pop. Millions and millions.

Mr. Gripes is certain Governor Palin, ostensibly a proponent of never giving up on the tough tasks, looked at what was in front of her, and, with not a moment’s hesitation, said, “I’m out of here.” The next Presidential election did not factor into her decision at all. After a national campaign, being governor was ‘dudsville’. And, let’s face it, 2012 is a millennium from now.

To her credit, Ms. Palin possesses tremendous confidence and ambition – those qualities permit her to overlook her faults, and take big risks. Her timing, too, is exquisite, so she pounced at the opportunity.

That’s not to say she’s done with a run at the Presidency. Her ambition will never let that notion disappear. With her vaulted self-esteem, she just knows she’d be a superb President. In fact, a poll of Republicans was conducted by Gallup a few months ago, and Mr. Gripes was astounded by one finding: 72% of Republicans indicated they’d vote for Sarah Palin for President. Yikes. Or, as the old sportscaster Mel Allen would exclaim after another Yankee home run, “How about that!”

Little League – It’s all too much. Too many television cameras, too many anxious ‘my-boy’s-gonna-sign-for-a-million-bucks’ parents, too many perfect playing fields and pristine uniforms, too much pressure, too much exposure, too many 10-year-old arms throwing curveballs, and too much cloying ‘Mom-and-Apple-Pie’ sentimentality. Little League’s gone the way of so many other American institutions – a kid’s sheer elation at playing the game of baseball has been smothered by officious parents and, yes, corporate interests.  Once upon a time, Little League was a small-town civic responsibility, set up so a locale’s young boys could simply play competitive baseball on placid Saturday afternoons. Now? It’s on television for weeks on end, with competing teams from as far away as Sri Lanka. The fun has been bleached out.

America’s moved so far and so fast from its innocent days of 50, 60 years ago.  Allow me, kind readers, to recall Mr. Gripes’ own momentous first day of Little League. Asked to appear for a tryout at a local elementary school, I dutifully showed up, a shy, eager, energetic and, above all, frightened boy of 7 or 8, with about fifty other boys.  We were told to get in line, as one of the coaches proceeded down the queue, writing down names. When he was in front of me, my heart thumping through my chest, the coach, who was, I dimly remember, a rather aggressive, loud type, screamed out, “Son, where’s your glove?” My parents, adherents to a decidedly benign-neglect approach to child-rearing, had forgotten to purchase a baseball glove for their eldest son. Truth be told, I had never swung a bat, or tried on a baseball glove before that day. To my eternal mortification and humiliation, of all the kids at this tryout, I was the only boy — and a doctor’s son, to boot — who did not have a glove.

The coach, who knew my father in passing, just stood there, incredulous, shaking his head slightly, further embarrassing me. In retrospect, I suspect he was contemplating a riddle Mr. Gripes has been pondering his entire life, “What planet do these Israels come from?” I have little memory of anything else from that day, except I took my fielding trials at shortstop with a first baseman’s mitt borrowed from my cousin, did not mishandle any ball hit to me, came in first or second in all of the sprint races, and didn’t hit badly either. The smirk on that coach’s face disappeared. Following the tryout, I was handed a note to be taken home and given to my dad. I didn’t have the nerve to examine it, but I’ll bet it went along the lines of, “Jimmy appears to possess the instincts to be a pretty good ballplayer, but please for God’s sake, buy him a goddam glove, will you, Doc!” Two days later, I received a brand-new, gorgeous Bobby Richardson infielder’s glove. From that day on, I never stopped playing baseball for twenty years.

My point – too long in coming, I know – is this: In those days, boys played baseball all the time – on school playgrounds, in friends’ backyards, on streets, everywhere, until nightfall, when we couldn’t see the ball any longer. We chose sides, and played and played. There were no adults around to supervise, to organize, or to schedule. We simply played because we loved to swing that bat and run those bases. For Mr. Gripes, it was the great passion – by far – of his childhood. And there were not any meddling parents around. Yes, there was Little League, but essentially until the age of 12 or 13, it was strictly for Saturdays, with a practice or two during the week. Inadvertently we were given the gift of time and space to learn the basics of cooperation and fair play on our own. And, above all,  baseball taught us about getting back up after failure – maybe it’s the pitcher forgetting about the monstrous home run he just gave up, and mustering up the nerve to face the next batter, or the hitter completely overmatched a couple of times at bat, yet not surrendering an inch when he gets up again. That’s a great lesson, the idea of failing, rising off the mat and moving forward despite formidable obstacles. And, boys then played the game in total anonymity; sure, parents came to Little League games, but for the most part we were left alone. That’s Mr. Gripes’ advice: allow children to find their own passion at their own pace. Parents, sure, enjoy your child’s Little League games, but try not to interfere – just let the kids be kids. That way, the love for the game will endure.

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Iran, Big Bopper and the Imperfect Perfect Game

Posted by James Israel | Posted in Baseball, Iran, Rock and Roll | Posted on 20-07-2009

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Iran – A nation that operates solely on religious principles – the theocracy in Iran, for one –cannot endure – impossible. A clash between a burgeoning class of young, educated citizens and a corrupt ruling religious order was inevitable. Something’s got to give in this struggle, and I’m afraid in the short run it’s not going to be the deadly grim and frightened mullahs.

The ‘Supreme Leader’: That appellation, redolent of Orwell or the Land of Oz, sums up beautifully the pomposity, grandiosity and, yes, the fraudulence of the ruling mullah class. The story goes that the Grand Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the revolution that overthrew the Shah, was the embodiment of God on Earth. As he was dying, he passed, through his fingertips, his divinity to Ali Khamenei, the present ruler and Supreme Leader. Since he’s essentially the channel of God’s will, every decision he makes is just, final and absolute. Today, he’s murdering his country’s women and children. Some divinity. A theocracy must fail – to cite Karl Marx, the contradictions become too apparent.

In the flush of elation after the Shah was overthrown, the Iranian revolution and ruling class were sustained for thirty years. This past election destroyed the legitimacy of the regime, though. The Supreme Leader, injecting the will of God, steals the election. The Big Lie didn’t work any longer. Iranians were not duped; the ruling mullahs treated the voters as dumb, powerless fools, and enraged the citizenry. And, then, when students, not yet besieged by work, marriage, children or all the other burdens of middle age, decided to act on their impulses, the revolution was on.

A couple of thoughts on religion in general: at the outset, let me state emphatically that Mr. Gripes is a strong proponent of freedom of religion – any individual should be permitted to worship whomever or whatever they choose: Buddha, the Virgin Mary, false idols, The Supreme Moose of the Northwest, witch doctors, burning bushes, Zeus, or, indeed, although I can barely refrain from cursing, psycho-wacko Scientology with all its nutty Hollywood trappings – it’s not my business to object. But what I can’t support is the imposition of a particular religion on any other person. Worship in your church, and leave everyone else alone. ‘Organized’ religion, though, doesn’t leave well enough alone. Every religion, certainly, thinks its divine path is the only true path to enlightenment and to whatever awaits us after death. Emanating from a belief in a religion’s superiority is the urgency to convert practitioners of alien faiths. And, that in a nutshell is why so many murderous, bestial cruelties have occurred through the ages. The prospects of a glorious, idyllic afterlife have been the excuse to unleash unspeakable horrors on the ‘unenlightened’ masses. The reality is that there’s no such thing as a ‘superior’ religion: none of us knows what awaits us, none of us has seen God, and, if indeed there is a merciful God, he works on a ‘level playing field’; He would assert surely, ‘No religion, just like no man should lord over any other man, is superior to any other religion.’ Unfortunately, world history, seized by power, money and the sexual allure of women, has rarely operated according to that precept – just the opposite, in fact.

By the time you, my readers, have read this column, I fear the courage and collective strength of millions of protesting Iranians may have already been expunged by the implacable mullah power structure in Iran. The state has all the weapons, police and sadistic militias on their side, and will not hesitate, once the decision is made, to shoot and kill their own citizens; the ruling mullahs, no longer legitimate in the eyes of citizens, desperately cling to power. The will of God must be served even if thousands are murdered. The universities will be closed for a long time, and when they’re re-opened the curriculum will be entirely Islamic-based. Suppression works when the opposition has no guns.
But, despite a foreboding sense that this will end in terrible bloodshed, Mr. Gripes marvels at the irrepressible human soul. Exploited, beaten, humiliated, and treated often as nothing more than lumps of animal flesh, the arc of history demonstrates that human beings just don’t give up; their instinctive yearning for lives of free will and free thought inexorably compel them to act, in the face of impossible odds and likely imprisonment or death. That’s courage. History tells us over and over this spirit can never be vanquished for long.

NY Postscript – A month ago, Mr. Gripes described the inconceivable catastrophe that’s befallen New York citizens: I was referring to our New York State government, a quagmire of immense proportions. I’m sorry [actually not so sorry: it's grist for Mr. Gripes' mill] to say it’s gotten even more farcical.
Let me describe the current scene: the NY Senate, comprised of 62 individuals, as of two weeks ago was split 32 Democrats and 30 Republicans. A majority leader, who guides the activities of the body, was a Democrat, obviously. Everything changed about 10 days ago, when 2 Democrats moved over to the Republican side, giving the Republicans control of the Senate; they naturally voted in a Republican as the new majority leader. Not so fast: the Democrats, boiling mad, asserted the majority leader election was bogus, and refused to enter the chamber to conduct business. In fact, they locked the doors to the Senate, and no one could get in. Unbelievable.

Governor David Paterson, a non-comprehending boob constantly stumbling over himself, not because he’s blind, but because of his bumbling incompetence, initially says and does nothing, but then, astoundingly, insists the delay in Senate business is preventing lobbyists [??] from carrying out their occupational duties. It only gets worse. One of the Democrats-turned-Republican reneges on his new party, and returns to the Democratic fold. Now, it is 31-31, a deadlock. [Let me make a stab at the inducement that compelled this man to come back to the party: he's promised funding for his son-in-law's non-profit 'community' program, of which exactly $11.31 will actually go to the community, and $432,000 will be his son-in-law's annual salary for 'running' the one-desk, no-phone operation.]

Let’s go on: It’s 31-31. Nothing’s happening as of this writing, and hasn’t for a week. No sessions, no legislation, no meetings, nothing. Each one of these clowns goes before the TV cameras, and says we must get on “with the people’s business,” but it’s the other party’s fault. During this period, it’s gotten so ridiculous that one senator, who would be the new Republican leader, wanted a judge to permit him to cast TWO votes in any legislative vote: one as a regular senator, and one as majority leader. This action, he claimed, is necessary to break a deadlocked vote. A legislator asking for a judicial OK so he could vote two times: that’s got to be a first in the history of the glorious, ‘one-man-one-vote’ republic.

Back to the business of the ‘people’. Mr. Gripes is a ‘people’ in this great commonwealth, and he’d like to proffer a people’s resolution to fix all of this: let’s borrow from France two guillotines, refurbish and lubricate them, restoring the blades to their razor-sharp calibration of, say, 1793. Place them outside on the Albany public plaza, in plain view of Senators peering down from the large French windows of their chamber. Relate to the Senators that they’d better get to work, or citizens, amassing in large numbers on the square, will be permitted to enter the Senate, and conduct less parliamentary but far more purposeful business of their own, perhaps replicating the actions of a vigilante mob. Surely that, as the cliché goes, “will focus the minds” of our august senators, who might even extract their thumbs out of their rear ends and take up the “business of the people.”

The ‘Perfect’ Game – This year is the 50th anniversary of the greatest pitching performance in baseball history: a 5’7″ lefthander of middling ability named, in alliterative fashion, Harvey Haddix, threw twelve innings of perfect baseball – facing 36 batters – and got them all out, not one runner reaching first base. Sometimes, though, a man who has achieved his dream is humbled by sudden reversals in life. Mr. Haddix, who for this one game outpitched Mathewson, Walter Johnson, Koufax, Cleveland, Feller, Maddox, all of the greats, never did complete his perfection, and in fact lost the game. After 12 innings, the score was 0-0. In the 13th inning, the opponent, the Milwaukee Braves, got their first base runners on base, and scored a couple of runs on a Joe Adcock [remember him?] home run – later changed to a double due to a Hank Aaron running mistake — and won the game. I distinctly recall reading about this the following morning, and simply thinking, “Wow… this’ll never happen again.” 36 up and 36 down. And he got beat.

Chat rooms - Here’s a statistic I saw the other day in the Wall Street Journal: out of the 300,000,000 Chinese citizens who have access to the Internet, 100,000,000 use chat rooms. Consider that. China’s a country with a tightly controlled press, no right to assemble in a public gathering, and an educational system that extols a mass-murderer like Mao Tse-tung, run by a decrepit, corrupt Communist government — yet chat rooms thrive. Mr. Gripes observes the on-going atomization of American society, as family and social ties continually diminish in importance, and can only conclude that when – not if – China evolves into a more democratic, fair-minded social system, we are cooked. The Chinese ethos of collective will and massive cooperative effort – witness the phenomenon of the chat room – with the backing of a future government that citizens believe in — will simply roll over the world.

Elvis – An eight-year-old neighbor of mine some 25 years ago, Amanda, was asked for her opinion of Elvis Presley. Her answer: “Presley? I didn’t know Elvis had a last name.” You’re right, Amanda, there’ll always be just one Elvis. As summertime commences, I’d just like to offer a couple of tiny biographical tidbits about the monumental Mr. Presley:

* He never appeared in a public performance, other than playing his guitar on his apartment stoop for a couple of friends, before his incandescent discovery. Not at high school, not at church, nowhere.
* Mariah Carey was recently awarded a well-earned plaque for selling her 150-millionth album. In order to catch Elvis, Ms. Carey would have to sell another 850,000,000 records: Elvis is over one billion, and counting.
* A couple of months before his first song was played on the radio [it debuted after midnight one Saturday night, by a bored D.J. who decided to play something new], Elvis and his buddies were arrested for vagrancy in a Memphis park, and escorted out by policemen. Six months after that airing, a park concert was scheduled, and Mr. Presley had to be shielded from thousands of screaming fans, so he was escorted into the identical park by the very same cops. Ah, the vicissitudes of life. Incidentally, Tim McCarver, the TV baseball announcer, grew up in Memphis and was at that concert. Mr. McCarver, a macho ex-major-league catcher with the St. Louis Cardinals, later declared, “Elvis was the most beautiful man I ever saw.”

Chantilly Lace - Today’s the first day of summer. Summertime, the beach and rock ‘n roll are interwoven. In its honor, I’d like to present as the final piece in today’s column the pure essence of rock ‘n roll, millions of miles from the elaborate dross rock ‘n roll has become. The Who, Pink Floyd, U-2, Jewel, Madonna, and Coldplay: some of these performers are excellent, but they’re so removed from the essence of early rock ‘n roll. The Big Bopper in Chantilly Lace joyously brings it back:

Hello Baby, yeah, this is the Big Bopper speaking,
Ha, Ha, you sweet thing,
Do I what? Will I what? Oh, baby, you know what I like…
Chantilly Lace and a pretty face and a pony tail hangin’ down
A wiggle and a walk and a giggle and a talk made the world go round
There ain’t nothing in the world like a big-eyed girl to make me act so
Funny, make me spend my money, make me fool so loose like a long-
Necked goose,
[yelling] OH BABY THAT’S WHAT I LIKE.

Roll over, Chaucer, and tell Shelley the news. Early rock ‘n roll always speaks the truth.

Comments? Feel free to send remarks to: JamesIsrael77@yahoo.com

June 20, 2009