Daily Archives: April 16, 2014


Steve Grossman For Governor

I have been tending toward supporting Steve Grossman who is a candidate for Governor of Massachusetts.

I have heard a remark about someone being dead set against him because as a former head of AIPAC, he has a very bigoted view of Arabs. Anyone who has read many of the things that I have posted about Israel and Palestinians would know that I am one Jew that would take a very dim view of this purported attitude of Grossman. In fact, I take such a dim view of such attitudes, that many of my relatives have unfriended me on Facebook. How’s that for my bona fides?

So, I thought that I really ought to do some research on Steve Grossman to see if these accusations are warranted. Below is the result of my research. Let me cut to the chase. I have not found any evidence that would support the allegation. In fact quite the opposite. After doing this research, I am a much stronger supporter of Steve Grossman than I was when I started. I am grateful that the disparaging remarks about Steve Grossman encouraged me to do this research.

Google search steve Grossman for governor Palestinian

MA-Gov 2014 is on: Senator Dan Wolf blasts Treasurer Steve Grossman.  There is nothing in the article itself about Grossman and Arabs, but there are some comments that allude to the topic. For technical reasons, I can only include them here as an image. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Comments from the Wolf Blasts Grossman article

Steve Grossman, ex-AIPAC chair, running for Mass. governor from JTA – Global Jewish News Source.

He served as chairman of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
from 1992 to 1997.

In Mass. governor’s race packed with Jewish candidates, much talk of repairing the world

Steve Grossman, the state treasurer and a past chairman of the
Democratic National Committee, quotes from Isaiah in describing his
ambition to close the gap between rich and poor.

“I received my Jewish heritage, my background, in being that person
who can be a repairer of the breach between those who are well-to-do
and those who lack the things people aspire to,” he said in an
interview.

Other Jewish candidates according to the article are Dan Wolf, Evan Falchuk, Don Berwick,

Grossman, 67, takes pride in his role reconciling AIPAC to the
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations launched under Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin in the early 1990s.

“Rabin’s exact words were, ‘AIPAC is the most important American
Jewish organization and I need your help,’ ” Grossman recalls of his
1993 meeting with the late Israeli leader.

Grossman immediately convened a phone conference with the AIPAC
board, and it became the first U.S. Jewish group to endorse the
talks.

“That was probably as meaningful a conversation I’ve had with any
leader,” Grossman said. “I felt I was participating in a small way in
Jewish history.”

The Boston Phoenix March 16 – 23, 2000 article Is Grossman our next governor? This article was the final straw in my research.  There is so much other positive info in the article than what I have excerpted below, that I have become convinced that my choice of Steve Grossman is absolutely the right choice.

Not everyone is so enthusiastic, of course. To critics such as Lou
DiNatale, the director of state and local policy at UMass Boston’s
McCormack Institute, Grossman is a fundraiser, a rich Newton
businessman, a vanity candidate, a dilettante. “Grossman is the
functional equivalent of a Democratic Steve Forbes,” DiNatale says. “He
inherited a company from his family. His credentials are simply those
of being a fundraiser.”

But a closer look at Grossman reveals a
long-time activist committed to the ideals of grassroots politics — a
family commitment that goes all the way back to his grandfather.
.
.
.
The war had personal as well as political consequences for
Grossman. At Harvard he signed an anti-war petition, despite the
warnings of career-conscious classmates who said it would harm his
chances to get a job. Later, he accelerated his business-school program
and joined the US Army Reserves, which fulfilled his military
obligations. That’s where he met Edward Markey, a young man from
Malden. “We were always talking about politics,” Markey remembers.
When Markey announced that he was running for a congressional seat in
1976, Grossman called to offer his family’s support.
.
.
.
During the campaigns of 1992, Grossman acted as a one-man
Democratic truth squad, trailing Governor Weld and his fellow
Republicans as they traversed Massachusetts campaigning for GOP
candidates. And after Paul Tsongas dropped out of the presidential
race, Grossman threw his support to Bill Clinton, whom he had met when
he briefed Clinton on Mideast policy before a speech that the
then-governor of Arkansas made to AIPAC in 1989. By the time Clinton
was inaugurated, Grossman was chairman of AIPAC, and his ties to the
president would serve him well in that capacity. When Grossman met with
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in Jerusalem the very day the news broke
that the Israelis and the Palestinians had secretly been negotiating in
Oslo, Rabin told Grossman the peace deal could not move forward unless
he had the support of the American Jewish community. Toward that end,
Grossman worked with President Clinton to sell the deal and deliver
American backing.

By 1997, Grossman had left AIPAC and was
preparing to take a break from communal work, but his involvement in
party affairs was about to intensify. The fundraising scandals
surrounding the DNC were coming to a head. The party found itself
$20 million in debt, and donors were reluctant to contribute more
money. At this dark moment, Michael Whouley recommended Grossman to
Vice-President Gore for the chairmanship.

I have provided links to all my sources.  You should read them yourself, and you should do your own research.

Mark Twain said
“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”

So please be careful about what you know for sure about Steve Grossman. I will continue to keep my eyes and ears open so that I can be sure, too.


Official Sturbridge Annual Town Election Results

I just received the Official Sturbridge Annual Town Election Results by email.

Here are the Annual Town Election Results translated to a form you can actually read. This file is also readable as an MS Excel spreadsheet.

I don’t know if the embedding below will be more or less easy for you to read than the whole file in the link above. Take your pick. It might be easier to download the above file to your computer if you wish to save it.

In your browser you can use the controls or shortcut key to shrink this down so that you might be able to see it easily on this page. On Windows machines the shortcut is Ctrl– (Control minus). To get your browser window back to normal size the shortcut on Windows is Ctrl-0 (control zero).



Climate change is more than data

I got an email from Organizing For Action with the subject “Climate change is more than data”. I might be tempted to chalk this up to synchronicity with my previous post April Snow Highlights Global Climate Change.

Whatever, the cause, the email led me to some interesting places.

There was a suggestion to Go watch the trailer for “Years of Living Dangerously,” and share it with your friends today.

On YouTube it is Years of Living Dangerously Trailer #2.

It’s the biggest story of our time. Hollywood’s brightest stars and today’s most respected journalists explore the issues of climate change and bring you intimate accounts of triumph and tragedy. YEARS OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY takes you directly to the heart of the matter in this awe-inspiring and cinematic documentary series event from Executive Producers James Cameron, Jerry Weintraub and Arnold Schwarzenegger.



The edited full episode is at Years of Living Dangerously Premiere Full Episode.

Hollywood celebrities and respected journalists span the globe to explore the issues of climate change and cover intimate stories of human triumph and tragedy. Watch new episodes Sundays at 10PM ET/PT, only on SHOWTIME.


The interleaving of different threads of the story is maddening, and I still think Thomas Friedman is an a-hole, but the show is still very much worth watching. “most respected journalists” indeed. They couldn’t have done worse to find a journalist with “more respect” except if they had picked someone from Faux Noise. Thomas Friedman has been glibly wrong about more things than anybody but perhaps Tim Russert.


April Snow Highlights Global Climate Change

I have seen a few comments about how this snow storm is incompatible with the idea of global warming.  First I have to point out that what we see in the northern hemisphere is only half of what is in the global climate.  Remember what is below the equator?

Then I have to bring you a sad recollection for those of you who are under the age of 37. May 9, 1977 Historic NorthEast Snowstorm, This Day in History.

May 9, 1977 — A late season snowstorm hit parts of Pennsylvania, New York State, and southern and central New England. Heavier snowfall totals included 27 inches at Slide Mountain New York and 20 inches at Norfolk, Connecticut. At Boston it was the first May snow in 107 years of records. The heavy wet snow caused extensive damage to trees and power lines. The homes of half a million people were without power following the storm.

We were living in Bolton at the time.  The number I seem to recall was 17 inches of snow.  We returned from a vacation in Florida to find our house without power.  We didn’t bother to unpack.  We just headed for a motel in Ayer.  Shelah commuted to school in Bolton from Ayer for a few days.

So if you measure the changes over the last 37 years, a sprinkle of snow in April is global warming. If it’s not warming, then hold onto your hats, May is coming.

Just one idiosyncratic, non-scientific point of view. (In other words, this post is meant to be humorous 🙂


Our Rad Justice System: The even hand of the law

Matt Bors has the cartoon Our Rad Justice System: The even hand of the law.

Matt Bors Cartoon

By not prosecuting people responsible for the financial fraud collapse of 2009, we are implicitly saying that white collar injury to large numbers of people is not as bad as a petty crime. This is why the lack of jail sentences in the fraud case is so harmful to our society.

When are we going to wake up to who is a greater threat to us and who is not?