MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Buckley's splendid eulogies

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I come late to the William F. Buckley eulogy party, a full week as a matter of fact. I was going to skip it entirely but I finally read my Newsweek magazine, which devoted precious newshole to the passing of the conservative icon.There was the long retrospective on his career by Evan Thomas, accompanied by a couple of respectful appreciations by Katrina Vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher of The Nation, the country’s premier liberal magazine, and Michael Gerson, George W. Bush’s exceptional speechwriter who sups now at the trough of several publications, Newsweek and the Washington Post included.Before I go any further, I should get this out of the way: among his many admirable qualities, Mr. Buckley was a very charming man and he gave great parties.Douglas Martin began his obituary in The New York Times this way:

William F. Buckley Jr., who marshaled polysyllabic exuberance, arched eyebrows and a refined, perspicacious mind to elevate conservatism to the center of American political discourse, died on Wednesday at his home in Stamford, Conn. He was 82.

No purpose will be served rehashing all the encomiums Buckley’s passing garnered. He was a great guy. A great writer. A great wit. Founded a magazine. He was the father of the conservative movement.Some of his eulogizers lamented what has become of the conservative movement he founded. Current crop of conservatives just don’t have the style, the civilized manner of Buckley. David Brooks, a protégé of Buckley who now occupies valuable real estate on The New York Times op-ed page, lamented the return of the haters and rabble rousers long after Buckley thought he had banished them from his movement.Brooks and others, as quoted by Newsweek, on Buckley:

For more than a half century, William F. Buckley Jr., who died last week at 82, largely inspired and held together the conservative movement that is collapsing today. The Wall Street Journal editorialized: “Several generations of conservatives grew up (in more than one sense) with Bill Buckley. Now they have—well, there is no one like him.” “He changed the personality of conservatism,” Brooks says. “It had been sort of negative, and he made it smart and sophisticated and pushed out all these oddballs and created a movement.” More recently, says Brooks, conservatism has “lost something.” In the conservatism spawned by talk radio and TV, the haters and know-nothings are back, ranting about immigrants and liberals. “It was a lot more philosophical under him,” he says. At those nightly salons, Buckley liked to talk and argue about ideas and literature and the nature of man; politics was rarely mentioned. “The new conservatives are not as intellectually creative as those dealing with communism and socialism,” says Brooks. Buckley tolerated some disreputable ideas, including segregation; but he had the capacity to change.

And vanden Heuvel had this to say early in her appreciation of Buckley:

And while he ceased to argue that Africans will be ready to run their own affairs “when they stop eating each other,” neither he nor his magazine ever fully repudiated the poisonous role it played in stoking white supremacists’ anger against the civil-rights movement.

The same Mr. Buckley called author Gore Vidal a “queer” and threatened to punch him out on his television show, The Firing Line. Charming indeed.

I’m sorry, Mr. Buckley might have had nicer manners but how is this any better than any of Rush Limbaugh or Ann Coulter’s serial assault on common-sense and decency?

William F. Buckley was an unreconstructed racist who comforted segregationists everywhere, including the purveyors of the long discredited policy of apartheid in South Africa. Buckley and the pages of the National Review provided ballast to the Reagan administration as it resisted all entreaties to help topple that evil regime.

That this man was welcomed in respectable society when he was alive was bad enough. That he was, on his death, further celebrated in the pages of respectable mainstream publications is both tragic and shameful.

Questions, not verse . . .

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A friend, Lewis Blain, sent on these questions:

After yesterday’s outcome I feel the urge to remind everyone of our past and what we need to do to get ahead.

1) Why is it that a Black Man can

create a tiny piece called a filament(electric light – Lewis Latimer) That allows people to see in the dark But can’t be seen fit to lead a country to the true light.

2) Why is it that a Black Man can

create an instrument (clock – Benjamin Banneker) That all People use to tell time? But people don’t think it is time for him to run a country.

3) Why is it that a Black Man can

design a place for the high authoritiesto meet in & a place for the President to live in (The Capital & the White House Phillip Reid–a slave–& Â Pierre L’Enfant)?But not good enough to lead these meetings or live in himself.

4) Why is it that a Black Man was

brilliant enough to do the first openheart surgery (Dr. Daniel Hale Williams)And show the world how to get and preserve plasma (Dr. Charles Drew)? But not good enough to put a program in place where everyone can afford this surgery.

5) Why is it that a Black Man was

creative enough to design an instrument (traffic light – Garrett Morgan) To bring multiple people (traffic) to a halt?But not seen creative enough to design a plan to bring all this unnecessary and worthless Fighting between countries to an end.

6) Why is it that a Black Man could

create the soles (shoes – Jan Matzeliger) that people Walk on everyday? But not seen good enough to fill the shoes of a bad president.

7) Why is it that a Black Man was

smart enough & brave enough to teach himself (Fredrick Douglas & Thomas Fuller – both slaves) and others how to read, write and/or calculate math?

But not seen (as) smart enough and bold enough to calculate a platform to be President to a country That sure needs another first by us.

So you see my Brothers and Sisters what I am saying is let us not forget our past, Which led us to our present and can definitely be the backbone to our future.

We were good enough,

smart enough, creative enough, and bold enough then, so Lets all give Obama the chance to show that we are still these things and more.

We all are as strong

as our weakest link, so don’t be that weak link that denies

Our people that chance to

show we still can OVERCOME & BE THE FIRST

Results are in

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Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, (D-NY), scored comprehensive wins in Ohio and Texas. She also won in Rhode Island. Her opponent, Sen. Barack Obama, (D-IL), won in Vermont. The wins helped stanch Mrs. Clinton’

s string of 11 straight losses since her big night on Super Tuesday.

The next ‘fight of the century’

figures to be in Pennsylvania in late April. And, as she did before last night, she may have to sustain another string of losses to Sen. Obama in the race to be the Democratic Party nominee for president of the United States before that primary.

Thus it always is with the Clintons, drama, emotions, whether real or cooked up.

There can be no doubt anymore that the Clintons will do whatever it takes, including damaging the eventual Democratic Party nominee, to win this nomination. For Sen. Clinton, the nomination is destiny. For former Pres. Bill Clinton, it is redemption.They are not about to stand by and let Sen. Obama, soaring rhetoric or not, get in the way of that. What Mr. Obama has to show now is how he fights.

Irrefutable

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This kind of infallible logic is exactly how you become a big city newspaper columnist.

Sen. Barack Obama, (D-IL), has won 11 straight Democratic Party primaries and caucuses in the contest with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, (D-NY), for the presidential nomination. During the past month, Mr. Obama has won states big and small, won some of them by landslide. He has won so-called ‘blue’ and ‘red’ states. In other words, he has won in every way imaginable.

This puts Sen. Obama exactly where Sen. Clinton wants him, according to New York Daily News political columnist Michael Goodwin:

You hear it everywhere: Tuesday is Hillary Clinton‘s last stand. If she can’t win Ohio and Texas, she’s history.

True, mostly. But it’s not the whole story. The rest goes like this: This is Barack Obama‘s third chance to knock her out. If he can’t close the deal this time, maybe he can’t close the deal, period.

Either the third time is the charm for him, or it could be strike three against him. Any result tomorrow that doesn’t finish her off lets her argue that Democratic voters’ love affair with Obama was just one of those flings. She’ll say buyer’s remorse has set in, and it’s time to get serious about winning the White House.

This must be a natural extension of the Clinton campaign’s weekend argument that Obama not only has win all contests on Tuesday because he spent more money than she did, but that he has to win all contests by comfortable margins. Why? Because she’s the underdog and he’s spent more money than she did.

Talk about turning weaknesses into strength.

Stories my mother told me . . .

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This is one of them.

My mother was about 15 when she got pregnant with me. My father was 18.

Terrified to go to her own family, she approached my father’s sister and told her of her predicament. The two young women hatched a plan to make the problem, me, go away. They would procure an abortion for my mother.

I forgot to mention this was in Africa and in the early 1960’s.

Just imagine what the practice of abortion was like in this country in the 1960’s and you’ll understand that undergoing the procedure in Africa then would have ended in certain death for my mother.

But my mother’s biggest fear was realized. Her father found out about the pregnancy and ended the talk of abortion.

I was born and my early childhood was spent in my grandfather’s compound in Accra, Ghana. The consequences of those decisions set the course of my life. My mother never finished high school (she was fond of telling I was her high school diploma until I made her stop). Attendant to that was crushing poverty that ruled much of my life.

The good news, however, was that my mother did not die and I lived.

Bates for News

Six-month-old Daniella broke the hearts of New Yorkers everywhere when Sailema claimed she was left in his cab.

I reminisce about this now because of little Daniella, the 6-month-old that a few people are in a whale of trouble for trying to make sure she is safe. Cabby Klever Sailema turned her over to Queens firefighters, claiming a fare had abandoned the infant in his cab. That story turned out not to be true.

Klever Sailema spoke to the Daily News from his lawyer’s office in the Bronx.

Now he’s going to be punished. So will Daniella’s father, Carlos Rodas, 27, when cops catch up with him.

I was taken by the age of the mother, 14, and the insanity of punishing her and any of the people (well, Rodas does deserve sanction for taking advantage of a child) for trying to think of a way to make sure Daniella is safe and cared for. She was not much younger than my own mother was when she faced the same questions. The plan they hatched was, at best, hare-brained.

But, if the hoped for outcome is adoption, what exactly is wrong with that?

This story could have had a tragic ending. We’ve heard and seen too many times little children like Daniella being killed by the hands of their ward?

Maybe Sailema, a 45-year-old father of three from Elmhurst, Queens, does not deserve a hero’s medal but I’m not sure he deserves the charges against him either. What good is served by punishing Maria Siavichay, 21, Daniella’s aunt, who may have cooked up this ‘solution’?

I see this whole incident as a distress call for our community. Our sex education program is sorely lacking. A good sex education program does not, of course, mitigate statutory rape. But Daniella’s 14-year-old mother should have had better information to cope with her situation every misbegotten step of the way. And she should have had better resources after becoming pregnant. Our entire child welfare system failed her.

Here’s another thing: Our society does not aid families. We don’t help young families.

Here’s my question: What should Sailema and Siavichay have done?

These kids . . .

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Alex Moni of New Jersey was working for the Obama campaign in Corpus Christi.

Photo: Michael Stravato for The New York Times

At the end of the day, I like the profile of the Obama Democratic Party. It is young, diverse, resourceful, and self-generating. That bodes well for the future of the party. If Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, (D-NY), ends up the party’s nominee, she is going to have to harness the energy of the primary to govern.

The fear, of course, is that we’re going to be so busy fighting old Clinton wars, including whatever Bill is up to this time around, that we won’t have time to address and of the issues facing the nation.

Anna Scott of Montana, the Bowie County campaign field coordinator for Barack Obama, helped Ruth Blackwell, 83, with her e-mail address last week in Texarkana, Tex.

I have to give Mrs. Clinton props for how well she has fought back in the last few days. It has not been an easy campaign for her and people are so quick to see fault and write her off. Many of the problems are of her making. She seems to be coming back from them, however.

I hope she puts some of the lessons learned to good use if she ends up the nominee.

The people's house

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Last August, a bridge fell in Minneapolis and we learned it would cost $225 billion a year for the next 50 years just to maintain America’s crumbling roadways and bridges.

A new report just out says African Americans still lag behind white Americans significantly in income, education and other measures of well-being.

Healthcare in America is abysmal. Education is even worse. The health index for America’s children is worse than in many third world countries.

Remember that illegal war that we lied our way into? It’s still going on and America’s service men and women are still dying for lack of proper gear.

Another new report says one in every 100 American is now behind bars, a new record.

Every indication is that the American economy is cratering, on the verge of collapse.

And I am sure there are even more serious problems plaguing our nation that I am overlooking. At least I know the men and women that we elected to the United States Senate and the House of Representative are hard at work tackling those problems.

Why, just yesterday, a Congressional subcommittee held a hearing where it threatened to impose on America’s major sports cartel testing for performance enhancing drugs.

A different committee has asked the U.S. Justice Department to investigate whether an athlete lied in his testimony trying to refute allegations of PED use made by a former friend of his, an admitted serial liar.

The greatest show on earth

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News flash! Congress to investigate pitching great Roger Clemens for perjury.

Members of Congress, mostly Democrats, especially Henry Waxman, want the United States Justice Department to investigate whether Clemens was telling the truth when he appeared in a farcical hearing that even Waxman found embarrassing and wished he had not held.

This was a hearing where gas bag politicians, not prosecutors, were questioning Clemens about the testimony from an inveterate liar, a drug dealer, and date rapist Brian McNamee that he had injected Clemens with steroids and other substances. No one has any other testimony other than McNamee’s.

They would seek to use the words of Yankee pitching great Andy Pettitte to buttress McNamee’s shaky testimony.

This is not going to end well. For Congress. And the Justice Department. Also, I have a feeling that this nation faces far more serious problems than this trumped up drama.

Bloomberg's city

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The best Levi Jeans I ever wore as a child growing up in Africa were not the ones sent to me by my father, who lived in Chicago at the time. They were the knock-offs made in the warren of factories in Lagos, Nigeria.

The Nigeria of my youth had a highly educated but under-employed workforce. The situation today is not that different, except that that workforce is even more educated now and even more under-employed.

What brings about this little trip down memory lane?

Action by goons working for New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg in a raid in Chinatown yesterday. $1 million in counterfeit goods seized in NYC raidSo said the headline of the Associated Press story Newsday ran yesterday.

The Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement, after two months of investigation, descended on an area they called the “Counterfeit Triangle” and seized counterfeit Gucci, Prada, Fendi, Rolex and Coach goods.

I am not saying counterfeiters are good for the economy but these Americans trying to work, something to help their families (the government surely ain’t gonna do it) and they get harassed.

First, corporations devalue work and shipped it to overseas sweatshops. Then when some of the people left behind try to do a little work, they arrest them for alleged quality of life violation.Of course, no sooner were the members of this special unit—cops and buildings and finance inspectors—back in their office after this little charade than the hawkers were back on the street peddling the same wares.

This is what I’ve come to expect from the Bloomberg administration. This is the same mayor who promulgated a law against picking up furniture that people have disposed off on city sidewalks. My friend Todd at Yankees For Justice wrote about this a month ago.

Other people’s discards were the only way I furnished my city apartment back in the days. Then Bloomberg not only made that against the law, he confiscated your vehicle if you put the trash you just picked up in your car or van. I did that. I would see something and, if it was too big to carry, I’d run and get my car, hoping no else got to it before I got back.

And when I made the mistake of a putting perfectly good Sony television on the sidewalk, it was gone before I could change my mind and bring it back in.

I did not consider the person who took that television a thief. It’s a time-honored New York City tradition. Until the abomination that is Mike Bloomberg.

Now, his department of Sanitation trumpets how many people they arrest and how many vehicles they seized on a city website.

I know some people think Bloomberg has been great for New York City. I guess anyone coming after Rudy Giuliani has to be considered great in comparison. Bloomberg is a charlatan who didn’t want to be mayor but ran as a lark.

I cannot wait for his nightmare reign to end.