Well, my building never even pretended to be Trump Tower, or maybe it did
because it does have "tower" in its name, Maple Tower Condominiumns, even
though it's a square squat building. And for the record, it's not a
retirement building. Young single folks, and couples with little kids live
here, as well as older folks.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2016 10:53 AM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: Betsy DeVos, Trump's Big-Donor Education
Secretary
And all of those "pretenders" who believed they were successful examples of
the American Dream, moved into a building that began falling in around their
ears, never stopping to understand that this very building represented all
that was Donald Trump. His kind built that building, and many thousands of
others just like it. We have served clients in "high end" retirement
apartments, where entire walls had to be torn out in order to clean out the
black mold that had been growing there for the five or six years since the
building first opened. And so many of these fancy retirement apartment
buildings were sold early on, to huge corporations. Staff positions were
cut; replaced by low paid help. Meals that had been top of the line when
the buildings opened, were cheapened to meals no better than those served in
the homes of many working poor.
But we were coaxed by the pied pipers of Wall Street, to turn our anger
toward our government.
Speaking of those little houses, I know they represent the wide spread
American Suburbia, but it was the best I could do...and besides I love the
song. And it does remind us...some of us...that we are watching the
"dumbing down" of more than our minds. Our life style is being "dumbed
Down", too.
But before I head off down this long, complex road that leads to a leveling
of America's Poor and Working Classes, I will shut up.
Carl Jarvis
On 11/28/16, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
But the little boxes in the song aren't Puerto Rico. They're Americangone.
suburbia. They're Long Island where I live which is why Long Islanders
voted for Trump in such great numbers. And these are the, excuse the
expression, iddle class, better educated people, well, many of them
are. They're actually the working class with delusions of grandeur.
They're the people who own condos in my apartment building who said at
a meeting I attended when I first got here, "This is a luxury
building!" Of course, they never saw a real luxury building. I did
when I did home studies for the very wealthy in Manhattan. Those
buildings have one apartment on a floor, or sometimes, 2 floors, and
the apartments were bigger than my house, which was pretty big. But
the people in my building saw the marble on the lobby floor and the
security guard at the desk and they thought they had purchased luxury.
The fact that the building was built so poorly, that there were
terrible leaks in many of the apartments and in the underground
parking area, and that the door frames weren't straight and the doors
weren't flush with the frames, all that went unnoticed.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2016 6:11 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: Betsy DeVos, Trump's Big-Donor
Education Secretary
"Make America Strong Again!"
Translated, this Trump proclamation means, "We're bringing back the
90's...the 1890's.
With a congress controled by conservatives, and Trump bravely leading
the way, "For Sale" signs will be popping up on many of our public
owned properties.
Remember, Capitalism is like, besides an out of control cancer,
Ca;pitalism is like a giant vacuum cleaner. Whenever a little loose
change is left laying around...Whoosh!, a loud sucking noise and it's
Just look at all that loose change. Trust funds and government pensions.2014.
Public buildings and bridges, not to mention entire freeways, all can
be better run by private corporations.
I tell you, the day is close at hand when the USA will look just like
Puerto Rico. we'll all live in little boxes. But we won't own them.
Little boxes on the hillside,
Little boxes all the same.
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one,
And they're all made out of ticky tacky And they all look just the
same.
And the people in the houses
All went to the university,
Where they were put in boxes
And they came out all the same,
And there's doctors and lawyers,
And business executives,
And they're all made out of ticky tacky And they all look just the
same.
And they all play on the golf course
And drink their martinis dry,
And they all have pretty children
And the children go to school,
And the children go to summer camp
And then to the university,
Where they are put in boxes
And they come out all the same.
And the boys go into business
And marry and raise a family
In boxes made of ticky tacky
And they all look just the same.
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one,
And they're all made out of ticky tacky And they all look just the
same.
Malvina Reynolds songbook(s) in which the music to this song appears:
---- Little Boxes and Other Handmade Songs
---- The Malvina Reynolds Songbook
Carl Jarvis
On 11/28/16, joe harcz Comcast <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
And she is now going to head the Dept. of Ed. Her main goal is tothe Kochs'
effectively privatize public education.
And this is surely going to suck for pwd as well.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Miriam Vieni" <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2016 3:57 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] Betsy DeVos, Trump's Big-Donor Education
Secretary
Mayer writes: "After choosing for his cabinet a series of political
outsiders who are loyal to him personally, Donald Trump has broken
with this pattern to name Betsy DeVos his Secretary of Education.
DeVos, whose father-in-law is a co-founder of Amway, the multilevel
marketing empire, comes from the very heart of the small circle of
conservative billionaires who have long funded the Republican Party."
Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos. (photo: Jabin Botsford/WP)
Betsy DeVos, Trump's Big-Donor Education Secretary By Jane Mayer,
The New Yorker
27 November 16
After choosing for his cabinet a series of political outsiders who
are loyal to him personally, Donald Trump has broken with this
pattern to name Betsy DeVos his Secretary of Education. DeVos, whose
father-in-law is a co-founder of Amway, the multilevel marketing
empire, comes from the very heart of the small circle of
conservative billionaires who have long funded the Republican Party.
Trump's choice of DeVos delivers on his campaign promise to increase
the role of charter schools, which she has long championed. But it
also flies
in
the face of his fiery anti-establishment campaign rhetoric. Steve
Bannon, who was named Trump's senior counsellor and chief
strategist, has mocked what he called "the donor class," arguing
that it and the politicians it bankrolls have little understanding
of the needs of working-class and middle-class voters. Such populist
rhetoric fuelled Trump's campaign, in which he presented himself as
an outsider who would govern independently of the corrupt and
out-of-touch private interests that he said had "rigged"
American politics.
But it would be hard to find a better representative of the "donor
class"
than DeVos, whose family has been allied with Charles and David Koch
for years. Betsy, her husband Richard, Jr. (Dick), and her
father-in-law, Richard, Sr., whose fortune was estimated by Forbes
to be worth $5.1 billion, have turned up repeatedly on lists of
attendees at
Republican Party.donor
summits, and as contributors to the brothers' political ventures. In
2010, Charles Koch described Richard DeVos, Sr., as one of
thirty-two "great partners" who had contributed a million dollars or
more to the tens of millions of dollars that the Kochs planned to
spend in that year's campaign cycle.
While the DeVoses are less well known than the Kochs, they have
played a similar role in bankrolling the rightward march of the
Starting in 1970, the DeVos family, which is based in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, began directing at least two hundred million dollars into
funding what was then called "The New Right." The family supported
conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation; academic
organizations such as the Collegiate Studies Institute, which funded
conservative publications on college campuses; and the secretive
Council on National Policy, which the Times called "a little-known
club of a few hundred of the most powerful conservatives in the
country." The Council's membership list, which was kept secret,
included leaders of the Christian right, such as Jerry Falwell, Pat
Robertson, and Phyllis Schlafly, and anti-tax and pro-gun groups.
Richard DeVos, Sr., liked to say that it brought together "the doers
and the donors."
In 1980, the DeVos family contributed heavily to the election of
Ronald Reagan, and DeVos, Sr., was named the finance chair of the
Republican National Committee. Two years later, he was removed,
after calling the brutal 1982 recession a "cleansing process," and
insisting that anyone who was unemployed simply didn't want to work.
That same year, DeVos and his Amway co-founder, Jay Van Andel, were
charged with criminal tax fraud in Canada. Eventually, Amway pleaded
guilty and paid fines of twenty-five million dollars, and the
criminal charges against DeVos and his partner were dropped. Despite
these incidents, the DeVos clan remained a major political force.
"There's not a Republican president or presidential candidate in the
last fifty years who hasn't known the DeVoses," Saul Anuzis, a
former chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, told Mother Jones, in
offense,"The marriage of Dick DeVos to Betsy Prince only increased the
family's wealth and power. Her father, Edgar Prince, had made a
fortune in auto-parts manufacturing, selling his company for $1.35
billion in cash, in 1996.
Her
brother Erik founded Blackwater, the private military company that
the government infamously contracted to work in Afghanistan and
Iraq, where its mercenaries killed more than a dozen civilians in 2007.
DeVos is a religious conservative who has pushed for years to breach
the wall between church and state on education, among other issues.*
(The Washington Post reports that Betsy DeVos has been an elder at
Mars Hill, in Grand Rapids.) Betsy, who served as the chairwoman of
the Michigan Republican Party in the late nineties and again in the
early aughts, spent more than two million dollars of the family's
money on a failed school-vouchers referendum in 2000, which would
have allowed Michigan residents to use public funds to pay for
tuition at religious schools.
The
family then spent thirty-five million dollars, in 2006, on Dick
DeVos's unsuccessful campaign to unseat Jennifer Granholm, then the
Democratic governor of the state. After that campaign, the DeVos
family doubled down
on
political contributions and support for conservative Christian causes.
Members of the family, including Betsy and Dick DeVos, have spent
heavily
in
opposition to same-sex-marriage laws in several states. According to
the Michigan L.G.B.T. publication PrideSource.com, Devos and her
husband led the successful campaign to pass an anti-gay-marriage
ballot referendum in the state in 2004, contributing more than two
hundred thousand dollars to the effort. Dick Devos reportedly gave a
hundred thousand dollars, in 2008, to an amendment that banned
same-sex marriage in Florida. That year, Elsa Prince Broekhuizen,
Betsy Devos's mother, was a major contributor to the effort to pass
Proposition 8, which made same-sex marriage illegal in California.
Trump may have run against big money in politics, but his choice for
Education Secretary has made no apologies about her family's
political spending. Betsy DeVos has been a major financial backer of
legal efforts to overturn campaign-spending limits. In 1997, she
brashly explained her opposition to campaign-finance-reform measures
that were aimed at cleaning up so-called "soft money," a predecessor
to today's unlimited "dark money"
election spending. "My family is the biggest contributor of soft
money to the Republican National Committee," she wrote in the
Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call. "I have decided to stop taking
2014.the Kochs'she wrote, "at the suggestion that we are buying influence. Now I
simply concede the point.
They are right. We do expect something in return. We expect to
foster a conservative governing philosophy consisting of limited
government and respect for traditional American virtues. We expect a
return on our investment."
"People like us," she added archly, "must surely be stopped."
In the 2016 campaign, DeVos continued to spend heavily, but not in
favor of Trump, who, she declared, "does not represent the
Republican Party."
Evidently, she has changed her mind about that, and he has changed
his about the merits of "the donor class."
Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. Error! Hyperlink reference not
valid.
Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos. (photo: Jabin Botsford/WP)
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/betsy-devos-trumps-big-donor
-
educati
on-secretaryhttp://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/betsy-devos-trum
p
s-big-d
onor-education-secretary
Betsy DeVos, Trump's Big-Donor Education Secretary By Jane Mayer,
The New Yorker
27 November 16
fter choosing for his cabinet a series of political outsiders who
are loyal to him personally, Donald Trump has broken with this
pattern to name Betsy DeVos his Secretary of Education. DeVos, whose
father-in-law is a co-founder of Amway, the multilevel marketing
empire, comes from the very heart of the small circle of
conservative billionaires who have long funded the Republican Party.
Trump's choice of DeVos delivers on his campaign promise to increase
the role of charter schools, which she has long championed. But it
also flies
in
the face of his fiery anti-establishment campaign rhetoric. Steve
Bannon, who was named Trump's senior counsellor and chief
strategist, has mocked what he called "the donor class," arguing
that it and the politicians it bankrolls have little understanding
of the needs of working-class and middle-class voters. Such populist
rhetoric fuelled Trump's campaign, in which he presented himself as
an outsider who would govern independently of the corrupt and
out-of-touch private interests that he said had "rigged"
American politics.
But it would be hard to find a better representative of the "donor
class"
than DeVos, whose family has been allied with Charles and David Koch
for years. Betsy, her husband Richard, Jr. (Dick), and her
father-in-law, Richard, Sr., whose fortune was estimated by Forbes
to be worth $5.1 billion, have turned up repeatedly on lists of
attendees at
Republican Party.donor
summits, and as contributors to the brothers' political ventures. In
2010, Charles Koch described Richard DeVos, Sr., as one of
thirty-two "great partners" who had contributed a million dollars or
more to the tens of millions of dollars that the Kochs planned to
spend in that year's campaign cycle.
While the DeVoses are less well known than the Kochs, they have
played a similar role in bankrolling the rightward march of the
Starting in 1970, the DeVos family, which is based in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, began directing at least two hundred million dollars into
funding what was then called "The New Right." The family supported
conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation; academic
organizations such as the Collegiate Studies Institute, which funded
conservative publications on college campuses; and the secretive
Council on National Policy, which the Times called "a little-known
club of a few hundred of the most powerful conservatives in the
country." The Council's membership list, which was kept secret,
included leaders of the Christian right, such as Jerry Falwell, Pat
Robertson, and Phyllis Schlafly, and anti-tax and pro-gun groups.
Richard DeVos, Sr., liked to say that it brought together "the doers
and the donors."
In 1980, the DeVos family contributed heavily to the election of
Ronald Reagan, and DeVos, Sr., was named the finance chair of the
Republican National Committee. Two years later, he was removed,
after calling the brutal 1982 recession a "cleansing process," and
insisting that anyone who was unemployed simply didn't want to work.
That same year, DeVos and his Amway co-founder, Jay Van Andel, were
charged with criminal tax fraud in Canada. Eventually, Amway pleaded
guilty and paid fines of twenty-five million dollars, and the
criminal charges against DeVos and his partner were dropped. Despite
these incidents, the DeVos clan remained a major political force.
"There's not a Republican president or presidential candidate in the
last fifty years who hasn't known the DeVoses," Saul Anuzis, a
former chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, told Mother Jones, in
offense,"The marriage of Dick DeVos to Betsy Prince only increased the
family's wealth and power. Her father, Edgar Prince, had made a
fortune in auto-parts manufacturing, selling his company for $1.35
billion in cash, in 1996.
Her
brother Erik founded Blackwater, the private military company that
the government infamously contracted to work in Afghanistan and
Iraq, where its mercenaries killed more than a dozen civilians in 2007.
DeVos is a religious conservative who has pushed for years to breach
the wall between church and state on education, among other issues.*
(The Washington Post reports that Betsy DeVos has been an elder at
Mars Hill, in Grand Rapids.) Betsy, who served as the chairwoman of
the Michigan Republican Party in the late nineties and again in the
early aughts, spent more than two million dollars of the family's
money on a failed school-vouchers referendum in 2000, which would
have allowed Michigan residents to use public funds to pay for
tuition at religious schools.
The
family then spent thirty-five million dollars, in 2006, on Dick
DeVos's unsuccessful campaign to unseat Jennifer Granholm, then the
Democratic governor of the state. After that campaign, the DeVos
family doubled down
on
political contributions and support for conservative Christian causes.
Members of the family, including Betsy and Dick DeVos, have spent
heavily
in
opposition to same-sex-marriage laws in several states. According to
the Michigan L.G.B.T. publication PrideSource.com, Devos and her
husband led the successful campaign to pass an anti-gay-marriage
ballot referendum in the state in 2004, contributing more than two
hundred thousand dollars to the effort. Dick Devos reportedly gave a
hundred thousand dollars, in 2008, to an amendment that banned
same-sex marriage in Florida. That year, Elsa Prince Broekhuizen,
Betsy Devos's mother, was a major contributor to the effort to pass
Proposition 8, which made same-sex marriage illegal in California.
Trump may have run against big money in politics, but his choice for
Education Secretary has made no apologies about her family's
political spending. Betsy DeVos has been a major financial backer of
legal efforts to overturn campaign-spending limits. In 1997, she
brashly explained her opposition to campaign-finance-reform measures
that were aimed at cleaning up so-called "soft money," a predecessor
to today's unlimited "dark money"
election spending. "My family is the biggest contributor of soft
money to the Republican National Committee," she wrote in the
Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call. "I have decided to stop taking
she wrote, "at the suggestion that we are buying influence. Now I
simply concede the point.
They are right. We do expect something in return. We expect to
foster a conservative governing philosophy consisting of limited
government and respect for traditional American virtues. We expect a
return on our investment."
"People like us," she added archly, "must surely be stopped."
In the 2016 campaign, DeVos continued to spend heavily, but not in
favor of Trump, who, she declared, "does not represent the
Republican Party."
Evidently, she has changed her mind about that, and he has changed
his about the merits of "the donor class."
http://e-max.it/posizionamento-siti-web/socialize
http://e-max.it/posizionamento-siti-web/socialize