How Can Joe Roman Sleep at Night?
Submitted by Jeff Buster on Wed, 02/03/2010 - 23:46.
I went to a Greater Cleveland Partnership funded "community" meeting tonight...and the hypocrisy and lies were so thick I felt like I had to ethically/intellectually PUKE.
The unsettling impact this University Circle access freeway "opportunity" ruse is causing on the community is really, really cruel – The lady in the image spoke from her heart - while the totally phony "proponents" spoke from their GCP funded wallets. A social crime and a very sick GCP dynamic.
Joe, you need to go to a meeting or two yourself. Don’t force Bob Brown and Terri Hamilton to do the dirty work for you. They are too accustomed to (and dependent on) the GPC routine to notice their lack of ethics – but with your Harvard background you will feel your gorge rising too if you attend a meeting.
Bring a brown bag - you may PUKE ....
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should I replace my roof?
The stories the folks told said no to the opportunity corridor. They've been told and told for years it is coming.
Some told me they thought the funds, any funds could be better spent to assist them - those who live there - with their own economic development - give us credit and grants and consultants to help us start our own businesses.
The ghost of the University Circle Access road is hard to wear down even with Terry Egger as co-head honcho with his PD propaganda machine. These folks remember that debacle, and they could care less about a road to University Circle. The Cleveland Clinic is not their savior either.
The winding road we took down the hill is beautiful if neglected. Holton Avenue tumbles down from Woodhill under bridges and along the curvy wooded and industrial escarpment. Few homes or buildings had light in their windows.
In the presentation, is this slide
Tecora Gray
Plain Dealer 2007 Marvin Fong
Gray's adult children plead with her to move. They say the neighborhood will never come back. The retired secretary hasn't given up hope. She has seen new houses several blocks away.
Presenters would have us believe that she is a prisoner - her words do not accompany that slide. She is a nameless mascot of a handful of residents who should be happy to "get along" to make way for the opportunity corridor. I think she has a pretty swell gig judging by this green pastoral scene. Maybe her grown children should move nearby and make a garden.
But no. Build it and they will come - or at least they'll drive through.
What was it Howard Zinn said? "You can't be neutral on a moving train." These folks didn't seem to be neutral. Ranging in age from their mid 20s to their mid 70s, one after another, they spoke out against the corridor with passion for the place they call home. And they didn't have much time to say their pieces... the presenters talked without interruption for an hour and 45 minutes leaving only 15 minutes for comments and questions.
At one point, when HNTB presenter Matt Wahl, answering a question about relocation, said, "if we take your house..." He was promptly interrupted by Terri Hamilton Brown who said, "we say acquire - if we acquire your property." There was a groan shared by many in attendance. They're old hands with this process of dog and pony. And they're tired of it.
Ms. Brown (who's spouse, Darnell Brown is Cleveland's COO - not related to Robert Brown City Planning Director of the same name) is especially well suited for this appointment. She has been the top dog at CMHA, UCI, Diversity Director at National City Bank and sits on the Cleveland Foundation Board. She holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Chicago - the Milton Freidman school of disaster capitalism.
A 1970s economics lesson for Joe Roman and oldNEO
I was going to quote Milton Friedman earlier today...and I shall now...
Like with religion, people may argue about capitalism and points of Friedman's theories about economic reality, but few would argue with his last point... that business must stay "within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud." That is the equivalent of the golden rule of economics, being to pursue efficiency. Closed, encumbered, deceitful, fraudulent business is inefficient, and stupid, and so far from optimal.
That is where planning and development in unreal NEO is far from optimal - it is closed, encumbered, deceitful, fraudulent and in every way inefficient.
The Friedman quote above is from the conclusion of a 1970 New York Times Sunday Magazine article below - "The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits" - which I encourage you to read to the end. Friedman has been a dominant economist of our era and all time, and his theories are the fundamentals of our modern American economy... blame him for all that Reagan supply-side voodoo, for example...
I assure you my parents read this article and lived their lives believing these words, as did millions of Americans, and that has led to the sorry state of our nation today.
I certainly studied Friedman, as an economist, and developed better understandings and theories from living through more modern times... in a world still heavily influenced by Friedman, of course.
Milton was quite right about capitalism, in modern American society still today - almost 40 years after he published these words - which is why the very concept of "sustainability" is patently absurd, under current American business practice and fundamental capitalist philosophy. To Friedman and his followers, "Social Responsibility" is a "fundamentally subversive doctrine", like Communism.
And he is right, under current American business practice and fundamental capitalist philosophy.
Friedman is why so many old and young people think it makes sense to build the opportunity corridor as envisioned and being done today.
There are other economists... perhaps we should revisit Galbraith, for tomorrow...
For today, read the words that still underpin Joe Roman, our parents and other old farts' understandings about modern economics, and have defined our American culture, environment and society ever since the ME-ME-ME 1970s.
As poorly as the last 40 years have turned out for our American society and the world, this is the only reasoning I see behind the current planning around the Opportunity Corridor.
Disrupt IT
Puke
Thank you Susan and Jeff for enduring this mockery--I can barely take it any more. The GCP puppets you mention are fascists destroying the lives of people who have worked hard their whole life.
I endured the same mockery tonight at the school board meeting at Garrett Morgan. Our representatives MAKE no efforts to improve the lives of people who pay taxes in the City of Cleveland and ALLOW vultures to profit off of the poverty they impose. I am sick.
Guevara endured it too
OPPORTUNITY OR OPPORTUNISM?
East-side residents wary of "Opportunity Corridor" proposal
by DAMIAN GUEVARA Cleveland Scene
The first commenter noted that they chose to live in Westlake instead of Univerisity Circle, but that the corridor would have changed her/his mind. Really? I can't think of two more disparate communities. So, smp1977, if you're working in University Circle, enjoy that half hour commute and know that a new road will not hasten your arrival, nor make it healthier. Sorry no complete public transit option between Westlake and University Circle.
Ah... me, me, me... the era of the flabby individualist - my car, it's an extension of my limbs and my persona.
A friend emailed this morning: "opportunity" for clinic/UH to gain more patients
Holton Avenue
Here's a photo essay I did of Holton Ave.:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tmunot_juliana/sets/72157603373853228/
To Susan Miller: I'm glad to know I'm not the only person who appreciates - and I borrow the phrase from - Pauline Kael here - the "ornery splendor" of Holton Ave.
thanks urbane
Thanks for the delightful photo tour. I enjoyed the late summer fall images of Holton Avenue. I bet it's lovely on a snowy day, too.
The Gorilla
Forgotten Cleveland....
he is to refrain from increasing the price of the product in ord
"He is to refrain from increasing the price of the product in order to contribute to the social objective of preventing inflation, even though a price in crease would be in the best interests of the corporation." And about all will raise their prices, which reduces the ability of customers to buy their goods. Just as if a person stands up at a ball game, he/she can see better, but if they all stand up none can see better.
When I got my MBA many years ago, I was taught that the officers of a corporation worked for the shareholder-owners. In theory, yes, in practice, only for extremely large shareholdings. It is very difficult for shareholders to remove a CEO. And the gap between what the highest and lowest paid individual working for a corporation has widened greatly, with CEO's earning huge salaries, while keeping lower level workers at low levels of pay and now will be cutting their hours so that they will not be full time and so the company won't pay to pay for their high priced Obama care. The high salaries reduce the amount of profit available to pay dividends to those same shareholders.
The owners of the businesses in my hometown died. Their children inherited. They sold off parts of the businesses and moved the rest offshore. Having moved out of the little town, they didn't have to face those whose jobs they destroyed. The small town now lacks any business of good size. People living there must travel an hour to work elsewhere.
No economist is perfect, it is not a science although the economists may like to think so. They generalize but cannot be precise in applying generalities to the moment. In the late 1970's, I disagreed with a professor who taught that OPEC was going to crumble, implying that the collapse was already underway, because all cartels do, in the long run. But how long is the long run? It is still in business.
Friedman is being ignored today in favor of Keynesian money printing which lowers the value of the dollar, making it easier to repay our debt, an impossible task since we have to borrow to pay interest. It harms individuals, whose dollar purchases less and less.
Latin America's "Chicago Boys" applied his lesson in the 1970's and their economies improved. Unfortunately, Ben Bernanke is not following Friedman.
"Social responsibiility?" I like Laura's definition: Can you sleep at night? Can you look yourself in the mirror in the morning? Unfortunately sociopaths have no trouble doing so. And others have no problem because they were never given a moral foundation.
And because wages have not kept up with inflation, even in a household with husband and wife, the wife often must work, leaving the care, training and education of the children to still lower paid workers. Working long and longer hours, unable to be home for all to have dinner together, many lessons, the imparting of moral values among them, are not taught to the children.