Friday, October 10, 2008

LINCOLNVILLE STREETS FLOOD WHILE THE CITY OF ST. AUGUSTINE WASTES MONEY ON $25 MILLION WHITE ELEPHANT PARKING GARAGE AND OTHER FLUBDUBS





Many times each year, St. Augustine streets in low-income and minority become impassible due to flooding.

These are prime examples of what we call "Environmental Racism." Not only do Lincolnville and West Augustine literally get dumped on -- it's worthy of a Scandals Tour -- but our Nation's Oldest City's racist City Manager has been unwilling and unable in 10.5 years on the job to do anything about the drainage problems here.

Not only that, but he's also failed and refused to get federal grants that would fix the crumbling seawall (below).

We have in St. Augustine "a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference," in the words of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (quoting Dante). Where else in the world would a City Manager still be in power (and smirking) after two major environmental violations -- dumping 40,000 cubic yards of solid waste in the Old City Reservoir (in West Augustine) and dumping sewage effluent in a saltwater marsh for years, failing to inform the people while commiting Sunshine violations to conceal it all?

City Commissioners refuse to discuss the City Manager's crimes against nature.

Who should we ask about this Environmental Racism? Who empowers this gang of thugs.

CONGRESSMAN JOHN MICA, who got the City a $1.2 million grant for a giant parking garage we don't need.

FLAGLER COLLEGE CHANCELLOR WILLIAM L. PROCTOR, our State Representative for the 20th District. Thanks to PROCTOR, St. Augustine's in danger of resembling the dystopia in the movie, "It's a Wonderful Life," where one mean old man named Potter dominates a town through ruthless financial chicanery -- the angel shows the hero what the town would look like without him.



Thanks to PROCTOR, St. Augustine gets very little from FLAGLER COLLEGE (only $127,000to pay for two police officers, when other colleges and universities are much more generous -- Yale University pays New Haven, CT. 50% of what it would pay in property taxes.

Thanks to PROCTOR's bad influence -- a right-wing school with no tenure for faculty members -- our City is deprived of what could be a first-rate educational institution with adult education programs at night.

Thanks to PROCTOR's and MICA's developer-driven refusal to support the St. Augustine National Historical Park, National Seashore and National Scenic Coastal Highway (proposed in 2006), our small businesses and employees are suffering from an economic downturn.

Thanks to PROCTOR and MICA, St. Augustine increasingly resembles the dystopia of Potterville in "It's a Wonderful Life."

FLAGLER COLLEGE started a food court in its new Ringhaver Building, resulting in coffee shops and other small businesses closing their doors.

Thanks to City Commissioners' ill-advised adult entertainment ordinance, we might look even more like POTTERVILLE soon due to the economic downturn.

And the obscene, hyseterical and ranting posts by those government officials, family members, toadies, and henchmen posting as Anonymice at Plazabum, we're scaring tourists away with hateful attacks on homeless people (commencing two days before Christmas, 2006).

It's a beautful town in a beautiful place.

By electing reform-minded citizens like Jimmy Owens and Judith Seraphin to City Commission -- and Faye Armitage to Congress and Doug Courtney to the State Legislature -- we be able to protect our precious environmental and cultural heritage, create good jobs at good wages and recover from the misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance of the WILLIAM. B. HARRISS regime.

What do you reckon?

Thursday, October 09, 2008

CONTROL FREAKERY -- Or How Insecure Politicians and Their Entourages Respond to Public Questions and Seek to Limit Campaigning and Debates


Our local candidate campaign fora have for too long (since before I was in St. Augustine) been dominated by card-playing bores. Various aspiring fora are forcing people to hand in cards, which are then read (or not read) at-will by the "moderators." Too often, they omit the tough questions (as the League of Women Voters invariably does). They remind me of what the fictional president in "The West Wing" called the "boring tight-ass society." They're control freaks. They want the world to dance to their elevator music.

Cross-examination is the greatest engine ever devised for learning the truth. If you let politicians answer questions read by moderators from cards, they'll not answer the questions, preferring to stick to their talking points. Since the person who wrote the question is unknown, we don't know what motivated the questioner, or whether they have a proverbial ax to grind (or proverbial dirty laundry). Since the person who asked the question doesn't even get to read it (even from a dumb 'ole card), the candidates feel free to ignore the question, knowing there can be no followup.

The card procedure is similar to a little-used device in the Rules of Civil Procedure -- depositions on written questions. Unless the deponent is in a distant city and there is no question as to the answer, few lawyers or parties would ever want to take a deposition on written questions.

When reporters get to question the President of the United States, when citizens get to question Presidential candidates, but St. Johns County residents can't even stand up on their own two feet and ask their own questions in their own words of the candidates, there's something wrong.

Kudos to St. Paul's A.M.E. Church for letting people ask their own questions. Pray for the League of Women Voters and other organizations where control freaks dominate the right of citizens to speak out and ask questions.

Our Founding Fathers in Philadelphia did not communicate to one another on cards.
Neither should we in St. Johns County and St. Augustine, Florida.

Our putative "leaders" are horribly insecure and afraid. They're afraid to let us ask questions. They won't answer them in City Commission meetings. They don't answer them on the campaign trail. They're afraid of the truth. (Ask ERROL JONES, who falsely promised he would hold town meetings in 2002 but does not do so -- see below).

Speaking of control freakery, it's even worse with campaign signs, Republicans are stealing Democratic signs, particularly Obama signs. (Still waiting to hear back from Robert T. Smith, Chair of the St. Augustine Republican Club -- what did he know and when did he know it?).

It's especially silly in the City of St. Augustine Beach, where under the longtime legal advice of the malfeasant GEOFFREY DOBSON, they've had an ordinance prohibiting political signs until three weeks before the election. This is the same incompetent lawyer who almost cost taxpayers $2 million in purchase of a Bell Jet Ranger luxury jet helicopter that we don't need for mosquito control. Thanks to the five of xix Mosquito Control Commission candidates who answered St. Augustine Record Editor Peter Ellis' question Tuesday night -- do we need a helicopter -- in the negative. Only TIM CHIU raised his hand to say we needed to purchase a helicopter. But GEOFFREY DOBSON brazenly said purchasing a luxury helicopter was "sole source" procurement when it was not (and the helicopter was unadorned with any way of spraying skeeters and made about as much sense as using a Ferrari as a snowplow).

If the public got to ask questions (and demand answers), the devious developers represented by the likes of GEORGE McCLURE would not have gotten their way, winning approval to build some 80,000 houses in St. Johns County, a national disgrace that requires FBI and other federal criminal investigations.

As to the anonymice on Plazabum who copy items from my blog, and then feebly attempt to answer them on their site, I appreciate that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. But their Plazabum site is not open to dissenters, and it's pointless to act as if your posting my opinions there and trying to answer them constitutes dialogue. THe Plazabum hacks demanded I be kicked off the St. Augustine Record Talk of the Town website for disagreeing with them -- they have no more respect for free speech and democracy than the Tennessee Supreme Court or the U.S. Department of Labor.

In fact, they rather remind me of the Exxon Chief Economist who spoke to my International Business and Oil class at Georgetown. I questioned him for 20 minutes about Big Oil and its monopoly power, slowdancing with OPEC. He then proceeded to answer my questions later -- at an invitation-only dinner with students in the International Business Diplomacy Program. I wasn't there and didn't have the ability to ask followup questions (or hear his answers).

As to the LWV refusing to allow people to ask their own questions, unfiltered, and as to Plazabum cretins excluding dissenting views, mocking them, and using barnyard epithets, brandishing racism, misogyny, homophobia and other forms of bigotry, just remember the immortal words of William F. Buckley, Jr. (of someone who would not debate him): "Why does baloney reject the grinder?"

Of course, Plazabum would rather engage in infantile, intoxicated, self-indulgent rants against the homeless, with the effect of reducing the attractivness of St. Augustine as a tourist destination. Anyone researching this beautiful town on the Internet would be discouraged from visiting by Plazabum's bipolar bigotry

Undoing Republicans' Reign of Ruin Requires All of Our Help

Undoing Republicans' reign of ruin -- from City Hall to Tallahassee to Washington, D.C. -- requires all of our help. There are 26 days to elction day. Make every day count.

Boom in voter registration favors Dems, could lead Obama to election win _ if they turn out

Boom in voter registration favors Dems, could lead Obama to election win _ if they turn out
By WHITNEY WOODWARD and MIKE BAKER
Associated Press Writers

12:02 PM PDT, October 9, 2008

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) _ The surge in new voters that helped propel Barack Obama to his party's presidential nomination is carrying over to the general election — 9 million newly registered voters who are overwhelmingly Democratic and could add up to a big victory on Election Day.

If they show up.

In states where registration is recorded by party, including eight key states that could decide the election, voters have signed up Democratic in the past six months by a margin of nearly 4-to-1.

Tonya Barker is among them. The 30-year-old mother of two from eastern North Carolina said it wasn't until this election — when the Illinois senator burst onto the national scene — that she finally found a reason to vote.

"Why would I waste my time on someone I don't believe in?" said Barker. "I think I knew Barack was coming."

Simply registering voters, even when the numbers are skewed so heavily toward one party, is no guarantee of success.

Historically, voter turnout among new registrants has been low. And while candidates have months to run registration drives, they have only a tiny window — several days during early balloting, just hours on Election Day — to get out the vote.

Still, an Associated Press analysis of registration data found that if the millions of newly registered voters turn out at the same rate as in 2004 and cast ballots with their declared party of choice, Obama could have the votes he needs to wrest several battleground states away from the Republican Party and its nominee, Sen. John McCain.

Obama could hold Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, won by Democrat John Kerry four years ago, and go on to pick up three states won by President Bush: Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico. He could also narrow the gap in Iowa, as well as in both Florida and North Carolina: two big Southern states worth 42 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.

A win for Obama in only a few of those eight states could doom McCain's chances. A victory in all could turn the election into a rout.

"The trend line is really troubling," said longtime Republican consultant Carter Wrenn, who helped North Carolina's Jesse Helms win several terms in the U.S. Senate in a state where there are far more registered Democrats than Republicans.

"That's a sign that this is one of those elections where all the tides are flowing in the Democrats' direction. Those tides are the most important thing in politics."

An AP survey of election officials nationwide found that as of Oct. 1, the number of registered Democrats had grown by nearly 5 percent since 2004 — outpacing overall population growth in the 28 states where information on voter registration by party was available for 2004 and 2008. During the same time, the GOP lost more than 2 percent of its registered voters.

Within the numbers are unmistakable signs that Obama stands to reap the benefits of the registration boom.

Among them: In five states that track registration by race, blacks — who polls suggest almost unanimously support Obama — have registered to vote at nearly twice the rate of whites over the past six months.

"It had a lot to do with negligence on my part, not taking interest in it," Natalie Mattocks, a 26-year-old woman from Jacksonville, said of her previous indifference to voting. She signed up this summer as a Democrat. "Now with an African-American candidate, there's kind of an automatic level of interest for me," said Mattocks, who is black.

And she said she has been adamant that her friends vote, too.

"I'm on them," Mattocks said. "It's become very important for me to make sure they're registered. I'm telling everyone I come across, no matter if I don't know them and they don't know me. They can see it on my shirt, who I'm voting for."

In the eight battleground states where voters register by party, Democrats have added more than 1 million registrants in the past four years — while the GOP has lost roughly 125,000.

In six of the eight, more voters also have recently registered as independents or as members of third parties than as Republicans. Since the start of the year in Florida, 253,294 people have signed up as independents or with other parties, compared to 190,137 Republicans.

Meanwhile, 360,478 Florida voters registered as Democrats.

"The real question is, can the Democrats turn these voters out?" said Erin Van Sickle, a spokeswoman for the Florida Republican Party. "History tells us: No, they can't. Republicans have a time-tested get-out-the-vote machine and that will not change this year."

Four years ago, there were a few thousand more registered Republicans than Democrats in Nevada. Thanks in part to a competitive Democratic caucus between Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the party now has a roughly 90,000-voter edge. Even if a large portion of those new Democrats don't vote, Obama has enough potential new voters to make up the 21,500 vote edge that delivered the state's five electoral votes to Bush in '04.

Said Dan Hart, a Democratic political consultant in Nevada: "If we've got a registration advantage of that size, and independents are leaning Democratic ... there's a point in time when you just don't have enough voters to win an election."

Steve Wark, a Republican consultant from Las Vegas and an expert on getting out the vote, acknowledged he'd rather be on the other side of the registration surge. But he said getting first-time registrants to the polls is especially hard in Nevada, where the population is transient and often new to the state.

"In southern Nevada, you can count on 20 percent of any new registrants to vote in the next regular election," Wark said. "It's very difficult when you do registration drives to make those meaningful within an election cycle."

Among the new voters in Nevada are tens of thousands signed up by Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, a group that works to register low-income people. Officials there and in other states have accused ACORN, which claims to have registered 1.3 million people nationwide since 2007, of submitting registrations that used false or duplicated information.

ACORN has said it informs election authorities when it identifies a potentially fraudulent registration, and said the relatively few number of problem registrations probably stem from workers — who are paid by the number of registrations they submit — making up false applications, rather than trying to change the outcome of the election.

The lingering nomination fight between Clinton and Obama turned the late-season primaries in Pennsylvania and North Carolina into critical contests, generating enthusiasm and booming registration.

The ranks of registered Democrats has grown by 500,000 in the past year in Pennsylvania, while the GOP has lost about 28,000. The state's 67 counties are still processing the crush of paperwork filed before this week's registration deadline.

Thomas Baldino, a political science professor at Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., said many of the registrants recruited by the Obama campaign are college students and other young people. He cautioned that such people are less likely to vote than older, established voters for whom heading out on Election Day is a habit.

"(Obama) needs to mobilize those people," Baldino said. "He needs to turn those numbers into votes."

The registration trend favoring Democrats is dramatic in North Carolina, a state that hasn't voted for that party's nominee since Gov. Jimmy Carter from nearby Georgia was on the ballot in 1976. New Democratic registrations outpaced those for the GOP 2-to-1 this year.

Billy Mills, the Democratic Party chairman in North Carolina's Onslow County, was thrilled this week when Michelle Obama arrived to speak to about 1,500 military families who live near Camp Lejeune, the Marine Corps' main base on the East Coast. This will be the first election for thousand of Marines stationed there, where the average age is 23.

"I'd say the older forces of the county, the retirees, they're still Republican," Mills said. "But there's a lot of younger folks that see it differently and that have registered Democratic as a result of their interest in Obama. This has been the biggest movement that I've seen in a long time."

___

The Associated Press' Election Research and Quality Control Group in New York, and writers Kathleen Hennessey in Las Vegas, Peter Jackson in Harrisburg, Pa., and Brent Kallestad in Tallahassee, Fla., contributed to this report.

FCC Investigates Equal Time Violations By Reagan Smith, Florida News Network, Florida Roundtable



I've filed a complaint of Equal Time violations against the Florida News Network, Florida Roundtable and Reagan Smith. They had Congressman Tom Feeney on Florida Roundtable one Saturday at 6 AM and said they'd have him on several more times before the election, with no plans to have any Democrats on.

SInce the FCC complaint, there have been no more Equal TIme violations -- no more Republican politicians, just pollsters, nattering nabobs of nativism (and negativism), professional Obama haters, knuckle-draggers and assorted right wing kooks.

Elapsed time to file the complaint electronically -- ten minutes.

Cleaning the airwaves of Equal Time violations -- priceless.

This Reagan Smith is one lugubrious goober, as is "Congressman Lou Frey," who turns out to be a former Congressman. They habitually call him "Congressman Lou Frey,{" only stating he is a former Congressman at the top and bottom of the hour.

-------------

Reagan Smith Biography
WDBO WJYO WSSP WMGF FRN

Reagan was born in Cleveland, Ohio on Jan.1, 1949. He received his B.A. and M.A. in Political Science and History from Cleveland State University. He has received several awards including those from the Associated Press and United Press International in Cleveland and Orlando, and Best in Industry awards from the Cleveland Press Club. He has served as News and Public Affairs broadcaster in Orlando since 1980. Reagan even owned WFEZ-FM 92.1 . He has been a News Director and morning anchor at WDBO-AM 580, WJYO-FM 107.7, WSSP-FM 104.1, WMGF-FM 107.7. Reagan is now in his 19th year on Florida Radio Network with approximately 70 stations statewide as morning news anchor and public affairs director. Reagan is also creator and co-host of a syndicated political talk show "Florida Roundtable", along with Congressman Lou Frey, Jr.
Reagan is joined by his broadcast partner of 18 years Dave Riley for Smith and Riley, Central Florida's Entertainment Connection



The late U.S. Senator JESSE HELMS (R-NC) began his career as a broadcast demagogue, just like radical right-wing biased broadcaster REAGAN SMITH of FLORIDA NEWS NETWORK and FLORIDA ROUNDTABLE

So, Congressman JOHN MICA wears a pinkie ring -- what do you make of that?


New York TImes
January 23, 2000

Ba-Da-Bing! Thumbs Up for the Pinkie Ring
By ILENE ROSENZWEIG

I'VE been wearing it for 30 years,'' Tony Sirico said. ''It's part of my life.'' Mr. Sirico was discussing his pinkie ring, the same one he wears when playing Paulie Walnuts on ''The Sopranos,'' the HBO mob opera that started its second season last week.

''They say Mafia wear pinkie rings, but men of style wear pinkie rings,'' Mr. Sirico said. ''So long as they're not gaudy and the man has a nice hand -- not too feminine a hand.'' Mr. Sirico, who favors what he called a ''sexy'' black onyx look, said he was unaware that pinkie rings had gone out of style.

No matter. They aren't anymore. Out of style, that is. Rapt ''Sopranos'' fans revel in the show's anti-''Godfather'' suburban New Jersey ambience: the women with their acrylic nails and bad aerobics outfits, the leather- and marble-appointed living rooms. But far from mocking this tackiness, the show, and its authentic-seeming wise guys, like Paulie Walnuts, have rendered it cool, pinkie rings and all.

At the other end of the classiness spectrum, pinkie rings play a pivotal part in the film ''The Talented Mr. Ripley,'' as tokens of the high-born lineage to which Matt Damon's Tom Ripley so desperately aspires.

Lately, high fashion has rehabilitated once-declasse items, from ruffled tuxedo shirts to tube tops. But it has ignored the pinkie ring. ''Generally, a pinkie ring has a touch of vulgarity,'' said John Fairchild, the former chairman of Women's Wear Daily and an arbiter of all things chic. Long dismissed as a symbol of bad taste, the pinkie ring, with its associations to cheese balls and Joe Pesci, seemed too felonious to overlook. Like celebrating a bad toupee.

Which is all right with me. If loving pinkie rings is a crime, then I'm happy to plead guilty. Maybe because I grew up on Long Island at a time when boys picked you up for the prom wearing tuxedos and sneakers, I've always yearned for the opposite: guys with polish and panache, a kind of macho dandy. You can smell him coming, an intoxicating cocktail of fresh shirt, cologne and a hair shine -- confident enough in his masculinity to indulge his feminine side.

Mr. Sirico spoke by telephone, during an afternoon of watching the horses on television and ''making sauce'' in his Brooklyn apartment, where he lives with his mother.

The pinkie ring expresses a masculine elegance that transcends race, creed and culture. The Duke of Windsor wore one, and Prince Charles does. Signet rings, as aristocrats know, were originally used to stamp initials or family crests into sealing wax, and worn on the pinkie, an easy finger to extend. Hip-hop princes like Sean Combs have also adopted pinkie rings. The rapper Jay-Z posed for an album cover with his Bentley and a diamond-encrusted pinkie.

''Conscious or unconscious, ironic or unironic, they're trying to impersonate a member of WASP society, impersonating British upper class,'' said Toby Young, an English writer living in New York, whose pinkie bears his family crest, a moorhen.

Old-time-comedy royalty favored them, too. The televised Dean Martin roasts of the 1970's, tapes of which are now sold through infomercials, were a pinkie ring bonanza. From George Burns to Milton Berle, Jack Benny to Jackie Gleason, Bob Newhart to Bob Hope, these legends fired off zingers with pinkies flashing.

When I called Alan King, the Friars Club member and longtime roaster, he said, ''Well, we were all a bunch of wise guys.'' Back in the pinkie heyday, he recalled, the cat's-eye and star sapphires were the hip stones to get. ''Everyone looked to see the best star -- who had the best one,'' he said. ''It was very affected.''

Frank Sinatra wore a signet ring with a family crest on his right hand, dressing up an otherwise inelegant mitt. ''My knuckles are like broken bananas,'' he once said. He refused the gift of an ID bracelet from his family, saying he wore only the ring, and besides, ''I know who I am.''

To me, the pinkie ring conveys that kind of bravado. Which is why I think it's an injustice that women don't wear them, too.

Women need pinkie rings. Fendi baguettes and pashmina scarves can hardly be talismans of inner strength when their trendiness is so fleeting. High heels are a more consistent power statement, but they hurt too much. What object of style can offer unquestionable self-assurance that won't be gone next season? Maybe a diamond engagement ring, the only flaw being that it is given by a man. A pinkie ring, on the other hand, can be inherited, a coming-of-age hand-me-down. It can also be bought with your own earnings, say, after a good day at the track.

To put my money where my pinkie is, I visited Bobby Satin, a jeweler in Chinatown. Mr. Satin has been in the business for 40 years, long enough to have seen the pinkie's fortunes come and go. In the 1950's and 60's, the rings were big, he told me, pulling out a tray of vintage ones: understated sapphires, gold horse heads set in diamond horseshoes.

Pinkie rings are often thought to bring luck, and they are rubbed and turned by some gamblers like worry beads. Almost sheepishly, Mr. Satin conceded that he used to wear one himself, gold with green jade -- a good luck stone in Chinatown. He took his off 20 years ago, around the time he had one made for his son, who was college-bound. His son gave it back, saying he'd never wear it.

Why did they go out of style? Hippies. Grunge. Long hair became the new expression of sensitized masculinity. On ''The Sopranos,'' Christopher, Tony Soprano's hot-headed nephew, from the next generation, does not wear a pinkie ring.

''Rebellion, I guess,'' Michael Imperioli, who plays Christopher, said at the premiere party last week at Roseland Ballroom.

Pinkie rings have always been about impersonating style heroes, from American blue bloods emulating British aristocrats to working stiffs -- gangsters, car dealers, show biz characters -- striving toward classiness. Tacky or not, it is still a fundamental of American style: self-invention.

Maybe these days, when wearing rings in your navels and eyebrows is common, the most rebellious thing a girl can do is to stake a claim to a pinkie ring, joining those few fabulous female pinkie wearers like Lil' Kim and Angie Dickenson, a k a ''Police Woman,'' who was sensational on a Dean Martin roast in a strapless spangled gown and an arsenal of diamonds on her left pinkie.

So I picked out a gold pinkie ring with a diamond-chip horseshoe for good luck, like the one Big Pussy Bompensero wears on ''The Sopranos.'' You're supposed to wear it facing up, with the ends of the horseshoe pointing to the nail, so that the luck won't run out. (So said Joe Mantegna, playing a snazzy numbers runner in Barry Levinson's film ''Liberty Heights.'') The ring's previous owner had a pinkie twice as big as mine, so Mr. Satin sized it down. Suddenly feeling large, I bought another one, for my best pallie, just like the friendship pinkie rings Frank once bought for himself and Dean.

On second look, I started to worry that there was a pinkie love handle poking over the edge of the band. In the ring, my finger looked fat. I didn't think I could pull it off. Mr. Satin shook his head, assuring me that it was swollen only from trying rings on and suggesting I switch hands. I did and then remembered something said to me at the Soprano's premiere party by Chuck Zito, who plays a Mafia gangster on HBO's prison drama, ''Oz.'' ''The bigger and hairier the hand, the better it looks,'' said Mr. Zito, whose pinkie ring is a diamond-studded boxing glove from his father.

So my pinkie's slightly pudgy. You got a problem with that?

ALL IN THE FAMILY -- CONGRESSMAN JOHN MICA'S CHILDREN BENEFIT FROM HIS SERVICE IN CONGRESS



Son J. CLARK MICA is a lobbyist for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, a Schedule C job (political patronage).
Daugther D'ANNE MICA is a PRmeister for the likes of PBS&J, engineering company whose executives have been convicted of using a35 million in embezzled funds to make illegal contributions to Florida politicians. Using MICA & McCORMACK, she has lobbied St. Johns County officials for developers.
JOHN MICA uses his influence to bring home the bacon even without asking locals, as in the case of the Castillo de San Marcos tunnel, for which he allocated federal funds without talking to anyone in the entire City of St. Augusttine. See below.
JOHN MICA is a sterotype on wheels -- why, he even wears a pinkie ring!

Color them connected.

So GEORGE McCLURE Is Now A Conservationist? Or Do Developers Desire a Bailout, Using a One Cent Sales Tax? What do you reckon? (See below)





Interesting. GEORGE MCCLURE has mocked and trounced conservationists again and again and again. His clients (like ROBERT MICHAEL GRAUBARD) have hired MCCLURE to make mincemeat of wetlands, even destroying a 3000-4000 year old Indian village in the name of profits (that may never come) for a dumb ole minimart and condos on Red Houe Bluff.

Now GEORGE MCCLURE has formed an organization to push for a one cent sales tax to buy land for conservation. Wonderful. Instead of supporting a St. Augustine National Historical Park, National Seashore and National Scenic Coastal Highway and seeking federal funds, GEORGE MCCLURE wants to empower his cronies in the Courthouse to buy his clients' land now that the real estate boom has bust.

In effect, they demand a bailout at the expense of those who can least afford it -- working people. Sales taxes are the most regressive tax you can have. Why would you want to increase the suffering of working people when we're in a global economic recission/depression?

Maybe GEORGE MCCLURE's rich poals could pay more taxes on their stocks and bonds to pay for conservation land. But under fircely mean former Florida GOVERNOR JOHN EDWARD BUSH, the tax on intangible properties like stocks and bonds was abolished -- BUSH called it an "evil tax." Evil is ss evil does.

The Treasurer of St. Johns Forever is none other than ROGER VAN GHENT, a lugubrious goober who masquerades as a Democrat, who received money from the DAVIS FAMILY (sponsors of the misbegotten NOCATEE development on the WINN-DIXIE owners' D-DOT RANCH). ROGER VAN GHENT is a sell-out, and he is not a real Democrat. VAN GHENT is also one of the deluded demagogues supporting an ill-conceived St. Johns County Charter -- like GEORGE W. BUSH, ROGER VAN GHENT is all hat and no cattle.

Last year, I served on a committee with ROGER VAN GHENT and he is a cognitive miser -- a nasty, snarly chauvinistic know-it-all who knows very little.

So the sales tax has three strikes against it -- no support for a National Park, a bailout for developers paid for by those who can least afford it, and advanced by the Snidely Whiplash of developer lawyers, GEORGE MCCLURE, and his pal ROGER VAN GHENT, who has taken money and other things of value from the DAVIS FAMILY.

Former Citibank Executive VAN GHENT got contributions from DAVIS family enterprises for his run for County COmmissioner. He's also getting a park named after him. As the Matt Damon character said to the corporate lawyer-whore in "The Rainmaker," "do you ever remember when you first sold out?"



ROGER VAN GHENT is the Treasurer of St. Johns Forever, working hand-in-hand with GEORGE McCLURE -- that's pure poetry in motion.


This FERAL GOAT bears remarkable resemblance to ROGER VAN GHENT -- ROGER VAN GHENT can E-mail me a photograph of himself to EASlavin@aol.com


Former County Commissioner SARAH BAILEY wants County to buy her land, using county money that would be raised with a one cent sales tax. That's ROGER VAN GHENT between Commissioners Tom Manuel and Cindy Stevenson -- doesn't VAN GHENT resemble the goat?


Developer MARK MIDDLEBROOK, The Middlebrook Company, Jacksonville, Florida


JOHN HENRY HANKINGSON, JR., Former EPA Region 4 Administrator, 1993-2001, Senior Consultant with MACTEC Group


Now, after the Charter and the one cent sales tax are defeated (again, as in 1998 and 2008), let's work together for a St. Augustine National HIstorical Park, National Seashore and National Scenic Coastal Highway.

Group formed to support 1-cent sales tax

Group formed to support 1-cent sales tax



From Staff
Publication Date: 10/09/08


A group of St. Johns County residents have formed St. Johns Forever, a committee organized to provide information and solicit support for the conservation and transportation ballot initiative that will appear on the November ballot.

If successful, these programs will be supported by a 1-cent sales tax, which will bring St. Johns County's sales tax to 7 percent, the same as in surrounding counties.

St. Johns Forever plans a series of informational mailings as well as presentations at many civic gatherings and events held in St. Johns County between today and Election Day to provide information, solicit support and answer questions from voters.

"Timing of this ballot initiative is critical. The real estate market is in a downturn so prices from sellers may be favorable right now. Also, we all know that important projects are getting away from St. Johns County because we don't have a source of matching funds. This would give us a source of funds and put us in position to receive grants that are going to other places," said attorney George McClure of McClure and Bloodworth, a founding member of St. Johns Forever.

The ordinance passed by the St. Johns County Commission provides that the one-penny can only be spent in St. Johns County, can only be used to acquire conservation lands that will be publicly accessible and only purchase from willing sellers. The transportation funding can only be used in areas of existing development in St. Johns County to mitigate congestion and enhance safety. Because of this provision, the proposal would not encourage additional development, advocates of the option tax say.

"Election Day is fast approaching and we will work very hard to inform the voters about this much-needed plan. It is a balance of land conservation plans and necessary improvements to already congested areas. It deserves everyone's support", said Sarah Bailey, Chair of St. Johns Forever.

Members of the St. Johns Forever Committee include Bailey (chair), McClure, Mark Middlebrook, John Hankinson, Roger VanGhent (treasurer), Brian Paradise, Susan Grandin and Susie Wiles.


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WORLD TRAVELER: JOHN MICA FLEW TO TIBET





None of his committee assignments involve foreign affairs.

His excuse in last year's St. Augustine Record was he was helping BOEING (one of his campaign contributors) sell airplanes to China.

Not one Tibetan is in the decisionmaking process for Chinese airplane procurement.

This was a junket by an egomaniacal Congressman, and another example of waste, fraud, abuse, misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance by tatterdemalion COngressman JOHN MICA. Let's show this wild wastrel the door. Elect Faye Armitage to Congress.

JOHN MICA CAN'T EXPLAIN TO THESE KIDS HOW REPUBLICANS HAVE FOULED UP THEIR FUTURE WITH THEIR INEPT POLICIES FAVORING OLIGOPOLISTS

WORLD TRAVELER: Here's Congressman JOHN MICA in Will County, Illinois



Jim Roolf, chairman of the Will County Airport Coalition, (from left), Will County Executive Larry Walsh, Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., chairman of the House Subcommittee on Aviation, and Rep. Jerry Weller, R-Morris, discuss county plans for a South Suburban Airport at a meeting held at the County Office building last month. Mica has echoed his praises for the plan from that meeting in a letter to Gov. Rod Blagojevich.


They look awfully Republican, don't you reckon?

WORLD TRAVELER: JOHN MICA MEETS WITH SLOVENIA MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS






Press Release
29.08.2001

Meeting between Slovenia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Dr Rupel and US Congressman John L. Mica


The Slovenia Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr Dimitrij Rupel, met with Republican Congressman John L. Mica today, 29 August 2001. Minister Dr Rupel acquainted him with the current state of affairs in Slovenia and the major activities of Slovene foreign policy.

The greatest attention in their conversation was devoted to the inclusion of our country in NATO. Congressman Mica presented his views on NATO expansion. He feels that expansion is necessary and supports it, and he also supports the inclusion of Slovenia in the alliance, stressing both strategic and geographical reasons.

"In politics there are talkers and doers -


"In politics there are talkers and doers -
John Mica is a doer."
President George W. Bush
During a visit to Daytona Beach,
January 30, 2002


Based on MICA's enormous bar, restaurant and casino bills (below) paid for by lobbyist cash to his campaign, perhaps BUSH meant to say DEWARS instead of DOERS.



MICA is a failed COngressman who has encumbered the position for eight terms, violating his "Contract With America."








Newt Gingrich shut down the government because Bill Clinton made him sit at the back of Air Force One.

JOHN MICA cried because they gave him a chair that wasn't fancy enough for his considerable keester.



Eight is enough. No ninth term.





No ninth term for this corrupt, earmarking, head-butting crybaby MICA. See much more below and in archives.

THEY'VE HAD THEIR TURN, NOW IT'S OUR TURN















TIME TO FLUSH THE JOHNS -- DEFEAT CONGRESSMAN JOHN MICA AND SENATOR JOHN McCAIN






Vote for Obama/Biden for President/VP and Faye Armitage for Congress.

Say NO to crony corruption and earmarks for MICA's campaign contributors.