Lower Manhattan is always wall-to-wall people, more so than many
areas of Midtown Manhattan. My long day
today brought me there for an appointment and then a meeting which happened to
be almost directly across the street (Broadway) from one another, and thenceforth
a dinner meeting in the Tribeca (TRIangle BElow CAnal Street) area.
In Lower Manhattan you will always share the sidewalk with
lots of other people. Had I stayed on Broadway just one hour longer, then I
would have shared the sidewalks not only with Barack Hussein Obama (who was
there to dedicate the One World Trade Center construction and then do some
campaign fundraising), but also his retinue of sedan chair litter carriers, cup
bearers, teleprompter technicians, SS men (I leave it to you, Dear Reader, to
decide whether this stands for "Secret Service" or "Schutzstaffel")
and other tax-dollar supported sycophants.
Which wouldn't be so bad, except that for every one of them
there are a few hundred Obamatrons who would pay for the privilege of seeing
The Messiah up front.
But, as I said, the timing got me out of the worst of that
crowd.
Meanwhile, about 40 miles to the east of New York City, the
Long Island Maritime Museum is hosting a Pirate
Festival this weekend. How asinine
and absurd! Pirates, you will recall,
were the terrorists of their day. Glorification
of pirates is glorification of terrorism. [Never mind that I like Gilbert & Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance.].
With all due respect to those who are into horse racing, I
personally am not. Nevertheless, the sport's
contribution to the arts, culture, and the economy cannot be ignored, and its
social utility cannot be denied.
The Belmont Stakes
is one of the major horse races in America if not the world, the horse's
equivalent of the Super Bowl, the World Series or the Stanley Cup. And just a few days ago, Local 3 of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the union which represents the
track workers at the Belmont Race Track, was beating
its war drums and talking
about striking and thereby derailing this year's Belmont Stakes.
Well, the union all of a sudden let it slip that, labor
disputes notwithstanding, the Belmont Stakes will still run, and then, there
was an official announcement that the New York Racing Association and the union
had come
to an agreement.
Labor disputes are complex things. There almost always is lots of behind-the-scenes
motion which is not evident to the public.
But the timing on this one is very auspicious and coincidental.
Auspicious and coincidental, I dare suggest, to Governor Scott
Walker's landslide success in the Wisconsin election which the unions insisted
on having to recall him from office, and which constituted the equivalent of
rubbing ten times the manure from all of the horses running in the Belmont
Stakes into the union leaders' faces.
Perhaps some union leaders are now beginning to get in touch
with the reality that unions do not enjoy the public popularity they had
envisioned.
Another thing about the Belmont Stakes: Isn't hippodromy a sport of the wealthy? You know, the supposed 1% against whom the
Occu-shmucks were protesting in Zuccotti Park?
If those one-percenters are so evil, wouldn't it then make sense for the
unions to bring them down by holding a strike to cause the cancellation of the
Belmont Stakes?
Could it be that the ninety-nine percenters who comprise
Local 3 have too much of a vested economic interest in the success of the one
percenters whose numbers comprise the horsey set?