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Showing posts from September, 2018
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She said/He said and the Supreme Court By Hank Silverberg I don’t know if Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted a young woman when he was in high school or not. I can’t imagine any circumstances in which a woman would make such an accusation, leaving herself open to demeaning ridicule and even death threats, if the accusation was not true.   I do know that the whole process for nominating Judge Kavanaugh, the hearings before the senate judiciary committee, the letter to Senator Diane Feinstein from Christine Blasey Ford making the accusation, and the subsequent media barrage, has left a very sour taste in my mouth.  I wrote that lead on Sunday before word came that another woman has accused the judge of sexual misconduct. Two women coming forward adds more credibility to the allegations.      Judge Brett Kavanaugh           (Photo courtesy of  DC Appeals Court)   Sex crimes are not an easy topic to discuss, nor are they easy to prosecute. Th
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The Politics of Hurricanes By Hank Silverberg Everything is politics these days. Since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast in August of 2005, much has been written about the response of  the federal government to natural disasters. Has Congress allocated enough money? Was the response quick enough? Did those in high office show enough concern about the victims? These are all legitimate questions for the press, the public, and the government itself to review. The Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) has been restructured several times since Katrina left hundreds of people stranded in the New Orleans Superdome without proper supplies or facilities during the 2005 disaster.  And both the Bush and Obama Administrations responded much better to subsequent storms. But somehow the current administration can’t seem to do so without bringing its bizarre view of the world into it. As Hurricane Florence approached the east coast this past w
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See the USA By Hank Silverberg I don’t travel as much as I would like. But when I do, I enjoy a good road trip by car because you see more of the countryside. When I have the time, I get off the Interstates and take back roads, though I discovered this weekend I don’t like driving narrow two-lane mountain roads with up and down” S” curves and no guard rails.   A family wedding in New England took me  through nine states. I had traveled most of the route several times before.   The view from the Delaware Memorial Bridge is still spectacular, but I have seen it many times. We were hoping to see a few new things on this trip, and we did.   For example. In the Garden State (NJ), which is anything but a garden if you see it only from the Turnpike, can surprise you. We took a back route through central Jersey neighborhoods to get away from a major traffic jam near New Brunswick.   I had worked this ground as a reporter for WCTC radio early in my career, so the town names and geog
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The American Worker By Hank Silverberg It’s Labor Day. Thousands of Americans have been on the road for the last unofficial weekend of summer. They may have been at the beach, or in the mountains. Or maybe they just stayed in the back yard with the barbecue grill. For most Americans it’s a day off. Labor Unions were the major force behind Labor Day. It was a day set aside to honor the American worker, many of them immigrants who had built railroads, skyscrapers, roads and automobiles during the height of the Industrial Revolution, and turned the United States into a world economic power.  The first official national Labor Day came in 1894, by which time 30 states had already established the day to celebrate the American worker. It was the era of the robber barons, who reaped the benefit of other people’s labor. They often accused labor organizers of being anarchists or communists and sent thugs to break up their organizing meetings. (Workers on  DC Metro'

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