Good Riddance

People who aren’t funny and have no sense of humor shouldn’t attempt humor.

People who are transparently nursing and prosecuting grievances – and won’t shut up about them – should not simultaneously pretend that they are acting out of a sense of civic duty. This is insulting the intelligence of literally anyone.

People shouldn’t lie over and over and over again in order to nurse grudges and salve wounded egos.

People who secretly record others for political gain should release the entire audio and not selectively edited snippets from it. That’s how we know you’re lying and spinning.

People for whom party bosses cleared the field to advance their candidacies shouldn’t pretend like they’re some sort of grassroots hero who has bucked the system.

People who run into the harsh and stark realization that they have burned every bridge and alienated hard-working party faithful should look only in the mirror when assigning blame.

Sanitized for Whose Protection?

I guess there was just too much there to effectively sanitize.

The people deserve to see what the Republican candidate for County Executive believes and what she was tweeting to people. This is a deliberate cover-up to hide this information from voters, and it is unconscionable.

Happy uplifting stories of personal and family success are one thing, but when a candidate spends significant time on relentless conspiratorial panic, we need to know about this.

What is Politics?

It is a person undertaking to represent others in an effort to make their town, district, city, county, state, etc., a little better.

It is a process by which these people seek elected office.

It is a battle of ideas.

It is a battle of personalities.

It is, by necessity, adversarial.

It is an appeal to various people and constituencies that they should support you with their action, their money, their voices, and votes.

In Erie County, politics is oftentimes messy and, even more frequently, stupid.

Erie County Republicans are predictable. This is a small-c conservative area, and they win elections mostly through appeals to people’s fears, anger, prejudices, and whatever right-wing trope is floating around talk radio or Fox News at the time. Ask one of them to define “woke”. Ask them if every gay person is a “groomer.” Ask them what the existential threat is from drag brunches. Ask them about January 6th and when they stopped believing in democracy and the peaceful transfer of power.

Twitter is garbage, blogging is dead, and our local media are so risk-averse that seldom does anyone really drill down on the sheer madness taking place.

THE RIGHT

The Republican candidate for County Executive is Chrissy Casilio-Bluhm, a former neighbor of mine. She is a professional in public relations, mother to three children, and wife of a pharmacist. Ordinarily, a perfect resume for a person running for office who is dependent on suburban votes. She’s one of you.

Except when we get to the conspiracy theories like whether Damar Hamlin really died and has been replaced by a double.

Or whether Covid was all a big hoax.

Or whether elections are rigged.

Or whether the January 6th coup attempt was an Antifa plot.

Or whether an online furniture retailer trafficked in children.

It’s all here.

Mrs. Casilio-Bluhm has a Twitter account that has been locked at least for a few weeks. Up until mid-February, the bio read as follows:

As of this week, the highlighted text and the paid-for Twitter Blue blue check is gone.

I guess she is no longer fiscally conservative nor socially moderate. It is utterly unconscionable that this Twitter account is restricted given that she is now running for office. I have no doubt that it is being sanitized of embarrassing nonsense that plays well with other “Catturd” reply accounts, but not so well in a broad general election.

Mrs. Casilio-Bluhm is undoubtedly an excellent and devoted mother, loving spouse, and great at public relations, but the Damar Hamlin conspiracy-mongering alone is disqualifying for public office.

Although, at least she hasn’t said that “Erie County Sucks.”

As to her alleged social moderation, here is an exchange she and I had in Spring 2022 under a post that former Congressman Chris Jacobs published to Facebook touting his anti-abortion bona fides. My original comment was posted to Jacobs, who was, at the time, a big proponent of abolition of Covid restrictions.

We come back to a few things – the crumbled-up intersection between Covid denier’s “my body, my choice” and the fact that most of them would deny that choice to a woman with respect to her own uterus. We come back to the fact that no one is forcing anyone to have an abortion; that if your morals or religion compel you not to end a pregnancy, then by all means don’t. But do not impose your morals or religious commands on anyone else. Do not force victims of rape or incest to deliver the children conceived in violent crime. Do not force mothers whose pregnancies are not – and will never be viable – or who are at grave risk of injury or death themselves to sacrifice themselves to satisfy your edicts.

Now Republicans, emboldened by a reactionary activist Supreme Court, are poised to ban abortions and drag shows and to exterminate and/or outlaw transgender Americans because these are “woke” things that they do not countenance.

I repeat: local media, I beg of you, ask a Republican who utters the term to define “woke.”

Anyway, Chrissy Casilio-Bluhm is no newcomer to politics. She is the daughter of the town supervisor. Her family company is her business’ landlord. She earns PR business from Republican campaigns. The Erie County Republican Committee chairman said,

“As a mom trying to run a business, she knows the struggles that families try to deal with everyday, and certainly as an Erie County taxpayer knows we’ve got to do more to make this county more affordable.”

Clarence has among the lowest taxes in Erie County and those taxes pay for, among other things, roads, a DPW, and a great school district. Erie County property tax rates have gone down steadily for years, and sales taxes have remained the same. I am a well-off person and I would never claim to know the struggles of people who do not know where their next meal is coming from or how they will make rent or whether their kids will have a bright future. Anyone living in a brand-new custom-built home over 3,000 square feet and an estimated value of over $808,000 has been served pretty well by Erie County and its current County Executive, and can hardly be seen to complain about property taxes or other costs of living.

Republican politics right now is absolutely batshit insane, fueled by fear and hatred, triggered by anything that isn’t heterosexual, white, or a pickup truck. There is no ideology left, just an endless parade of phobias and grievances, promoted by a lying, pliant media ecosystem populated by smug performative “conservatives” broadcasting exclusively for smug performative “conservatives.” Trump broke the Republican party and what was left of small-c conservatism, and there’s no way back. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, Donald Trump, Matt Gaetz, and Paul Gosar are all of you and vice-versa.

I guess the real test is the degree to which the so-called “Reagan Democrats” – the socially reactionary registered Democrats – are attracted to this week’s WBEN talking points, but from the sounds of it, WBEN’s afternoon drive-time host has already called the County Executive race for Poloncarz.

THE LEFT

The Democratic Socialists are good at tactics, bad at strategy. It was one thing, for instance, to defeat a Byron Brown in a primary when he didn’t even try, but not much worked once he started to try. Their online presence is pretty juvenile, their positions seldom amount to little more than sloganeering, and they do not have a tendency to build consensus through cooperation or compromise, and that makes up a huge part of governing, if not politics. One cannot argue with or reason with zealots.

Erie County Democrats have, in the last 5 years or so, become quite adept at avoiding factionalism. This is a refreshing change from the preceding 25 years. Now, they need to get better at messaging. The Democratic Party is a big tent party that serves many oftentimes competing constituencies. It is messy by design. You don’t have to like any Democrat or the party committee or anyone leading it or on it. But they do the hard work that goes into growing the party and getting people elected.

I first met Mark Poloncarz in 2003 when he was campaigning for John Kerry and I was campaigning for Wes Clark. The party coalesced around Kerry for the 2004 election, and Mark’s interest in politics, his leadership skills, his intelligence, and his ability to talk to people from any town, any class, any race propelled him to elected countywide office as Comptroller. And a damn good Comptroller he was, getting in there in the wake of Joel Giambra’s Red/Green budget fiasco, and continuing his tenure through Chris Collins’ tumultuous, disastrous one term as County Executive.

John LaFalce and Mark Poloncarz are the only two Democrats ever to have defeated Collins in a contested election. LaFalce was, at the time, the incumbent, so Poloncarz’s unexpected win in 2011 was a true upset.

Since then, Poloncarz has been a stable and strong executive, restoring funding to culturals and acknowledging their importance to the people who live here. Every year, he has delivered a small surplus or a small deficit that is easily plugged with the use of prior years’ surpluses. He ensures that Erie County gets the Medicaid funding it needs to keep its citizens safe. He expects hard work and professionalism from the people who work for Erie County. He was an excellent steward of our public health during Covid, and worked hard – against loads of opposition – to try and prevent people from avoidable disease or death.

There exists no compelling reason to replace him.

He does not think that Damar Hamlin is dead and that a body double is running around pretending to be him.

He does not believe that Wayfair was trafficking in children or selling adrenochrome.

He does not believe that January 6th coup was an Antifa false flag.

He does not believe that elections are rigged.

In the end, what Poloncarz is good at is marshalling finite public funds to ensure that as many of the different needs of as many possible Erie County communities are served in a fiscally responsible way. That means paving rural roads and funding Medicaid. That means helping communities to pool redundant resources, making sure that health needs are fulfilled, that seniors have rewarding recreational activities, ensuring that parks are usable, that traditions are upheld, that libraries stay open, that roads are plowed and salted, that emergencies are planned for and reacted to, taxes are collected, lawsuits defended, environment protected, police and sheriffs have the tools they need to fight and solve crime, etc.

And when Erie County messes things up, Poloncarz is accountable and works to ensure that mistakes are not repeated.

The County Executive does not exist to single-handedly end poverty, but his office works to ease the burdens on our poor, and to cover heating costs, and to expedite the handling of state and federal programs that exist to provide health care, housing, and food to the poor.

The County Executive cannot turn Erie County into Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe or a Toronto suburb.

The County Executive cannot cajole Nike or Ikea or Costco into doing anything. If anything, the county will offer incentives to companies that promise to bring good-paying jobs. And if they go back on that promise, he’ll claw back those incentives because no one gets special treatment.

The County Executive did not single-handedly murder “50” people during the Blizzard of 2022, nor is he in charge of regional rail planning or advocacy. One erstwhile candidate insulted Mark Poloncarz by claiming he never “said a word” about trains. Literally read his reaction to a vote on where the Buffalo city rail station should be and tell me he never thought about it or said a word.

One person ran for County Executive for less than a month and then quit in a petulant 25-tweet statement, the subtext of which was that he knew no one would volunteer to help him obtain valid signatures of 2,000 out of the 285,000 registered Democrats in Erie County. It’s interesting how when one decides to wage war and insult an entire institution, that the rank and file who do the actual work that keeps the institution running are the ones who decide you’re not worthy of their help, time, work, and money. It’s easy to selectively edit secretly recorded audio to make your enemies look bad, but why wouldn’t you just release the whole thing? It’s easy to feign victimhood at the hands of the big bad old party which is, in your estimation, so well-organized in its malign corruption that it will prevent you even from running for office, but simultaneously so incompetent and inept that it cannot win elections or improve our region.

New Buffalo News political reporter Charlie Specht wrote,

McMurray is widely viewed as a credible force in the Democratic Party, especially among left-leaning progressives attracted by his views throughout his campaigns.

I don’t know where that’s coming from. I don’t know a single Democrat who would, after this month’s string of tantrums, give McMurray the time of day. Left-leaning progressives may agree with some of what McMurray claims to believe, but I have seen far more mockery of him than anything else.

So Free. So Brave.

Got the text from my HS junior today. The new American rite of passage – the lockdown that is not a drill. Cops with shotguns and K9 units sweeping the campus.

This is because in the United States, we prioritize the rights of an inanimate object – a gun – over the safety of children and schools. Our elected leaders cannot enact meaningful legislation or regulation to prevent this sort of thing from happening over and over again because the NRA – the lobby for the gun manufacturers – has weaponized the Constitution to enable and ensure that any idiot can – nay SHOULD – own military hardware.

It didn’t used to be this way.

This didn’t happen during the economic and political turmoil of the 70s. It didn’t happen during the coke-fueled 80s. It didn’t happen in the 90s.

Not like this, anyway.

I can tell you that I don’t feel free when my kid texts me that there are cops everywhere and that they are in lockdown and it’s not a drill. I don’t feel very free when my kid tells me that she’s scared. I can earnestly explain to you that I don’t feel like this is the greatest country on Earth right now at this moment because I have friends and family who live in other G7 countries and they send their kids to school and don’t have to worry about this.

I do not feel free having to worry about this. Why do the freedoms and liberties of guns come before the freedoms and liberties of my family? Why does my child not have the freedom from this sort of abject terror?

Nate Gets Me Canceled

The population of people who know why I stopped tweeting in May 2020 is pretty small. Nate McMurray is one of them, and he is so low and dishonorable that he used it against me in an effort to silence me, this blog, my voice, and any scrutiny of his foundering campaign.

Congratulations, Nate or whoever made up that account. Consider me silenced.

How Nate Interacts With People

On Thursday and Friday February 16th and 17th, Cheektowaga Councilman Brian Nowak interacted with County Executive candidate Nate McMurray.

The difference here is that Brian is an elected official and very well-informed. He knows what he’s talking about.

Nate isn’t and doesn’t.

Yet that doesn’t prevent Nate from being condescending to Brian in an absurd way. (click the image to enlarge)

Chances are slim that McMurray makes it past petitions to merit even a response from Poloncarz on a “debate”, but look at how he interacts with Brian, who points out that ego should take a back seat to achievement and defending past achievements. Nate has a lot of the former, few of the latter. But he is to be lauded for rendering himself unemployable except for a shaky entry into being a litigation attorney.

He immediately lunges at Nowak, making him out to be a Poloncarz shill by quizzing him on three bullet points on which he has fixated. Nowak responds, deftly. (Again, click to expand)

So, in response to Nowak, McMurray lashes out with feigned incredulity and then proceeds to insult Nowak, who responds by reminding McMurray that it is he who is running for CE, and again schooling him on the fact that governing involves myriad competing interests and associated minutiae.

Then Nate pivots to his love of IKEA (born from his Scandinavian travel, despite the fact that IKEA exists on every populated continent on Earth.) It is another McMurray flex – he’s better than you because he made more than you – is better traveled than you.

Nowak then reminds McMurray that the 14% poverty rate in Erie County is not caused by – or fixable by – one man. (Remember the other day I referred to McMurray’s declarations about poverty to be akin to Trumpism’s “he alone can fix it.“)

McMurray then again offers a non-responsive insult by claiming we have the “worst job market in the country” (citation, please), and that Buffalo “is the third poorest city in the country,” which really should be directed to the city’s government.

Then he asks, rhetorically, as if this is Nowak’s responsibility to answer, “what is the legacy of [Poloncarz]”? I personally think the legacy is to restore faith in county government. To deliver excellent results with a renewed focus on what matters to people. To be a responsible and capable steward of the public purse. To navigate through two negotiations with the Bills and a pandemic. To restore Erie County to fiscal responsibility, improve our credit rating, improve our infrastructure, and to ensure that county departments and services are constantly improving.

Anyone who thinks there hasn’t been positive change between 2012 – 2023, as compared with 2000 – 2011 is lying, an idiot, or was simply absent from the area. Anyone with even a passing, hearsay recollection of Mssrs. Giambra and Collins know how much better, more competent, more responsive, and more people-focused our county government is now.

That’s why we don’t necessarily need some quasi-informed cowboy spouting off about undefined “change” because that sounds a lot like 1999 speaking. “Challenging authority” is for loudmouth adolescents, and is not a positive for its own sake. It really underscores the fact that the driving force that informs McMurray’s candidacy is score-settling and grievance. It has nothing whatsoever to do with the nuts and bolts of running a county government.

As Nowak, notes, “Only the guy who isn’t rowing has time to rock the boat.” *Chef’s kiss.*

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