FLORIDA RESIDENTS PLEAD GUILTY TO CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT INTERSTATE TRANSPORTATION OF STOLEN PROPERTY OF FAMILY OF FORMER CANDIDATE FOR NATIONAL OFFICE TIED TO POLITICAL “ORGANIZATION” IN WESTCHESTER.

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Pleas Follow Filing of Criminal Information Alleging Defendants Stole Property Belonging to Immediate Family Member of a Then-Former Government Official

WPCNR FBI WIRE. From the Federal Bureau of Investigation. September 7, 2022:

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Michael J. Driscoll, Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, announced that AIMEE HARRIS and ROBERT KURLANDER pled guilty to conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property involving the theft of personal belongings of an immediate family member of a then-former government official who was a candidate for national political office.  HARRIS and KURLANDER pled guilty Wednesday before United States Magistrate Judge Sarah L. Cave and will be sentenced by Chief United States District Judge Laura Taylor Swain. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said:  “Harris and Kurlander stole personal property from an immediate family member of a candidate for national political office.  They sold the property to an organization in New York for $40,000 and even returned to take more of the victim’s property when asked to do so.  Harris and Kurlander sought to profit from their theft of another person’s personal property, and they now stand convicted of a federal felony as a result.”  

FBI Assistant Director Michael J. Driscoll said:  “As they’ve admitted with today’s pleas, the defendants conspired to steal an individual’s personal property, which they subsequently sold to a third party and delivered across state lines.  As a consequence of their actions, they now face punishment in the federal criminal justice system for their crimes.  I’d like to thank the Public Corruption Units at both the FBI’s New York Office and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York for their dedicated effort in this case.”  

According to the Information and statements made in court:

In or about September 2020, HARRIS and KURLANDER conspired to steal, transport across state lines, and sell personal property that belonged to an individual (the “Victim”) whom HARRIS and KURLANDER knew was an immediate family member of a then-former government official who was a candidate for national political office. 

The Victim had stored the property, including a handwritten journal containing highly personal entries, tax records, a digital storage card containing private family photographs, and a cellphone, among other things, in a private residence in Delray Beach, Florida, at which HARRIS was temporarily residing. 

After HARRIS stole the property, she enlisted KURLANDER to help her facilitate its sale.  HARRIS and KURLANDER then made contact with an employee of an organization based in Mamaroneck, New York (the “Organization”), who instructed them to use an encrypted application to communicate with the Organization and requested photographs of the Victim’s property. 

After receiving the photographs, the Organization offered to pay for HARRIS and KURLANDER’s transportation of the property from Florida to New York City.  HARRIS and KURLANDER subsequently traveled to New York City with the Victim’s property at the Organization’s expense and met with employees of the Organization. 

During that meeting, HARRIS described the circumstances of how she had obtained the Victim’s property, provided the property to the Organization, and disclosed that the Victim had stored additional property in the residence where HARRIS continued to have access. 

After the meeting, and at the Organization’s request, HARRIS and KURLANDER returned to Florida to obtain more of the Victim’s property in order to provide it to the Organization.  They later met with an Organization employee in Florida and gave that employee more of the Victim’s stolen property, believing that the Organization would transport or cause the transport of the stolen property from Florida to the Organization’s offices in New York, which the Organization subsequently did.  The Organization subsequently paid HARRIS and KURLANDER each $20,000 for the stolen property.

*                *                *

AIMEE HARRIS, 40, of Palm Beach, Florida, and ROBERT KURLANDER, 58, of Jupiter, Florida, each pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property, which carries a maximum sentence of 5 years in prison. 

The maximum potential sentence in this case is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendants will be determined by the judge. 

Under the terms of their plea agreements, HARRIS and KURLANDER each agreed to forfeit $20,000, and KURLANDER agreed to cooperate with the Government.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. 

The prosecution of this case is being handled by the Office’s Public Corruption Unit.  Assistant United States Attorneys Jacqueline C. Kelly, Robert B. Sobelman, and Mitzi S. Steiner are in charge of the prosecution.

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JOHN BAILEY’S WVOX WHITE PLAINS REPORT THIS MORNING: COMPLETE TRANSCRIPT

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JOHN BAILEY THE CITIZENETREPORTER

APPEARS ON AIR WORLDWIDE TUESDAYS 7:50 AM

ON DENNIS AND TONNY’S GOOD MORNING

WESTCHESTER PROGRAM WVOX 1460 & WVOX.COM

GOOD MORNING WESTCHESTER, DENNIS AND TONNY FROM WHITE PLAINS NY USA. WHERE WE HAVE BREAKING NEWS!

THE COMMON COUNCIL MEETS TONIGHT AT CITY HALL HOLDING A PUBLIC HEARING ON EXTENDING THE CITY PARTICIPATION IN THE SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER/WESTCHESTER POWER CONSORTIUM OF 24 TOWNS AND CITIES TO CONTINUE AT THE NEW FIXED GREEN ENERGY RATE OF 15.1 CENTS PER KILOWATT HOUR WITH A BASIC RATE OF 13.3 CENTS PER KILOWATT HOUR. \

THIS RATE FIXES THE PRICE OF KILLOWATT HOUR FOR GREEN ENERGY FOR MEMBER CITIES OF THE CONSORTIUM FOR TWO YEARS.

ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK LAST WEEK I INTERVIEWED DAN WELSH DIRECTOR OF WESTCHESTER POWER AND NINA ORVILLE  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER WHERE THEY ANNOUNCED THE RATES.

I ASKED THEM WHY THE RATE  OBTAINED AFTER THEIR “PAUSE” CALLED LAST SPRING IS HIGHER.

MR. WELSH SAID  WHEN BUYING ELECTRIC POWER, YOU ARE BUYING ELECTRONS WITH NO ABILITY TO DISCERN WHETHER THE ELECTRICITY IS MANUFACTURED BY GREEN SOURCES SOLAR, WIND OR WATER IT IS BECAUSE THE NEW YORK INDEPENDENT SYSTEMS OPERATOR SETS THE PRICE OF ELECTRICITY AT OR  NEAR THE HIGHEST PRICE POINT.

PRESENTLY NATURAL GAS IS THE HIGHEST PRICED AND MOST USED SOURCE OF ELECTRICITY, MEANING INSTEAD OF SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER BEING ABLE TO BUY GREEN SOURCE GENERATED ELECTRICITY AT A LOWER PRICE THAN NATURAL GAS THE LARGEST FUEL SOURCE, THEY CAN’T.

THEY HAVE TO BUY IT OFF THE GRID AT THE NYISO SET PRICE. THIS IS STUNNING NEWS TO ME.

IT MEANS THE NEW RATE FOR GREEN ENERGY NOW IS EVEN HIGHER THAN ORIGINALLY REJECTED BY WESTCHESTER POWER LAST SPRING.

MY ELECTRIC BILL AS A GREEN CUSTOMER OF WESTCHESTER POWER FOR AUGUST THE FIRST MONTH UNDER THE STANDARD CON ED RATE OF 11.2 CENTS PER KWH FOR THE ELECTRICITY AT THIS NEW RATE OF 15 CENTS THE ADVANTAGE IS THE NEW GREEN FIXED RATE REMAINS FIXED FOR 2 YEARS,

BUT IF I USE 1,389 KILOWATTHOURS OF ELECTRICITY NEXT AUGUST AT THE NEW GREEN RATE OF 15.1 CENTS PER KILOWATT HOUR INSTEAD OF $155 FOR THE ELECTRICITY i PAY $210 AT THE NEW FIXED GREEN RATE A 40% INCREASE TO GET GREEN ENERGY WHICH MAY OR NOT BE GREEN SOURCE GENERATED ANYWAY.

WHY IS THE PRICE OF NATURAL GAS SO HIGH?

MR. WELSH SAID BECAUSE THE USA IS SENDING OUR NATURAL GAS OR PART OF IT TO EUROPE DUE TO THE UKRAINE-RUSSIA WAR SHORTAGES AND RUSSIA CLAMPING DOWN ON NATURAL GAS EXPORTS TO EUROPE.

THE NEW GREEN RATE AND BASE RATE (13.3 CENTS PER KILOWATTHOUR) FROM SUSTAINABLE WESTCHESTER AND WESTCHESTER POWER WILL START BEING CHARGED IN DECEMBER MR. WELSH AND MS ORVILLE SAID.

MAYOR ROACH IS VERY SUPPORTIVE OF GREEN ENERGY

TONIGHT HE IS APPOINTING  MARIAM ELGUETA TO BE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY TO THE MAYOR AND CLIMATE SMART COORDINATOR TO LIAISON WITH HIS CLIMATE START COMMUNITY PROGRAM TO FACILIATE MORE AGGRESSIVE ENERGY SAVINGS IN WHITE PLAINS.

HE IS ESTABLISHING A CLIMATE SMART COMMUNITY TASK FORCE TO DEVELOP A STRATEGY AND WORK PLAN FOR ESTABLISHING A BASE LINE  FOR CITY CURRENT EMISSIONS, RECOMMEND REDUCTION TARGETS, IDENTIFY NEW STRATEGIES  FOR REDUCTIONS AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND TO RECOMMEND WAYS  IN WHICH THESE STRATEGIES CAN BE INCORPORATED INTO THE CITY’S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING EFFORTS.

THE MEMBERS OF THE CLIMATE SMART COMMUNITY TASK FORCE ARE:

Judith Mezey, Planning Department Deputy Commissioner

Rebecca Fahey, White Plains Department of Public Works

Jeremiah Frei-Pearson, White Plains Sustainability Committee

Samuel Scafidi White Plains resident

Vennela Yadhati, White Plains resident

Mariam Elgueta, Secretary to the Mayor

The Mayor will chair the Task Force

THIS IS A GREAT DAY TO GO BACK TO SCHOOL.

SCHOOL STARTED TODAY AND SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS DR. JOSEPH RICCA IN OUR BACK TO SCHOOL INTERVIEW LAST WEEK SAID NEW SECURITY PROCEDURES WERE IN EFFECT , BUT CANNOT DISCLOSE THEM.

THERE IS NO MANDATORY MASKING IN EFFECT BUT STUDENTS CAN DON MASKS IF THEY WANT TO.

PARENTS ARE CAUTIONED NOT TO SEND STUDENTS TO SCHOOL IF THEY SHOWED SIGNS OF ILLNESS. AGGREGATE TESTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PARENTS AND GUARDIANS IF REQUESTED. PARENTS CAN DO THAT BY CALLING THEIR CHILD’S SCHOOL.

PARTITIONS BETWEEN STUDENTS IN SCHOOL CLASSROOMS HAVE BEEN REMOVED.

SUPERINTENDENT RICCA SAID THAT IF COVID CASES OR MONKEYPOX WERE TO INCREASE SUBSTANTIALLY, THE WHITE PLAINS SCHOOLS ARE PREPARED TO RETURN TO REMOTE LEARING OR DISTANCING AND MASKING MEASURES. THE DISTRICT HAS PLANNED FOR THIS POSSIBILITY

NO BULLYING OVER MASKING OR NOT TO MASK WILL BE TOLERATED, THE SUPERINTENDENT SAID.

DR. RICCA STATED TO HIS KNOWLEDGE, OTHER SCHOOL DISTRICTS WERE PROCEEDING LIKE WHITE PLAINS, RETURNING TO A NORMAL SCHOOL SITUATION WITH CAUTION.

TOM CHAPIN WILL START DOWNTOWN MUSIC AT GRACE AT NOON ON SEPTEMBER 28. AND THAT’S IT FOR THIS WEEK…DENNIS AND TONNY?

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THE WORK COOPERATIVE ALTERNATIVE IN WESTCHESTER.

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WPCNR MOVING FORWARD. By Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. September 5, 2022:

ON Labor day learn more about the Westchester Cooperative Network.

This network promotes and supports the development of worker owned cooperatives in Westchester County. Check their website. And, listen to the interview (link below) with Delia Marx, founder of the network.

Worker owned coops exist around the nation but not in Westchester. Delia would love to start a coop in Greenburgh and in the county. The cooperative network is currently offering a limited number of grants of up to $10,000 to groups whose business mission aligns with the seven cooperative principles. The cooperative network accepts applications on a rolling basis.

Do you have a business idea? Are you willing to put in the time and effort to bring it to fruition? Can you gather a group of people to work together? The Westchester Cooperative Network helps residents find the necessary training, legal assistance and financial support. This could be a great opportunity.

https://www.westchestercooperative.net/

PAUL FEINER

Greenburgh Town Supervisor

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NEW ACTIVE WESTCHESTER COVID CASES NOSE DIVE 40% IN AUGUST.

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WESTCHESTER HAS 4TH CONSECUTIVE WEEK OF NO RISE IN INFECTION RATE, CONTROLLING THE SPREAD OF THE DISEASE, NOT STOPPING IT.

WPCNR CORONA VIRUS SURVEILLANCE. From the New York State Covid 19 Tracker and the Westchester Covid Tracker. Observation & Analysis By John F. Bailey. September 5, 2022:

Westchester has got Covid under control not spreading after 7 months of growing cases. February being the only month other than August where infections were dropping.

FOLLOW THE EBB OF NEW ACTIVE COVID POSITIVES. Note there is no significant surge in midweek that characterized case increases in July. The first number in each is the number of positives that day, the second number the number of persons tested an the third number the percentage of infections of those testing positive. Infections averaged 178 a day 5.9% of those tested. the Spread rate of the persons testing positive two weeks ago was 1 new covid infected person the week of August 21-27 infecting 1 other person (1,246 new covid cases the week finished Saturday, divided by 1,300 cases the week of August 21-27)

Saturday new infections brought the total of August 28 to September 3 to 1,245, 54 less than the 1,300 of last week. This marked the fourth consecutive week that the corona virus infections have stayed even or declined.

August 28 to September 3 is the third three weeks since February 6-12 (1,208 new covid infections), February 13-19 (886 new), February 20-26( 492 new covid cases),when  the county has had  three reduced or even numbers of infections consecutively.

The first three weeks in a row that infections were reduced  since February were Aug. 1-6 (2,062), Aug 7-13(1,664), and Aug 14-20 (1,299).

Westchester went up 1 to 1,300 new infections the week of Aug 21-28, virtually even, virtually even for four consecutive weeks now.

Taking a look around the leading areas of infections based on the Westchester covid Tracker, Westchester residents have dramatically changed their habits. The vaccinations have worked. The areas of the county that have averaged a 100 active cases for weeks have dramatically cut infections of the 15 most active areas computed by WPCNR on the date of August 4, those 15 hot spot areas have declined to just 9 areas that have 100 cases.

The 15 areas August 4 coming in with 100 cases that day have cut cases an average 40%. The red numbers next to the towns in the current 100 active cases list show dramatic reductions:

CHECK THE RED NUMBERS! GOOD JOB WESTCHESTER! YONKERS DROPPING OUT OF OVER 1,000 INFECTIONS A MONTH AGO TO 719, MT. PLEASANT TARRYTOWNS, NORTH AND NEW CASTLES DROPPING OUT OF THE 100 CASE RANGE CUTTING NEW CASES 55% IN A MONTH. GREENBURGH CUTTING INFECTIONS 56%. WHITE PLAINS, 37%. THE HIGH RATE OF INFECTIONS A MONTH AGO, ON THE RIGHT SHOWS THAT AFTER THE WILD SPREAD OF 10,298 NEW CASES IN JULY, PERSONS PAID ATTENTION TO BEHAVIORS AND ON THE SURFACE AT LEAST THE DISEASE AT THIS TIME IS UNDER CONTROL.

With school starting tomorrow, the pressure will be on to keep behavior and vigilance sharp, and manage your risks as well as your child’s.

Right now the disease is not spreading. But that depends on you Westchester.

WESTCHESTER IS CARDED AT  MONKEYPOX CASES AT 81. NYC MONKEYPOX CASES,3,001.

Around the Mid-Hudson Region, the covid is down, too. But it is not down in Nassau County and Suffolk.

COVID IN THE NEW YORK CITY METROPOLITAN AREA ON SATURDAY. STILL OUT THERE AND ABOUT

Westchester lead the county with 141 cases Saturday, and a 5.2% percentage positive rate. The Mid Hudson region combined for 356 cases Saturday of 7,167 tested, for a 5% overall all positive rate this is the lowest infection rate we have seen . Nassau and Suffolk County continue to infect hundreds a week at 8.4% and 7% positive rates. The 9 counties of the Mid-Hudson region and Nassau and Suffolk counties had 988 new persons with covid Saturday of 14,177 tests (all Lab certified), for an overall 7% infection rate.

The 9 counties are infecting at a rate that is 61% of what New York is infecting with covid, around 1,000 a week., compared to NYC’s figure of 1,627 new cases.

Though covid is better under control in Westchester at a 1 infecting 1 infection rate that still yields 1,000 a month. That has to come down.

The unknown quantity is monkeypox. New York City reported 3,001 cases of monkeypox Friday,virtually double the number of new covid cases.

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EUGENE V. DEBS THE PEERLESS LEADER OF AMERICAN LABOR

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Biography from Wikipedia:

Eugene Victor “Gene” Debs (November 5, 1855 – October 20, 1926) was an American socialistpolitical activisttrade unionist, one of the founding members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), and five times the candidate of the Socialist Party of America for President of the United States.[1] Through his presidential candidacies as well as his work with labor movements, Debs eventually became one of the best-known socialists living in the United States.

Debs quit school at 14 in Terre Haute, Indiana, to work on the railroad and became a fireman on the railroad in 1870 at age 15.

Early in his political career, Debs was a member of the Democratic Party. He was elected as a Democrat to the Indiana General Assembly in 1884.

After working with several smaller unions, including the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, Debs led his union in a major ten-month strike against the CB&Q Railroad in 1888.

Debs was instrumental in the founding of the American Railway Union (ARU), one of the nation’s first industrial unions.

After workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company organized a wildcat strike over pay cuts in the summer of 1894, Debs signed many into the ARU. He led a boycott by the ARU against handling trains with Pullman cars in what became the nationwide Pullman Strike, affecting most lines west of Detroit and more than 250,000 workers in 27 states.

Purportedly to keep the mail running, President Grover Cleveland used the United States Army to break the strike. As a leader of the ARU, Debs was convicted of federal charges for defying a court injunction against the strike and served six months in prison.

In prison, Debs read various works of socialist theory and emerged six months later as a committed adherent of the international socialist movement. Debs was a founding member of the Social Democracy of America (1897), the Social Democratic Party of America (1898) and the Socialist Party of America (1901). Debs ran as a Socialist candidate for President of the United States five times, including 1900 (earning 0.6 percent of the popular vote), 1904 (3.0 percent), 1908 (2.8 percent), 1912 (6.0 percent), and 1920 (3.4 percent), the last time from a prison cell.

He was also a candidate for United States Congress from his native state Indiana in 1916.

Debs was noted for his oratorical skills, and his speech denouncing American participation in World War I led to his second arrest in 1918. He was convicted under the Sedition Act of 1918 and sentenced to a ten-year term. President Warren G. Harding commuted his sentence in December 1921. Debs died in 1926, not long after being admitted to a sanatorium due to cardiovascular problems that developed during his time in prison.

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DROUGHT. LOCAL CITIZENS ENCOURAGED TO CONSERVE WATER.

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WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. By Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner. September 5, 2022:

Greenburgh Currently Suffers Moderate Drought Period as Reservoirs Deplete 

As you may notice from your browning grass and trees that are already looking like Autumn, we are severely low on rainfall this summer. The upstate reservoir network that provides our greater metropolitan area drinking water is under its normal capacity, so when you try to save your lawn or overuse water in other ways in your home or business, you risk further depleting our precious drinking water resources. 

Current conditions in Westchester County:

·         100% of the county has gone from “abnormally dry” status to being classified as in a “moderate drought” period. This means that crop growth is stunted, planting is delayed, fire danger is elevated, gardens begin to wilt, and lawns brown early. In a drought, irrigation use increases, hay and grain yields are lower than normal, honey production declines, wildfires and ground fires increase.

·         21.71% of Westchester is in a severe drought period. This means that specialty crops are impacted in both yield and fruit size, and air quality is poor. 

The Town of Greenburgh is currently in a moderate drought period. 

What can you do to use less water, and have a positive impact during this time of drought?

The following home practices can ease the burden on your local water supply and save money in the process:

1.    Turn off the faucet while brushing your teeth and washing your face. 

2.    Only run the washing machine and dishwasher when you have a full load.

3.    Use a low-flow shower head and faucet aerators.

4.    Fix leaks.

5.    Install a dual-flush or low-flow toilet or put a conversion kit on your existing toilet.

6.    Don’t overwater your lawn or water during peak periods, and install rain sensors on irrigation systems.

7.    Install a rain barrel to collect water for outdoor watering.

8.    Plant a rain garden for catching stormwater runoff from your roof, driveway, and other hard surfaces.

9.    Monitor your water usage on your water bill and ask your local government about a home water audit.

10. Share your knowledge about saving water through conservation and efficiency with your neighbors.

These water saving measures can have a big impact on water demand in local communities. While saving money, you also have the opportunity to get involved in your local community, protect the water in your local waterways so you can continue to enjoy their recreational benefits, and get to know your home and family with a few do-it-yourself projects!

 

Did you know that…

_30 to 60% of domestic drinking water is used to water yards and gardens, and often large portions are wasted by over-watering, evaporation, and misdirected sprinklers that water sidewalks and driveways.

_The average U.S. per capita water use is 170 gallons per day (gpd). Compare that to 36 gpd in Australia, with better efficiency measures in place but still enjoying the same quality of life. 

*For more information on drought conditions/effects and how to conserve water, you can visit the resources we used in this article

https://www1.nyc.gov/site/dep/water/reservoir-levels.page

https://www.drought.gov/states/new-york/county/westchester

https://data.indystar.com/drought/new-york/westchester-county/36119/

https://planning.westchestergov.com/environment/water-conservation/drought-emergency-plan

https://www.americanrivers.org/rivers/discover-your-river/top-10-ways-for-you-to-save-water-at-home/

PAUL FEINER

Greenburgh Town Supervisor

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THE GREATEST COLLAPSE IN BASEBALL HISTORY CONTINUES

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By “Bull” Allen, September 4, 2022 UPDATED SEPTEMBER 5:

The Big Ball Park
BULL ALLEN

Hello there everybody, this is Bull Allen, greeting you from a deserted Yankee Stadium. The old Big Ball Park. Drawing deeply on a White Owl Wallop and sipping a Ballantine Ale in the depressing gathering twilight, watching the greatest collapse in baseball history unfold.

They are on life support in Tampa.

The Bronx Bombers are no longer bombing.

The losing continues.

The lead over Tampa Bay is 5 games after the must win Sunday, 2-1, where Aaron Judge once again with a head first slide into third to set up the winning run in the eighth. A win not even mentioned in this mornings sports section of The Times.

The pitching lasts 4 to 5 innings.

The box scores when you can find them on the internet are pathetic. No hits from the 3rd slot to the 9th slot in the batting order Saturday night. Benching kids who were hitting. Playing hitters who won’t walk and swing .

Batting Aaron Judge, by far their best player and best clutch hitter, as manager should realize first is no longer smart. He has to move The Judge down to third and fourth and Kiner-Felafel 1st. At least there would be somebody on when Judge hits one.

The team has lost its heart.

Meanwhile, in another part of the country in Tampa Bay the Yankees continue their el foldo. They cannot score. A tired overused pitching staff struggles due to Aaron Boone mismanagement and the lead once 13 games is down to 4 games–with 30 to play! 

New York needs to play .500 ball at least to .make the expanded crapshoot of the playoffs

With every loss the Yankee ability to resign Aaron Judge dwindles. Judge is looking at a team that has fallen into a funk. The swagger is gone on this team. The confidence is gone.

The inability of the Yankee hitting instructors and the manager to demand the hitters execute situational hitting has indicated the collapse of the Earl Weaver 3-run homer theory along with the flaws of the Sparky Anderson 4 innings and 5 pitchers daily rotation.

The inability of Aaron Boone to motivate the team is obvious.

You cannot have 5 inning starters because it kills the bullpen. A management change was needed.

Perhaps we can exhume Bob Lemon’s coffin or Billy Martin’s coffin, or Casey Stengel’s coffin and place it in the Yankee dugout and that will inspire the team.

The prospects for the club after this colossal fold from .700 for 81 games to .300 ball since unprecedented in baseball annals.

This streak is worth a book.

But it could shatter the team for years. The Yankee heart is gone.

The team has never collapsed like this ever in their history. Even in the mid-60s, they played with heart. Their mystique brought them back into contention with Bill Virdon almost winning the pennant in 1974 and 1975.

Will Judge want to sign on for big Yankee money with so much having to be fixed? This lineup strategy of free swinging big boppers who can only bop when a pitcher makes a mistake, since they swing at everything and never just make contact. Of course, Judge might go cross town to the Mets and enjoy the same celebrity. This business about him going to the West Coast to play with the Giants, well they are in a fade, too. Los Angeles? They can afford him. So can the Phils, the Braves, the White Sox, the Minnesotas. Lots of contending young clubs. T

The Yankees by this profound structural error have shattered their image.

Nobody fears them any more.

Some one needs to come in and fix it. Bring in Joe Girardi for the stretch run. Joe Girardi never made excuses. He never whined. Or hire Joe Madden.

In the glory days when the Yankees lost, they lost tough. They never whined. the stalked off the field with pride. The Yankees showed you how a winner loses, with class and dignity.

They have lost that heart.

The Yankees now have to play the AL EAST the toughest division in baseball to make sure they make the playoffs, and if they do make it they will face good pitching every game. Without finishing first they could be one and out as a wildcard.

The big story in New York’s lackluster newspaper sports sections is their utter ignoring the baseball season. No box scores.No standings. And absolutely no coverage of the Yankee collapse. The heart is gone out of the sports sections too.

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3RD WEEK: NO RISE IN COVID INFECTION PACE. FIRST THREE WEEKS EVEN OR REDUCED PACE SINCE FEBRUARY. HEADED FOR A 4TH CONSECUTIVE WEEK OF KEEPING COVID SPREAD DOWN.

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WPCNR COVID SURVEILLANCE. From the New York State Department of Health Covid and Monkeypox trackers. Observation & Analysis by John F. Bailey. September 4, 2022:

August 28 to September 2 is the third three weeks since February 6-12 (1,208 new covid infections), February 13-19 (886 new), February 20-26( 492 new covid cases),when  the county has had  three reduced or even numbers of infections consecutively.

The first three weeks in a row that infections were reduced  since February were Aug. 1-6 (2,062), Aug 7-13(1,664), and Aug 14-20 (1,299).

Westchester went up 1 to 1,300 new infections the week of Aug 21-28, virtually even, virtually even for four consecutive weeks.

From Last Sunday, August 28 through Friday, September 2, there  were  1,105 persons testing positive for covid.

Depending on Saturday testing results (due out this afternoon), Westchester may finish the 6 days with 1,291 cases or lower which would be lower than the week of August 21 to 27 that saw 1,300 cases in the county.

Significantly this is the third consecutive week new infections of covid have been even in this case, not spreading higher.

For the record, Westchester is infecting at 185 new covid cases a day the first 6 days of the week before Labor Day Weekend,  a 1 infected person from 2 weeks ago infecting 1 other person over the two weeks from August 21. This is the infection rate that keeps the number of cases from expanding, and diminishing the exponential spread of the disease.

WESTCHESTER IS CARDED AT  MONKEYPOX CASES AT 81. NYC MONKEYPOX CASES,3,001

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LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALUTES THE PIONEERS OF WORKERS’ RIGHTS TO LIVE, LIBERTY, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS AND FAIR WAGES

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. SEPTEMBER 3, 2022. Reprinted from the CitizeNetReporter Archives:

It is Labor Day Weekend 2022.

Look back at the history of the labor movement, workers have always had to fight and die to make progress.

Because management is not fair, equitable, or humane. They don’t care about you as a person. They use you up. Use you. And when you get hurt. Too bad.

Business and government “internships” today are a nice word for slavery without whips.

Labor Day first made its appearance when low wages and long hours were protested against in the mid-nineteenth century during the American Industrial Revolution.

Management works for themselvesalways.

Oregon instituted the first Labor Day in the 1870s, and New York in the 1880s.

The National Labor Day Holiday came about because of national outrage over two violent strikes that were ended by armed intervention by the military and private detectives, the notorious “Pinkertons.”

Let’s go back to the 1890s and learn what Labor Day is all about. It’s not about a day off. It is a memorial day. It’s not about “good job.”

The gay 90s were not so gay if you were a worker.

They were a time when the so-called robber barons thought nothing of bringing out private security forces to shoot strikers. They  lowered wages with no mercy. It was all about them, their mansions, their fortunes, their tax-free profits. (No income tax before 1913, folks).

In the Homestead, Pennsylvania steel factory strike in 1892Andrew Carnegie, the steel baron, wanted to lower wages to make the Homestead factory  more profitable. And the big robber barons of 2022 are doing it to us today, 122 years later.

(Instead of pulling down statues, they should change the name of the Carnegie Institute. Mr. Carnegie was no saint.)

Steelworkers in Homestead Pennsylvania, made $10 a week, working 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, as much as  84 hours a week.

Carnegie’s Deputy  Chairman Henry Frick wanted to pay them less, and attempted to bring in non-union laborers to replace them.

Two thousand union workers barricaded the plant.

Frick hired Pinkerton Detectives to disperse them. On June 29, 1892, “Pinkertons” killed 7 union workers with gunfire, and injured “countless” others and three Pinkertons were killed.

The Governor called in the National Guard to restore order. The armed intervention broke the Amalgamated Association union.

After this, according to “Steelworkers in America” by David Brody, wages of steelworkers at Homestead declined 20% from 1892 to 1907 and workshifts went up from 8 hours to 12 hours (96 hours a week). 

What a great fellow, Carnegie. What a humanitarian! That’s your robber baron. He’d fit right in with today’s Wolves of Wall Street, the college high interest loans, the foreclosurists, and our national leadership wouldn’t he?

This union-killing in Pennysylvania was followed by the 1894 Pullman Strike in Pullman Illinois.

George M. Pullman, the creator of the sleeper car, housed his workers in Pullman City, Illinois, and charged them rent. 

In the depression of the early 1890s, in 1893 wages at the Pullman Palace Factory fell  25%, but Pullman did not lower his rents to his workers.

The rent, if not met, was deducted from worker pay.

Pullman was a garbage person.

A nice guy, George Pullman.  He could run a bank today, couldn’t he? He could run an airline and an airliner manufacturing company (3 crashes killing a thousand people because Boeing was cheap on inspections, please.)

On May 11, 1894 workers with the American Railroad Union under the leadership of the great  Eugene V.  Debs, started a wildcat (unauthorized) strike in protest of Pullman’s policies.

On June 26, 1894, union members refused to service trains with Pullman Cars in their consist, to leave Chicago, delaying the U.S. Mail.

Twenty-four railroads in an organization called the General Managers Association announced that any switchman who refused to move rail cars would be fired.

Mr. Debs and his union stood their ground.

Debs said if any switchman was fired for not moving Pullman Cars, the union would walk off their jobs. On June 29, 50,000 union men quit.

Union supporters stopped trains on rails West of Chicago.

President Grover Cleveland was asked by the railroads to use federal troops to stop the strike.

(Does all this sound familiar? Right out of today’s political rhetoric.)

When Debs went to Blue Island to ask railroad workers there to support the strike, rioting broke out, tracks were torn up. Railroad cars were burned.

The Attorney General of the United States Richard Olney, at the urging of the railroad owners, obtained an injunction July 2 that declared the strike illegal.

When Debs’ union members did not return to work, when they did not return to work—-

President Cleveland sent federal troops into Chicago.

Troops opened fire on strikers  attempting to stop a train traveling through downtown Chicago.

Debs and his union leaders were arrested for disrupting the delivery of mail.

Twenty-six civilians were killed for disrupting the mail.

Because the mail could not be delivered. Because the mail could not be delivered…how pathetic.

Debs, the union leader, stopped the strike.

Debs was sentenced to six months in jail and the union was disbanded. To my knowledge no federal troops who killed civilians were prosecuted.

A number of railroad workers were blacklisted and could not get a job on a railroad in the United States.

It was the first time federal troops were used to break up a strike.

Pullman workers were forced to sign a pledge they would never strike again.

The threat of the federal government stopping strikes lead to an end of strikes for at least 8 years.

President Cleveland, though, was facing reelection in 1894.

And, here’s how Labor Day became a national holiday.

Union leaders and citizens were alarmed at his handling of the strike.

As PBS put it in a documentary in 2001:

“But now, protests against President Cleveland’s harsh methods made the appeasement (italics WPCNR) of the nation’s workers a top political priority. In the immediate wake of the strike, legislation was rushed unanimously through both houses of Congress, and the bill arrived on President Cleveland’s desk just six days after his troops had broken the Pullman strike.

1894 was an election year.

President Cleveland seized the chance at conciliation, and Labor Day was born. William Jennings Bryant ran for the Democratic Party and the Populist Party in 1896, losing to  Republican William McKinley.

Then came a sea change in the great coal strike of 1902, when another “exemplary” capitalist J. P. Morgan fought the coal workers.

It happened in the coal fields of Easton, Pennsylvania, when the United Mine Workers headed by John Mitchell struck the coal operators  pushing for an 8-hour day.

The coal operators employed private police and the Pennsylvania National Guard to protect non-union workers.

President Theodore Roosevelt summoned the parties to the White House to bring settlement of the dispute by arbitration. After 6 months, the coal miners won a 9-hour day and a 10% increase in wages.

T.R.’s personal intervention lead to Selig Perlman, economist and labor historian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, saying “this was perhaps the first time in history a labor organization tied up for months a strategic industry without being condemned as a revolutionary menace.’

The 1902 leadership of the great President Teddy Roosevelt resulted in elimination of private police forces long used  by management to combat workers.

When Governor Samuel Pennypacker became Governor of Pennsylvania, Pennypacker created the Pennsylvania State Police in 1903, the first in the nation to supplant the independent organizations hired by management that were little more than strong-arm boys.

The lesson of Labor Day is to remember the bravery of the union leaders who put their members first, did not make deals, did not sell out their members,(and I might add, succomb to politicians’ whining) and held out for the good against managements that were neither kind, humane, fair, or appreciative of their workers’ contribution to their corporate success.

Management never  is.

They talk a good game but it’s all talk.

Look at the Covid firings. Look at the owners of Purdue Pharma, killing 500,000 with their hideous painkillers and not being jailed for it. And they get to keep their blood money.

There was a remembrance this week in White Plains for the thousands of young people who have overdosed on opioids and fentanyl . They should call for punishment of the greedy who profit from these dangerous distributions of drugs.

So American workers should remember the struggles and the leadership of Debs and Mitchell. And the strikers and civilians who were shot down in the street for stopping delivery of mail, for God’s sake!

They introduced a new era of workers’ rights at the costs of their lives.

The battle against worker exploitation never ends. It’s still happening today.

Let’s stop it. Let’s fight it. Let’s boycott the robber barons, and vote out the scalywags in Washington, D.C. All of them.

While it is in mind, could congress pass the Voting Rights Bill. Do something to reverse the feckless prejudice of the sophist Supreme Court and the gutless, heartless support of landlords and refusal to throw out the Texas abortion vigilante legislation.

The Supreme Court now aligns itself with the pre Civil War Dred Scott decision which ruled slaves were property, not people. They have ruled that women are not entitled to their own destinies.

The Supreme Court failed again just as it did on Dred Scott.

Now women are property.

Thanks to the Supreme Court Pontious Pilot attitude of not striking down the Texas “Vigilante ” Abortion Law.

When you have self-important judges on the Supreme Court embracing laws that take away freedom and condone violence, you have a kangaroo court, not “Supreme” in any way, but a “Superior” Court-ideology-driven, not “Guardians” of the people in any way.

Pass the legislation, congress.

Do something.

No more talk.

Action!

What would Socrates say?

What would Jesus do?

Judge Francis Nicolai said in court during the Hockley-Delgado legal proceedings twenty years ago in White Plains, NY, USA– the Judge pointed to his black judge’s sleeve and said ” I wear these robes to right wrongs.”

The Supreme Court of today obviously does not think this way. I mean, do they think?

The judges of the Supreme Court (because they act on mass) wear their robes to enable unfairness in the name of fairness, wrongs that deny rights, and practices that take away freedom and the pursuit of happiness. Their robes should be white with white hoods.

Welcome back robber barons, we know who you are, what you do, and your perpetual whining about how bad it is for you. You’re not strong you’re weak. You’re not fair you are unfair. You want aid and privileges and amnesty, but are reluctant to give aid, extend privileges or forgive when you are asked to sacrifice.

Labor must always fight management,. Management and ownership always wants breaks but they won’t give the working man a break.

Today’s inflation–completely manufactured by business–shows nothing has changed since 1892.

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