NOVEMBER 11– ARMISTICE DAY OF THE PAST. VIETNAM VETERANS WERE HONORED

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VIETNAM VETERANS WHO GAVE THE LAST MEASURE ARE REMEMBERED ON FIRST VIETNAM VETERANS MEMORIAL DAY.

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PICTURES OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY SOLDIERS WITH THEIR HOMETOWNS AND THE DAY THEY DIED IN ACTION DURING THE VIETNAM WAR WERE DISPLAYED IN THE ROTUNDA IN CITY HALL THIS AFTERNOON ON THE FIRST OFFICIAL VIETNAM VETERANS MEMORIAL DAY ORGANIZED BY WESTCHESTER COUNTY AND THE CITY OF WHITE PLAINS AND VIETNAM VETERANS WHO REMEMBER THEIR COMRADES.
MAYOR TOM ROACH OF WHITE PLAINS REMEMBERED MEN IN HIS FAMILY GOING TO VIETNAM AND DESCRIBED THE NEED TO RECOGNIZE THEIR SACRIFICE.
COUNTY EXECUTIVE GEORGE LATIMER EXPRESSED REGRETS ABOUT HOW VIETNAM VETERANS MET AN INHOSPITABLE WELCOME WHEN RETURNING HOME
CHAIRMAN OF THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY BOARD OF LEGISLATORS BENJAMIN BOYKIN OBSERVED PERSONAL MEMORIES OF A VIETNAM “GRUNT’ WHOM HE KNEW.
NAM VETERAN RON TUCCI TOLD OF HIS PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF VETS LIKE HIMSELF WHEN THEY CAME BACK.
A WREATH WAS PLACED BEFORE THE PLAQUE, RIGHT HONORING WHITE PLAINS VIETNAM WAR DEAD WHOSE NAMES ARE ENGRAVED ON THE PLAQUE ON THE CITY HALL ROTUNDA AT RIGHT.
LAWRENCE DENSMORE WAS ONE OF THE 26 WHITE PLAINS VIETNAM DEAD. HE WAS A VERY CLOSE BUDDY OF DAN GRIFFIN WHO HANDLES VETERANS SERVICES FOR WESTCHESTER COUNTY. ALL THE VIETNAM WAR DEAD EACH HAD A REMEMBRANCE CARD LIKE THIS ON DISPLAY IN THE ROTUNDA. THESE REMEMBRANCES COMPILED FOR THIS OCCASION BRING HOME THE MEANING OF THE LOSS OF YOUNG MEN LIKE MR. DENSMORE, BECAUSE YOU SEE THE PERSON, THE SPIRIT, THE REALNESS OF A PERSON LOST TO US FOREVER. .
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NOVEMBER 10–NEW YORK TRAFFIC –OUT OF TOWNERS ARRIVING FOR HOLIDAYS BE CAREFUL OUT THERE

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THERE IS NO PEACE AND GOOD WILL TOWARDS MEN ON NEW YORK ROADS THIS THANKSGIVING OR DECEMBER

 

LOOK FRONT AND BACKWARDS AT ALL TIMES TO AVOID WESTCHESTER LONG ISLAND NJ AND NYC OUTLAW DRIVERS AND PEDESTRIANS THEY’RE OUT TO GET YOU AND YOU DON’T WANT TO GET THEM.

HIGH ALERT FOR: Aggressive, Arrogant, Maneuvering, Passing on Right. Excessive Speed on Westchester Highways AND SUICIDAL JAYWALKERS–U TURNS A NEW YORK SPECIALTY

 

WPCNR TRAFFICA ALERTA; News and Comment by John F. Bailey. November 10, 2024:

Warning: this is not an official alert it is a WPCNR Public Service alert for the unexpected, the never encountered before this year in high traffic season.

The Taconic and Sprain Brook Parkways, in fact all parkways and expressways in Westchester  County are notorious for the aggressive speeding and passing at high speeds by many drivers going as high as 25 miles or more over the speed limit (85 to 90) and passing at high speed.

Motorists ahead of these hot rod Lincolns are often unaware of their coming up on their tails.  I have to assume that the Saw Mill, the I-684 and I-287 are subject to the same “Cowboys” maneuvering in and out  and around cars they feel are driving too slow and holding them back. Note that they  squeeze ahead of in zippy dart-in moves and if they misjudge their cut in you could be clipped and sent out of control.

I rarely see such menaces to other drivers pulled over.

The Westchester roads subject to highly dangerous traffic extends to cities like White Plains. Talk about pedestrian-friendly,  the pedestrians are downright friendly, aggressive crossers, pedestrian crossway violators and trusting us not to hit them.

In White Plains, we drivers have to not only be alert for U-turns on Mamaroneck Avenue by motorists blatantly making a “U-ie” when they miss a turn or want to go back! the way they came. No kidding. Worst driving since the days of the 1957 “peel-outs”.

We drivers must also be alert for aggressive pedestrians jaywalking in the middle of Mamaroneck Avenue and other streets heads in their cellphones,  using babies in carriages ahead of them as advance scouts.

The jay walkers leave us the careful or not too careful drivers to see them even when the pedestrians are wearing dark clothing.

The walkers in White Plains are overenergizing the streets of White Plains, making them too exciting, life threatening, but they are using all of every street as if they have the right of way all over every street using it as one big crosswalk,  by the jaywalking in the middle or anywhere they want to all along the blocks.

I do not exaggerate, ladies and gentlemen.

I am no personal injury lawyer, but by White Plains tolerating such trends as U-turns, and out of control jaywalking, (also aggravated by pedestrians using a crosswalk and starting to cross by stepping into a cross walk when cars are making right turns and have the green light), if I as a driver do not see a jaywalker and I hit them, the city could be sued for liability for not enforcing against jaywalkers.  The city needs to pass a no-jaywalking ordinance if it does not already have one. Let alone the driver hitting a jaywalker with a vehicle and being sued in a civil suit.

Driving in cities and major county roads is no longer safe. Too many drivers are violating speed restrictions by 15, 20, 30 miles over the limit and more and playing NASCAR by passing recklessly often very close to clipping the car they are cutting around.

You drive at the speed limit in this county you have to look in your rear view mirror to spot one of these cowboys coming at you with frightening speed (no shot at stopping) and it freezes you.

Just a friendly observation, hoping that “honchos driving too fast,” as Jan and Dean called them in their great ode to the California Highway Patrol, Freeway Flyer, would slow down for their own safety, you have no shot if you misjudge your passing cut-in. You get clipped, flipped and you go fly into oblivion.

Pedestrians you have to curtail your jaywalking habit.

Cross at the corner at a cross walk. Even if you’re impatient. Just tell your date you do not want her to get hurt. Also what happened to wearing white at night? Do it to be seen crossing streets legally.

As White Plains  and other cities and town apartments open and fill up, the streets will be like New York City-ized.

The latest outrage is that New York City’s City Council has suddenly surpassed the United State Congress, both houses of it, for the most irresponsible governing body by making jaywalking legal in New York City. Which means that if you as a driver hit one of those New York City arrogant crossers between blocks, you are liable. You weren’t careful.

Ai Yi YI!

Meanwhile few delivery guys and gals in New York City using the bike lanes, obey the traffic signals.

I repeat for out-of towers: few delivery guys and gals in New York City using the bikel anes, obey the traffic signals.

Watch out O-O-T-ERS! A motorbike at high speed can injure you seriously knocking you flying into a severe head injury broken hand or arm or fractured leg. And then you have to wait a half hour for an ambulance.

There need to be police on the beat to write up jaywalking and crossing cars and u-turning cars.

We need some traffic control initiatives not only on moving violations like U-turns, but jaywalkers, and crosswalk violations when cars have the light to turn.

I do not need official statistics.

I see the violations.

I see them every time I drive in to White Plains, or put on my NASCAR crash helmet, fireproof suit and activate my perimeter radar to  drive the Taconic Parkway (on weekends particularly), The Sprain I-684, hope I see the “honchos” before they make a slip.

Be careful out there.

More careful.

Vigilance for the Driving Vigilantes.

 

 

 

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NOVEMBER 9– HELLO LOVE! IT’S THANKSGIVING WEEK IN THE GREATEST CITY IN THE WORLD!

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As Pearl S. Buck who has been around says on her plaque in Grand Central Terminal (see if you can find it on your holiday trip in),

“As for New York City, it is a place apart. There is not its match in any other country in the world.”

Miss Buck said that in the 1930s, and she should see The Big Town now.

Thanksgiving Week NEXT WEEK  is a week when New York City turns up the volume with sites and experiences you will find around every corner.

Saturday, Brenda Starr and I took Metro North into The Big Apple to see a play and on our trip New York City showed off. The energy makes you feel young again–always.

 

At Grand Central Terminal, we toured the Holiday Market featuring artisans from all over, which just dazzled me with the range of creativity displayed and celebrated the creativity of the human spirit.

 

A FIREGLASS PIECE: “THE DARK PLANET”

 

“EVERYBODY GOES TO VIC’S” IN NOHO..Try the “Eggs in Purgatory” for $16–IT IS SOOOO HOT NYC

AND YOU CAN HEAR YOUR SIGNIFICANT OTHER ACROSS THE TABLE

NEW YORK THEATRE WORKSHOP WHERE THE AVANT GARDE PLAYS OF THE FUTURE PLAY NOW!

AROUND EVERY CORNER YOU SEE SOMETHING YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN BEFORE HERE THE INCREDIBLE HYDRAULIC NEW YORK CRANE THE GMK 6400 THAT LIFTS 450 TONS 450 FEET! FULLY EXTENDED! NOTHING LIKE A “NEW YORK CRANE”

 

COME ONA DOWN TO THE GREATEST CITY IN THE WORLD FOR THE HOLIDAYS JUST FOR THE THRILL THAT NEVER STOPS! 

AND ALWAYS LOOK UP!

 

 

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NOVEMBER 8–THANKSGIVING IN AMERICA’S HOMETOWN PLYMOUTH MASSACHUSETTS USA

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THANKSGIVING IN AMERICA’S HOMETOWN: PLYMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS

 

WPCNR Thanksgiving Portfolio, all photos by WPCNR:

On this Thanksgiving, let us remember the band of hardy intrepid souls who crossed an ocean in a boat no  bigger than a large Chris Craft and settled in an unforgiving landscape and started a country in the cold landscape of New England.

They were immigrants.

They were helped by Indians who welcomed them, without Indians’ compassion they would not have survived. And, remember, those pilgrims were immigrants.

A salute to this brave band. A salute, too, to the indians who accepted them without visas, without jobs, with no background checks no green cards. No border wall. No cages for children. No fear on the part of the Indians and their humanitarian leader, Squanto

The pilgrims sailed into a bay, dropped anchor and just carved out a living after living in incredible conditions in a ship’s hold for weeks, crossing the storm-tossed North Atlantic. Here are some views of America’s hometown by the WPCNR Roving Photographer.

.

Plymouth Rock Landing. Plymouth, Massachusetts.

The Mayflower II. Plymouth Harbor.

Indian Statue of Squanto welcoming the Pilgrim Settlers. Plymouth.

Governor William Bradford Statue on the Shores of Plymouth Harbor

“Plymouth Rock,” The landing place of the pilgrims.

Settlers Home, left, circa 1690.

Church, Plymouth late 1700s. .

The Jury: Old Burial Ground, Plymouth. Last resting place of the pilgrims overlooking Plymouth Harbor. The sacrifices, bravery and perseverance of these persons stand as examples to Americans today.

How are we doin’?

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NOVEMBER 7–TONIGHT MEET THE MAYOR ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK. AT 7:30 PM ON FIOS CH 45 AND OPTIMUM 76 OR WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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WPCNR NEWSMAKERS MEET THE WINNER OF THE MAYORS RACE TONIGHT.

TONIGHT, WHITE PLAINS WEEK INTRODUCES THE NEW MAYOR OF WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA–the winner of Tuesday’s election.

You will see the interview John Bailey conducted with the winning Mayoral candidate and learn again his plans and priorities for the city.

You if you did not see revealing profile of the winning candidate you can familiarize yourself with the new Mayor’s priorities and what you can expect in his first term.

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NOVEMBER 6– YOU BET YOUR LIFE. A BULL ALLEN RETROSPECTIVE OF BASEBALL AND GAMBLING

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK By “BULL ALLEN” November 6, 2025:

Hello there everybody,  this is Bull Allen greeting you from the old Yankee Stadium in the shadow of late autumn.

Now that the World Series is over, this memory of the third game of the 1956 World Series is a fitting melancholy to another intriguing season fraught with change, in rules, in attitudes and vagaries.

As I look down from the Mel Allen Broadcast Booth in the old mezzanine I see fans departing in a few days Don Larsen will pitch a perfect game saved by Mantles over the head backhand catch to save a double in left center.

I am also saddened by the big white-lettered sign “NO BETTING” a reminder of the Chicago Black Sox scandal of 1919, when the Pale Hose contrived to throw the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. Eight players were thrown out of baseball for life when the scandal came to light by Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, baseball’s first Commissioner.

it is 106 years this October since these 8 players threw a World Series.

How sad it is that the excitement of baseball players and pitchers and batters and fielders adjusting to the no shifts rule, the pitching clock, the batters’ 9 seconds be ready rule, have made baseball more exciting, and as I wrote October 2 that it has been overhadowed by baseball selling itself to the gambling industry.

Gambling commercials are in Yankee games. Baseball promotes gambling on broadcasts, even has relationships with them.

Baseball as the 1919 World Series proved is easy to fix. Nowadays bets are accepted on possible outcomes of at bats during games by gambling companies.

It was made even more startling when prominent NBA players were named as being involved in promoting fixed poker games.

If it can be done with NBA stars, it can be done with baseball stars.

More horrifying to me is how spots on gambling on baseball broadcasts and television broadcasts listened to by teens and children tells them gambling is good.

Gambling is a drug every bit as addictive as hard drugs and alcohol.

It may not kill you but you are betting your life if you develop a gambling habit.

It is a terrible thing to advertise on a baseball broadcast.

Baseball is now making so much money  from it that it will never give it up until of course another World Series is fixed.

Baseball used to be wholesome.

It is not any more with this gambling thing.

Here is Bart Giamatti’s farewell to the 2025 season…

 

 

 

 

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NOVEMBER 6 TONIGHT: INSIDE NEW YORK-PRESBYTERIAN-THE ONE ON 1111 WESTCHESTER AVENUE WHITE PLAINS HOW IT SERVES YOUR HEALTH NEEDS ON FIOS CH 45 AND OPTIMUM 76

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JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS 

TARA RITCHIE 

ON HOW NEW YORK-PRESBYTERIAN THE ONE  AT 1111 WESTCHESTER AVENUE SERVES YOU

WHAT “THE ONE” BRINGS TO WHITE PLAINS AND ALL OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY

WHY NEW YORK-PRESBYTERIAN CREATED IT.

HOW IT’S  BEING USED BY NEW PATIENTS AFTER 7 WEEKS SINCE ITS DEBUT

WHO’S USING IT AND WHY IT MAKES SENSE FOR YOU

HOW TO USE IT.

ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK PEOPLE TO BE HEARD NOVEMBER 6 AT 8, SATURDAY NOVEMBER 8 AT 7

AND ANYTIME ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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NOVEMBER 5– ANOTHER ELECTION IS OVER. WILL ANYTHING CHANGE? THE PEOPLE CHANGE. WILL THEY CHANGE THINGS?

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2025. NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. November 5, 2025:

The picture above shows brochures and mailings that have crossed The CitizeNetReporter’s bustling newsroom this year.

Each promised everything you could want, public safety, more protection, more affordable housing, funding education, protecting jobs, taking care of infrastructure, protecting social security, change, the same old promises, and you can go through 14 years of one leader and at the end of 14 years you realize not much changes. The politicians also ask for campaign contributions.

My father once told me, “I’ve found that no matter what politicians say or do, who gets into office, not much changes and things always remain the same.”

Except in the last year things have really changed.

The politicians who won in 2024 have changed things. They have not made things better. They have promoted very hurtful policies, deported people, promoted hatred and transformed the military into a tool of tyranny. They attack enemies.

Now the politicians who won yesterday are faced with politicians who are aggressive. Like hurting people. Do not like persons who are immigrants, black, Spanish, Mexican, Columbia. They have put persons in charge who change the law by directive, not through congress.

Now on the day after Election Day, we now know that things have changed in this country.

But the challenge is the cliche promises politicians have made are under seige.

Develop wisely, protect people, improve housing, feed the hungry help the homeless.

Not this year the soft touchy feely things, the promises to help mean something.

You have to help if yopu been elected.

No more good works if you cannot finance it. No more crossing your fingers  a developer will do what they say. Newly elected electees are on their own and have to lead from the front as Director of Public Safety Davie Chong said.

Financial shortfall holes, well you have to find the money. Invest in people not concrete. Twist bankers arms to help people, not evict, or deny mortgages, dooming them to a vagrant life.

In the era of anything goes the leader cannot ignore moral imperatives. He or she cannot condone deceit and misdirection.

The new Mayor of White Plains has a lot of problems his predecessor did stand up to, aside from environmental green energy process.

There is a strong movement in this country that wants to run everyone’s life. What to think. How to live.

The last time I read the Constitution it said every man is entitled to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.

It still does.

I  hope the politicians elected yesterday locally still do.

Next year there will be more brochures promising the same things.

This year it really matters that the elected do what have to do.

They have no choice but to do so.

Plan. Execute. Achieve . Advance the conditions of the afflicted and afflict the comfortable and the venal.

it’s no more “Anything Goes” time.

It’s not what you want elected officials.

It is what the people need.

Bring them what they need.

Lower prices. Jobs. Roofs. No rents endlessly raised. No food prices and gas prices the sky’s the limit. Medical care the costs of houses. No health networks that won’t treat you. And please no more making yourself great instead of the people who live in your city.

The county has 16,000 persons who need affordable homes up from 11,750 8 years ago. It is time we started building them, faster.

There are a third of the population of the county that cannot feed themselves. This is a disgrace considering how wealthy this county is. The county should do it.

 

 

 

 

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NOVEMBER 3— FED CUT IN INTEREST RATES ON OCTOBER 29 IRONIC

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WPCNR PLUS CA CHANGE, PLUS CA MEME CHANGE. News and  comment by John F. Bailey. November 3, 2025:

Marcel Proust said it all: “The more things change the more they remain the same.”

The Fed cost interest rates on October 29, The rush is on.

I find ironic that the lords of money today would lower interest rates on the same day the Great Stock Market Crash happened 96 years ago.

After worrying about how if they cut interest rates, inflation would overheat, the Federal Reserve Bank did the administration bidding which had been pressuring the Fed to cut interest rates and infuse the economy with spending adrenalin.

In the John Kenneth Galbraith book The Great Crash, which I printed the Wikipedia synopsis last week, I find it incredulous that with inflation rampant this year, that the Fed would do exactly what happened in the Roaring Twenties.  I quote Wikipedia again below:

(You cannot read the following without wondering how smart are those people in Washington who think throwing gasoline (money at lower interest rates) on a hot market will put out the fire inflation they have been trying to put out (inflation) the last year, but couldn’t.

 

The speculative bubble “PREAMBLE TO DISASTER”

The Florida land boom of the 1920s established the mood “and the conviction that God intended the American middle classes to be rich,” a sentiment so strong that it survived the ensuing crash of property prices.[6] 

In the early 1920s, yields of common stocks were favorable and prices low.

In the final six months of 1924, prices began to rise and continued through 1925, from 106 in May 1924 stock prices rose to 181 by December 1925.[7]

After a couple of short downturns during 1926, prices began to increase in earnest throughout 1927, the year in which conventional wisdom saw the seeds of what became the Great Crash sown. Following Britain’s return to the Gold Standard, and subsequent foreign exchange crises, there followed an exodus of gold from Europe to the United States.

EASING INTEREST RATES A COSTLY ERROR

In the spring of 1927, Montagu Norman and other governors of European Banks asked the Federal Reserve to ease their monetary policy and they agreed, reducing the rediscount rate from 4 to 3.5%, a move that Lionel Robbins described as resulting “in one of the most costly errors committed by it or any other banking system in the last 75 years”.

The funds released by the Fed became available to invest in the stock market and “from that date, according to all the evidence, the situation got completely out of control”.[8]

Galbraith disagreed with this simplistic analysis by arguing that the availability of money in the past was no sure recipe for a bubble in common stocks and that prices could still be regarded as a true valuation of the stock at the end of 1927.

It is early in 1928 that the “escape into make believe” started in earnest, when the market began to rise by large vaulting leaps rather than steady increments.

Prominent investors, such as Harrison Williams, the proponent of both the Shenandoah and the Blue Ridge Trust, were described by Professor Dice as “having vision for the future and boundless hope and optimism” and not “hampered by the heavy armor of tradition”.[9]

On 12 March, the volume of trading had reached 3,875,910 shares, an all-time high. By 20 June, 5,052,790 shares were traded in a falling market that many prematurely thought signalled the end of the bull market.[10] Prices rose once more and after the election of Hoover, with a “victory boom” resulting in an all-time record trading of 6,641,250 shares in a rising market (16 November).

Overall, the market rose during the year from 245 to 331 which was accompanied by a phenomenal increase in trading on margin,[11] which relieved the buyer from putting up the full purchase price of the stock by using the securities as collateral for a loan.

The buyer obtained full benefit of ownership in rising stock valuation, but the loan amount remained the same. People swarmed to buy stock on margin.

In the early 1920s, brokers’ loans used to finance purchases on margin averaged 1–1.5 billion but by November 1928 had reached six billion.

By the end of 1928, the interest on such loans was yielding 12% to lenders which led to a flood of gold converging on Wall St. from all over the world to fuel the purchase of stocks on margin.[12]

Aftermath of the crash

In the wake of Black Tuesday,  October 29, London newspapers reported that ruined speculators were throwing themselves from windows but Galbraith asserts there was no substance to these claims of widespread suicides.[13] Embezzlement now came to the fore.

During the bubble, there was a net increase of what Galbraith calls “psychic wealth”; the person being robbed was unaware of their loss whilst the embezzler was materially improved. With the bursting of the bubble, accounts were now more closely scrutinized and reports of defaulting employees became a daily occurrence after the first week of the crash.

on the Great Depression

Contrary to what had been Wall Street’s perceived tendency in playing down its influence, Galbraith asserted the important contribution of the 1929 crash on the Great Depression which followed:[15] causing a contraction of demand for goods, destroying for a time the normal means of investment and lending, arresting economic growth and causing financial hardship which alienated many from the economic system. [2] Galbraith further argues that the Great Depression was caused by a mixture of five main weaknesses:

First, an imbalance in the income distribution. Galbraith asserts that “the 5 per cent of the population with the highest incomes in that year [1929] received approximately one third of all personal income.” Personal income in the form of rents, dividends, and interest of the well-to-do was approximately twice as much as in the period following the Second World War, leaving the economy dependent on a high level of investment and luxury consumer spending, and vulnerable to the stock market crash.[16]

Second, problems in the structure of corporations. Most specifically, he cites newly formed investment entities of the era (such as holding companies and investment trusts) as contributing to a deflationary spiral, due in no small part to their high reliance on leverage.

Dividends paid the interest on the bonds in the holding companies, and when these were interrupted, the structure collapsed. “It would be hard to imagine a corporate system better designed to continue and accentuate a deflationary cycle.”

Also, “The fact was that American enterprise in the twenties had opened its hospitable arms to an exceptional number of promoters, grafters, swindlers, impostors, and frauds. This, in the long history of such activities, was a kind of flood tide of corporate larceny.”[16]

(Does this sound a lot like today, readers?)

Third, the bad banking structure. The weakness was manifest in the large number of units working independently. As one failed, pressure was applied to another, leading to a domino effect accelerated by increasing unemployment and lower incomes.[17]

Fourth, foreign trade imbalances. During World War I, the US became a creditor nation, exporting more than it imported. High tariffs on imports contributed to this imbalance. Subsequent defaults by foreign governments led to a decline in exports, which was especially hard on farmers.

And finally, “the poor state of economic intelligence.” Galbraith says that the “economists and those who offered economic counsel in the late twenties and early thirties were almost uniquely perverse” and that “the burden of reputable economic advice was invariably on the side of measures that would make things worse.[18]

Prospects for recurrence

Galbraith was of the opinion that the Great Crash had burned itself so deeply into the national consciousness that America had been spared another bubble up to the present time (1954).;[19] however he thought the chances of another speculative orgy which characterized the 1929 crash as rather good as he felt the American people remained susceptible to the conviction that unlimited rewards were to be had and that they individually were meant to share in it. He considered the sense of responsibility in the financial community for the wider community as a whole as not being small but “nearly nil”.[20] Even though government powers were available to prevent a recurrence of a bubble their use was not attractive or politically expedient since an election is in the offing even on the day after an election.[21]

Now, departing from the Wikipedia synopsis of the Galbraith The Great Crash, technically the corporations have recovered by raising prices, firing staff and increased their profits and stock prices. But with less income and the catastrophic cold hearts of congress going along with budget cuts people cannot afford to buy houses, move forward with their lives, get jobs. Banks have not lowered their mortgage rates substantially to inject movement in real estate. Incomes of States, counties and cities have been cut by national spending cuts.

Meanwhile the market keeps on soaring, the stock market that is.

So cutting interest rates on the very day of October 29, seems to be the height of folly.

It took enormous efforts of charity of government under Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal to help Americans out of the Depression which was not really ended until World War II came along.

Now there is no  help, no pity, no sense of responsibility in the cold hearts of Congress and our leadership.

There is no help.

Help what’s that?

The irony of the rate cut on October 29 makes me shake my head in shame.

You too can be an economist, a leader, a Congressperson or a Senator.

You and I Mr. Mrs. and Ms. America have to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps.

There is no Teddy Roosevelt or Franklin Roosevelt, or Barack Obama now to save us.

We do not learn from the past

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NOVEMBER 2– THE SACRIFICES OF THE VETERANS INSPIRES CITIZENS TO HELP EACH OTHER.

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Alex Philippidis Remembers 9/11: HELPING THE HEROES THE LEGACY

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. From Alex Philippidis of Genome Web Daily News, Mary Ann Leibert, Inc.  September 11, 2016:

Editor’s Note:

Alex, well-known local reporter around Westchester County for the last 38 years sent along his remembrance of what happened after the Twin Towers fell: 

Two weeks after 9/11, I wrote this article sharing this story of something good that came from something evil… No link to this story exists any more, so I copy it in its entirety below:

Helping the heroes

From: Westchester County Business Journal, Oct. 1, 2001

“The World Trade Center should, because of its importance, become a living representation of man’s belief in humanity, his need for individual dignity, his belief in the cooperation of men, and through this cooperation, his ability to find greatness.” – Minoru Yamasaki, architect of the Twin Towers

Nearly three weeks have passed, but the memories are as fresh as ever for Jay Martino and 50 of his colleagues about the hell they witnessed at Ground Zero of the terrorist attacks that leveled the World Trade Center.

“It’s an unimaginable site of destruction. You search your mind to come up with the right verbiage, the right adjectives. How can I describe what I saw? It’s a horrific scene,” said Martino, a general superintendent with Granite/Halmar Construction Co. of Mount Vernon.

Martino, head of the Masons & Concrete Contractors Association of Hudson Valley Inc., led a team of workers who answered their industry’s call to send volunteers and heavy machines to the tons of wreckage that comprised the Twin Towers and five smaller buildings.

Granite/Halmar was among dozens of construction contractors in and around Westchester that sent resources to the World Trade Center in response to a memo distributed to all 650 members of the Construction Industry Council (CIC) of Westchester and Hudson Valley Inc. of Tarrytown.

Yonkers Contracting Co., which helped build the World Trade Center in the 1970s, donated 100 trucks to the rescue effort, while Tilcon New York Inc. of West Nyack and four subcontractors donated equipment and personnel from their 21 quarry and asphalt facilities in New York and New Jersey.

“I think more than any other industry, construction contractors and workers comprehend the enormity of the task at hand because we understand the magnitude of what it takes to create such magnificent structures and buildings,” said Ross J. Pepe, CIC president.

“Everyone in our industry has a deep and new-found appreciation of the ironworkers, operating engineers, laborers, Teamsters and other union workers now at the site as the world watches these guys on TV doing a job that nobody would ever want to do.”

The World Trade Center took half a decade to build, but only two hours for terrorists to level in the series of attacks that shook the world on Sept. 11.

County construction industry responds
The following day when CIC asked for volunteers, hundreds answered the call. Fifty of them came from Granite/Halmar, which had hired them for its many projects under construction – such as the new international arrivals terminal and an expansion of the British Airways terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

“They said they needed cutoff saws, tools, oxygen tanks, manpower. So I put the call out to all of our foreman asking if any of them would volunteer,” Martino recalled “We loaded a half-dozen pickup trucks with oxygen and acetylene gas tanks, plus dust masks, goggles, safety glasses.”

The Granite/Halmar men joined other CIC member companies in assembling at Yonkers Raceway, then following a state police escort south to lower Manhattan. Authorities have divided the area in and around the World Trade Center into four zones, each overseen by a construction contractor: AMEC p.l.c.; Tully Construction Inc.; a joint venture of Turner Construction and Plaza Materials Inc.; and Bovis Lend Lease and two subcontractors, Grace Industries Inc. and Gateway.

Granite/Halmar entered the site working for AMEC, which controls the northwest zone of the recovery area, Granite/Halmar had worked for AMEC at the Kennedy airport projects.

“We hooked up with a firefighter, a captain. He escorted us to ground zero. Right away we went to work with the firemen. They were elated to see us. They had nothing. They had no cutoff saws we could see. They had one set of torches. They were working their way through the pile of rubble with picks and shovels. Everything was done by hand,” Martino said.

“We were cutting steel into pieces. We took everything we could handle and loaded it into 5-gallon barrels, then kept passing them on down the line,” Martino said. “We worked till late in the evening, 11 or 12 o’clock at night.

“It was just amazing, the amount of debris and structural steel there was around. You stood on steel beams that had just collapsed. You’d look at the steel and it was completely clean.

There was no concrete to be found. You didn’t see any chunks of concrete. The fire was so great the concrete had disintegrated.’

“You’d see bits and pieces of carpet, and every once in a while, there would be a bumper to a vehicle. You stood on the steel beams which had collapsed,” Martino said.

Not once during their time at Ground Zero did Martino or his men spot any bodies, or any parts of bodies.

“I was not looking forward to anything like that. I was looking to help and I would have gone anywhere I was told to go. But I kept wondering. What would I do if I saw something? How would I react?”

An especially welcome sight, Martino said, was the hundreds of volunteers who catered to weary rescuers: “Every time you turned around, you heard. Do you need something to drink? Do you want something to eat? They had buckets of water and Gatorade. They had Power Bars.”

Just three years ago Martino and workers from GraniteHalmar’s predecessor, Halmar Builders of New York Inc., transformed the drab exterior public space outside the World Trade Center into World Trade Center Plaza, a public plaza complete with granite pavement and landscaped areas.

Looking at a poster-sized photo of the plaza outside his office, Martino paused. “I feel funny seeing the pictures of it now.”

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