Left In Lowell

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October 29, 2008

Hamilton Canal Master Plan Online

by at 9:27 am.

Trinity Financial, which has now officially signed an agreement with the city as of last Friday, has released the Master Plan online. Bernie gives us the numbers:

The agreement features the sale of approximately 11 acres of land to developer Trinity Financial for $7 million. In a seperate agreement the state has agreed to purchase 4 acres for the new courthouse for $3.8 million. Combined, the sales nearly recoup the $11 million investment the city has made to acquire the land, demolish the existing structures and address environmental concerns. Once the project is fully developed the city could expect to see an annual $4 million dollars in taxes.

Kudos to everyone involved for moving this forward.

(By the way, there’s some other posts of interest on the CM’s blog. Including info on Halloween fun to be had.)

October 28, 2008

Wilkerson Arrested

by at 10:09 am.

This is just incredible.

Thank goodness we have a better Democrat as our nominee, Sonya Chang-Diaz.

October 27, 2008

Conversations with Bernie - A Podcast

by at 11:23 am.

[Bumped in case people missed it!]

I am hoping to generate more original content for this blog, and one of the easiest ways, if I’m not too concerned about perfect production values, is to take my little digital recorder around and interview people.

One series I would like to conduct I’m calling “Conversations with Bernie” where I take 15-20 minutes to walk over to the office of the City Manager and conduct an informal interview.

My interview style is still a little jarring if you ask me (one benefit of having to listen and edit is having to listen to yourself, unfortunately) and the recorder picks up everything, but here it is. Today, Bernie and I talked about the economic and budgetary outlook for the city, as well as the fuss over the sewage treatment plant. Click below to play the interview, which is just under 18 minutes.

icon for podpress  Conversations with Bernie - 10/24/2008 [17:43m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

October 25, 2008

Republicans Not Fit To Lead

by at 9:53 am.

Tristero on Digby hits on the real tragedy of the Palin speech on science and earmarks…not only is she completely ignorant of the subject of which she speaks (worthy of a Phelps rant?) but the fact is, that policy speech had to have put together by the upper echelons of the campaign, some of the “great brains” of Republican leadership:

Sarah Palin isn’t the issue here. Sure, I’ll concede that this illustrates Palin’s breathtaking ignorance AND her stupidity. After all, she agreed to repeat it. But what it really demonstrates is how unqualified the upper echelons of the Republican party are to run this country. She certainly didn’t write this speech: John McCain’s advisers did and approved every appalling word.

The subject is government funding of scientific research:

Where does a lot of that earmark money end up anyway? […] You’ve heard about some of these pet projects they really don’t make a whole lot of sense and sometimes these dollars go to projects that have little or nothing to do with the public good. Things like fruit fly research in Paris, France. I kid you not.

If you know anything at all about science in the 21st century, then you know that the study of fruit flies (aka Drosophilia melanogaster) has led to some of the most important discoveries in biology, genetics, and related topics.

And yet, their best argument for electing them these days is that we need to balance the one-party rule of Democrats (both nationally and in this state). You know, if you got balance, but it’s on the edge of a cliff, I’d prefer to back away from the cliff, to hell with their brand of “balance.”

October 24, 2008

I SO Called It

by at 1:42 pm.

Yesterday or today, my husband and I had the morning news on while getting ready for work, and that Ashley Todd I-got-beat-up-cuz-I-was-a-McCain-supporter story was on. The woman also claimed that a “B” was carved into her cheek with a knife by the attacker.

I happened to pass by the TV when they showed the photo of the girl, which showed the “B” but…backwards. Instantly I said to my husband, this story is FAKE, she did that in the mirror, and was stupid enough to do it frontwards to her mirror image. He was more circumspect, admitting it was possible but that we just didn’t know at the time. Meanwhile, Fixed Noise and the wingnuttery types got their victim on. It smelled to me like a way to counter the “Obama supporters and reporters attacked by McCain supporters at rallies” stories but whatever.

Turns out, I was completely, in all respects, 100% correct. Score one for me!

Ug…And You Wonder.

by at 1:04 pm.

I headed to jackiedoherty.org as I am wont to do most days, and read a post by Margaret in poem form referencing a Dan Phelps column, also in poem form (well, the form, maybe, but you can’t call it a poem) ridiculing the idea of poetry without rhymes. He doesn’t get it, he says.

But you know what is easy? Writing a poem that doesn’t rhyme. You just write an essay, then break it up in the middle of the lines so it’s hard to follow. There’s no flow, no meter, no sense.

What happened to poems that rhyme?
[…]
Modern poetry is kind of like verse. Only worse.

Lowell recently hosted the annual Massachusetts Poetry Festival. I didn’t want to say anything beforehand — heaven forbid anybody poke fun at an upcoming event in the city lest they be looked on as Lowell bashers. I don’t want to seem uncouth (though it’s probably the truth).

But now that the festival is in the past, I gotta tell you, the “poems” from which The Sun published snippets in a special section promoting the festival — I didn’t get ‘em. To be honest, they just sounded pretentious to me.

If you’ll excuse my indulgence, for a moment. Mr. Phelps, if there is something about which you know very little, please, refrain from writing about it at all. You’ll only hurt yourself.

“But you know what is easy? Writing a poem that doesn’t rhyme.” That is the stupidest thing I have ever heard. Ever. So blatantly untrue for anyone who actually knows anything about literature, or writing, I don’t know where to start.

Having taken intense poetry writing courses with very excellent, established poets like Charles Simic, I can tell you first hand it’s not “the easiest thing in the world” to write a poem, just because it doesn’t rhyme. The line breaks, the rhythm, word choice, everything is a part of the writing, rhymes or not. You spend a lot time time working over the same ten lines, and might create ten seperate revisions. Most poets write about very intimate subjects, getting a breath’s away from a flower petal or a heartbreak…the only other art in the world which scrapes so close to the artists’ soul is acting, where the actor must pull emotions from his own experience and serve them up to an audience. Poetry writing is raw, often painful, work. Unlike ranting incoherently in a column…

And there are rules to free verse poetry. Yes, you forgo iambic pentameter and rhymes, but actually, that makes things harder. Working within restrictions means it either works, or it doesn’t, and you know that instantly. A looser set of rules makes deciding on what sort of line breaks you want, what needs to be cut or added to (most often, cut!) much harder, and much easier to critique. Shorter lines in a poem are energetic, and longer ones more languid. The word at the end of a line gains emphasis, by virtue of the mental or physical pause evoked by going on to the next line.

By the way, it didn’t take much education for me to learn that. We’re talking middle school English.

He refers to one of Robert Pinsky’s works as a “poem” with all the condescension and derision that “quotes” can portray. He then takes this one small excerpt as evidence of why modern poetry is stupid. Because he doesn’t understand the four lines. Well, duh. It’s an excerpt from one poem from one poet, out of context. Beyond that, there are thousands of modern poets in the world…there are cerebral poets and there are imagery-driven poets and those that write long epics and those that prefer short. There are poets that write about their own experiences and poets that write about others’ experiences and poets that write using big, big words. And some writing with little words. No one says you have to like them all. It is largely an aesthetic choice and often one of just how hard you want to work for your reading enjoyment. I myself, even as a mature poetry reader, enjoy the more visceral, lyric, imagery-laden poems of the late Jane Kenyon, to those of her husband, Donald Hall, which are sprinkled with lots of literary references.

By the way, modern poetry written with rhymes often comes across as archaic and self-conscious. Anyone who writes in rhyme has to be careful. Rhymes can be babyish (like the ones in Phelp’s column) too easily. If art needs to change with the times, meter and rhyme in the strict historic sense shifted to free verse, and to do anything else is a sign of an inexperienced poet, or else one of a brave poet. There are good poets who can pull of rhyme and strict meter in this day and age. They are exceptionally rare. But that’s not because free verse is easy so most poets just stick to that.

But one thing is clear to anyone with half a brain for literature: poetry, “even” free verse, isn’t easy.

Now, writing a column in the Lowell Sun, apparently, is like a cakewalk. Anyone seems to be able to do it. All you have to do is have some outrage, a computer, and a lack of understanding of your subject.

My advice to Mr. Phelps: stay away from writing about poetry. In fact, I think you should entirely stay away from writing about writing at all. Given your history with it, I mean.

Weld Endorces Obama

by at 11:29 am.

There’s really not much more to say on this. Welcome to the bandwagon…

(Via BMG.)

Update: I just love this part:

Weld said he’s never endorsed a Democrat for president before, but in the last six weeks or so, it became “close to a no-brainer.”

Ouch!

What affect this specific endorsement has is questionable, especially as the biggest impact would be in MA and we’re a safe state, but it adds to the general narrative that a lot of moderate, and even some conservative, Republicans are endorsing Obama over McCain. According to Weld, “It’s not often you get a guy with his combination of qualities, chief among which I would say is the deep sense of calm he displays, and I think that’s a product of his equally deep intelligence.” It appears he believes that Obama definitely has the temperament and judgment to be President.

Given that he backed play-to-the-far-right-base Mittster “Hair” Romney in the primary…oh, nevermind. Let’s just enjoy the day!

Household Hazardous Waste Day Tomorrow

by at 11:24 am.

Just a reminder, tomorrow is the fall Household Hazardous Waste Day. Gate opens at 9 am, last car at 1 pm. Cawley Stadium (map) on Douglas Road from 9am until 1pm. For more details visit the city’s webpage on what is accepted.

Dogs and Pot Maybe, NO to Income Tax Repeal

by at 10:45 am.

Another poll has come out regarding the up-and-coming ballot initiatives voters face on November 4th.

First, the decent news for those who are sick of throwing nonviolent offenders into jail for up to several years for a small amount of pot, which is arguably just about as harmful (in the general population) as smoking, which is legal. The yes-on-two vote is 51% to 32% opposed, with 16% undecided. Seems like with the way things are going, it’ll pass.

Second, the OK news for the dogs: 44% in this poll support banning racing, and 43% are opposed, with 13% up for grabs. The poll consisted of 400 people, called between Monday and Wednesday, with a 4.9% margin of error (pretty large if you ask me) so things are up in the air on Question 3 (which I encourage people to vote Yes on - you would too if you knew a greyhound adopted from the tracks which was seriously screwed up in the head).

The best news, however, comes on the income tax repeal question - Question 1. Fully 59% oppose the measure. 26% support it. That’s some really low support numbers. Shows that people are more educated this time around (as opposed to 2002). People are becoming less afraid to say, “hey, if we want services, we need to pay for them.” Progressives have made their message clear and people are listening. Doesn’t hurt that our side had $3.5M to spend on ads and grassroots campaigning this time either (taking no chances, as the boston.com article says). But that doesn’t explain the extreme margin between those pro and against.

But if you want Question #3 to pass (and if you are not a cold hearted cruel person, you should, you really should), you have got to talk to your friends and neighbors and tell them to vote with the dogs, Yes on Three!

(As to Question Two, vote your conscience. But remember this: we spend a lot of money incarcerating people for small amounts of marijuana possession. But if we pass Q3, we turn a money sink into a money gain, as people who are caught pay a fine to the state. It seems like a no brainer to me, at least fiscally.)

October 22, 2008

Wilkerson In MORE Trouble?

by at 9:02 pm.

State Senator Dianne Wilkerson has had a long troubling run of ethics problems while in office. These have been very well documented in many places, not the least of which include the Globe and the Herald.

She narrowly lost the Democratic primary to Sonia Chang-Diaz, but proclaimed herself moving forward with a sticker campaign to keep her seat. She will, of course, not appear on the ballot, an uphill battle no matter what. Now, she’s facing potentially another couple of explosive ethics and tax problems, says the Boston Phoenix. (Via BMG.)

As the only African-American state Senator, and a supposed progressive (though some have questioned this too), it’s unfortunate that Wilkerson has destroyed herself this way. An accidental mistake or two might be forgiven, but her pattern of behavior showcases an attitude of entitlement and rules-don’t-apply-to-me. Her progressive record and minority status does not mean she deserves to be in the Senate.

More and better Democrats, the motto of much of the progressive blogosphere. It’s gratifying that the better Democrat, Chang-Diaz, won the Democratic nomination. Let’s hope we can put the ethics-challenged Wilkerson behind us and get some better governance for Second Suffolk.

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