BSO

BSO
Showing posts with label simon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simon. Show all posts

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Simon Powell (1998 - 2010)



It saddens me to report that Simon Powell, a Springfield mayoral candidate who received hundreds of write-in votes in his 1999 challenge to the re-election of former Mayor Michael Albano, has died. Born in 1998, he was 84 in dog years.

How did a canine candidate come to run for Mayor of Springfield? It's hard to recapture the context of the times in which the Simon for Mayor campaign took place. Today, it is widely recognized that Springfield's tragic decline from one of the Northeast's most respected medium-sized cities to a fiscal and political basket case was in large part due to a corrupt Democrat Party machine that over the decades bled the city dry. However, in 1999 that was not so widely understood, and political gangsters like Albano, his thug lieutenant Anthony Ardolino, the Asselin family, Frankie Keough and a host of lesser sleazoids were all at the height of their power.

In those days, it could be difficult and even dangerous to oppose them. Ask the Valley Advocate about how they found themselves banned from City Hall. Ask Dan Yorke about how he lost his radio station because of pressure put on his advertisers. Ask former City Councilor Mitch Ogulewicz about the time his employer received orders to pressure him how to vote. Ask Simon's human companions Bob and Karen how it felt to be publicly ridiculed as "trailer trash." Ask me how it felt to be called "a crazy radical."

Oh wait, that last smear was probably justified. Eventually we would all be fully vindicated by a wave of FBI raids, but in 1999 there was no one willing to risk the consequences of running against Albano; and with good reason, since the Springfield political machine had a well-earned reputation for being mean, vindictive and completely ruthless in dealing with their enemies. It was for that reason that the idea of running Simon came up, because it would be hard for the powers-that-be to retaliate against an animal. I mean what were they gonna do? Revoke his dog license?

The Powell's planned a big rally, which was held at their 16 Acres home the weekend before the election, to kick off Simon's write-in campaign. The general public and all the local political dissidents were invited, and the event is now legendary as the most surreal political farce of modern Valley politics. However, the rally wasn't widely covered at the time, although I wrote about the event afterward in the Baystate Objectivist as follows:





I personally attended the Simon for Mayor rally as the informal master of ceremonies, for which I arrived elegantly attired in a suit and tie I usually reserve for Halloween, as we all stood in line to proudly shake the paw of the mayoral contender.

I also spoke in Simon's behalf as he barked out his campaign promises of a return to good government, an end to corruption, the liberation of the county dog pound, repealing the leash law and imposing a tax on cats. Afterwards we all enjoyed a dog's lunch, until the rally had to disperse amidst never substantiated rumors that the candidate had run off with a bitch in heat named Monica.

Amazingly, Mayor Albano did respond to our rally, declaring the next morning on Bax and O'Brien that if dogs could vote they would support him over Simon in gratitude to Albano for the planned new Thomas J. O'Connor Animal Shelter.

Despite Simon's dogged campaigning, many voters felt that a canine mayor was redundant, Springfield having already gone to the dogs years ago. Although every dog has it's day, Election Day was not to be Simon's as the dog eat dog tactics of the Albano camp successfully smeared Simon as a real son of a bitch. Yet even in defeat, Simon the Mayoral Pooch was still able to garner over 600 write-in votes.


In the darkest hours of Springfield's decline, when the forces of corruption were at their peak, local historians will long remember that it was Simon Powell who carried the banner of good government when no human standard-bearer could be found.

REST EASY, BRAVE GOOD BOY.
 



Neal critics takin' it to the streets.





The ruins of Cray Soda Company in Holyoke.





I like this quote in the window of a Northampton mystical shop. I think it corrects a common misconception.

 



You often hear people saying that they "need to find themselves." Nonsense, there is no self to find, only self-creating choices to make. As Ayn Rand once put it, "We are beings with self-made souls." So go out and begin to create yourself by starting to live your personal vision of what you've always wanted to be.

A few pumpkins on the steps in Northampton.





Pumpkin diversity on display on the steps in Northampton. 





Economic development Northampton style. 




Amherst Reflections by Mary E. Carey.
 

Monday, October 19, 2009

Arturo Innocent

Activist Found Not Guilty

 


Arturo Castillion


The Northampton radical group Poverty is Not a Crime, the brainchild of activists Caty Simon and Ira McKinley, organized a number of rallies earlier this year to protest downtown economic development policies, in particular the proposed ordinance that would have all but banned panhandling for spare change on Main Street.





At one such event two prominent local activists, David Beyer and Arturo Castillion, were arrested for alleged rowdy misconduct during the demonstration. The charges against Beyer were eventually dismissed, but Arturo Castillion went to trial. Today he was found innocent when a video surfaced just before trial that appeared to show that police over-reacted in arresting him. The ever intrepid Caty Simon (below) sent me a previously unreleased photo of the arrest as well as an account of today's court proceedings:





Arturo Castillon was one of the founders of Poverty Is Not A Crime, and is a long time low income rights activist, as well as a former UMass student who has since transfered to Temple University.

He was charged with disorderly conduct & assault and battery on a police officer. The first charge was later dropped. Basically, the police officer claimed Arturo shoved him when he told Arturo to clear off the street, but in actual fact the cop shoved *him* and Arturo went quietly, which was later shown in a video taken from a cop car nearby, evidence that was wrangled last minute from the prosecution. (The Friday before the Monday of the trial!) Also, eyewitness and PINAC member/Umass student John Colvin testified to these facts as well. It seems the patrol officer lost his temper and covered up for it later with the charge, as ACLU lawyer Luke Ryan, Arturo's representation, theorized in his closing argument.

In a trial ruled by the judge (the right to a jury was waived) Arturo was found not guilty.


Here is a photo of Arturo in police custody.





Hopefully Arturo's acquittal will be a lesson that police should try to be more restrained at these kinds of events. Then again, maybe the protesters should show a little restraint as well. 



Two Cartoons

This cartoon is all too tragically true and self-evident.





This one is a little hard to figure. It came to me with the punchline, "So I said to him, "Barack, I know Abe Lincoln, and you ain't Abe Lincoln."

 



First of all, the joke is not very funny. Furthermore, to get the joke requires one to remember a similar line from the 1988 debate between Lloyd Bentson and Daniel Quayle, which not one in ten American's does. Besides that, it isn't clear who is saying the punchline. Lincoln himself in a fit of egomania? And look who is there among the GOP luminaries. Richard Nixon? Who would trust him in a card game? And Jerry Ford? Nice guy but no presidential giant. In fact the only two people at that gathering who might be considered historic giants are Ronald Reagan and Lincoln himself. 

The rest are lightweights: Eisenhower whose outstanding military career was certainly not surpassed by his political one, and Teddy Roosevelt, whom most Republicans consider to have been in many ways a closet Democrat. And what are the two Bushes doing there? They aren't even dead yet, and while the verdict of history is still out on their presidencies, few think they will rise to Lincolnian stature. And where is this ghostly card game taking place? Look at the background. You mean there are political conventions in heaven? If so that settles it - I'm hellbound and glad of it.

On Campus

The UMass Cannabis Club was holding its annual cookie and brownie sale today. Consume at your own risk. 





The Amherst College singing group that call themselves "The Route 9" perform at the school talent show. 





 

Me standing in the way of a view of paradise this afternoon at Amherst College. 





Today's Video

Just like you mistreat someone somebody's gonna mistreat you. 



 

Sunderland.