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9-11 memories

MMM readers are invited to submit their 9-11 memories in the comments of this post.  If you would like your story published on the front page, start you comment with “Art, put this on the front page.”

MY 9/11 memory, by Charles Measley
It was a morning very similar to this as I sat in my six grade English class at
Holy Trinity School in Long Branch. When a teacher from across the hall came in
and instructed us to turn on the news, that there was some sort of accident in
New York City.

As we turned on CNN we saw a gaping hole on the side of a skyscraper as the
reporters struggled to understand how a pilot could make such a horrific mistake on a clear day like this. As we sat there and watch without warning we saw an airplane coming from behind and slamming into the next tower with a horrific fireball. At that moment the attitude of everyone change , the reporters said with certainty that this was no accident, but intentional.

Shortly after that my father came and picked me up early, he drove me down to the beach in West, a section of Long Branch. As we stood there on the sandy
beach with the crystal clear sky in front of us we could see the smoke billowing
from the city. In the back of my mind I was wondering if my mother,  who worked in the city was okay.

We went back home and put on the news and watch as one tower fell, and then
another, and then a plane crashing into the Pentagon and then another plane
smashing into a field in Pennsylvania. Luckily that day my mother never made it  in, she left late and got stuck in traffic on the parkway by Perth Amboy.

Posted: September 11th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 9-11 | Tags: , , | 4 Comments »

Live Coverage of the 9-11 memorial ceremony

http://new.livestream.com/911Memorial/11thanniversary

Posted: September 11th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 9-11 | Comments Off on Live Coverage of the 9-11 memorial ceremony

Never the same, Never forget

 

The weather was wonderful on Sunday, much as it was on September 11, 2001.

As I gazed over to New York and noticed the Freedom Tower in the distance, I turned to my friend and said, “it is just not the same.”

Life will never be the same for those who lost husbands or wives, brothers or sisters, aunts or uncles, friends and lovers that day.  Life will not be the same for those who fled lower Manhattan to physical safety but still bear the psychological and emotions scars.

Life will never be the same for the families of the first responders who perished that day, or have perished since or are still hanging on, due to poisonous air that guaranteed a slow death.

Life with never be the same for the young men and women who have served bravely in Afghanistan and Iraq, even if they came home unharmed physically.  Life will never be the same for their families.

Life will never be the same for a nation that has traded freedom and privacy for security.

 

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 9-11 | Tags: | 5 Comments »

Milestone

This past weekend marked the second anniversary of MoreMonmouthMusings as this domain address.

Traffic to MoreMonmouthMusings.net during the past two years has exceed the entire previous 4+ years at the old blogspot address, which still gets daily traffic, combined.

Thank you for making MoreMonmouthMusings one of your regular stops for news and commentary.  Please patronize our advertisers and thank them for supporting this site.

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Art Gallagher, Uncategorized | Tags: , | 6 Comments »

Christie responds to report of budget shortfall

The Office of Legislative Services released a report this morning stating that New Jersey’s state government revenues for last fiscal year were $253 million short of the Christie administration’s projections.  Last month OLS said the FY2012 shortfall was $542 million.

Governor Chris Christie responded this afternoon:

 

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, New Jersey State Budget | Tags: , , | 3 Comments »

Democratic source: Obama winning NJ by 18%, Menendez by 12%

The Obama campaign is so confident of winning New Jersey comfortably that the prime responsibility of its New Jersey staffers is to recruit volunteers to go to Pennsylvania for the rest of the campaign, according to a high level Democrat who spoke to MMM on the condition of anonymity.

“Menendez will win by at least 10 points,” said the source, “the internal numbers have Obama up by 18 and Menendez up by 12.  Elsewhere in the country, the Senate and Congressional candidates are doing better than Obama, but not in Jersey.  Menendez needs Obama’s coattails, but he’ll have them.”

The source said Menendez is working harder than he ever has in his life. “He’s out shaking hands with commuters every day at 5:30am and doesn’t stop campaigning until midnight.”

“We don’t see Kyrillos working that hard,” the source said as a dig to the GOP challenger.

Menendez 2012 Communications Director Paul Brubaker has still not called back.

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Presidential Politics, 2012 U.S. Senate Race, Barack Obama, Bob Menendez, Joe Kyrillos | Tags: , , | 4 Comments »

Menendez Ducking Debates

Kyrillos calls on U.S. Senator to defend his 20 year record in Washington

Is Bob Menendez planning to dance back into office without defending his record and debating his opponent?

That seems to be his strategy so far.  Menendez refused to accept a written challenge to debate from GOP nominee Joe Kyrillos last month.  This morning, the Kyrillos campaign announced that Menendez is also ignoring media and academic invitations to debate.  Menendez has not responded to then following invitations according to the Kyrillos release:

1. League of Women Voters/WPVI-TV, WABC-TV, and Univision

2. The Record/FIOS 1 News

3. Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University and WNYC’s Brian Lehrer Show/WNYC Radio and NJPR AM Radio

4. William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Richard Stockton College of New Jersey/ NJTV

5. Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey/Jewish Standard News

6. The Uribe Society/Hudson County TV

“One of us will be the next United States Senator from New Jersey,” said Senator Joe Kyrillos.  “New Jerseyans need to know our position on the issues before, not after the election.  I’m ready to talk about my record of saving New Jersey taxpayers $11.9 billion in new taxes and bringing bipartisan reform to Trenton.  I’m proud of my record and it’s time for Senator Menendez to stop running from and defend his.”

MMM left a voice mail for Menendez 2012 Communications Director Paul Brubaker asking if Menendez would be accepting any of these invitations.  Brubaker has yet to respond.  Nor has he called back, as promised, for comment on the polls that were released last week.

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 U.S. Senate Race | Tags: , , | 6 Comments »

Booker’s next step….Why not the White House?

Updated September 10, 11:20 am

Prior to last month the buzz about Newark Mayor Cory Booker’s future was that he would run for U.S. Senate in 2014, challenging Senator Frank Launtenberg if necessary.  Booker opened a federal PAC last year and Lautenberg has been sniping at him ever since.

But in the weeks leading up to the convention Booker met with county chairs to plant the seeds of a gubernatorial run against Governor Chris Christie last year.  In Charlotte he went into full campaign mode without making an announcement.  In the process he made himself the front runner for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 2013.  A Booker candidacy for governor will clear the Democratic field. Without Booker in the race there will be a contentious primary.  Senators Dick Codey, Barbara Buono and Steve Sweeney could be contenders.  Assemblymen John Wisniewski and Lou Greenwald are acting like candidates.  Elizabeth Mayor Chris Bollwage says he will run if Booker doesn’t.

None of the other potential candidates will be able to gain any traction until Booker makes his intentions clear.

As a nod to Booker’s front runner status, Quinnipiac polled a Christie/Booker match up.  Christie won the poll by 7%, but Booker’s name was recognised by 60% of those polled.   That is an extraordinary high number for a New Jersey politician who has never run a statewide race.  Booker has better name recognition than Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno.  He is as well known and better liked than U.S. Senator Bob Menendez.

Booker told the New Jersey delegation in Charlotte that Christie can be beat and that he is only governor because urban Democrats didn’t come out to vote for Jon Corzine in 2009.  The implication is that he can get urban voters out, regardless of the desires of Democratic bosses George Norcross in the south and Joe DiVincenzo in the north who didn’t rev their machines for Corzine in 09.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Presidential Politics, 2013 Gubernatorial Politics, 2014 U.S. Senate race | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Biden Channels Bill Clinton

AP photo

What is it with Democrats and channeling?

Last week in Charlotte at the Democratic convention Congressman Frank Pallone channeled Governor Chris Christie.

Yesterday in Ohio, in a town called Seaman, Vice President Joe Biden channeled former President Bill Clinton while campaigning in a diner.

I wonder how those biker dudes would have reacted if the Secret Service hadn’t been there.  Then again, maybe they were undercover Secret Service agents.

Biden opened his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention with a effusive expression of his love for his wife, Jill. “I love you,” Biden professed to 20,000 in the convention hall and a national TV audience, “you’re the love of my life and the life of my love.”

Posted: September 10th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Presidential Politics | Tags: , , , , | 6 Comments »

“The Price of Politics”

Bob Woodward’s new book, “The Price of Politics”  may do more to threaten President Obama’s reelection than the anemic jobs reports.

Obama may be a great orator with a clever campaign, but Woodward’s book depicts his White House as dysfunctional and disorganized.  The president himself is depicted as aloof and unable to develop the relationships necessary to lead the nation.  Congressional leaders of his own party, Nancy Pelosi in the House and Harry Reid in the Senate, have little regard for Obama’s leadership abilities.

The book focuses on the debt ceiling crisis that the nation face during the summer of 2011.  A crisis that was so serious that “they wouldn’t tell the world how bad in was at the time,” according to Woodward in a interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer that will be aired Monday night.

As I was reading several reviews of the book I was reminded of Governor Chris Christie’s frequent criticism of Obama’s lack of leadership and inability to work across the aisle.  It’s worse than Chrisite imagined.  Harry Reid asked Obama to leave the room, at a meeting Obama called of congressional leaders at the White House, so that the congressional leaders could hammer out a deal to avert our nation defaulting on its debt that Obama would have no choice but to sign.  Earlier in the Obama administration, Nancy Pelosi muted  a conference call from Obama while she and Reid were together working on details of the stimulus package so that the president wouldn’t know that he did not have their undivided attention for his pontification.  Clint Eastwood was right.  The chair is empty and even the national Democratic congressional leaders know it.

The mainstream media’s coverage of the book may be more damaging to Obama’s reelection chances than the content of the book itself.

Reviews in the New York Times and Washington Post read like the reviewers compared notes before publication.  They are trying to suppress sales by depicting the book as boring and a rehash of previous reporting.  Yet they have enough integrity to report Woodward’s conclusion:

“It is a fact that President Obama was handed a miserable, faltering economy and faced a recalcitrant Republican opposition.

“But presidents work their will — or should work their will — on the important matters of national business. There is occasional discussion in this book about Presidents Reagan and Clinton, what they did or would have done. Open as both are to serious criticism, they nonetheless largely worked their will.

“Obama has not. The mission of stabilizing and improving the economy is incomplete.”

But ABC is giving Woodward  prime coverage of the book on Monday night in a intervew with Sawyer during “World News Tonight” and “Nightline.”  Woodward will sit down with George Stephanopolous live on “Good Morning America” on Tuesday, September 11, the day the book is release.

The early coverage does not look good for Obama.

 

Posted: September 9th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: 2012 Presidential Politics, Media | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 23 Comments »