"Today, we settle all the family's business."
March 11, 2011 at 11:16 A.M. Overnight attacks on these writings have resulted in newly-inserted "errors," I am sure. I will make corrections from public computers throughout the day.
Salvator Rizzo, "Sensitive State Data Found on Machines: Agency Computers Were Never Scrubbed," in The Star Ledger, March 10, 2011, at p. 1.
This information will also allow hackers to access other existing computer records, including confidential personnel records for people like Stuart Rabner. The information that may be obtained will come in handy in future efforts to manipulate the system. ("New Jersey is the Home of the Living Dead.")
It is very thoughtful of New Jersey officials to put this information out there in so easily accessible a manner. No doubt my "top-secret" torture files that will not be turned over to me, as the victim of government crimes and in violation of state public disclosure laws and the Constitution, is on one of those computers. Is it true that Cuba has obtained all of my files? ("What is it like to be tortured?")
New Jersey's humiliating spectacle of thievery is rivalled only by the unmatched level of stupidity and incompetence among judges and government workers in Trenton. ("Mafia Influence in New Jersey Courts and Politics" and "The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight.")
Is Jaynee LaVecchia really connected to the Gambinos? Usually, the mafia is more intelligent and better organized than the lobotomized crooks in Trenton. I am told -- although I can neither confirm nor deny this little tid-bit of information -- that several courtrooms in New Jersey have been "decorated" with feces. If true, this gesture is an eloquent symbol not only of a too-literal reading of my immortal prose, but of a harsh judgment on America's "Soprano State." ("Law and Ethics in the Soprano State" and "New Jersey's Feces-Covered Supreme Court.")
Fidel says hello?
Matt Friedman & Chris Megerian, "Lobbyist Spending Hits New Heights," in The Star Ledger, March 10, 2011, at p. 15.
"The state's largest teachers' union spent $6.9 MILLION on lobbying last year, most of it going to an ad campaign against Christie and his cuts to education in the state budget, according to a report released yesterday by the Election Law Enforcement Commission. That's the most that a special interest group has spent on New Jersey lobbying in one year, according to the commission."
This is how you become a political target by spending money against one party. I find it difficult to believe that union officials were not getting kickbacks on this loot spent on lobbyists that was coming from members' dues. Not all teachers in New Jersey are Democrats who want their money spent on controversial efforts to oust persons in the opposed party.
People in the teachers' unions have to get it through their skulls that the gravy train in New Jersey ain't coming this year. McGreevey and Corzine are not in the Governor's Mansion handing out the cookies. Deal with it, Babara. Schwing!
Kelly Hughes, "Five Charged With Rigging School Bids: State Engineer Devised Scheme," in The Star Ledger, March 10, 2011, at p. 15.
This is why there's no money for schools or children's needs: THEFT. You want to improve things for teachers and students in New Jersey schools -- which are in decline -- then stop protecting the Democrat-mafia machine and give up the illusion that you can steal forever from school budgets without affecting the quality of the education available to children in the state. Christie is doing what has to be done in New Jersey. ("Da Jersey Code" and "Cement is Gold.")
"An engineer who oversaw several construction projects in Westfield, Tinton Falls and Scotch Plains-Fanwood district was charged yesterday with orchestrating a bid-rigging and kickback scheme that allegedly cost taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars."
The aptly-named Kenneth Disko, 47, "filed 4 exaggerated estimates for construction projects and directed contractors to submit inflated quotes to school districts for the work, the state attorney general's office said. In exchange, Disko allegedly took more than $80,000 in KICKBACKS from contractors over nine years." Mr. Disko "works on his hair." He complained that jail guards "hit my hair."
You know somebody has to be taking care of big-time Democrat politicians for no one to notice this stuff over all the years that Democrats were in office. McGreevey, Corzine, Codey, Sweeney -- nobody saw nothing. Suddenly, Christie comes in and says: "Gee, how about that?"
I would, as they say, "hazard the guess" that somebody was bringing people like Codey and McGreevey cookies to look the other way or to have Peter "See-No-Evil" Harvey and Anne Milgram look the other way when these two "ethical attorneys" served as chief law enforcement officers in Trenton. This is to say nothing of Stuart Rabner who still gets a card from Mr. Prisco for Yum Kippur. ("Stuart Rabner and Conduct Unbecoming to the Judiciary in New Jersey" and "No More Cover-Ups and Lies, Chief Justice Rabner!" then "'Shyster Ray' Lesniak Accused of Juicing a Development Deal" and "New Jersey's Politically Connected Lawyers on the Tit" and "Corrupt Law Firms, Senator Bob, and New Jersey Ethics.")
You gotta be kidding me with these guys and gals. Geez. ("Another Mafia Sweep in New Jersey and Anne Milgram is Clueless.")
Sources:
New York and the World:
Alissa J. Rubin, "Taliban Causes Most Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan, U.N. Says," in The New York Times, March 10, 2011, at p. A9. (Worst year yet for pro-U.S. forces.) Salman Masood, "Bomber Hits Taliban Opponents in Pakistan," in The New York Times, March 10, 2011, at p. A9. (Taliban is killing the opposition in Pakistan. Pakistan has reached explosive levels of anti-Americanism among the population. Things do not look good for the imprisoned Mr. Davis, sadly: "On Obama's Secret Service.") Salman Masood, "Pakistan General Credits U.S. Drone Strikes," in The New York Times, March 9, 2011, at p. A8. (The sign of fanaticism is "redoubling one's efforts when the cause is lost." Drone attacks have cost the government much of the population's support, hundreds or thousands of civilian casualties, energizing the enemy -- success? No matter how many generals on the C.I.A.'s payroll, allegedly, make such speeches the people are not fooled.)
New Jersey:
Richard Cowen, "Spiffier Golf Course Reopenning: $2.8 MILLION in Improvements and a New Name," in The Record, March 7, 2011, at p. L-1. (Thank goodness the golf course is O.K., so that firing cops and fire fighters is no problem.) Patrick Quinn, "Afghan Leader Rejects Apology for 9 Deaths: Boys Cutting Firewood KILLED by NATO Helicopter Attack," in The Record, March 7, 2011, at p. A-9. (Sorry about that.) JohnPetrick, "Paterson Cop Indicted in Off Duty Confrontation," in The Record, March 8, 2011, at p. L-1. (Racism?) Patricia Alex, "Charter Schools Chief Must Repay $500,000: Collected Pay and Pension at the Same Time," in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. A-1. (Anthony Barckett's collected $500,000 in state pension benefits while working, allegedly: "Jennifer Velez is a 'Dyke Magnet!'") AP, "Wildwood Mayor, Attorney Indicted," in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. A-3. (Wildwood Mayor Guy De Marzo and Attorney Samuel Lashman "misappropriated" -- that's kind of like STEALING -- public funds. You're not in this league, Marilyn. These are your "social superiors" in New Jersey who steal more money than you can imagine, every day -- allegedly. They're the whores, not you.) "Alleged Mobster released From Jail," in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. A-3. (Steve De Piro, 55, of Kenilworth, a minor union official and blue collar worker, also alleged mafia soldier, somehow, came up with $1.2 MILLION bond to get out of the can. Hey, you think he's in the mafia or just thrifty?) Chris Megerian & Matt Friedman, "Embattled Sports Agency Member Quits: Faces Charges of Bribery, Misconduct," in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. A-4. "Sounds Familiar: Former Sheriff Accused of Bribery," (Editorial) in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. A-10. Richard Cowen, "Sheriff's Office Faces Layoffs: Freeholders Fail to Reach Budget Deal," in The Record, March 9, 2011, at p. L-1. Alex Rodriguez & Zelfigar Ali, "Suicide Bomber Kills at Least 34 at Pakistan Funeral," in The Star Ledger, March 10, 2011, at p. 5. Karen Rouse, "NJ Transit Gets First Bill in Fight for Tunnel Funds: Law Firm's December Tab Tops $333,000," in The Star Ledger, March 10, 2011, at p. 32. (How much of this loot is coming back to New Jersey politicians in under- and over-the-table payments? This is one month's legal bills in a case that has not begun detailed discovery.)
Labels: Wetting their beaks ...
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