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More Political Grandstanding
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Dear George,
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It's been raining heavily in NYC this morning. So if that wasn't enough to
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put a damper on anyone's mood, some radio reporters decided it was a good time
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to let us now that after all the spraying of mosquitoes (the stuff seems to
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kill butterflies and other birds and also adversely affect humans with asthma),
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we could have the same outbreak of Nile fever encephalitis next spring. Of
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course, the "dung on the Virgin Mary" has taken over the headlines from our
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public-health problem. In the latest twist, the mayor has the Brooklyn Museum
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conspiring with Christie's to inflate the value of the art collection in the
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exhibit. I'm sure some people in the hard-pressed, cash-poor museum were
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wondering why they hadn't thought of doing that in the first place! The
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political grandstanding is moving us even further away from confronting the
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very real public-policy challenges that you outlined in your letter. William
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Safire had a very thoughtful column in the Times today. He sees all the
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players as serving a very narrowly defined self-interest. He criticizes the
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Brooklyn Museum for mounting the offensive exhibition in the first place, and
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he also is offended by the mayor's confrontational litigious position. Pitting
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the "right to free artistic expression" against "accountability of public
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funds" isn't the right fight. He argues that "New York needs mediators, not
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gladiators." This position seems like the right one to me, but it has the
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luxury of ignoring the political reality in New York. The Brooklyn Museum is a
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stepchild when it comes to fund-raising and cachet, so they need both the
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attention and the money. The mayor "seen his opportunities and took 'em," as
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Plunkitt of Tammany Hall would have said. Once again, important issues of
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public policy are decided in a crisis atmosphere and the public's view is
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largely irrelevant.
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I'd like to think more about your position on charter schools and vouchers.
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I, too, have been struggling with this issue. Now, I am off to tape a cable
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show sponsored by the Citizens Union on the Charter-revision propositions that
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will be appearing on the NYC ballot in the November election. This is actually
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an important issue, but alas, has no sex, drugs, or rock 'n' roll angle to it,
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so the media has covered it minimally. Maybe I can come up with a hook before
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the show. Should I show a picture of a nude mayor, public advocate, comptroller
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and City Council speaker urinating on the City Charter? It wouldn't be
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difficult, they are all men!
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Warmest regards,
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Ester
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