Tuesday, November 5, 2013

In New Jersey, apathetic morons stifle real change

The campaign office for Barbara Buono and Milly Silva on Cedar Lane in Teaneck.


By Victor E. Sasson
Editor

If Democrat Barbara Buono fails today to unseat the worst New Jersey governor ever, she can blame the legions of apathetic morons who sit on the sidelines and allow the right wing to seize the high ground.

The real poison in our democracy -- a story The Record has rarely told -- are registered voters too lazy to get off their asses and go to the polls or even apply for a mail-in ballot.

Their corrosive influence can be seen in every local and state election, but in months of election coverage, The Record hasn't bothered to interview a single voter.

Democratic edge

With a 700,000 edge in registered voters, apathy is likely the leading explanation for how a Democrat running for governor loses in New Jersey.

Of course, in 2009, when Republican Chris Christie won his first term as governor, the electorate fell for the Big Lie that he would lower property taxes.

Instead of his first term being one of compromise and bipartisanship, Christie likely employed the veto more than any other previous governor.

And The Record, which insists on calling him "popular," has distinguished itself as little more than a public-relations apparatus for the GOP bully.

What about voters?  

Instead of speaking to voters, Editor Marty Gottlieb and his gang of lazy columnists and reporters have spun endless tales, predicting the outcome of the gubernatorial election based on so-called experts, pundits, polls, politics and fund-raising totals.

I picked up a real newspaper on Monday, The New York Times, and found four large color photos of Brooklyn residents and a story on their views of the mayoral election in New York City.

Imagine that.

Steve Waldman, 65, a computer supplier, is quoted as saying the last presidential candidate he voted for was Hubert H. Humphrey, and the last mayor he cast a ballot for was Edward I. Koch.

(That's pronounced "Kotch," not "Coke," as in the evil Koch brothers behind Americans for Prosperity, the right-wing group that is financing GOP attack ads).

The Times did its interviews in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, where only about half of the registered voters cast ballots in the 2012 presidential election, and less than a third voted for mayor in 2009.

A Times editorial on Monday urged New Jersey voters to approve a constitutional amendment to raise the minimum wage to $8.25 an hour, starting on Jan. 1, a move the greedy Borg publishing family opposed in a Record editorial.

Christie also vetoed a hike in the minimum for low-wage workers, one of the groups he likes to screw with his mean-spirited policies.

Today's paper

What dominates The Record's front page today? Not the election. The editors are already tired of that.

The top half of Page 1 carries a big, black headline:


Gunman strikes panic
in Garden State Plaza


Of course, the "panic" was in shoppers, not in the Paramus shopping center itself.

The phrase "at Garden State Plaza" would have conveyed that, but six-figure Production Editor Liz Houlton missed the clunky headline. 

Still, the real weakness in the story is that it fails to report the only one hurt was the alleged gunman, Richard Shoop, 20, the Teaneck man who police say committed suicide in the mall.


Who is to blame?

Was the paper's early deadlines or the five reporters who worked on the story or the editors to blame for that major omission?

Deputy Assignment Editor Dan Sforza and the rest of the Woodland Park daily's local-news operation fails miserably almost every time to get to the law-enforcement sources who have the information readers demand.

This morning, the paper's Web site, NorthJersey.com, actually has the nerve to quote a neighbor of the Shoops as saying Richard was "a nice kid."

A correction on A-2 today acknowledges the misspelling of the name of a candidate in the Bogota Borough Council election. 

How sloppy can Sforza get?

Hackensack news

The Local front today reports Hackensack High School finally got a new resource officer after the school board agreed to pay his salary (L-1).

The dysfunctional Board of Education is the last remnant of decades of Zisa family rule over Hackensack. 

Sforza couldn't find enough local news to fill his section, so he resorted to a time-tested filler photo of a non-fatal auto accident (L-3).

As usual, the caption tells readers little, especially in this case, where Ridgewood police are quoted as saying the brakes on a relatively new Mazda SUV "failed."

Maybe, the driver "failed" to use the brakes and mistakenly hit the gas pedal instead.

11 comments:

  1. Mr. Sassoon maybe you've never worked in newspapers but since they found the gunman and ascertained his injuries in the middle of the night, I think it's reasonable that the newspaper that comes to you door in the middle of the night would not have that information.

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  2. I didn't hear anything about the middle of the night. I worked at three newspapers for nearly 40 years, and some have later deadlines than others. The Record for many years had early deadlines to accommodate a ragtag army of deliverers, and often was unable to deliver late sports scores.

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  3. Of course you didn't hear anything. It happened in the middle of the night and you were relying on a story from a few hours earlier than that.

    It's too bad they don't make a newspaper that updates stories when new developments come along, like a guy shooting up a mall, killing himself and being found at 3:30 in the morning. Such a shame you can't read that anywhere until the next day.

    Sent from my iPhone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I listened to radio news this morning and didn't hear anything about the middle of the night . Also, if no one was hurt by the shooting, the story was overplayed in a sensational tabloid style, marred by a unintentionally hideous headline that had a shopping center panicking. It just goes to show that after many decades of covering such deadline news, The Record still get a complete and accurate story.

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  4. So shoppers there were panicking because of a headline in a newspaper that showed up on racks six hours after the first shot. What the heck are you talking about?

    Thousands of people were in there, in various stages of lockdown. I'd say that qualifies as big news. Sorry if you don't think so, but you obviously don't work for a paper, you just have unreasonable expectations for one.

    Advice: cancel your subscription and get it all free online.

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  5. There's nothing like reading a newspaper. The Web site is filled with even more errors, bad writing and reporting than the paper.

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  6. The only thing that you know less about than the City, is the Board of Education.

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    Replies
    1. Really? Are you a board member or a member of the Zisa family, which sucked Hackensack dry?

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  7. Go! Christie! The rich still rule!

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  8. Someone once asked me if I was ignorant or apathetic. I said I don't know and I don't care.

    ReplyDelete
  9. You should do stand-up. Thanks, you made me laugh.

    ReplyDelete

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