Showing posts with label taxing the rich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taxing the rich. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Editors surrender to Christie on taxing the wealthy

The Engine 5 Firehouse on Main Street in Hackensack is one of the most distinctive around.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

Democratic lawmakers are renewing the debate over taxing wealthy residents and corporations to balance the state budget at the end of the month, but The Record's editors have already made up their minds.

How can Editor Marty Gottlieb run today's front-page story on a plan to avoid Governor Christie's drastic cuts in the state contribution to the pension system (A-1)?

Only six days ago, an editorial called a millionaires tax "a political non-starter" (A-18 on June 13).

Is this objective journalism or are the editors just taking their marching orders  from the GOP bully and the wealthy Borg publishing family?

Don't expect Editorial Page Editor Alfred P. Doblin to revisit the viability of higher taxes on the wealthy, especially if he can't find a Broadway show, book or song to compare them to.

Christie-proofing budget

Today's Page 1 story reports the proposal by Senate President Stephen Sweeney and Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg would generate $1.6 billion, "which is the same amount Christie has proposed cutting the planned state pension contribution for the fiscal year that begins July 1" (A-4).

A Christie spokesman referred to millionaires as "overburdened New Jersey taxpayers," and said "raising taxes drives businesses and citizens out of New Jersey and makes our problems worse."

Who in their right mind would move out of New Jersey, which is just across the river from the financial and cultural capital of the United States?

Animal farm

Today's edition is dominated by animal news -- on Page 1 and L-3 in Local.

The A-1 story reports the suspension of mail delivery for more than a month to four homes in Rochelle Park after a dog attacked a mail carrier, "leaving six severe bite wounds up the man's arms."

Why not put down the dog and fine the owners so it doesn't happen again?

Roast duck

Good luck trying to follow the story on "a mama duck and her four ducklings" in Ridgewood (L-3).

A big photo shows four ducklings, and the smaller photo shows a large duck, presumably the mother, and only three ducklings.

But the text says "the mama ... couldn't be found."

This is typical of the sloppy editing under six-figure Production Editor Liz Houlton and her sleep-deprived staff.

The village could have saved taxpayers money by alerting the many downtown restaurant chefs and letting them take care of the ducks.  

Another story on the same page reports a house fire in Saddle Brook killed seven cats and an eighth cat is missing.

Pat who?

Meanwhile, more poor editing on the Local front likely puzzled tens of thousands of readers (L-1).

A photo caption reads, "June Nakayama wiping away a tear after Pat Kinney presented her with a bouquet on Wednesday."

Readers learn Nakayama was being thanked for starting a "Pre-Mom Club for young Japanese women who move to North Jersey with their businessmen-husbands."

But Kinney is never identified.

Of course, newsroom veterans know Kinney as a freelancer who once wrote the "Neighbors from Japan" column for The Record.

Consumers lose

Staff Writer Elisa Ung does a poor job representing consumers in her fine-dining restaurant reviews.

So why did the editors think she would do any better on supermarket purchases (BL-1)?

Today, she touts pricey bottled pasta sauce made by Jon Bon Jovi's father, but doesn't mention that you get only 24 ounces for $5.99 or barely enough for a half-pound of dried pasta.

I found the same bottled Bongiovi Marinara, Garden-style and Arrabiata on sale today at the Paramus ShopRite for a more palatable $2.99. 



Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Hitting Obama on taxes, not Christie

James Beard with red wineImage by beardfoundation via Flickr
May Chef James Beard and his recipes rest in peace.


President Obama's compromise on a two-year extension of Bush tax cuts for the rich leads The Record today -- in stark contrast to how the Woodland Park daily played Governor Christie's refusal to tax millionaires and help get New Jersey out of its deep fiscal hole.

Editor Francis Scandale uses a Page 1 story from McClatchy Newspapers that takes the focus off Republicans -- The Grand Old Party of No. 

Again, that contrasts with how Editorial Page Editor Alfred P. Doblin sniped from the Opinion Page, blaming the majority Democrats in the state Legislature for failing to extend the special Corzine tax hike on the wealthy.

An editorial on A-12 calls Obama's deal with Republicans "a defeat," but doesn't take Democrats to task for their lack of unity or the GOP for its stubborn partisanship in the service of the rich. 


Embarrassing correction

A correction on A-2 notes an editorial Tuesday totally misquoted Bradley Campbell, the former state environmental commissioner. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy.

A story on A-4 reports cutbacks in a roadside assistance service that follows a pattern set by the Christie administration -- hitting the middle and working classes where it hurts, while making the governor's wealthy supporters even richer.

What local news?

Head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes' Local section today has little municipal news -- unless you count replacement of windows in a Lodi school and a continuing discussion of zoning in Mahwah (both L-3).

The lead story on L-1 makes it difficult to judge whether an $882,000 settlement will make whole a man who was injured in a gas-pipeline explosion, because Staff Writer Kibret Markos is in the pockets of trial lawyers and carefully omits how much the victim's attorney will keep (at least a third, plus thousands more for expert witnesses and so forth).

Road Worrier John Cichowski again turns out a column on the Local front without actually having to leave the office and do any reporting on commuting problems. He simply answers e-mail questions from motorists.


Pass the Lipitor


If you have any doubt Food Editor Susan Leigh Sherill is out of touch with how people eat, just turn to the photos with her "In Your Kitchen" recipes of the week (Better Living front and F-2.)

A log of raw beef and raw egg yolks, and a second log of Roquefort and cream cheeses and butter look to me like two huge turds -- no matter how much her husband, photographer Ted Axelrod, tries to dress them up with his photos. 

I can see her guests dropping like flies from cholesterol overdoses, if she dared serve these two dishes at a party. She says she used "best-quality tenderloin," but it could be from cattle raised on antibiotics, growth hormones and animal by-products (bits of dead animals).

She is so eager to publicize the James Beard Foundation, which she supports, and the late chef's 1972 cookbook, she ignores how many readers have long ago discarded their 1970s recipes and the devil-may-care attitude that went with them.

Tornado sighted

Can any reader tell me why white space shaped like a tornado appears on Page F-5 today -- between two stories and above an advertisement?

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