Showing posts with label heroin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heroin. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Christie columnist perpetuates bully's middle-class myth

Black cars and limousines bringing top athletes, celebrities and other guests to the launch party for The Players' Tribune, an online site published by Derek Jeter, late Saturday night on West 26th Street, near 12th Avenue, not far from where CBS newsman Bob Simon was killed after his speeding Lincoln Town Car limo crashed last Wednesday. Today, The Record's so-called commuting columnist tackles auto safety and Simon's death, posing a speculative, "What if"?


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

The real danger of Staff Writer Charles Stile's flattering columns on Governor Christie is that nine times out of 10 they are played on Page 1 amid "objective" news stories, but never labeled "Opinion," a sure way to mislead readers.

Today, many familiar with Christie's multiple vetoes of a tax surcharge on millionaires and raising the minimum wage surely threw up their breakfasts when they came to this sentence on the questionable ethics of his corporate-sponsored travel:

"The travel flap undercuts his image as an ordinary Jersey guy with middle-class tastes and ambitions" (A-1).

To avoid being a laughing stock, Stile needs to say in his first sentence what he has never said: 

Christie's "brand" and his elaborate public relations campaigns are a complete sham as he pursues his White house dreams and leaves New Jersey in shambles.

Demonizing Paterson

The front page today is dominated by the first of a three-part series, "IN HEROIN'S GRIP," a second installment of Staff Writer Rebecca D. O'Brien's untiring coverage of the role of Silk City in a suburban epidemic (A-1, A-8 and A-9).

The demonizing of Paterson began under the last editor, Francis "Frank" Scandale, who actually published a map showing readers where they could buy drugs in the city.

I just wonder how many readers are going to get through all three parts, which appear to be another attempt by Editor Marty Gottlieb to win a Pulitzer Prize.

The Record supplements this one-dimensional portrayal of the city almost daily with stories about official corruption, failing schools and unbridled gun violence.

Today, the introductory paragraphs invoke "the fatal shootings of 12-year-old Genesis Rincon in July and 14-year-old Nazareh Bugg in late September."

Yet, I have never seen The Record go after the Police Department, led for many years by a white police chief, for its apparent inability or unwillingness to stop crime perpetrated mostly against minority residents.

Slum landlords and banks that red line are other subjects the Woodland Park daily won't touch.

Air bags, windbags 

Despite Road Warrior John Cichowski's hand-wringing over the lack of rear curtain air bags in Bob Simon's limo, the CBS newsman's failure to buckle up is probably what led to his fatal injuries last Wednesday on 12th Avenue and 30th Street in Manhattan (L-1).

Cichowski assigns blame for unsafe limos on just about everyone but Ford Motor Co. and other manufacturers, who fight government-mandated safety improvements tooth and nail to avoid reducing their profits.

Unbelted in the back seat, Simon was hurled forward when his speeding limo struck unmovable steel stanchions, suffering "blunt-force injuries to his head, torso and extremities," according to the medical examiner.

Side curtain air bags likely wouldn't have stopped Simon from being thrown forward into the front seat, dashboard and windshield at the same high speed the limo was traveling before its sudden deceleration.

'Where am I?'

In his Feb. 8 column, Cichowski repeated the same mistake he published on Aug. 10, 2014, claiming a Bergen Avenue house next to Route 17 in Waldwick is five blocks south of another house, when it is really five blocks north.

The error was corrected last year by the Facebook page for Road Warrior Bloopers:


"In his Feb. 8 column, the forgetful Road Warrior repeated the same clueless nonsense that I previously corrected with his Aug. 10, 2014, column.
"Road Warrior indicated that a Bergen Avenue crash accident in Waldwick was five blocks south of another resident’s house on Dora Avenue.
"Bergen Avenue is five blocks north of Dora Avenue.
"He indicated the Waldwick resident was worried her corner house was in “exactly the same position” as the Bergen Avenue corner property that sustained damage from the Route 17 accident.
"The Dora Avenue home is set back at least 50 feet further from the main traffic lanes of Route 17 than the Bergen Avenue home.
"It does not border the southbound side of Route 17, like the Bergen Ave. home, since there is an entire exit ramp road to Sheridan Avenue between the Dora Avenue home and Route 17."

See: Clueless Road Warrior forgets past errors


Is that kosher?

It's just like Staff Writer Elisa Ung to focus on the 65 bottles and 12 tap beers available at Teaneck Doghouse, a kosher sports bar and restaurant (The Corner Table column, BL-1).

Ung is unwilling the uncover what I call the kosher-food scam, charging much higher prices for -- in this case --  beef hot dogs, burgers and sausage egg rolls, but not delivering meat that has been raised naturally. 


Sunday, May 5, 2013

Black heroin users don't concern prosecutor

This sign is planted on Hackensack's Passaic Street, near Summit Avenue, where a bus and another vehicle collided on Thursday. The lack of turn lanes on Passaic creates a traffic bottleneck during the morning and afternoon rush hours.



In running 88 photos of heroin-possession suspects today, the top editors of The Record -- all of whom are white -- overlooked one thing.

Apparently, no photos of black heroin users are shown on Page A-6, meaning Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli, like the editors, couldn't care less about them.

That's no surprise, given Molinelli's refusal to release information in the fatal police shootings of two African-Americans, Rickey McFadden of Leonia  and Malik Williams of Garfield.

Molinelli must be the first public official to file harassment charges against a citizen -- a man who called him and demanded information about the Williams shooting.  

Tabloid news 

But let's get back to today's sensational, tabloid-like front page from ex-New York Timesman Marty Gottlieb, editor of The Record since late January 2012.

"Suburbia's deadly secret" is the big, black headline over the Page 1 report on the "rising death toll" among suburbanites who use heroin, which many buy from evil black drug dealers in Paterson.

"Since the beginning of 2011, heroin has claimed at least 50 lives in Bergen County," according to the fourth paragraph.

Fifty? Haven't as many people died in traffic accidents or got run down by speeders and stop-sign runners?

Isn't the lack of traffic-law enforcement really "suburbia's deadly secret"? 

You can't tell from Road Warrior John Cichowski, who today offers another in a series of columns on tree trimming and tree clearing in Sandy's wake (L-1).

Editors loves GOP

More bias is evident on the front page in the Political Stile column, which suggests Chris Christie is "the nation's most popular governor -- and certainly among its most visible."

Yes, that last part is true: Christie is visible from the Moon. 

Gottlieb keeps on putting the Charles Stile column on Page 1, even though he knows readers are sick and tired of all the "politics" the media inject into election coverage, instead of focusing on issues.

But issues bore editors and reporters -- from municipal reporters to all the swells in the Trenton State House press corps.

At least the second slanted article about the  gubernatorial election appears on the front of the "Opinion" section:  

Ex-Republican flunky Carl Golden's assessment of Democratic candidate Barbara Buono.

The headline, "An uphill battle," describes Buono's chances with New Jersey media, all of which seem to be in love with Christie, hero of the 1 percent. (O-1).

Dissing Hackensack

In Local, head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes and her deputy, Dan Sforza, could barely manage to fill 3-plus pages of local news, and still needed the photo of a minor car engine-compartment fire (L-3).

In Better Living, food coverage is missing, but there are 2 pages of ads for Mother's Day Dining (BL-6 and BL-7).

Reader exposes flaws

A concerned reader has sent yet another e-mail to management, highlighting errors in the May 1 Road Warrior column, which John Cichowski seems to write off the top of his head: 

"Why doesn't The Record management baby-sit every Road Warrior column to prevent his hazardous and mistake-riddled reporting?

"Why are readers subjected, as they were in his May 1 column, to Road Warrior's mistaken, misleading analysis, and reporting on fatalities, injuries, and need for police at road work zones?
"In response to a reader's question, he indicated it will be acceptable for bicyclists to use the Pulaski Skyway after construction is completed, just like they could before construction started.  How incompetent and deadly do the Road Warrior answers have tobe before there is a retraction of another answer that is NOT based on any facts?  Bicyclists were banned prior to construction and will be banned afterwards since it is unsafe.
"The Road Warrior devotes most of his column to providing irrelevant statistics in addressing similar readers' questions:

"'Why must police baby-sit construction and utility roadside jobs for safety since it also adds considerable cost to a project that is passed along to consumers and taxpayers?'

"Road Warrior NEVER makes any substantiated correlation between the use of full-time police babysitters at road work zones and prevention of fatalities and injuries.

"Road Warrior doesn't seem to realize NJ's Move Over Law is still in effect if there are construction safety flashing lights. There is NO need for flashing lights from a police car."

For the full text, see the Facebook page for Road Warrior Bloopers: 

Arrest the Road Warrior and throw away the key