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#101
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I'm sorry but I just can't understand why the city holding a meet and greet of possibly the most important city official can be seen as a frivolous expense..
My not having an engraved invitation is an abomination but knowing my personal distain of the mayor makes even that understandable... ![]() Bottom line, IMO, the meet and greet was correct.. Ross
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To paraphrase Sam on the TV show Burn Notice: " You know these forum guys..Buncha whiny little girls."
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#102
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#103
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Anyone have a factual account of what the meet & greet cost?
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Under democracy, one party always devotes its chief energies to trying to prove that the other party is unfit to rule - and both commonly succeed, and are right. ~H.L. Mencken, 1956 |
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#104
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I think these things always look different depending on your perspective. If you barely get by and then get socked with a huge electric bill while reading about money from the electric fund being used to fund various other ventures you're going to feel different about $500 (a pure guess) being spent on snacks for folks who are supposed to be working for you, than you might feel if you are relatively well off and living in a home worth $200K or more. The more well to do is going to see this kind of thing as normal oil to grease the wheels of civil society, the person who doesn't have money for their own cheetos is going to see it as a ridiculous waste and proof that the people in power have no regard for the people they serve.
At the city level, being so close to the people you serve, our leadership would be well advised to consider this little tidbit about appearances. |
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#105
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Some would say that an employee that isn't gainfully employed due to inclement weather or lack of work, should be sent home to save money. But, there are many that would jump down their throats, claiming those workers need 40 hours to survive. D*mned if you do, d*mned if you don't.
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Under democracy, one party always devotes its chief energies to trying to prove that the other party is unfit to rule - and both commonly succeed, and are right. ~H.L. Mencken, 1956 |
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#106
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If the cost of the meet-and-greet was $600, then the per-capita cost to Lebanon's citizenry was about five cents each. And if all of it it came off everybody's electric bills, then your grandmother's share was probably even less than that. If you're trying to prevent your grandmother from freezing in the dark over cans of cat food, hopefully you can come up with more substantive ideas than stopping the city from an extravagance that saves her a nickel whenever they hire new city administrators.
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"Don't believe everything you think." Last edited by RIchard Bland; 02-08-2010 at 03:14 PM. |
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#107
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I agree it's small potatos, but symbolism is symbolism. |
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#108
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#109
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Somebody really needs to do an analysis of whether the city is still overcharging on electric rates. They may be, but then again, they may not. And virtually no one who has complained so bitterly about the rate increases and accuses the city of overcharging has acknowledged that the city used a lot of accumulated excess from the electric fund in order to subsdize electric rates during most of 2009. I have a feeling it's because they are trying to paint a picture of a rapacious calculating underhanded bunch of thieves, and this particular inconvenient fact indicates that the city is making at least some modest efforts to do the right thing. While they may have screwed the pooch in implementing the rate increases, it seems more likely this would have been due to incompetence or miscalculation as opposed to deliberately shafting the citizenry, given what a high profile the issue has achieved. I agree completely that symbolism is symbolism. The problem is that people appear to me to be losing the distinction between the symbolic and the substantive. Seriously, Grandma's nickel isn't worth writing about, hardly even as a symbol. (It also makes you wonder about a family that sits by and lets an old lady struggle by on six hundred bucks a month, but has plenty of energy and indignity to complain to the city about a matter that costs her five cents.) A deeper problem is that people are really good at outrage and moral posturing and making symbolic arguments, but (at least to judge from the what appears on the forum) pretty useless when it comes to addressing the substance.
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"Don't believe everything you think." Last edited by RIchard Bland; 02-08-2010 at 04:21 PM. |
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#110
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I agree entirely with your last sentence. But punch and cookies isn't caviar and champagne. And in what way has anybody hollered "Let the eat cake?" (Interesting historical tidbit I read recently: the infamous phrase attributed--probably falsely--to Marie Antoinette would actually translate as "Let them eat brioche.")
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"Don't believe everything you think." |
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