T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
484.2 | I'm from NH, myself | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:50 | 5 |
| On Sunday he had a bunch of ads about how much he'd help the
working woman because he's in favor of improved daycare and likes
kids.
--bonnie
|
484.3 | barf | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:59 | 18 |
|
Thanks for entering this.
A couple of quotes from Friday's article:
"Although he praised the women's movement for having helped women make
gains in some areas, Silber said that movement has also made it harder
for women 'who've decided to take their maternal responsibilities
seriously' to be housewives.
"'There is no question that we have a generation of neglected children,
we have a generation of abused children, by women who have thought that
a third-rate day care center was just as good as a first-rate home,'
Silber said in the interview with WCVB-TV (Ch.5)."
Can you say "blame the woman"?
D.
|
484.4 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | but it was a _clean_ miss | Mon Oct 29 1990 12:01 | 11 |
| re .3 He sort of implies that _all_ day-care is third-rate as
opposed to home care being first class. He doesn't quite say it,
just does a d*mn good job of impying it. Probably managed to induce
a lot of guilt with it. Notice the implication that parents, and
especially mothers, should be willing to sacrifice their own lives,
dreams, plans and happiness for their kids.
Personally I'd rather the kids were raised in day-care than by
someone who resents being stuck at home while their career plans
go down the tube. I wonder how many kids were abused/neglected
for _that_ reason ?
|
484.5 | my opinion | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Oct 29 1990 12:11 | 14 |
| It's hard to say what was meant by the comments. I didn't hear
or read it in it's entirety (sp?), but from what I did see, my
take on it was the implication that day care should be better
than it is. this is not directed to parent/s who are presently
using day-care, I'm sure there are plenty of wonderful centers
out there. Just remember that it wasn't too long ago that you
could read another story of child abuse at day care centers almost
*daily*. Maybe he is personally against the idea of day care/
working mother. I think it's ok if it works for him, but it's not
ok to force those values on anyone else. I don't think he's trying
to do that, he's just such a strong personality that sometimes it's
hard to separate his personal feelings from potential policy making.
Christine
|
484.6 | that settles that | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Mon Oct 29 1990 13:10 | 7 |
| >he's just such a strong personality that sometimes it's hard to
>separate his personal feelings from potential policy making.
If someone can't seperate their personal feelings from their policy
making, they DO NOT belong in office.
D!
|
484.7 | Rebroadcast at 10... | NETMAN::BASTION | Welcome to the Tea Party, Alice | Mon Oct 29 1990 13:21 | 15 |
| Both interviews with Silber and Weld will be broadcast on Channel 5
(Boston) tonight at 10:00.
Natalie Jacobsen asked both candidates the same questions and it was
interesting to see how different the answers were. Sounds like Silber
didn't do his homework...Jacobsen is the type of woman who "neglects
their children", according to his definition.
Mrs. Silber was asked how she saw her role as first lady, if her
husband was elected. Her reply was that she would maintain her private
life.
Judi
|
484.8 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Oct 29 1990 13:33 | 15 |
| D!
Well, I stated my opinion badly, I didn't mean to say that, but am
as a loss for words to better describe my thoughts on this. Of course,
I'm not trying to change your mind, mine's not even made up. However,
I think most people in public office bring many of their own (read
personal) values/beliefs to the work they perform while in office. A lot
of the acceptance levels of what's appropriate and what's not depend of
what the hot issues of the times are. I'd still rather have someone in
office that follows through on campaign promises regardless of personal
feelings than someone who makes promises to get elected, then forgets
his/her constituancy when in power. DISCLAIMER: this last remark is
not a reflection on the behaviors of either gubenatorial candidates,
but a personal feeling that politicians should support the people who
vote them into office rather that ignoring their pleas)
|
484.9 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Oct 29 1990 14:41 | 17 |
| .5 > Just remember that it wasn't too long ago that you could read
.5 > another story of child abuse at day care centers almost *daily*.
That is highly misleading. Although a couple of instances of
(alleged) daycare abuse received endless publicity, children are
HUNDREDS of times more likely to be abused by members of their own
household than by daycare providers.
It can be said of either Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate that he
is the worst one imaginable, with the possible exception of his
opponent. Weld manages to come across as a much nicer guy, but it is
doubtful that even the beloved Mass. Legislature can save us from his
policy positions. Amazingly, whichever wins, we will soon manage to
make it look as if even a couple of New Hampshire governors were not
all THAT bad!
- Bruce
|
484.10 | | DECXPS::HENDERSON | Hello baby, I'm gone goodbye | Mon Oct 29 1990 14:42 | 13 |
| I do not live in Massachusetts and if I did I would not support Dr Silber.
However, I would like to see someone come along who like him who has not spent
their life in politics, and gets angry about what is and has been taking place
in government and is clear about what they will do about it.
Again, I am not a Massachusetts resident, nor a Silber supporter. I find the
man, for lack of a better term, scary.
Jim
|
484.11 | | ASABET::RAINEY | | Mon Oct 29 1990 15:17 | 7 |
| didn't mean to be misleading, just my impression from reading
the papers and hearing some first hand horror stories. As a
result, my opinion is that choosing a day care center is a
frightening thought. That's not to say that there aren't good
ones, just that the bad exist. I did not mean to imply that no
childeren are abused in the home, we all know it sadly happens
too often.
|
484.12 | | CADSE::KHER | | Mon Oct 29 1990 15:35 | 11 |
| >"Although he praised the women's movement for having helped women make
> gains in some areas, Silber said that movement has also made it harder
> for women 'who've decided to take their maternal responsibilities
> seriously' to be housewives.
That seems to imply that women who are working are not taking their
maternal resposibilities as seriously as they should. I don't like
that
manisha who's_not_a_working_mother
|
484.13 | Weld/Cellucci | ASDS::BARLOW | Me for MA governor!!! | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:12 | 26 |
|
re .8
And if Silber acts on the statements he made during his campaigning,
then women, African Americans and the elderly will be in REAL
trouble. Silber is PRO_LIFE!!! He has stated that he believes
that the 'rights of a fetus' are more important than the rights of
a woman. He has stated that paraphrase(women who work are child
abusers). Even IF he believes that putting a child into daycare
is the same as abusing it, then why aren't the husbands responsible
too? Or does Silber believe that WOMEN not MEN are SOLELY repsonsible
for the upbringing of children? He has decided not to speak in mostly
black neighborhoods because paraphase( 'why should I go talk to a
bunch of prostitutes and drug addicts?'). Then he backed down,(READ
CHANGED HIS STAND), and went to where-ever-that-was-I-forget and when
a woman started yelling at him, he chickened-out and left. Will he
always run with his tail between his legs when confronted with strong,
black women? (I never saw him run from the media.) And how about the
elderly? He indicated earlier that medicare is a good place to cut
spending because they're going to die anyways.
I should hope that IF Silber, God forbid, becomes governor of MA
that he totally changes his stands on everything.
Rachael
|
484.14 | | ASDS::BARLOW | Me for MA governor!!! | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:16 | 9 |
|
re .13
Please excuse me if I seem very emotional on this subject,
but I am TERRIFIED of what will happen to the rights of individuals if
Silber gets elected.
Rachael
|
484.15 | a sad year for liberals | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:30 | 20 |
|
re .14 -- great for personal name! Now we might have a real choice :-)
I keep deciding and then undeciding to vote for Weld simply because
Silber's attitudes toward (and past history with) women, gays,
non-whites frighten me. I also worry about Weld's stance on gun
control and his support for the CLT petition, but I just couldn't
bring myself to vote for Silber. So, I may decide in the booth,
and for me it comes down to:
1. Vote for Weld, and hope for the best.
2. Write in Evelyn, and get some personal satisfaction.
3. Leave that part of the ballot blank.
Maybe tomorrow night's debate will help me make a decision I can stick
to for more than 24 hours....
Justine
|
484.16 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | being gentle is *not* being wimpy!!!!!!!!! | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:31 | 10 |
| I agree, Rachel. I was not happy this morning as I walked past the banke of
newspaper machines to see that Silber is leading Weld in the race.
Sigh.
Please, everyone, if you have any feelings about who should be governor, VOTE!
Don't believe "them" when they tell you "one person's vote doesn't count!"
If it didn't, why would candidates spend soooo much money on campaigns?
E Grace
|
484.17 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Oct 29 1990 16:43 | 15 |
|
Whenever I see that one is ahead in the polls, I cringe, until I
remember that the alternative is the other one (groan). Silber has
absolutely no control over his mouth. His actual stands on childcare
and abortion are actually rather progressive, but he can't surpress his
neandrathal verbal instincts. Weld, on the other hand, is a real
smoothy, but it isn't clear that his policies won't be worse.
In fact, there is an alternative, our fellow Digit Umina. I know
little about him, but occasionally find that an excellent reason to
give him my vote. But I'll probably end up trying to pick the lesser
evil.
- Bruce
|
484.18 | | ASDS::BARLOW | Me for MA governor!!! | Tue Oct 30 1990 08:18 | 51 |
| re: 17, Silber's view on abortion is far from progressive. He is
endorsed my the pro-life assoc, (whatever the name is of that group),
while Weld is endorsed by the NOW and pro-choice groups.
re: everybody else who isn't sure
While Weld may not impress people, he did fight the mayor of Boston
a few years back for corruption and I've heard that the real meat in
his stands comes from Paul Cellucci. I don't know much about him, but
I'd like to learn more. Weld/Cellucci's social policies are pretty
much in line with Libertarian social philosophy. (Basically,
conservative about how much the government can/should interfere with
our lives.)
I'm voting for Weld, because Silber as governor is a terrifying thought
and because I like CLT. (Yes, not a very popular view.) I think that
Beacon Hill needs to be sent a message from the people of this state
that they are managing state finances poorly. CLT doesn't state where
the cuts will come from, (no matter what the ads say about education
being cut). I called Weld headquarters and they told me that Weld
wants to cut out the layer of middle management that Dukakis put in.
(I had heard elsewhere that he added 50,000-80,000 new jobs! I got
different figures at different times.) I'd like to see figures on
exactly how much this will cut. I also heard from a fellow Decie that
the MA government has spend 2+million on ads against CLT!!! $2,000,000!
Sort-of makes you wonder why they are so nervous! And where did they
get 2 million?
Gun control is a hard issue. Guns are used by people to kill people.
A statistic that I'd like to see is what percent of guns used in
murders are illegally owned. I've heard that it's high but I don't
know for sure. We are given the right to bear arms in our
constitution and that right is there to protect us, not only from
criminals but from the government. If guns are illegal, then normal
people won't have any so ~maybe~ instances of domestice violence using
guns would go down. However, the people who would still be able to get
guns are precisely the people who shouldn't have guns. If we simply
tighten the restrictions on who can own a gun and INFORCE those
restrictions, then we might be able to get a handle on some of this
crime. (my favorite bumpersticker, "Criminals prefer unarmed
victims".)
OK, off my soapbox. I really am thinking about getting into politics.
It just seems that these people are not saying what they should. Weld
headquarters promised that he won't side-step the issues tonight. I
sure hope not!
Of course, I'd rather write a good program that politic, so maybe I
won't.
Rachael
|
484.19 | stickers, anyone? | ASDS::BARLOW | Me for MA governor!!! | Tue Oct 30 1990 08:20 | 5 |
|
Anybody in Stow, MA want a Weld/Cellucci bumper sticker?
Send mail!
|
484.20 | | IE0010::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:48 | 13 |
| I don't like Silber's views either, but I'm not that terrified at the
prospect of him being elected. Silber is obviously NOT a skilled
politician. Anyone who runs off at the mouth like he does, doesn't
know how to play the game. He will have to deal with a legislature of
experienced politicians whose cooperation he must cultivate to be
effective and powerful. They can make it pretty frustrating for him if
he doesn't compromise.
One thing I like about Silber is that I know where he stands, I don't
like where he stands, but I do believe him. Definitely NOT a
politician!!! I can't say the same thing about Weld.
Mary
|
484.21 | | CENTRY::mackin | Damn, just lost our data again | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:48 | 8 |
| The only thing I've liked about Len Umina's candidacy is his tenacity. He's
been running for at least the past 3+ years against all odds and, to some
extend, against the establishment.
As for his political views, which the news media seem content to continuously
exlude from all mention, they are more than a little right wing for my tastes.
Jim
|
484.22 | | LUDWIG::JOERILEY | The Birdman chirps again! | Tue Oct 30 1990 23:37 | 4 |
|
I have to go along with Weld/cellucci and yes on CLT.
Joe
|
484.23 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:12 | 5 |
| .22
I'll second that.
D.
|
484.24 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Oct 31 1990 13:22 | 29 |
| I'm not sure who I'll vote for for governor. Silber says a lot of
things that other politicians are afraid to say, and often that we
really should be debating. We end up arguing about who he outraged
rather than about whether what he said was true.
For example, he's the only one saying that in order to contain
rising medical costs, we may have to provide less care for some
people. It's probably true, but nobody is willing to debate it.
It's certainly a defensible position, and we should be arguing
about it.
On the other hand, Silber is absolutely undemocratic in style.
He'd make a great dictator.
I can't support Weld because the only thing he's ever done that I
agree with was resgning in protest over Ed Meese. That was a
gutsy, correct thing to do. But I don't agree with him on most
other issues.
I'll vote against question 2 on the grounds that it's poorly
thought out and poorly worded, so I don't know exactly what it
will do, and I don't like what I think it will do.
I'll vote against question 3 because I don't believe the state can
meet its obligations with that large a tax cut, and I approve of
some of the tax hikes it would roll back (in particular the gas
tax and some of the increased fines.)
--David
|
484.25 | Ellen Goodman from the Globe 11/1 | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:21 | 105 |
|
From this morning's Boston Globe -- some kind person posted this in
another file. I think I'm with Ellen.
Justine
A VOTER'S QUANDARY
by Ellen Goodman
1-Nov-1990 Boston Globe
During the week before the election, a woman of my acquaintance
appeared in the bathroom mirror, asking "What's a nice girl like you
doing in a place like this?"
The place was a political location known as a quandary, located halfway
between a rock and a hard place. The rock was John Silber. The hard
place was William Weld. The problem was who to vote for as governor.
The race has bewildered outsiders who think of Massachusetts as the
land of the liberal, the miracle and the Michael. Two angry years
after Dukakis and the economy went down the chute, the choice for his
successor will be either a Reagan Democrat, or a Bush Republican.
Peering over the sink, I repeated the bare facts of the case to the
woman before me for her judgment. On the one hand there is Silber,
whose style of open, intimate, inter-personal relationship is winning
through intimidation. Even Henry Kissinger once described working with
Silber as "a bloody brawl." But he's a man with some attractive ideas,
especially about early education.
On the other hand there is Weld, the affable patrician-in-training who
worked in Reagan's Justice Department until he resigned in protest.
Weld exudes the politics of the well-fed, favoring a tax-cut proposal
on the ballot that threatens a lethal blow to the state's services.
The pack of national journalists who have come to read the entrails of
liberalism find this pair anthropologically interesting. But to the
more-worried-than-angry voters of Massachusetts, the quandary has
seemed like a sinkhole.
Each time an undecided voter swallows hard, determined to go with
Weld's temperament and hopes for the best, he makes them choke. How do
you vote for a guy who talks about the AK-47 as if it's sporting
equipment at the Myopia Hunt Club?
Just when another undecided figures that she can pull the Silber lever
without sending a lethal shock through her veins, he raises the
voltage. Silber's knee jerks into the nearest groin. His latest
charge was that children are "neglected" and "abused" by working women
who have thought that a third-rate daycare center was just as good as a
first-rate home. How do you vote for a pit bull hankering for a fight?
Silber's attempt in Tuesday's debate to portray himself as tough but
caring, a protector of small children, is as believable as Saddam
Hussein patting little hostages. Weld's CLT defense rang as empty as
the budget.
The woman in the mirror and I have tried to apply every logical
proposition to this race. We have looked at this decision from every
angle.
Angle One: It's better to vote for policies than people. This is a
popular theory, but how do you believe it after decades of broken
promises and shattered platforms? What difference do the programs
matter if there's no money for them?
Angle Two: Vote for the person who seems decent, and assume that he
doesn't mean what he sometimes says. It's a nice idea, but didn't some
Americans try that with Ronald Reagan?
Angle Three: Don't vote for either. However attractive this notion,
my favorite for weeks, not to decide is to decide. Even if you vote
for nobody, somebody will win.
But having explored the terrain of undecided turf, only one angle holds
any promise of decision. Angle Four: Which of these men do you most
want to vote against?
Backed into this unhappy corner, an answer of sorts is slowly emerging.
The woman before me admits that she most wants to vote against the man
with a lifetime of contentious bullying in his curriculum vitae. She
most wants to stop Silber before he produces four years of rancor and
sets off on the yellow brick road of national politics.
Surely Silber's scorn for others, his disinterest in listening and what
it implies -- an occasional change of mind -- makes him unfit. So does
the message that the victory of this ambitious man would send
nationally: the politics of anger are winning. Remember the subtitle
of Silber's book? "What's wrong with America and how to fix it."
So at last, clambering miserably, reluctantly, halfheartedly up the
sides of the quandary on this tortuous path of reason, I offer one last
exchange with my mirror image. This is what's "wrong with America" we
agree. So little to vote *for*, so much to vote *against*.
In the end, the voting machine may count this a vote for Weld. But
Bill, don't take it personally.
|
484.26 | Silber will ignore the constitution | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Thu Nov 01 1990 14:58 | 26 |
| > <<< Note 484.25 by COGITO::SULLIVAN "Singing for our lives" >>>
> -< Ellen Goodman from the Globe 11/1 >-
> Justine
I will not debate the "gun" issue here please don't start it but this piece
belongs in the Silber note.
When Silber was asked, in public, by the chairman of the Fall River chamber
of congress about gun laws, silber said that to own a gun people must
go through background checks *AND* allow the police the right to enter
their homes at any time to "check up" on the guns, and that people should
allow their medical and criminal backgrounds to become public knowledge
to get permission to own a gun. When the chairman said "that will violate
peoples constitutional rights to privacy and violate the second amendment
Silber said "The Constitution doesn't matter, public good is more important"
Whether you agree with guns or not, the fact that he would throw out the
4th (and IMO the 2nd) Amendment to "control" a certain segment of the population
(gun owners) makes me ask what other rights would he tromple for the
"public good"?
Amos
|
484.27 | Oh No! | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:07 | 8 |
| I think that the alleged? comment Silber made about not following the
Consitution in his example says it all. The Constitution was set up
by men who understood the problems the new Democracy would face and
the quirks of men to bend guidelines to their own advantage. I think
we need a push to GET BACK to the Constituition not some who advocates
ignoring parts of it. To ignore the Constitution is a form of one man
show.... "I know best". That comment scares me more than any I have
heard from him to date. On that basis alone Weld would get my vote.
|
484.28 | | DASXPS::HENDERSON | I tell ya 'bout hey now!! | Fri Nov 02 1990 12:12 | 10 |
| Yes, that comment bothered me a great deal also..reminded me of a comment
which I believe was made by Drug Czar William Bennet...who said that Americans
may have to sacrifice some of their constitutional rights so that we can really
fix this drug problem.
Mighty scary.
Jim
|