Friday, July 26, 2013

50 Shades of Weiner

Carlos Danger. Really?

Good to know that he says his behavior "is behind us now and in the rear view mirror." If only the Weiners could see beyond their ambition and understand that we've been run over and over and over. Go away, please.




John Cuneo ~ The New Yorker

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Earth . . . from 900 million miles away


Earth as recorded by the Cassini spacecraft while Saturn blocks the Sun from a distance of  900 million miles. Earth is the bright blue dot in the lower right. Nothing like a photograph from space to put things in perspective.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Go away, this beach is private

Peter Simon
It's summer and it's hot. And that means people want to cool off in the ocean. It also means some people will ignore any and all signs that say "private, no trespassing" to do it, jamming up single-lane roads and limited resident parking. Worse, they'll get in your face if you ask to see their beach parking pass. Here on Martha's Vineyard it has become a clash some insensitively call "beach apartheid."

The rub is this:
"According to 2005 Martha’s Vineyard Commission figures, 124,565 linear feet, or 37.5 percent, of the Island’s shoreline is open to all. The remaining 62.5 percent is either restricted town beach – 4,090 linear feet, or 1.2 percent – or land held privately in one way or another. The greater portion of this is held by individual big landowners. The rest is held by beach associations, shares in which trade for astonishing sums."
And these landowners, most seasonal summer residents, pay 80 percent of the island's taxes, supporting the schools, roads and public services all year. And for that, they want a little privacy in July and August.


Bruce McCall ~ The New Yorker
David Sipress ~ The New Yorker

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The All Star

The well-deserved tributes to Mariano Rivera keep coming. Pure talent and class.


Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Grace after disgrace


What does it say about our society when the leading candidates for New York City Mayor and Comptroller are two men who both resigned from public office for behavior they initially lied about and then only admitted under the weight of the facts?

What does it say about Anthony Weiner and Eliot Spitzer that despite their known character defects they're running for public office again? Are they unemployable in the private sector? Doesn't New York deserve far better from elected officials paid by taxpayers?

Peggy Noonan hit the nail on the head in a recent Wall Street Journal editorial titled How to Find Grace after Disgrace.
"So what are we saying? You know. We're saying the answer to the politician's question, 'What is the optimum moment at which to come back from a big sex scandal, and how do I do it?' is this: 'You are asking the wrong question.'
"The right questions would go something like: 'What can I do to stop being greedy for power, attention and adulation? How can I come to understand that the question is not the public's capacity to forgive, but my own capacity to exercise sound judgment and regard for others? How can I stop being a manipulator of public emotions and become the kind of person who generates headlines that parents are relieved—grateful—to explain to their children?"
"And of course the answer is: You can do what John Profumo did. You can go away. You can do something good. You can help women instead of degrading them, help your culture and your city instead of degrading them."
"You can become a man."

Saturday, July 13, 2013

$118 million for Homer's Pond plus

Last August, Gerald DeBlois, the owner of Homer's Pond on West Tisbury's south shore, listed a 266-acre parcel for $92 million.

It's still on the market. But now DeBlois has sweetened the listing with another 50 acres and his home at the new record price of $118 million. Caroline Kennedy, your move.

The addition of the DeBlois home and surrounding property to the previous sale package expands the beachfront area to be sold. It also has the effect of reducing the price of what went on the market last year from $92 to $74 million. The price on the DeBlois house and surrounding acreage is $44 million. The properties may be sold separately or together, the owner and his agents said.
This marks the second time in the past three months that a significant Island property has been placed on the market with an asking price of many millions. In early May the Kennedy family listed two large, undeveloped oceanfront lots for sale at Red Gate Farm in Aquinnah; they are priced at $25 million for a 53-acre lot and $20 million for a 39-acre lot. The lots are still on the market.
Remote beachfront populated only by shorebirds. — Mark Lovewell
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
The addition of the DeBlois home and surrounding property to the previous sale package expands the beachfront area to be sold. It also has the effect of reducing the price of what went on the market last year from $92 to $74 million. The price on the DeBlois house and surrounding acreage is $44 million. The properties may be sold separately or together, the owner and his agents said.
This marks the second time in the past three months that a significant Island property has been placed on the market with an asking price of many millions. In early May the Kennedy family listed two large, undeveloped oceanfront lots for sale at Red Gate Farm in Aquinnah; they are priced at $25 million for a 53-acre lot and $20 million for a 39-acre lot. The lots are still on the market.
Remote beachfront populated only by shorebirds. — Mark Lovewell
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf
Mr. DeBlois told the Gazette this week that he made a strategy decision to put everything up for sale because he thought it might be more attractive to a buyer or possibly a group of buyers.
“We obviously have had the property on the market since last July and decided sometime this winter that we needed to refocus,” he said. “And we became convinced that to attract people to the property we needed to do this. I’m 72 years old and I don’t want to do this twice.”
- See more at: http://mvgazette.com/news/2013/07/11/west-tisbury-property-goes-market-record-118-million#sthash.jx9EK0wa.dpuf