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Busy, Busy, Busy

Posted on 17 July 2008 by Antonio D. French

As most of you know, PubDef.net is a side project for me. My day job is political consulting and campaign management. And right now is an incredibly busy time for me, with 18-hour days every day until E-Day. Not only am I managing the state senate campaign of Rep. Rodney Hubbard, but I am also a candidate myself for Democratic Committeeman of the 21st Ward.

Needless to say, I don’t have much time for side projects nowadays. But that being said, I’ll try to keep updating the site (with the help of my intern, Cengiz) as much as I can between now and Election Day, August 5th. Mostly with videos.

So keep visiting and keep commenting.

PS — If you care to make a contribution to my campaign, here’s my PayPal link. Thanks for your support.


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We Already Miss Tim

Posted on 14 June 2008 by Antonio D. French

When I heard the news yesterday, it was like hearing a family member had died. I had never even met the man, but the death of Tim Russert deeply shook me and leaves me concerned about the future of our nation.

Integrity and journalism have been on a mutually exclusive path since the birth of Fox News and the further shrinking the 24-hour news cycle and the American attention span. Today, though it seems we have wall-to-wall coverage of the Presidential candidates, try to find any meaningful discourse among the hours of talk. Try to find a reporter who actually knows what he or she is talking about and is able to slow down the spin machines long enough for us to see who we’re really voting for, what we’re really talking about.

But there has at least been one hour a week, one news show with limited commercial interruptions that we could count on. “Meet the Press”.

Meet the press, indeed. “Remember the Press”, is a name just as fitting. Remember what the press used to be. A symbol of wisdom and institutional knowledge. The Fourth Estate, able and needed to stand toe-to-toe with the most powerful people in Washington, as equals, and demand answers on our behalf. Few other institutions could command that respect from both Presidents and viewers like Tim Russert’s “Meet the Press”.

For all my adult life, if it was Sunday, it was “Meet the Press” and Tim Russert. Today is Saturday. What will I do tomorrow?

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Ed Martin: Unionizing Charter Schools is a Bad Idea

Posted on 23 May 2008 by Antonio D. French

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“Right Now! with Ed Martin” Episode #2

Posted on 08 April 2008 by Antonio D. French

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Ed Martin: No Tax Dollars for Mortgage Bailouts

Posted on 03 April 2008 by Ed Martin

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On Party-Switchers

Posted on 05 January 2008 by Antonio D. French

With all the name-calling that’s been coming from Republicans upset at State Senator Chris Koster’s and now state senate candidate Chris Benjamin’s switching their party affiliations, we at PubDef.net would like to remind our Republican friends that switching parties is nothing new.

Discovering that your personal beliefs and the direction of your political party no longer match is not all that uncommon in American politics. In fact, the godfather of modern Republican conservatism, Ronald Reagan, himself, was a Democrat for the first 51 years of his life.

If it wasn’t for party-switchers, Republicans might be stuck quoting Richard Nixon in their debates.

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Are 13 Year-Olds Responsible Or Not?

Posted on 03 December 2007 by Antonio D. French

While the parents, media and lawmakers look for someone to punish for the suicide of Megan Meier, others wonder how Internet postings could possibly drive someone to suicide.

“What if the boyfriend was real?” asked a friend of mine. “What if he dumped her, called her a [vulgar name] and she ran home and killed herself? Would they try to prosecute him?”

Good question. While the link to the popular social networking website MySpace has made this St. Charles tragedy a worldwide story, the media’s thirst for sensationalism mixed with politicians’ opportunism has really left common sense and any idea of personal responsibility at the roadside.

Shouldn’t a 13-year-old be able to handle “meanness” better than this? Or is this newly-coined “cyber-bullying” really a new, more menacing threat to young people, as an editorial in the Post-Dispatch claimed today:

“The pervasiveness of technology, including cell phones, e-mail and instant messaging, coupled with the anonymity it bestows, makes electronic harassment less escapable and more effective. Bullies no longer lurk only in school hallways and playgrounds; now, they slip right into a child’s bedroom, wreaking havoc even when school is out.”

Really? Are emails really more scary than three bigger kids beating the hell out of you everyday at lunch? Because sticks and stones can indeed break your bones. Words — well, they can be hurtful too, but at 13 years-old aren’t kids at least responsible enough for their own actions as to rule out the words of a faceless boy or girl as the reason for them killing themselves?

Ironically, at the same time newspapers, TV news, and the girl’s parents are arguing that 13-year-old Megan was not responsible for her own actions, a St. Louis County judge sentenced young Sherman Burnett Jr. to 60 years in prison for a crime he committed when he was — you guessed it — 13 years-old.


So which is it, Missouri? Are 13 year-olds responsible for themselves or not?

Because if they are, young Sherman should go to jail for a very long time for kidnapping, beating and sexually assaulting his 6 year-old neighbor. And young Megan was old enough to know what the hell she was doing when she decided to take her own life. No words from someone she never met caused her suicide.

Or is someone else really responsible for causing Megan to hang herself in her room, because as a child, Megan was manipulated and harassed to the point of her own suicide and, like young Sherman, had no concept yet how precious life — theirs or others — actually is.

So which one is it, Missouri? What are 13 year-old kids responsible for — your kids and mine?

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Slay Supports McKee, Blasts Post

Posted on 29 June 2007 by Antonio D. French

After getting a free ride through most of his two terms in office, and benefiting from years of praise (deserved and undeserved) for the work of entrepreneurs and developers who’ve been rebuilding and repopulating downtown, Mayor Francis Slay is having another tantrum about the Post-Dispatch’s “careless reporting” — this time, on its late coverage of developer Paul McKee’s secret plan for a large section of north St. Louis.

“I am a great admirer of Paul McKee,” Slay writes on his blog. “He is a generous donor of time and money to a range of civic enterprises. He is a mainstay of several Catholic charities. In fact, until he decided to spend money acquiring privately owned vacant lots and empty buildings in north St. Louis, he has been either feted or unnoticed. For whatever reason, this particular good deed has earned him the enmity of the local newspaper.”

The mayor, who last year called for a group of local investors to buy the paper, goes on to criticize the Post’s City Hall reporter.

“The story, by political writer/blogger Jake Wagman, is a thin web of half-facts, rumors, and tenuous connections that would have benefited from better editing and less careless reporting,” Slay writes.

The mayor goes on to deny that he knows any details about what McKee has in mind for the 400-plus properties he has acquired so far – but, “I do know that he is buying properties that no one else has even looked at in decades.”

Neighbors of McKee’s properties have complained about his lack of attention to his buildings, which have been cited numerous times by the City for dangerous conditions.
The aldermen in the wards where most of the properties are located have made several attempts to meet with McKee on his plans for the area and the condition of his properties, with no luck. At the same time, the mayor confirmed to the Post-Dispatch that he has met with McKee several times.
While McKee’s plan may eventually lead to much-needed northside development, in the time between his first acquisition and when he breaks ground years from today, residents say his properties are undeniably leading to an even faster decline in the quality of life of people in his targeted neighborhoods.
Perhaps the mayor should heed the words of those citizens at least as much as that of the “vision” of a developer — and not kill the messenger in the process.
McKee wisely wanted to keep the cat in the bag until the last moment, in order to keep his acquisition price as low as possible. But after two front page stories in the daily newspaper, it is probably fair to say the secret is out. Perhaps it is time to bring the aldermen, if not the general public, to the table.
No one — not the public, and obviously not the Post-Dispatch — believes that someone as smart, or at least as rich, as Paul McKee is going to spend millions of dollars on hundreds of properties without a plan for what to do with them.

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Post Doesn’t Care What You Think

Posted on 04 February 2007 by Antonio D. French

COMMENTARY

The editorial board of the Post-Dispatch told its urban readers yesterday that they don’t give a damn about what they think about the future of their public schools — and neither should the state.

Let’s get real,” said the editors condescendingly. The editorial says that sure, at the first and only opportunity the public has had to let its feelings be heard about this matter, hundreds of people showed up to clearly, and often very articulately, express their opposition. But what do they know?

The Post says the public should not trust in the ability of the current superintendent, Dr. Diana Bourisaw, but rather in the wisdom of Mayor Francis Slay (who brought us such figures as Veronica O’Brien and Dr. William Kincaid) and the sensitivity of Gov. Matt Blunt (who’s said that nobody in their right mind would live in St. Louis City).

The Post says the parents, voters and taxpayers of the City should trust that what is being threatened will only be “temporary” and in ten years the politicians will give us our rights back. Kind of like state control of our police department was just a temporary action when the nation was gripped in civil conflict.

The Post joins its partner the American in asking the public to have faith in something for which their is no proof; that the State of Missouri or any three people it empowers can do what has, so far, been very difficult for us to do locally: get parents, teachers, school board members, political leaders, civic leaders, the business community, the general public, and the media to focus on the needs of young people in the City of St. Louis and help them, in all parts of their lives, prepare for a better future.

Just one problem: There’s nothing about how to do that in the Danforth-Freeman report. A takeover in no way guarantees success. In fact, no plan at all has been presented on how the state plans to improve the district. But Dr. Bourisaw has.

And the reality that DESE, the Danforth-Freeman committee, the Post-Dispatch, and the American never seem to acknowledge is that SLPS is just recovering from one takeover. From 2003 to 2006, the district was under the de facto authority of the mayor’s office. And during that time, things got worse.

During the same period, the Wellston school district was under the authority of DESE and the Governor’s office. And things got worse.

So what now, by bringing these two failures of leadership together, are the people and parents of St. Louis promised in exchange for turning over their power, tax dollars and children?

And as one speaker at last week’s public forum asked so appropriately: If ten years from now we find ourselves in the very likely situation of having a failing, state-operated school district, then what? Will they hand it back to the voters? What is the exit strategy?

There are few times in history that power is given up and given back without a fight. The editors at the Post-Dispatch and the St. Louis American must excuse us if we don’t share in their faith in the abilities or promises of politicians.

It is up to the people and parents of the City of St. Louis to make right our own house. The state can aid in that by: better funding public education across the state, passing Sen. Maida Coleman’s bill to allow for the recall of school board members, and respecting the rights of the citizens of this city as you do those of people elsewhere in this state by allowing our vote to mean something on April 3, 2007.

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Post-Disgrace

Posted on 22 December 2006 by Antonio D. French

COMMENTARY

When the balance of power shifted on the St. Louis City School Board back in April, the Post-Dispatch and its education reporter, Steve Giegerich, suddenly began to watch the district with a critical eye.

Before, when the board members were going through superintendents like Kleenex, thumbing their noses and the state’s Sunshine laws, and talking fiscal responsibility while voting in favor of budgets that actually added to the financial crisis, Giegerich and his paper barely printed a critical word.

But suddenly, after the new board took over, around the same time Pub Def first reported that Mayor Francis Slay and board members Bob Archibald and Ron Jackson began secret communications with state officials about taking over SLPS, the Post began its series of attacks on the district and members of the new board majority.

As a matter of fact, the “good reporting being done by P-D education writer Steve Giegerich” (as Mayor Slay notes on his blog) is actually used as evidence in the Special Committee on SLPS’ report calling for a state takeover.

Just today, Giegerich writes under the headline “Bourisaw slapped over wage issue at school board meeting”, that one board member attacked the superintendent last night for him not knowing what he was doing when he voted against her recommended budget amendment last week.

Nowhere do Giegerich or his editors inform their readers that this particular board member, Robert Archibald, was the first public official to call for a state takeover of the district, a complete abdication of his own responsibilities, and therefore has an invested interest in attacking the superintendent.

And nowhere does the Post note in today’s article that the majority of other board members did not blame the superintendent. They either voted for her request in the first place or acknowledged that maybe they just weren’t paying close attention at the last meeting.

The fact is that many (if not most) of the reporters and editors at the Post-Dispatch do not live in St. Louis City — and neither do their readers. Maybe that is why they seem to have no problem actively destroying the image of our public schools — especially now that the mayor is leading the charge.

In fact, our crisis seems entertaining to their suburban readers who have their urban neighbors’ education and crime problems to discuss until the new season of “American Idol” starts.

But for those of us that do care about this city, and deeply resent the constant attempts of outsiders to take away our power in the name of fixing our problems for us, I have to say that the Post is indeed disgraceful in its cheerleading for our disenfranchisement.

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