Back to the top!

I remember when I was 1989, I came to NYC with my parents and there were only a few memories I remember still to this day. One was driving from the airport through Harlem to my great grandparents house in Jersey and my parents yelling at me to keep my head in the window of the taxi, and not to bother the dealers on the street corners (they actually said don’t look at them). The other was the walk up the Statue of Liberty to the crown, and looking out over the rivers to Manhattan just before sun down. It was one of the most beautiful sites I still remember to this day.

After 9/11, the “smart” people of President George W. Bush’s Department of the Interior, declared under the guise of the fire, building and safety codes the narrow, 12-story spiral staircase with a low guardrail walk up to the crown off limits mostly for fear of more terrorists looking to deface, blow up or desecrate this national symbol.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar formally announced a reversal of this decision at a news conference this week on Ellis Island. “On July 4, we are giving America a special gift,” Mr. Salazar said. They are re-opening up the crown.

No more than 10 people will be allowed in the crown at a time, he said, and officials anticipate that will allow for 30 visitors an hour. He estimated that 50,000 people would be able to visit the crown in the first year and that the number would be increased later to 100,000 a year.

We can all thank Representative Anthony D. Weiner, a Queens Democrat who has been one of the most vocal proponents of giving the public back access to the crown.

In January of this year, Mr. Salazar climbed the 146 steps to the crown himself, joined by Mr. Weiner, Representative Albio Sires of New Jersey and Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey. When Mr. Salazar came down, he said of the experience: “One word: Awesome.”

Stirring the Pot

No this is not a reference to a Tyler Florence cook book, but I wanted to revive some discussion I’ve had prior to the inauguration with a thread of emails with friends (“Interesting…” string)

Superbowl thread? Naw, AZ is going to “upset” the Steelers…

I just watched A Few Good Men and wanted to comment on Obama’s quick signing order to close Gitmo… Did he just “weaken a country” this week as Col. Nathan R. Jessep (known in this plot line as the GOP) claims, or is this just a symbolic statement to right the “America’s Human Rights & Justice” ship which has been tipped sideways in the last 8 years. This is very telling article in the Washington Post of how BushCo administration treated the situation down there.

Reading the first three paragraphs, my take (sourced from DKos) is that detention and interrogation (“torture”) were a higher priority to the former Administration than figuring out which cases actually merited prosecution. In other words, locking up some Arabs and torturing them was more important than determining if they were actually guilty and prosecuting them for their crimes.

While no such agency is doing a great job in monitoring, collecting and merging all kinds of data on all Americans especially the press (whistleblower video and shouldn’t really be a surprise given all the stories on this over the years in this area), this administration wasn’t interested in keep comprehensive files on their detainees to build a case against detainees.

Even with the closing of Gitmo, the new administration has such a cluster to deal with, it will be a miracle of governmental process to get this resolved within his first term. The Right meanwhile, is prepared to continually call Obama a terrorist sympathizer or a failure through out his administration regardless of actual Justice he’s looking to restore to not just Americans but all people.

Galloway: Tell your friend not to get cute down there, the Marines at Gitmo are fanatical.
Lt. Weinberg: Fanatical about what?
Galloway: About being Marines.