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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Evolution of a Story

Evolution of a Story

I.
A Greenville man suspected of being involved in a string of armed
robberies at convenience stores over the weekend was shot and killed
at about 7:45 p.m. Tuesday outside his apartment after a confrontation
with the Mercer County Critical Incident Response Team.
CIRT members were serving an arrest warrant on Jeffrey Alan Anderson,
30, of 17 College Ave., Greenville, on charges including robbery filed
Tuesday at District Judge Ronald E. Antos’ Farrell court by Southwest
Mercer County Regional police officer Kevin J. Wherry.
According to state police, they also searched Apartment 2 of the house
after being issued a search warrant.
During the execution of the warrants, Anderson failed to obey police
commands and attempted to back over police with his car, prompting
CIRT members to shoot at him, state police, who are leading the probe
into the shooting, said.
Anderson was struck by at least one round and fatally wounded,
according to police.
Over the weekend there were four convenience store robberies.
The first happened at 10:38 p.m. Friday at Standard Market in Masury,
according to Brookfield police. The second and third happened within
30 minutes of each other between 2 and 3 a.m. Saturday — the second at
2:15 a.m. at McQuaids in Farrell and the third at 2:45 a.m. at Circle
K in West Middlesex. The fourth was at 10:31 p.m. Sunday at Veado’s
Mini Market in Hempfield Township.
Police suspected the crimes were linked and involved men who used long
guns. Cash and cigarettes were taken during the robberies.
Because Anderson was killed, the case against him is listed as
inactive in online court documents posted early Wednesday.
“This is an on-going investigation being conducted by (state police),”
Cpl. Douglas R. Maxwell said in a news release.

II.

From about 8 p.m. Tuesday until 2:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jeffrey Alan
Anderson’s friends and family knew he was dead, but officials gave
them little inkling as to how or why he was killed.
His wife Serena, eight months pregnant with Anderson’s son, was
accompanied by a couple friends and sobbed behind the police tape in
the parking lot of the Greenville Sheetz, searching for a way to get
closer to the College Avenue apartment where they lived.
His father and step-mother, Jeffrey Alan Anderson Sr. and Rebecca
Anderson, of West Salem Township, arrived about 9:30 p.m. in shock.
The rushed beneath the cordon but were stopped by police in the middle
of Shenango Street with a couple others who tired to slip through the
barricade.
Rebecca Anderson could be seen sobbing in the middle of the street as
police tried to keep them away.
“They wanted us to go out and calm down,” the elder Anderson said. “I
said ‘How are you going to do it (calm down) if it’s your son?’.”
What they knew was gathered through word-of-mouth as the Greenville
area buzzed with news of the shooting.
“I heard the cops were serving a warrant to him and they said he was
trying to run,” he said. “He was in and out of trouble, but that’s no
reason to shoot him.”
“I’ve got to wait and find out. They won’t let me go down or nothing,” he said.
At about 10 p.m. police cordoned off an area in a parking lot south of
Shenango Street and Greenville firefighters brought chairs and bottled
water for the family members and their friends.
They sat and waited.
And waited.
And waited.
At about midnight, after initially declining to be interviewed, the
talked to the media.
“They won’t talk to us,” Anderson Sr. said repeatedly.
He spoke frankly about his son and the younger man’s troubles with the law.
“He was on disability,” the father said, and he was on probation after
his latest stint in jail.
“He was shot in the driveway,” he said he’d heard.
At about 12:30 a police officer approached and talked briefly with the family.
“He said the cops shot him, I guess,” Anderson Sr. said “He said it
kind of looks like that’s what happened.”
Friends and family members sobbed loudly as two wreckers appeared on
the road and were let through the cordons at about 12:45 a.m.
Police drove Serena Anderson closer to the scene, confirmed her
husband was dead, and questioned her for more than an hour as
concerned friends and family wondered aloud where she’d been taken.
West Salem Township Constable???? arrived at about 1 a.m. and spoke to
the family, telling them to forget rumors about the incident and to
wait until authorities completed their work.
“He’s had a hard life, he was in and out of jail,” Rebecca Anderson
said. “I thought this was his break, with his wife and baby.”
“My brother was a good, kind-hearted person,” Elizabeth Anderson of
Atlantic said. “What I don’t understand is all of this happened at
7-7:30, it’s 1:30, it doesn’t take that long to tell the family.
“It’s ridicules it’s taking them that long to get him out of there,” she said.
Police never did tell the family more.
At about 2:30 a.m. Wednesday State police trooper Jason Olayer
approached the area where family members were talking to the media and
told reporters “We don’t have all the facts now.”
He confirmed police were investigating Jeffrey Anderson’s death.
“He’s the only person that was harmed,” Olayer said.
He refused to tell the family more and directed them to call state
police Wednesday morning.

III.
They were going to name their son Nicholas Alan Anderson, Serena
Anderson said, hours after her husband Jeffrey Alan Anderson was
gunned down Tuesday night by the Mercer County Critical Incident
Response Team outside their Greenville home.
“Now it’s probably going to be Jeffrey Alan Anderson III,” the
21-year-old widow said through tears.
Mrs. Anderson, eight months pregnant with the boy and suffering from
diabetes as a result of the pregnancy, sat on a metal folding chair in
a parking lot surrounded by police tape and shared her story.
Before they met last June, Anderson had been in-and-out of trouble with the law.
According to online court documents, Anderson had been numerous
convictions for burglary dating back to 1999 and in 2005 he had a
run-in with police that ended with him being shot in the shoulder on
Hazen Road in Sharpsville near Buhl Farm park after an incident
involving several police departments.
That wound was self-inflicted, reports at the time indicated, although
Anderson later claimed that police shot him.
He served about 4 years in prison for that incident, his family said,
but after being released last year he’d made strides for the better.
“He was ready to do right,” his uncle, Jim Anderson said.
He and Serena married Dec. 6, 2010 and shortly thereafter she found
out she was pregnant.
Since then, “he has turned his life completely around,” Mrs. Anderson said.
“I was the one who kept him out of trouble,” she said.
“I’m with him every single day and now I don’t know where I’m going to
go,” she said.
Her grandmother lives in Atlantic and she was staying there for the
time being, but other family members live in Wisconsin, where the pair
wanted to relocate, but couldn’t because of Anderson’s probation, Mrs.
Anderson said.
They’d struggled with car trouble — an oil leak — and on Tuesday
afternoon drove to his grandmother’s house on Fredonia Road to borrow
her car, Mrs. Anderson said.
They drove back separately, with Anderson apparently a few minutes ahead of her.
When she arrived on College Avenue, “all of them SUV cop truck things
were in the parking lot” across the street from their apartment, she
said.
“I know for sure I heard two and may have heard three gunshots,” she
said. “And I stopped and all the cops unholstered their guns and said
to back up.”
She parked at Sheetz.
Eventually, the police told her Anderson was dead.
“They showed me a picture of Jeffrey and said ‘Is that your
husband?’,” she said. “(They said) ‘I’m sorry to tell you this but
he’s deceased, he died.”
“They asked me a whole bunch of questions,” she said.
They included queries into their financial situation and if he drank
or used drugs, which she said he didn’t.
“They said ‘Do you know what he does between the hours of 2 a.m.
and...” her voice trailed off.
She said she didn’t, she slept then.
Because of her diabetes, she wanted to get into her house but
couldn’t: the door was locked and the keys were in the car that
Anderson had been driving.
He ended up in the car at the bottom of a ravine on the bank of the
Little Shenango River, she said, although police didn’t say where the
car or the body ended up.
As authorities prepared to clear the scene about 2:30 a.m. a flatbed
tow truck hauled the car away in the darkness of the alleyway behind
Greenville Medical Center.
Mrs. Anderson was able to look into the bedroom window of the
apartment and she said it appeared to be ransacked from the police
search.
“My whole room was like tore apart,” she said.
She’d been told “something about a search warrant, but there didn’t
tell me what for,” she said.
“Still, really I don’t know what’s going on,” she said. “I’m still in
shock about it.”

IV.
Police shot and killed a Greenville man suspected in a series of armed
robberies as they attempted to arrest him Tuesday night at his home.
Jeffrey Alan Anderson, 30, of 17 College Ave., Apt. 2, was shot in the
head as police said he attempted to run over members of the Mercer
County Critical Incident Response Team, authorities said Wednesday.
Anderson was backing his car up when he was shot and the vehicle ended
up at the bottom of a steep ravine north of his home.
Mercer County Deputy Coroner Robert L. Snyder said the head shot
killed Anderson and Erie County Forensic Pathologist Dr. Eric Vey
ruled Anderson’s death a homicide after he performed an autopsy
Wednesday in Erie.
Snyder referred further comment to state police, who are handling the
probe because the shooting involved a Mercer County police officer and
they act independently of local authorities.
State police held a news conference Wednesday, but offered few details
about the shooting and would not say if Anderson was armed at the
time.
“He did have a known violent criminal history,” said Trooper Herbert
Rieger of the Butler Barracks.
Court documents revealed Anderson was suspected in participating in
four armed robberies in the Mercer County area over the weekend.
Distinct tattoos captured on surveillance video and clerk descriptions
led police to Anderson, according to affidavit filed in District Judge
Lorinda Hinch’s Mercer office.
Mercer County Critical Incident Response Team was asked by Southwest
Mercer County Regional police to serve the warrant, according to
Hermitage Police Chief Patrick McElhinny, who is president of the CIRT
board.
“This was considered a high risk arrest warrant service,” McElhinny said.
Anderson had been in trouble with the law before and had been released
from prison last year, according to family members who said he’d been
trying to turn his life around.
“He was in and out of trouble, but that’s no reason to shoot him,” his
father, Jeffrey Anderson Sr. said.
His pregnant wife Serena, who said she heard the shots that killed her
husband, said she didn’t know if Anderson was involved in the
robberies.
“I was the one who kept him out of trouble,” she said early Wednesday
morning. “I’m with him every single day and now I don’t know where I’m
going to go.”
“He was ready to do right,” his uncle Jim Anderson said.
Hermitage lawyer David Ristvey was retained by a police union to
represent the interests of the CIRT member who shot Anderson. The
policeman has not be identified.
“We fully expect the shooting to be cleared, the shooting to be
justified and within policy,” Ristvey said. “My understanding is this
was an intentional attempt to run over the officer.”
Formed by the Mercer County Police Chief’s Association, CIRT is a
tactical team that acts as the area’s special forces team and is
composed of officers from several local departments.
After shooting Anderson, police searched his apartment near the
overgrown ravine that’s strewn with old tires and now marked with a
rectangle of left-behind police tape where it appears Anderson lay
dead for almost eight hours as police from several departments
processed the scene.
They were looking for the rusted, pump-action, long barrel black
shotgun police allege Anderson used in at least one of the robberies,
shoes, a black shirt, faded jeans, a dark blue bandana decorated in
white, cut-off black gloves, a black jacket with the letter “P” on the
right shoulder, a long white T-shirt and a white 2000 Plymouth Neon
sedan, according to the search warrant application signed by District
Judge Hinch.
According to online court documents, Anderson, formerly of Sharon, was
charged with numerous burglaries dating back to 1999, and in 2005 he
had a run-in with several police departments that ended with him being
shot in the shoulder on Hazen Road in Sharpsville near Buhl Farm park.
That wound was self-inflicted, reports at the time indicated, although
Anderson later claimed that police shot him, family members said
Tuesday.
He served about four years in prison for that incident, his family said.
This is the second fatal shooting involving a county police officer
since at least the mid-1960s, according to the encyclopedic
recollections of Senior Common Pleas Court Judge Michael J. Wherry and
retired District Attorney James P. Epstein.
Expect the investigation to be comprehensive, Epstein said.
In March 2009 state police shot and killed Walter J. McGarvey Jr., 45,
after he fired on them outside his home in New Hamburg.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

A Scrivener’s Lament

A Scrivener’s Lament

By Tom Davidson

At heart, I’ve always been a newspaperman. I didn’t become a journalist until I reached adulthood, and even then it wasn’t the career path I thought I’d take, but I have fond memories of watching the older man who delivered papers in our neighborhood on his bike, whom my father would often bullshit with and offer a glass of ice water to as we sat on our front porch.
At different points in my formative years we were subscribers, but with a corner store a short walk or bike ride away, I spent a few minutes each afternoon tasked with the chore of picking up the paper and getting to spend some spare change on penny candy.
It beat taking out the garbage or washing the dishes; burning the papers was perhaps the only thing I enjoyed more, but it wasn’t until me teen years that I was allowed to do that.
The paper was our window to the rest of the world: It told us what Tom Holden and Walter Cronkite didn’t have time for in their 30-minute telecasts, which I remember watching on an old black and white console television.
I was bred to be a reader and in addition to the vintage Hardy Boys mysteries, James Fenimore Cooper and Charles Dickens novels on my bookshelf, I read the paper when my father was finished with it.
We passed each section around the living room or front porch after dinner. I can still spend hours reading baseball box scores and statistics. I also came to enjoy reading Mike Royko’s daily diatribe and the stories chronicling Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini’s boxing prowess.
I hung on every word of the sports pages and absorbed enough of the rest of the news so I was informed, even at a young age.
I graduated high school and decided I wanted to be a writer and by that I mean William Faulkner or Ernest Hemingway, not Bob Woodward or Carl Bernstein. I wanted to be a “real writer,” I suppose.
Still, I was drawn to the newspaper office at Bowling Green State University – even though I studied serious “creative writing” instead of journalism - and I vaguely recall penning a couple columns criticizing the college president during the blizzard of 1993, when we were the only school that remained open in the state.
From my first walk into the dingy, dimly lit, cluttered sanctuary of that newsroom I came to realize that being a reporter wouldn’t be a bad idea.
I moved home and wandered a bit, dreaming of writing instead of doing it, working two-bit jobs where I developed some skills talking to strangers, and stumbled upon a newspaper job in Greenville.
I re-read Russell Baker’s two memoirs in my first weeks on the job there and checked out every book on journalism I could from the library.
I was hooked on the job from the first car crash I covered and have been listening to police scanner tones since, chomping at the bit as I race to the scene of whatever’s happening.
I’ve been lucky in my career thus far, learning the ins and outs of small town government that’s dominated with talk of sewage and zoning, covering high school field trips and assemblies and village fairs.
Since moving to Sharon, I’ve been able to cover major national stories like Hurricane Katrina, the local cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the Shenango Valley’s tie to the Great Migration of the early 20th century.
I’ve also witnessed the decline in the trade brought on by the explosion of the Web, cell phones, and this Brave New World of corporate media conglomerates concerned about an ever-shrinking bottom line and declining circulation.
My dad didn’t live long enough to see me become a newspaperman (I prefer that term to journalist) and many of his contemporaries are also dead or dying. New, younger readers aren’t buying newspapers because they’re informed by Facebook status updates and Twitter tweets: they expect their news to be free and publishers have yet to figure out how newspapers and other publications will survive in this paperless, wireless world.
I’m stuck in the middle, young enough that most of my career is in front of me, but old enough to lament the heyday, back when I was still in short pants and I was just happy to buy the paper, some Swedish fish and Jawbreakers.
I like the smell and feel of newsprint and remember how the ink would rub onto my hands on muggy summer days, especially, and how when it was all read and digested I could burn it in the backyard barrel.
Now, the industry itself is burning into ashes. I got hot in the newsroom today over something silly and it’s taken me a couple hours to cool off and realize this is my calling; that it’s not anyone’s fault we’re understaffed, overworked and underpaid: at least no one in my newsroom.
The days when families were press barons like Charles Foster Kane’s filmic portrayal of William Randolph Hearst are over.
The Chandler’s of Los Angeles, the Ochs-Sulzberger’s of New York and the Meyer-Grahams of Washington have long taken their products public and Wall Street, not Main Street, decides the course.
I’m re-reading David Halberstam’s chronicle on the media, “The Powers That Be,” published in the 1970s. Then, it was thought to be a profile of the rise of the modern media, but now I see it as a warning bell tolling the inevitable decline of news as we know it.
We have yet to figure out how to compete for and attract new readers in this new age. I used to be one of gaggle of reporters covering an event, now I’m often the only person asking questions and watching as local leaders make important decisions.
Coverage areas are shrinking and don’t overlap much anymore; the news hole and staffs are smaller; people are busier these days and don’t have time to read 500 words on a topic when they can get the essentials in a 10-second sound bite or a two-sentence tweet.
When William Faulkner accepted the Nobel Prize for Literature, he said he “declined to accept the end of man.” Paraphrasing him, I decline to accept the end of newspapers.
But we have our work cut out for us.
We must figure out how to compete with the 1,000 camera phones that were disseminating then-candidate Barack Obama’s Youngstown campaign appearances two years ago as I was struggling to take notes and snap photographs.
We’ve got to become essential again, and more relevant. I miss overhearing people discussing the stories of the day in coffee shops and the telephone calls from people who were outraged at a particular story – the messenger takes a lot of shots – but most days, people lack that passion anymore.
Apathy is abundant and young people don’t seem to care what’s in the paper unless they’re looking for a job, and even then, there as likely to depend on the Internet instead of the want ads.
I don’t like it a bit.
It scares me, because even with an ipad or smart phone, the Internet remains a digital representation of words and images. One might be able to read it on a hand-held device, but what’s being looked at doesn’t exist in the facile way a newspaper or book does.
Web sites go down from time-to-time, batteries die and there are power outages; but one can read a book or newspaper by candlelight, or even write a letter with pen-and-paper, not that anyone does that anymore.
Just as people were scared and suspicious of Gutenberg’s printing press, I’m fearful of this new digitized world, much like old-school football coaches must have been after the inception of the forward pass.
To continue the football analogy, I’m at heart a Buckeye fan and I prefer Woody Hayes’ “three yards and a cloud of dust” to the flashy “wildcat” passes of today’s overpaid superstars.
Day after day, I keep writing what I like to call “three quotes and a cloud of dust” – that’s a short, accurate, descriptive story of a basic news event for you non-news junkies.
But we’ve fumbled the ball too many times lately and the fans, our readers, are no longer rooting for us.
I wish I had the answers to turning it all around, but I’m just a shoe-leather scribe out in the streets of my naked city, trying to scoop the Facebook crowd in style and avoid being a mockingbird duplicating the Twitter tweets.
Read all about my travails in your local newspaper.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Fear & Loathing in Northeast Ohio

Fear & Loathing in Northeast Ohio

By Tom Davidson

They’re burning LeBron James jerseys tonight, now that the King has handed down his decision after about 40 minutes of sports commentary hell tonight.
Apparently, somewhere, someone was losing sleep over the decision, although I suspect it wasn’t Mr. James, and I question whether the move carries with it any actual importance in today’s sports world.
What doesn’t need to be hyped is that this is yet another blow to a region that’s been battered, both on and off the fields and courts of play.
It’s the area the mills left long ago, for cheap-agent contracts overseas; it’s the place where the Tribe has toiled on the baseball field without a championship since 1948; the place the Browns abandoned for the greener pastures of Baltimore.
It’s a place where a team that won 111 times in 1954 was swept in the World Series, a place where the football gods played a series of cosmic jokes in the 1980s on hapless Browns fans.
Knowing several of their ranks, I have no doubts that The Drive, The Fumble, and The Drive II, left permanent psychological scars.
The Tribe turned the corner and started winning when the powers-that-be in baseball went on strike and canceled a World Series. They lost to a Braves team that was better-coached, then stumbled against the Marlins in a collapse that rivaled the Browns losses against the Broncos in the football playoffs of the 1980s.
The Cavs were the third, perhaps lowliest of the sports franchises until they found their savior seven years ago. Then, LeBron seemed like the gift of manna in the Old Testament that kept the Hebrews alive. When the team started winning, “King James” as they called him, seemed to be even Christ-like.
That’s no more.
It turns out, he was just another Judas and betrayed them.
What maddening for the Cavs and their fans, is money wasn’t the motivating factor, winning was. He gave the team seven seasons to produce a winner and it came up short.
Who can blame him for signing with a team that plays in the playground of South Beach? Where he can hobnob with superstars instead of maybe shaking hands with Drew Carey... plus there’s no state income tax in Florida and the climate beats the winter on the shore of Lake Erie.
He’ll be away from a region that’s so stuck on losing it can’t find a way to win when it counts, even with him willing all of his magical talents on the court.
What remains in Cleveland is a legacy of losing it isn’t able to live down, even with a homegrown hero of James’ stature.
“The Decision” is the latest in a long-line of sporting anomalies to curse Cleveland. For the rest of the nation, the question now is “Was it worth the hype?”
In the greater Cleveland area, there are no questions now, it’s just another kick below the belt that leads to a grimace, tears and a resigned feeling that losing is a way of life.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Too Frosty

He warned us, but have we given him a fighting chance?
by
Tom Davidson

“If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer,” President-elect Barack Obama said when the majority of the nation elected him on Nov. 5, 2008.
Last night, we deserved a better answer.
I’ll concede I wouldn’t wish the problems he’s facing on anyone, but it was time for President Obama to start acting like he’s a part of the solution to our problems, not an impartial bystander to the doomsday events that have plagued us.
For too long, he’s been a harbinger of bad news instead of being the leader who forges a new path, politics be damned. His cool standoffishness is not what the country needs in a leader right now. I didn’t like Reagan’s politics, but as a leader, he was at least a good actor.
When it came to tragedy or terrorism, the man who busted the air-traffic controllers union, talked our way out of the Cold War, and mourned with us through the Challenger Tragedy, was able to lead with gusto and decisiveness, legalities be damned; Reagan was Presidential.
President Obama’s aloofness is costing him a chance to win over people in the name of a crisis. This is a time for us to band together, as he said when he won our hearts and minds, we Americans “who sent a message to the world that we have never been a collection of red states and blue states; we are, and always will be, the United States of America,” he told us then.
Really?
I’m sick and tired of the divisiveness of the nation. I don’t believe the “grassroots” support of those singing the Songs of the Doomed is as great as they say it is, but I acknowledge their presence.
I’m also seeing other folks, people who once were gaga for Obama, cool off a bit. They’re no longer flying the “hope and change” flag as prominently.
He warned us this day was coming.
Remember?
“The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year, or even one term, but America – I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you: We as a people will get there.”
Thus far it's been a rough-and-tumble time of turmoil. He's gotten the change part right.
My, the changes: The New World Order that's emerging in the wake of an economic Hindenburg. The fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan that is less a war and more a fact of life in this Brave New World – because wars end. The health care reform was so filled with debate that it motivated an unhealthy, New York apple-pie slice of Americans to action and near-constant criticism. They’re led by a motley cast of stentorian talking heads, who pick it apart piece by excruciating piece, in a 24/7 debate that has yet to really end.
He foresaw it, that cold Tuesday in November in Chicago’s Grant Park:
“There will be setbacks and false starts. There are many who won’t agree with every decision or policy I make as president, and we know that government can’t solve every problem.”
He was inspiring, then.
Where was the hope when he spoke from the Oval Office Tuesday night? Where’s the man who once aroused a thrill that shot up Chris Matthews’ leg?
He’s a dour man now, saddled with the soiling of the Gulf of Mexico, when he was supposed to be taking a short health-care victory lap, then waiting for the economy to make a great leap forward so people would be inspired to find solutions to our myriad problems.
He knew it wouldn’t be easy.
“But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. I will listen to you, especially when we disagree.”
But is he hearing us? It’s time for him to show us he’s our leader, and thus far, he’s performed like a sports prospect, a number-1 draft pick who’s been given a huge signing bonus, and has so much potential, but hasn’t yet made it.
It’s not over, Mr. President. There’s still time to man the rudder. I still believe that the American ship is unsinkable because the American people won’t stand for it. We’re not like World Cup soccer fans who will settle for a tie.
We’d rather play football with each other, and since it’s the off-season, the political version of the sport is biding our time, but always, we play to win.
So here’s a “yo” to the “Party of No” that it’s time to abide by our calculated leader. Prove him wrong by getting behind him to see if he can inspire us to “join in the work of remaking this nation the only way it’s been done in America for (223) years – block by block, brick by brick, callused hand by callused hand” or oily for that matter.
Lead us out of it all, Mr. President.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Fear & Loathing & Laziness (Unpaid)

Fear & Loathing & Laziness (Unpaid)

By Tom Davidson

The American Way has gone all awry in the 21st Century. We forgot our hard-working roots in a whirlwind fugue that brought on this downspin into the Great Abyss. In the name of profits, we’ve scaled back, using the economics of the time as an excuse to sacrifice selves in the name of more profits for shareholders.
It’s nothing new but it’s evolved to the point that some companies really, really just need to fail. End the bail-outs; instead of just cutting back, close up shop; stop being compassionate and offering across-the board temporary furloughs instead of just firing the dead weight and telling the others they need to work more because their jobs are on the line.
We’ve worked ourselves into a false prosperity by helping life’s “C” and “D” students get by. Sure, it was nice for them, but for the people really trying to make a go of it and almost-succeeding it was a crime.
We took the corporate ladder and turned it into an escalator but we didn’t decide who’s going to pay the power bill to keep the contraption running.
I think it’s best to struggle step-by-step instead of taking the free ride, but then, I’m willing to risk my mettle against a brutal system.
I’m tired of watching lesser workers getting a pass and a free paycheck; it foils industry to accept less when more is needed.
Alas, we’re doomed to fall from first place. We, the American Exceptionalists whom the fates have smiled on for more than two centuries are facing crises because we’ve grown lax; pampered; willing to let others do the dirty work instead of sweating for our own success.
So here I sit, at home, writing for free, off unpaid as work piles on my desk and news gets old. (And we wonder why circulation’s down and some people make fun of us?)
What happens to real journalists at the 40th hour of each week? Do they just stop writing?
That’s what’s happening now, most of the time, and it’s why things are suffering.
We expect less and pay less but still strive to cover more and write better, but the problem is that scale is impossible to balance.
So we’re here, treading water, barely, sometimes drowning as we roll with the waves. We cash our lower paychecks each fortnight and complain as stress builds and resentments fester and the end product suffers.
We’re caught in this Super Cycle with most other American institutions, waiting for the Next Great Hope to save us. The truth is far more unsettling: we are beyond saving; unless we collectively shape up, our ship is sunk, we’re taking on water and oil now, and Houston, did you get that radio call that we’ve got a gusher in the Gulf?
The problem is us and our attitude. The Compassionate Conservatives refuse to assume any blame, but it is all of our faults: We delegated too much power and wealth to too few people and now we’re helpless.
We’re slaves to corporate boards and markets beyond our understanding because we weren’t required to take that class in high school or college. We keep on, strident, unhappy, voiceless in this country built by people who strived to win the game. Now, it’s game over and guess what? They won.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Fear & Loathing at 35!

Fear & Loathing at 35!

By

Tom Davidson

Skylab Skylab Skylab! I remember it falling and my father collecting a piece of history in our basement. At least, that was a family joke!
The mid-to-late 1970s were a national joke and I was a punch line, a long-lost “All in the Family” episode waiting to be filmed.
Sheet & Tube had yet to be closed and my maternal grandfather had yet to be killed – squashed like a bug, according to his co-workers at Valley Mould – shortly after my parents met. Two years later, in 1975, I was borne of them, a child of the flashy-oversized collar and bell-bottom Baby-boomers who are taxing our government today.
My first relevant memories are a house-explosion on Youngstown’s North Side and the capture and release of the hostages in Iran during the Reagan Revolution. I kind of remember that Black Monday in 1977 when Sheet & Tube died and the Steel Valley became a part of the Rust Belt, but those memories are hazy.
I thought we’d be nuclear war-remnants by now; I remain astounded we’ve survived Y2K, 9/11 and whatever you want to call our world-at-the-brink-on-the-blink world as we know it.
All I know is I feel fine.
I’m glad I know what it’s like to struggle. I also remember the shock-and-awe of the 1980s: Challenger falling before my 11-yeat-old eyes, already shaded with the 1985 tornadoes; the fall of the Berlin Wall and of Communism as a Red Scare; the rise of Terror!
The horror, my horror. And now I’m tasked with covering it all. I feel it’s a sacred duty despite the horrific corporate corruption of my calling: The Truth is my bottom line, all other be damned.
As a scribe, I’ve survived Y2K, 9/11, War and Act 47. I’ve written books about sewage and comprehensive plans; I covered Hurricane Katrina and tired to do our local war dead justice.
I maintain a succor for seeing something new every day and writing about it; The Shenango Valley has yet to stump me with its foibles and I keep chasing the sirens and the story that helps to tell the tale of the best and worst of times in this Dickensian, Faulkneresque Valley that is my valley! Still green, though rust-littered after all these (35) years!
And so it goes...

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Fear & Loathing in May

Fear & Loathing in May

Yes, I have tricks in my pocket, I have things up my sleeve. But I am the opposite of a stage magician. He gives you illusion that has the appearance of truth. I give you truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion.
-- Tom, as Narrator, in Scene One
“The Glass Menagerie”
Tennessee Williams


Getting the story started is the hardest part. I know what I want to tell you, but how to start it?
I could tell you about that hour-long drive almost 10 years ago when I went to watch a former co-worker portray the Tom character in “The Glass Menagerie” – it was a summer-stock production, or at least what passes for summer stock in western Pennsylvania. Our group was one of a handful who came to the show. It felt like we had the theater to ourselves.
I felt bad then for Schyler, that’s his last name, his full name is Radcliffe Schyler. No one calls him “Rad” or “Radcliffe” but as is the habit among boys at certain preparatory schools and over-priced liberal arts colleges, he’s called “Schyler.”
It’s an odd spelling of a last name, it seems to me. It’s as if there’s a vowel missing before the “y” and Schyler’s like that himself: He’s missing that vowel.
Schyler was performing the Williams play to less than 50 people (25 is a better estimate, but it was tough to get an accurate head count with the house lights dimmed.).
“Menagerie” isn’t the kind of play that plays well in western Pennsylvania. People like to laugh here and they like the jokes to be clean.
Not to sully anything about “The Glass Menagerie” – it’s just that is the kind of thing better appreciated by city folks or people in high school or college.
I hadn’t talked to Schyler for about 10 years after that, when he found me on one of those social networking Web sites that I used to despise, but now am unhappily almost addicted to: if I don’t log in each day, what am I missing?
It spins around in my mind until I have no choice but to get up and wait for the computer to boot up. Most of the time, I’m disappointed. The interesting stuff only seems to happen when I’m too busy to care and then I find out about it days later, when my life has slowed down and I waste the time looking at what my “friends” are up to. By then, they’re back to tedium.
As it turns out, Schyler has nothing to do with this story, he was just a digression. This story’s about two kids I saw swimming Sunday afternoon in an un-heated above-ground pool that had clean-enough, albeit cold, water.
The boys, ages 16 and 14 were splashing about and fooling around on a humid, but mild, early May afternoon. Not swimming weather by a long shot. But they made the most of the day and are probably sitting indoors by now, teeth chattering, lips blue, fingertips shriveled like prunes: I know the feeling, I’ve been there.
I’m listening to Johnny Cash sing Steve Goodman’s folk song about the “City of New Orleans” – the train, not the city – as I think about the kids splashing each other in a pool that I swam in when I was there age.
Back then, the corner store that’s almost caddy-corner from the house sold penny candy and even cigarettes to kids. I remember being sent to the store with a couple singles to buy my dad a soft-pack of Kent kings, a newspaper, and some candy with the change.
Swedish fish and fire balls were favorites, but there were so many choices: Laffy Taffy, Jaw Breakers, Boston Baked Beans, string licorice. Older kids would come in and buy 40s of malt liquor; I don’t think the clerks cared if they were 21.
Much as I reminisce about the “good-old days” I can’t help but think about how we were making the best during trying times. Looking at the facts, the Shenango Valley lost its prosperity in the 1980s: the mills were closing and unemployment was rampant. Still, I remember them as glorious days.
Much like 85-year-old Kate Yasgur, who attended a recent tea party. The Greenville resident longed for the days of her girlhood – the late 1930s. The country was in the midst of the Great Depression and was about to enter World War II, but to Mrs. Yasgur, they were a time full of wonder and delight.
She liked her government then and told me she supported FDR’s New Deal whole-heartedly. Others didn’t, equating the laws that were passed expanding the government and creating an American welfare state were un-American.
More than half-a-century later we’re still debating the issue. Some still, like Archie Bunker, maintain, “we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again.”
Myself, I relish the intense debate we’re having. There is no right answer in politics and that we’re allowed to freely speak our minds is something I cherish as an American.
While right now some of us are fretting about the direction our country is headed, the kids I saw swimming in the pool will look back on this time as their “glory days.”
That’s America for you.