To view this page ensure that Adobe Flash Player version 11.1.0 or greater is installed.
Page 16 THE VILLADOM TIMES IV • October 16, 2013
Politicians against Americans!
Remember the first time you saw the Grand Canyon?
I do. It was during the recession of 1958. My father had
just gotten dusted from his job in New York City, but he
had negotiated a similar job in the San Francisco area. We
pulled up stakes for what we hoped would be a temporary
move, rented the house to a family friend, and drove across
the country to see America as a sort of left-handed oppor-
tunity. We made a list of the things we wanted to see, and
the Grand Canyon was the last big goal before we reached
California. We spent the first night and the next day of the trip in
Gettysburg. My buddies in the sixth grade had formed a
regular Civil War army, with blue kepi-style hats and inap-
propriate popgun rifles. I had read up on the topic, and
seeing the battlefield brought history to life -- up to a point.
Before the battlefield became part of the National Park
System, the various states had set up monuments to their
regiments and favorite sons. The effect was to make the
battlefield into a vast cemetery or memorial track for brave
men on both sides, though one could conjure up what hap-
pened by looking over the lay of the land and the exhibits.
Being there made American history emotionally palpable
and honored the courage of the soldiers.
Many say the battlefield is haunted and, in an odd sense,
that spectral presence brings the battlefield alive. Some
friends were driving through a rainstorm there once and
passed a water-logged Confederate courier on a galloping
horse. When they came to the gate, they commented on the
accuracy of the Confederate’s uniform. They were told that
no such person was in the park, because it was long past
closing time. They waited at the exit but the Confederate
on the galloping horse never rode past them. Perhaps he is
still there.
The Grand Canyon was the penultimate stop on the trip.
I remember the old dull-red road surfaces, but when we
walked to the rim, I was awestruck to the point where I
almost fell over backward. No photograph can do justice
to the vast sweep of the canyon. One could gaze for hours
at the rock formations that crop up like ruined palaces and
pagan temples of a mythical forgotten race, or analyze the
striated geology of the deepest cut in the Earth known to
man. To see this spectacle is to ponder it profoundly.
The stop before we finally landed in the reality of the
real estate market was Muir Woods. The giant redwoods,
protected through the influence of John Muir, had the same
effect on me as they did on their namesake: The inspired
absolute reverence. Muir said many times that Nature was
a wonderful place to pray. The idea that anyone would have
wanted to log those trees for a quick profit was a form of
blasphemy. Cutting one down anywhere, not just in what
became the National Park System, should have instinc-
tively been recognized as a crime.
Some people have different instincts, and some have
political instincts. In order to make the population take the
government shut-down seriously after a half-dozen flops
that did not come off, the instigators had to find something
to shut down that would be annoying but not threatening.
The National Parks were the perfect soft target. Try cut-
ting off Social Security. No politician who voted for that
cut would ever be elected again because the people who
receive Social Security, or expect to, know it is actually
their money by a contract with the government.
Any party held responsible for an attack on Social Secu-
rity would go the way of the Bull Mooses, the Mugwumps,
or the Know-Nothings. Cut Welfare? America’s cities are
still standing. A week after a Welfare elimination, the
responsible political leader could climb to the top of the
Washington Monument and play his lyre above a sea of
fire as the citizens of the nation’s capital burned everything
in sight, possibly including the lodge they could no longer
afford. When a confused, unarmed black woman tried to
broach White House security with a baby in her car, she
was shot from five different angles based on a very dubious
threat. We will see no cuts to Welfare.
Remember what happened when somebody suggested
that we might want to suspend the Super Bowl during the
first war against Iraq? That idea did not last very long.
Politicians are survivors. They learn not to offend vola-
tile communities that can be polarized by their economic
foolishness, but they also learn that respectable people are
slow to take up arms for purely aesthetic reasons. The polit-
ical football cannot be football, and it cannot be Welfare or
Social Security. The political football, by default, becomes
the National Park System.
The appeal of the parks to people from this country and
those of every country tend to be intelligent, reflective, and
reasonably thrifty. They attract a different audience than
the gambling casinos that waste enough electricity to illu-
minate all of Mexico, or the huge spectator sports events
that reinforce people’s sense of their own national prowess
even as their jobs are being moved to overseas locations
and the U.S. infrastructure collapses.
The parks attract decent people who think -- and who
think hard and long before they resort to violence. The
parks are now the victims of America’s schoolyard. The
politicians are the bullies. The politicians also think long
and hard. Attacks on programs that render people depen-
dant on Big Government are the last things they would
touch because those people could become strident in short
order and some of them have very little to lose. The edu-
cated middle class used to get tapped for real wars against
perceived enemies, but we could not prolong the wasteful
misery in Iraq and Afghanistan with a conscripted army,
because educated people draw the line at being killed in
dubious battle outside the national interest. The guy who
planned the 9/11 attack is dead, and the attackers are dead.
We did what we had to. Enough!
Politicians keep telling us that the troops are over there
defending our freedom. They say it, but nobody believes
it anymore, though they pretend to, so as not to offend the
veterans and their long-suffering families. When some-
body proposed a third invasion of Syria, there was ZERO
support, even from the American Legion commentators.
Who wants our soldiers fighting overseas? The people who
pay the politicians. I regretted that I missed Vietnam due
to a training injury when I volunteer for Airborne. Two of
my friends, both decorated for valor, and a third guy who
learned Vietnamese and served in counter-intelligence, said
they would never serve again unless the Soviets invaded the
Western Hemisphere, in which case they would bring their
own guns and drive their own cars to the border. Enough
was enough then. It still is.
The middle class is also tapped to the point of anemia
by taxes. The over-taxed members of the middle class are
the nerds, geeks, and wimpy kids who get beat up in the
schoolyard by the bully politicians, though in their private
lives they are also the doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers,
and business people who keep day-to-day America func-
tional. Speaking of function: Has anybody noticed that good-
paying jobs are not coming back? Did anybody notice that a
large number of the people who visit the National Parks are
European and Asian tourists? In New York City, a young
Asian family was recently pursued and run off the road by
some punks on cheap motorcycles. The video of the chase
and the photographs of the beating of the Asian man went
viral. You think tourists will come here for that? The civil-
ity of the National Parks is a fact, the guides are informa-
tive and entertaining, and the travel to the locations draws
tourists through America’s heartland where travelers spend
money on food and accommodations and gasoline and
come to realize that most Americans are neither thugs nor
empty-headed celebrities, but real people. Nobody who has
seen Tokyo, Seoul, or Singapore is particularly impressed
with the New York skyline. The history of London or Paris
is not there either. Mexico City is twice as big and has
older monuments. Ditto Beijing. Nobody is impressed by
America’s urban life. We should reopen the parks and see
that they stay open. They are the best advertisement for the
goodness and greatness of America that we have left.
Remember which politicians voted to close them. See
that not one of them is ever elected again.
Letters to the Editor
Supporting Marcus
needed a strong voice or defender at council meetings, Rob
was there. Thanks, Rob, for standing up for others -- and
for continuing to stand up for what you believe.
Rob has been a strong supporter of many local programs,
including the Mahwah Recreation program, the Mahwah
Municipal Alliance, the Mahwah Environmental Volunteer
Organization, and many more. Thank you, Rob, for your
involvement and volunteerism -- for coaching our youths,
for volunteering at the Homeless Shelter in Hackensack, for
picking up trash with other environmentalists, and for sup-
porting so many other township activities and programs.
Rob Hermansen is the only candidate with prior town-
ship council experience, plus he has proven that he is com-
mitted to our township and to the people who live, work,
and volunteer here. I hope you will join me in thanking Rob
Hermansen by electing him to the Mahwah Town Council
(vote column 2) on Nov. 5.
Jackie Sinclair
Mahwah Voting for Hermansen
Dear Editor:
My name is Robert G. Hermansen, candidate for
Mahwah Township Council. I have lived in Mahwah for
the past 12 years and have served in municipal and county
government for seven of those years. None of the other can-
didates has ever been elected to public office.
As your councilman, I will continue to work hard to
keep Mahwah taxes low and to provide strong fiscal over-
sight of the budget. I have a bachelor’s degree in finance
and am a certified financial advisor for a major brokerage
firm. I also have in-depth government budget and finance
experience from past elected positions as a Bergen County
Freeholder and Mahwah Councilman. None of the other
candidates has this financial background or firsthand gov-
ernment experience.
I will work hard to stabilize municipal expenses while
(continued on page 17)
Dear Editor:
It is very important to me to share my love and apprecia-
tion for the Township of Mahwah. I’ve lived here most of
my life, and I’m 85 years old now. In my lifetime, I’ve man-
aged a number of political campaigns on the state, county,
and local levels, and it is in this role that I write to you
today. You might remember my name affiliated with our
mayor, Bill Laforet, because I was also his campaign man-
ager for both elections. Today, I am writing to you in order
to ask your support for Jonathan Marcus, who is running
for a council seat. I am not his campaign manager, but I am
wholeheartedly supporting Jonathan Marcus for council.
I am also supporting Senator Cardinale, Assembly-
woman Schepisi, and Assembly Candidate Auth, all of
whom are running as a team.
Please remember to vote. Every vote counts.
Lou Rizzo
Mahwah Dear Editor:
The purpose of my letter is to thank Rob Hermansen
for running for Mahwah Township Council. I have many
reasons to express my thanks, but these are the ones I think
voters should know about.
For the past seven years, Rob has served in municipal
and county government, giving generously of his time and
talent. In fact, he is the only one of the four candidates on
the ballot who has already been a Mahwah Councilman and
a Bergen County Freeholder. Thank you, Rob, for running
again and for sharing your years of government experience
with us.
Rob has been a strong supporter of our volunteer ambu-
lance corps, youth recreation programs, senior activities,
volunteer firefighters, our recycling program, and our
police department. In fact, whenever any of these groups
Candidate makes case for election