Saturday, February 01, 2014

When Keepin’ It Real Goes Wrong: Kasim Reed and Dave Chappelle

 
Dave Chappelle: When Keeping it Real Goes Wrong - Vernon Franklin (Foul language warning)
 

 

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

A tip ‘o the hate to Steve Sailer.

Although I write no brief for Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, he really didn’t owe anyone any apologies, as far as the highway calamities were concerned. While my family and I were watching the news coverage of the stranded vehicles in and around Atlanta at different times on Wednesday and/or Thursday, I was explaining to them that none of the highways being shown were Atlanta streets. They were all under the jurisdiction of the counties Atlanta straddles (mostly Fulton, and partly Dekalb) and the state of Georgia. Mayor Reed should have simply pointed that out, rather than huffing and puffing. As for adults and kids stuck in Atlanta schools… that ball was in Reed’s court.

 

U.S.

Mayor Unapologetic as

Questions Fly in Storm

That Stopped Atlanta

By KIM SEVERSON
JAN. 30, 2014


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Mayor Kasim Reed listened to a question on Wednesday about the city’s response to a snowstorm that caused havoc.
Ben Gray/Atlanta Journal Constitution, via Associated Press

[Buried code: data-title="Mayor Unapologetic as Questions Fly in Storm That Stopped Atlanta " data-description="While Gov. Nathan Deal of Georgia has been contrite after Atlanta was gripped by an icy paralysis during a snowstorm this week, Mayor Kasim Reed has rejected criticism." data-publish-date="Jan. 30, 2014">]

ATLANTA — Anyone who has listened to Kasim Reed, the former entertainment lawyer who became Atlanta’s mayor in 2010, knows the man who calls himself a street fighter likes to be forceful when he makes a point.

But for the past two days, as the national face of a city that was virtually incapacitated by two inches of snow and ice, Mr. Reed has come across more as peevish than powerful as he has done interview after interview, mostly rejecting criticism of the government’s role in Atlanta’s vast ice storm gridlock.

“I don’t want to get into the blame game,” he snapped at local reporters Wednesday as children were still stranded in schools and images of thousands stranded on frozen interstates rolled in a seemingly endless media loop.

Related Coverage

  • Atlanta Officials Gamble on Storm and Lose, and Others Pay the Price
    JAN. 29, 2014







  • The next day, he fired back at national journalists, suggesting that Matt Lauer of NBC’s “Today” be more accurate in the images of a crippled region he was presenting to viewers and sniping with Mika Brzezinski on “Morning Joe” on MSNBC.
     



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    Army personnel helped stranded commuters at the West Lake transit station off Interstate 20. (Virginie Drujon-Kippelen for The New York Times)

    How the capital of the Deep South fell victim to more than 24 hours of icy paralysis despite early predictions that a rare winter storm was about to fall is still being analyzed.

    Gov. Nathan Deal, in an apologetic briefing for reporters on Thursday and in his own series of national interviews, was as soft and contrite as Mr. Reed was unyielding and combative. The governor said he did not learn the storm had been upgraded until about 9 a.m. Tuesday, six hours after the fact. He was beginning an internal investigation into why early warnings were not heeded sooner, he said.

    But larger questions loom for Mr. Reed, an ambitious 44-year-old politician, and Mr. Deal, who is running for re-election in November. How much will a losing gamble on how to handle a paralyzing storm hurt? And what’s the best way to cope with the kind of disastrous storm response that has dramatically wounded the careers of numerous politicians over the years?

    Left up to some voters, the gamble could hurt a lot. Drew Hansen, a University of Georgia criminal justice student who spent Tuesday night in a pharmacy after driving for more than seven hours, faulted both Mr. Deal and Mr. Reed.

    “To be honest with you, I don’t think they cared,” Mr. Hansen, 21, said. “Deal was warm. Reed was warm. They didn’t care. For them it was like, ‘Whatever, yeah, there’s people out there. We’re already in office. We don’t care.’ ”

    Reminded that Mr. Deal is seeking re-election, Mr. Hansen replied: “Good luck!”

    Still, as temperatures warmed on Thursday, some tempers cooled.

    Abdul Noble, 41, acknowledged the inexact science of weather forecasting but said officials could have been better prepared.

    “They’re human and they made a bad call,” Mr. Noble said as he waited for a National Guard escort to the car he abandoned on Tuesday night. “At the same time, Atlanta should have been more proactive.”

    For Mr. Reed, a Democrat with strong ties to the White House and his eyes on a long political career, the issue might be one of public relations as much as politics.

    Throughout the ordeal, Mr. Reed has been careful not to throw blame on Mr. Deal, a conservative Republican with whom he has worked shoulder to shoulder on key issues like expanding the state’s port in Savannah and attracting new business to Georgia. It has been a fruitful political relationship rare in a region that is deeply divided by urban and suburban concerns, political affiliation and race.


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    Tami Chappell/Reuters

    Georgia Storm Response “Not Fast Enough”

    Gov. Nathan Deal said that he was not satisfied with the response to this week’s winter storm and that an internal review would be conducted.

    When the storm was hitting the region, the two were at a Ritz-Carlton banquet room, celebrating Mr. Reed’s Georgian of the Year award from Georgia Trend magazine.

    During the storm and its aftermath, Mr. Reed has had to navigate the sprawling geographic and political challenges that come with being the de facto leader of a multicounty metropolitan region of six million people, only 432,000 of whom live in his city.


     

    “He has taken the media lead because every national story attacks Atlanta and it’s not in his nature to leave criticism unanswered,” said Carlos Campos, the mayor’s spokesman. “But the criticisms should actually be directed just as much to Cobb County leaders, DeKalb County leaders, Fulton County and other metro government leaders.”

    The city began preparing for the storm at 9 a.m., Mr. Reed has repeatedly pointed out. While tens of thousands of vehicles were at a standstill on the interstates that bisect and loop around Atlanta, the vast majority of the city streets were passable.

    Mr. Reed has said that the city and other governmental agencies should have worked together to stagger the times that parents and workers took to the road Tuesday afternoon.

    But, as he repeatedly pointed out, he has no control over preparing state highways for a storm, releasing children early from school or pre-emptively limiting the high volume of tractor-trailer traffic that choked the interstates when the ice hit.

    Some here worry more that the region’s seeming inability to handle a major weather crisis could hurt Atlanta’s future more than any one person’s political career.

    “I don’t see it as a big black eye on him or on the governor,” said Curley M. Dossman Jr., the president of the Georgia-Pacific Foundation and the chairman of the mentorship organization 100 Black Men of America. “I think the city is going to take a little heat when it comes to attracting a Super Bowl or an event like that, but he didn’t shy away from the issue. He gets credit for that.”

    Still, by other accounts, this is a blow to an administration that is not without flaws. Mr. Reed went all in on a regional transportation tax that was soundly trounced by voters. He has been criticized for his role in how contracts were handed out at the new international airport. And he lost the Atlanta Braves, which announced in November that the team was moving out of the city and into Cobb County.

    But all of that — and one bad storm — is not likely to sideline Mr. Reed, said Michael R. Bloomberg, the former New York mayor who did not seem to sustain long-term damage from being blasted for his response to New York’s blizzard in 2010. He called Mr. Reed “a real comer.”

    “You can’t win with weather, and he’ll get over this,” Mr. Bloomberg said. “You can say I wish it didn’t snow or I wish the traffic was moving better or why weren’t the streets plowed when I wanted them plowed.”

    But at the end of the day, he said, all a mayor can say is, “O.K., fine. Thank you. Let’s move on.”

    Alan Blinder contributed reporting.

    A version of this article appears in print on January 31, 2014, on page A13 of the New York edition with the headline: Mayor Unapologetic in Eye of Storm That Brought Atlanta to a Halt.

    1 comment:

    Nicholas said...

    Anonymous said...

    This is for the "keeping it real" story below. I couldn't find the comment tab on it.

    Ha ha, funny but not original. Barney Miller had an episode years ago in which Det. Frank Luger (played by James Gregory) told Det. Ron Harris (played by Ron Glass) to "shuffle" on out of here, well, it wasn't 100% clear what he said but Det. Harris at least thought he heard it. That caused Ron Harris to mock Luger with stereotypical black accents in a long diatribe. Afterward, Luger felt chastened and apologized, then to seal the deal he offered his hand with palm up to "slap some skin with Det. Harris". Harris, exasperated at that point turned Lugers hand over to the side and shook hands with him "white man style". The final gag got the biggest laugh, actually far superior to this routine which was funny but didn't have the final bit of irony at the end.

    I tried to find the bit on Youtube but couldn't. Too bad, it's a great bit.

    Barney Miller was a brilliant TV show. Funniest cop show ever.

    Jerry

    Saturday, February 1, 2014 at 9:32:00 PM EST
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