Chicago - A message from the station manager

By Mark Bazer

The United States has now confirmed what most already accepted as true: North Korea tested a nuclear weapon last week. The debate within the United States and around the world about how to respond to Pyongyang will, of course, continue.
Most agree that there is no “military option” when it comes to North Korea; to use force would put all of Southeast Asia, particularly Seoul, at risk. But after that, there is little agreement.
On one side, the Bush administration is leading an international campaign for increased sanctions against the North Korean regime. President Bush has also, throughout his presidency, rejected bilateral talks between the U.S. and North Korea, preferring instead the so-called “six-party talks.”
The Bush administration’s approach, though, has failed – as is evidenced by North Korea’s testing of a nuclear bomb. Kim Jong-il, North Korea’s “Dear Leader,” thrives off of being isolated. He’s clearly unconcerned with his impoverished people’s plight, which makes the effectiveness of any sanctions highly questionable.
On the other side, some diplomats argue that we must negotiate with North Korea. But this approach is also flawed. Rewarding North Korea for its behavior will send a signal we can’t afford to send to other rogue nations, such as Iran. Plus, it’s been proven not to work: Bill Clinton, with the help of Jimmy Carter, reached a deal with North Korea to cease its nuclear-weapon research in 1994 only to later see Pyongyang renege on it behind our back.
So, then, how can we get Kim Jong-il to rethink his nuclear program without giving into his demands, and without threatening stability in the region? In other words, what is the proper course for the U.S. to take in regard to North Korea?
Well, how the fuck should I know?

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Posted on October 19, 2006

The [Rod & Judy] Papers

By Steve Rhodes

He was slick, but he’s always been slick, from the day he married the daughter of a Chicago ward boss on his way to the governor’s mansion.
“She didn’t seem like a Republican governor ready to restore a party crippled by corruption. Instead, she reminded me of some tired waitress in a river town café who’s heard the same jokes too many times.
“I knew they belonged together.”

– John Kass, on the best and brightest candidates for governor Illinois was able to produce this year

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Posted on October 11, 2006

Slow Ride: The CTA Is Stuck In Reverse

By Scott Gordon

The news last week about a dramatic increase in “slow zones” on the CTA’s El tracks was just the latest in a year of discontent for frustrated riders tired of the transportation agency’s seeming inability to run a train system. Here is a rundown of the continuing problems on each of the CTA’s color-coded routes – and the solutions advocates are pressing for.

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Posted on September 22, 2006

The [Big-Box Veto] Papers

By Steve Rhodes

Who says Mayor Daley has lost control of the City Council? His veto of the big-box ordinance has turned at least a few aldermen back into the quivering cowards we always knew they were.

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Posted on September 12, 2006

Where Do Chicago’s Poor White People Live?

By Kiljoong Kim

In August 2005, Chicago Sun-Times columnist Mary Mitchell posed the question, “Where do poor white people live?” While the question may sound simple, it leads to complex issues about race, class, and how we think about social space. For many decades, being poor in a metropolitan area has been synonymous with being black, just as being poor in a rural areas has mostly meant being white. Of course, this cannot be wholly true. Poor blacks live in the country, too. Rich blacks live in the city. Rich whites live in the country. Mitchell’s question is perhaps the most obscure of these combinations: Where do poor white people in the Chicago area live?

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Posted on September 11, 2006

The [Ryan] Papers

By Steve Rhodes

In sentencing George Ryan to a relatively light six-and-half-years in prison yesterday, U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer called the former governor “a complicated man.”
As John Kass writes this morning, “Ryan is as complicated as butt steak and eggs at 4 a.m. after a long night at the casinos . . . ”
In fact, George Ryan is the most uncomplicated governor of Illinois in recent history, and one of its most uncomplicated pols of stature of all time.

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Posted on September 7, 2006

The [Race] Papers

By Steve Rhodes

Neil Steinberg, a white guy, recently complained that “Black people prefer to be the sole arbiters of all things racial.” (See No. 4)
But it’s really white people who want to control the dialogue on race.
For example, the Rev. James Meeks was recently in the news for his use of the “N” word. The white media demanded an explanation – and an apology. The mayor was also offended and weighed in. The same mayor who once reportedly said that Chicago needed a white mayor (aides later clarified that he meant a “wet mayor,” though they couldn’t explain what that would entail or how it would improve the city).
Maybe people of color should be the sole arbiters of how the “N” word is used. Maybe us white people should stay out of that one; like Germans who aren’t allowed to legally form neo-Nazi parties, our ancestors have forfeited certain privileges for us, regardless of our technical lack of responsibility for historic abuses. Maybe the best way for us white people to recognize and repudiate those abuses is by accepting such sacrifices as having little or no say in who, what, when, and where using the “N” word is acceptable.

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Posted on August 31, 2006

The Foie Gras Follies

By Steve Rhodes

The Tribune editorial page today joined the lazy media chorus Thursday chiding the Chicago City Council for its so-called meddling ways, including its ban on foie gras.
But in April 2005, the editorial page was singing a different tune. Back then, in response to Charlie Trotter’s declaration that – after visiting foie gras production facilities – he would no longer serve the fatty liver delicacy, and following a Tribune reporter’s visit to one of those facilities, the newspaper’s editorial page agreed that the treatment of ducks in making foie gras was cruel and unacceptable.

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Posted on August 25, 2006

The [Foie Gras & Fundraising] Papers

By Steve Rhodes

Is the foie gras ban really the silliest law the Chicago City Council has ever passed?
Of course not.
Is Mayor Daley the silliest mayor we’ve ever had?
All signs point to Yes.

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Posted on August 23, 2006

Big Box of Nonsense: Wal-Mart’s Imaginary Billions

By Scott Gordon

Don’t worry, House of Smiley. Be happy.
You’re not as bad off as you think.
Yes, the Chicago City Council voted Wednesday on a living wage proposal that will require “big-box” retailers such as yourself to pay workers more than you are used to.
But you’re still in pretty good shape – surely up to absorbing Chicago’s new rules and still make gobs of money. And same to you, Chicago – unless you believe Wal-Mart’s propaganda. Those full-page newspaper ads desperately asking, “Would You Turn Down $6.5 billion?” don’t really add up.

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Posted on July 26, 2006

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