Tag Archives: Spitzer

Because you need somebody who’s actually effected change rather than somebody who just talks about it all day.

Ashley Dupre was his fall, and now she’s getting her reward, and unfortunately, Spitzer, rather the American public, are the fall guys.

From the Huffington Post:

Tell me again: Why should we get all worked up over the revelation that the New York governor paid for sex? Will it bring back to life the eight U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq that same day in a war that makes no sense and has cost this nation trillions in future debt? Will it save those millions of homes that hardworking folks all over the country are losing because of financial industry shenanigans that Eliot Spitzer, as much as anyone, attempted to halt? Perhaps it provides some insight into why oil has risen to $108 a barrel, benefiting most of all the oil sheiks whom our taxpayer-supported military has kept in power?

Sure, the guy, by his own admission, is quite pathetic in all those small, squirrelly ways that have messed up the lives of other grand public figures before him, but why is an all-too-human sin, amply predicted in early Scripture, getting all this incredible media play as some sort of shocking event? The answer is that, while having precious little to do with serious corruption in public life, it does have a great deal to do with stoking flagging newspaper sales and television ratings.

The sad truth is that reporting on major corruption, say, the rationalizations of a president who has authorized torture, doesn’t cut it as a marketing bonanza. Just days before this grand exposé, the president vetoed a bill banning torture, and instead of being greeted with horrified disgust, the president’s deep denigration of this nation’s presumed ideals was met with a vast public yawn. Torture, unlike paid sex, doesn’t have legs as a news story.

Sex sells, and frankly it would seem far more exploitative for the news media to pimp this tale to the public than anything that VIP escort service did with the pitiable governor. His behavior was not really any more wretched than messing around with a young and vulnerable White House intern who didn’t even get paid for her efforts, yet Bill Clinton survived that one, whereas Spitzer was presumed dead on the arrival of this “news.” The New York Times, which editorially has supported the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, whose vast White House experience clearly did not include corralling her husband, now editorializes contemptuously about Spitzer’s betrayal of the public trust as well as about his exploitation of his “ashen-faced” wife, who, like Hillary, stood by her man.

The media consensus from the opening salvo was that Spitzer must resign and he will be thrown to the dogs, which is unfortunate because, like Clinton, he has done much valuable work in the public interest, and the outrage over this personal dereliction, tawdry in the extreme, is excessive. I certainly never wanted Clinton to resign, let alone be impeached, but why is Spitzer’s paying for sex more disgraceful than ripping it off? Yes, Spitzer allegedly broke a law that shouldn’t be on the books, and his resignation in disgrace is inevitable, but it bothers me that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney remain in office despite having violated enormously more serious laws.

Frankly, I don’t care what any of these politicians do in their personal lives as long as the practice is consensual, and the thousands of dollars that exchanged hands in this case would provide a presumption that the lady in question was indeed a willing partner in this commercial transaction. True, Spitzer is an outrageous hypocrite for having prosecuted others caught in what should not be considered criminal behavior, but since when is hypocrisy on the part of a politician, particularly as to sex, so shocking?

I wouldn’t have written this column had I not read the Wall Street Journal’s Page 1 news story headlined “Wall Street Cheers as Its Nemesis Plunges Into Crisis.” The article begins with the crowing statement “It’s Schadenfreude time on Wall Street” and goes on to quote those whom Spitzer went after over what should be considered the criminal greed that has predominated on Wall Street. It was Spitzer, as much as anyone, who sounded the alarm on the subprime mortgage crisis, the obscene payouts to CEOs who defrauded their shareholders and the other financial scandals that have brought the U.S. economy to its knees.

The best rule of thumb these days is that ordinary Americans should be mightily depressed over any news that Wall Street hustlers cheer, for they have been exposed as a dangerous pack of scoundrels quite willing to rob decent, hardworking people of their homes. And of course no one on Wall Street ever paid for sex.

I love all these so-called “experts” (i.e. they have their own TV show or wrote a book) who get on Larry King Live, Fox News, AC360 and spout some garbage about “why is Spitzer’s wife standing by him” and “this is a crime with a victim.”

That is wrong on so many levels.

First, I’m not even going to link to the many pages, but just look for Dupre, and I’m sure you’ll find that this girl got like 700k plays on her myspace page yesterday and she even UPLOADED A SONG to Amie Street.

So, Dupre is obviously a smart cookie and is TAKING ADVANTAGE of her recent fame to parlay it into a quickly rising music career. Now whether she can make it last is another story, but she’s certainly hot right now.

Second, to ever call a woman weak or stupid for standing by her husband is absolutely ridiculous. This is precisely why the divorce rate is so high in this country — because you have all these fools standing up on their squawk boxes preaching “female empowerment.”

Female empowerment is saving the victims of sex slave trade (that’s the REAL time when there is a crime & a victim in prostituion.) Go to IJM.org and see real women victims who need empowerment.

To ever lambast a woman for standing by her Husband is absurd, and it shows the utter stupidity of the pyschologists, authors, and famous people writing books today.

So some woman who it happened to before spoke /wrote about the struggles. You know what? Life’s tough. Relationships are tough.

And who are you — who have no knowledge of this marriage, who have nothing to do with the family, that have no idea hwo this relationship started, how it developed, and how they have endured — who are you to say anything?

Third, honestly, this is when I say Americans are incredibly stupid.

Always focusing on the wrong thing.

They should looking to see who aer the people who most benefit from Spitzer stepping down (i.e. the crooks on Wall Street) and say to ourselves — hmm, now that Spitzer’s gone, can we make sure we get behind Paterson & Cuomo and allow them to tear down any corrupt super-wealthy fools?

The Victim in this crime is the people of the US, because with the fall of Spitzer, we have lost (not only a future presidential candidate) but someone who went after the big boys and made them shiver in their pants.

The fact that they cheered when he fell should be a red flag to anyone — with Spitzer gone, let’s hope Cuomo can help take on the ridiculous insurance companies, lying & cheating investment bankers, et. al.