We Try Harder – 98 Acres in Albany

We Try Harder – 98 Acres in Albany

"On August 1, 1961, the Temporary State Commission on the Capital City held the first of two public hearings on Albany’s rehabilitation. (Eight months later, of course, the Commission would approve Gov. Rockefeller’s plan to demolish 98 acres in downtown Albany for the South Mall.) The hearing, held on a sweltering night in the un-air-conditioned Chancellors Hall in the State Education Building, lasted from 8:00 to 11:00pm."

"In the audience was 35-year-old George W. Harder, Jr. A native of Albany and a World War II Navy veteran, Harder had left the area in 1954 for an FBI job. He returned to Albany earlier in 1961 to start a law practice. He later said that he had intended only to sit and listen as others debated Albany’s future. But as the evening went on, he grew more and more frustrated with the Democratic organization’s opposition to redevelopment. Finally, Harder rose as the evening’s last speaker and gave some impromptu remarks. Dismayed by the stagnation he saw in downtown Albany, he mused that “if Henry Hudson were to return to this area, he could look around and say, ‘It hasn’t changed much.’” Harder unfavorably compared retail and office vacancies in the heart of the city with new retail developments, like the Westgate shopping center on the western fringe of Albany. He concluded by blaming Albany’s decline on “man-made blight” and a “lethargic citizenry with a very limited outlook on the future.”

"This incident launched Harder’s career as a political activist. Had he chosen to align himself with boss Dan O’Connell’s Democrats, Harder likely would have won elected office. His father, after all, had been secretary of the statewide Democratic committee, as well as secretary to Lt. Gov. Edwin Corning (the mayor’s father) during the Al Smith administration. Yet Harder chose to challenge the machine’s power by running in 1962 for the Democratic nomination for State Assembly against incumbent Frank Cox. This was the first contested Democratic primary in Albany since 1921."

Democrats Aren’t Moving Left. They’re Returning to Their Roots.

Democrats Aren’t Moving Left. They’re Returning to Their Roots.

"Be advised: “Democrats are in danger of going too far left in 2018.” So warn Republicans like Mitt Romney and ex-Democrats like Joe Lieberman and public personae as diverse as James Comey and Howard Schultz. In recent months, the pundit class has determined that the party’s leftward lurch heralds the rise of a “liberal tea party”—a movement that could very well unmoor Democrats from their longstanding center-left traditions, in close imitation of the spiral of events that caused the Republican Party to turn sharply to the right in recent years."

"What’s fueling this argument? For one, more Democrats have rallied, either noisily or cautiously, around such policy innovations as “Medicare for all,” universal college and a universal basic income. That a smattering of Democratic candidates have elected to call themselves “democratic socialists” has only fueled the claim that such programs are “socialist.” “The center is Harry Truman and Daniel Patrick Moynihan, not Eugene Debs and Michael Harrington,” warned New York Times opinion columnist Bret Stephens recently. (Debs and Harrington were self-identified socialists.)'

"But there’s something wrong with this historical interpretation: Truman strongly supported single-payer health care. Moynihan supported a universal basic income in the 1960s. Dating back to World War II, Democrats sought to make a government-paid education available to as many Americans as possible. If Democrats are marching to the left, that road leads directly back to platforms and politicians who, in their day, commanded wide support and existed firmly in the mainstream of political thought."

Snow Next Week?

It looks like for next week there is an increasing chance of lake effect snow. 🌨 I am not sure if that will impact my plans that much, especially down in the Finger Lakes, but I will have to plan accordingly on where I camp. While Syracuse might get a few inches of snow, it looks like most of the snow won’t make it to the Finger Lakes. 🌬 Every day though it’s expected to get up to at least the upper 30s, so I doubt the snow will last for long.

Morning Sun, Roadside Camping

Today’s Almanac – November 5, 2018

Today’s Almanac

With the changing of the clocks back an hour on Sunday, the distribution of daylight is much more even between morning and afternoon.🌄 Days continue to get shorter, but at least the mornings aren’t nearly as long, but it does mean the evening commute now will occur in the darkness. 🚃🚗🚓🚚🚗🏎

Night before dawn is 6 hours and 15 minutes,
Dawn starts at 6:15 am and runs for 29 minutes,
Sunrise is at 6:45 am which is 5 hours and 14 minutes before noon,
High noon, the transit of the sun, is at 11:48 am,
From twelve noon to the sunset at 4:50 pm is 4 hours and 50 minutes,
Dusk lasts for 30 minutes concluding at 5:20 pm,
Leaving 6 hours and 39 minutes until midnight.

 Paint Mine Falls