On Wednesday evening, City Council, for the first time in six years that Ed Pawlowski has been mayor, didn't approve one of his proposals. The proposal wasn't actually rejected, but the 3 to 3 tie vote doesn't allow his scheme to proceed. Who voted which way, is the topic of this post. Although the Pawlowski promoted Trash to Energy company was going to charge the city twice as much, for twice as long as a competitor, the RubberStamp Trio once again sang the Yes Song. Worse yet, all three singers, Schweyer, Schlossberg, and Guridy, would like to be State Representatives. Rejecting the non- competitive offer was Jeanette Eichenwald, Ray O'Connell and Cynthia Mota. Jeanette has emerged as an independent voice on Council, but until Wednesday, usually stood alone. Many people had expectations when Ray O'Connell was elected, but it took over two years for him to stand on his own. The great surprise of the evening was new councilwoman Cynthia Mota, who asserted herself at only her second council meeting. I did not attend the meeting. This analysis is from the benefit of phone calls, and two excellent LOCAL, STATE AND NATIONAL MUSINGS
Mar 31, 2022
Allentown City Council Awoke (For Five Minutes)
On Wednesday evening, City Council, for the first time in six years that Ed Pawlowski has been mayor, didn't approve one of his proposals. The proposal wasn't actually rejected, but the 3 to 3 tie vote doesn't allow his scheme to proceed. Who voted which way, is the topic of this post. Although the Pawlowski promoted Trash to Energy company was going to charge the city twice as much, for twice as long as a competitor, the RubberStamp Trio once again sang the Yes Song. Worse yet, all three singers, Schweyer, Schlossberg, and Guridy, would like to be State Representatives. Rejecting the non- competitive offer was Jeanette Eichenwald, Ray O'Connell and Cynthia Mota. Jeanette has emerged as an independent voice on Council, but until Wednesday, usually stood alone. Many people had expectations when Ray O'Connell was elected, but it took over two years for him to stand on his own. The great surprise of the evening was new councilwoman Cynthia Mota, who asserted herself at only her second council meeting. I did not attend the meeting. This analysis is from the benefit of phone calls, and two excellent Mar 30, 2022
Allentown's Coffee Square
Mar 29, 2022
Jessica Lenard's Fashion Statement
Fashion Statement is a limited edition 8X10 inch etching by Jessica Lenard (1950-2016). She had commissioned a large scale giclee print of the piece. That giclee is being presented by Alderfer Auctions on April 6th to introduce Lenard to their audience. The print measures 42X56inches.
On April 14, the auction house will make available All Day Sucker, an iconic painting featured over the years in several of her shows.
Those interested in learning more about Lenard and her work will find her website revealing.
above photo of All Day Sucker
Mar 28, 2022
Lou Barletta For Governor
Mar 25, 2022
Quality Of Life In Allentown
When I saw the headline about quality of life in Allentown, I was encouraged. Perhaps Mayor Tuerk was going to crack down on the dirt bikes terrorizing city streets? I had written about this problem almost three years ago. As I got deeper into the article and they started quoting Promise Neighborhoods, my enthusiasm waned. Of course Promise Neighborhood worries about what inequalities in our community causes the junior gangsters to act out? I can only hope that Tuerk values Promise's opinions less than the Morning Call does.
The bikes are a difficult problem. The article points out that chasing them by police would create a situation too hazardous to justify. As an advocate for our traditional park system, a suggestion of turning over a city park to the bikers, to blow off steam, would be a nightmare.
It is constructive that the city is recognizing the problem as a priority. I would think that fast confiscation of the bikes, and a slow, complicated return of them, would greatly lessen the problem.
Mar 24, 2022
Union Terrace Gets Shaft
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| Timber lined shaft dug to water main in Union Terrace |
Shown above is a project by the city water department. A cast-iron water main runs under the Terrace, feeding the West End from the water plant on Martin Luther King Drive. A private company will reline the existing 30" main, dating back to 1905, with a new plastic liner. The Terrace was built over the main in 1937, and was the last WPA project completed in Allentown.
Mar 23, 2022
Stairway To Shame

In the mid 1930's, Allentown, and especially its park system, was endowed with magnificent stone edifices, courtesy of the WPA; Works Progress Administration. This was a New Deal program designed to provide employment during the aftermath of the depression. Stone masons from all over the country converged on this city and built structures which are irreplaceable. The walls and step structures in Lehigh Parkway, as the Union Terrace amphitheater, are legacies which must be protected. Pictured above is the grand stairway from Lawrence Street (Martin Luther King Drive) up to Junction Street, built in 1936. The steps are in a state of disrepair. They lead to the great Junction/Union Street Retaining Wall, thirty feet high and two blocks long, which was completed in 1937. I call upon the Trexler Trust and Allentonians of memory, to insist these steps are re-pointed and preserved. The current Administration knows little of our past. It's important to save the things in Allentown that matter.

The City of Allentown is embarking upon a $3.8 million dollar capital plan to change the nature of our parks, funded in large part by the Trexler Trust. Although a number of fads will be accommodated, not one dollar is earmarked to preserve the existing WPA treasures. General Trexler envisioned the parks as a reserve for the passive enjoyment of nature. Among the new Disney-World type plans are a wedding pavilion in the Rose Garden, and the largest playground in eastern Pennsylvania to be built in Cedar Park. The trail through Cedar Creek Park will have lights installed, and the picnic areas will be expanded. Anybody driving past Cedar Beach on a Monday morning sees the trash generated currently by only a few picnic tables. How many more park workers will be required to deal with the consequences of these new plans? The playground is being billed as a "Destination Playground", who will pay to keep that clean? Allentown should build and monitor numerous playgrounds throughout center city, within walking distance for children and parents. The Trexler Trust and The City of Allentown have a responsibility to first repair and maintain these iconic stone edifices which are unique to Allentown.

photo info: the dedication stone is on the Union Street wall. The steps shown in the photo here go through a tunnel in the wall and climb up to Spring Garden Street. They are in total disrepair. This posting is a combination of two previous posts, which appeared on this blog last September.
above reprinted from May of 2009
UPDATE APRIL 10, 2018: My campaign to save the WPA structures has been on going for over a decade. About 10 years ago, I organized meetings at the library to bring attention to the neglect inflicted upon these structures. In the process I tutored Karen El-Chaar, from Friends Of The Parks, on the issues. She then was able to obtain a grant from the Trexler Trust, and repoint the Fountain Park Steps. I opposed the more outlandish proposals cited above for Rose Garden area, and plans were scaled back. I organized efforts to dig out and reveal the WPA Spring Pond and Boat Landing, both of which were discarded decades earlier. Because of the neglect, the Lehigh Parkway wall collapsed, but has since been partially rebuilt, to allow use of the entrance road into the park. In cooperation with Friends Of The Parks, I conducted tours of Lehigh Parkway, featuring its history and WPA structures. During the Pawlowski regime I offered my advice to City Council on the traditional park system and WPA, but it was rejected. I again make the same offer to Mayor O'Connell and the new administration.
UPDATE MARCH 3, 2020: Although O'Connell did invite me to a meeting about the parks, I am once again a persona non grata. Karen El-Chaar is now director of parks. It is my understanding that the Trexler Trust has commissioned a study of the Parkway Structures, but declined to share any information with me. It is my informed opinion that the immediate services of a stone mason are much more needed than that of their consultants. Time is the enemy of these structures.
Mar 22, 2022
History Of Union Terrace
The area now known as Joseph S Daddona Lake and Terrace has a rich history. The stone arch bridge dates back to 1828. If Lehigh County had its way, the bridge would be gone now. I'm proud to have played a large part in saving it. The park consists of the former city ice skating pond, and the WPA amphitheater.
This blog previously featured the train of Union Terrace, which was near the end of the former Barber Quarry Branch line... Talking of tracks, shown above is the freight station of the Allentown and Reading Traction Company. Their trolley would go under the Dorney Park roller coaster on its way to Kutztown. Many of you would know the freight building many years later, as the store and home of Joe and Ann Daddona.
reprinted from April of 2013
Mar 21, 2022
Lehigh Valley As Slow Learner
Zac Cohen And Company still refuses to accept his loss in the election last November. Although they babble that voters will be disenfranchised if the Election Board certifies his opponent's victory, the board is disenfranchising the public from a full judicial bench. It is becoming very apparent that the board is less than non-partisan, while it waits for Zac to find more pebbles to toss.
Allentown complains that not enough contractors bid on improvements to Valania Park, but also wants to further restrict which contractors can bid on projects? However, that contradiction is fitting for that park, which is being over-improved, considering both the amount, and type of activity that occurs there.
A victim over the weekend from multiple stab wounds doesn't have any information to give police.....They never do.
The Morning Call keeps featuring letters bashing the Republican candidates...Is that their reader base, or their editor's bias? One would think from a marketing standpoint, that they would want a more balanced opinion page.
Mar 18, 2022
Park Follies And Misappropriations
Over the years this blog and myself have established credibility and expertise on Allentown's traditional park system and the WPA. I must report what I consider to be a major shenanigan by the mayor. $1.3 million dollars was taken to purchase two heavy industrial areas, to supposedly add to the park system. This $million plus dollars was taken from the water/sewage lease, which is being used as the mayor's discretionary fund, instead of the dedicated pension relief, promised at the time. $950,000.00 was used to buy the parcel at Union and Basin Streets, near the city sewage plant. This is one of the oldest industrial areas in the city, and certainly not needed for more park land. Allentown has not been able to maintain the existing park land, or the features within it. The Fountain Park Pool has been abandoned, and the WPA structures are crumbling. The other just purchased parcel is the old fertilizer plant location, along Martin Luther King Dr., west of the crumbling Schreibers Bridge. We have an administration with no memory or knowledge of Allentown's past. Anybody who knew what went on at the fertilizer/rendering plant, would not want their grandchildren playing there. The city's rationale for these purchases is to expand the biking paths and connect the parks. That's the folly, and now the misappropriations. Allentown has supposedly allocated money to engineer the repair of the leaning WPA wall in Lehigh Parkway. I know why the wall leans. Years ago, the stone shoulder between the park entrance and wall was blacktoped. As cars and city trucks drive around the curve, pressure is exerted against the wall. That strip of asphalt needs to be removed, and the stone buffer restored. The problem with the engineering study is that it's the third time it has been appropriated. In the last two budgets money was actually budgeted to repair the wall, now the process begins again. What happen to the previous appropriations? Must molovinsky on allentown now also establish expertise in forensic accounting?
reprinted from June 26, 2014
UPDATE JULY2015. The wall collapsed in Lehigh Parkway, closing the traditional entrance to the park.. Over the past several years I had met with two park directors and the city engineer, to no avail, trying to save the wall. Recently, I have reported a problem to the current park director about the Union Terrace WPA structure, that needs immediate attention. The new parcels, rather than connecting the parks, are connecting the neglect.
UPDATE MARCH 8, 2018: Local news sources are reporting that Mayor Pawlowski is expected to resign today. If this welcome news will have a positive effect on the park system remains to be seen. A potential mayoral contender told me that if he were in charge, I'd be working for the park department, planning WPA renovations. I never asked for a job, nor do I want one. However, when I did ask City Council to appoint me as a volunteer liaison on WPA matters, I was met with silence. A park employee told me that there is significant money in the new budget for WPA repairs. Again, that is nothing new. How it will be appropriated remains to be seen. There is one thing for sure; Whoever the new mayor might be, whatever the park budget might be, my advocacy for the WPA structures will continue.
Mar 17, 2022
Duck Paté Once Again At Cedar Park
In yesterday's post, I wrote about the Poison Hemlock and other invasive species taking over the creek banks in the Allentown Park System. This is a result of the ill-advised riparian buffers, promoted by the Wildlands Conservancy.
Yesterday morning the park department started to clear cut the stream banks in Cedar Park, the only way to get rid of the invasives. Removing them by hand would require the labor of the whole department, for the whole summer.
The buffers serve no ecological purpose in Allentown, because the storm water is piped directly into the streams, under the buffers. However, the Wildlands Conservancy never lets specific realities get in the way of their generalized science.
These faux buffers have numerous victims. Yesterday this year's batch of ducklings were turned into paté and mulch, when the mower went over their nests. For the rest of the summer, the city will allow the faux buffer to grow, blocking both view and access to the creek. It's not a good plan for the ducks or the children.
Allentown should defer to General Trexler's landscape architect, and again allow its citizens to enjoy the parks, as designed.
Mar 16, 2022
Allentown's Quality Of Life Border
A reader recently commented that he lives Allentown, and is sticking it out, as opposed to those who moved out to Parkland. This is easy to say when you live in Allentown's west end, because the quality of life border isn't at Cedar Crest Blvd., but rather at about 12th Street.
As the weather gets warmer, the streets get louder and more marred by litter. Between Front and 7th Streets you're likely to encounter junior motorbike gangs, which ignore both stop lights and one way destinations.
With Tuerk and Roca there's a new sheriff in town, and it's a new town indeed. We who remember when Dodge was quiet, remember a different Allentown.
I suspect that in coming years this may seem like the good old days. Despite historically low mortgage rates, the current grossly inflated real estate frenzy will result in buyer's remorse and abandoned properties.
I can appreciate that my predictions will not be used for the city's public relations...For that kind of spin I recommend the Morning Call.
Mar 15, 2022
Business As Usual At The Morning Call
This blog promotes itself as a chronicle of local history and politics. Politically, besides for my park and WPA advocacy, my sole recommendation has been for more officers on the police force. It's not that I don't have a wish list for other changes, but realistically in this one party town, only the police force is critical for the town's survival.
It was gratifying to see in the Morning Call that both Chief Roca and Mayor Tuerk are pitching to beef up the force. Interesting that councilman Josh Siegel, now interested in a state rep seat, supports the increase. Not that long ago he was marching with the Defund crowd.
The Morning Call's new city beat reporter, Lindsay Weber, included Hasshan Batts in her article, who would be the chief benefactor of the Defund movement.
The paper continues its tradition of its Go To people for quotes, who include Ce-Ce Gerlach, in addition to Batts. As a long time inner-city landlord, I can tell you what is wrong with the Gerlach/Batts recommendation to fight poverty in order to fight crime. Allentown is very much a transient town. When the shooter just arrived from NYC or New Jersey three weeks ago, we need more police, not more social workers. The shooter had social workers in New York, and they didn't help him much anyway.
The irony of the paper reporting on Batts' formula is that none of its paid subscribers subscribe to Batts' nonsense. Send the police first, and protect the bystanders.
Mar 14, 2022
Lehigh Parkway Tops Allentown Remembering
Most of you know that in addition to this blog, I also administer a Facebook group, Allentown Chronicles. Endlessly requesting membership, are people who just joined facebook three hours earlier, and want to sell members Allentown tee-shirts. If such shirts would actually be delivered if ordered, I do not know, I do not accept their membership.
On another local group I noticed the post above, which is actually a promotion. A quick search revealed that the gentleman is only not from Allentown, he's not even from United States. Nevertheless, hundreds of people "liked" the post, and make suggestions as what should be added. Many were surprised that certain landmarks were excluded. You must forgive the man, he never heard of Allentown before. He sells these posters to nostalgiacs everywhere.
Being the party pooper I enjoy being, I placed the following comment on the post...Everybody should be aware that this is a commercial company with no connection whatsoever to Allentown, which is harvesting your input to sell you a poster. They do the same everywhere.
You'll be relieved to know that my revelation didn't discourage the nostalgiacs from suggesting more of their favorite places. The clever merchant puts a "like" after each one, giving the nostalgiacs beloved feedback.
But allow me to use the scam for my own purpose. Please note that Lehigh Parkway has the dominant spot on the poster. I can only assume that the poster's solicitation for suggestions came up with Lehigh Parkway the most often.
Perhaps those in the current administration might consider that for most Allentonians, Robin Hood is the prime memory of Lehigh Parkway, and removing that rubble from the bridge's piers could only be a feather in their cap.
Mar 11, 2022
Walking With The (Then) New Park Director (In 2013)
I showed park director Mikowychok the abandoned island and the boat landing, things that he never saw before, or even knew existed. I found his indifference to the demise of these wonderful constructions astounding. When I criticized the tall thin weed wall blocking the entire creek view, he replied that a row of single tall weeds was better than none. He actually told Mota that the creek was more enticing when you could only get a glimpse of it here and there. It made me think of an old arcade peep show machine. It's too bad that the city hired another lobbyist for the Wildlands Conservancy as Park Director, instead of a defender of our unique park system, however, it's no surprise. Both the out of town park directors were hired by the same out of town city manager. All three of them, four including the mayor, have no knowledge or appreciation of the formerly nationally recognized park system, in the former All American City. Wildlands was spouting voodoo science. They actually said that there's no fecal count in the creek, despite my photographs of creek shores filled with toilet paper. In order for them to harvest the current grant they must demolish the dam by the end of September. From the grant they also harvest administrative fees. The dam dates from the early 1940's, and has delighted five generations with its sight and sound. The hard press is on City Council to approve this latest destruction with virtually no deliberation. I ask those who appreciate beauty and ambience to help me save our history.
UPDATE: The post above is reprinted from August 17, 2013. John Mikowychok, the new park director referred to above, has resigned. Less than three months after being hired, Mikowychok recommended to City Council that the Wildlands Conservancy be allowed to destroy two picturesque historic dams on the Little Lehigh. The Wildlands Conservancy deposited the demolished WPA Robin Hood Dam rubble around the Robin Hood Bridge, ruining the visual effect of the iconic stone piers. The demolished Trout Nursery Dam contributed to the recent record fish kill. We have lost 75 years of history to a person who was here for 15 months. I will have more to say about park directors with no knowledge of the park system and the Wildlands Conservancy's self serving agenda in subsequent posts. Let us hope that South Whitehall has more respect for Wehr's Dam and its history.
above reprinted from September of 2014*
Mar 10, 2022
The Brineing of Allentown
I'm usually somewhat amused when I see the accolades for retiring city personnel. As a landlord, activist and blogger, I've seen many inequalities over the decades. I've seen property owners abused for both revenge and amusement. Pawlowski used code enforcement as a weapon, and his goons are still mostly there in that department. What brings on this rant was the brine applied to the city streets early Wednesday morning. With predicted temperatures above freezing, was the application just an overtime fest for city workers and a brineing of the taxpayers, or erring on the side of caution?
When new Mayor Tuerk announced that he was keeping all department heads* in place, my eyebrows raised. If he had said that he was replacing all department heads, my eyebrows would have raised just the same. An observer wouldn't be able to distinguish between my expressions, nor I between my reactions.
* There is at least one department head that I would retain, but mentioning him/her disrupts the poetry.**
** brineing spelled with e, another literary license
Mar 9, 2022
The Robin Hood Bridge
Mar 8, 2022
The Lost Beauty Of Lehigh Parkway
| photography by Tami Quigley |
photograph by Tami Quigley
Mar 7, 2022
Restore The Beauty
“The dam and reservoir were cherished by many people in the local community and an important part of.... history. We want to make sure its story is preserved.”When I fought unsecessfually to save the Robin Hood Dam in Lehigh Parkway, the park director at the time proposed replacing the dam with signage. There is such a fading sign at the former dam site on the Monocacy Creek in downtown Bethlehem. While I declined his offer for a sign instead of the dam, this post is to announce my new WPA project... I will champion to have the city restore the Robin Hood Bridge piers to their previous scenic state, before being despoiled by the broken dam rubble. This rubble was placed there by the Wildlands Conservancy, when they demolished the dam. Demolishing the dam was a crime, but making the previously beautiful bridge piers ugly was a sin.
Mar 4, 2022
As Allentown Turns
Mar 3, 2022
2nd And Hamilton

Up to the mid 1960's, before Allentown started tinkering with urban redevelopment, lower Hamilton Street still teemed with businesses. The City had grown from the river west, and lower Hamilton Street was a vibrant area. Two train stations and several rail lines crossed the busy thoroughfare. Front, Ridge and Second were major streets in the first half of the twentieth century. My grandparents settled on the 600 block of 2nd Street in 1895, along with other Jewish immigrants from Russia and Lithuania. As a boy, I worked at my father's meat market on Union Street. I would have lunch at a diner, just out of view in the photo above. The diner was across from the A&P, set back from the people shown on the corner. A&P featured bags of ground to order 8 O'Clock coffee, the Starbucks of its day.
Mar 2, 2022
Downhill On Lehigh Street

During the early 1970's, Allentown demolished the entire neighborhood between Union and Lawrence Streets. It was, in a large part, home to the black community. How ironic that we destroyed the cohesion of a neighborhood, but renamed Lawrence Street after Martin Luther King. The only remnant of the neighborhood is the St. James A.M.E. Church. Going up the hill today we now have a vacant bank call center on the east, and the Housing Authority Project on the west. A whole neighborhood existed in from both sides of Lehigh Street, including black owned shops. The houses were old and humble, but people owned them, many for generations. Some blacks at the time wondered if the project was Urban Renewal or Negro Removal?
above reprinted from May 2011
Mar 1, 2022
A Road Runs Through It
Feb 28, 2022
Allentown"s Phantom Rejuvenation
Yesterday's Morning Call had a story on the PennDot study, which recommended four different options to handle the onslaught of traffic to rejuvenated center city Allentown. It's truly amazing how little $1Billion buys now a days. Believe it or not, despite the endless use of adjectives by the paper, the town is as dead as ever. PennDot, realizing that the study wasn't necessary, is never the less proceeding as if it was. One recommendation was actually for a bike lane on 7th street. When is the last time you saw a bike on 7th Street? Their consultant, from King of Prussia, thinks that patrons are going to ride their bikes down 7th Street to a show at the arena; I couldn't make this stuff up, where would I get such an imagination? Meanwhile, Pennsylvania has been ranked as one of the worst run states in the country, maybe it's because we hire consultants who recommend building bike lanes on 7th Street, to accommodate invisible arena patrons. So far, the best arena night hasn't come close to duplicating the traffic on a Thursday night, back in the days of Hess Brothers. What we have is a bunch of new buildings, of no architectural significance, and a medium size arena, which gets half full, 40 nights a year.
Feb 25, 2022
Pray For Allentown
When Allentown Police Chief Charles Roca put up a Pray For Ukraine meme yesterday, my immediate thought was Pray For Allentown. I had just learned that in addition to the shots fired in Cedar Beach Sunday evening, there was another homicide, at an east side bar early Thursday morning.
In addition to putting out this blog every weekday, I also administer a large facebook group, Allentown Chronicles. The group majors in history, and minors in local politics. Many of its members are former Allentonians, whose memory dwells in better days for the Queen City. Many of them would prefer not even to read about the town's current state of crime.
In addition to those members fixated on the past, there is a group which I refer to as the cheerleaders. These are current residents who compare Allentown to Philadelphia, Chicago and Detroit, and think Allentown is just experiencing urban problems that are part of life in all big cities. Many of them are either transplants, or too young to remember the good old days. One of the cheerleaders mentioned that there were only 6 fatalities in 2020. He omitted the fact that there were 63 shootings. The low kill rate is only from poor aim, and good ER work at the local hospitals.
This post is not intended to minimize the suffering occurring in Ukraine. It is also not intended to demean the empathy shown by Chief Roca to that tragedy.
I altered Chief Roca's meme by putting Allentown over it.
Feb 24, 2022
Morning Call's Social Agenda
The Morning Call's coverage of the Cedar Beach Park shooting incident started and ended with quotes from Pastor/Activist Gregory Edwards, who wasn't there, on the relationship between poverty and violence. In between, there were quotes from Enid Santiago, who wasn't there. Although Edwards' grandchildren were in the park(not him), so were hundreds of other children. Enid Santiago was a candidate for state representative, who didn't even win the primary election.
Why is the Morning Call featuring these people in an article about a seminal incident in Allentown? And certainly, a drive-by shooting in an Allentown park is a seminal incident or a low point. Although nobody was actually shot, that was only by a blessing. The shooter was across the creek and bridge from the basketball courts, shooting a handgun. Nearby was the Destination Playground, full of children.
The Morning Call has been obsessed with what they promote as the new leaders in Allentown. As a paying subscriber to the paper, I can tell them that I had enough, too much already, about their view of new leaders in Allentown. All I want to know is who the shooter was arraigned before, and what bail was set? It couldn't be too high!
artwork shown above by Mark Beyer
Feb 23, 2022
Gun Shots At Cedar Beach Park
I was saddened to hear about shots being fired near the basketball courts in Cedar Beach Park.
I'm afraid the city is at the point now that when a crowd is drawn to Cedar Beach and other parks, we need additional police coverage on site.
The Morning Call reports Pastor/activist Gregory Edwards as saying...
“So, when we talk about public safety, ... poverty is an act of violence. When folks are living in abject poverty, poverty is an act of violence, and so certain types of crimes happen in certain environments. I’m not abdicating personal responsibility, but certain types of crime happen in certain environments because of the lack of resources that could alter someone’s decision."
In all respect to Pastor Edwards, Allentown always had poor people and Allentown always had parks, but we never had shootings in the parks. Credit to Mayor Tuerk, who seems to understand that poverty is one issue and public safety is another.
While the activists will always want more resources for their poverty programs, the police need more manpower, if our city and parks are to become safe again.
Feb 22, 2022
Ag Hall At The Fairgrounds
Feb 20, 2022
Harris Converts To Republicanism
Feb 18, 2022
Bill Whitewashing At The Morning Call
Bill claims that he was a long time critic against the Democratic corruption in Harrisburg, but that these MAGAs will really undermine our state's progress. Of course in this Valley of Incumbents Voted for Life, White never put a name to any of these Democrats. It's easy to complain about corruption in the state house when never naming a culprit.
While White claims that he wanted to see improvement in Harrisburg, he's still worried about any of the status quo being changed out. Over the years White has labeled me misguided and dour for actually naming bad people and programs. There is a reason that the FBI spent two years investigating Allentown, and practically every contract signed at city hall. It took that long because there were no clues from Bill White or anybody else at the Morning Call.
Feb 17, 2022
The West End Train Branch
photo of train crossing Tilghman at 17th Street taken by Kermit E. Geary in 1974, from the Mark Rabenold Collection.
Feb 16, 2022
Palin Fair Game
Sarah Palin has been fair game with the press since McCain nominated her in 2008. In the case against the New York Times, she lost before the trial, during the trial, and when the verdict was read. The judge dismissed half the case before the trial, and publicly declared that he would dismiss the charges of libel against the Times, regardless of the verdict.
Even the Times, although a libel defendant in the case, besmirched her further during the trial. Their reporter wrote that Palin is back in the public eye in a way that is "wholly fitting" with her political persona.Feb 15, 2022
A Voice And Style Is Silenced
photo of Patrice by Ramy Song
Feb 14, 2022
An Allentown Cheesesteak Story
Feb 11, 2022
Hasshan Batts Not A Bashful Man
Feb 10, 2022
The Morning Call's Steep Price
Feb 9, 2022
The Morning Call Awakens To Allentown's Monster
Feb 8, 2022
Lamont Doesn't Impress In Northampton
Feb 7, 2022
National Republican Discourse
As a conservative independent, when not casting my vote for an independent, it more often than not goes to the Republican candidate. While my disillusionment with Trump occurred early in his term, any defense of him completely expired on January 6th, 2021.
While I take heart in Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger and Mike Pence, the RNC Salt Lake winter proclamation defending January 6th can only hurt the party in 2022 and 24. Hopefully, by their spring meeting, they will be more Republican, and less Trumpican.
Trump didn't win the election in 2020, and likewise he wouldn't win in 2024. However, there is a backlash to the progressive Democratic programs now occurring. The Defund The Police mentality has turned the urban cores into a lawless jungle. The endless stimulus payments have a negative effect on the economy. There are real opportunities for rational Republicans to prevail. However, supporting Trump's delusions is not rational.
I suppose Republican candidates feel that they can walk the tightrope to win primaries in the spring, and then move more toward the middle for November. They are overestimating themselves, and underestimating the voters.
Feb 4, 2022
Over The Dam In 2014
Feb 3, 2022
Tuerk Bloats Mayoral Staff
Feb 2, 2022
Zac Cohen And Donald Trump Have A Lot In Common
Zac Cohen and Donald Trump both refuse to accept the results of their respective elections. A Hail Mary federal lawsuit has been filed seemingly on Cohen's behalf after exhausting all legal options in Pennsylvania. Five bipartisan electors, who didn't remember to date their mail-in ballot, have filed the suit. Cohen clearly is more concerned with his career than justice in Lehigh Valley, which continues without its third new judge.
On a bipartisan note, allow me to say that we can do without any candidate who refuses to accept the results of their election.
We can do without a president who considers sedition part of the electoral process. We can do without a judge who cannot accept a verdict.
UPDATE: Bernie O'Hare weighs in on the same topic.
UPDATE FEBRUARY 3, 2022: Bernie O'Hare weighs in on the same topic once again.













