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MD_Vet
05-24-2013, 03:07 PM
As the IRS scandal attests, President Barack Obama brought The Chicago Way to Washington. (Andrew Harrer, Bloomberg)
The Internal Revenue Service scandal now devouring the Obama administration — the outrageous use of the federal taxing authority to target tea party and other conservatives — certainly makes for meaty partisan politics.
But this scandal is about more than partisanship. It's bigger than whether the Republicans win or the Democrats lose.

It's even bigger than President Barack Obama. Yes, bigger than Obama.
It is opening American eyes to the fundamental relationship between free people and those who govern them. This one is about the Republic and whether we can keep it.
And it started me thinking of years ago, of my father and my uncle in Chicago and how government muscle really works.
Because if you want to understand The Chicago Way of things in Washington these days, with the guys from Chicago in charge of the White House and the federal leviathan, there's one place you start:
You start in Chicago.
My father and uncle ran a small business, a supermarket on the South Side. Uncle George worked in the front, my father in the butcher shop in the back. My uncle had been a teacher. My father had plowed his fields with a mule.
They were immigrants who came here from Greece with nothing in their pockets but a determination to work, and the belief that here, in America, no other power could roll in with tanks and put their boots on the necks of their children.
My father and uncle, like the rest of the family, valued education and books and free political debate. And so at large extended family Sundays, we'd all sit around the dinner table, many uncles and aunts and cousins, young and old.
There were conservatives and socialists, Roosevelt Democrats and Reagan Republicans and a few bewildered, equivocal moderates in between, everyone squabbling, laughing, telling stories.
No matter whose house we were visiting, the TV was never turned on after dinner. Instead, we'd have coffee and fruit and dessert and argument. We had different views, we loved each other, and even strangers who showed up were expected to join in, to debate education, the presidency, social issues, the war, drugs, bluejeans, long hair, baseball, everything.
Uncle Alex was the uncle who told us young people how best to make our points. He ran a snack shop in the Bridgeport neighborhood — the legendary home of Chicago mayors and Democratic machine bosses.

"Don't wait for a ticket," he'd say, and puff on his cigar, always in a white shirt and tie, on those family Sundays. So we'd just jump in when we could, like the rest.
One Sunday, I must have been 12 or 13, I decided to ask what I thought was an intelligent question that was something like this:
We talk politics every Sunday, we fight about this and that, so why aren't you politically active outside?
Why don't you get involved in politics?
There was an immediate silence. The older cousins looked away. The aunts and uncles stared at me in horror, as if I'd just announced I was selling heroin after school.
You could hear them breathing. No one spoke. I could feel myself blushing.
Someone quickly changed the subject to some safe old story. It could have been the one about how our grandfather named the family mule — a white, big-headed animal — after President Truman. My sin seemed forgotten.
But I couldn't forget it. I couldn't understand how we could argue about politics over baklava and watermelon and coffee, but not put it into practice.
We could support a political candidacy, we could donate or work for one or another politician that we agreed with.
This is America, I said.
"Are you in your good senses?" said my father. "We have lives here. We have businesses. If we get involved in politics, they will ruin us."
And no one, not the Roosevelt Democrats or the Reagan Republicans, disagreed. The socialists, the communists, the royalists, everyone nodded their heads.
This was Chicago. And for a business owner to get involved meant one thing: It would cost you money and somebody from government could destroy you.
The health inspectors would come, and the revenue department, the building inspectors, the fire inspectors, on and on. The city code books aren't thick because politicians like to write new laws and regulations. The codes are thick because when government swings them at a citizen, they hurt.
And who swings the codes and regulations at those who'd open their mouths? A government worker. That government worker owes his or her job to the political boss. And that boss has a boss.
The worker doesn't have to be told. The worker wants a promotion. If an irritant rises, it is erased. The hack gets a promotion. This is government.
So everybody kept their mouths shut, and Chicago was hailed by national political reporters as the city that works.
I didn't understand it all back then, but I understand it now. Once there were old bosses. Now there are new bosses. And shopkeepers still keep their mouths shut. Tavern owners still keep their mouths shut.
Even billionaires keep their mouths shut.
One hard-working billionaire whose children own the Chicago Cubs (http://chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs) dared to open his mouth. Joe Ricketts considered funding a political group critical of Obama before last year's campaign. Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Obama's former chief of staff, made it clear that if the Cubs wanted City Hall's approval to refurbish decrepit Wrigley Field, Ricketts better back off.
It happened. He backed off. It was sickening. But it was and is Chicago.
And now — with the IRS used as political muscle and the Obama administration keeping that secret until after the president was elected — America understands it too.
jskass@tribune.com (http://netmail.verizon.net/webmail/%22http://mailto:jskass@tribune.com%22)
Twitter @John_Kass

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http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-05-19/news/ct-met-kass-0519-20130519_1_chicago-mayors-father-and-uncle-the-chicago-way

JFootin
05-24-2013, 04:16 PM
Damn rightly said! And there isn't any turning back. No men of honor can overcome the festering power of evil the is now so entrenched from the Oval Office on down. They will be destroyed, just like Herman Cain and Mitt Romney. And if that doesn't work, they will be assassinated. Not even anything new about any of this. What is new is the brazenness that is now full blown; they know they are unstopable now, so no reason to hide and be even a little sneaky about it.

deadeye
05-24-2013, 04:57 PM
Every major society in history has rotted and decayed from the inside. Greece, Rome, France, Egyptian Empire, the British Empire, (Atlantis?) and so on. If anyone remembers their history, little Portugal once ruled the seas. What makes anyone think ours is any different? We have a chance right now to halt it, but will people be willing to give up their Free Bubble Up and Rainbow Stew.

jocko
05-24-2013, 04:58 PM
its really not a scandal. it is just day to day operations by the obmmer administration..

Armybrat
05-24-2013, 05:01 PM
Chicago doesn't have a monopoly on those tactics.

That's the way LBJ and his cronies ran things down here in Texas for decades.

ltxi
05-24-2013, 05:05 PM
its really not a scandal. it is just day to day operations by the obmmer administration..

....and others. Check

wyntrout
05-24-2013, 09:31 PM
Obama brought "transparency" to the Offal Office... if that means the usual Chicago criminal politics.

The Offal Office sure fits!

Wynn:D

olympicmotorcars
05-24-2013, 10:27 PM
Every major society in history has rotted and decayed from the inside. Greece, Rome, France, Egyptian Empire, the British Empire, (Atlantis?) and so on. If anyone remembers their history, little Portugal once ruled the seas. What makes anyone think ours is any different? We have a chance right now to halt it, but will people be willing to give up their Free Bubble Up and Rainbow Stew.

I agree. Historically speaking, all goverments eventually turn corrupt because power intoxicates the people in charge and they begin to oppress the population more and more, until eventually they become soft and are conquered by another country , or their oppressed population rises up and overthrows the corrupt leaders.... then the cycle inevitably starts all over again.

When you think about it, it is really amazing things even work as well as they do.

ltxi
05-25-2013, 03:34 PM
Every major society in history has rotted and decayed from the inside. Greece, Rome, France, Egyptian Empire, the British Empire, (Atlantis?) and so on. If anyone remembers their history, little Portugal once ruled the seas. What makes anyone think ours is any different? We have a chance right now to halt it, but will people be willing to give up their Free Bubble Up and Rainbow Stew.

Rise and Fall has always been the way of it. We've had our time on top. Next be China's turn.

codegeek
05-25-2013, 03:42 PM
The Democratic National Committee says we are making up scandals out of thin air. Now, if you will excuse me, I have to find my tinfoil hat. The daily government download just can't wait.

downtownv
05-25-2013, 04:30 PM
In China, the people rose against the oppressors! There's only one way that would happen here. When the Gov tells the low information folks the freebies are done we're outta money. Tick tock tick tock Tick tock tick tock Tick tock tick tock Tick tock tick tock....

Bawanna
05-25-2013, 05:00 PM
We were long out of money in the first month of the first term, what are we giving them now? Tick tock, tick tock, tick tock.

downtownv
05-25-2013, 05:54 PM
They have not told Shanaynay no mo' Foodstamps, sect 8 free rent, freebama phones. Welfare, frre daycare, free classroom Breakfasts/Lunches and after school care, no mo' useless classes at the local college. That's when TSHTF time starts. Let the games begin!:7: