Bush Ignorant on World War II History 1-16-08

Letter to the Journal News

January 16, 2008

 

On January 12, 2008, in the Journal News, it was reported that President George W. Bush stated, at Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem’s Holocaust Memorial, that the Allies should have bombed the railroad tracks leading to the Auschwitz Death Camp. Again our President has shown an incredible lack of knowledge and understanding of commonly known history. Any casual student of World War II would know that it was virtually impossible for high-level bombers to hit any single railroad track from between 10 and 20 thousand feet in the sky. All the marshalling yards, where trains are assembled, were constantly bombed in daylight and the Germans used thousands of soldiers, prisoners and slave-laborers to repair these yards. His pandering remarks, to his hosts, reflect his typical ignorance of the facts. In June of 1944, David Ben-Gurion, the future first Prime Minister of Israel, who was the Chairman of the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem, responded to a proposal by the Allies to bomb Auschwitz. His agency met, and voted eleven to one against bombing the facility. By the time the Allies had discovered that Auschwitz-Birkenau was the final destination for all those helpless victims, over 90% of them had been killed. The leading historian of that gruesome era, Sir Martin Gilbert has written that, “the details and even the name of Auschwitz were not confirmed until the escape of two prisoners in April, 1944.”  Even though there were numerous raids, in late 1944, over the nearby synthetic oil production plant at Monowitz, Allied planes from Foggia, Italy did not have fighter escort. Therefore low-level attacks were virtually impossible. In late January of 2009, and not too soon, former President Bush can go back to clearing brush in Crawford, and spend some of his idle time reading a book once in awhile, and contemplating his disastrous administration.

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

The Advocates 1-9-08

 

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

January 9, 2008

 

Wednesday, January 9, 2008, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  My guest this morning in the studio is Mr. Neil Goldstein, the Executive Director of the American Jewish Congress.

In 1918, leaders within the American Jewish community, consisting of Jewish, Zionists, and immigrant community organizations, convened the first American Jewish Congress (AJCongress) in Philadelphia's historic Independence Hall. Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Felix Frankfurter, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, and others joined to lay the groundwork for a national democratic organization comprised of Jewish leaders from all over the country, to rally for equal rights for all Americans regardless of race, religion or national ancestry.

In addition to its stated goals of equal rights for all, it was founded to broaden Jewish leadership and to present a unified American Jewish position at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. It became effective as a pressure group in 1928 under the leadership of Rabbi Wise, who remained the president and chief spokesperson of the AJCongress until his death in 1949.

Through its emphasis on human rights for all Americans; on protection by government of the weakest among us; and on a just society based on civil law and the Jewish concept of Tzedek —righteousness— the American Jewish Congress has made its mark to a remarkable degree on American society in general and Jewish well-being in particular.

 

Today our discussion and topic will be: Keeping an Old Organization Young! The American Jewish Congress is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year, and it has just had a major success with the Congressional passage of the US-Israel Energy Cooperation Act (USIECA) – a piece of legislation that the AJC conceptualized and helped lead to its passage.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com

rjg727@optonline.net 

 

The Advocates 1-2-08

 

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

 

“The Democrats in the Red Zone”

With author

 AF Cook

 

Wednesday, January 2, 2008, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. My guest this morning from Arlington, Va., is AF Cook, the author of “Democrats in the Red Zone: an Independent Voter’s take on the game of political perception”!

 

AF Cook, who is a graduate of Tufts University, is a writer/editor and, communications consultant. Over the past seven years, she has been editing, writing, and supervising projects for organizations as diverse as the FDAnews, the American Red Cross, the University of Maryland, The Diversity Channel, and the National Geographic Society. She is affiliated with of the National Press Club, and Washington Independent Writers.  

 

Today’s discussion will center on her provocative new and interesting book, “Democrats in the Red Zone: an independent voter’s take on the game of political perception.” Author Cook said, “Since I can remember, it’s been an uphill battle for Democrats to win the hearts and minds of most male voters, Cook writes, “I don’t think the problem is that complicated because, as many guys have told me, they’re not that complicated.”

 

But appealing to male voters is just one part of the Democrats’ overall communication problem with voters, Cook says. If Democrats want the voting majority to accept its policies as right for America, they need to find out better ways of convincing voters of that. Cook believes Dems can learn valuable lessons about competition and communication from the all-American game of football. It doesn’t matter if you’re right, Cook says, if you can’t convince people to agree with you.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

914-524-8381

914-261-6587 (cell)

https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com

rjg727@optonline.net 

 

The Advocates 12-26-07

“The Advocates”

 with

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

 

“What Will 2008 Bring?”

 

Wednesday, December 26, 2007, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. My guests this morning are Lew Perelman calling in from Virginia, and in our studio John Puma from Mount Vernon, Henry Ferlauto from White Plains, and John Berenyi from New York and all over the world.  The topic is what will 2008 look like!

 

Our first guest this morning is Dr. Lewis J. Perelman is a Washington-DC policy and management consultant.  A native of Mount Vernon, New York, and one of my oldest friends, he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics from the City College of New York, and went on to study space and planetary physics at Columbia University and Harvard University.  He later earned his doctoral degree in administration, planning, and policy from Harvard, where his studies focused on sustainable economic development.

 

Dr. Perelman has worked for over 30 years—as an analyst, thought leader, teacher, and consultant—on key strategic problems of human ecology: transportation, energy, environmental protection, human capital management, national security, technology innovation, and economic and business development. In 1992 he gained renown for his best-selling book “School’s Out”, which anticipated much of the revolution that the Internet and information technology would end up causing in learning, work, and the keys to business success. 

 

Dr. Perelman’s recent work has focused on strategies to meet the security, environmental and economic needs to rebuild the nation’s crumbling infrastructure. He also contributed to a recent Commerce Department study of the economic impact of investments in research and innovation.

 

One of our studio guests is Mr. John Berenyi, who has undergraduate and graduate degrees in, engineering, management sciences and applied economics from Columbia University. He has been an investment banker, who has specialized in alternative energy and environmental finance for the past 25 years. In the early part of his career, as a Loeb Fellow in Advanced Environmental Studies at Harvard University, he developed the composite set of environmental indicators to measure the quality of life in cities across the United States. Cities, counties, states, and academic institutions have adopted this work, across America, as a tool for public of public policy and evaluation. Today, after a long career serving companies like Citicorp, HSBC Capital and IF Rothschild, he is the managing director of Ecocite, a Canadian-based company that works as an energy investment trust for eco-property development. John is focused today on the crisis in today’s money markets with a special emphasis on forecasting the impact of the potential credit crunch emanating from the sub prime lenders.

 

Along with Mr. John Berenyi are Mr. John Puma of Mount Vernon, NY, and Henry Ferlauto of White Plains. John Puma’s career has ranged from creating start-up businesses, to developing communications systems for multi-national communication giants, to building housing for the middle and working class citizens, and to developing alternate energy concepts for communities.  John, who was brought up on Long Island, and gravitated to Mount Vernon, was educated at the State University of NY in Buffalo, and took graduate courses in entertainment arts at NYU. John is interested in encouraging and developing local and market interest in alternative fuels and the effort to wean our economy from fossil fuel dependency.

 

Henry Ferlauto, is an account executive with Genius Inside, whohas had many years of experience with information technology. He has been deeply involved with project, vendor, and directory management. He has been an acclaimed trainer, and currently works in areas that include working on project management goals and objectives, along with consulting on sales of collaborative enterprise management software. His special interests are; American history with a focus on the Revolutionary War and NYC, along with public policy issues that affect local government.

 

Today’s discussion will not reflect on the past, but look forward to the New Year, 2008 and our thoughts and predictions regarding the future. We will try to focus on the political races, what will be the economic fallout regarding the sub prime mortgage debacle and the credit markets, global warming its impact, the media and its growth, how science is changing our coming world, entertainment, with some thoughts about the ongoing labor disputes, the steroid revelations in sports and the social trends facing our society.

 

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

The Advocates 12-19-06

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460- “New Day, New Hour.”

 

Wednesday, December 19, 2007, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. My guests this morning are three men from our local area: Joseph P. Murphy, Dan Griffin, and JIm Mazzone. They are all three intimately involved with America’s armed forces, past and present. Mr. Joseph Murphy, who is from Rye, NY, is the Chairman of Congresswomen Nita Lowey’s Service Academy Review Board, which overseas her selections for our military academies, West Point, Annapolis, Air Force Academy, and the Coast Guard. Mr. Murphy with degrees from Saint Francis College and Fordham University, is a veteran of the Marine Corps, and the Naval Reserve. He has served on Service Academy Board that since Dick Ottinger’s (1983) days, and has been involved with education, and helped introduce a Junior ROTC program into the area in the early 1980’s. Mr. Dan Griffin, of White Plains, is a Vietnam veteran and has been President of the Vietnam Veterans of America from 1987 through 1997, and has been the Executive Director of that organization since 1997. He currently serves in the New York Guard as a Chief Warrant Officer. Our last guest is Mr. Jim Mazzone of White Plains, who after graduating from the Military College of the Citadel, in South Carolina, served in the Marine Corps as a Rifle Platoon Commander. Mr. Mazzone was the past Commander of the Marine Corps League Detachment in White Plains, and now serves as the Area Vice Commandant for the Marines and oversees ten detachments in the Southeast Area of the State of New York.  Mr. Mazzone serves on various boards and committees regarding veterans and his alma mater, The Citadel.

 

Today’s discussion will center on, their concerns regarding recruiting for both the service academies and the regular armed forces in this era, the needs and problems facing veterans in our area. These will include their thoughts on the Veteran’s Administration, health care, housing, jobs, and the re-adjustment and transition to civilian life. We will also talk about their general views on the military, and how they see the all-volunteer army, which is being heavily supplemented by the National Guard and Reserves, succeeding in the future.

 

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

The Advocates 12-12-07

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460- “New Day, New Hour.”

 

Wednesday, December 12, 2007, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. My special guest this week is Richard Feldman, author of the riveting new book. Ricochet, Confessions of a Gun Lobbyist, published by John Wiley & Sons, and will be available in 2008

 

Today’s discussion will center on, Mr. Feldman’s rise through GOP politics, and his association and experiences, with both the National Rifle Association and the gun lobby in America. His revelatory book will reveal his education about guns, his philosophy about gun ownership and the need for people to be concerned about their self-defense, and his gradual disillusionment with the current leadership of the National Rifle Association.

 

Richard Feldman was raised in Nassau County, and attended Boston University, before graduating from Union College in the early 1970’s. He is a practicing lawyer and he believes that the NRA is not an effective advocate for its member’s interests. He articulates the case that their obsessive desire for power, their scare-mongering and drive for money, undermines reasonable solutions that would not only protect gun owner’s rights while reducing accidental shootings and gun violence. Ricochet is not a confessional tell-all about the evils of gun ownership. It is in reality an expose of the NRA, and how it has betrayed the trust of legitimate gun owners and sportsman, who cherish the Second Amendment. Feldman believes that the NRA has “inadvertently strengthened the hand of those who would take your guns away.”

 

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution: Right of people to bear arms not to be infringed. “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”  

 

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

The Advocate 12-5-07

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460- “New Day, New Hour.”

 

Wednesday, December 5, 2007, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. My special guest this week will be Michael Carriere, who is currently the Vice President of the Central Labor Council of the AFL-CIO in Westchester and Putnam Counties.  We will also have here today Mr. Glen Hockley, a current member of the White Plains City Council and a strong supporter of trade unionism in White Plains, and Westchester County.

 

Today’s topic will be the “prevailing wage,” what it is, and how important is it to the health and welfare of members of the trade unions of not only New York, but around the country. Also as part of this discussion I will ask Mr. Carriere his thoughts on the twin issues that affect American labor, cheap imports from undemocratic, non-unionized countries like China, India and the Pacific Rim, who do not have safety or health standards that come anywhere near matching ours, and proliferation of undocumented workers that are flooding our shores and under-cutting the wages of American citizens and workers. 

 

 As a background to the discussion of the “prevailing wage,” almost all public works constructions are required by the Davis Bacon Act to pay all workers who work on public works projects the “prevailing wage,” in the local area. By definition established over a long period, this wage approximates the local union scale for the particular trade covered. This rate is usually much higher than the wages paid for private work and the contractor has to adjust their bid accordingly face serious consequences. As part of that agreement there must be a “certified payroll,” which is one means to verify compliance.  All contractors working on public work projects are required to provide on a weekly basis a certified copy of the weekly payroll on a specific project naming all workers and showing wages, deductions and benefits paid including a check number. If one doesn’t comply with the “prevailing wage” rules the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) can use their investigative arm and authority, which could result in adverse rulings against the contractor and the penalties can be onerous.

 

Mr. Carriere, who has been a Union member for 20 years, came from a Union family. He started a glazier for Local Union 1087 and held many elected positions, before and after, the merger with District Council 9 and the consolidation of Local Unions 206 and 1087.  He is also a strong advocate of apprentice programs, and has contributed his time, and the efforts his union in many charitable projects that include the YMCA rehabilitation in White Plains, food pantries, toys for tots, The Children’s Hospital in Valhalla, various projects in Yonkers and church rehabilitations in Port Chester and Brewster.

 

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

The Advocates 11-28-07

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460- “New Day, New Hour.”

 

Wednesday, November 28, 2007, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  My special guest this morning Dr. Lewis J. Perelman, and the topic will revisit the subject raised two weeks ago by Professor Charles Perrow, regarding the natural conflict between the “green” and “blue” agendas.

 

Dr. Lewis J. Perelman is a Washington-DC policy and management consultant.  A native of Mount Vernon, New York, he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics from the City College of New York, and went on to study space and planetary physics at Columbia University and Harvard University.  He later earned his doctoral degree in administration, planning, and policy from Harvard, where his studies focused on sustainable economic development.

 

Lewis Perelman has worked for over 30 years—as an analyst, thought leader, teacher, and consultant—on key strategic problems of human ecology: transportation, energy, environmental protection, human capital management, national security, technology innovation, and economic and business development. In 1992 he gained renown for his best-selling book “School’s Out”, which anticipated much of the revolution that the Internet and information technology would end up causing in learning, work, and the keys to business success.

 

Dr. Perelman currently is planning an online symposium for the Public Entity Risk Institute, scheduled for January, on the subject of “Infrastructure Risk and Renewal”.  Reflecting Dr. Perelman's own recent policy work, the symposium will particularly focus on the growing clash between a “green” policy agenda, concerned with environmental protection and efficiency, and a contrasting “blue” policy agenda, concerned with human security and survival.

 

While the “green” agenda often claims to aim at “sustainability,” Lewis Perelman warns that not everything that pretends to be “sustainable” really is. True sustainability, Perelman argues, requires a prudent mix of both the green and the blue goals—not only protection against long-range threats but also preparedness, agility, flexibility, and the capacity to adapt quickly to new circumstances. In one word, resilience.

One of the first analysts at the U.S. government’s 30-year-old Solar Energy Research Institute, and recently a fellow at the government’s new Homeland Security Institute, Dr. Perelman has a unique perspective to combine the green and the blue agendas into an overall scheme of social resilience. He criticizes both the green agenda of environmental protection and the blue agenda of national security for being commonly obsessed with a self-defeating strategy of centralized command and control, prevention, and resistance to change. Instead, he sees an emerging challenge within both the green and blue domains from an    alternative policy paradigm that emphasizes decentralization, distributed responsibility, entrepreneurial initiative, adaptation to change, and overall community resilience.

 

Also joining us again is retired Army Colonel Jeff Gaynor, our call-in guest from Herndon, Va., who is the chief operating officer of eNTEGRITI. His new business interest and activity revolves around the concept of preparing and hardening our infrastructure so it can be more economically sustained and can be more resilient against potential natural and man-made challenges. While in the military, his service encompassed over 30 years of enlisted and comissioned experience. His assignments included: Communications Monitor, Counterintelligence Agent and Operations Officer; Infantry Advisor to Vietnamese Territorial Forces in An Loc; Brigade Intelligence Officer and Secretary General Staff, 25th Infantry Division; Director of the Secretary of Defense/Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Current Intelligence Presentations Division, Defense Intelligence Agency; 511th Military Intelligence Battalion Commander; Army Programs Officer, General Defense Intelligence Program; and Presidential Communications and Security Officer and Alternate Military Aide to the President during the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations.

Mr. Gaynor is the recipient of: The Silver Star; Defense Superior Service Medal; Legion of Merit; three awards of the Bronze Star Medal; Combat Infantryman’s, Joint Staff and Presidential Staff Identification adges and two awards of the Department of Defense Exceptional Civilian Service Medal.

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

The Advocates 11-15-07

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460-

 

Thursday morning November 15, 2007, at 9:00 am, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  My special guest this morning is Charles Perrow, the author of the most interesting book, The Next Catastrophe, from Princeton University Press, which addresses the problem of reducing our vulnerabilities to natural, industrial and terror driven disasters and Mr. John Puma of Mount Vernon, a builder, who has spent most of his career managing communication infrastructure, and has a strong interest in alternate energy sources.

 

Charles Perrow is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Yale University. He is a past Vice President of the Eastern Sociological Society; a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (1981-2, 1999); Fellow of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science; Resident Scholar, Russell Sage Foundation, 1990-91; Fellow, Shelly Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies, 1995-96; Visitor, Institute for Advanced Studies, 1995-96, Princeton University; former member of the Committee on Human Factors, National Academy of Sciences, of the Sociology Panel of the National Science Foundation, and of the editorial boards of several journals. Currently he is a member of the National Academy’s committee on dependable software systems.  An organizational theorist, he is the author of seven books (three receiving prizes), including: The Radical Attack on Business (1972), Organizational Analysis: A Sociological View (1970), Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay (1972; 3rd ed., 1986), Normal Accidents: Living with High Risk Technologies (1984, revised, 1999), The AIDS Disaster: The Failure of Organizations in New York and the Nation (1990) with Mauro Guillen; Organizing America: Wealth, Power, and the Origins of American Capitalism (2002);  The Next Catastrophe: Reducing Our Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters (2007); and over 60 articles.

 

His current interests are in managing complexly interactive, tightly coupled systems (including hospitals, nuclear plants, chemical plants, power grids, aviation, the space program, and intelligent transportation systems); the challenge and limits of network centric warfare; self-organizing properties of the Internet, the electric power grid, networks of small firms, and terrorist organizations; and the possibilities for restructuring society to reduce our vulnerability to increasing disasters, whether natural, industrial/technological, or deliberate.  These grow out of his work on “normal accidents,” with its emphasis upon organizational design and systems theory.  His consultancies and workshops include the US Forest Service, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, NASA, FAA, Naval War College, NIH, NSF, Intel Corp., and DaimlerChrysler.

 

Our other guest in the studio, is Mr. John Puma of Mount Vernon, NY, a businessman and serial entrepreneur whose career has ranged from management consulting, starting and building companies in emerging technologies, to developing communications systems for multi-national communication giants, to real estate development for the middle and working class citizens, and most recently to work in the alternate energy field.  John, who was brought up on Long Island, and gravitated to Mount Vernon, was educated at the State University of NY, in Buffalo, and took graduate courses in entertainment arts at NYU.

 

I also expect Mr. Jeff Gaynor as a special call-in guest from Herndon , Va., who is the chief operating officer of eNTEGRITI.

Mr. Gaynor retired from the Army as a Colonel. His service encompassed over 30 years of enlisted and commissioned, Armor, Infantry, and Military Intelligence experience. His assignments included: Communications Monitor, Counterintelligence Agent and Operations Officer; Infantry Advisor to Vietnamese Territorial Forces in An Loc; Brigade Intelligence Officer and Secretary General Staff, 25th Infantry Division; Director of the Secretary of Defense/Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Current Intelligence Presentations Division, Defense Intelligence Agency; 511th Military Intelligence Battalion Commander; Army Programs Officer, General Defense Intelligence Program; and Presidential Communications and Security Officer and Alternate Military Aide to the President during the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations.

Mr. Gaynor is the recipient of: The Silver Star; Defense Superior Service Medal; Legion of Merit; three awards of the Bronze Star Medal; Combat Infantryman’s, Joint Staff and Presidential Staff Identification adges and two awards of the Department of Defense Exceptional Civilian Service Medal.

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

The Advocates 11-8-07

The Advocates with Richard J. Garfunkel on WVOX – AM Radio 1460-

 

Thursday morning November 8, 2007, at 9:00 am, I am hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM on your dial, or you can listen to its live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  My special guests this morning are Sonja Brown, Kevin Morgan, and Judy Beville. These three individuals were just elected in an historic landslide to represent the Town of Greenburgh.  They accomplished a feat that has rarely, if ever, been done. They triumphed in the September 18th Democratic Primary, defeating three party-endorsed incumbents with 36 years experience on the public payroll. Yesterday they completed this unprecedented sweep in the general election over the same foes. They are a part of Supervisor Paul Feiner’s new team, as the Supervisor won his 9th consecutive term with over 80% of the vote.  In January, Kevin and Sonja will join the Greenburgh Town Board and hopefully a new era of cooperation, civility and collegiality will again move forward in Westchester’s biggest and most diverse town. Judy Beville, a current member of the Valhalla Board of Education, an educator, and a specialist in mentoring youth, will be the Town’s new Clerk, after the 14-year tenure of Alfreda Williams. Kevin Morgan, a professional Legal Aid Society investigator, a member of the Planning Board, and a decorated, retired police office will join Sonja Brown, a social worker, who has been an advocate for better schools, mentoring minority youth, and has been called an “Outreach Dynamo” on the new Town Board.  We will discuss the campaign, their vision for the future, and their upcoming plan of action for Greenburgh!

 

Meanwhile the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “ issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

Richard J. Garfunkel