Ned Lamont declined to be interviewed for this story

was that wrong? should i not have done that?

Wealthy Maine couple accused of killing neighbor’s trees to secure ocean view, poisoning public beach in the process

Two Maine millionaires are bickering in court over accusations that one poisoned the other's trees to score the ultimate ocean view — and that in doing so, a lethal herbicide leached into their small community's only public beach.  

Lisa Gorman, wife of the late LL Bean president Leon Gorman, claims that her neighbor applied herbicide to her oak trees without consent in 2021, The Associated Press reported. 

Neighbor Amelia Bond, former CEO of St. Louis Foundation, then offered to split the cost to remove the dying trees from the front of the Camden home in 2022, according to legal documents reviewed by the AP. This gave Bond an unobstructed view of Penobscot Bay, an idyllic harbor filled with lobster boats, yachts and schooners. 

The destruction didn't stop at the Gorman property. Herbicide Tebuthiuron spread next door to the town's only public seaside beach, prompting a legal investigation. Residents were seen walking their dogs just 500 feet away from the soil where the herbicide, lethal to aquatic plants, was detected, according to the AP. 

Bond and her husband, Arthur Bond III, an architect whose aunt is former U.S. Sen. Kit Bond, have paid thousands to the state and $1.5 million to Gorman, the town's planning and development director told the AP. Most acknowledged that the fabulously wealthy part-time residents "from away" — the Mainer's expression for out-of-towners — have enough money to comfortably shoulder fines and get away with their actions. 

"They just pay the fine because they have plenty of money," Hodgson said. "That’s the town we live in."

Then again, there’s this:

The herbicide at the center of the skirmish, Tebuthiuron, was also used by an angry Alabama football fan to avenge his team's loss by killing oak trees at rival Auburn in 2010. 

That fan, Harvey Updyke, admitted to poisoning the trees and received jail time, the AP reported. 

[Three year sentence, minimum six months served, five years probation.]

"The cupboard is bare. There's (sic) no more cuts to make." Nancy Pelosi, 9/21/2013

“and Loan forgiveness and citizenship, too – allahu akbar, baby”

But there’s been plenty of restocking of that cupboard since she made that preposterous claim. For instance …

Dem Sen. Patty Murray Seeks Millions for Anti-Semitic Mosque Whose Leader Called Jews 'Despicable Apes'

The Muslim Association of Puget Sound hosted speakers who praised Palestinian 'martyrs,' referred to Jews as 'filth'

The Democrats’ top Senate appropriator is seeking millions of dollars in taxpayer funds for an Islamic organization in Washington state that has preached anti-Semitism, cheered Hamas’s "victory" over Israel, and hosted Palestinian activists who urge resistance against Israel "by any means necessary."

Sen. Patty Murray (D., Wash.), the chairwoman of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee, requested $2.5 million for the Muslim Association of Puget Sound last month for the construction of a clinic, a massive windfall for an organization that received $6.2 million in revenue in 2022. That’s on top of an $850,000 earmark that Murray landed for the organization earlier this year to provide tech training for "underrepresented communities."

>>>

The Biden administration has awarded millions of dollars in Department of Homeland Security grants to mosques whose leaders have called Jews "an arrogant breed of people" and called on Allah to "eradicate [Zionists] from existence," the Washington Free Beacon reported.

The Muslim Association of Puget Sound, the largest Islamic group in Washington, has provided a platform for similar rhetoric. Mohammad Joban, the mosque’s head imam, apologized [uh huh] in 2019 for preaching that Allah transformed Jews into "despicable apes" for disobeying him.

Joban and other speakers hosted by the Muslim association have praised Hamas and other "liberation" groups’ attacks on Israel

>>>>

The cleric, who referred to Israel as "the killers of the babies," declared the residents of Gaza the "winners" of the Israel-Hamas war. As evidence of Israel’s defeat, Joban said, "there’s no school, no university, no services" in some parts of Israel.

During a sermon on Nov. 3, Sheikh Hasib Noor called on Allah to "accept our martyrs" in Gaza and "destroy their enemy and your enemy," according to the Middle East Media Research Institute. Noor prayed to "destroy the occupying Zionists" and "cleanse the Al-Aqsa Mosque of their filth."

Then there is an event with Palestine Chronicle publisher Ramzy Baroud, whose outlet published the writings of Abdullah Aljamal, a Hamas affiliate who held three Israelis hostage in the wake of the October 7 attack.

Baroud declared at a talk hosted by the association on June 4, 2021, that Israel has "no right to self-defense" and Palestinians have a right to liberation "by any means necessary."

A failed inspection, or did the buyer discover that, even at $1.350 million, no one else wanted it, and rethought his bid ?

3 Hickory Drive a 1901 Mediterranean in Stamford’s “prestigious” Southfield Point, was reported under contract on June 10th, but has now been returned to the active roster. It’s been asking $2.1 million lately, but that number has ranged lower over the past five years, dropping to just $1.350 in 2020.

Yes, it’s Stamford: high taxes, lousy schools, yadada, but, depending on this home’s condition, and how close you can get to that $1.350 price, I’m amazed by how much house you can get in our poorer neighbor to the east compared to, say, Chickahominy.

I'd thought Sam Goldbrick had converted his house on Glen Avon into homeless housing and left town, but apparently not; that's too bad.

GOLDBRICK: Camillo’s Absence at Pride and Juneteenth Events Should Not Be a Surprise

Greenwich Republican first selectman Fred Camillo was a no-show at this month’s Pride celebration at Greenwich Town Hall.  And you won’t see him at Greenwich’s Juneteenth commemoration either.  Greenwich Free Press reported that Camillo has a prior engagement.  What exactly is keeping him from attending those events?  According to his executive assistant, Ken Borsuk, the first selectman won’t appear for Juneteenth because “he’s taking some personal days and is out of Town.”

>>>

[N]o one should be surprised that Camillo would no-show for these two important [sic] celebrations.  It was Camillo, after all, who just last fall attempted to implement a “flag law” that would have allowed him to ban the flying of the Pride and the Juneteenth flags at Town Hall.  …

During his decade in the Connecticut legislature, state representative Camillo voted repeatedly for racist “voter ID” laws that targeted Black and Hispanic voters with what a federal judge in North Carolina described as “almost surgical precision.” [And what a North Carolina judge was doing in Connecticut, we’ll never know]. Camillo and his fellow Republicans also voted repeatedly against amending the Connecticut constitution to permit early voting.  ….

Fred Camillo demonstrated his hostility to the LGBTQ community by voting against the nomination of Andrew McDonald in 2018 to serve as chief justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court.  McDonald was a tremendously well qualified candidate [so say the Democrats, so so say all] for chief justice, having been a partner in a leading Connecticut law firm, serving as a state senator, and as chief legal counsel to the governor of Connecticut, before being named as an associate justice of the state supreme court.  But when he was nominated to be chief justice, the GOP balked.  You see, Andrew McDonald is openly gay, and married to a man, and Republicans were determined to demonstrate their anti-LGBTQ bigotry by blocking his nomination.  Fred Camillo and every other Republican legislator except one voted against his nomination.

Given his history, no one should be surprised that Fred Camillo can’t be bothered to show up for Pride or Juneteenth celebrations.  But no one should consider his no-shows acceptable.

Well, anyone who scoffs at feel-good, meaningless parades, slogans and suburban lawn signs, and despises those hypocritical white liberals who participate in such empty activities probably finds Fred’s refusal to join in Goldbrick’s and his fellows’ pseudo-outrage entirely acceptable.

As an aside, I’m sick of frauds like Goldbrick feeling so free to call anyone who disagrees with him a racist homophobe. If these people didn’t believe that everything and everyone was racist, I’d be offended. As it is, I suggest the following for this fine fellow:

Victor Davis Hanson's family has lived in California for generations — he still does — and he has some observations

in memoriam

How California’s Paradise Become our Purgatory

How and why did California end up as a warning to Western civilization of what might be in store for anyone who followed its nihilism?

By Victor Davis Hanson

June 20, 2024

California has become a test case of the suicide of the West. Never before has such a state, so rich in natural resources and endowed with such a bountiful human inheritance, self-destructed so rapidly.

How and why did California so utterly consume its unmatched natural and ancestral inheritance and end up as a warning to Western civilization of what might be in store for anyone who followed its nihilism?

The symptoms of the state’s suicide are indisputable.

Governor Gavin Newsom enjoyed a recent $98 billion budget surplus—gifted from multibillion-dollar federal COVID-19 subsidies, the highest income and gas taxes in the nation, and among the country’s steepest sales and property taxes.

Yet in a year, he turned it into a growing $45 billion budget deficit.

At a time of an over-regulated, overtaxed, and sputtering economy, Newsom spent lavishly on new entitlements, illegal immigrants, and untried and inefficient green projects.

Newsom was endowed with two of the wettest years in recent California history. Yet he and radical environmentalists squandered the water bounty—as snowmelts and runoff long designated for agricultural irrigation were drained from aqueducts and reservoirs to flow out to sea.

Newsom transferred millions of dollars designated by a voter referendum to build dams and aqueducts for water storage and instead blew up four historic dams on the Klamath River. For decades, these now-destroyed scenic lakes provided clean, green hydroelectric power, irrigation storage, flood control, and recreation.

California hosts one-third of the nation’s welfare recipients. Over a fifth of the population lives below the property line. Nearly half the nation’s homeless sleep on the streets of its major cities.

The state’s downtowns are dirty, dangerous, and increasingly abandoned by businesses—most recently Google—that cannot rely on a defunded and shackled police.

Newsom’s California has spent billions on homeless relief and subsidizing millions of new illegal migrant arrivals across the state’s porous southern border.

The result was predictably even more homeless and more illegal immigrants, all front-loaded onto the state’s already overtaxed and broken healthcare, housing, and welfare entitlements.

Newsome raised the minimum wage for fast-food workers to $22 an hour. The result was wage inflation rippling out to all service areas, unaffordable food for the poor, and massive shut-downs and bankruptcies of fast food outlets.

Twenty-seven percent of Californians were born outside of the United States. It is a minority-majority state. Yet California has long dropped unifying civic education, while the bankrupt state funds exploratory commissions to consider divisive racial reparations.

California’s universities are hotbeds of ethnic, religious, and racial chauvinism and infighting. State officials, however, did little as its campuses were plagued for months by rampant and violent anti-Semitism.

Almost nightly, the nation watches mass smash-and-grab attacks on California retail stores. Carjackers and thieves own the night. They are rarely caught, even more rarely arrested—and almost never convicted.

Currently, Newsom is fighting in the courts to stop the people’s constitutional right to place on the ballot initiatives to restore penalties for violent crime and theft.

Gas prices are the highest in the continental United States, given green mandate formulas and the nation’s highest, and still raising, gasoline taxes—and are scheduled to go well over $6 a gallon.

Yet its ossified roads and highways are among the nation’s most dangerous, as vast sums of transportation funding were siphoned off to the multibillion-dollar high-speed rail boondoggle.

The state imports almost all the costly vitals of modern life, mostly because it prohibits using California’s own vast petroleum, natural gas, timber, and mineral resources.

As California implodes, its embarrassed government turns to the irrelevant, if not ludicrous.

It now outlaws natural gas stoves in new homes. It is adding new income-based surcharges for those who dutifully pay their power bills—to help subsidize the 2.5 million Californians who simply default on their energy bill with impunity.

>>>>

Meanwhile, a tiny coastal elite, empowered by $9 trillion in Silicon Valley market capitalization, fiddled while their state burned.

California became a medieval society of plutocratic barons, subsidized peasants, and a shrinking and fleeing middle class. It is now home to a few rich estates, subsidized apartments, and unaffordable middle-class houses.

California suffers from poorly ranked public schools—but brags about its prestigious private academies. Its highways are lethal—but it hosts the most private jets in the nation.

The fantasies of a protected enclave of Gavin Newsom, Nancy Pelosi, and the masters of the Silicon Valley universe have become the abject nightmares of everyone else.

In sum, a privileged Bay Area elite inherited a California paradise and turned it into purgatory.

RELATED:

Los Angeles Opens Homeless Shelter That's Nicer Than Some Houses

xThe city of Los Angeles has a homeless problem.

Okay, a lot of California's big cities do (given who runs it), but what did Los Angeles do about it? Shuffle them off like they did for Xi Jinping when he visited San Francisco? Let churches and private entities do something about it?

Nope, they built a fancy high-rise apartment block, just for homeless people, right in the middle of downtown.

And believe me, it's nicer than some people's houses, boasting 228 studio apartments and 47 one-bedroom apartments, a gym, an art room, a library, and a music room.

All for the low, low cost of $600,000 per room to build on the taxpayers' dime!

As Fox 11 LA described, this is part of the 2016 Proposition HHH passed by voters to allocate $1.2 billion in bonds toward building homeless shelters.

And this is only opening just now?

Oh yeah, and there are going to be two more at some point, but given how it's been almost a decade to build the first one, don't hold your breath for the others.

People on X have rightly made fun of this genius plan to make being homeless preferable to actually earning a living in L.A., with many pointing out that it will either A) be used to shelter illegal immigrants instead of the regular homeless, or B) be utterly trashed in a very short amount of time.

California already has half the nation’s homeless: this will attract still more, but perhaps that’s the point, I don’t know.

They have to get the drug mixture just right, then monitor for side-effects (UPDATED)

Don't Expect to Hear From the White House Much Over the Next Week

President Joe Biden will remain out of town for an extended stay at Camp David as he and his campaign team work to ready the octogenarian commander-in-chief for next week's debate with former President Donald Trump. 

Already away from Washington at his home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, Biden will travel to the presidential retreat in Maryland on Thursday evening for a week-long stay at Camp David. A new FAA NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) confirmed the no-fly zone around Camp David until next Thursday, the date of Biden's showdown with Trump on CNN.

UPDATE: Great minds think alike.

60 years ago, Bangor, Maine voluntarily bombed itself into oblivion

Bangor “Civic Boosters” set off an urban “renewal” explosion — the city has never recovered

When I moved to Bangor in 1981 to practice law, I was struck by the acres of asphalt parking lots and dearth of the historic building that might be expected in a city originally settled in 1769. It was explained to me that the founders of the very firm I’d just joined, George Peabody and George Eaton, had dominated the political scene for decades, taking turns serving as mayor, and they were instrumental in convincing city residents to sign on for a massive urban renewal project. The plan was implemented, the city was razed, and then federal funds dried up, leaving a parker’s paradise, but little else. Bangor looked like hell in 1981; it still does.

Sixty years ago this week, Bangor residents turned out in force to vote on one of the most divisive and transformative measures in the city’s history: the downtown urban renewal project. 

The project, which would eventually see more than 100 buildings demolished across 32 downtown acres, passed with 53 percent of the votes on June 15, 1964. With 7,657 Bangor residents voting on the measure, it was the largest local election turnout in Bangor at the time since 1929.

>>>>

What started as an effort directed almost solely at improving Bangor’s housing stock began to shift focus in 1959. That year, city staff began floating the idea of adding a new project onto the urban renewal effort: a redesign of the area along the Kenduskeag Stream between State and Washington streets that would create new streamside parking, a project that had strong support among the downtown business community. That project was approved in 1960 and completed in 1964.

By 1961, however, the downtown urban renewal idea had snowballed well beyond just the new streamside parking area, to encompass a sweeping redesign of large swaths of downtown.

The federal urban renewal program was changed once again to allow cities to tack additional projects onto established ones. In June 1961 city staff threw together a preliminary plan to revamp most of the east side of downtown, mostly by tearing down old buildings and selling the land back to interested parties. The major argument was that the area was full of badly designed traffic patterns and substandard buildings, and was more suited to the economy of the 19th century — not of the modern age. 

Public opinion on urban renewal became divided. It was one thing to help vulnerable residents access safe, modern housing. It was another to rip up whole blocks of Bangor’s historic downtown. Between June 1961, when the project was first brought forth, and when the measure finally went to the ballot box in June 1964, there were three years of sometimes agonizing public discourse. 

Proponents extolled the project’s virtues with town hall meetings and glossy brochures. Five redesign plans were shown to the public, some of which were even more sweeping than the plan that was eventually adopted in March 1963, which would see all but one building on Exchange Street demolished, and much of Pickering Square and what was then Mercantile Square razed to create more parking and buildable land. It would also see Bangor’s old City Hall at the corner of Hammond and Columbia streets torn down, to be replaced with a parking structure. City Hall would move to its current location on Park Street. 

A large but disparate opposition questioned the project’s cost, its impact on local businesses and the fact that there were many unknowns as to how it would all work out, including how wise it was to assume all that newly vacant land would end up filled. For the six months leading up to the June 1964 referendum, the Bangor Daily News published near-daily articles discussing the matter. The issue was further complicated by a time element — if the matter wasn’t settled by October 1964, the city would lose out on the federal funds earmarked for the project.

In the end, voters saw downtown urban renewal as a chance to redefine the city’s fortunes, moving it away from its storied but long-gone past and toward the future. It was a big gamble, to be sure, but when faced with huge economic challenges like the end of passenger rail in the city and the rumored closure of Dow Air Force Base — which was announced a few months later in 1964 — something had to be done. 

City planners and the public could not, at the time, have known that the legacy of urban renewal would be one of such mixed results. Some good did come out of it — mostly in the form of better housing and housing policy. But most people today associate Bangor’s urban renewal with the wholesale destruction of iconic buildings like the old City Hall, the Bijou and Park Theatres and the Flatiron building, and with a loss of historic character, with little of the promised development taking its place.

“But even today, there are still large, undeveloped swaths of land, mostly used for parking lots, in the urban renewal zone

A few new buildings were constructed on those razed lots, like One Merchants Plaza, where the BDN is housed today, and the Penobscot Judicial Center, which opened in 2009 and was the last major building to be built on an urban renewal lot. But even today, there are still large, undeveloped swaths of land, mostly used for parking lots, in the urban renewal zone — a visible reminder that good intentions can have unintended consequences.