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Today's Polital Picture (continued) by: f. g. lopriato y lopez
II
diavofo no e diavola per essere diavolo,
Today's Political Picture is reminiscent of the death scene in Zorba, The Greek. In the movie Zorba's wife is dying, her friends and neighbors drop in to take her meager belongings on the pretext of "visiting" her, while Zorba attempts to comfort her in her final seconds of life. Our economy may not be dying, but it is seriously ill, yet everybody and his or her special interest is trying to capitalize on the bailouts. Including New Mexico.
For instance: If Albuquerque is in financial striates, it's because Mayor
Marty and the Municipal Mafia fell for The Texan's BS. Time and time again
they went out and did things on Bush's promise, complaining about unfounded
demands from upstairs but digging us deeper in the hole on the promise
that the check was in the mail.
The people did that, but they went on spending like a bunch of power-drunk
republicans.
The exploitation of government, religion, and race for monetary, political, or social persona! benefit is rapidly becoming a thing of the past, like the old time filling stations, the field became too overcrowded for small timers to keep up with the competition.
More and more only the fittest of the fit survive, and fittest are playing
for Billions, while small-fry are selling their souls for a few hundred
thousand and even less in many cases.
Omnipotent Kaffe Klutch Klique KaLLers to Konservative radio Koncure that
the bank regulator fell asleep at the wheel, and didn't enforce the regulations.
During the Great Depression of !929, FDR enacted a series of laws called
"The Depression Laws, " to insure that it would never happen again. Ronald
Regan, in his wisdom, tossed all those laws out, doing away with our safety
nets. Today the very same entities that inspired Regan to trash them and
cheered him on when he did are lamenting what we, who went though it once
knew was inevitable if banks were not subject to "regul atuib,"
First of ail, you have to picture Albuquerque as it was then., not as it
is now.
Old Town had been the center of socia!, commercial, and politica!; activities, not to mention the religious aspects of the community until the railroad came, after that Old Town had been abandoned and, except for the church, Charley Mann's general store, the post office and one little cafe, a home for unwed mothers it remained a neglected ghost town that was not long in deteriorating. The proper name for Old Town then was Old Albuquerque. and it's limits were from what is now Mountain Road, to about what is now Cebtrak Avebye, and from where the roads now split to form Old Town Road and Mountain Road. to the East side of what you now know as Rio Grande Blvd. What had been the Territorial Fair became The Society Hall, a dance hall! that drew people from everywhere within what you now know as Albuquerque but then identified themselves as independent villages, Atriscom, Barelas, Armijo, Los Tomases, , Duranes, Los Griegos, Corrales, Alameda, Nartubez Town, etc. Going North from the Society Hal! there were two houses and then Old Town Schoo!, then residences still referred to as El Rancho de ..... " although, as the families often grew and married, those ranchos had been divided and subdivided so much that what had originally started as land grant that had to touch the mountains on one end and the other had shrunk down with barely enough room to accommodate a house and, perhaps a small garden. The villages mentioned above also started as grants hence the names, (to be continued.) II/ fglyl |
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by Pat Hostetter-Lopez @ H&L Enterprises-Updated 2/23/2009
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