Weekly Wilson - Blog of Author Connie C. Wilson

Welcome to WeeklyWilson.com, where author/film critic Connie (Corcoran) Wilson avoids totally losing her marbles in semi-retirement by writing about film (see the Chicago Film Festival reviews and SXSW), politics and books----her own books and those of other people. You'll also find her diverging frequently to share humorous (or not-so-humorous) anecdotes and concerns. Try it! You'll like it!

GOP Debate on CNN Is Right-Wing Fest for 7 Hopefuls

Mitt Romney: Presidential Front-runnerCNN’s “live” coverage of the 7 Republican hopefuls debating from St. Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire just concluded.   Anderson Cooper is winding up the John King moderated debate.

Ron Paul is talking with Anderson Cooper about the stark contrast between his position on bringing all troops home from foreign engagements and the less dramatic opinions of the other candidates. “All great nations usually go down when they spread themselves too thin around the world,” said Paul to Cooper. “Financially, it’s a lot easier to go after this overseas spending than to go after health care.” Ron Paul said in comparing this year’s debate versus those he was involved in in 2008, “There was a difference. The reactions were different. The country now is definitely moving in the direction of less government and a different foreign policy.”

On the role of faith in public life, Paul said, “I think faith has something to do with the people. …You can’t teach people how to be moral.” Paul underscored the 1st Amendment religious freedom tenet.  Is Christianity under attack? asked Cooper? “I think, to some degree,” responded Ron Paul.   Paul said, “You can’t legislate morality…the law has to have a moral fiber to it. That’s how I think it should apply. It’d be nice if we could remake Afghanistan, but the blowback is too big.”

In speaking with John King, David Gergen and Gloria Borger,   Ron Paul underscored that there is a retreat from positions of the previous campaign debates on foreign policy. Gergen said what struck him was how much more conservative the Republican Party has become and that they are “pretty far to the right.”

The exchange with Herman Cain (former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza) about hiring Muslims came up. Cain:  “A lot of Muslims are not totally dedicated to this country,” was attributed to Herman Cain. He said he would not be comfortable with appointing Muslims to his Cabinet. Newt Gingrich said he “wanted to go out on a limb here” in demanding an oath of fealty for those who would serve in his Administration.

Andy Card, former White House Chief of Staff for President Bush, said that he felt Herman Cain was trying to dig himself out of a hole on the entire Muslim line of questioning.  Cain appeared to be in a hole all night, as far as I could determine.  Gergen said that Truman had loyalty tests and it was considered a bad blot on his record and led to McCarthyism.  Cornell Belcher, CNN correspondent, said he was “not comfortable with him (Cain).” Independent and moderate voters would not be comfortable with this answer about “loyalty tests.”

I wasn’t comfortable with any of the candidates onstage at the Republican debates. Those who performed best were Mitt Romney, the front-runner and Michelle Bachmann, the former Senator from Minnesota. Although Bachmann can sound as bigoted as they come, this night she announced that, if elected, she wouldn’t let her personal beliefs intrude on state’s rights, especially in regards to abortion and/or its banning.

Attacks

 

President Obama took a beating all night long. “He’s failed the American people “said Romney of Obama. Bachmann said, “His report card right now has a big old ‘F.’” Robert Gibbs, former Press Secretary for Obama, speaking afterwards on behalf of the Administration, said, “If you wanted to hear the economic problems that set us up for our current problems, that is exactly what these candidates talked about tonight…We had a massive economic recessions that crested in September of 2008.” Gibbs said, “We have to understand what got us into this mess and we have to make sure we don’t hire somebody to get us right back into this mess.”  Gibbs commented on the reforms imposed on the financial institutions and how the Republican candidates want to un-do those financial regulations, as well as slash Medicare and Social Security.

King said, “It’s either a choice or a referendum.”  If it’s a choice, said moderator King, then many Democrats are saying, “Where is he? Why isn’t he out there?” Gibbs responded that the American public wants Obama out there talking to CEO’s and creating more jobs. “It took us a while to get into this mess and it’s going to take us a while to get out,” Gibbs said. He responded to a question from Gloria Borger, CNN Chief Political Analyst, “In May, the polling (CNN) showed that public blamed Bush more than Obama for the mess we’re in.” “I’m not suggesting that this election is going to be about blaming Bush,” said Gibbs as the spokesperson for the White House, “but the policies you heard tonight were the same ones that got us into this mess.  …I think we have to understand that the American people are hurting every day. We have family members that are out of work. We have neighbors that are out of work. ..We’re going to have bits and sparks to this procedure,” defended Gibbs.

David Gergen:  “The question becomes, ‘When is the President going to give us a plan to deal with the slowing of the economy?’”  Gibbs: “I’m not setting this up to be a referendum on George W. Bush, but, first and foremost, we have to continue to do the things like tax cuts for small businesses.” Does Obama have more legislation on the table? asked Gergen.  Gibbs responded that the administration needs to structure this carefully.  (He used, as an example that it can’t be set up so that a business that fired Anderson Cooper on Monday could then hire him back on Tuesday to  get a tax credit.)
“Are there things that we can continue to do to spur the economy?” repeated Gibbs back to Gergen, saying, as an answer, “We’ve got to increase job training.  Some of the jobs that went away we know aren’t coming back.”

From a veteran political junkie’s point of view, I would say that nobody laid a glove on Romney, who looked presidential, and Rick Santorum revealed even more unpleasant things about his arch-conservative personality. (Lately, there have been articles about Mrs. Santorum’s abortion history, but the Santorums are extremely conservative on the topic, even in cases of rape or incest, even though she, herself, basically has been revealed as having had such a procedure.

Herman Cain just came off as extraneous to the debate and, although Pawlenty had a chance to take shots at Romney (which he had just done on a national news program), in person, mano a mano, he demurred and remained polite.  Bachmann did better than anticipated.  Ron Paul, as usual, provided some common sense mixed with some comedy. The arched eyebrows of Romney as he stood next to Ron Paul watching him were priceless. [Surely this will resurface on “Saturday Night Live.”]

The debate about Sharia Law seemed a ridiculous topic, given the true problems this nation faces.  In dial-testing done in real time, the Opera House Republicans and Independents in Rochester, New Hampshire became heated on the topic of right to work laws.  Pawlenty’s remarks on having the “right to work” were popular.  The biggest reaction early on was to that topic. Citizens in Ohio and Wisconsin, where teachers, firefighters and other union employees are under attack (and the Governor of Ohio is a spawn of Fox News) might feel less enthused. The country as a whole might be less enthused about the dismantling of the programs and unions they have counted on all their lives.

Michelle Bachmann reintroduced herself to the American public, forcefully mentioning her 5 children (and 23 foster children) and bringing up her expertise as a tax lawyer.  Andy Card (former White House aide to Bush) said, of Bachmann’s performance:  “I thought Michele Bachmann did a very good job tonight.”  Bachmann scored points on Obama’s failure to raise the debt ceiling, when a Senator. The Tea Party-ers will like her, said the commentators.  “She came across as very electable tonight,” said one talking head.  Cooper wondered what Sarah Palin might have been thinking about Michele Bachmann while watching her this night. Gloria Borger felt she was “the positive candidate” and moved out of Sarah Palin’s shadow.

John King feels Bachmann’s challenge is whether she can move out of her identity as a Tea Party candidate. David Gergen felt she spoke in pithy, interesting sentences and she introduced her biography (repeatedly….Bachmann is a native of Waterloo, Iowa, so who knows how she’ll play in the Iowa caucuses).  Gloria Borger thought Bachmann was more impressive than Rick Santorum, the other social conservative.   Biggest winners were Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann, for me. Winners were declared to be:

51% Romney, Bachmann, 21%, 9% Pawlenty by Republicans.

35% Romney, 26% Bachmann and 12% Pawlenty by Democrats.

Cornell Blecher, CNN African American pundit, said that Michele Bachmann will be one of the last candidates standing.  Why would Pawlenty start an attack and then not follow through?  all commentators asked, in regards to the health care bill Romney initiated in Massachusetts when Governor. The consensus: Romney was the winner; Pawlenty missed an opportunity; Bachmann – most underrated.

The entire Republican debate revealed 7 people who oppose Obama’s Health Care bill, are anti-gay, oppose gay marriage and abortion rights, would like to restore “Don’t ask/don’t tell” and are very, very conservative. Cain and Paul seem to have no shot, but Paul is always amusing and a straight-shooter. Cain, a former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, seemed to have no business being on the stage with the other career politicians, but, then, prior to the debate, one would have said that of Michele Bachmann.

Three Local Authors to Sign Books in Long Grove on September 12, 2011

Three local authors will be signing books in Long Grove during the annual Strawberry Festival, on Sunday, June 12, 2011. The trio will be 2 blocks from the fire station, selling a total of 10 different titles, which range from self-help nonfiction to science fiction to ghost stories set along Route 66.

The 3 local authors taking part in the event are debut author Pauline Marquez, head of last year’s Quad City Book Fair David Dorris, and Connie (Corcoran) Wilson.

Mr. Dorris’ second book, “LIfe Is Too Short” will be on sale, as will titles ranging from “It Came from the 70s: From The Godfather to Apocalypse Now,” “Hellfire & Damnation,” “Out of Time,” “Ghostly Tales of Route 66” (Volumes I, II and III), and “Both Sides Now.” The authors will also be present at the RME (River Music Experience) on July 30 from noon to 8 p.m. Time frame for tomorrow’s signing is noon to 4 p.m.

 

Sarah Palin Documentary Alternative Titles, or “Fear & Loathing in Des Moines”

It was reported in the Chicago Tribune on Thursday, May 26, that a film about Sarah Palin entitled “The Undefeated” is going to be screened first in Iowa. The Hawkeye state already has a reputation for all things corny, as I well know (being a native), so this seems appropriate.

It seems even more apropos should the Palin person decide to announce she is running for President of the United States. After all, if Donald Trump can (and Pat Paulsen before him), why not Sarah Palin? Why else make a movie about a woman who didn’t even finish out her full term a Governor of Alaska and is now reported to be buying real estate in Arizona?

The film is a 2-hour documentary financed by conservative filmmaker Stephen Bannon. With $1 million and Palin’s help and permission, footage has been obtained (and included) of Ms Palin’s time as a member of the Wasilla City Council. (It was not reported if there was film of her resigning her office as Governor mid-way through her term.)

Besides giving me a “heads up” that I must make it a point to catch this no-doubt Oscar-worthy and eminently objective movie, it set off political pundits at the Tribune to the point that an entire article was devoted to possible alternative titles (tongue-in-cheek). They ran in the Sunday, May 29, 2011 Chicago Tribune, and, quite frankly, they are too good to keep under wraps. Some appeared on various blogs, but I have added quite a few original titles of my own:

Possible Alternative Titles for the Film about Sarah Palin’s Illustrious Political Career:

“All About Sarah”

“Dark Victory”

“Forgetting Sarah Palin”

“Mooseferatu”

“To Kill and Field Dress A Mockingbird”

“Children of a Lesser Todd”

“Children of the Corn Meet Children of the Candidate”

“The Devil Wears Mukluks”

“In What Respect, Charlie Brown?”

“I Can See Russia from my Seat Ringside at ‘Dancing with the Stars’”

“Citizen Vain”

“There Will Be Blood Libel”

“Kiss of the Snider Woman”

“Blazing Prattle”

“South from Alaska”

“Desperately Seeking Syntax”

“From Within Sight of Russia, With Love”

“The Todd Also Rises”

“Mama Grizzly, Dearest”

“Birthers of a Nation”

“Must Hate Wolves”

“Motorcycle Mama”

“Driving Miss Dizzy”

“Death Panel Becomes Her”

“Honey! I Exploited the Kids!”

“No Country for Newspaper Reading Sissies”

“Close Encounters of the Third-Rate Kind”

“Nightmare on Elk Street”

“Belfries Are Ringing”

“The Dumb Luck Club”

“I Know That You Quit Last Summer”

“Gone Is the Win”

“Dancing Toward the Dark”

“When Sarah Met Romney”

“The Shawshank Refudiation”

“Fear and Loathing in Des Moines”

Add your own potential title for the new Sarah Palin movie below.

 

Copyright 2011 by Connie Wilson

Silver Feather Award (IWPA)Joins E-Lit Awards

On May 21 at the Union Club, the Chicago branch of  the Illinois Women’s Press Association awarded its Silver Feather awards for writing excellence to several of Connie’s projects, including both of her most recent books, It Came from the ’70s: From The Godfather to Apocalypse Now and Hellfire & Damnation.  Both books have already scored (first-ever) E-Lit awards for their Kindle versions ($8.50 and $2.99, respectively, on Amazon and Barnes & Noble). Hellfire & Damnation, which is organized around Dante’s Inferno and its 9 Circles of Hell, also placed 7th (of 46 nominees) on the Preliminary Stoker Ballot. (Stephen King placed 10th on that ballot) from the HWA (Horror Writers’ Association. A sneak preview of one of the stories from the sequel to follow went up (for 99 cents) as a Kindle short story (6,500 words) on May 17th, entitled “The Bureau.”

A third book Ghostly Tales of Route 66 in Kindle format also was named a Gold Medal winner in the E-Lit awards in the travel category earlier this year. ($9.50 on Amazon and Barnes & Noble). It has only recently been made available in other than print format, although the Kindle format contains several new stories never before published, but has no pictures as the print versions do.

Other categories awarded Silver Feather awards for excellence in writing by the IWPA were:

     Photo on the Web for “The Tall Ships in Chicago at Navy Pier” on www.WeeklyWilson website.

     Writing for the Web:  “Obama in Iowa for Health Care Initiatie:  Tea Partiers Rally Outside Iowa City Fieldhouse.”

     Writing for the Web, Column or Commentary:  “Opinion:  Phil Hare Is Better Choice than Bobby Schilling in Illinois’ 17th District Race,” Yahoo! News.

     Videos for the Website, Special Interest Site:  Hellfire & Damnation, Quad Cities’ Learning, dba Quad City Press

     Writing for the Web, Feature Article:  “What Did General Stanley McChrystal Really Say in the ‘Rolling Stone’ Article that Got Him Fired?”, Yahoo Contributor Network

     Website Development, Special Interest Sites:  www.ConnieCWilson.com, Quad Cities’ Learning, Inc.

     Blogs, Webcontent, Special Interest Sites, “Weekly Wilson:  Chicago Film Festival:  Encounters of the Famous Kind,” WeeklyWilson website.

          Connie signed copies of her newest book, It Came from the ’70s: From The Godfather to Apocalypse Now at the BEA (Book Expo America) on Wednesday, May 25 from 2 to 3 p.m. and she will be selling and signing copies of all of her books at Printers’ Row on Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

   If you miss her there, try the RME (River Music Experience) on July 30th in Davenport, Iowa, during the Bix Road Race weekend which coincides with the RAGBRAI (Register’s Annual Great Bike Race Across Iowa) race finale. She will also be heading out for appearances at an assortment of Family Video stores with the movie book and delivering a lecture at the Moline Club in the near future. (Stay tuned for further developments.)

New York City BEA (Book Expo America) and BlogWorld

I’ve just returned from nearly a week in New York City where I attended the Book Exposition that is the largest in the world and signed copies of “It Came from the ’70s: From The Godfather to Apocalypse Now” from 2 to 3 p.m. on Wednesday, May 25th at the HWA (Horror Writers’ Association) table.

The same day as the signing, I attended the Adult breakfast where Mindy Kahl MC-ed and Diane Keaton was the Celebrity author. The author of “Middlesex” and Charlaine Harris, who created Sookie Stackhouse (of the “True Love” television series) also spoke.

New York Times Best-Selling Author Jonathan Maberry signed before me at the HWA booth, and there was much to admire and browse. No plays this year, but I also attended BlogWorld and a Book Bloggers’ Conference at which Otis from Goodreads was present. A workshop on “Monetizing Your Blog” will help me be a better presented on June 25th during “Blogging for Bucks” at the Midwest Writers’ Center conference.  No wild parties or late nights, but many early mornings and presentations during my week in the Big Apple.

On the way out, I sat next to the parents of a Chicago Sun Times reporter being honored with the Pulitzer Prize for his article on Chicago’s “59 Hours of Violence.” How cool is that? On the way back, I sat next to the new anchorwoman in Sioux City, Iowa and a woman who takes formal portraits of Arabian horses.

“Modern Family” Ends Season with Episode “See You Next Fall”

ABC, May 18, 2011, 10 PM (ET) In an episode entitled “See You Next Fall,” “Modern Family” saluted Alex Dunphy’s graduation (Ariel Winter). Alex is graduating from junior high school and, as Manny (Rico Rodriguez) says to Luke (Nolan Gould), “Do you realize, in just two years we’ll be graduating?” At the moment, Luke is staring at a beach ball floating in the pool and says, “I think I’m moving it with my mind.” Manny—barely missing a beat—says, “Well, at least I will.”

The episode was the perfect blend of wit and slapstick. It was written by Danny Zuker (prominent in the credits each week) and directed by Steven Levitan, one of the series’ creators. Top notch attention, in other words, to this episode.

The opening laughs are centered on Cam’s (Eric Stonestreet) fall into the backyard child’s pool. Mitchell (Jesse Tyler-Ferguson) laughs and Cam is offended. Once they join the rest of the family at Jay and Gloria’s for a pre-graduation party, his iritation is simply intensified when he accidentally walks into both a sliding glass door and the screen door. When the entire group laughs, Cameron, in high dudgeon, says, “Cruelty is genetic.” There is also concern over Jay’s drooping eyelid, which he is reluctant to admit occurred when he had Botox. Cam blurts out, “What were you thinking? You’re a veteran!”

As is foreshadowed during Jay’s attempts to get his gate to automatically rise, the entire graduation group is stuck behind the uncooperative gated fence. Gloria’s solution is to throw a bicycle built for two over the fence, quickly followed by Claire (Julie Bowen) and Phil (Ty Burrell).  They set off for their daughter’s valedictorian address on the bicycle-built-for-two, which promptly suffers a broken chain. There is already concern among the family that Alex’s speech, which is essentially one long complaint about her treatment by her fellow classmates, will be inappropriate and make her a social pariah.  The good advice from older sister Haley (Sarah Hyland) is that Alex simply mouth the words to a mindless pop song. As the line in the script has it:  “It’s a graduation…a celebration of being done with thinking!”

The climax of the episode is the arrival of Phil and Claire at the graduation ceremony. They literally fall down the hill outside the ceremony, causing Cam to laugh. The lines were great in the episode. One of my personal favorites was Luke’s unspoken solution to the “we’re-stuck-behind-the-gate” problem when Phil says (with Luke’s solution still unspoken), “We don’t have time to build a rocket.”

A great episode of  the best sitcom series currently on the air.

 

Cancun Redux, 2011

Now that I’m back in Chicago in 50-degree weather (and have been since Easter Saturday), here are a few shots of Chichen Itza. Chichen Itza translates to “the mouth of the well of the people of Itza.” The Mayans used to throw their human sacrifices down one well (cenote) and drink from the other. The trip to Chichen Itza is one we made many years ago, when they still let you climb the pyramid.

 

Mayan Observatory at Chichen Itza.

If you’ve seen the movie “Against All Odds,” you may be familiar with some of these sights of one of the 7 Wonders (new) of the World.

 

 

 

 

Is this meant to represent a lizard or Quetzalcoatl?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The moon, at times, in Mexico, was bright red. This is a beautiful shot.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A picture of the moon during the now defunct Venetian Boat Night.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now there's somethin' you don't see ever' day!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday,April 15, 2011: Cancun’s Royal Islander

Pancho & Willie's on Friday, April 15, 2011.

Cancun, Mexico, Royal Islander Resort:  We’ve moved down the street now, to the 9th floor penthouse digs at the Royal Islander Resort.  I’m sitting outside enjoying a balmy, slightly windy day, as groceries are being purchased from the downstairs store. We brought at least 7 bags of groceries with us. While we were assured

Two-year-olds need to be entertained during dinners out.

that we could “trade” from the Islander to the Sands, there would be the normal “trading” fee, which was something like $159. For $159, I’ll pack my groceries and move, which we did.

 The daughter and her friend Emmie Futrell went out clubbing (Daddy-O’s has a revolving dance floor, they reported, and it looked as though some of the sweet young things tottering around on it might fall off at any moment) and did not get home till 2:30 a.m. Still, they had to leave for the airport at 12:30 p.m., while we had to pack up all of our clothing and sundries, which included about 13 bags of groceries from our unit and that of the son and daughter-in-law, who were sharing with their good friends. (That unit had 4 children under the age of 5 inside and one of them got sick and threw up in bed during the night).

 We stayed up to watch David Letterman, but, realizing that we’d have to pack early to move, we were not up late. The 23-year-olds in residence at our unit had no such qualms. We took the girls to lunch at LaVeranda restaurant and the Cobb salad was delicious. The Nandas, with children Olivia (the sick one) and Kira were at the next table and they left just ahead of the girls for the trip back home to Chicago, where we heard the temperature was 40 degrees.

Achilles the Iguana will pose with you,,,for a fee.

 

 I am one of the few who has an actual trench coat with her, for  

Scott, Mom and Stacey,

the return. Satch was going to wear shorts. The troops leaving are brown and we had all eaten at Pancho & Willy’s last night, which was a last-minute substitute for the Rainforest Café. Son Scott had asked the taxi folk if the Rainforest Café was still in business and received a positive response. When we got there, wending our way through a display of a tiny lion cub on a leash (name: Kira) whose owner jealously guarded any picture taking that didn’t involve a fee, we learned that the restaurant went out of business 7 months ago. (So much for that idea!)

Pancho & Willy’s was right there (as was the Club known as Coco Bongo). We posed for some silly photographs (included here) and then entered the chaos that is Pancho and Willy’s. A person who looked like he had made up his face to resemble a

Achilles the Iguana and Ava from Scotland enjoy the sun,

vampire blew up balloons for the children, but one of the foursome kept chewing on her balloons and they kept breaking and hurting her. She had not had a nap and spent a lot of time crying about the broken balloons.

 The twins (especially Ava) seemed smitten with the balloon animals they received and, although Ava is not fond of loud noises, they hung in there pretty well for quite a long time, as they did have naps. I ordered whatever I thought would hurt my inflamed mouth the least. All this salsa and “hot” food is not good for Yours Truly. Therefore, I had a chicken dish that involved stuffing a chicken breast with cheese of one sort and putting more cheese (Parmesan, I think) over the top. It was okay. Drinks were served in huge glasses that were very tall and tippy. Stacey’s leaked and soaked the table area in front of her. She also was issued a bib for her fish tacos, as was her father with his chicken tacos.

 Following the extremely loud and noisy meal (and the random picture-taking seen here), we went back to the bus stop. To take the bus downtown costs 8 and ½ pesos, per person. That means that 12 of us could take the bus for 102 pesos, which is less than $10. A cab driver, seeing just Scott at the bus stop, tried to suggest that he could take all of us for the same price as the bus. When he learned that we had twelve people, it quickly became apparent that his plan was unworkable.

Ava really liked the bus. All the way downtown she kept putting her head out the window, like a dog, and saying, “Wow!” Elise seemed to like the bus as well.

When most of us (10 out of 12) returned to the Royal Sands (last week’s haven), the 2 girls went off on a club-hopping adventure. It seems slightly more dangerous in the downtown areas of the city (especially if you do not speak Spanish), but it still seems safe in Cancun. I would not want to send my young adults off by themselves, whether they were male or female (but especially if they were female), after events like the slaying of the young girl in Aruba, and my last words were,” Don’t let anyone put roofies in your drinks.” This may have seemed like a joke; it wasn’t. I am happy to report that both girls displayed enough common sense to have a good time making the rounds and return safely to the Sands. 

As we waited for the bus to come to pick the girls up to take them to the airport for their flight back to Nashville, Emmie said that her boyfriend’s parents have a place at the Moon Palace, and we talked about where that was, in relation to our location. The Moon Palace, which I have heard is very nice, has “floating” weeks. In other words, you don’t have one particular week that is reserved for you. We have “fixed” weeks, but it is possible to trade your week…for a $159 fee.

 Satch and Scott listened to our long-time favorite, Richard (Ricardo) “pitch” them on a penthouse unit at the Sands that went on the market for $14,000. The normal going rate for a penthouse unit, said Richard, had been $47,000. This was a “distress” sale. He didn’t know what the “distress” was (divorce? Ill health? Someone lost his or her job?) but he predicted it would not remain in the system long. The next closest, in terms of a good deal, was every-other-week, which would cost you $16,000 for a non-penthouse unit.
The boys were interested in (maybe) splitting the cost of a unit, but the economic times do not suggest that this is the wisest course of action, just now. They refrained from any purchases and agreed to consider for the future whether any such investment was in their future.
We learned that we first bought in 1997. We had been coming for 3 years prior, which would be 1994, when Stacey was 7 years old. Our first 2 years, we stayed in 2 connecting suites at the Fiesta Americana Condessa. The third year, when Stacey was 10 years old, we brought friend Lisa Lage with us. (That year we flew out of St. Louis and had a horrible time, as we did not have notarized paperwork from Lisa’s parents with us, which caused us to almost have to stay in Texas to rectify the situation.) We bought at the Islander when Stacey was 11, and we have been coming to the Islander and the Sands (one week in each place) ever since.

 Our time at the Royal Islander, where we are on the 9th floor in the penthouse (and where I am typing this now) will expire when we are 77 years old. Our time at the Royal Sands will expire when we are 105. Or, in all probability, we will expire before our time does.

April 12, 2011: From Mexico (Xcaret, Tulum)

Tuesday, April 12, 2011, Cancun, Mexico:

Stacey (Wilson) and Emmie (Futrell) visiting Tulum, Mexico.

The girls (Emmie and Stacey) took an all-day excursion to Xelha today, which saw them also visiting the ruins at Tulum. Most of the pictures below are of the ruins at Tulum, which has a breathtaking view of the ocean and a beach far below.
The girls seemed to really enjoy Xelha, where, they said, a bicycle could be used to move from place to place and visitors could wander off on paths alone, rather than having to move as part of a group tour.

Beach at Tulum, Mexico.

What follows are the pictures that Emmie Futrell shot, mostly in Tulum, Mexico.

Tulum, Mexico ruins.

Tulum: tropical birds.

Ruins at Tulum, Mexico.

Rock Island Arsenal Implicated in Shady Arms Deal

On July 28, 2006, the Army Sustainment Command (i.e., the Rock Island Arsenal) in Rock Island, Illinois (also known to we Quad City natives as Arsenal Island) posted a 44-page document on fbo.gov entitled “A Solicitation for Nonstandard Ammunition.” The order was similar to other orders on fbo.gov, in that it had blank spaces for name and telephone numbers and hundreds of spaces to be filled in.  The document represented a semi-covert operation by the Bush Administration, which wasn’t at all sure that the 2008 presidential election would go Republican. The Bushies wanted to make sure that the Afghanistan rebels would have enough ammunition and weapons to keep fighting, no matter who was president, so they were going to go around Congress, as is often the custom, and prop up the Afghan National Army.

 

The order was a big one: enough to equip a small army.  It included ammunition for Ak-47 assault rifles and SVD Dgarunov sniper rifles, GP 30 grenades, 82 mm Russian mortars, S-KO aviation rockets in enormous quantities. The contract would go to a single bidder as the wording read, “One firm fixed-price award, on an all-or-none basis, will be made as a result of this solicitation.”  The money was only available for 2 years (which was the amount of time George W. Bush had left in office.) Unlike most federal contracts, there was no dollar limit posted.

 

These kinds of contracts are what the Pentagon calls a “pseudo case:” the intent was to go around Congress and allocate defense funds without the approval of Congress. The order would be published—but only on fbo.gov.

 

A couple of stoners located in Miami stumbled on the posting and soon were bidding $300 million (which turned out to be $50 million lower than the nearest competitor) for this enormous government contract.  The two principals in the small firm known as AEY, David Packouz and Efraim Diveroli, had no business being in the running for such a large contract, but there were 3 reasons why they got it, anyway:

#1) The Bush administration had started a small business initiative at the Pentagon, requiring that a certain percentage of contracts awarded go to smaller businesses like AEY.

#2) Packouz and Diveroli specialized in exactly the sort of arms the ad was looking for.  They had the “past performance” that the Pentagon would be looking for, and,

#3) The posting required only that the ammunition be “serviceable without qualification.”

 

What that last bit of mumbo-jumbo means is that quality of the ammunition was not an issue, indicating how ambivalent the Bush administration was towards the Afghan fighting. They’d supply them with arms and munitions, but, as Packouz and Diveroli put it, “The Pentagon didn’t care if we supplied shit ammo, as long as it went bang and out of the barrel.”

 

Thus began the long, strange journey that led Packouz and Diveroli to not only pose as international arms dealers (while smoking dope in South Beach), but also to prison.  Diveroli to a 4-year-prison term and Packouz to turn state’s witness. Along the way, at least one of the players in this elaborate scam ended up dead under mysterious circumstances (Kosta Trebicka of Albania) and a small-time guy like Diveroli told his new partner (recruited from their mutual synagogue), “I’ve found the perfect contract for us.  It’s enormous—far, far bigger than anything we’ve done before, but it’s right up our alley.”

 

The first task order was for $600,000 of grenades.  It was important that the company of two come through on the initial order. As Diveroli put it to Packouz in the “Rolling Stone” article from which this information is taken (“Arms and the Dudes,” by Guy Lawson in the March 31, 2011 Rolling Stone issue), “You’ve got the bitch’s panties off, but you haven’t fucked her yet.” (p. 59).

 

The second task order was for $49 million in ammunition, including $100 million rounds of AK ammunition and over a million grenades for rocket launchers. Packouz calculated that he stood to make as much as $6 million on the contract—if the duo could deliver. The order allowed the two to live the high life at the Flamingo in Miami, telling the other attorneys and would-be models who lived there that they were arms dealers. The line was something along the lines of, “You know the war in Afghanistan? The bullets are all ours.”

 

Unfortunately, there were only the two of them. A task normally handled by teams of weapons experts was dumped in Packouz’ lap and he and Diveroli began contacting the Ukraine, Montenegro, the Czech Republic, Albania and attending events like the International Defense Exhibition in Abu Dhabi for suppliers. Rosboron Export, the official dealer for all Russian arms, sold more than 90% of Russian weapons, but Rosboron was banned by the State Department for selling nuclear equipment to Iran. There was also the problem of shipping the weapons…if they could be found…to Afghanistan.  Turkmenistan, a former Soviet satellite, had to be crossed to get to Afghanistan, and permission could not be obtained. As Packouz put it, “It was clear that Putin was fucking with us directly.  If the Russians made life difficult for us, they would get taken off the Russian blacklist, so they could get our business for themselves.” (p. 72, Guy Lawson’s Rolling Stone article “Arms and the Dudes.”

 

Every day, Packouz would send volleys of e-mails to Kabul and Kyrgyzstan and the Army Arsenal command in Rock Island, Illinois, set on an island in the middle of the Mississippi, once designated something like 7th to go in the event of a Russian nuclear attack. (Omaha with its SAC facilities always ranked high on the list, too).

The contracting officers told Packouz there was “a secret agenda.” Quote from the article, p. 72:  “They said Bush and Rumsfeld were trying to arm Afghanistan with enough ammo to last them the next few decades.  It made sense to me, but I didn’t really care.  My main motivator was making money, just like it was for General Dynamics.  Nobody goes into the arms business for altruistic purposes.”

 

The 9% profit margins that the newbies had decided might be high enough soon gave way to 25% mark-ups, leaving Packouz and Diveroli with $85 million in profits. The boys had delusions of grandeur, even moving into larger offices, rather than the modest apartment they originally operated from and bringing in 2 young secretaries courtesy of Craigslist, 2 more friends from their synagogue and a Russian interpreter to help them fulfill the contracts. Said Packouz of that time, “Things were rolling along.  We were delivering on a consistent basis.  We had suppliers in Hungary and Bulgaria and other countries.  I had finally arranged all the overflight permits.  We were cash positive.”

 

A few weeks after the contract was awarded to AEY, the fledgling arms dealers were summoned to a meeting with the purchasing officers at the Rock Island Arsenal.  Because they were so young, the duo asked Ralph Merrill, the Utah Mormon gun manufacturer in his sixties who had bankrolled them, to go with them to the meeting.  Diveroli was also able to show auditors a personal bank balance of $5.4 million.

 

As “Rolling Stone” describes the meeting on Arsenal Island on page 59:  “The meeting with Army officials proved to be a formality. Diveroli had the contracting jargon down, and he sailed through the technical aspects of the transaction with confidence:  supply sources, end-user certificates, AEY’s experience.  Said Packouz afterwards, “I just think it never occurred to the Army people that they were dealing with a couple of dudes in their early twenties.” (p. 59, “Arms & the Dudes” in March 31, 3011 Rolling Stone magazine.)

 

Eventually, as one of the boys’ aunts had predicted all along, things went bust.  The New York Times ran a front-page story in March of 2008 entitled “Supplier Under Scrutiny on Arms for Afghans.” As the eventual House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform concluded, “The AEY contract can be viewed as a case study in what is wrong with the procurement process.” (p.75).  As the article concludes, “The Bush administration’s push to outsource its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, in short, had sent companies like AEY into the world of illegal arms dealers, but when things turned nasty, the federal government reacted with righteous indignation.” The investigation than ultimately yielded a 4-year sentence (lengthened by a questionable lapse of judgment on Diveroli’s part in handling a machine gun when specifically banned from doing so), there was “a questionable need for the contract, a grossly inadequate assessment of AEY’s qualifications and poor execution and oversight of the contract.”
And it all happened at our local Rock Island Arsenal. Read the gorier details (and there are LOTS more, in the March 31, 2011 Rolling Stone magazine with Howard Stern on the cover.)

 

 

 

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