Skip to main content

Lamont Jumps Off Brooklyn Bridge


When you told your mother that you really ought to have a new bike because Tommy next door got one, your pragmatic mother, if she was at all like my mother, responded somewhat as follows:  “If Tommy jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge, would you follow him?”

This response usually concluded the discussion, and it was unanswerable. You were not Tommy, and his circumstance, you were led to believe, were far plusher than your own. Discussion over. You would have to work, saving up your meager salary for a new bike, or perhaps fortune would smile on the family, a rich uncle would die – there were none – and he would favor the family and you in particular with a bike in his last will and testament.

Governor Edward Miner Lamont Jr. – “Ned” to you – white-privileged and brought up in the lap of luxury, likely never had to face such narrow circumstances. Lamont’s gold-platted pedigree is widely available to all curious journalists in Wikipedia.

He is the great-grandson of former J. P. Morgan & Co. Chairman Thomas Lamont. His father was an economist who worked on the Marshall Plan and served in the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) during the Nixon administration. He is the grand-nephew of American Civil Liberties Union Director Corliss Lamont and a “distant descendant of colonial diarist Thomas Minor, from whom he gets his middle name.” Lamont lives in toney Greenwich and is the padrone of Sky Farm, on the island of North Haven, Maine, a family “summer cottage.”

The rich are very different than you and I, says F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Lamont is very rich, and he married well. His capable wife Ann, a venture capitalist, puts far more bread and butter on the family table than does her husband.

Armed with a Bachelor's Degree in Political Science from Stanford University, Ann is reputed to be a faithful political advisor to her husband. Some critics of the Governor, by no means all Republicans, have been known to grouse that Ann may be her husband’s only political advisor. Not as bristly as his predecessor, Dannel Malloy, Lamont has not burned up the phone lines seeking advice from Democrat or Republican leaders in the General Assembly, a body that has been put into suspended animation by the Coronavirus plague.

Lamont has jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge, we are told by NBCNY: “Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont jointly implemented the restricted travel list last month in an effort to ward off local COVID resurgence. It applies to states that exceed 10 percent daily test positivity rates or 10 new cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day rolling period.”

The plan – to prevent Coronavirus contagion from other states – makes sense only as a political ploy to garner votes in the upcoming 2020 elections from the terminally stupid among us and journalists who have not re-read Edgar Allen Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death.” This is a story that centers on the inability of politicians to prevent a plague from entering a fortified castle. Sturdy walls, Lord Prospero soon discovers, cannot prevent the Red Death from penetrating his fortifications. And the Lamont, Cuomo, Murphy travel restrictions will fail in preventing Coronavirus seepage into Connecticut for two reasons.

Reason number one: the plan cannot be effectively implemented. All travelers from out of state – or those, such as UConn sports players, who travel out of state and return – must submit to Coronavirus testing. If they test positive for Coronavirus, they must submit to a 14 day sequester. The plan is extensive and will involve all modes of travel, whether by plane, train, bus or car. Lamont has posted travel cops at airports. But, one may be sure, no such enforcers, armed with forms that must be signed by the traveler, will share a ride with any commuter traveling by car from Mayor Bill de Blasio’s New York City to Fairfield County; ditto train and bus travelers. The walls of Prospero’s castle are semi-permeable.

Reason number two: Even if the Lamont, Cuomo, Murphy plan were perfectible, the plan’s premise is fatally faulty. Months of exposure to Coronavirus should have convinced politicians that prophylaxis is insufficient to prevent the spread of Coronavirus. Only a vaccine or natural immunity can prevent people from contracting the virus. The human body is an anti-body production machine, and sequestration -- as Cuomo has been forced to admit – delays the natural production of antibodies in people, such as school children, who are NOT at risk of developing serious Coronavirus complications. More than 60 percent of those who fell fatally ill with Coronavirus were self-quarantines.

Indeed, people who were most at risk of dying “with” – not “from” – coronavirus were the elderly in nursing homes left to their own insufficient resources by Lamont, Cuomo and Murphy.

The real; danger for Connecticut lies here: Lamont cannot jump off the Brooklyn Bridge, along with other destructive governors Cuomo and Murphy, without taking the entire population of Connecticut with him.

People in Connecticut should ask their practical-minded, abstemious mothers how they think such suicidal jumps off bridges will work out for those in Connecticut who plan to mail in their votes early for savior politicians who pretend convincingly to solve problems they are responsible for creating.


Comments

Anonymous said…

Mr. Pesci:

Keep up the good work of telling it like it is regarding the "rules" of King Edward of Greenwich.

I think we can be assured of two situations after the elections on Nov 3 this year:

The Covid Plague will quickly abate and drop from the daily headlines and

The bill will become due to the taxpayers of CT for the financial disaster resulting
from King Edwards "rules" and the abdication of the CT General Assembly.

A Suffield serf

Anonymous said…
Well written. I agree completely.
Anonymous said…
Gov. Ned "Fredo II" Lamont had no problem with the hordes of Cuomo's and DeBlasio's constituents flooding into CT early on, when NY was the Wuhan of the US. Some moved their families to their second homes all along the CT shore, some traveled back and forth to NYC each day, but they ALL crowded into our supermarkets to grab carts full of groceries.

I'm tired of essentially having a NY Lt. Gov. as our ruler. Awhile back, he was among the 'top' handful of Govs in numbers of Executive Orders issued. Not that our incredibly Far Left legislature (enabled by spineless Republicans) would have been much better, but we've essentially been under a dictatorship for several months. I can't wait to see the tax increases we'll have slammed down our throats to pay for all of this One-Man Rule.

With these new Orders in place, I'm so glad we're spending $1.2 million this Summer to attract tourists.
dmoelling said…
Bravo,

We seldom see any real reporting about Lamont. The old Wall Street Journal Series "Who is..."
was on the editorial page and asked a lot of basic questions about federal cabinet candidates. To my knowlege there has never been something similar done for Ned. We would hear all the time that "he ran a business", but you never hear about his little cable company. A toy project by a well connected and wealthy Yale grad is not the same as risking it all to start a real business and keep it going.

Ned seems to love the Coronavirus. His eyes light up when discussing case counts. I can see him with a little ledger book at home toting up statistics and planning his next fumbling order.
Roger said…

Don, Come clean or your just another Hypocrite! Rog

Popular posts from this blog

The Blumenthal Burisma Connection

Steve Hilton , a Fox News commentator who over the weekend had connected some Burisma corruption dots, had this to say about Connecticut U.S. Senator Dick Blumenthal’s association with the tangled knot of corruption in Ukraine: “We cross-referenced the Senate co-sponsors of Ed Markey's Ukraine gas bill with the list of Democrats whom Burisma lobbyist, David Leiter, routinely gave money to and found another one -- one of the most sanctimonious of them all, actually -- Sen. Richard Blumenthal."

Powell, the JI, And Economic literacy

Powell, Pesci Substack The Journal Inquirer (JI), one of the last independent newspapers in Connecticut, is now a part of the Hearst Media chain. Hearst has been growing by leaps and bounds in the state during the last decade. At the same time, many newspapers in Connecticut have shrunk in size, the result, some people seem to think, of ad revenue smaller newspapers have lost to internet sites and a declining newspaper reading public. Surviving papers are now seeking to recover the lost revenue by erecting “pay walls.” Like most besieged businesses, newspapers also are attempting to recoup lost revenue through staff reductions, reductions in the size of the product – both candy bars and newspapers are much smaller than they had been in the past – and sell-offs to larger chains that operate according to the social Darwinian principles of monopolistic “red in tooth and claw” giant corporations. The first principle of the successful mega-firm is: Buy out your predator before he swallows

Down The Rabbit Hole, A Book Review

Down the Rabbit Hole How the Culture of Corrections Encourages Crime by Brent McCall & Michael Liebowitz Available at Amazon Price: $12.95/softcover, 337 pages   “ Down the Rabbit Hole: How the Culture of Corrections Encourages Crime ,” a penological eye-opener, is written by two Connecticut prisoners, Brent McCall and Michael Liebowitz. Their book is an analytical work, not merely a page-turner prison drama, and it provides serious answers to the question: Why is reoffending a more likely outcome than rehabilitation in the wake of a prison sentence? The multiple answers to this central question are not at all obvious. Before picking up the book, the reader would be well advised to shed his preconceptions and also slough off the highly misleading claims of prison officials concerning the efficacy of programs developed by dusty old experts who have never had an honest discussion with a real convict. Some of the experts are more convincing cons than the cons, p