Nickels peeks under the Cascade Curtain and gets pissed off
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Joel Connelly, blogging from the Democratic National Convention in Denver, had a nugget from Seattle's strongman mayor, Greg Nickels.
Nickels recently took a trip to Spokane with his wife and was outraged at seeing one of those signs paid for by the goons at the Building Industry Association of Washington (BIAW) to help the Dino Rossi cause: "Don't let Seattle steal this election." The sign is dumb — Seattle didn't steal an election from Dino — but it's designed to rub salt in old wounds and appeal to anti-Seattle sentiment outside the Space Needle's shadow. No one likes Goliath, after all. It's an old campaign tactic, too — former Republican Sen. Slade Gorton was notorious for demonizing Seattle in the hinterlands.
According to Connelly, here's what Nickels had to say about the sign:
"I was pissed off," he said. "We need to be one state and find common ground. ... To look at those huge signs along I-90 was very hurtful, not just to us but to the state as a whole."
Appealing for state unity is all very well, except that it's hollow coming from Nickels, who himself has bashed rural and Eastern Washington. At Seattle City Club last spring, he suggested the Seattle metro area should consider seceding from the state (or the country) with who-needs-you-guys rhetoric he later termed a joke:
If we were a country, [our economy] would be just a little smaller than Thailand. We would be larger than Colombia, Venezuela. We are held back because our state and federal government[s] still believe our economies are driven by wheat farms and timber logging.
Nickels' hissy fit expressed frustration with Olympia and the rest of the state for not understanding Seattle's superiority and centrality. And while the mayor was speaking for effect — it was a kind of howl of frustration from a ham-strung strongman — his tantrum certainly set back Cascade Curtain relations. Almost every major daily in the state editorialized against Nickels for being divisive and dismissive of the contributions they make to the state's economy. In fact, Nickels' joke undercut his previous rhetoric on the topic and simply underscored that Seattle is arrogant, out of touch, and self-serving. Said the Spokane Spokesman-Review:
Over the years, frustrated residents of Eastern Washington and North Idaho have sometimes called for secession, and we've tried to point out what a dumb idea that would be. We never expected it would be necessary to say the same to the statesman who wrote, six years ago: "We can eradicate the 'Cascade divide' and nurture instead 'One Washington.'"
People outside of Seattle believe that Greg Nickels' "One Washington" would be ruled by Seattle. That's a reason the stupid tactics of the BIAW resonate with many people, and it's thanks to statements like his that folks have had their worst suspicions us confirmed. If Nickels is "pissed off," he ought to ask people outside Seattle what they think about "the Seattle way."








Comments:
Posted Thu, Aug 28, 7:07 a.m. inappropriate
Seattle Politics: I think Republican KC Prosecutor Satterberg gets his share of the blame - Seattle's immaturity didn't grow in a vacuum.
In my opinion so-called 'moderate' Eastside Republicans have been fostering that immaturity to their benefit for quite some time - through the large percentage of rental properties in the City and public contracts for boondoggles such as Sound Transit.
Perhaps the most ironic thing about Nickels is that he actually thinks his 'toughness' is justified by previous abuses, including those of white female bureaucrats. The fact is though that he, and Satterberg, are just another part of the problem.
Gregoire's role in all this is not a simple case of election fraud. However when it comes to professional practice there is certainly a legal case to be made. Gregoire came to power largely through the quality work she did with implementing the precursor to the Growth Management Act, the State EPA regs, while she headed the Washington Department of Ecology.
At the time the Eastside was booming, and, in places, producing inappropriate developments. Though not perfect her implementation of these regs was a bonus to the City (though it may well have cost them the annexation of the MS neighborhod to Redmond).
If you'll recall your university intro to Econ class we're big on supply and demand graphs - the sweet spot of equilibrium between the two being the intellectual point of zen.
This may be a bit obtuse, but it's my opinion that the solution is to find a 'point of equilibrium' in regards to law and accountability between the Seattle/UW based government and the rest of the State's citizens.
And that's not just a question of election 'fraud', but of the consequences of all uses (or abuses) of State power, including over the economy and the bedroom.
At this time the 'State' and its friends owe the citizens of this State quite a bit, it's time to pay that bill, AND to 'mitigate' the full responsibility for the consequences of your actions by making sure those that have been 'punished' for calling for your accountability are lessend.
The law, the consequences, the State has established is much worse a punishment than a conviction for election Fraud.
Theoretically this is all pretty clear, the big problem though may well be the Feds. In my mind the tricky part is how to proceed so that the Feds both support the defense of Constitution within Washington State they also begin to apply those same 'laws' at the Federal level, including the paying off the Deficit, by the boomer generation, prior to their retirement.
dougNOSPAM@motleytoolsDOTcom
McKinley Neighborhood CoffeeHouse, Tacoma
Posted Thu, Aug 28, 8 a.m. inappropriate
YES!: Check out the previous listed article about the current demographics and trends in Seattle and you can see that Seattle has turned into a spoiled kid who only thinks of itself. Regionalism is not practiced in Seattle. Seattle has become a wealthy self centered brat and continues to grow in that direction. It is a high priced town which only includes the rich and tourists....downtown.
It is a suburb of the rest of the State.
Art
Posted Thu, Aug 28, 9:50 a.m. inappropriate
"...be one state and find common ground": The Mayor of the Pacific Northwest sez:
"I was pissed off... We need to be one state and find common ground. ... To look at those huge signs along I-90 was very hurtful, not just to us but to the state as a whole."
This is precious. Hey, doofus, if you want the state to find common ground, you can start by viewing The Rest of the State not as Seattle's private back yard, but as the folks who carry the burden of keeping our collectivist betters stocked with lattes and Birkenstocks. The less parasitic Seattle is, the more tolerant we'll be of it. And, yes, most people in The Rest of the State believe that Seattle did steal the election. I know common sense instructs us not to blame on a conspiracy that which can be explained by simple incompetence, but is such tremendous incompetence really possible except on purpose?
Posted Thu, Aug 28, 11:02 a.m. inappropriate
Don't let Eastern Washington steal our taxes: Per capita, Seattleites and Pugetopilitans pay way more in taxes that go to benefit those living in Eastern Washington than the other way around. Let the Inland Empire folks secede and pay their own way if they feel so mistreated.
Posted Thu, Aug 28, 3:14 p.m. inappropriate
Why he's pissed !: folks, you have to remember :
It has been a tough year for the high priests of global warming in Seattle and the US. First, NASA had to correct its earlier claim that the hottest year on record in the contiguous US had been 1998, which seemed to prove that global warming was on the march. It was actually 1934. Then it turned out the world's oceans have been growing steadily cooler, not hotter, since 2003. Meanwhile, the winter of 2007 was the coldest in the US in decades, after Al Gore warned us that we were about to see the end of winter as we know it.
In a May issue of Nature, evidence about falling global temperatures forced German climatologists to conclude that the transformation of our planet into a permanent sauna is taking a decade-long hiatus, at least. Then this month came former greenhouse gas alarmist David Evans's article in The Australian, stating that since 1999 evidence has been accumulating that man-made carbon emissions can't be the cause of global warming. By now that evidence, Evans said, has become pretty conclusive.