Full slate

It appears we now have a full slate of candidates in the 14th District.

Republican Bill Baroni and Democrat Seema Singh for state Senate, and Democrats Linda Greenstein and Wayne D’Angelo and Republicans Adam Bushman and Tom Goodwin for Assembly.

And, if things break right, the 14th will be a clean elections district, meaning public financing to level the playing field some.

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Have to stay calm, it is still early…

But how can I not get a bit giddy about the first four games of the Mets season: A sweep of the world champs and a rout of the hated Braves. Consider these pitching lines:

  1. Tom Glavine — 6 innings, 6 hits, an earned run, 2 strikeouts and a walk in a 6-1 win over the Cards.
  2. Orlando Hernandez — 7 innings, 5 hits, an earned run (Scott Rolen’s homer) and a walk in a 4-1 win over the Cards.
  3. John Maine — 7 innings, a hit, 6 Ks and two walks in a 10-0 win over the Cards.
  4. Oliver Perez — 7 innings, five hits, an earned run (Jeff Franceour’s homer) and six Ks in an 11-1 win over the Braves.

That’s four walks and none by Oliver Perez, whose main problem has been tossing strikes.

Add in crisp fielding and a killer instinct that has the team taking advantage of every mistake and you have a winning formula. It is early, but things are looking good so far.

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The illogic of violence

Interesting column in The Star-Ledger today by Raymond A. Schroth, a humanities professor at St. Peter’s College on torture and its relationship to Easter.

Jesus, he says, in his death, embodied the intersection between politics and religion and his death should standa s a reminder, a warning really, that we all share responsibility for the violence — both to body and spirit — done in our names.

For the death of Jesus was the prime moment when politics and religion became one. His arrest, trial, imprisonment and execution was a political event, a judicial murder. Politicians both religious and secular saw Jesus as a threat who had to be removed. Even more than Adam’s fall, this is the Original Sin of mankind: All those from Cain’s murder of his brother Abel to those of us today who have tolerated political violence share the responsibility for Jesus’ death.

All state-sanctioned violence — he writes specifically about torture, but I would add war and the death penalty to this — falls uner this ethical rubric. This is why the Vatican has a theory of just war to separate othe legitimate uses of force — defensive and proportional only — and why the pope oppsed the invasion of Iraq and the Vatican opposes capital punishment.

You don’t have to be a Catholic or even a Christian — I’m not — to agree with Schrath’s argument. Read Camus on the death penaly or Gandhi on the counterproductive nature of revolutionary violence to get a broader sense of the spiritual and physical dangers of state violence — or organized violence, like the Intifada.

Watching stone-throwing Palestinians face off against Israeli tanks (proprtionality?) or suicide bombers targeting civilians (the weapon of the powerless wielded without regard for life, engaging in a ceaseless downward spiral of violence, bombers begetting tanks and bulldozers begetting bombers and so on), can anyone tuly say that this violence is making anyone safer?

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Make it public

This probably won’t quiet the small squall surrounding the governor, but he is asking “a panel of ethics advisers to review his conduct during recent negotiations over a new contract for state workers and his financial ties to union leader Carla Katz.”

I can understand his reticence about going public with some of the information here, but at the same time he is a public official, the chief executive of the state and his behavior needs to be above board. This is especially true in the wake of the McGreevey scandals and all of the other ethical problems facing the state.

His past relationship with Carla Katz is always going to be an issue. The two of them can make it less so only by allowing us into some areas they might prefer to keep private. That’s not comfortable and may not be fair, but he’s the one who chose to run for governor.

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It could have happened here

When I heard the news of yesterday’s bank robbery in Readington, my first thought obviously was for the family of the FBI agent who was killed. But I also wondered about the Dayton bank robbery on March 16 — when I read about bank heists, or anything really, I always wonder whether they may be related to things happening in the four towns my papers cover.

Then came word — first off the record and then later on the record — that the Readington heist was indeed related to the March 16 robbery of the Bank of America branch on Summerfield Boulevard.

That robbery also turned violent, though the injuries were rather minor. But watching the news late last night and reading the reports in the various New Jersey dailies and online, I can only marvel at how lucky we turned out to be.

Yesterday’s robbery was the fifth — and possibly the 10th — in a string of heists that had grown more and more violent. The Dayton heist was not the first in which shots were fired, but it was the first in which there were injuries.

And while it appears that the FBI agent was killed by friendly fire, the trajectory of this robbery string makes me believe that the escalating violence was destined to result in a death sooner or later.

The best we can say about this is that it’s over. The final suspect was nabbed late Friday, meaning four men are in jail, charged in connection with the robbery spree.

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