Now, of course, the Mayor wants to vote for term limits. This is significant because it affirms his clear belief he, and he alone, should be able to change rules--which only apply to him if and when they serve his purposes. After all, NYC voters twice affirmed term limits. Only someone with as much money as he has ought to be able to weasel around that:
George Orwell put it well in his sardonic book, “Animal Farm.” He wrote:
“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
And now Mayor Michael Bloomberg has shown us that Orwell wasn’t far off the mark. In 2009, Bloomberg, through his superiority in power and money, strong-armed the City Council to pass a law overturning the ban on more than two terms as mayor. Now, the Mayor has reversed himself. He will vote for a two-term limit for everyone else — even as he continues in his third term.
He has affirmed that, in the political jungle of New York, he is the one animal more equal than others.
Quite true, and the mayor doesn't even bother hiding it. Three for me, and two for everyone else. Of course, in three years that could change. The third term, this time, was an emergency. Bloomberg said only his economic expertise could help us sail through these rocky waters. Of course, that wasn't the real emergency.
To Michael Bloomberg, an emergency entails Michael Bloomberg not getting what Michael Bloomberg wants. Don't rule out another emergency in 2013. And be wary if the UFT says 2013 will be better. Bloomberg could buy another term for himself, or hand-pick someone even worse.
Or maybe a teacher-friendly Democrat will get in. I've been waiting for that to happen since 1984.