Greater transparency cited as reason for pulling back curtain on previously unreported cash
“The fact is if you have a big bag of cash, you can use that for essentially whatever you want,” said Farkas. “I think at the end of the day, they’re going to have to justify why this money has to go straight into the pockets of a privately owned sports team rather than to other needed priorities.”
I actually agree with Farkas on this one. What a waste of money.
Farkas went on a spirit quest of sorts (hiked the Pacific Crest Trail to raise money for Big Brothers and Sisters), and came back a much more understanding and thoughtful guy.
He’s still a conservative, but he’s closer to a Clark con, rather than a Harper con now. Seems mostly like a changed man, but I’m still suspicious of the Harper-brain taking over if he gets into power again.
I read something about that but haven’t really taken the time yet to see where he is politically. It sounds like he’s still farther right than I’d go, but from what I read he was able to admit some things he was wrong about, and that’s something I can seriously respect!
Any politician who publically admits they were wrong and they’re trying to re-educate themselves on divisive topics is worth another look.
Say what you want about Farkas (I haven’t ever really been a fan) but he does seem to love this city.
I don’t know much about the guy’s track record in council. But I did tune into the debate before the mayoral election, and two things stood out. First, was that he sounded incredibly reasonable, which was a surprise to me as my leftist echo chamber had me thinking he was an extremist. Second, the whole debate was respectful, sane, and that all the candidates seemed to want the best for the city.
Municipal political partisanship will destroy what seems to me to be the last bastion of cooperative politics in the country, which is a real shame.
If all of the players and managers can get paid millions while the owners still turn a profit, why can’t they build their own arena?
Because it’s “good for the community!” (Pro tip: It’s not. Pretty much never.)