By M. Rossman
Josh Brodesky and the Arizona Daily Star published a piece on Jodi Bain the other day. An ‘exclusive’ – exclusive in this case meaning only Brodesky and the Star were vile enough to publish such a thing – a tale told by a pawn. A piggish, pitiful pawn, who exposed himself for the total dupe that he is.
An alleged man, lacking even an once of intellectual honesty or decency.
According to Josh, in his hit piece entitled “Jodi Bain, ousted from Rio Nuevo, built nothing good,” Jodi had to go; she didn’t build anything.
But to those of us who are not allowed in the good ol’boys club, Jodi Bain built confidence that the public might finally get justice for the flagrant mismanagement of taxpayer money.
Gee, some women just don’t know their place anymore, do they Josh?
Was she getting too close to the people who diverted funds for other purposes and channeled money to select entities for personal gain, Josh?
Well yeah, she was, but maybe that was just one of those contradictions you refer to in your hit piece.
Could it be, Josh, that unraveling the corruption shook your world so much that you couldn’t comprehend what was really happening?
I couldn’t see any good intentions in the story, I saw self-serving motives designed for those who want to hide the truth and larger issues that have nothing to do with who Jodi Bain dates. It is symptomatic of what’s wrong with Tucson and Pima County. The only people who wanted Bain and Grinnell removed were those with something to hide.
The unaccounted $230 million is a lot of money, and each time we get close to the truth, the Arizona Daily Star, otherwise known as Jim Click’s newsletter, whitewashes the sins of the hypocritical leaders and covers their naked attempts to suppress the truth.
So, let’s just take a moment to summarize the substance of your big reported story of condemnation – you say, “she sent mixed messages”.
She’s dating a lawyer? Are you kidding me? How misogynistic and dishonest can you get?
Josh’s jab at Jodi is a perfect textbook case of how misogynists paint women as either a) not real women, or b) shrill hussies, as a way to marginalize them and their success.
So step aside Bill Maher, there’s a new Grand Pooh-Bah in town.