Friday, November 21, 2008
span.fullpost {display:none;}HorsesAss.Org » Blog Archive » It’s all Google’s fault
In response to a Goldy editorial about Frank Blethen, owner of the Seattle Tomes, crying about the loss of ad revenue.
I could give royal turd for Blethen BUT I am concerned that we have not as yet fun d a way to create online media that compete as well for attention as the
One of the best things about the 2008 revolution is that Dean-Obama have found a way around the rich folks owning a campaign. BUT Huff/Slate/Kos/HA/Drudge etc are still little more than rumor shops.
I think Blethen may be part right in that serious reorting requires support and the only useful model for that has been the advert. dollar paid to newspapers and TV.
As a photographer, I am very disturbed by the dreadful LACK of photojournalism in Iraq! Yeh, I hear a lot of excuses but I suspect the bottom line is a lack of the $$$ that were enough, in a past era, to pay Robert Capa and his ilk and to support Life and other media that showed the work of the great social photographers. Other than the snaps from Abu Grave, there has been virtually NO unimportant photography from this war!
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Talking Points Memo | Breaking News and Analysis
It seems that Clinton at the State Department is close to a done deal. But I think we should consider that during her time on the national stage Sen. Clinton has been at the helm in two big undertakings -- had two big executive leadership tasks. One was health care in 1994 and the other was her presidential bid in 2007-08. Each was something of a trainwreck from an executive-level management perspective. And the State Department is a notoriously intractable bureaucracy. I still need some help understanding this decision."
Here is the beginning of my post. And here is the rest of it.
Talking Points Memo | Breaking News and Analysis
Rep. Henry Waxman (D) has ousted John Dingell (D) as Chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee.
That's a hugely big deal on any number of levels -- not least of which is the two men's very different positions on energy policy. We'll have more soon.
Late Update: Here's the reaction from a Republican Hill staffer friend of mine -- very sane good guy, but, you know, still a Republican ...
Dude:
The day Henry got into this race, this result was ordained.
The differences between the 2 are, as you mentioned, HUGE.
But, honestly, the real story here is Nancy Pelosi whacked John Dingell. She put a hit on him, and it was executed.
The rest of the story takes a back seat to that FACT.
For the moment, I'm still going with 'Holy Crap'."
Politicker WA | Washington Politics News, Reaction, and Analysis
Murray retains Senate leadership post
By Bryan Bissell, PolitickerWA.com ReporterSen. Patty Murray (D-Bothell) held on to her position as Democratic conference secretary when the Senate Democrats met in Washington, D.C. today, McClatchy’s Les Blumenthal reports.
Conference secretary, the post Murray was first elected to in 2006, is considered the fourth highest position in Democratic leadership.
There was speculation earlier this fall that Murray might ascend to the chair of the Veterans Affairs Committee if Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) was stripped of his chairmanship by the Democrats for his outspoken support of 2008 Republican presidential nomineSuucah in Beijing ..
WWMT? What would Moses Think?
International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
Conference to Examine Nazi- Era Crimes
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his Italian counterpart announced on Tuesday that historians from the two countries are to hold a conference next year. The topic will be the hundreds of thousands of Italian soldiers that were deported to Nazi Germany during World War II. more...
* Nazi Massacre: Berlin Takes Rome to Court
* Remembering Georg Elser: Berlin Debates Memorial for Would-Be Hitler Assassin
* Haunted by Nazi History: German Politicians Divided over Anti-Semitism"
Hmmm ... anyone want to bet whether the agenda will include the role of the Vatican?
International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
A new report adds more evidence to the fear of a widening income gap in Germany. The solid German middle class is losing people to the top and bottom of the income scale, while satisfaction with the German system falters. more..."
This is important for two reasons.
First, the erosion of the middle class in a social democracy argues that the problem in the US and China is much more broadly spread then I would have thought. If the goal of capitalism is to optimize the size of the middle class, we may all be in terrible trouble.
Second, Germany's problme could represent the drag down effect of America's trickle down economics. While German social policies are far more rational than ours, the US economy is likely to still be seveal of the cylinders in the German and world engine, As long as the US is run by voodoo economics, it ,may be impossible for a social democracy to NOT be affected by our maliase.
Ironically, Reaganomics may be a good thing for the third world! Growth of an affluent class in China or INdia may be a necessary step in the evolution of a poor country.
International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
THE WORLD FROM BERLIN
'Absurdistan along the Horn of Africa'
Just a few weeks before the EU anti-pirate mission is set to deploy, German officials are still unsure how much military force they are allowed to use against Somali raiders. Politicans are frustrated by the indecision and, on Thursday, German commentators joined the fray. more...
This is the beginning of the internationalism I expect to be a core part of Obama's foreign policy. The Indian Oceen needs to be and will be a "world" sea.
Popular Science
Fast Winds at the Bahrain World Trade Center
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Daily Kos: State of the Nation
The pending announcement by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, which congressional aides said could come as early as today, would elevate Kerry to the top of the foreign policy establishment and give him a major role in shaping President-elect Barack Obama's foreign policy priorities.
Kerry, 64, who was elected to a fifth term in the US Senate from Massachusetts earlier this month, will be officially handed the gavel when the new congressional session convenes in January, according to multiple Capitol Hill sources. He will replace the outgoing chairman, Vice President-elect Joe Biden."
Daily Kos: State of the Nation
Minnesota reports that it has thus far re-counted 15.49 percent of its ballots. If the first day's results are indicative of the pace that the candidates will maintain throughout the recount process, Franken would gain a net of 278 votes over Colmean, giving him a narrow victory. For any number of reasons, however, the results reported thus far may not be indicative of future trends [...]
the precincts that were re-counted today were slightly redder than average, having favored Coleman by an aggregate of 3.3 points during the initial count. No votes have yet been re-counted in Minneapolis (out of more than 200,000 cast), although about 43,000 have been recounted in St. Paul (out of around 140,000 cast on Election Day). Another city which has not yet reported any results is Duluth, traditionally a Democratic stronghold."
NEWS NOT IN THE US MEDIA!
NEW DELHI: Nobel laureate and Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency Mohamed ElBaradei has been chosen to receive the Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace, Disarmament and Development for 2008. An international jury, chaired ..."
BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | Mammoth's genome pieced together
The experts extracted DNA from samples of mammoth hair to reconstruct the genetic sequence of this Ice Age beast.
Though some stretches are missing, the researchers estimate that the genome is roughly 80% complete.
The work could provide insights into the extinction of the mammoth and also resurrects questions about the viability of cloning long-dead species.
The scientists were aided in their task by the fact that several deep-frozen carcasses of woolly mammoths have been dug out of the permafrost in Siberia."
Awe who pould have dreamed that tis could ever be done?
PC Magazine dropping print for online
US News & World Report, long the number three newsmagazine in the United States behind Time and Newsweek, announced earlier this month that it was abandoning print for the Web and the 100-year-old newspaper the Christian Science Monitor announced plans recently to do the same."
Here is the beginning of my post. And here is the rest of it.
Tennessee Adopts $9.5 Million University Piracy Measure Despite School Layoffs | Threat Level from Wired.com
Combating music piracy at Tennessee's public university system is more important than hiring teachers and keeping down tuition costs.
Just-signed legislation requires the 222,000-student system to spend an estimated $9.5 million (.pdf) for file sharing "monitoring software," "monitoring hardware" and an additional "recurring cost of $1,575,000 for 21 staff positions and benefits (@75,000 each) to monitor network traffic" of its students.
Tennessee's measure, (.pdf) approved Wednesday by Gov. Phil Bredesen, was the nation's first in a bid to combat online file sharing within state-funded universities. The law, similar versions of which the Recording Industry Association of America wants throughout the United States, comes as the Tennessee public university system is increasing tuition, laying off teachers and leaving unfilled vacant instructor positions to battle a $43.7 million shortfall.
"This bill, the first of its kind in the nation, addressed the issue of campus music theft in a state where the impact is felt more harshly than most," said Mitch Bainwol, the RIAA's chairman and CEO.
Supercomputers Break Petaflop Barrier, Transforming Science | Wired Science from Wired.com
These computers aren't just faster than those they pushed further down the list, they will enable a new class of science that wasn't possible before. As recently described in Wired magazine, these massive number crunchers will push simulation to the forefront of science."
Cray is a SEATTLE firm!
Politics, Political News, Campaign 2008 - Politico.com
By MIKE ALLEN & GLENN THRUSH | 11/19/08 11:09 AM
To satisfy Obama’s vetting team, Bill Clinton is open to giving up foreign sources of income if his wife becomes secretary of state."
Hitler HAD only got one ball | The Sun |News
AN extraordinary account from a German army medic has finally confirmed what the world long suspected: Hitler only had one ball.
War veteran Johan Jambor made the revelation to a priest in the 1960s, who wrote it down.
The priest’s document has now come to light – 23 years after Johan’s death.
The war tyrant’s medical condition has been mocked for years in a British song.
The lyrics are: “Hitler has only got one ball, the other is in the Albert Hall. His mother, the dirty b****r, cut it off when he was small.’
Until now there has never been complete proof Hitler was monorchic – the medical term for having one testicle.
But the document tells how Johan saw the proof with his own eyes. In the account, he relives the horror of serving as an army medic in World War I."
Here is the beginning of my post. And here is the rest of it.
Breaking News and Opinion on The Huffington Post
Al Qaeda No. 2 Insults Obama
With Racial Epithet
Also Insults Powell, Rice
SJ comments:
sad that American Black revolutionaries, in an effort to return t their roots and divest themselves of the overlay of the slave master's religion, have urned to Islam. While it is true that Islamic and Jewish dogmas both accept the converted as a part of the people, the evangelims of Islam like that of of the Christians has committed a kind of cultural geneocide., literally wiping out millenia of culture amongst the prliterate people its has converted. All three Abrahamic faiths also share a terrible elitism, rejecting all gods but their deity .. perhaps a shared deity .. as being of chaos and the devil.
For those who want a feel for the evils of evangelism, I recommend thw wonderful book, "Arrow of God" by Chinua Achebe.
UPDATE Jewish Politicians
NYU poll: Two-thirds of U.S. Jews back Obama over McCain | |
Survey shows Republican candidate garners 75 percent support among the Orthodox voters. 04:59 |
On our side, some have gone so far as to ask is Obama a covert Yid?
Sheldon Adelson: Neoconservative and a mega-donor, however, a combination of financial reverses and internal disputes has muted his contribution to the McCain effort.
David Axelrod: Chief strategist and media advisor for the Obama campaign, he has harnessed grassroots support through "viral" media, new technology and emphasis on the theme of change. He has already received a lot of coverage in SJ as a brilliant political strategist who may finally end the era of Atwater/Rove corruption of the American political process.
John Adler, 49, brings 20 years of elective experience to the job of representing New Jersey’s 3rd District, a seat that no Democrat had won since 1882. Adler, who spent the past 16 years in the New Jersey State Senate, where he was assistant minority leader from 1994 to 2001, won the seat of retiring Rep. Jim Saxton.
Steven Bob : One of two Reform rabbis from the Chicago area founded Rabbis for Obama, which has persuaded hundreds of rabbinical colleagues to go on record by name supporting the candidate. The group's influence on the Jewish electorate has been difficult to gauge. (see Sam Gordon).
Matt Brooks: The executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition is a frequent media "first responder" on Jewish issues.
Mark Broxmeyer: A businessman and chair of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs conservative think tank, Broxmeyer serves as national chairman of the McCain campaign's Jewish Advisory Coalition and as a member of the candidate's national finance committee.
Eric Cantor: This Virginia congressman, the sole Jewish Republican in the House, has emerged as a primary McCain surrogate in a bid to sway Florida and his home state.
Obama surrogate U.S. Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland.
Laurie David: The global-warming activist and producer of "An Inconvenient Truth," starring Al Gore, she is ex-wife of "Seinfeld" and "Curb Your Enthusiasm" creator Larry David and one of Jewish Hollywood's most prodigious fundraisers.
Ira Forman: The executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council, he is Matt Brooks' counterpart.
David Flaum: Former Bushite, now Republican Jewish Coalition National Chairman
Barney Frank: The Massachusetts Democratic congressman is one of the most visible, outspoken liberals in the House. He is openly gay and a frequent target of pro-McCain commentators, particularly on Fox News, where, because of his role as chair of the House Financial Services Committee, he has been said to bear crucial responsibility for the sub-prime lending crisis. He played a key role in negotiating the Wall Street bailout package.
Sandra Froman, the first Jewish president of the National Rifle Association (2005-7), and a steering committee member of Sportsmen for McCain;
Capers Funnye First cousin to Michelle Obama, rabbi fo Chicago Jewish Congregation Beth Shalom B'nai Zaken, perhaps the oldest of African American Jewish Congregation in the US.
David Geffen Hollywood mogul, early supporter of Obama.
Sam Gordon: One of two Reform rabbis from the Chicago area founded Rabbis for Obama, which has persuaded hundreds of rabbinical colleagues to go on record by name supporting the candidate. The group's influence on the Jewish electorate has been difficult to gauge. (Stephen Bob).
Alan Grayson In Florida’s 8th District, Alan Grayson found success in his second run for Congress, winning a seat that includes part of Orlando, including Walt Disney World. Grayson, the surprise victor of the Democratic primary, defeated incumbent Republican Ric Keller in what the Orlando Sentinel called the ugliest fight in Central Florida House races.
Malcolm Hoenlein: Formally nonpartisan as professional chief of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, he invited Sarah Palin to speak at an anti-Ahmadinejad rally at the UN, then bowed to pressure to rescind the invitation. He is seen to have aided the McCain campaign in terms of some Jewish undecideds.
Cheryl Jacobs: A McCain campaign co-chair in Broward County, Florida, the Conservative rabbi, a longtime Democrat, supported Hillary Clinton's primary race for president, but then switched to McCain.
Jared Polis, 33, a multimillionaire Internet entrepreneur who will represent Colorado’s 2nd District, is the first openly gay non-incumbent male to be elected to the House of Representatives.
David Katzenberg: Another Hollywod mogul who has supported Obama.
Henry Kissinger: The New York Times calls the former secretary of state a "close outside adviser" to McCain's campaign. He is regularly called upon by the candidate for advice on foreign affairs, and held a high-profile briefing session with Palin prior to the vice-presidential debate.
Ed Koch: The former New York City mayor is still a gold standard for Jews of a certain age. He backed Bush in 2004 and Hillary Clinton during the primaries. Now he's for Obama.
William Kristol: As editor of Rupert Murdoch's Weekly Standard magazine, a New York Times columnist and a Fox News commentator, he is an extremely influential neoconservative voice.
Dan Kurtzer: The center-left anchor of Obama's Middle East advisory staff. (see Dennis Ross)
Sherry Lansing: The first woman to head a major Hollywood studio (Paramount), she is a major Democratic donor and fundraiser.
Ed Lasky: Through the American Thinker Web site, his articles helped spawn the widespread Internet campaign alleging that Obama is anti-Israel.
Obama advisor and ex-California congressman Mel Levine.
Joe Lieberman: The Connecticut senator was Al Gore's 2000 Democratic running mate. He is now McCain's point man for undecided Jewish voters.
Linda Lingle, the first Jewish governor of Hawaii and an early defender of Sarah Palin.
Monologue for Obama by Sara Silverman spawned a counter-clip from veteran comic Jackie Mason.
Mik Moore: He launched Jewsvote.org, utilizing high-tech methods to counteract Web-borne attacks on Obama. The group also sponsors The Great Schlep - a campaign to get grandchildren to visit grandparents in Florida, to persuade them to vote for Obama.
Eli Pariser: He heads MoveOn.org, a liberal on-line advocacy group that has raised large sums for Democratic candidates.
Martin Peretz: The editor of The New Republic, he wrote an influential article entitled "Can friends of Israel - and Jews - trust Obama? In a word, Yes."
Dennis Prager: He is an influential, outspoken and often strident nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. Despite reservations over McCain's campaign reform bill, he has thrown his weight behind the GOP ticket.
Penny Pritzker: She is the national finance chair of the Obama campaign. A billionaire executive, pioneer Obama supporter and scion of a well-known Jewish mega-donor family, she has taken flak over the degree of her involvement in a the failure of a bank driven by sub-prime mortgages.
Ed Rendell: The governor of the key swing state of Pennsylvania, he is former head of the Democratic National Committee and a top Democratic campaign spokesman.
Denise Rich: The socialite and ex-wife of disgraced billionaire Marc Rich is a Democratic megafundraiser.
Dennis Ross: The center-right anchor of Obama's Middle East advisory staff. (see Dan Kurtzer)
Robert Rubin: The top Obama economics advisor has unsurpassed knowledge of the workings of Wall Street and was treasury secretary in the Clinton administration.
Senator Bernie Sanders: Sanders is the only pr5minent politician in the US to openly call hinself a socialist or democratic socialist. Because he does not belong to a formal political party he appears as an independent on the ballot. Sanders caucuses with the Democratic Party and is counted as a Democrat for the purposes of committee assignments.
Rabbi David Saperstein Reform Jewish leader, one of the signers of a letter protesting bigotry of Republican campaigns that depict Obama as antisemitic,
Dan Shapiro: A former Clinton administration National Security Council official, he is a senior Mideast policy advisor and Jewish outreach coordinator for the Obama campaign. He is said to have co-written Obama's speech before AIPAC (the pro-Israel lobby), in which the candidate declared "Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel and it must remain undivided" - a statement Obama later partially recanted.
Sarah Silverman: A "shock comedian," she served as video spokeswoman for The Great Schlep (see Mik Moore, above). Her monologue spawned a counter-clip from veteran comic Jackie Mason.
Alan Solow: The Chicago lawyer is active in the Jewish community and in the Conference of Presidents. He has been an Obama supporter for a dozen years.
George Soros: Brilliant stock market and currency manipulator who is honest about how he makes mkoney and a major supporter of liberal causes. Often the bete noir of antisemitic rantings on the right.
Steven Spielberg: Movie producer and intellectual, early Obamite.
Jon Stewart: As host of the satirical TV news program "The Daily Show," he has become perhaps the most listened-to liberal voice in the nation. The New York Times called Stewart's program "a genuine cultural and political force."
Barbra Streisand: The superstar singer is a Jewish-liberal icon and mega-fundraiser. She endorsed Hillary Clinton in the primary race and has backed Obama since the Democratic convention. She also headlined a Hollywood fundraiser in September, which included a $25,800-a-plate dinner.
Robert Wexler: A key Obama surrogate, the Florida congressman has campaigned extensively in the effort to shift the electoral vote-rich Sunshine State from the McCain column to the Democrats.
Howard Wolfson: Hillary's adviser, supposedly a Democrat but now a Faux talking head, often disses Obama.
Fred Zeidman: McCain's lead Jewish strategist, he is chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, and a heavyweight among Jewish Republicans
and, the ever popular:
Henry Lehman: A Bavarian immigrant who settled in Alabama in 1844 at age 23, and founded H. Lehman, a general store that, by accepting raw cotton in lieu of cash, would later lead to commodity trading in cotton. In 1850, he and his brothers Emanuel and Mayer formed Lehman Brothers, which became one of the first and most powerful investment houses on Wall Street. Lehman Brothers' spectacular collapse in mid-September, the largest bankruptcy in American history, triggered a worldwide financial panic that, more than any single factor, may determine the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.
and, for Seattle: Stefan Sharansky and David Goldstein
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
HorsesAss.Org » Blog Archive » I-1000: Controversial to everyone but the voters
Congratulations to the supporters.
I hope the I1000 crew now actually puts their money and action behind doing a much better job with this than what has happeened in Oregon:
1. Too few people in Oregon use the law and most physicians will not write the script. An effort needs to be made to make this available and understandable without .. as has happened in Oregon .. having a small coterie of physicians who understand and support it. Otherwise all your efforts will end up going small number of folks.
2. We need regulations to assure the law is not misused. I would like to have seen he law forbid forcing people to choose between penury and suicide.
I believe the law has not been misused so far in Oregon. Oregon’s law has been used very little but Oregon built nothing in their law to protect patients from having to choose between impoverishment and state aid for terminal care.
This is especially worrisome in the current economic situation where we must expect a lot more people to be driven to medical bankruptcy.
At a minimum, I hope we will require that records be kept to monitor the use of this option in people with precarious financial needs.
3. We need to be sure that the law is not misused to prosecute physician’s current use of morphine. I know the proponents claim this is not an issue, but lawyers have told me they think the law could be used by the “pro-life” crown to place law suits against the physicians who use morphine without going through the procedures described in this law."
Monday, November 17, 2008
Sarah Palin for Secretary of the Interior?
“There’s definitely been a reaction to the few groups that have been named so far,” said Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women. “I agree with those who are concerned that it would have been nice to see more women.”
Women’s rights advocates acknowledge it’s still early in the transition process, but they say early staff picks and the lists of rumored Cabinet nominees send the wrong signal."
"The mention of Clinton Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers is seen as particularly problematic. As president of Harvard University, Summers said that innate differences between men and women might be one reason fewer women succeed in science and math careers. The controversial comment led to his ousting as president."
Feminism at any price.
Mexico's growing assisted-living market targets U.S. retirees | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Latest News
There are already an estimated 1.2 million retired Americans and Canadians in Mexico who – like their millions of compatriots back home – will need a greater level of care at an affordable price.
'This is not going to be a niche market; this is going to be an entire industry,' said Eduardo Alvarado, chief executive officer of La Moreleja, a residential development in San Luis PotosÃ, a colonial city in northern Mexico that also sports Wal-Mart, Home Depot and many other businesses familiar to Americans.
Some developers are shifting their traditional condo and townhouse developments in midstream to include assisted-living wings focused, in part, on Americans who want modern facilities with quality services rather than the informal operations or go-it-alone approaches that now exist. .................
La Moreleja will charge a one-time inscription of $9,000 and a monthly rent of about $1,100 that includes a full range of services, including meals.
Here is the beginning of my post. And here is the rest of it.
Saudi Arabia News - Topix
Riyadh: In an ornate living room, a group of women gathered around coffee and date cakes to celebrate the afternoon 18 years ago when they got into cars and drove the streets of Riyadh, a stunning defiance of ..."
Saudi Arabia News - Topix
Meet sexy Saudi Arabia women online Chat & date Saudi Arabia girls now!"
Saudi Arabia News - Topix
Pirates have captured a giant Saudi-owned oil tanker in the Indian Ocean off the Kenyan coast."
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Obama's Fascinating Interview with Cathleen Falsani - Steven Waldman
Obama's Fascinating Interview with Cathleen Falsani
Tuesday November 11, 2008
The most detailed and fascinating explication of Barack Obama's faith came in a 2004 interview he gave Chicago Sun Times columnist Cathleen Falsani when he was running for U.S. Senate in Illinois. The column she wrote about the interview has been quoted and misquoted many times over, but she'd never before published the full transcript in a major publication.
Because of how controversial that interview became, Falsani has graciously allowed us to print the full conversation here.
Falsani is one of the most gifted interviews on matters of Faith, and has recently published an outstanding memoir called Sin Boldly: A Field Guide for Grace. To get a free download of the audio book, click here.
At 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 27, 2004, when I was the religion reporter (I am now its religion columnist) at the Chicago Sun-Times, I met then-State Sen. Barack Obama at Café Baci, a small coffee joint at 330 S. Michigan Avenue in Chicago, to interview him exclusively about his spirituality. Our conversation took place a few days after he'd clinched the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate seat that he eventually won. We spoke for more than an hour. He came alone. He answered everything I asked without notes or hesitation. The profile of Obama that grew from the interview at Cafe Baci became the first in a series in the Sun-Times called "The God Factor," that eventually became my first book, The God Factor: Inside the Spiritual Lives of Public People (FSG, March 2006.) Because of the staggering interest in now President-Elect Obama's faith and spiritual predilections, I thought it might be helpful to share that interivew, uncut and in its entirety, here.
--Cathleen Falsani
Interview with State Sen. Barack Obama
3:30 p.m., Saturday March 27
Café Baci, 330 S. Michigan Avenue
Me: decaf
He: alone, on time, grabs a Naked juice protein shake
FALSANI:
What do you believe?
OBAMA:
I am a Christian.
So, I have a deep faith. So I draw from the Christian faith.
On the other hand, I was born in Hawaii where obviously there are a lot of Eastern influences.
I lived in Indonesia, the largest Muslim country in the world, between the ages of six and 10.
My father was from Kenya, and although he was probably most accurately labeled an agnostic, his father was Muslim.
And I'd say, probably, intellectually I've drawn as much from Judaism as any other faith.
(A patron stops and says, "Congratulations," shakes his hand. "Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Thank you.")
So, I'm rooted in the Christian tradition. I believe that there are many paths to the same place, and that is a belief that there is a higher power, a belief that we are connected as a people. That there are values that transcend race or culture, that move us forward, and there's an obligation for all of us individually as well as collectively to take responsibility to make those values lived.
And so, part of my project in life was probably to spend the first 40 years of my life figuring out what I did believe - I'm 42 now - and it's not that I had it all completely worked out, but I'm spending a lot of time now trying to apply what I believe and trying to live up to those values.
FALSANI:
Have you always been a Christian?
OBAMA:
I was raised more by my mother and my mother was Christian.
FALSANI:
Any particular flavor?
OBAMA:
No.
My grandparents who were from small towns in Kansas. My grandmother was Methodist. My grandfather was Baptist. This was at a time when I think the Methodists felt slightly superior to the Baptists. And by the time I was born, they were, I think, my grandparents had joined a Universalist church.
So, my mother, who I think had as much influence on my values as anybody, was not someone who wore her religion on her sleeve. We'd go to church for Easter. She wasn't a church lady.
As I said, we moved to Indonesia. She remarried an Indonesian who wasn't particularly, he wasn't a practicing Muslim. I went to a Catholic school in a Muslim country. So I was studying the Bible and catechisms by day, and at night you'd hear the prayer call.
So I don't think as a child we were, or I had a structured religious education. But my mother was deeply spiritual person, and would spend a lot of time talking about values and give me books about the world's religions, and talk to me about them. And I think always, her view always was that underlying these religions were a common set of beliefs about how you treat other people and how you aspire to act, not just for yourself but also for the greater good.
And, so that, I think, was what I carried with me through college. I probably didn't get started getting active in church activities until I moved to Chicago.
The way I came to Chicago in 1985 was that I was interested in community organizing and I was inspired by the Civil Rights movement. And the idea that ordinary people could do extraordinary things. And there was a group of churches out on the South Side of Chicago that had come together to form an organization to try to deal with the devastation of steel plants that had closed. And didn't have much money, but felt that if they formed an organization and hired somebody to organize them to work on issues that affected their community, that it would strengthen the church and also strengthen the community.
So they hired me, for $13,000 a year. The princely sum. And I drove out here and I didn't know anybody and started working with both the ministers and the lay people in these churches on issues like creating job training programs, or afterschool programs for youth, or making sure that city services were fairly allocated to underserved communites.
This would be in Roseland, West Pullman, Altgeld Gardens, far South Side working class and lower income communities.
And it was in those places where I think what had been more of an intellectual view of religion deepened because I'd be spending an enormous amount of time with church ladies, sort of surrogate mothers and fathers and everybody I was working with was 50 or 55 or 60, and here I was a 23-year-old kid running around.
I became much more familiar with the ongoing tradition of the historic black church and it's importance in the community.
And the power of that culture to give people strength in very difficult circumstances, and the power of that church to give people courage against great odds. And it moved me deeply.
So that, one of the churches I met, or one of the churches that I became involved in was Trinity United Church of Christ. And the pastor there, Jeremiah Wright, became a good friend. So I joined that church and committed myself to Christ in that church.
FALSANI:
Did you actually go up for an altar call?
OBAMA:
Yes. Absolutely.
It was a daytime service, during a daytime service. And it was a powerful moment. Because, it was powerful for me because it not only confirmed my faith, it not only gave shape to my faith, but I think, also, allowed me to connect the work I had been pursuing with my faith.
FALSANI:
How long ago?
OBAMA:
16, 17 years ago. 1987 or 88
FALSANI:
So you got yourself born again?
OBAMA:
Yeah, although I don't, I retain from my childhood and my experiences growing up a suspicion of dogma. And I'm not somebody who is always comfortable with language that implies I've got a monopoly on the truth, or that my faith is automatically transferable to others.
I'm a big believer in tolerance. I think that religion at it's best comes with a big dose of doubt. I'm suspicious of too much certainty in the pursuit of understanding just because I think people are limited in their understanding.
I think that, particularly as somebody who's now in the public realm and is a student of what brings people together and what drives them apart, there's an enormous amount of damage done around the world in the name of religion and certainty.
FALSANI
Do you still attend Trinity?
OBAMA:
Yep. Every week. 11 oclock service.
Ever been there? Good service.
I actually wrote a book called Dreams from My Father, it's kind of a meditation on race. There's a whole chapter on the church in that, and my first visits to Trinity.
FALSANI:
Do you pray often?
OBAMA:
Uh, yeah, I guess I do.
Its' not formal, me getting on my knees. I think I have an ongoing conversation with God. I think throughout the day, I'm constantly asking myself questions about what I'm doing, why am I doing it.
One of the interesting things about being in public life is there are constantly these pressures being placed on you from different sides. To be effective, you have to be able to listen to a variety of points of view, synthesize viewpoints. You also have to know when to be just a strong advocate, and push back against certain people or views that you think aren't right or don't serve your constituents.
And so, the biggest challenge, I think, is always maintaining your moral compass. Those are the conversations I'm having internally. I'm measuring my actions against that inner voice that for me at least is audible, is active, it tells me where I think I'm on track and where I think I'm off track.
It's interesting particularly now after this election, comes with it a lot of celebrity. And I always think of politics as having two sides. There's a vanity aspect to politics, and then there's a substantive part of politics. Now you need some sizzle with the steak to be effective, but I think it's easy to get swept up in the vanity side of it, the desire to be liked and recognized and important. It's important for me throughout the day to measure and to take stock and to say, now, am I doing this because I think it's advantageous to me politically, or because I think it's the right thing to do? Am I doing this to get my name in the papers or am I doing this because it's necessary to accomplish my motives.
FALSANI:
Checking for altruism?
OBAMA:
Yeah. I mean, something like it.
Looking for, ... It's interesting, the most powerful political moments for me come when I feel like my actions are aligned with a certain truth. I can feel it. When I'm talking to a group and I'm saying something truthful, I can feel a power that comes out of those statements that is different than when I'm just being glib or clever.
FALSANI:
What's that power? Is it the holy spirit? God?
OBAMA:
Well, I think it's the power of the recognition of God, or the recognition of a larger truth that is being shared between me and an audience.
That's something you learn watching ministers, quite a bit. What they call the Holy Spirit. They want the Holy Spirit to come down before they're preaching, right? Not to try to intellectualize it but what I see is there are moments that happen within a sermon where the minister gets out of his ego and is speaking from a deeper source. And it's powerful.
There are also times when you can see the ego getting in the way. Where the minister is performing and clearly straining for applause or an Amen. And those are distinct moments. I think those former moments are sacred.
FALSANI:
Who's Jesus to you?
(He laughs nervously)
OBAMA:
Right.
Jesus is an historical figure for me, and he's also a bridge between God and man, in the Christian faith, and one that I think is powerful precisely because he serves as that means of us reaching something higher.
And he's also a wonderful teacher. I think it's important for all of us, of whatever faith, to have teachers in the flesh and also teachers in history.
FALSANI:
Is Jesus someone who you feel you have a regular connection with now, a personal connection with in your life?
OBAMA:
Yeah. Yes. I think some of the things I talked about earlier are addressed through, are channeled through my Christian faith and a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
FALSANI:
Have you read the bible?
OBAMA:
Absolutely.
I read it not as regularly as I would like. These days I don't have much time for reading or reflection, period.
FALSANI:
Do you try to take some time for whatever, meditation prayer reading?
OBAMA:
I'll be honest with you, I used to all the time, in a fairly disciplined way. But during the course of this campaign, I don't. And I probably need to and would like to, but that's where that internal monologue, or dialogue I think supplants my opportunity to read and reflect in a structured way these days.
It's much more sort of as I'm going through the day trying to take stock and take a moment here and a moment there to take stock, why am I here, how does this connect with a larger sense of purpose.
FALSANI:
Do you have people in your life that you look to for guidance?
OBAMA:
Well, my pastor [Jeremiah Wright] is certainly someone who I have an enormous amount of respect for.
I have a number of friends who are ministers. Reverend Meeks is a close friend and colleague of mine in the state Senate. Father Michael Pfleger is a dear friend, and somebody I interact with closely.
FALSANI:
Those two will keep you on your toes.
OBAMA:
And theyr'e good friends. Because both of them are in the public eye, there are ways we can all reflect on what's happening to each of us in ways that are useful.
I think they can help me, they can appreciate certain specific challenges that I go through as a public figure.
FALSANI:
Jack Ryan [Obama's Republican opponent in the U.S. Senate race at the time] said talking about your faith is frought with peril for a public figure.
OBAMA:
Which is why you generally will not see me spending a lot of time talking about it on the stump.
Alongside my own deep personal faith, I am a follower, as well, of our civic religion. I am a big believer in the separation of church and state. I am a big believer in our constitutional structure. I mean, I'm a law professor at the University of Chicago teaching constitutional law. I am a great admirer of our founding charter, and its resolve to prevent theocracies from forming, and its resolve to prevent disruptive strains of fundamentalism from taking root ion this country.
As I said before, in my own public policy, I'm very suspicious of religious certainty expressing itself in politics.
Now, that's different form a belief that values have to inform our public policy. I think it's perfectly consistent to say that I want my government to be operating for all faiths and all peoples, including atheists and agnostics, while also insisting that there are values tha tinform my politics that are appropriate to talk about.
A standard line in my stump speech during this campaign is that my politics are informed by a belief that we're all connected. That if there's a child on the South Side of Chicago that can't read, that makes a difference in my life even if it's not my own child. If there's a senior citizen in downstate Illinois that's struggling to pay for their medicine and having to chose between medicine and the rent, that makes my life poorer even if it's not my grandparent. And if there's an Arab American family that's being rounded up by John Ashcroft without the benefit of due process, that threatens my civil liberties.
I can give religious expression to that. I am my brother's keeper, I am my sister's keeper, we are all children of God. Or I can express it in secular terms. But the basic premise remains the same. I think sometimes Democrats have made the mistake of shying away from a conversation about values for fear that they sacrifice the important value of tolerance. And I don't think those two things are mutually exclusive.
FALSANI:
Do you think it's wrong for people to want to know about a civic leader's spirituality?
OBAMA:
I don't' think it's wrong. I think that political leaders are subject to all sorts of vetting by the public, and this can be a component of that.
I think that I am disturbed by, let me put it this way: I think there is an enormous danger on the part of public figures to rationalize or justify their actions by claiming God's mandate.
I think there is this tendency that I don't think is healthy for public figures to wear religion on their sleeve as a means to insulate themselves from criticism, or dialogue with people who disagree with them.
FALSANI:
The conversation stopper, when you say you're a Christian and leave it at that.
OBAMA:
Where do you move forward with that?
This is something that I'm sure I'd have serious debates with my fellow Christians about. I think that the difficult thing about any religion, including Christianity, is that at some level there is a call to evangelize and prostelytize. There's the belief, certainly in some quarters, that people haven't embraced Jesus Christ as their personal savior that they're going to hell.
FALSANI:
You don't believe that?
OBAMA:
I find it hard to believe that my God would consign four-fifths of the world to hell.
I can't imagine that my God would allow some little Hindu kid in India who never interacts with the Christian faith to somehow burn for all eternity.
That's just not part of my religious makeup.
Part of the reason I think it's always difficult for public figures to talk about this is that the nature of politics is that you want to have everybody like you and project the best possible traits onto you. Oftentimes that's by being as vague as possible, or appealing to the lowest commong denominators. The more specific and detailed you are on issues as personal and fundamental as your faith, the more potentially dangerous it is.
FALSANI:
Do you ever have people who know you're a Christian question a particular stance you take on an issue, how can you be a Christian and ...
OBAMA:
Like the right to choose.
I haven't been challenged in those direct ways. And to that extent, I give the public a lot of credit. I'm always stuck by how much common sense the American people have. They get confused sometimes, watch FoxNews or listen to talk radio. That's dangerous sometimes. But generally, Americans are tolerant and I think recognize that faith is a personal thing, and they may feel very strongly about an issue like abortion or gay marriage, but if they discuss it with me as an elected official they will discuss it with me in those terms and not, say, as 'you call yourself a Christian.' I cannot recall that ever happening.
FALSANI:
Do you get questions about your faith?
OBAMA:
Obviously as an African American politician rooted in the African American community, I spend a lot of time in the black church. I have no qualms in those settings in participating fully in those services and celebrating my God in that wonderful community that is the black church.
(he pauses)
But I also try to be . . . Rarely in those settings do people come up to me and say, what are your beliefs. They are going to presume, and rightly so. Although they may presume a set of doctrines that I subscribe to that I don't necessarily subscribe to.
But I don't think that's unique to me. I think that each of us when we walk into our church or mosque or synagogue are interpreting that experience in different ways, are reading scriptures in different ways and are arriving at our own understanding at different ways and in different phases.
I don't know a healthy congregation or an effective minister who doesn't recognize that.
If all it took was someone proclaiming I believe Jesus Christ and that he died for my sins, and that was all there was to it, people wouldn't have to keep coming to church, would they.
FALSANI:
Do you believe in heaven?
OBAMA:
Do I believe in the harps and clouds and wings?
FALSANI:
A place spiritually you go to after you die?
OBAMA:
What I believe in is that if I live my life as well as I can, that I will be rewarded. I don't presume to have knowledge of what happens after I die. But I feel very strongly that whether the reward is in the here and now or in the hereafter, the aligning myself to my faith and my values is a good thing.
When I tuck in my daughters at night and I feel like I've been a good father to them, and I see in them that I am transferring values that I got from my mother and that they're kind people and that they're honest people, and they're curious people, that's a little piece of heaven.
FALSANI:
Do you believe in sin?
OBAMA:
Yes.
FALSANI:
What is sin?
OBAMA:
Being out of alignment with my values.
FALSANI:
What happens if you have sin in your life?
OBAMA:
I think it's the same thing as the question about heaven. In the same way that if I'm true to myself and my faith that that is its own reward, when I'm not true to it, it's its own punishment.
FALSANI:
Where do you find spiritual inspiration? Music, nature, literature, people, a conduit you plug into?
OBAMA:
There are so many.
Nothing is more powerful than the black church experience. A good choir and a good sermon in the black church, it's pretty hard not to be move and be transported.
I can be transported by watching a good performance of Hamlet, or reading Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon, or listening to Miles Davis.
FALSANI:
Is there something that you go back to as a touchstone, a book, a particular piece of music, a place ...
OBAMA:
As I said before, in my own sort of mental library, the Civil Rights movement has a powerful hold on me. It's a point in time where I think heaven and earth meet. Because it's a moment in which a collective faith transforms everything. So when I read Gandhi or I read King or I read certain passages of Abraham Lincoln and I think about those times where people's values are tested, I think those inspire me.
FALSANI:
What are you doing when you feel the most centered, the most aligned spiritually?
OBAMA:
I think I already described it. It's when I'm being true to myself. And that can happen in me making a speech or it can happen in me playing with my kids, or it can happen in a small interaction with a security guard in a building when I'm recognizing them and exchanging a good word.
FALSANI:
Is there someone you would look to as an example of how not to do it?
OBAMA:
Bin Laden.
(grins broadly)
FALSANI:
... An example of a role model, who combined everything you said you want to do in your life, and your faith?
OBAMA:
I think Gandhi is a great example of a profoundly spiritual man who acted and risked everything on behalf of those values but never slipped into intolerance or dogma. He seemed to always maintain an air of doubt about him.
I think Dr. King, and Lincoln. Those three are good examples for me of people who applied their faith to a larger canvas without allowing that faith to metasticize into something that is hurtful.
FALSANI:
Can we go back to that morning service in 1987 or 88 -- when you have a moment that you can go back to that as an epiphany...
OBAMA:
It wasn't an epiphany.
It was much more of a gradual process for me. I know there are some people who fall out. Which is wonderful. God bless them. For me it was probably because there is a certain self-consciousness that I possess as somebody with probably too much book learning, and also a very polyglot background.
FALSANI:
It wasn't like a moment where you finally got it? It was a symbol of that decision?
OBAMA:
Exactly. I think it was just a moment to certify or publicly affirm a growing faith in me.
-END-
Cathleen Falsani is author of Sin Boldly: A Field Guide for Grace. To get a free download of the audio book, click here.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Heresy of the Week || Mostholyfamilymonastery.com
Here is the beginning of my post. And here is the rest of it.
Friday, November 14, 2008
Discussion about We need a Main Street Project
HorsesAss.Org » Blog Archive » We need a Main Street Project
A Different Take
What went poof .. the air in this bubble -- was not anything as solid as house prices or as ephemeral as silk hatted capitalists, what went poof is the myth that "money" itself is productive.
Picture ... Obama's house in Chicago. Currrent value about 1.3 milli0n. About 10,000 square feet with a huge 1000 bottle wine cellar.
Our economy has depended for decades on the weird idea that buying stocks was the same thing as investing in companies we "bought." Of course, this was rarely true. If I bought $100,000 of GM five years ago. those shares had no effect on GM's ability to business unless GM diluted my value by selling more shares. The stockholder may have gotten richer but GM's change in capitalization, i.e. its newt worth, was not in parallel with its ability to invest.
If that sort of idea is too obvious, things got a lot worse under Clinton and Bush when the awesome ideas of securitization, hedge funds, and derivatives replaced stocks and bonds as the best way of investing. These three horsemen of our apocalypse have one thing in common .. they equate productivity with the ability of money to make itself. Underlying this elegant fantasy is the scary idea that an economy can grow with NO investment in "real" goods or services. This was a bubble without even the thin skin of some real value in tulips or Internet real estate.
OK. I am not an economist but if I am correct, the fix for this crisis is ... deflation! We need, in effect, to revalue money to better reflect its productivity. Krugman's ideas seem to me, just like Jon Devore's, to do just that.
The criteria for our stimulus should be very simple ... does this investment increase our productivity? We need to act more like Sweden, Japan or China by thin king of the US as one big corporation and choose investments that benefit our competitiveness.
What does this mean?
1. We do NOT lower taxes or give rebates so folks can buy more Chinese prom gowns.
Sure this will make jobs at Wall Mart, but Wall Mart does not add value to our productivity so, in the long run those jobs are not helpful
Nonetheless, no long term investment will help if we slip into a deep recession. That means we need to under gird the safety net .. unemployment, job retraining, universal health care, tuition relief are all urgent needs.
.
2. We do NOT prevent companies form becoming bankrupt.
Bankruptcies in this country can be manged very well since the courts have the ability to restructure rather than destroy. I like the idea of using Fed funds to help with the restructuring. E.g. lets let GM go toes up and restructure it to cut it excessive number of brands and build a better structure for high tech competition for efficient cars.
A key part of this is moving to world standards for government, rather than employer, based health care and retirement programs. As painful as it might be, the new GM ought no longer to function as a pension plan for its ex workers.
3. We DO spend money on infrastructure.
Here in the NW, we ought to build 1-605 ... a new, rural highways from Vancouver to Portland and upgrade passenger rail to bullet train status.
The entire US rail system, power grid, water distribution system is ripe for reconstruction.
4. We DO invest in high end education.
I am less than enthusiastic about spending money on community colleges. Like a tax refund, this sort of activity does help individuals but it does not provide a long term increase in productivity.
It would be asinine to give up the intellectual leadership offered by our top schools in an era where intellectual property may be our best investment.
5. We DO fix the effin immigration laws.
Americans ought to be able to compete for entry level wages and construction jobs while the best of world talent continues to come here to work for the US and become citizens of the world's greatest multiethnic society.
The Kennedy McCain Act needs to be reintroduced ASAP.
6. We DO invest in alternatives to suburbia.
The hidden costs of living in Issaquah and working in Redmond are nuts. Toll roads and light rail provide incentives for people to live closer together AND preserve green space.
7. We DO cut our military.
Past recessions have been solved by wars. This one will not be for the simple, cold reason that there is no large war we can win.
Money invested in Americans defending Australia from Indonesia or containing Russian imperialism would be far more effective building our own economy. This implies we need to return to the 1880s model of a balance of power by building alliances rather than trying to dominate the whole world.
8. We DO invest in key technologies.
Most of the growth in real productivity since WWII has been in technologies that began as government investments. Radio and TV began with RCA .. a government initiative. The Internet began as a DARPA project. Satellites grew out of the competition between the USSR and the USA to throw military stuff into orbit. Modern agriculture began in government funded genetics labs.
This does not mean we need phony pseudo wars that can not be won either. A war on energy, as one example, is inane because much of what the candidates promised is in a league with Reagan's Star Wars initiative.
There are, however, clear opportunities for investments in biotech. The USA has frittered away a huge amount of IP by having too little government support for technology development. The genome project alone offers immense opportunities we can not profit from because the US lacks funding for long term enterprises as opposed to 3-5 year corporate projects.
Much the same is true of energy technology. Our need is only partially for basic science support and more for funds that allow American firms to undertake projects where pay off may be ten years or more in the future.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
A Jew goes looking for Jesus - St. Petersburg Times
Cohen, the son of a rabbi, was raised an Orthodox Jew. He observed the Sabbath, kept kosher and married a nice Jewish girl — the converted daughter of a Methodist minister, actually.
But unlike his wife, who passionately embraced her new religion, Cohen was jaded. He wanted a chance to choose Judaism for himself, the way she had. So beginning in the summer of 2006, he spent a year experiencing Christianity. He still attended synagogue on Saturdays and followed the Talmud, but on Sundays, the Atlanta resident sampled churches. He also took in a Christian rock concert, booksellers convention, wrestling match and Faith Day at Turner Field.
At the end of the year Cohen, a Web editor, returned to Judaism with newfound fervor. And he wrote a book about the whole thing, natch. Monday, as part of Jewish Book Month, he'll be in Tampa to discuss My Jesus Year: A Rabbi's Son Wanders the Bible Belt in Search of His Own Faith.
A Message to Hillary and Sarah
Sex Positive Parenting
Tonight on the Cult of Gracie show you'll hear the amazing truth -- You can both be a sex positive feminist and raise healthy, sexually responsible and responsive adults:
This Wednesday (November 12, from 9 to 10 PM Central time), the lovely Dr. Jane Vargas, of PantyMistress.com, returns to Cult of Gracie Radio with her sex positive feminist daughters, Rebecca of Porn Perspectives and Rachel aka the Pop Feminist.Listen live to the show here, ask questions in chat, and you can join the show live at 646.200.3136.
Image via Kitschy Kitschy Coo.
Bayard Rustin and Prop 8
As some of you know, one of Skeptical Brotha’s longtime contributors has posted that he succumed to the cacophony of lies, hatred, and fear peddled by the homophobic religious right, and voted to ban same sex marriage in California. In so doing, he defecated on the legacy of many gay and lesbian people who fought for the rights of African Americans and similarly situated people of color for full equality in this country.
Without community organizers like Bayard Rustin, a gay black man who traveled to India to study and bring back the nonviolent tactics of Mahatma Ghandhi, the civil rights movement would have suffered in this country. The remarkable thing about the multi-talented Rustin is that he was always upfront about his sexuality, he didn’t hide who he was from anybody. For a man born nearly one hundred years ago in 1912, that little factoid is a big honkin’ deal. In addition to his civil rights activism and his methodical planning of the 1963 March on Washington, he was also a dedicated labor organizer. You remember the March on Washington, right? I believe Dr. King said somethin’ about a dream–a dream that his only living sibling has said has now been realized with the election of Barack Obama.
The late Mrs. Coretta Scott King was clear in her support for equal rights for all:
...............................
A Better Agenda for Darcy
Darcy may well have won w/o dirty campaigning. She should have won anyway because she is a better person for the job.
BUT
With apologies to Sandip and others in the campaign, Darcy should have listened when I and others urged her to go local.
The election in the 8th was not for the Presidency or the cabinet. The elction was fora representative OF the eighth. Darcy has creds she should have used a lot better. She is a techie in a District where the dominant product is bits and bytes. She is a professional woman and a mom. She is a lover, one assumes, of the NW heritage of trees, forests, and schools. None of this came through in the campaign.
OK, I have MY agenda. I wanted her to seek out local supporters from tech and academics. Maybe the war was a better issue? Even so, then why did she choose to paint herself as the head of some team of national experts rather than seeking and showing the counsel of local experts. The UW alone has one of the world's strongest programs in national security but as far as I could find out, Darcy never involved herself with any of these people.
Other issues where she could have claimed a local perch are transportation and energy. Our energy situation, because of Bonneville, is unique and very much a federal issue. BC with its huge hydro resources is also relevant. As for transportation, why did she not take a stand on light rail? I would Sarah Palin Betcha that Pierce Co. is very supportive because LR means JOBS.
While we are at energy, there are also huge openings to discuss in re our relations with BC. The Province has vast natural resources .. from hydro to wonds and tides. We need a common development policy and common trade policy to move the focus of commerce from LA/SF to Vanc-Seatac. This raises many issues that would be great meat for a campaign, including the need for high speed rail from Vancouver to Portland.
I know that these are far too many issues for one campaign, but they are all LOCAL: issues. If Darcy still wants a political future in the NW, she needs to refocus her efforts on the 'hood.
International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
Internationally renowned architect Daniel Libeskind has agreed to design a new synagogue for Munich. And, if the local Jewish community has its way, the building will bring history full circle: They want to build it on the site of Munich's first synagogue, destroyed during the 1938 Night of Broken Glass. By Jess Smee more..."
Gov't approves aliya of some 150 Bnei Menashe from India | Cafe Talk | Jerusalem Post
SAMSON VAIPHEI and his family...
SAMSON VAIPHEI and his family are among a new group of 150 Bnei Menashe approved to make aliya from northeastern India.
Photo: Courtesy
The Bnei Menashe claim descent from a lost tribe of Israel and some 7,200 of them reside primarily in the Indian states of Mizoram and Manipur, which border Burma and Bangladesh.
While there has been no decision to allow the remaining 7,200 Bnei Menashe to make aliya, Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit has allowed the 150 in on humanitarian grounds, as members of this group were previously promised their aliya would be approved, and thus many of them had sold their homes and most of their possessions."
Jerusalem Post | Breaking News from Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish World
By KHALED ABU TOAMEH
Egypt calls off 'reconciliation' talks; many Palestinians also accept having two mini-states."
Israeli Beduins claim link to Obama | Israel | Jerusalem Post
............
'People are very happy. It is the first time that we have a black and Beduin president,' Abduallah said. 'When Obama won, we even named newborn babies after him.'
'We grant a person we love and a person who is victorious either a sword, a horse, or a bride,' he continued. 'But we do not want to give him a bride because we do not want to upset his wife.'"
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Rahm Emanuel's Irgun Father Speaks Up
Arab-American group blasts Emanuel’s dad
November 12, 2008
WASHINGTON (JTA) - An Arab-American group wants Barack Obama and Rahm Emanuel to repudiate remarks made by Emanuel’s father.
President-elect Obama last week named U.S. Rep. Emanuel (D-Ill.), whose father is Israeli, as his White House chief of staff. In an interview with the Israeli daily Ma’ariv, Benjamin Emanuel said: "Obviously, he’ll influence the president to be pro-Israel. Why wouldn’t he? What is he, an Arab? He’s not going to be mopping floors at the White House."
In an e-mail blast, the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee urged its members to protest the "detestable" comments by fax or through e-mail.
ADC also wrote a letter to Emanuel asking him to repudiate his father’s comments. ADC "views this characterization of an Arab as an unacceptable smear," the letter said. "One can readily imagine the justifiable outcry if someone made a similar remark about African‐Americans, Jews, or Hispanics, concerning cleaning the floors of the White House. Do the normal standards of decency and civility not apply when talking about Arabs?"
Before his family moved to the lakeshore suburb of Wilmette, Rahm Emanuel attended Bernard Zell Anshe Emet Day School, a Jewish high school endowed by billionaire Sam Zell. Inheriting his father’s passion for Israel, Rahm Emanuel worked as a civilian volunteer in Israel in the 1991 Gulf War, rust-proofing brakes on an army base in northern Israel.
Beyond Emanuel’s private introduction to AIPAC’s executive board, Obama sounded all the important themes in his public remarks. He vowed to stop Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and insisted Jerusalem will remain the undivided capital of the Jewish state.
“Let me be clear. Israel’s security is sacrosanct. It is non-negotiable,” he said. “The Palestinians need a state that is contiguous and cohesive, and that allows them to prosper . . . But any agreement with the Palestinian people must preserve Israel’s identity as a Jewish state, with secure, recognized and defensible borders.”
The key idea, missing in this discussion, is that the government MUST switch from the now failed model of free market capitalism to a model more like that lf Europe and Japan where the government itself is a major investor.
The essence of 19th century capitalism was the concept that entrepreneurs would do the tight thing by investing in productivity AND helping the consumer increase his purchasing power to but the new goods. That idea is now fundamental to all economics, even in China. What is different is that we developed a bizarre system that diverted capital from productivity to money itself. A HUGE part of our capital was invested in financial schemes that drained capital from everything else.
Those schemes were like the pre-capitalist idea of money as a goal itself, an idea that led to the failure of pre capitalist systems. We are, I suggest, now paying a huge price for a return to the ideas that drove Imperial Spain to ruin.
This is why the idea of subsidizing the consumer is bad. We need to find ways of investing in our national .. and now world .. productivity.
A good start is to think of large, successful nations, as competitors for capital. Leave aside the religious belief of laissez-faire and communism but create world law that encourages countries to compete with each other commercially.
Done well, that sort of competition should benefit the citizens of the country that “chooses” the best system for its citizens. As a Jeffersonian, I believe that system will be American.