Archive for September 12th, 2010

Sep
12

Both Sides Now w Huffington Matalin Jobs MidTerms the Quran and Christ

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Both Sides Now w Huffington  Matalin Jobs MidTerms the Quran and Christ

On the issues of burning Korans, building bridges and winning elections, Arianna and Mary sometimes moved beyond left and right, often-times not so much (hear highlights of the full 9/11 program below).
On Democratic Economic Policies: For different reasons, they concurred that Obama had done too little to revive the economy. Arianna wished that the original Stimulus had been larger because “it’s an no-brainer” that when the private market isn’t creating enough consumer demand, the public sector must. Mary wasn’t buying that, concluding that it was all about “business confidence” and “entitlement reform.” “You mean Social Security cuts?” the Host asked. She responded no, only “adjustments.”
Should Washington retain Bush’s tax cuts to the top 2%? Mary argued that many of them were small businesses — while Arianna said that the rich were rich… and whether she got a personal tax cut didn’t mean that the HuffPost would hire more people. Irrespective of federal tax and spending policy, she added, there was a world-wide structural economic change occurring that would bleed jobs out of America.
On GOP Fall Prospects: While the two were polar opposites on the cause of the current economic mess – Mary said that it wasn’t Bush’s fault since he only had four years as a president with a Republican Congress — they agreed that the higher-than-expected unemployment rate made Democratic hopes this fall nearly hopeless. For the sake of “Both Sides,” the Host countered that Democrats could still hold the House because of their superior get-out-the-vote operation, Obama’s aggressive anti-GOP offensive to shrink the “enthusiasm gap” and some weak, fringe Republican nominees. (An off-air bet ensued which will be revealed post election-day.)
On Beck, Christ and Israel: Arianna and Mary differed on a) whether Glenn Beck on the day of his DC rally questioned Obama’s religion and b) what Christ would have said Christianity was — and then they both concluded that in the land where “He” came from, it was exemplary for Obama to start peace talks without knowing for sure that the principal parties would agree in the end. “That’s his job,” said Mary.
Media and Quran-burning: Both focused on the media as an accelerant on this inflammatory issue. (Again, the Host countered whether the real problem wasn’t a wacko pastor who’d be recruiting device for al Qaeda, as the President and Secretary of Defense feared.) And when asked about those who drew a link between a book burner and a mosque builder — e.g., Palin, Boehner, Giuliani — Arianna forcefully said that the only link was the anti-Muslim “continuum of intolerance.”
Mark Green is the Host of Both Sides Now w/ Huffington & Matalin.
Send all comments to BothSidesRadio.com, where you can also listen to the full program this week and any earlier ones.
Mark Green is the host “Both Sides Now.”
Send any comments to Bothsidesradio.com, where you can listen to the full show this week as well as prior shows.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Congresswoman Plays the Xenophobia Card Part II

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Congresswoman Plays the Xenophobia Card Part II

It is almost as if the House Intelligence Committee member is having an “out of body” experience. Is it not odd that someone sitting on a powerful committee that exercises oversight over the entire national intelligence community should resort to asking accusatory questions–in regard to claims of Hezbollah terrorists on the Mexican border–in extracurricular settings rather than directly addressing them to agency officials who can be readily summoned before her committee?
Once again the Charlotte Observer has reported the keep-me-awake-at-night “worries” of Rep. Sue Myrick (R-NC) over Hezbollah operating on the Mexican-American border. ( September 9.) Yet, no significant new evidence is offered to back up her headline-grabbing suggestion. Rather, the Homeland Security department–as reported by McClatchy reporter Barbara Barrett–has stated again that it has no credible evidence of activity by the U.S.-designated terrorist group along that border.
It is almost as if Ms. Myrick is having an experience, based on little more than her alarmist imagination. Is it not peculiar that this freshman member of the House Intelligence Committee relies upon old tales of tattoos (in Farsi) seen on border-crossers, an obscure reference in a weapons-trafficking federal case in New York state, and a comparison of how tunnels are dug in Mexico and Israel, to fashion her sensationalist theory?
Is it not odd that someone sitting on a powerful committee that exercises oversight over the entire national intelligence community (DHS, CIA, FBI, NSA, et.al.) should resort to asking accusatory questions in extra-curricular settings rather than directly addressing them to officials from these agencies who can be readily summoned before her committee?
To quote from Myrick in a September 2 Washington Times op-ed provocatively entitled Myrick: Hezbollah Car Bombs on Our Border: Doesn’t the protection of the American public deserve answers? Unfortunately, the administration continues to sit by idly while security threats go uninvestigated. But the Congresswoman offered no evidence for such a serious charge, other than Secretary Janet Napolitano’s decision not to form a “task force” requested by Myrick. Note: DHS did not say that it had refused to investigate the alleged threat.
She followed up the opinion piece with a video posted on her website–the Department of Homeland Security seal was superimposed–entitled Update: Hezbollah on the Southern Border about a legal case in New York state in which a link to Hezbollah had been “overlooked.” In the video a male voice–using colored graphics–reports on a federal case about a Syrian arms dealer’s alleged activities in South America that brought him into contact with FARC in Colombia in an arms-for-drugs deal.
Notice is drawn in the video to the Representative’s own anecdotal pieces of information about Hezbollah activities on the Mexican-American border obtained from former counter-terrorism officials. With a photo of the Charlotte Observer in the background, the video then pictures an abbreviated quote from an HMS spokesperson contained in the June 30 issue of the paper under Myrick Calls for Look into Terrorists on S.W. Border: Congresswoman Believes Hezbollah is in Mexico. At the close of the Myrick website video this loaded question is posed: Why does the Department of Homeland Security refuse to acknowledge the threat and, at the very least, look into it?
No wonder the Congresswoman is usually unavailable for unrestricted press interviews on this hot topic. Frankly, I do not think she knows what she is talking about.

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Sep
12

Steelers Win Without Ben Roethlisberger Barely

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Steelers Win Without Ben Roethlisberger  Barely

Looks like kicker Jeff Reed owes running back Rashard Mendenhall a couple of cold ones.
The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Atlanta Falcons 15-9 in overtime. If this game is any indication of the season to come, expect a lot of hungover Steelers fans on Monday mornings.
However, it’s great to see a defense that can step up when it counts and an offense focusing on the running game. Hey, that’s Steelers football.
After a missed 40-yard field goal by Reed, the Steelers’ usually reliable kicker, with 39 seconds left, the game went into overtime. The Falcons won the coin toss but had to punt after their first possession. Then, at 2:35 into overtime, Mendenhall ran 50 yards for a TD and the win. It was the only touchdown in the entire game and the first offensive play for the Steelers in OT. Mendenhall ended up with 120 yards in 22 carries. Not too shabby, huh? Running back Isaac Redman (6 carries for 19 yards) also looks like he was an excellent pickup for the Steelers.
It was an epic day for Steelers receiver Hines Ward, with his 26th career 100-yard game. He also became the first Steeler ever to have over 11,000 yards. Wow … that’s a lot of yards. Congratulations, Hines, and way to shut up the naysayers who say you’re too old to still be effective.
The defense also stepped up brilliantly, limiting the Falcons to three field goals and giving up only 49 yards to running back Michael Turner. Are the defense’s fourth-quarter woes a thing of the past? Let’s cross our fingers.
Safety Troy Polamalu had an amazing, and I mean amazing interception at the end of the fourth quarter, stepping in front of Pro Bowl receiver Roddy White. Dragging both feet in bounds, holding the ball up with one hand, curly mane flowing in the breeze — it truly was a thing of beauty.
And even though it didn’t count, it’s always fun to watch linebacker James Harrison pick up the ball and huff and puff his way into the end zone, slowly losing steam with each stomp, as an entourage of Steelers defenders surround him and cheer him on.
Polamalu’s interception set up Reed’s missed field goal attempt, when every Steelers fan thought the game was won. Nope, clearly they just felt like making their season opener a little bit more exciting.
Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan completed 27 in 44 attempts for a total of 252 yards. He threw to White 23 (ahem, 23!!) times, as White seemed to be able to consistently beat cornerback Bryant McFadden. White ended up with 13 catches for 111 yards, a pretty productive afternoon.
Dennis Dixon, the Steelers’ third-string quarterback, racked up 18 completions in 26 attempts for 236 yards. It was his second career start. He was also intercepted once and seemed at times to forget which team he was playing for, as he kept throwing to Falcon defenders. Luckily for him, they dropped a lot of potential interceptions. He either didn’t recognize what the defense was doing or his aim really sucked. Let’s hope it’s something he can get better at before facing the Tennessee Titans next week.
But he also had moments of brilliance, like a 52-yard completion to receiver Mike Wallace (doesn’t look like we’re going to miss Santonio Holmes), and 24- and 25-yard completions to Hines Ward down the middle of the field. Hey, Dixon can only get better … right? Right?
This is the eighth consecutive season opener the Steelers have won, the best streak in the league. That stat is good, but this one isn’t: Converting 4-of-14 attempts on third down. That absolutely has to improve, or the Steelers are going to have to face an incredibly long season.
Also unfortunate: Nose tackle Casey Hampton injured his hamstring, and left tackle Max Starks hurt his left ankle. Both had to leave the game and neither returned, and their status for next week against the Titans is unknown. Let’s hope they get better in time.

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Sep
12

Win Friends and Influence People by Condemning Others and Speaking for God

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Win Friends and Influence People by Condemning Others and Speaking for God

One of the absolute best things you can do for another person is to tell them what’s wrong with them. People positively love it when they’re told—especially by someone they hardly know—what, who, and how they should be. And the greater the scope of things you criticize in another, the deeper that person will thrill to your input and criticism.
If you want to make someone really happy, for instance, find profound fault with their relationship to God! That’s a surefire friend-winner, every time. Because if a person is wrong about God, what’s left for them to be right about? Nothing! Why waste your time trying to win someone’s affection by criticizing things like their clothes or diet, when you can go for the gold? Criticize their understanding of God! That’s how you’ll make a ready friend for life.
As fantastic as it is, the reason people so enjoy being informed that their relationship with God (and so just everything else!) is all wrong isn’t just because it gives them a chance to correctly reject everything about themselves. It goes even deeper than that. It shows them how much you care about them. The strongest message of love you can send another, after all, is that they’re doomed to spend eternity having the living flesh seared off their bones if they don’t become just like you. That’s why no one has more friends than the person who won’t rest until as many possible non-Christians—or wrong sort of Christians—have heard from them personally about what deluded, pitiful, morally bereft sinners they are.
When you take the time to let someone know how absurdly mistaken they are about everything from the nature of morality, to the purpose of man, to what happens after we die, what you’re certain to discover right away is how readily they grasp that you do, in fact, understand such things in a much deeper way than they. That’s why they’re sure to respond so positively to your critique of their character, belief system, and concept of God. When you show other people how positive you are that you’re right, they just can’t wait to start thinking like you. That’s the wonder of passion. It’s downright contagious!
There are those who believe that God is working in the life of every person, cultivating, in his own way and time, a relationship with them that he knows is perfect for them and him. Don’t you believe it! God is too busy worrying about things like weather and keeping the planets aligned to tend to the soul of every living human. He’s God, not … super God. He depends upon those who are closest to him to do those things that he just doesn’t have the time or energy to do himself. And one of those things is teaching others how wrong they are about him. And people—no matter how dense they might be about everything else in life—understand that. When you tell someone what they should believe about God, and why they’re wrong for believing whatever immature inanity about God they do, they understand that you’re not just speaking about God, but for God. And that’s why they’re guaranteed to love your message! Sure, everyone yearns to hear directly from God. But few are awarded that privilege! The rest are willing and ready to hear directly from the very next best thing to God: you.
From God; to you; to the confused, deluded, and sin-filled; back up to God again.
That’s the glorious circle of life!
Break it at your peril.
****
John also blogs at JohnShore.com.
Come hang out with John on his Facebook fan page.

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Sep
12

Ryan Air CEO Buries Head Firmly in Sand says global warming is bullst

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Ryan Air CEO Buries Head Firmly in Sand says global warming is bullst

There is something poetic about comparing the head of a low-budget airline company to an ostrich.
The CEO of Ryan Air, Michael O’Leary, the cheap-flight kings of Europe, is grabbing headlines today and it is not for his company’s cramped no-frills flights, but for his comments regarding the reality of climate change.
Despite the fact that 2010 is on track to being the hottest year in recorded human history and decades of scientific evidence to the contrary from the most prestigious scientific academies in the world, O’Leary states in an interview with the Irish Independent that,
O’Leary goes on,
And on,
“The scientific community has nearly always been wrong in history anyway. In the Middle Ages, they were going to excommunicate Galileo because the entire scientific community said the Earth was flat… I mean, it is absolutely bizarre that the people who can’t tell us what the fucking weather is next Tuesday can predict with absolute precision what the fucking global temperatures will be in 100 years’ time. It’s horseshit.”
Given the fact that the airline industry is one of the largest emitters of greenhouse gas in the world, O’Leary’s thinking shows that some people will always find it easier to bury their head in the sand than deal with a challenge. But it is also in tune with a lot of people these days.
Recent polling in the EU has shown a marked drop in the number of people who believe in the idea that greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels is the cause of climate change. An April 2010 poll found that only 38% of British respondents agreed that, “global warming is a fact and is mostly caused by emissions from vehicles and industrial facilities.”
While people like O’Leary may seem crazy to most, there will be many who will read his comments and nod their head.
Since the failure of the international talks in Copenahgen and the climate bill in the US Senate there has been a lot of talk about the need to re-build the climate movement and I couldn’t agree more. One thing that needs to be dealt with at the same time is the disconnect between the science and public opinion about the causes and consequences of climate change.
After all, it is hard to build a movement if you don’t have a critical mass that believes in the cause.

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Sep
12

Kickoff Week for the NFL Negotiations

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Kickoff Week for the NFL Negotiations

Just as the NFL teams take the field for the first week of the season, the labor struggles have begun in earnest. You might have missed the news that the members of the Super Bowl Champion New Orleans Saints unanimously voted last Monday to authorize the NFL Players Association to decertify. What is all this about?
The possible decertification of the Players Association is based on the relationship between national labor law and antitrust law. This is the most difficult topic I cover in my Sports Law course, but it will be critical to understanding the bargaining games over the coming year. While many fans have trouble believing that millionaire athletes are unionized, that is very old news. Players with careers averaging about four years find in a union the support they need to make sure they are treated fairly. Then why would the Saints – and the members of all the other NFL teams to follow – vote to allow their union to decertify?
Decertification would mean the union would cease to exist. That, believe it or not, may be a benefit to the players and to their prospects in collective bargaining. The collective bargaining agreement between the clubs and the union includes all kinds of provisions that limit economic competition between the clubs. For example, NFL teams are limited by the salary cap in what they can pay their employees, the players. They are limited in the number of employees they can hire, 53 during the regular season. They even share their revenues. Think of any other group of economic competitors pulling off the same trick. These “restraints of trade,” as they are called in antitrust law, would be easy targets in an antitrust suit. While we are used to hearing about multi-million dollar multi-year contracts, in a truly free market these very special athletes might be able to command even higher salaries.
How then do the NFL teams get away with these antitrust violations? When the economic restraints are embodied in a collective bargaining agreement, they are insulated from antitrust liability under prevailing court precedent. Congress enacted both the antitrust laws and the labor laws, and the courts, in seeking to reconcile the two statutes, have said that labor law trumps antitrust law when the restraints are the product of free and open collective bargaining.
Why then is the NFL Players Association threatening to stop being a union? The Supreme Court has held that as long as the union exists, the antitrust immunity exists, even after expiration of the collective bargaining agreement. Apparently, the only way antitrust laws will apply to the NFL in its dealings with its players is if the union commits “suicide.”
The union has used this strategy before. After the disastrous 1987 strike, the union decertified and players filed an antitrust suit. While the case was pending, the parties secretly negotiated a new collective bargaining agreement. (If the negotiations had been made public, then the union’s decertification would have been revealed to be a sham. Both sides honored the secrecy pledge.) That ushered in decades of labor peace on the football field.
A genuine decertification of the Players Association accompanied by an antitrust suit would mean the end of the NFL as we know it. Thus, the risk to the NFL by the union’s strategy is real. However, it is also a doomsday bomb. The union has to be willing to end its existence, and management must believe that could happen. Otherwise, the antitrust ploy is an empty threat.
The union insists that taking player votes now is simply for logistical reasons. It is easier to reach all the players during the season. The union need not act until March or even later when the owners make plain they intend to lock out the players to achieve their bargaining goals. Both sides are just preparing for the showdown that seems sure to come next year.

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Sep
12

BP Accident Report OutPoints Finger at Everyone Else

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BP Accident Report OutPoints Finger at Everyone Else

The long awaited internal report on the blowout of Mississippi Canyon Block 252 well from BP was released this week, a 200 plus page treatise with page after page of data about the blowout and its causes. Predictably, the report did its best to deflect liability away from BP by pointing the finger at virtually everyone else. Also predictably, the press mostly gave them a pass, claiming that BP also blamed themselves for the accident. Well, not really. The report identified 8 major conclusions about factors that caused the accident. Of the eight, the company only took partial responsibility for 2. Here they are, along with BP’s conclusions:The annulus did not isolate the hydrocarbons -
Halliburton’s fault, though BP should have been more aware.The shoe track (bottom section of casing) did
not isolate hydrocarbons – Halliburton’s and Weatherford’s fault.The negative pressure test was accepted although
well integrity had not been established – Primarily Transocean’s toolpusher’s
fault; BP’s fault that company man accepted toolpusher’s explanation. Influx of hydrocarbons was not recognized until
hydrocarbons were in the riser – Transocean’s fault.Well control response actions failed to regain
control of the well – Transocean’s faultDiversion to the mud gas separator (rather than
directly overboard) resulted in gas venting onto the rig – Transocean’s fault. The fire and gas system did not prevent
hydrocarbon ignition – Transocean’s faultThe BOP emergency mode did not seal the well -
Transocean’s fault
Not on the list were BP’s casing design, BP’s decision not to run all the centralizers, BP’s orders not to circulate bottoms up before the cement job, and BP’s decision to displace the riser with seawater prior to running the top cement plug or setting the casinghanger lockdown sleeve. The report, in fact, staunchly defended the casing design calling it standard industry practice that was actually better than a liner, even though most of the industry, including Shell, have disagreed. The report concluded that the original influx of gas into the well came up through the production casing, which is the least likely path that required 4 simultaneous failures to occur. The obvious path, up the outside of the production casing to the casing hanger that we’ve talked about before, was dismissed, thought they left the door open to that possibility, buried in the back of the report. As part of their defense of this conclusion was the live feed of pressure readings from the rig up until the explosions; they also cited the pressure behaviors of the well during the static kill, but left that data out of the appendices. They also discounted the lack of centralizers as a cause of the blowout, which I agree with, but for a different reason. They say it’s because the gas from the formation actually went DOWN the annulus, into the production casing, through 134 feet of premium cement in the shoe track, through TWO float failed valves, and into the casing. I don’t believe the centralizers were a factor because I question their effectiveness, especially in small gauge holes, such as this one.Two new pieces of information were interesting, though. According to BP’s conclusions about pressure data, one of the annular preventer worked, at least partially. They don’t explain, though how it ultimately failed. Also, when gas first hit the surface, the crew ran it through the mud gas separator, which was overwhelmed, enveloping the rig in gas. Had they simply diverted it overboard, it could have given them more time to get the well under control. As it happened, the gas flooded the engine rooms with disastrous consequences.Certainly, running nitrified cement was a factor in this well getting away from them, but that was BP’s decision. Not running all the centralizers were BP’s decision, and Halliburton’s Opti-Cem cement report even warned BP of the likelihood of severe gas flow, which BP promptly ignored. The key mistake here, however, was failure to recognize the influx of hydrocarbons into the well. BP can blame Transocean and the others all it wants, but it was that mistake that lead to the disaster, and that responsibility lay on BP’s shoulders as operator. In fact, the influx came to the surface because BP prematurely ordered that seawater be loaded into the riser before the final operations were complete.It’s more than just a coincidence that BP’s own conclusions about the causes of this disaster happen to be somebody else’s fault, and BP takes little responsibility for key errors that were made. It’s also no surprise that the factors BP points to as causes are neither provable or disprovable, because almost everything they point to as causes are still in the hole, never to be recovered. There is plenty of blame to go around here between BP and Transocean. The rig crew should have recognized the kick…but the BP company men should have, too. We all know the BOP failed, and that’s on Transocean’s shoulders, but the rest? That’s on BP as operator.BP’s blatant (some might say cynical) buck-passing calls the validity of the entire report into question, but that’s not surprising, with the stakes so high. Rather than getting to the truth, BP’s goal here was to spread as much fault as possible and blaming the dead guys is always easiest. The shame is that all this gamesmanship obscures the possible real causes that could help save lives as the industry goes back to work in the deepwater.I didn’t expect that kind of transparecy, though, especially based on the experiences of the last 4 months.
More on The Daily Hurricane Energy page.

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Sep
12

Reading the Pictures The 911 Anniversary Message You Wont Get from the Typical Ground Zero Snapshot Were Just Allah Americans Here

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Reading the Pictures The 911 Anniversary Message You Wont Get from the Typical Ground Zero Snapshot Were Just Allah Americans Here

For several years now, I have been working with Alan Chin, one of America’s finest independent freelance photojournalists, to capture significant political events free of the media filter. Whether covering presidential primaries or the aftermath of disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, our interest, besides the scene “on the ground,” has involved how the media chooses to put words and a literal frame around that scene.
Speaking of “ground,” it’s hard to find a larger disconnect between reality and the media storyline than the one Alan photographed at Ground Zero this weekend on the anniversary of 9/11. Whereas the media’s coverage of Ground Zero and Cordoba Islamic Center protests tend to soft peddle the conflict as a battle of left vs. right, or protectors of freedom of religion vs. defenders of the victims of 9/11, Chin’s photos offer us a different, if obvious message.
What the pictures have to say is that people who take their citizenship and their rights all-too-for granted have turned the terror attack; the commemoration of the terror attack; the election of a half-black Christian president; and this current election season into an opportunity, in the most sanctimonious way, to use classic American symbols, as well as symbols of Christianity, to scapegoat otherwise patriotic, hardworking American Muslims.
What Alan shot and represented in a simple eight frame slideshow is how American Muslims and Muslims in America are overwhelming true to the ideals the haters exploit, and on Saturday, in symbolism and self-expression (whether the media chose to notice or not), they showed up and made it known.
See Alan Chin’s 9/11 slideshow here at BagNewsNotes.

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Sep
12

Goodness and Redemption in Flipped The Best Special Effects

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Goodness and Redemption in Flipped The Best Special Effects

A lot of contemporary movies picture American suburban life as banal, hypocritical, and morally bankrupt, a deceitful place where manicured landscapes and plastic surgery cover up empty, desperate realities. But in Rob Reiner’s newly released Flipped, the American ‘burbs provide the environment in which fragile, honest goodness is repeatedly tested and quietly grows.
Completely devoid of special effects, violence, or sex, and without a single chase scene or exploding car, Flipped relies on old-fashioned storytelling and great acting to tell the story of a boy and girl coming of age in the suburbs.
The story begins with young Juli developing a massive childhood crush on Bryce, the dreamy-eyed new kid in the neighborhood. In spite of those eyes of his, Bryce is completely blind to her beauty, and when he finally begins to flip for her as she has for him, it’s almost too late.
The families of the two protagonists are essential to the film’s richness. I asked producer Rob Reiner about some of these secondary characters.
“Really, the pivotal role in the film, aside from the two kids, is the grandfather. He’s the moral compass in the movie,” Rob explained. “Bryce is fortunate that his grandfather comes to live with him at such a critical time, when he’s 12 or 13. The old man teaches his grandson something that Bryce’s own father doesn’t understand: that in terms of character, you can swim out so far from the shore that you can’t make it back.”
Bryce’s father, along with a few of his schoolmates, represents the negative polarity in the movie: outwardly successful but inwardly empty. Juli’s father, in contrast, has “kept his soul,” in Reiner’s words, keeping his creativity alive and holding on to his love for his family, even though his lawn is full of weeds.
“The most important scene in the film, in many ways,” Rob continued, “is the scene where Juli’s dad takes Juli to visit his brother, her uncle, who is mentally handicapped.” It’s in that visit, climaxing in an embarrassing outburst in a public place, that we see the gritty courage and tough commitment that real families require.
The two mothers, each struggling with the complexities of marriage and parenthood, create one of the film’s most redemptive moments: a meal where the two families come together and begin to overcome their longstanding alienation. (As many suburban families know, it can be a long walk to cross the street and meet a neighbor.)
I told Rob that I sensed a kind of understated spirituality in that dinner; it felt like a kind of communion, evoking in its humble way the epic meal in Babette’s Feast. In it, people must face their false impressions of one another, and a kind of repentance begins for several of the characters.
“It really is a spiritual movie,” Rob replied. “Juli has this pure love for God’s creation, seen in her love for that old sycamore tree.” And it shows as well in her care for some chickens, beloved byproducts of a science fair project; she calls them “my girls.”
Bryce discovers that the only way to love Juli is to love what she loves, and so he is brought into Juli’s spirituality through her. It’s a kind of reverse Eden story: Eve coaxes Adam back into the garden he has wandered away from.
Flipped succeeds in doing something few films do without seeming schmaltzy: it captures moments of goodness. “You don’t set out trying to convey goodness,” Rob said. “You try to capture honesty. Because people aren’t cartoons. We’re all a mix. So you try to convey who a character really is with honesty. And when you do that, some goodness always shines through.”
If you’ve been losing faith lately, wondering if all the eggs have gotten salmonella and all the beaches tarballs, take somebody you love (or would like to love) and see Flipped. And better still, make it a double or triple date, and plan to go out after seeing the movie. You’ll have lots to talk about — honest moments where goodness shines through — which is probably the best kind of special effect anywhere.

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Sep
12

Arianna Discusses Third World Ameria With Maria Bartiromo On CSpans After Words VIDEO

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Arianna Discusses Third World Ameria With Maria Bartiromo On CSpans After Words VIDEO

Arianna appeared on C-Span’s “After Words” program this weekend to discuss her latest book “Third World America” with Maria Bartiromo.
Arianna spoke about her motivations for writing the book, the current dismal state of America’s political and economic system, and what we can do to turn it around.
“Over the last few years, I’ve begun to see something happening,” she said, “which is that the country which was about the American Dream was actually now becoming the country of downward mobility for millions of people in the middle class who felt they could no longer give themselves or their children the better life that was associated with America. So I really wrote it as a warning and also to show all the ways we can turn it around.”
WATCH:

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Sep
12

Cleaning Your Silver Lining

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Cleaning Your Silver Lining

Dear God,
Something happened today that I do not think has ever happened in the history of man kind, it was the kind of something that you know you can never repeat, unless you knew the exact reason or formula for it. What happened was this, both of my middle children cleaned their rooms without an argument, without me having to ask more then once, and not one bit of whining. I did not even bribe them with the promise of a new and shiny trinket.
I know all of you parents out there are scratching your heads and thinking “she has to be lying, there must be something, promise of a new Xbox game, a new Hannah Montana pair of shoes, perhaps even the ever sought after trip to Carvel, but no, none of this took place, I never even had to raise my voice, threaten to sell all of their toys on Craigs list to fund a maid, or to give them away to the kids down the street, which worked up until they were old enough to realize the kids down the street had their own toys.
All I did was say “ok I want your rooms cleaned today before 4 pm, you pick the time that isn’t going to interfere with any pre planned battles on Halo 3 or any fun game time on Roblox”, and it was done. The sound of the vacuum cleaner is now ringing in my ears as the last kids finishes up in her room.
I do believe I know what the answer to this mystery is, something I am hesitant to admit but it is the fact my husband has been away. Working out of town for 5 days out of the week has let me do something I have never been able to do with these kids before and that is parent without an opposing party. My husband is the spoiler, the indulger, the one who sticks up for them when they whine. He was an only child to a 100% italian family, he walked on water and his mom brown bagged his lunch for him till he was an adult and working full time.
Am I happy about this turn of events? I am. Do we miss him? More then ever. But within every cloud there is a silver lining, and this silver lining is cleaned and vacuumed.
Love,
A Mom

Follow Amy Domestico on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Stockholm Water Confab Rings Alarms Offers Hope

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Stockholm Water Confab Rings Alarms Offers Hope

“S**t!”
The BBC allowed freelance journalist/author Rose George http://rosegeorge.com to use the word on the air to ring alarm bells that 2.6 billion people – four in ten – worldwide don’t have toilets, and have to resort to the outdoors for their basic human needs.
“Meanwhile, the western world luxuriates in flush toilets; in toilets that play music or can check blood pressure, where the flush is a thoughtless thing, and anything that can go down a sewer – nappies, motorbikes, goldfish – does,” her website claims.
2.6 billion people worldwide don’t have toilets (Abu-Fadil)
George has been campaigning for better sanitation and has penned several books, notably her tour de force, The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why it Matters.
Her mantra is that more people should become aware of the dangers of bad sanitation, as human excrement in water supplies is a contributor to communicable diseases http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rose-george/how-to-save-the-world-wit_b_334223.html.
According to her research, a child dies from diarrhea – usually brought on by fecal-contaminated food or water – every 15 seconds. But human waste, she argues, is also full of nutrients, is rich and can be used to good purpose.
George’s sanitation goals and other water-related topics attracted 2,500 participants to World Water Week in Stockholm http://www.worldwaterweek.org/about where experts, decision makers, academics and journalists debated issues of vital importance to the planet.
This week’s event, organized by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) www.siwi.org, was a dizzying conference http://www.worldwaterweek.org/programme2010 packed with plenary sessions, workshops, seminars, side events and awards ceremonies meant to create awareness about problems, as well as share solutions and plans of action.
In a workshop on water quality for human health, University of Maryland Prof. Rita Colwell, this year’s water prize laureate, spoke of her findings in the mapping of microbial and chemical risks in a bid to reduce health threats.
“Diarrheal diseases transmitted by water are key to the loss of working hours and security for countries,” she noted.
Award winner Dr. Rita Colwell (Abu-Fadil)
Water, water every where
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water every where,
Ne any drop to drink
British poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s 1798 “The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner” came to mind as experts in Sweden discussed shortages and how less than 1 percent of the Earth’s water was fresh and available for human consumption.
The contrast between developing countries suffering from a lack of potable water and Sweden, that boasts clean tap water, couldn’t be starker.
Stockholm, a/k/a “the Venice of the North,” maintains high standards of wastewater treatment, allowing people to fish and swim in the heart of the city, which was impossible a few decades ago.
Stockholm tap water is drinkable (Abu-Fadil)
Participants were each handed a conference bag and a water bottle like those used by athletes to fill from fountains at the venue that dispensed cold still and fizzy water.
Promoting clean drinking water (Abu-Fadil)
Conference topics included biodiversity, wastewater management, combating desertification, maintaining ecosystems, climate change, pollutants in water resources, and the economics of sanitation, to name a few.
“Don’t be a drip,” was a catchy bookmark handed out by the National Geographic http://www.nationalgeographic.com – one of countless materials displayed in the exhibition hall – featuring a duck in a shower urging people to reduce their water use.
Complex conference presentations were coupled with awards, with Swedish Crown Princess Victoria handing out the 2010 Stockholm Junior Water Prize to innovative young scientists.
This year Canadians Alexander Allard and Danny Luong nabbed the prize, sponsored by the ITT Corporation www.itt.com, for their work to develop a new biotechnical method to biodegrade polystyrene in water.
Crown Princess Victoria (at podium) with Junior Water
Prize laureates (Abu-Fadil)
The Striking WASH Communication http://washcommunication.blogspot.com Media Awards were another incentive for journalists to become more engaged in water-related issues.
Participants were told the perception of a water story was news of water wars, contamination incidents, and floods or droughts, whereas bad climate, water-related deaths and negotiated water agreements barely made a dent in any news cycle.
Experts urge better water-media ties (Abu-Fadil)
Dr. Peter Gleik of the Pacific Institute www.pacinst.org advised water experts to cultivate reporters, help them understand the story and issues, send them news, and become reliable sources.
He also suggested water specialists should become reporters, should blog and tweet, should comment and should use Facebook to convey their messages.

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Sep
12

Hurricane Igor gathers strength on westward track

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Hurricane Igor gathers strength on westward track

Hurricane Igor has strengthened in the Atlantic and is moving westwards, forecasters warned.
The category four storm with winds of up to 135mph (220km/h) is currently 1,565 miles (2,520km) east of the Dominican Republic.
Forecasters say it could cross the northern Caribbean, possibly heading toward Bermuda.
However, they added it was too early to make any definitive predictions about the hurricane's path.
The Miami-based National Hurricane Center said Igor had “rapidly intensified”.
“Some additional strengthening is forecast during the next 48 hours,” it said.
Igor has become the fourth hurricane of the 2010 Atlantic season, following Alex, Danielle and Earl.
Hurricane Earl churned up the east coast of the US and Canada earlier this month, toppling trees and power lines and causing minor flooding.
One person died in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia after securing a boat that had slipped its moorings.

Source:BBC

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Sep
12

Jefferson vs Hamilton Again Thankfully

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Jefferson vs Hamilton Again Thankfully

In the Entrance Hall at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s museum of maps, Native American artifacts, and mounted animal horns, stood two busts, facing each other. One was of Jefferson and the other of Alexander Hamilton. As Jefferson put it, he placed them there so they could be “opposed in death as in life.”
In our lives, the political differences that separated Hamilton and Jefferson still dominate. Jefferson, the plantation owner, spent the Revolution in Virginia. He believed an innate moral sense guides us into right action. Government’s role is thus to secure basic rights and, at the national level, to do little else than assure our defense against foreign enemies, secure favorable treaties of commerce, and foster interstate connections (in his day – roads and canals). Jefferson believed in a “natural aristocracy” which would emerge based on talent and hard work not parentage. When he deviated from his belief in limited government, it was to purchase Louisiana. He questioned his own power to do so but knew the vast land would open the west to small farmers. In his ever-optimistic world-view, a nation of yeoman farmers, each able to support his own family, would ensure their political freedom. The “elective principle,” by which the nation became more democratic the more offices in all branches of government were open to frequent election, was essential to what he celebrated as the “spirit of ’76.”
Hamilton, the New Yorker, spent the Revolution in the field as Washington’s aide, acquiring a national perspective. He saw man at his worst and lacked Jefferson’s confidence in human morality. Government’s role was thus to ensure liberty through constraining human evil. He knew that a weak central government under the Articles of Confederation nearly lost the war because it could not raise funds to provision an army, and he saw its post-victory weakness make the fledgling United States a mockery among the nations of Europe. Hamilton was not bothered by aristocracy, seeing in it a guiding and stabilizing force amidst democratic excesses. A financial wizard (in contrast to Jefferson, who could not even manage his own debts), Hamilton believed that American strength depended on national wealth, which in turn required a strong central government able to raise funds, make loans, tie wealthy individuals to it, and foster manufacturing. When he erred, it was on the side of granting the national government too much power. He believed in representative government, shared a healthy skepticism of direct democracy, and thus looked to the more structured Constitution of ’87 as the surest ground on which to build the republic.
For nearly 225 years, the nation has grappled with which of these men was right, finding, thankfully, that the answer is both of them. Jefferson’s belief in the good sense of each person has fostered an expanding franchise, wide participation in public affairs, and a healthy distrust of centralized authority. His optimism pumps energy into the American Dream, the belief that hard work and an ever-opening frontier (once land, now opportunity) offer the best chance for happiness and political liberty. Hamilton’s belief in the necessity of a strong central government and robust economic policy has fostered an expanding economy, whose wealth has offered successive generations the material comfort and economic freedom which have ensured the exercise of political rights that would be nearly impossible were we still a nation of independent farmers with little time (or money) for anything but subsistence. A stronger national government has restrained or eliminated our worst anti-republican tendencies (slavery) and protected us in a world far less benign than Jefferson imagined.
Though both philosophies shape how we govern ourselves, they have lived as uneasy, conjoined twins. Their advocates have engaged in heated (sometimes violent) argument, each seeking political power while belittling the other – just as Hamilton and Jefferson did. Their political tango has made sure the pendulum did not swing too far in either direction. When Hamilton’s Federalists enacted the Sedition Act, jailing political dissenters, Jefferson’s Republicans took control of the government to reduce its power. When Jacksonian democracy opened up the offices of government to the often unruly “common man,” reformers reined in the spoils with the merit system. When the robber barons concentrated wealth and worsened the lives of sweatshop millions, Teddy Roosevelt restored balance with legislation that launched the federal government’s role in restraining monopolies.
Our national political dialogue still channels Jefferson and Hamilton. We argue about how to balance individual rights against the power of government, local needs and power against national ones, and how to trade off the needs of the worker with those of commercial and financial corporations. Social, economic, tax, energy, health care, and other policy debates are, quite often and at their core, Jefferson and Hamilton going at it again. The furor over the mandate for health care coverage is the most modern reincarnation of Hamilton vs. Jefferson.
America is a “both-and” not an “either-or” society. As long as both views have the power of healthy advocacy, we will probably get things right – though “probably” does not mean on the first try or quickly.
The Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian factions must be managed in creative tension. Ultimate victory for either camp would diminish our personal and civic lives. Indeed, ensuring that the tension continues in a productive way ought to be an aim of public policy.
On the surface, the proliferation of outlets for public expression, the standard of living of most Americans, anger at political and economic elites and big government offer evidence that Jefferson can still speak in the public forum. On the surface, the strength of the national government, the commercial wealth of the United States, and our powerful industrial and financial sectors suggest that Hamilton’s voice is also still being raised.
Despite their mutual animosity, Jefferson and Hamilton saw the need for each other. When Jefferson was tied with Aaron Burr in the Electoral College vote in 1801, it was Hamilton who urged his Federalist colleagues to cast their vote for Jefferson. He did not want the nation in the hands of the less scrupulous Burr. When Jefferson took office, he left Hamilton’s Bank of the United States intact, wisely seeing its value to a growing republic, even though he had detested the idea when Hamilton proposed it to Washington. The two men did not end their political disputes, but they saw the value of compromise to protect the system that made those disputes possible. Statesmanship triumphed, sometimes where there was no other choice.
We need the good sense, and the political will, to ensure that Jefferson and Hamilton continue to thrive in the public arena. This will require comparable acts of statesmanship.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Is Obama wrong to promote green jobs before the election

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Is Obama wrong to promote green jobs before the election

A genuine path to save the economy, the planet, and the President
By Bill Shireman
With jobs and the economy still weak less than 60 days before the election, President Obama is still pinning his hopes on the prospect of renewable energy and clean technologies to generate “green jobs.”
That’s important, but the President may be overlooking the technology family that can create more jobs and drive more sustainable growth than any other: information and communications technologies (ICT).
Clean technology is the latest investment obsession among opportunity-hungry venture capitalists. But most of the money now being spent to drive renewable energy technologies comes straight from American taxpayers, courtesy of the Department of Energy. Maybe those investments will pay off in a generation, and maybe they won’t. But it would be collective suicide for us to rely on them, when proven green economy-boosting technologies are right in our pockets, literally.
Electronics, computers, advanced materials, and information-packed products and processes are the real deal – the clean technologies that can play the biggest role now, and for generations to come, to drive growth, jobs, prosperity, and sustainability at once.
Today’s innovation-driven economy – the penetration of microchips and electronics into every industry and mass market – was triggered in part by the two energy crises of the 1970s. High energy prices helped power the biggest growth in the history of the electronics industry, because electronics are a substitute for expensive energy and resources.
Everyone knows what happens as electronics and other high technologies enter the economy: things get smaller, smarter, cheaper, better, and more resource efficient. Today’s microchips are as much as 100 million times as efficient as those made in 1960. Experimental new microchips are up to 100 times as efficient as today’s.
When those chips and other electronics products are embedded in industrial products, appliances and cars and buildings become as much as one-third more resource efficient.
And when we overthrow those industrial-era products with the pure products of the information age, resource productivity can skyrocket. Email is 10 to 100 times as efficient as snail mail. Telecommuting and telemeeting can be 100 or 1000 times as efficient as meeting in person.
And it’s not true that you can’t eat or drive ICT: information technology has enabled continuous gains in productivity in the agricultural, manufacturing, transportation, and building sectors, delivering more food, housing, and miles on less energy, water, and work.
The world needs those efficiency leaps. Last century, cheap fossil fuels helped drive a 40-fold increase in U.S. labor productivity, and ultimately delivered prosperity to 600 million of the planet’s six billion people. This century, we need a new productivity revolution: a ten-fold leap in resource productivity, the amount of economic value we derive from every unit of fuel or material we use. That’s the gain many scientists say we will need to support today’s affluent, and the three billion in China, India, Iraq, Iran, and the developing world on their path to prosperity, while turning down the furnace of global warming.
Scientists like James Lovelock think we are already too late. In his book, The Revenge of Gaia, Lovelock says that “We will do our best to survive, but sadly I cannot see the United States or the emerging economies of China and India cutting back in time, and they are the main source of [CO2] emissions. The worst will happen …” By 2050, according to Lovelock, Europe’s temperatures will climb 8 degrees Celsius, and the Arctic ice cap will be gone. Tropical rainforests will dry up by 2100, much of today’s arable land will be barren, and territory that today is home to billions will be under the ocean.
Innovation can help us cheat that fate, by radically reducing energy consumption and carbon emissions, while providing sustainable prosperity for billions.
Imagine a world that takes full advantage of the potential of high technology to generate radical gains in resource productivity. In our book What We Learned in the Rainforest, former Mitsubishi CEO Tachi Kiuchi and I describe how in a generation today’s Internet could evolve into a vastly richer global “infosphere,” a virtual gathering place that could network billions of people together, to share ideas, educate people, trade resources, develop relationships, and integrate cultures. Physical consumption in such a wired world could be much lower than in today’s. Billions could be prosperous, using a fraction of the resources required today.
In the decade after the first energy crises, microchips and advanced technologies broke the decades-old “iron law” that welded energy use to per capita GDP. In less than a generation, we cut U.S. energy and materials intensity – the amount we use per unit of GDP – by about one-third. That saved the equivalent of about 15 million barrels of oil a day, creating global excess capacity in oil production that sent prices falling.
Today – now that we have squandered our gains and resumed our profligate waste – we have brought on new energy crises, masquerading as terrorism, war, insecurity, climate instability, oil spills, coal disasters, and economic meltdown. What are these feedback signals telling us to do?
It’s not hard to figure out. We need to drive down our reliance on carbon-intensive fossil fuels. The first step is to put a price on carbon – just the marketplace signal we need to drive a more robust ICT sector.
ICT is no panacea. Today’s technologies are still dependent on yesterday’s industrial technologies. Their mining tailings are strewn over Africa, as are the human rights abuses that accompany the extraction of key materials like Coltan. Their waste is largely shipped to places like China, where they impose hardship on peasants who work to extract increments of value from them, placing themselves at risk.
Those challenges are real. But they can be dealt with, with smart systems to drive resource efficiency, reveal and eliminate abuses in the supply chain, and recycle – objectives possible largely through the use of ICT itself.
To drive a green, job-rich, prosperous economy, there is a grand coalition lying in wait: between the conservatives who rightly fear our dependence on Middle East oil, the environmentalists who seek to prevent global warming, and the electronics, high tech, and venture capital leaders who see business opportunity in innovation.
Republicans Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina, the retired tech executives now seeking to be California’s next Governor and Senator, are doing Californians no favors by siding with Valero Oil to seek to roll back the state’s environmental standards under proposed Proposition 23. High tech executives should know better. But Democrats Jerry Brown and Barbara Boxer will do us no favors either, if they mouth the President’s confidence in the green jobs of the distant future. Both parties need to agree: today’s high technologies can simultaneous drive down our carbon emissions, and drive up our economic prosperity, by 2% to 3% every year – if we focus on them. ICT can power a revolution in resource productivity that can enable peace and sustainable prosperity for the world’s rising billions, and for us.

Follow Bill Shireman on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Was it the Right Thing to do to Pressure Pastor Jones not to Burn the Quran

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Was it the Right Thing to do to Pressure Pastor Jones not to Burn the Quran

On this solemn weekend of the 9th anniversary of 9-11, I find myself deeply troubled by the most recent development involving the Florida Pastor who threatened to publicly burn Qurans, but decided against doing so after receiving enormous pressure from fellow pastors and high ranking government officials.
Apparently, officials at the highest levels of our government had pressured him (some would say pleaded with him) to not carry out his plans for fear of retaliation against our Troops. One report even said he got a visit from the FBI at his home in Florida. If this is so, such actions should alarm us all and cause us to ask some hard questions, even if we don’t agree with the Pastor’s proposed actions.
First, whether or not the Rev. Jones ultimately goes through with his plans to burn Qurans at some point, I believe we are headed down a dangerous slippery slope on issues surrounding religious freedom, religious tolerance, and freedom of speech. Like most people of faith and good will, I do not support or condone acts of hatred or violence against another person’s religion. However, what I condone less is high level government officials like Secretary of Defense Gates calling directly a religious leader of a small church in one of the sovereign states of the United States and asking him to stand down lest he inflame passions against Muslims and incite violence by radical extremists within Islam against our Troops serving in the Middle East region.
Um, in case you all missed it–radical Islam declared war on America on September 11, 2001. Not the other way around. Their passions are already inflamed as against America.
Over the last several months we have seen an uncomfortable and some would say dangerous change in tone and discourse as it relates to the Islamic faith and how it is perceived and practiced here in America. The whole brouhaha started over the proposed Islamic Cultural Center at Ground Zero in New York City, and has now escalated into an international incident with other nations condemning the U.S. as anti-Muslim, and intolerant of religious freedom due to the proposed actions by the Pastor to burn the Quran.
According to news sources last Thursday evening, Pastor Terry Jones was under tremendous pressure from U.S. officials all the way up to President Barack Obama, who condemned Jones’ proposed actions to host a public Quran burning on Saturday – the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Friday, Jones abruptly announced a change of plans to a media circus outside his Dove Outreach World Center in Gainesville shortly after Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called him to make a direct appeal. Gates told Jones that burning Qurans would inflame Muslim sentiment and endanger U.S. troops abroad.
Here is my problem with what Secretary Gates did: First, after watching Imam Feisal on CNN’s Larry King on Wednesday hosted by my friend Soledad O’Brien I got the distinct feeling that we (Americans) were being politely threatened that we had better tread lightly with how we handle the Ground Zero Islamic Cultural Center lest we upset the “radical extremists” and put our nation at risk for further attacks domestically. Second, the response to this situation from officials at the highest levels from President Obama to Secretary Clinton continue to be one of “fear” and sending a message to radical Islam extremists and terrorists that the United States will not do anything to upset the apple cart and that we will walk on egg shells so as not to offend Islam radicals. Third, why is it that our officials have no concern about those who burn Bibles and flags in places where our Troops are serving on the ground, yet we go into panic mode over a nutty pastor with a small obscure church in Florida who might burn a Quran?
None of us wants to mistreat, or cause ill will with our Muslim brethren that live here in the United States. But, as I raised the question in an op-ed I wrote via theGrio.com titled, “Is Muslim the new M word”, [See http://www.thegrio.com/politics/has-muslim-become-the-m-word.php] where is the Muslim community in condemning inflammatory rhetoric or actions made against the United States and Americans?
Where is the responsibility of other nations to respect the sovereignty of the United States on our own soil? Where is the outrage and concern that Americans and our religious beliefs (yes, as a majority Christian nation, that includes our 44th President) are being endangered or attacked in the name of protecting the rights of other faiths? These are serious questions and the most serious question of all is what about Rev. Jones freedom speech.
Historically speaking the Catholic Church for centuries burned “Holy books and writings” that were in anyway contrary to Catholic dogma. Burning religious texts and books is nothing new folks. So, why when it comes to the Muslim/Islamic religion do we have a different set of rules?
Is it because we fear what the Imam Feisel said in his interview on CNN this week or in previous statements (e.g., that we must be “careful” how we handle the Mosque issue, etc. lest we draw the wrath of Islamic radicals on our Troops)? Or is it because we fear retaliation from Islamic terrorists once again on the homeland?
Let me be clear my fellow Americans, we don’t always have to like what our fellow citizens say or what they do in the name of freedom, but here in America as long as your conduct is lawful and peaceful we don’t ask you to abridge that freedom, no matter the consequences. Freedom of speech and protest is a critical underpinning of how this nation was built.
Our founder’s, in their infinite wisdom drafted one provision into our Constitution (which is also in the Bill of Rights) that to me is the cornerstone of the this great democratic republic: The First Amendment to the Constitution prohibits the making of any law “respecting an establishment of religion”, impeding the free exercise of religion, infringing on the freedom of speech, infringing on the freedom of the press, interfering with the right to peaceably assemble or prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances.
The first Amendment, in my opinion, is what makes America–America.
In the final analysis, we had all better take a step back and think about what is happening here and as I said before decide who we are as Americans and who we want to be because if we are not very careful the very freedom upon which we were founded will slowly fade and we may find ourselves wishing we had stood up sooner to protect those rights and freedoms.

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Sep
12

Weekend box office 091210 Resident Evil Afterlife scores as lone new release

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Weekend box office 091210 Resident Evil Afterlife scores as lone new release

I honestly can’t figure out for the life of me why there was only one new release this weekend, especially when there are four wide releases next weekend. But be it fear of opening a film on the weekend of September 11th, concerns about getting your press stolen by the Toronto and Venice Film Festivals, or sheer stupidity on the part of the studios, Resident Evil: Afterlife was left with a wide-open field this weekend, and it took advantage of it accordingly. The fourth Resident Evil picture, this time shot in 3D (not converted), took in $27.7 million for an obvious first-place finish.
The series, based on a horror video game franchise, has been one of the more consistent genre franchises over the last decade. The first film opened in March 2002 to $17 million, and it eventually grossed $40 million domestic and $102 million worldwide on a $33 million budget. Resident Evil: Apocalypse set the release template two years later, opening in early September 2004 to $23 million and grossing $51 million domestic and $129 million worldwide on a $45 million budget. Resident Evil: Extinction pulled the same trick in 2007, opening to $23 million and grossing $50 million domestic and $147 million worldwide on a $45 million budget. So now, three years almost to the day, we have the $60 million-costing Resident Evil: Afterlife, which comes with the added gimmick of being shot in 3D film. The marketing was pinpoint precise, with Sony sticking to theatrical trailers, the occasional poster, and targeted TV spots, since this series has a built-in fanbase that doesn’t seem to be expanding.
Heck, take away the 3D ticket-price upcharge, and this $27.7 million opening is similar to the $23 million openings of the last two sequels. Adjusted for inflation, the sequel openings would be about $28 million apiece, with the original opening to just-under $25 million. The three prior films had weekend-to-final gross multipliers of about 2.2x. So Resident Evil Afterlife should finish with about $60 million. Given how consistent the domestic fanbase is, Sony has to be hoping that the international audience that these films have experienced continues to expand. Otherwise, Sony just spent an additional $15 million to gross an additional $10 million in domestic box office (and a depressed DVD market won’t be as bountiful as it was for the prior three pictures). Still, any franchise that makes it to part IV is to be commended, as the video game-to-movie genre especially is littered with would-be franchises that never got past part I (Street Fighter, Super Mario Bros, Double Dragon, Doom), let alone part II (Mortal Kombat, Tomb Raider). Since the picture has already amassed $73 million globally this weekend, expect Sony to spend another $60 million in three years on Resident Evil: Resurrection.
There is little to report among holdovers. Takers and The American battled it out for second place. The surprisingly leggy heist picture pulled in $6.1 million for a $48 million seventeen-day gross. George Clooney’s arthouse variation on Bangkok Dangerous grossed $5.9 million. The American plunged 55%, which was the likely scenario considering the fraudulent advertising, but the $20 million artfilm has amassed $28 million thus far. Machete plunged 63% in weekend two, as expected since it was always intended as a cheap one-weekend gimmick. The $20 million picture has now grossed $20 million in ten days. Going the Distance dropped 42% in weekend two, a distressingly mediocre hold after a soft opening. The well-liked romantic comedy has grossed just $14 million in ten days, so it will hopefully gain a second chance on DVD/Blu Ray.
In other holdover news, The Expendables just missed crossing the $100 million mark, as it now has $98.5 million. Give it a couple days. Inception is now over $280 million domestic, and it finally crossed the $700 million mark in worldwide grosses this weekend. And, spurred by a re-release that was advertised as um, a birthday celebration for Bella Swan, Twilight Saga: Eclipse increased 71% from last weekend, but still came in just below $300 million in domestic grosses ($299.6 million). The Switch is at $25 million and Vampires Suck is at $35 million. The arrival of the 3D Resident Evil picture was a fatal blow to three others who all lost their 3D screens, as Piranha 3D crumbled 69%, Toy Story 3 plunged 63%, and Avatar: Special Edition collapsed 68%. In limited-release news, The Romantics opened on two screens with $44,400.
That’s it for this weekend. Next weekend we get four wide releases, and the starting shot of the Oscar season with the four-screen release of Never Let Me Go on Wednesday. Will The Town convince people to rent Gone Baby Gone? Will Devil restore luster to the M. Night Shyamalan brand? Will Easy A turn Emma Stone into a movie star? And will Lionsgate’s Alpha and Omega make you all feel guilty for ignoring Lionsgate’s Battle For Terra last May? Find out next weekend, same Bat-time, same Bat-channel.
Scott Mendelson

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Sep
12

Handcuffs For Wall Street Not HappyTalk

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Handcuffs For Wall Street Not HappyTalk

The Washington Post has published a very silly op-ed by Chrystia Freeland accusing President Barack Obama of unfairly “demonizing” Wall Street. Freeland wants to see Obama tone down his rhetoric and play nice with executives in pursuit of a harmonious economic recovery. The trouble is, Obama hasn’t actually deployed harsh words against Wall Street. What’s more, in order to avoid being characterized as “anti-business,” the Obama administration has refused to mete out serious punishment for outright financial fraud. Complaining about nouns and adjectives is a little ridiculous when handcuffs and prison sentences are in order.
Freeland is a long-time business editor at Reuters and the Financial Times, and the story she spins about the financial crisis comes across as very reasonable. It’s also completely inaccurate. Here’s the key line:
“Stricter regulation of financial services is necessary not because American bankers were bad, but because the rules governing them were.”
Bank regulations were lousy, of course. But Wall Street spent decades lobbying hard for those rules, and screamed bloody murder when Obama had the audacity to tweak them. More importantly, the financial crisis was not only the result of bad rules. It was the result of bad rules and rampant, straightforward fraud, something a seasoned business editor like Freeland ought to know. Seeking economic harmony with criminals seems like a pretty poor foundation for an economic recovery.
The FBI was warning about an “epidemic” of mortgage fraud as early as 2004. Mortgage fraud is typically perpetrated by lenders, not borrowers–80 percent of the time, according to the FBI. Banks made a lot of quick bucks over the past decade by illegally conning borrowers. Then bankers who knew these loans were fraudulent still packaged them into securities and sold them to investors without disclosing that fraud. They lied to their own shareholders about how many bad loans were on their books, and lied to them about the bonuses that were derived from the entire scheme. When you do these things, you are stealing lots of money from innocent people, and you are, in fact, behaving badly (to put it mildly).
The fraud allegations that have emerged over the past year are not restricted to a few bad apples at shady companies– they involve some of the largest players in global finance. Washington Mutual executives knew their company was issuing fraudulent loans, and securitized them anyway without stopping the influx of fraud in the lending pipeline. Wachovia is settling charges that it illegally laundered $380 billion in drug money in order to maintain access to liquidity. Barclays is accused of illegally laundering money from Iran, Sudan and other nations, jumping through elaborate technical hoops to conceal the source of their funds. Goldman Sachs set up its own clients to fail and bragged about their “shitty deals.” Citibank executives deceived their shareholders about the extent of their subprime mortgage holdings. Bank of America executives concealed heavy losses from the Merrill Lynch merger, and then lied to their shareholders about the massive bonuses they were paying out. IndyMac Bank and at least five other banks cooked their books by backdating capital injections.
For the past decade, fraud has been a mainstream business on Wall Street. That’s to be expected–massive financial crashes simply do not occur without widespread fraud. After the savings and loan crisis, more than 1,000 bankers went to jail for fraud, and the S&L bust was a much smaller debacle than the frenzy that took down Wall Street in 2008.
This is not to suggest that everyone on Wall Street is a criminal–many of these frauds were committed against reasonable financial professionals. But the only reason we haven’t we seen throngs of financiers in handcuffs over the past two years is precisely because Obama has been listening to people like Freeland, trying to avoid “demonizing” bankers who broke the law. Obama critics like hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb have been calling him “anti-business” precisely because some fraud charges have surfaced in the past two years– even though his agencies have gone easy on the fraudsters themselves.
The regulators Obama kept on board at the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) have not recommended any fraud prosecutions to the Justice Department–and we know that the OTS itself was involved in the illegal backdating scheme at IndyMac and other banks. The SEC has not pursued civil fraud cases against some of the executives it believes were involved in Citibank’s subprime scam, nor is the agency seeking serious accountability for Barclays. Nothing has happened to Lehman Brothers or Bank of America for their Enron-style derivatives scams that hid debt from investors, or to Merrill Lynch for its self-dealing of subprime derivatives. The Justice Department is letting Wachovia off the hook for laundering drug money. Let me repeat that: the Obama administration has been so eager to please Wall Street that it is letting bankers get away with laundering drug money.
Applying the law equally to all citizens isn’t demonization and it isn’t socialism– it’s a basic proponent of justice. When you steal a lot of money, you go to jail. When your theft crashes the global economy and throws 8 million people out of work, you go to jail for a long time. Obama doesn’t just need tough talk for Wall Street, he needs to prosecute the frauds that were committed, and explain them to the American people. Nothing about this should be threatening to the millions of fair and reasonable American financial professionals who have done nothing wrong.
If you examine Freeland’s two examples of so-called “demonization,” her story simply becomes absurd. When hedge funds who owned Chrysler bonds complained about losing money in the Chrysler bankruptcy, Obama called them “speculators” who needed to take losses. That’s perfectly reasonable. They were speculators, and they speculated on a company that went bankrupt. When you invest in a bad company, you lose money. That’s how capitalism works.
Freeland also claims that Obama was “out of line in permitting the denunciation of Goldman Sachs.” Goldman deserved to be denounced– their ABACUS scam was abhorrent, and it wasn’t the only egregious act the company engaged in (see: “shitty deal”). But Obama has had plenty of nice things to say about Goldman. He defended the massive bonus that Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein paid himself, and praised Blankfein as a “savvy” fellow.
You cannot reason with someone who claims he is being demonized when you call him “savvy,” nor should you. Any president who neglects basic principles of justice and standards for economic security in order to pamper princely executives isn’t doing his job. Ethical financiers and reasonable business editors should have nothing to fear from a president who criticizes and prosecutes illegal finance.

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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Earth to Pentagon Follow the Freaking Money

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Earth to Pentagon Follow the Freaking Money

It’s time to take another look at the wonderful, wacky world of government regulation of military contractors. By now it should be a no brainer that the marketplace for private military and security contractors (PMSC), as well as regular, conventional military industrial contractors only works as well as there is an adequate, experienced, knowledgeable, government acquisition work force capable of doing proper auditing.
And since so much of PMSC work — billions and billions of dollars as Carl Sagan would have said, if he were still alive– is done under a Pentagon contract it is only reasonable to ask how well the Pentagon does auditing.
The short answer is not very well, according to a report released Sep. 7 by Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), a long time DOD IG watchdog.
The report, OVERSIGHT REVIEW OF AUDIT REPORTING BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL was initiated after Senator Grassley received a series of anonymous letters alleging mismanagement, low productivity, and misconduct within the Department of Defense (DOD) Inspector General’s (OIG) Audit Office.
Actually, “not very well” is being kind to the IG. Here is how the report’s introduction puts it:
It is nothing short of astonishing to read that a DOD auditor “needs to be on the “money trail” 24/7.” As Homer Simpson would say, Duh! Or as legendary bank robber Willy Sutton said in his autobiography “Go where the money is…and go there often.”
Now, admittedly much of what the DOD IG does is to audit weapons contracts, which is not what most PMSC contractors do. But it also looks at professional services contracts, which does include PMSC. For example:
That was not the only example of problems auditing a PMC.
Report No. D-2009-078 examined medical care provided to the over 225,000 contractors working in Southwest Asia. The audit revealed the health care contracts between the DOD and contractors were often vague and subject to interpretation. Thus, it was difficult to determine what medical health care could be given to injured or ill contractors. A second, more alarming finding was that the Military Treatment Facilities (MTF) in Southwest Asia did not bill and collect payments from contractors who received care at these DOD facilities. Additionally, each military component had different billing and collection processes. It was found that MTFs may have provided millions of dollars of free medical care to contractors. In short, the report indicates the DOD was losing millions of dollars in reimbursable costs. This audit should have examined a sample of cases and quantified the dollar value of those losses with precision. The DOD components concurred with the OIGs recommendations to establish a uniform billing program. A working group was created to address this issue. U.S. Central Command indicated it would need additional personnel in theatre to perform the billing functions.
Again, this report probed a high-risk area that Congress and taxpayers expect the OIG to examine. DOD personnel and contractors have been in Southwest Asia since 2003. It is inexcusable that after six years of this war, in which DOD is heavily dependent on contractor support, the U.S. Central Command still does not have a procedure to deal with this billing and reimbursement issue.

Follow David Isenberg on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Cynthia Rowley Spring 2011 Its a Mod World PHOTOS POLL

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Cynthia Rowley Spring 2011 Its a Mod World PHOTOS POLL

While the rest of the fashion industry tended to nasty hangovers from the night before (Long Live Kombucha tea!), early birds trekked to Lincoln Center’s Stage to see Cynthia Rowley debut her Spring 2011 collection. As usual, Rowley drew a respectable amount of Hollywood wattage including Food Network star Katie Lee, X-Men hottie Rebecca Romijn, Greenberg ingénue Greta Gerwig and even an unlikely fashion week personality–Miami Heat’s Chris Bosh who sat front row with his girlfriend. Perhaps Bosh was scoping out new fodder for his upcoming column for Ocean Drive magazine? Also in the audience were a host of judges from Bravo’s Work of Art show–perhaps a nod to Rowley’s Mondrian-inspired show to come.
As for the collection, Rowley exhibited what she does best–pretty clothes with a healthy dose of optimism. The Swell author went a bit outside of her box this season by accessorizing her peony-lipped girls with sleek hair and oversized futuristic barrettes that looked like something Diane Keaton would wear in Woody Allen’s Sleeper and her perforated skirts and dresses looked like someone ran a hole puncher through them– in a good way. Taking a page out of the Marni handbook, Rowley opted for punchy minimalism with bright color blocking, geometric shapes and stark minimalism but made the collection her own by focusing on the Mod years by way of the Millennium– think Emma Peel meets Judy Jetson. Later, ever the hospitable designer, Rowley visited designer Prabal Gurung to wish him good luck backstage.
Cynthia Rowley – Front Row – Spring 2011 MBFW
1 of 16
Ellen DeGeneres Struts Her Stuff At Richie Rich Spring 2011 Show (PHOTOS)
And On The Third Day of Fashion, There Was Prabal Gurung (PHOTOS, POLL)
The Project Runway 2010 Collections (PHOTOS)
Jessica Simpson, Joe Zee & More Spotted At Thursday’s Fashion Shows (PHOTOS, POLL)
Ashlee Simpson, Coco Rocha & More Celebs Hit Friday’s Fashion Shows (PHOTOS)
BCBG Max Azria Spring 2011: Which Dress Would You Wear? (PHOTOS, POLL)
NEW YORK – SEPTEMBER 11: Actor Alan Cumming (L) and Rebecca Romijn (R) attend the Cynthia Rowley Spring 2011 fashion show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week at The Stage at Lincoln Center on September 11, 2010 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images for IMG)
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

What have we learned since 911 Its the process stupid

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What have we learned since 911 Its the process stupid

I originally published the essay below on September 12, 2007. In reviewing it this morning, I was struck by how much focus I placed on process (as did John Dean in his, at the time, new book) and how little focus John Kerry’s people (in the 2004 election campaign) did not.
Of course, as we watch the quality of the civic conversation in America continue to deteriorate – and the intellectual and emotional quality of our candidates for public office deteriorate as well – the question of process seems to be even more important than it was three years ago. Hard to believe it could be more important now than it was then, but it is. For proof all you need to look at is that President Obama – while saying “She’s a dear friend of mine. She’s somebody I’ve known since I was in law school.” – has refused so far to announce that Elizabeth Warren will run the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
The New York Times reported on Friday that many of the Obama Administration’s key economic positions remain unfilled, making it harder for the administration to shape desperately needed economic policy and financial regulation. The faster he says he wants Elizabeth Warren (or somebody) to run this new Bureau, the fast the public will start to believe that their “community organizer” president really is walking the talk of caring about them.
In my original essay, I also talk about the concept of Compassionate Capitalism, the alternative to Naomi Klein’s well-researched work on the kind of capitalism we have today. This is because the best way to motivate yourself to learn the things needed to improve how you do something is to have a new, more positive objective you want to achieve.
September 2007 was one year before today’s cutthroat, win-lose capitalism almost crashed the global economy. I believe it’s time for America to change course, before the direction we’re going in leads us to fall completely off the “us against them” cliff we are heading towards.
Now is the time for us to take a hard look in the mirror and decide just how we will move forward as a nation – together as one nation or in competition with each other? – and exactly what our ultimate destination will be!
I look forward to hearing what you think of these ideas three years later. And I hope you enjoy the new, one minute video at the end. And finally, please, let’s be civil towards each other, okay?
——————————–
September 12, 2007:
Six years ago I watched the World Trade Center’s collapse from my Brooklyn apartment. I went out to vote that day (an election that was ultimately re-scheduled) and the smell of burning plastic filled the air even though I lived miles from the site. From this picture taken from Earth orbit, I can see why…
The wind carried the smoke right over my part of Brooklyn.
I had lived with the WTC ever since 1976 – when I got out of college – because I worked in lower Manhattan at 26 Federal Plaza and my office windows faced South. In fact, each fall my office mates and I would wait for just the right days when the path of the setting Sun would take it right between the twin towers… an amazing thing to see.
A beautiful image that combined the best of the natural and man-made worlds.
After living in Brooklyn for 15 years, believe it or not I was scheduled to move back to Manhattan on September 15, 2001. I give my moving company (Shleppers Moving & Storage) a lot of credit for making the move happen on the originally agreed upon date despite all that had happened (and with needing to find a route from Brooklyn to mid-town Manhattan that was passable). Here’s a picture of lower Manhattan that I took as I crossed over the East River on my moving day. You can see the smoke from the still-burning World Trade Center site.
In the weeks after the attack, as all Americans struggled with “What do we do now?” questions, I was fortunate to have my thoughts on the subject published twice as letters to the editor of The New York Times (something I’ve been able to do about 10 times over the years).
On September 27th, I wrote that our capitalistic society – starting with the philosophy for redeveloping lower Manhattan – should aim to put compassion at the center of a re-imagined core.
And on November 19th, I wrote that plans for redeveloping lower Manhattan should help people think clearly about the nature of the world both before and after 9/11.
So, what have we learned since 9/11? And what could we still learn?
Well, I’ll invite you form your own opinion about the plans to redevelop lower Manhattan by helping you visit the site for the planning organization, “RenewNYC.com”. You can visit RenewNYC.com here. The memorial itself has as its theme Reflecting Absence and is described this way:
“Reflecting Absence is the memorial to honor the 2,979 heroes lost in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and February 26, 1993. The memorial will ensure that future generations will know where the towers once stood and will never forget each individual life taken during those tragic days. The memorial will be a place for families and friends to remember, a final resting place for those who have not been identified, and a place where thousands will come to reflect upon and share our personal and collective loss…. The memorial will not only remember those killed, but it will celebrate the heroism that prevailed following the attacks, and the resolve of our nation to overcome.”
The phrase “the resolve of our nation to overcome” is appropriately therapeutic but misses the critical element that to truly move on from tragedy one needs to commit to a purpose that is future focused. Perhaps one that respects the lives of those who died by reflecting what they wanted to accomplish in their lives, but still one that is future focused. Without that, one remains psychologically “stuck” in the past forever.
This is something that Mayor Michael Bloomberg apparently recognizes himself. You can read about how Mayor Bloomberg is – in the words of The New York Times – “(playing) an essential if more subtle role in nudging the city to gradually let go of its grief. It is a challenge the mayor has handled sometimes clumsily and sometimes with great sensitivity and eloquence, as he charted the path away from the concrete events of 2001. Now, as he works to imbue the city with optimism for the future, he even hints at a day when remembering may not mean reading the names of all the dead.” here.
This article also quotes Mayor Bloomberg as saying (after the first 9/11 anniversary) “I think the Jews do it right. They have a headstone unveiling a year after the funeral, and that’s sort of the time that you sort of stop the mourning process and start going forward. And the 9/11 ceremonies, what I’m trying to do is that in the morning we will look back, remember who they were and why they died. And in the evening come out of it looking forward and say, ‘O.K., we’re going to go forward.’”
“Go forward.” If only those redeveloping lower Manhattan knew this concept well enough to make “Ground Zero” and its vicinity an area that called to all Americans… and the people of the world… to make capitalism more compassionate. Well, I’m an optimist. Perhaps that will happen some day. (Read on for how I believe that can happen.)
There is one thing in RenewNYC.com’s plans that does focus on the future – and in a very significant way, too. It is the development organization’s commitment to “green” building design and construction principles. That is a great commitment, but it has no direct connection to the question of whether the future we create will be one in which terrorists either stop or continue to attack us. It will, however, save energy and provide a healthier work environment for the people in these buildings. And that’s a good thing.
So, one thing we’ve learned since 9/11 is that those entrusted with formulating redevelopment plans in the face of a national catastrophe tend to do so by looking backward rather than forward. And the result is an increased potential that we will remain emotionally stuck in the past… not a good thing. In my opinion, there is nothing about the redevelopment of lower Manhattan or the World Trade Center memorial itself that will help the public think critically about what type of society we should be building in the future.
Although if Mayor Bloomberg had been in charge, there’s at least a chance the memorial would have been forward and future focused.
Now, regarding my call for Compassionate Capitalism, we only have to look as far as Naomi Klein’s “The Shock Doctrine” to show us how far capitalism is from being what one could even begin to call “compassionate”. (If you haven’t watched the short documentary made in conjunction with her new book, I highly recommend you do so here.)
“The Shock Doctrine” describes how entire societies have been taken advantage of (one might even call it “cultural rape”) by those entrusted with leading them out of danger. Whether the danger is economic or security related, when it strikes there exists a conscious effort on the part of members of the business and political classes to push through changes in “the rules of the game” that make it much more possible for certain wealthy people to get wealthier and more powerful while the rest of us get poorer and less powerful.
When matched against the rules of society, this is serious, immoral and illegal stuff. And to the degree that it is happening in America (and it is, but Naomi Klein’s work talks about other countries as well), then those responsible should be tried for their “high crimes and…” Well, you get my drift.
Unfortunately, it has become increasingly clear that the George W. “we create our own reality” Bush administration cares very little about the Rule of Law. It cares about the Golden Rule (“He who has the gold rules.”) And those businesses – and business leaders – who finance and otherwise support the Bush administration’s activities and the activities of those politicians (both Democrats and Republicans) who keep this systems in place also live according to this most twisted of “golden rules”. As I say, they should be put on trial for their crimes against the system created by The Founding Fathers.
(Can you imagine what it would be like if our nation’s business and political leaders – who so frequently refer to their religious beliefs – lived in accordance with the real Golden Rule? Why, we’ve live in a totally transformed world! But I digress. Sorry.)
John Dean has just written a fascinating new book, “Broken Government”, in which – along with many other things – he discusses the role the Democrats play in keeping this illegal, immoral, and dysfunction system going. In an article Dean wrote called “Defeating Dysfunction” to promote his book, he says “Democrats criticize Republican policies, but they ignore the persistent abuses of process that have become normal Republican political behavior. Democratic distaste for addressing process issues first came to my attention following the 2004 presidential campaign, when I spoke to one of Senator John Kerry’s top advisers. I was curious why Kerry had not pressed President Bush about the excessive secrecy he and Vice President Cheney had imposed on their administration… Kerry’s adviser told me the campaign had not addressed this concern because “secrecy is a process issue.” Process, apparently, was an area where the Democratic candidate did not go.”
Dean goes on to say that “the current inside-the-Beltway wisdom holds that the public is not interested in process. In fact, empirical data show this is wrong.” And he concludes by saying “The vitality of American democracy demands that (the Democrats) once again take up process in 2008.”
In saying clearly that “It’s the process, stupid”, John Dean points to the critical lesson of our time… and the lesson we must learn. For it opens the door to the only way we will ever have the Compassionate Capitalism we are capable of having. This is The Lesson We Can Still Learn. It’s not too late.
It is a lesson that will take America down a road which many Democrats may be uncomfortable traveling, but it is the only road that leads to the objective we must reach as a nation: the restoration of our American values. “Truth, Justice, and the American Way” wasn’t just something Superman used to say he stood for. It was who we were on our best days and who we sought to be on our worst. It was never what the people we have entrusted to lead us into the future consciously sought to violate.
So, we must deal with the process we are using to get where we say we want to go. The Democrats must deal with the process. Progressive thinking Republicans must deal with the process. Third party candidates must deal with the process. (Ralph, this means you don’t get to say that there’s no difference between Democrats and Republicans anymore. Read John Dean’s book, okay?) And “we, the people” must deal with the process.
Because to not do so is like saying “The automobile I’m driving has gotten me everywhere I’ve wanted to get to so far. I’ll just keep driving it as I try to get to this new destination”, as you leave dry land and set off across the water to get to a distant land called Compassionate Capitalism.
See how crazy it is to think this way? We’re still in our cars and are trying to drive across the water. We are sinking fast, my friends. We need to get out of our cars!
If you agree with me and are now asking “Okay, where do I go to learn about process? And has anyone figured out what process could get us to this better future?”, then I say “Welcome aboard! It’s going to be an exciting journey from here forward!”
There are places you can go to learn process. And there are people who are already using the New Thinking society needs to adopt in order to get to this better world.
If you are an organizational leader (either for-profit or non-profit), I highly recommend you get involved with the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Program, which is run by the federal government’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). This program – which was signed into law 20 years ago during the Reagan Administration – is based on the continuous learning and improvement principles originally developed by such quality management leaders as Dr. W. Edwards Deming and Dr. Joseph Juran, the men who went to Japan after World War II and taught the Japanese how to make high quality products.
The Baldrige Program is intense, educational, and the best national program I know of for learning how to view what you’re doing in ways that support you in making fundamental change. (Perhaps the US Congress should get involved with the Baldrige Program.) For those who want to “play in the minor leagues before joining the majors”, I recommend the state-wide, Baldrige-based programs that function under the umbrella Network for Excellence. (Point of transparency: I am a board member of the Keystone Alliance for Performance Excellence, which is the Baldrige-based organization that covers Pennsylvania.)
Finally, while you may think that Compassionate Capitalism is an idea beyond what anyone dealing with process is talking about, I call your attention to the Corporate Social Responsibility movement. It is an increasingly mainstream corporate strategic focal point – as recognized by Harvard Business School’s Michael Porter, in his article “Strategy and Society” which was published last December – AND it includes a focus on process, especially under the umbrella of the work of The UN Global Compact. The Global Compact’s Performance Model is a Baldrige-like, continuous learning and improvement based program any organization can use to examine how it is going about attempting to be a good corporate citizen and to improve the processes it is using to do so. The Global Compact is a world-wide initiative that includes a network of USA-based corporations. At the same time, here in the USA we have Business for Social Responsibility, which works in partnership with The Global Compact.
There is hope, my friends. You just need to know where to look for it.
And in the case of our political and business leaders, we who want them to “do the right thing” must demand that they examine and fix the process! (And that they learn how to do so first!)
We can get to the better world we say we want. But we can’t get there by using the same thinking… the same process… we’ve used until now. We need to learn how to Think Differently!

Follow Steven G. Brant on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Surprise Surprise Palestinians Wont Recognize Jewish State

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Surprise Surprise Palestinians Wont Recognize Jewish State

“The Palestinian Authority will never recognize Israel as a Jewish state,..Such a declaration would directly threaten the Muslims and Christians in Israel and prevent Palestinian refugees, who left their homes and villages a number of decades ago, from being granted the right to return to them.”
Senior Palestinian negotiator Nabil Shaath shortly
after the start of US sponsored peace talks
This rather shocking comment made at a Ramallah press conference last week by one of the supposedly more “moderate” members of the Palestinian leadership produced headlines throughout both the Arab world and Israel.
Amazingly it received nary a mention in the major American media!
As Mr Shaath well knows, Israel was established and internationally recognized as a Jewish state more than 60 years ago. He also knows that Arab refusal to recognize that fact is at the very core of the Mideast conflict. So how does Shaath expect to win Israeli confidence and concessions for peace if Palestinians still refuse to accept Israel’s Jewishness?
And why is Mr Shaath so worried about Israel’s Arabs, that 20 % of Israel’s population of 8 million whose forebears were smart enough not to run away during the 1947-48 Arab launched war? Surely he knows that Israeli Arabs – Christian, Druze and Muslim – are full fledged citizens of the Jewish state. They occasionally face problems – but they always vote, elect their own members of parliament, work in the Israeli government , in Israeli industry, agriculture and commerce, are doctors and nurses in Israeli hospitals, teachers and professors in Israeli schools and universities, serve in the Israeli army if they wish, share in a democratic system unmatched in the Middle East and enjoy a standard of living that is the highest of most Arabs anywhere!
Mr. Shaath also fails to explain that when he speaks of “a Right of Return” he’s not referring merely to survivors from 1948′s original 700,000 or so Palestinian refugees. He is talking about all their descendants – four (sometimes five) generations of them – roughly 4 million souls by Arab count! Does the Palestinian leadership really expect Israel to commit demographic suicide as part of a “peace deal”?
The Palestinian exodus during the Arab war on nascent Israel is part of history.. Most fled out of fear of war, others because they were urged to make way for “victorious” Arab armies, and some – but certainly not most – because Israeli troops drove them out in the heat of battle.
Other mid-20th century refugee problems were all quickly settled (the millions who simultaneously fled Pakistan and India, for example). But the Arab refugee problem was made to fester with the compliance of the Palestinian leadership. Israel, with millions of Jewish refugees at its gates, understandably refused to allow a hostile Arab refugee mass back onto Israel’s sliver of land.
The Muslim world turned its back on its brethren. With the exception of Jordan, no Arab state has ever granted Palestinian refugees citizenship let alone a permanent home on any of its millions of open acres . Instead Palestinian Arab refugees were kept penned up in overcrowded refugee camps – tent cities that have become squalid towns. They still live off massive international welfare doles, are used as political pawns by corrupt officials, and sit waiting for Israel to be destroyed so they can invoke a “Right of Return”.
Compare that to the other, lesser know Mideast refugee crisis that coincided with Israel’s birth – the forced exodus of almost 900,000 Jews from their centuries old homes in the Arab world; from Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Aden, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia , Algeria and Morocco.
These Jewish communities, some of which had existed 1000 years before Islam, were rich in culture, with their own Judeo dialects and traditions, their own scholars and religious literature. The true story of this other Mideast refugee saga, is now told in a powerful new book by prize-winning British historian, Sir Martin Gilbert called “In Ishmael’s House; A History of Jews in Muslim Lands” (Yale University Press).
To be sure, says Gilbert, Jews in the Arab world were subject over the centuries to occasional violence and forced conversion. Nor were they ever accepted as anything but Dhimmi – “protected” but always second class citizens.
Still, by 1947, close to a million Jews lived in the Arab world. Many played primary roles in local economies, global trade, and medicine. Some became senior advisors to kings and presidents and helped enrich the cities of the Arab world ((EG Baghdad’s pre 1948 Chamber of Commerce was 50% Jewish).
The historic decision to establish the State of Israel changed all that. Outraged by the idea of even a tiny Jewish state in their midst (and with an avaricious eye on their Jewish citizens’ belongings), the Arab world turned on its Jews, targeting them with legislated discrimination, government sponsored anti-Semitic riots and murderous pogroms. Faced with growing threats, outright violence (some were hung for public amusement) and moves to completely disenfranchise them, close to 900,000 Jews were forced to abandon their ancient homes between 1948 and 1967 . In Cairo, the former home of Egypt’s wealthiest Jew became the residence of the Egyptian president.
right:Egyptian Jews being deported<
Almost all were eventually "allowed" to leave their native lands on condition they signed agreements never to return and – most important – to leave their property and belongings behind. Recently uncovered documents indicate that much of this massive theft was a coordinated scheme by several Arab governments to grab Jewish property worth as much as $100 billion today.
left: 1951, Baghdad Jews line up outside a synagogue to forfeit property to the Iraqi government and register for emigration permits.
Today, with the exception of small communal pockets in Morocco, the Arab world is effectively Judenrein. Egypt which once had 180,000 Jews now literally has a handful of mostly aged Jews living in Cairo and Alexandria; Iraq which had 160,000 Jews now has 10, Libya and most other Arab states have none.
But here comes the difference between the fates of Arab and Jewish refugees. While the corrupt Arab world condemned Palestinian Arabs to statelessness, squandered opportunities to make peace with Israel and stole mega-millions in welfare funds, the Jewish state and the world Jewish community worked tirelessly to resettle its fellow Jews from Arab lands. More than half a million have settled in Israel where, after early years of economic and sometimes social hardship, they and their descendants have been successfully integrated and now form more than 50% of the Jewish population. Others found new homes in South America, Western Europe, the United Kingdom, United States, Canada – rebuilding lives while trying to retain their own unique cultural ties and communal institutions.
On wings of eagles; Yemenite Jews Are Flown to Israel
credit:ruclip.com
Most important, not a single Jew from the Arab world remains a "refugee", not one lives in a squalid camp or demands UN funding or a "Right of Return" to the Arab world. Above all, not one angry Arab born Jew has ever strapped a terrorist suicide bomb to his or her waist and climbed aboard a bus to murder dozens of innocents.
There are reports Shaath is fighting to win the primary seat on the Palestinian negotiating team. The buzzing swarm of apologists for the Palestinians will argue that Nabil Shaath's statement was strictly for "Arab street consumption". Therein lies the problem. It's time for the Palestinian leadership to tell their people that the only hope for peace is a two state solution – to recognize Israel as the Jewish one, to build permanent homes for Arab refugees in the Palestinian Arab one and to seek resettlement for those who can't fit on it in other Arab lands.
Won't somebody please send Mr. Shaath a copy of Sir Martin's new book?
IN ISHMAEL'S HOUSE:

http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300167153

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Deadly Priorities Why Did PGE Spend Millions on Politics not Pipelines

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Deadly Priorities Why Did PGE Spend Millions on Politics not Pipelines

As the San Bruno community struggles to recover from the deadly PG&E pipeline blast and fire, many are asking why the California utility spend tens of millions of dollars on politics before they repaired pipelines that their own surveys said were crumbling beneath their customers’ feet?
I drove to San Bruno yesterday with my baby daughter (our 9/11 service activity was to donate clothes to the fire victims). We visited with first responders, volunteers, and community residents putting their lives back together. The spirit in San Bruno was cooperation and concern – people are still looking for loved ones and survivors are in shock. There was also a growing concern for the next one: just as earthquake victims wonder about aftershocks, the PG&E blast victims wonder what other pipelines lie crumbling beneath their feet.
This is a terrible tragedy – and it didn’t have to happen. Even before the deadly PG&E pipeline blast ripped through the San Bruno community, killing at least 6 people, destroying dozens of homes, and rendering hundreds homeless, the utility knew that they had a potential problem because their own survey listed the San Francisco peninsula pipelines as “high risk” http://media.baycitizen.org/uploaded/documents/2010/9/2009-pipe-memo/Pipe%20memo.pdf
As the investigations begin, the prevailing question is why? Why did the pipeline burst? Why did the utility not spent ratepayer money on fixing the high risk problem? Why did management decide to spend ratepayer dollars on political campaigns instead of pipeline repairs? Why set these deadly priorities? If the two decisions were not related – why weren’t they? And what will we do to make it right?
Here’s what w know so far: resident reported smelling odors in the San Bruno community in te days before the blast. They called PG&E but nothing was detected. No one took the customer complaints up the chain of command to the bosses who had a report listing the San Francisco peninsula pipelines as “high risk.” After the deadly blast, there was some denial by PG&E that the pipeline was even theirs; then denial that the pipeline was the one in the survey, but federal investigators (who released PG&E’s survey) said the pipeline was PG&E’s.
We know the utility had the money – our money – to fix the pipelines because public filings show that just last spring, PG&E chose to spend $45 million in ratepayer dollars in a failed bid to block public power idefeated Prop 16 (utility PG&E spent $45 million to LOSE a public power grab http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-california-prop16-20100610,0,6055763.story) -These are funds that could have been used to repair what the utility’s own survey said was a high risk pipeline on the SF peninsula. So why make the decision for politics not pipelines? If the spending decisions were not related, why not? At the very least, PG&E should have a moratorium on political spending until they compensate the San Bruno victims and fix the pipelines.
Who knows what crumbling infrastructure lies beneath our sleeping children? Actually, many people do – they pay surveyors to take a look. We actually know that our crumbling pipelines, roads, and bridges are ticking time bombs. That is why President Obama and Congressional Democrats have pushed to jobs that repair our roads, runways, and railways – we can’t have first rate American communities with third world American infrastructure.
Will we take this occasion to invest in rebuilding and to insist on ratepayer say on utility pay? Or will we continue with the status quo until the next explosion?
The San Bruno tragedy is a clarion call to rebuild America and insist on ratepayer say on utility pay. I think most taxpayers would reject deadly priorities that put politics over pipelines and choose repairs to the ground literally crumbling beneath our feet, and most ratepayers would choose crumbling infrastructure repairs over political campaigns. Wouldn’t you?

Follow Christine Pelosi on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/sfpelosi

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Sep
12

Fashions Night Out The Streets are Rocking

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Fashions Night Out The Streets are Rocking

You have to hand it to New York, when it’s “feeling it,” it sure knows how to throw a party. Fashion Week is all about pomp and circumstance and while all that glitz is great, there’s an old saying in retail – nothing happens until you get a sale.
Fashion’s Night Out was conceived with the idea of getting shoppers excited about buying (well that and serving lots of free champagne). We began our little adventure uptown at the Juicy Couture store…I’ve always said you can learn a thing or two going out at night in New York. Like Fonzi, I played it cool and nodded earnestly when someone leaned over and excitedly told me there was going to be a flash mob performance in a few minutes – although I didn’t have the faintest idea of what a flash mob was (don’t judge me)….by the way here’s what they look like (don’t feel bad I didn’t know either).
After the dancers rocked it, I cornered Erin Fetherston for an interview. Erin is one of the more talented young designers working these days and Juicy made a shrewd move by partnering up with her on a capsule collection. I always love chatting with Erin because aside from having tons of flavor and a great sense of style, I think it’s pretty awesome that her dad played football in the NFL for the 49ers (I know that isn’t fashion-related, but what can I say? I’m a football fan….).
Next we hopped over to Bulgari and walked right into a Patty Smyth concert. In New York it can be easy to get jaded, but I have to say, the music here is a cool thing. Outside the store, the crowd was a pretty diverse group (like a snapshot of a subway car diverse – all walks of life, ages and backgrounds) and many were way too young to remember the rocker’s hits. But Patty gamely ventured outside the store to sing and put on a very personal performance. I saw the chaos of the street come into focus as all eyes were on the singer. Even though it wasn’t her crowd, the sidewalk was soon dancing and mirroring back the lyrics to “Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough.” It was a very cool sight to see.
Little did I know it was about to get even cooler. I hustled my way inside the store and requested an interview and was led into a makeshift greenroom that had been set up as an office for Patty. I glanced around and noticed Rita Wilson chilling out on a chair. Patty eased me into the interview by showing me how to warm up my voice. Of course if I actually sang I think she would have called the cops. A few minutes into the interview the door slid open. It was a bit distracting. I’m thinking to myself, can’t they see we’re chatting here? When we went to calm the disturbance we froze in our tracks upon realizing the offender was Patty’s husband John McEnroe and I think we all know what happens when you cross him. But he was just here to check on his charming wife and exchange some endearing banter – the video we shot is worth a look shows a softer side of the tennis legend. Special thanks to Patti Smyth and Johnny Mac for being such good sports.
Fashion’s Night Out may or may not be a commercial success, but throughout the city, uptown and downtown, it has turned into one hell of a party.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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