Archive for October 4th, 2010

Oct
04

Will parents be next to get school reformers broom

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Will parents be next to get school reformers  broom

Once Bill Gates, D. C. Supt. Michelle Rhee and the Waiting for Superman crowd are done drawing and quartering teachers, are they going to come after us parents?
After all, we’re just the flip side of the same coin.
What if, after all the millions of dollars that have been poured into marketing and movies promoting charter schools, turnaround companies, vouchers, mayors running the schools, etc., parents still refuse to play?
What if the public opinion polls continue to show, as the Gallup/PDK report did this year, that:
Americans oppose school turnarounds – 58% support helping existing local school and school staff; only 13% want to close schools down or reopen them as charters.
Americans oppose tying teacher salaries to “results” – 60% agree that the primary purpose of teacher evaluation is “helping them improve their ability to teach”; only 13% like “establishing their salaries based upon their skills.”
Despite the recent relentless attack on teachers and schools by corporate and political leaders, Americans have “trust and confidence” in public school teachers (71%) and still give their local schools high marks (77% give an A or a B; 23% give a C, D, or F – only 1% F).
Well, it may be time for parents to get swept out with the rest of the dirt by Michelle Rhee’s broom.
I can just see the “tough,” “courageous” steps our city fathers may be forced to take:
Parents who don’t put their child’s name on one of those dramatically long charter school waiting lists will be fined.
Parents who admit that they didn’t know their child’s school was on the federal “failure to make adequate yearly progress” list (as reported by door-knockers from one of those new astroturf “parent” groups the Gates Foundation pays to collect such information) will receive a visit from child welfare services.
Parents who repeatedly refuse to “exercise choice” may face jail time.
It’s not so far-fetched.
After all, they’ve already come after our children. It started here in Chicago under Paul Vallas, Mayor Daley’s first non-educator schools CEO. To inflate test scores, Vallas began to exercise what he called “The Hammer,” that is, using end-of-year standardized test cut scores as grade promotion bars. Children whose Iowa test scores fell even one-tenth of one percent below the district “standard” had to repeat a grade. Even some top students were banned from eighth grade graduation celebrations under that policy, a humiliating practice that Chicago schools still inflict on children.
They call it “holding students accountable.”
Keep in mind that Washington D. C. Superintendent Michelle Rhee, famously featured on the cover of TIME magazine holding a broom and then in Waiting for Superman as, I suppose, Wonder Woman, is now also becoming known as the person whose motivational speech to this year’s new D. C. schoolteachers included a tale of how, when a new teacher herself, she had her second grade class tape their mouths closed, and then – as she laughingly relates in this video clip – sees their little mouths bleed when they try to take off the tape.
So, if they don’t flinch from being “courageous” with children, don’t think they’ll be afraid of us parents. Maybe they’ll even get lucky and they’ll be able to get parents and teachers feeling so bad that we’ll go after each other.
Knowing who the real bad guys are
The organization I am a part of, Parents United for Responsible Education (PURE), was founded in 1989 in Chicago during a 19-day teacher strike by a group of parents and teachers. As they do whenever there has been a school strike, city leaders tried hard to pit parents against teachers in an effort to force teacher concessions. But PURE’s founders knew where the pressure really belonged.
Parents and teachers have a common enemy – the politicians and corporate leaders who refuse to fund and support our schools adequately. With a united front, PURE parents and teachers organized over 1,000 people to march on City Hall to get the school doors open. It worked, but we’re still here 20 years later, fighting the same fight, this time on the national stage.
Parents, teachers, and students don’t have the money and power that the corporate school privatizers have. But we have something better and stronger – we have the truth on our side. If we stay together and stay strong, we shall overcome.

Follow Julie Woestehoff on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/pureparents

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Oct
04

7 Subconscious Slimming Strategies

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7 Subconscious Slimming Strategies

How many of us haven’t yet figured out that broccoli is generally a better choice than a Big Mac? The challenge for most isn’t in knowing what we should do to lose weight, but rather in actually doing it. Enjoy these seven strategies that will help you enjoyably do what you already know you should.
1. Focus on the Solution, not the Problem
There is a Huna saying (Huna is the spiritual practice of the traditional Hawaiian culture) that goes “Energy goes where attention flows”. In other words, what you think about expands. If you are constantly thinking about what you don’t want, you will have more of it. The subconscious mind does not understand a negative command. So if I were to say “don’t think of a pink elephant with purple spots on its floppy ears right now” what do you think about? If you tell yourself “don’t eat”, what do you think you will want to do?
Consider focusing on what you do want instead. For example, “I want to be relaxed around food” or “I want to love to exercise”. The energy will happily flow to the solution, and your subconscious mind will begin to design ways to get you what you want.
2. Recognize the Positive Intent
We overeat for a reason, and the reason, believe it or not, isn’t self-torture. We all prefer pleasure over pain, and let’s face it, you’re getting some pleasure out of overeating, or you wouldn’t do it. Perhaps it’s the distraction, the taste, or the comfort.
Whatever the reason, notice that, in its essence, it’s positive. Then begin to design new behaviors and thought patterns that work even better than food. For example, if food is a distraction, what are you distracting yourself from? How could you enjoy that more?
3. Whisper Sweet Things to Yourself
How do you talk to yourself? Would you speak to a friend or a child in this way? If you did, how would it affect them? Just for fun, pretend you are your own best friend, and say the nicest, most supportive things you can imagine to yourself. Switch to “I feel good about myself” or even “I am so silly!” from your top ten self criticisms and watch your sweet words replace your sweet tooth.
4. Focus on Self-Correcting.
No matter what your resolve, no matter how miraculous the diet, you will overeat again. We know this because naturally slender people overeat from time to time. Sometimes they misjudge how filling their food will be, other times they make a conscious choice to do it. But it doesn’t matter. They are still naturally slender.
The difference is that the naturally slender self correct. They know how to bring themselves back into balance after over-indulging. So if they dip their chips a few too many times at a cocktail party, they eat less at dinner. If they become upset emotionally, they get the support they need before coping with food or drink.
Shift your focus to how you bring yourself back into balance after overindulging, and on decreasing the time it takes to do so. Whether it’s a walk in nature, a workout, or a talk with a friend that brings you back into balance, make self-correcting your new priority.
5. Change Your Definition of Success
If you have set a goal for yourself of reaching a certain weight, it will probably take some time before you reach that goal. And along the way, the scale may not always tell you what you want to hear.
Because it’s hard to stay motivated for a long term goal that involves short term “sacrifice”, consider changing your goal to something that you can be successful at every day, such as making a healthy choice, or self-correcting.
6. Persistence not Perfection.
We love to strive for perfection, with the idea that in striving we will be our best. Unfortunately, this strategy often backfires when we beat ourselves up for not being good enough, heading straight to the refrigerator for consolation.
Reward yourself instead for your persistent efforts – for your commitment to learning, for self correcting, or for saying sweet things to yourself. Recognize that progress happens in waves, where the troughs are just as important as the crests in moving forward.
7. Create a Learning Mind.
As humans, we love to learn, be it finding the quickest route to work or the easiest way to get the job done. Yet many of us get stuck when it comes to changing our eating patterns. We fail to learn new, better strategies, getting stuck in our old patterns.
Why? Because we ask questions that block our natural learning, like “Why do I keep doing this? “What’s wrong with me?” or “I’ll never change.”
What if we asked ourselves learning questions instead, like “How would I like to be next time?”, “What is there to learn from this situation?” or “How can I make this easier?”.
Have fun with these strategies, and report back on your success to renee@reneemethod.com I’d love to hear from you!
Renee Stephens is host of iTunes’ top weight loss podcast “Inside Out Weight Loss”, with over 2.5 million downloads to date, behavioral weight loss expert, and featured in the upcoming documentary “The Inner Weigh”.
www.reneemethod.com

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Oct
04

Weekly eBay Roundup of Vintage Clothing Finds

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Weekly eBay Roundup of Vintage Clothing Finds

No time to page through thousands of eBay listings? Then just sneak a peek at my weekly eBay Roundup of Top Vintage Clothing Finds.
This eclectic mix of designer and non-designer vintage clothing and accessories caught my discerning eye because of their uniqueness, contemporary feel or highly collectible nature.
As always, buyer beware! Be sure to read the listings closely and contact the sellers with any questions.
This week’s finds include pieces by Givenchy, Yves Saint Laurent and Lilli Ann. Be sure to check out the rare 1970s Yves Saint Laurent necklace and the new old stock 1960s Bonnie Cashin for Coach handbag.
Which item is your favorite? Leave a comment below and let me know.
GET READY, GET SET, BID!!!
Click image for more information.
Vintage 1950s Satin Cocktail Dress (millstreetvintage) | Vintage 1970s Givenchy Cuff Bracelet (willowbrookantiques) | Vintage 1980s Ivory Wool Coat with Fox Collar (meat-market) | Vintage 1960s 1970s Russian Bohemian Coat (redhousevintage) | Vintage Yves Saint Laurent Rive Gauche Wool Blazer (hudson1807) | Vintage Lilli Diamond Brocade Cocktail Dress and Jacket (crazymancrazy) | Vintage 1960s Bonnie Cashin for Coat New Old Stock Handbag (grendel_providence) | Vintage 1960s Navy Velvet and Lace Dress (sleepyheadvintage) | Vintage Suede and Leather Handbag (allison3103) | Vintage 1960s Camel Harlequin Print Knit Jacket (thriftwares) | Vintage 1950s Lilli Ann Splatter Print Halter Dress (landof1000dresses) | Vintage Faux Leopard Coat (buttercups11) | Antique Late 1800s Wool Jacket (party-store) | Vintage 1940s Nightgown (mootz1963) | Vintage 1940s Sequin Trim Evening Gown (lafriperieboutique) | Vintage 1970s Yves Saint Laurent Deco Necklace (art-deco-masters) | (Disclosure: Editorial selections are made by Zuburbia with no direct promotional consideration from Bay sellers. Zuburbia is a affiliate member of the eBay Partner Network).
To receive the eBay Roundup via email, sign up for the mailing list here. Your information will never be sold or shared and you can easily unsubscribe at any time.

Follow Mary Kincaid on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/zuburbia

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Oct
04

Jesus The AntiCapitalist God and a Manifesto for a Better World

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Jesus The AntiCapitalist God and a Manifesto for a Better World

Competition is something that society seems to the thrive on. We have our favorite sports teams. We have our favorite drinks and favorite movies. Sometimes if someone else doesn’t like what we like, we get mad, disillusioned. Somehow we think the world was created for us and around us. Competition seems so entrenched in the spirit of the world that we would rather be Cain and Abel or the Tortoise and the Hare than a humanity that desires to know one another. We are so separated from each other that we can’t acknowledge the person that passes by us on the street. It’s as if we have forgotten to say “Hello!”
But it wasn’t always like this, nor does it have to remain so.
There is evidence that prehistoric humans were more nomadic as hunter-gatherer peoples and more consumerist as settled peoples. Now, the way we make sense of our existential angst is by filling it with things. Capitalism has become one such thing. As neo-settlers, we think that we need to either consume or capitalize to be successful. It’s as if we have brainwashed ourselves and society that we must take to gain, rather than simply exist and have more concern for the person next to us.
We live in a society embedded with the philosophy that what is mine is mine to protect at all costs. This philosophy endorses the kind of world where we can justify war in the name of entitlement or oil, where our individuality can only find respite in the direct rejection of what we don’t understand. We willingly participate in social lethargy, where we choose our own self-preservation over acknowledging the person next to us as we brush past them on the street. I think that what we have to realize is that what we have come to believe and deem as ours was never ours.
Paul was an ancient follower of Christ who had a revolutionary vision for society. He spoke to a society riddled by injustice, caste systems, poverty, gender separation and many other ills that mirrored our society now. He offered to his readers another way to see how we should interact with one another, saying, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). This radical new paradigm did not just exist for his community; it exists for our society. It doesn’t have to endorse a hyper-politically correct view of equality, but one where we can come together and believe in the principles that Christ believed in: love, acceptance, grace, shalom, counter-cultural subversion, economic equality. These are just a few things he represents. But these principles of Christ aren’t exclusive; they aren’t part of a special club that you have to join. They exist in each and every human, and we are capable of living them out together.
Psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan posited what he called the Mirror Stage, which is the realization that all of us are born into a world already constituted for us. When we enter into the world, there is already a world that was pre-existent, framed, and formed by those before us. When we participate in our familial dynamics, there are already beliefs, ethics and ideas set in place by the time we draw our first breath.
We enter into a world of borrowed beliefs. We come into this world already socialist without even knowing it.
When I use the word socialism, I am not speaking of the perversion of Karl Marx’s philosophy as it has been abused in the past, but of the need of to begin endorsing a diversified global community that seeks to make the world a better place through a neo-communal way of living — a world where we say what we mean, where what is mine is truly yours. It’s a newer, hipper version of the socialism in which the message of Jesus seems so steeped.
The socialism that philosopher Slavoj Zizek speaks of seems quite close to the heartbeat of Jesus. Jesus seemed to care for the poor so much that he might have lived like one by choice. He associated himself with the socially outcast; he broke cultural laws to help others; he spoke of a society where everyone cared for the other, where to love one’s neighbour was to love oneself, where to love one’s enemies was the mark of a radically hospitable person. I could go on, but this strand of revolutionary love isn’t just in Christianity; it’s across all of the major religions.
Why? Because we believe it can happen — not one day, but now.
In fact, to see socialism as a good thing, we need to move away from the hauntological interplay so prevalent in our society. We seem to look to the past to inform us how to be now, but what of the future? What if we begin being informed by the future rather than by those before us? What would that look like? This new kind of socialism sees the beauty in diversity and in plurality. It embraces the outsider as insider. It endorses creativity and sustainability as the fuel that drives the global community toward the future that awaits us.
What about our future? What does that look like? I am sure that Jesus has something to offer, just as any other great religious leader does. One of the things Jesus might have said was that we should love our neighbours. The language behind this speaks of a self-sacrificial spirit bent toward the betterment of society. If we love the person next to us, then we are committed to that person’s betterment. We are committed to that person being our primary concern in relationship to ourselves.
I understand that this philosophy might not sit well or even be all too comfortable. It even makes me feel uncomfortable as I write this. But these feelings we feel are chafing against the very lie that we should look out for Number One. This philosophy is counter to the fabric of a society that is at the moment. This doesn’t mean that in such a society there are not people who are doing bad things or participating in selfish acts, but it does mean that if we are people who are concerned about the betterment of our society, then we must begin asking hard questions. Jesus also used a common phrase during his time: he called himself the Son of Man, which in Aramaic could possibly mean “I,” “anyone,” or “someone.”
It is interesting that Jesus used an ambiguous title that was used by others to speak of their humanity. In fact, the ambiguity and commonality of such a phrase hints at the possibility that Christ was attempting to inspire those around him to see that what they were looking for already existed within them, that “I” is “anyone,” that “anyone” is “someone,” and that “someone” is “I.” Couched in the midst of these words is the idea that when I embrace anyone, I am embracing myself (I), and that when I embrace anyone, I am making that person someone.
We as the world have been fighting against each other for way too long. Maybe it’s time that we begin dreaming together of how we can work together in our diversity and make the world a better place, one where we stop fighting because of our beliefs and embrace our beliefs as a way towards peace, where we begin working together to stop hunger rather than competing for awards on who is giving more money to this cause. When we compete against one another, we are essentially agreeing that all that matters is the proverbial blue ribbon on our chest and not the cause.
The world can no longer afford people who speak of love, self-sacrifice, compassion and do everything in their power to deny those things to people who don’t believe the same as they do.
Maybe we can embrace a new kind of post-structural, post-Marxian socialism, one that sees humanity as something worth saving and sees it as our responsibility to defend the case of the widow, the poor and the outcast. When we do this, we are believing the world can be better. We are actively involved in the process of healing the world. We can no longer afford to talk about love and at the same time deny it through how we treat one another. Some might say that this is an idealistic notion, but if that is the case, then why is the majority of religious doctrine centered around the idea that compassion is possible? Why do we remember and venerate people like Mother Teresa, Thich Nhat Hanh, the Dalai Lama or Gandhi? Because we believe that compassionate is possible. We believe that war, poverty, hatred, hunger, exclusion, ignorance, intolerance, racism, and so many more things don’t have to have the last word, that love can have the last word.
What do we do now? We can begin looking for ways to embrace diversity and plurality. When we create things, we can think holistically; governments need to look out for the whole of society, not for those who pay them. We can realize that our food is their food, that “we” and “they” need not exist, that we are all displaced, that to participate in a better world means to participate in a better humanity.
Click here to sign a petition commit to create and participate in one selfless act at least once a week, either to a stranger or someone you know. Feed the poor, help someone cross the street, stay in and babysit, help stop the water crisis in Africa, be creative, and remember that even if you don’t experience results, it doesn’t mean that there isn’t a change! After you sign it, go over to my blog and share your stories there.

Follow George Elerick on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/atravelersnote

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Oct
04

Julie Taymors GenderWise Tempest

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Julie Taymors GenderWise Tempest

The centerpiece of the New York Film Festival, “The Tempest,” is state of the art Julie Taymor, that is, a study in the spectacular. The ashen spirit Ariel darts behind trees in the barren terrain of the Shakespearean island forest in multiples, to say nothing of the heavens conjured and riled by the tap of Prospero’s crooked stick. But here is Taymor’s twist: Prospero, long the private plum of aging actors much as he was created in the playwright’s senior years, is now Prospera. Introducing her in the grandeur of Alice Tully Hall on Saturday, Taymor announced, here is our sorceress. And Helen Mirren, always the queen, resplendent in sequins, glimmered onto the stage.
What does this gender bending do for Shakespeare’s late-life tale of shipwreck and betrayal? Taymor had directed an off-Broadway version early on, for Classic Stage Company, with a male lead. But a woman makes so much sense. Mirren supplies the requisite maturity: dozens of close-ups show her age unadorned with the magic of makeup, and she is above all else a mother, to Miranda, metaphorically to Ariel (the wiry Ben Whishaw), and to his earthly counterpart Caliban (Djimon Hounsou).
Composer Elliot Goldenthal said that the final coda over the credits was set to music –sung to haunting perfection by the band Portishead’s Beth Gibbons– after the film was put to bed. It will be amazing to see what Taymor does for the “Spider Man: Turn Off the Dark” musical, premiering on Broadway in November.
As viewers queued up for the long line leading to the Empire Hotel’s rooftop for the afterparty, it was hard to speak, hard to get over the return to contemporary English after the exquisite immersion of The Tempest.
This post also appears on Gossip Central..

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Oct
04

Will Our Politicians Ever Do the Right Thing

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Will Our Politicians Ever Do the Right Thing

Graphic insults can win elections. Sensible policy decisions often don’t. At least, that’s how American politics works today. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have clearly concluded that the surest way to win seats in November is to paint the other side as despicable. And soon after this election, most lawmakers will start to obsess about the contest in 2012. So no matter which party wins control, both parties will continue to publicly scorn the other’s positions on our mounting deficit, on taxes, on energy policy and on creating jobs. Congress will therefore make little progress on these issues, though all are critical to America’s future. Our country is thus destined to decline — for several more years at least.
To reverse that decline, we will have to get our lawmakers to negotiate in good faith over the issues on which they now mostly insult one another. How can we make that happen? To find a realistic answer, we need to look at ideological adversaries who have negotiated even-handed solutions to major national controversies. These episodes suggest how to coax Congress to resolve our problems sensibly: We have to significantly strengthen each lawmaker’s connection to his/her constituents.
To see how that bond can drive political decisions, consider ideological adversaries who have crafted win-win solutions to divisive national issues. One case that could have benefited nearly every American occurred in the mid-1990s. A group called the Council on Sustainable Development — which included seven environmental leaders, six corporate CEOs and five federal officials — met repeatedly over two-and-a half years to try to work out their intense conflicts over environmental policy. Despite their divergent interests and feelings of distrust, the members of this group eventually agreed on how to resolve the most prominent environmental disputes at a reasonable cost to all sides.
They basically proposed that the government require industries to clean up the environment far more thoroughly than to date but, at the same time, let companies largely decide how to meet those tougher standards. Businesses could then use their ingenuity to find the most efficient ways to cut pollution, saving the economy an estimated $250 billion dollars per decade.
Each council member then pitched the plan to his/her allies in the outside world. The CEOs won the support of the relevant industry associations. The environmental members won endorsements from nearly every environmental group. And the government officials secured backing from the appropriate regulatory agencies.
Yet Congress has largely ignored the council’s recommendations, opting instead to fight over nearly every environmental question.
Unfortunately, this is not an isolated episode. Representatives from across the political spectrum have developed a comprehensive plan for saving Social Security from bankruptcy while providing nearly every American a financially secure retirement (The National Commission on Retirement Policy Final Report). Another politically diverse group of advocates has devised a plan for reducing our consumption of foreign oil at minimal cost. And representatives from the Cato Institute, the Progressive Policy Institute, and other ideologically driven organizations (mostly from the right, but some clearly from the left and center) have unanimously agreed on a plan for restraining health care costs while boosting quality.
Yet Congress has repeatedly failed to reach agreement on every one of these issues.
What accounts for the difference? What is it about these ideological opponents that enabled them to resolve problems that politicians wouldn’t?
Each advocate was speaking for a large group of people who strongly backed his/her agenda. Each environmental leader at the Council on Sustainable Development, for instance, had hundreds of colleagues in the environmental community counting on him/her to advance their common cause. Each corporate CEO had hundreds of colleagues throughout his industry counting on him to advance their corporations’ interests.
Each representative eventually realized that the most practical way to make real progress for his/her own camp was to strike a deal with their long-time opponents, a deal that the other side could accept as readily as his own.
Each representative was then ideally positioned to explain to his fellow environmentalists or corporate executives how that deal with their long-time enemies was the most realistic way to advance their own cause.
Each member of Congress is, by contrast, in a far more difficult position. Every lawmaker represents scores of opposing groups, 700,000 people who disagree over nearly every issue. Each congressperson’s district contains large blocs of young adults, the middle-aged and senior citizens; blue-collar workers, white-collar workers, business owners and the unemployed; singles, couples, families and one-parent households; liberals, conservatives and most points in between.
Each of these groups has its own values and interests — which collide head-on with other groups’ values and interests.
So, if a member of Congress advocates a detailed solution to a controversial issue, several large blocs of voters in his/her district are bound to oppose his stand, perhaps enough to throw him out of office. The typical lawmaker therefore has strong incentives to avoid proposing realistic solutions to controversial issues.
The members of Congress have found that it’s far safer to blame the nation’s severest problems on the other party. A typical legislator can, after all, win reelection just by convincing most voters that the other party is more untrustworthy, incompetent or corrupt than his own — a message that any politician can craft in vivid terms that voters will remember.
By contrast, imagine if some lawmaker tried to convince his district’s many thousands of voters — from various age groups, income levels and family situations — that his myriad decisions on taxes, deficits, energy, health care and national security were serving their best interests. To each kind of voter, that legislator would need to justify each major decision differently. It would be an impossible task.
In effect, if any congressperson tries to work out cost-effective solutions to critical national problems, he/she rarely benefits by it. He may even suffer. But if a legislator lets our nation’s troubles fester and can pin the blame on the other party, he benefits greatly. A truly perverse set of incentives.
Voters, too, have incentives to do the wrong thing. In each district, after all, every voter — every young single, middle-aged parent, senior citizen, construction worker, teacher, salesperson, manager, conservative, liberal and moderate — has to share the same representative. Each voter has his/her own needs and expectations. Yet all 700,000 district residents have to share the same spokesperson in Congress.
So a typical voter cannot possibly get a spokesperson who shares his/her concerns on the issues that matter most to him. No wonder most voters feel politically alienated. No wonder 89 percent of voters never bother to find out how their representative has voted on any legislation.
Each representative can thus safely ignore most of his constituents’ interests. Instead, most lawmakers cater to the groups that keep closest track of how they vote. On Medicare, Congress kowtows to seniors. On farm policy, most lawmakers pander to farmers. And so on.
How do we fix these perverse incentives? By heavily regulating campaign contributions? Redrawing districts? Term limits? Whatever advantages these popular measures might have, all the diverse voters in each district would still have to share the same representative. So a typical voter still could not get a spokesperson who shared his or her biggest concerns. And each representative would still represent so many different kinds of voters that he/she could not justify difficult decisions on controversial issues — which means Congress would keep avoiding difficult decisions.
How, then, do we goad our lawmakers to resolve critical problems so that the whole country benefits? What if each congressperson was in a similar position as each member of the Council on Sustainable Development? What if each lawmaker had exclusively constituents who backed his/her basic political agenda? Each legislator would then know that if he/she negotiated cost-effective solutions to tough issues, he could — at last — explain to his constituents how those deals were the most practical way to meet their needs.
If, in turn, nearly every American could get a representative who shared his basic political outlook, every citizen would have a far stronger incentive than now to scrutinize congressional candidates, to vote and then hold his/her representative to account for his policy decisions.
Fortunately, it is possible to connect lawmakers and constituents this strongly without touching the Constitution. We would need to:
Merge today’s congressional districts into larger ones with, say, five representatives.
Organize elections so that nearly every voter would get a representative near him/herself on the political spectrum.
Provide each lawmaker with a vehicle for reporting regularly to his/her constituents to explain his decisions on major issues.
Make getting on the ballot far easier than now, so if any lawmaker failed to report significant progress on the critical issues, at the next election several candidates near him on the political spectrum would court his voters and have a good chance to win his seat.
Complex as this arrangement may sound, it is doable. For details on how such elections would work, see GenuineRepresentation.org/Congress
Ambitious changes, to be sure. But they are feasible if they start at the local level. Many city councils and state legislatures are, after all, as dysfunctional as Congress. Indeed the winter issue of the National Civic Review will make a case to civic leaders in troubled cities that their communities need to make changes along the above lines. If just a handful of cities act on that advice and their city councils end up negotiating sensible solutions to long-festering problems, citizens across the country might demand that their cities adopt a similar process, then their state governments and, ultimately, Congress.
A long road, but until we start making this kind of change, our lawmakers will have far stronger incentives to fight over our gravest problems than to solve them. To reverse America’s decline, we must change those incentives.
Sol Erdman is president of the Center for Collaborative Democracy. Lawrence Susskind is director of the MIT-Harvard Public Disputes Program. They are co-authors of The Cure for Our Broken Political Process: How We Can Get Our Politicians to Resolve the Issues Tearing Our Country Apart.

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Oct
04

Dealing With the Bad Stuff in Life a Fairy Tale Can Lend a Hand to Quentin Tarantino

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Dealing With the Bad Stuff in Life  a Fairy Tale Can Lend a Hand to Quentin Tarantino

Bad stuff happens. We try to be happy. Then we hear bad news. I found out my film editor colleague Sally Menke died hiking in the hills near where I live. I heard the helicopters searching late at night, but had no idea that they were searching for her.
I can’t unravel the cosmic reason for Sally leaving the planet at 56. This is extremely sad for her family and her director, Quentin Tarantino. You can understand the family grief, but I can vouch that the director-editor attachment is also like “family.” Sally was Tarantino’s one-and-only.
The last time I spoke to Sally was the day before the Oscars. She told me that Quentin would be coming to her home prior to the ceremony. He wanted to have pizza to get into the festive spirit. With no family of his own, he adopted Sally’s. We film editors are often surrogate moms, looking after the director and the project. Have a look at the YouTube clips where Quentin Tarantino says right on camera that he wanted an editor who would nurture him and the film. He was seeking a “movie mother.”
Have you noticed that mothers die in fairy tales? We parents cringe when we have to read these accounts to our little ones. We don’t want to upset the kids. Yet isn’t it important for them to know this is a possibility? The mother deer dies in Bambi — which is technically not a fairy tale, but is structured like one. The Grimm’s Cinderella and Snow White begin with the death of the mother. Most recent versions cop out and pick up the story with the step-mother in place to avoid traumatizing us with the loss of the main source of love and support.
In the Middle Ages fairy tales began as a popular oral tradition to introduce children to the bad stuff in life. These magical tales have enough reality to allow humans to identify with the characters. Though they depict pretty grim events, they usually resolve in “happily ever after.” This tells us that bad stuff is part of a cycle that also includes good stuff. There may be a curse which causes Sleeping Beauty to prick her finger at the age of 15 — but there is also the good fairy who modifies the death curse to a hundred-year sleep, promising a prince’s kiss to wake her up.
When the wound is raw, we need the reassurance that fairy tales provide. Cinderella grieves at her mother’s grave and visits it regularly. Still, there is more bad stuff ahead — her father remarries, and she has to cope with her nasty stepmother and step-sisters. Everyone knows the ending — Cinderella experiences joy again in her lifetime. Drawing on her mother’s spirit, she gets the gown and shoes to attend the ball where she meets the Prince. He is the life partner who helps her escape her bad situation and get to happily-ever-after.
We can’t erase the bad stuff in life. Sally Menke is sadly gone from our world. But Quentin Tarantino still has her spirit in his next work in the form of the knowledge that came to him from years of collaboration. He will have the challenge of finding a new Sally. If he does not find her on the first try, he may have a period of feeling like he is at the cinder pile, toiling. But it is important for him to channel Cinderella. She finds her way guided by the spirit of her mother. When Tarantino finds a “prince” in the form of a new editor who can make collaborating a fruitful experience again, he has the potential of getting to “happy again” or “happily ever after.”
At different times in your life a particular classic fairy tale can connect with your situation and help you through it. A goal in fairy tales is to get to “happily ever after.” Not every fairy tale quite gets to this ideal, but the archetype still sheds light on what to do, and it gives you hope.
The bad stuff in life does not even have to be our personal misfortune. Like many of you, I am a news junkie. I want to know what is going on. The down side is that there is always bad news somewhere making me feel awful — floods, wars, attacks. Do I even have a right to being happy given the horrible suffering in the world? Actually, the answer is yes. Why? Everyone else’s personal experiences with the “bad” in life can move them onward to a happier place. It is a cycle. When you find your special fairy tale, there is a message for you to help you get to happily-ever-after.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
04

Bullying of Gay Teens What Can Christians Do

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Bullying of Gay Teens What Can Christians Do

There is a line in the Guy Clark song “Stuff That Works” that has tormented me for days. It says, “I’ve got a tattoo with her name right through my soul.” Clark is talking about the woman he loves, but his poignant description made me reflect about three young boys we lost in September 2010. Their names are Asher, Billy and Seth. I have a tattoo with their names right through my soul this week, and it is raw and refuses to heal because I am ashamed of our nation and our churches and myself and how we failed them.
Asher Brown was 13, an eighth grader who killed himself on September 23. He shot himself in the head after suffering relentless harassment from a small group of students at Hamilton Middle School in the Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District in Houston, Texas. Billy (William) Lucas was 15, a student at Greensburg Community High School in Greensburg, Indiana. He hanged himself. Friends say that he had been bullied by other students for years. Seth Walsh was 13. He hanged himself from a tree in his Bakersfield, California backyard after years of being tormented by his peers.
The parents of these boys could not get school officials to do anything to protect them. This makes sense when you look at the community climate that is pervasive in much of our nation, where intolerance and exclusion and rejection are status quo for young people (and most adults) who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. These climates are fed most often on Sunday mornings in local pulpits where fundamentalists serve parishioners a steady diet of homophobia and bigotry that is sanctioned by the some of the largest churches in the world, notably Mormon, Catholics and Evangelical mega-churches that fund anti-gay programs in places like Uganda and the Bahamas.
Asher, Bill and Seth are victims of the trickle-down effects of these churches in the “one man/one woman” camp. Heterosexism, patriarchy, misogyny, homophobia and racism all fuel these organizations and ultimately result in the targeting of gay people.
When authority figures say things like “God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve,” they drive a stake through the hearts of kids like Asher, Bill and Seth, and they incite their children to bullying. Even worse is the “Love the sinner, hate the sin” rhetoric of churches. Kids have a hard time discerning this difference. They just hear, “God hates me. My Pastor hates me. My family hates me.” If you haven’t seen Prayers for Bobby yet, check it out. I know of no better example of the bitter outcome of religion-based homophobia. In truth, Bobby was “bullied” to death by his church and his mother’s inability to accept him as he was. Some say this is an inevitable rite of passage for kids who “come out” in fundamentalist families and churches and conservative communities. More and more, it may be a last rite for them.
Police investigators who interviewed students who harassed Seth the day he hanged himself said the students broke down into tears. Police said the tormentors never expected an outcome such as this.
That’s where we are in our country right now — schools and churches full of unbridled bullying and homophobic rhetoric leading to violence. The outcomes are actually very predictable. Children and teenagers are going to die. Grownups are going to die. Some will take their own lives in despair. Others will be killed by people who identify as Christians who believe the Bible tells them it is ok to rid the world of homosexuals and abortionists.
I believe that most of the murderers will have grown up in schools and Sunday School classes where it was ok to call Asher a faggot in gym class or on the way to Communion. One of the young boys who tormented Asher was a “born-again Christian” who performed mock gay sex acts on Asher while observed by his peers and his teacher. That young man will never outlive what he did to Asher or to himself.
What can we do?
Let me use an old fashioned word that fits. We need to repent. Then, we need to call our local school superintendents. Call our state representatives. Leave a message for our Governors. Tell the Tea Partiers and the Democrats and the Republicans and the Libertarians. They all have children and grandchildren. Heaven forbid that a bully mistakes one of theirs for gay.

Follow Rev. Dr. Cindi Love on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/SoulforceLove

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
04

Obama Poll Watch September 2010

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Obama Poll Watch  September 2010

Obama holds his ground
President Obama got a bit of a bounce in his monthly poll average in September, but the news is of a decidedly mixed variety. There is good news and bad in the numbers from last month for Obama, and it’s looking like there won’t be much of a pre-election change in his numbers which could help congressional Democrats out on the midterm campaign trail.
But we’ll get to the good and the bad numbers in a bit, and then at the end take another look at which president’s approval ratings are the closest match to Obama’s, at this point in their presidencies. First, though, let’s start off with this month’s Obama chart:
[Click on graph to see larger-scale version.]
September, 2010
Ever since Labor Day, President Obama has been channelling his inner Candidate Obama, in an effort to rally his party’s base before the midterm elections. Obama’s speeches have gotten a lot more partisan and a lot feistier in the past month, and while it’s hard to say exactly what impact it had on his polls, it may be having the desired effect of getting Democrats a little more enthusiastic about their chances in November. Even Republicans are now hedging their bets when it comes to bragging they’re going to retake the House, for instance.
Politically, not much happened in September, at least not much that the media or the public took note of. Obama signed a small business tax cut bill, but the media yawned. All other legislation was punted to the lame duck Congress, which Harry Reid may come to regret, since there are a handful of Senate races where the winner will not have to wait until next January, but instead will be sworn in immediately (as I wrote about, when I noticed it).
In the news over on the Right, the Tea Party insurgency continues apace. Delaware Republican primary voters nominated Christine O’Donnell over the eminently-electable Mike Castle, and may have thrown away an easy Republican pickup seat in the Senate as a result. This news was met with outright glee over on the Left, it should go without saying, especially after Bill Maher decided to have a whole bunch of fun with it. Other news from RightyLand was the release of the “Pledge To America” which was supposed to be some sort of “Contract With America II.” To put it bluntly, it fell short. Way short. The Republican establishment ran into the same problem the Left has had for a few years now: they wanted to please their base, but they didn’t want to scare away the independents, so they got behind a compromise which pleased neither. The worst reviews of the Pledge were from the Tea Party Right, while the Left was content to merely sit back, pop some metaphorical popcorn, and watch the internecine sniping.
Lefties had two other things to celebrate in September, both Executive branch staffing changes. The first was Elizabeth Warren getting named set up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (which was her idea in the first place, it bears pointing out), which initially was met with some skepticism on the Left, since Obama didn’t just recess-appoint her to be the chair of the new agency, but rather named her to set the thing up (thereby avoiding a huge Senate confirmation battle). But when it became clear that this is exactly the way Warren herself wanted it to happen, it was widely seen as A Good Thing over in Leftyville. Then, at the end of the month (officially in October, but the rumors were all-but-confirmed in the last week of September), Rahm Emanuel decided to pack his bags and head back to Chicago to make a run for mayor. And there was much rejoicing in Leftyville, at least those parts of it outside of Chicago (sorry, Chi-Town, but he’s your problem now…). All of this joy from the Left was dampened quite a bit by both the president and the vice president jabbing rhetorically at the “whiny” base once again.
Looking at all of the campaign-season rhetoric from Obama, though, the message both he and other Democrats seem to have latched upon for the midterms is: “Things would be much, much worse if the Republicans get back in power,” which is just not one of those campaign slogans that’s going to be remembered by the history books, I am sorry to say. It may do Democrats some good at the polls next month, but it’s hardly inspiring.
In relative terms of polling numbers, President Obama actually had a pretty good month last month. His approval rating rose four-tenths of a percent, which may not sound like a lot, but it matches his biggest jump ever in approval ratings, from way back in May of 2009. His disapproval rate was up slightly as well, but stayed just under fifty percent. For the month, Obama was at 45.7 percent approval, and 49.7 percent disapproval, with a record-low 4.6 percent undecided. Obama not only stopped his slide in approval rating last month, he actually turned it around a bit. But his disapproval rate rose slightly as well, making it a mixed picture at best.

Overall Trends
Last month I rashly wrote that since Obama was starting the month on an upswing, he had a good chance of posting largish gains in September. This didn’t happen, because he was unable to sustain his “bounce” (which I believe was due to the “we’re getting out of Iraq” milestone Obama hit at the end of August). His numbers started the month at a high of 46.6 percent, dipped a little, then recovered to 46.6 percent again mid-month. But in the second half of the month, his numbers dropped right back down again. He hit a low of 44.5 percent in the last week of September, then bounced back slightly to close the month at 45.0 percent. Obama’s disapproval numbers followed the same general trend, although fluctuating even more from a low of 47.6 at the beginning of the month, to a high of 51.2 percent towards the end of the month, when it fell back a bit to 50.6 percent.
As I said, Obama’s approval rating rose 0.4 percent last month, and as a result he did not post either an all-time monthly low or an all-time daily low in approval during September. To put this in perspective, Obama has only had six months out of the last twenty measurable months (the first month doesn’t count, as there is nothing to compare it to) where he posted a gain in approval rating. He posted a 0.1 percent gain in March of last year, a 0.2 percent rise this March, a 0.3 percent jump in both February ’09 and May ’10, and a 0.4 percent spike in May ’09 and last month. Again, to put this in perspective, his biggest downturn per month was 3.6 percent, in the midst of the town hall meetings last summer. So while Obama tied his best-ever month for approval gains, there (to be blunt) just haven’t been enough of them, and they’ve all been too small, when matched up against his losses.
The bad news from last month is that (due to some undecideds apparently making up their minds) while Obama’s approval rating rose, so also did his disapproval rating, by 0.2 percent. This meant he hit a new all-time high for disapproval on both a monthly (49.7 percent) and daily (51.2 percent) basis.
What’s even more ominous is that the trendlines aren’t all that great, heading into October. Obama’s numbers have been slipping for a couple of weeks now, and while a few decent polls will help reverse this, it remains to be seen whether Obama can hold his ground in the polling next month, since it’ll be in the midst of the midterm campaign frenzy.
If Obama keeps true to form, his numbers will stabilize next month, with little or no movement in either direction. Obama has gone through the following cycle over and over again so far: approval significantly drops for a few months, then Obama bounces back very slightly for one month, followed by a few months of relative stability, until he starts dropping again, and the cycle repeats. But we’ll have to wait at least another month to see if Obama follows this template once again, or not.

Obama versus Reagan
Every few months, I post the following comparison, just to give pause to both the Left and the Right. Because as time goes by, Obama’s approval numbers have been very closely tracking one particular previous occupant of the Oval Office — none other than Ronald Reagan. Every so often, a political commentator will point out that Obama’s numbers are currently better than Carter’s or Clinton’s were at the same point in their presidencies (which they are — you can see comparison charts all the way back to Eisenhower, updated monthly, at my ObamaPollWatch.com site, if interested). But I personally have been struck at how closely Obama and Reagan are following the same path. Take a look, to see what I’m talking about (Reagan’s second term is not charted, to make this easier to read):
[Click on graph to see larger-scale version.]
Not only have their lines been tracking overall on the same general trajectory, but check out the last six months or so — the lines are tracking not just on a general smoothed-out trendline, but month-to-month in almost perfect synch.
Conservatives have built up the myth of Reagan as being well-loved throughout his presidency, but he hit the same midterm doldrums Obama now finds himself in, and for almost exactly the same reason — the economy was in the same doldrums, and it wasn’t recovering fast enough to do the president any good politically. Reagan was about two points lower than Obama in disapproval, but he was almost four points lower in approval, as well.
It’s also interesting to note that Reagan hit bottom right when the new midterm Congress (where Republicans took a shellacking) was sworn in. After this point, he enjoyed a fairly steady rise as the economy eventually started to do better. Now, it’s impossible to say that Obama’s numbers will do the same, and at some point these two graphs are likely going to stop tracking each other so closely — which could be either good news for Obama, or bad, depending on which way it goes.
But for now, it’s interesting to note the similarities. Not to equate the two presidents, but as an alternative narrative to the “Obama’s poll numbers really stink” talking point you hear so often in the media these days. Well, yeah — they’re not great. But, looking back at the last few presidents (who didn’t start a war during this period), they’re actually about what you’d expect at this point in his term. It’s good to remember this every so often.

[Obama Poll Watch Data:]
Column Archives
[Aug 10], [Jul 10], [Jun 10], [May 10], [Apr 10], [Mar 10], [Feb 10], [Jan 10], [Dec 09], [Nov 09], [Oct 09], [Sep 09], [Aug 09], [Jul 09], [Jun 09], [May 09], [Apr 09], [Mar 09]

Obama’s All-Time Statistics
MonthlyHighest Monthly Approval — 2/09 — 63.4%Lowest Monthly Approval — 8/10 — 45.3%
Highest Monthly Disapproval — 9/10 — 49.7%Lowest Monthly Disapproval — 1/09 — 19.6%
DailyHighest Daily Approval — 2/15/09 — 65.5%Lowest Daily Approval — 8/16/10 — 44.3%
Highest Daily Disapproval — 9/26/10 — 51.2%Lowest Daily Disapproval — 1/29/09 — 19.3%

Obama’s Raw Monthly Data
[All-time high in bold, all-time low underlined.]
Month — (Approval / Disapproval / Undecided)09/10 — 45.7 / 49.7 / 4.608/10 — 45.3 / 49.5 / 5.207/10 — 46.6 / 47.4 / 6.006/10 — 47.6 / 46.7 / 5.705/10 — 48.1 / 45.5 / 6.404/10 — 47.8 / 46.5 / 5.703/10 — 48.1 / 46.4 / 5.502/10 — 47.9 / 46.1 / 6.001/10 — 49.2 / 45.3 / 5.512/09 — 49.4 / 44.9 / 5.711/09 — 51.1 / 43.5 / 5.410/09 — 52.2 / 41.9 / 5.909/09 — 52.7 / 42.0 / 5.308/09 — 52.8 / 40.8 / 6.407/09 — 56.4 / 38.1 / 5.506/09 — 59.8 / 33.6 / 6.605/09 — 61.4 / 31.6 / 7.004/09 — 61.0 / 30.8 / 8.203/09 — 60.9 / 29.9 / 9.202/09 — 63.4 / 24.4 / 12.201/09 — 63.1 / 19.6 / 17.3

ObamaPollWatch site:
Chris Weigant blogs at:
Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant

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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
04

What Makes It OK To Press Record

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What Makes It OK To Press Record

Having worked for a couple of large cable networks with robust legal departments, the need to have proper releases when recording anyone anywhere for entertainment purposes was drilled into my head. When I speak to young people I often emphasize that they should think the same way when it comes to recording and posting images or video of their friends – or at least remember to ask permission and respect any friend’s wish not to have their images posted online. It’s just proper etiquette or netiquette. Unfortunately, too often this just doesn’t happen. Young people are so used to pressing record, uploading and sharing, they don’t think through the consequences of posting or texting these images.
And as we’ve seen recently, the consequences can be grave. Posting explicit photos or recording/streaming someone engaging in sexual activity is much different than old school note passing. The viral nature of the Net amplifies both the number of people who can view this media along with the emotional impact on the person in the images or video.
The nature of online communication and technology in general creates a sense of distance between people. Since you often can’t see who you’re talking to and you can be anonymous or create false identities, it’s easier to feel as if there aren’t any consequences to online actions. An ongoing study conducted by Harvard researcher Carrie James revealed that today’s digital youth “lack moral and ethical judgment as well as consideration for others when surfing the Web.”
Organizations like Common Sense Media have made teaching digital ethics a priority and have distributed a free curriculum to middle schools across the country. MTV has also made digital harassment amongst teens its number one priority as well with “A Thin Line.”
Instead of just focusing on youth engaged in the actual bullying as bullies or victims, we should also be encouraging online “bystanders” to speak up and speak out. Just as in offline bullying, there is usually someone either with the person who hits “post” or is the person who receives the “sext” or even the person who rates or “likes” the images online. This is part of being a good digital citizen – it’s not just about learning not to bully online, it’s about intervening when you see it happening by flagging or reporting any explicit media that feels like it was recorded without the person’s knowledge to the service where it was posted, telling a school counselor after receiving a “sext” or speaking out to peers and calling cyberbullying what it is – uncool, hurtful and dangerous. We need to change our digital culture so that it’s not “ok” to press record.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
04

US urged to stop Haiti rice subsidies

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US urged to stop Haiti rice subsidies

A leading aid agency has called on the United States to stop subsidising American rice exports to Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, because it says the policy undermines local production of food.
Former US President Bill Clinton, one of the architects of the subsidies to US farmers – and who is now, paradoxically, the co-chair of Haiti's earthquake recovery Commission – is quoted by Oxfam as saying that the policy was “a mistake”.

  • “It may have been good for some of my farmers in Arkansas, but it has not worked,” said Mr Clinton, a frequent visitor to Haiti.
    “I have to live every day with the consequences of the lost capacity to produce a rice crop in Haiti to feed those people, because of what I did.”
    The aid agency says the 434m (274m) paid annually in domestic US rice subsidies is more than the total US aid to Haiti of 353m.
    The Oxfam report said subsidies paid to American farmers meant the rice they export to Haiti – known locally as Riz Miami or “Miami Rice” – is cheaper than locally produced rice.
    The foreign rice that is “dumped” in Haiti therefore exacerbates the rural-urban drift that has seen the population of the capital Port-au-Prince balloon out of control as farmers who cannot feed themselves move to the city in search of employment.
    The city was built in colonial times to house a few hundred thousand people.
    But it now has a population of an estimated three million – most living in badly-constructed blocks which crumbled in January's devastating earthquake, making at least a million people homeless.
    More than 230,000 people were killed in the 7.0 magnitude earthquake, which was centred near Port-au-Prince.
    Haiti was encouraged by western countries to liberalise its economy in 1994. As it cut taxes on imports its own rice production plummeted.
    In 1980, according to Oxfam, Haiti was virtually self sufficient in rice. But today it imports some 80% of its rice and 60% of its overall food supply.
    “Trade liberalisation has exposed Haitian farmers to competition from subsidised US rice and made consumers vulnerable to volatile global food prices,” said Oxfam.
    The report says food aid can be another side to this problem.
    In the month following the earthquake, for example, there was an international food aid “surge”.
    Although Oxfam says the aid was “unquestionably a necessity” because it reduced food prices and allowed people to eat, the price reductions also “negatively affected rural Haitians” who earn money from selling food to the cities and comprise the majority of the population.
    The agency recommended that, wherever possible, food aid should be bought in local markets inside the country that is receiving the aid.
    Oxfam also made numerous recommendations to the Haitian government aimed at reversing its historic bias favouring the elites in Port-au-Prince over the majority rural poor.
    It said the government should:
  • decentralise services away from the capital
  • ensure that farmers have access to credit
  • improve a land tenure system where most farmers have tiny parcels of land known as mouchwa – after the Creole word meaning “handkerchief-sized” – which they can be cheated out of by judges who award title to “whoever offers the biggest bribe”
    The situation that Oxfam highlights is part of the bizarre relationship Haiti has with development aid donors and humanitarian workers.
    Port-au-Prince is one of the aid capitals of the world.
    By some estimates there are over 8,000 development charities working in the city – and almost every four-wheel drive vehicle you see on the streets there has the logo of an aid agency on its doors.
    Yet the country remains mired in poverty. And many Haitians see the aid agencies primarily as sources of employment rather than as organisations that are making a difference in the long run.

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    04

    Terror alerts sow travel confusion

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    Terror alerts sow travel confusion

    There has been a flurry of alerts from several governments – US, British, Japanese – warning travellers of the high risk of terror attacks in Europe, especially its biggest countries – Britain, France, and Germany.
    But what are travellers meant to make of these alerts, when there is so little information to go on?
    Governments say they provide such travel alerts in order to keep the public informed.
    The “are issued to disseminate information about short-term conditions, either transnational or within a specific country, that pose significant risks to the security of US citizens”.
    Some sceptics argue that, on this occasion, they may just be covering themselves, after recent leaks suggesting heightened concerns about possible Mumbai-style attacks in Europe, and in the aftermath of previous attacks such as the Bali bombings.
    Such alerts are often meant simply to remind tourists to be vigilant, and perhaps to report suspicions when they have them.
    But, again, the critics argue that such warnings frequently confuse people. At the very least, the critics say, unless alerts are very specific, they are of little use.
    These particular alerts are not meant to dissuade people from travelling, but there is a risk that they could do just that, by spreading unnecessary alarm. In that sense, they could be counter-productive.
    But defenders of the system say it is always a difficult balance in deciding how much information to publish, and when. And they say such warnings can also act as a deterrent to possible plotters.

  • Even though there is much greater co-operation on intelligence-sharing than there was, different governments sometimes take different views of such calculations, which often lead to different policies on when to issue alerts or warnings, or change threat levels.
    There are similar controversies surrounding the threat level warnings adopted by governments.
    Many are variations on the colour-coded alert system introduced by the United States in 2002, in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks.
    In a five-tier system, the top three US alert levels are yellow for elevated risk, orange for high and red for severe risk of a terror attack or attacks.
    Again, these are meant to inform the public.
    Perhaps more significantly, they are meant as signals to government agencies, local authorities, law enforcement organizations, and the like on how to prepare and respond. They are designed, as one expert put it, “to sensitise the system”.
    But there has also been criticism that the decision-making processes and the information on which decisions are made remain largely secret.
    In the United States, there has been criticism that the system has also been open to political manipulation.
    In Britain, the political element has been largely removed by handing over the decision-making process for assessing the threat from international terrorism to an expert body, .

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    04

    Healthy Caramel Apples with Brigitte Mars

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    Healthy Caramel Apples with Brigitte Mars

    Apples
    Apples, native to Eurasia, are members of the Rosaceae (Rose) Family, relatives of peaches and pears, and known botanically as Malus species. Malus is the Greek term for “round fruit.” Everyone has heard the expression, “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.” Apples are high in pectin, a soluble and help stabilize blood sugar levels. Eating apples stimulate saliva flow, promote good digestion, clean the teeth and stimulate gum tissue. Apples are rich in flavonoids, beta-carotene and vitamins, B, C and the minerals boron, calcium, phosphorus, potassium and silicon. The tarter an apple is, the higher its Vitamin C content. Apples have long been associated with the planet Venus, the element of Water and the energies of peace, love and health.
    Walnuts
    Walnuts (Juglans nigra, J. regia) are members of the Juglandaceae (Walnut) Family. The genus name, Juglans, is derived from the Latin Jovis glans, or “nut of Jupiter,” a reminder of the belief that gods dined on walnuts. The Chinese refer to walnuts as “longevity fruit” because a walnut tree lives for several hundred years. Because of their resemblance to the brain, in many cultures walnuts are considered a good brain tonic and are now known to be rich in protein and essential fatty acids. Walnuts have long been associated with the sun, element of fire and the energies of consciousness and protection.
    Dates
    Dates (Phoenix dactylifera) are the fruit of a date palm, and member of the Palmaceae (Palm) Family. The genus name, Phoenix, is perhaps in reference to the mythological phoenix that rises from the ashes, as the date has its roots in the water and its head in the heat of the sky. The species name, dactylifera means fingers, which the dates resemble. The date palm is considered a symbol of fertility. Dates are high in carbohydrates, glutamic acid, tyramine, niacin, boron, iron, magnesium, potassium, and fiber. Dates are a great transition food, for those leaving behind sugar and junk food.
    Be sure to brush your teeth or rinse your mouth after enjoying dates, as their stickiness clings to the teeth. The date palm is used in making shelter, baskets, mats, rope and an Arab proverb is there are as many uses for the date palm as days in the calendar. Dates are associated with the sun, the element of Air and the energies of strength and spirituality.
    Sesame Seeds (Sesamum indicum)
    Sesame is a member of the Pedaliaceae (Sesame) Family. The seeds are about 50 percent oil and 25 to 35 percent protein, vitamin E, calcium, and iron protein.
    Hulled sesame seeds are used to make tahini; unhulled seeds make sesame butter. Sesame is associated with the Sun, element of Fire and energies of fertility, sex, protection, and prosperity.
    Rawsome Caramel Apples!
    6 organic apples
    2 cups dates soaked in 1 cup water, and mashed down
    2 tablespoons raw tahini
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    1 tiny pinch Celtic salt
    2 cups walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts or other nut of your choice
    Pulse the nuts in a food processor and transfer to a bowl.
    Poke a chopstick through 6 apples.
    In a food processor, blend till smooth, the soaked dates, vanilla and salt.
    Using a butter knife, apply the date paste to each apple. Swirl in nuts. Chill in the refrigerator. Enjoy this October delight!
    Brigitte Mars, a professional member of the American Herbalist Guild, is a nutritional consultant who has been working with Natural Medicine for over forty years. She teaches Herbal Medicine at Naropa University, Boulder College of Massage, and Bauman Holistic College of Nutrition and has a private practice. Brigitte is the author of twelve books, including The Sexual Herbal, The Desktop Guide to Herbal Medicine, Beauty by Nature, Addiction Free Naturally, Healing Herbal Teas, and Rawsome!. Visit here for more healthy living articles, raw food recipes, videos, workshops, books, and more at brigittemars.com. Brigitte blogs for The Huffington Post, Care2 and My Intent.
    Check out her international model yogini daughter, Rainbeau at www.rainbeaumars.com

    Follow Brigitte Mars on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/brigittemars

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Appropriating Native Economies When Is Enough Enough

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    Appropriating Native Economies When Is Enough Enough

    When is enough, enough? Native Americans have been asking this question for centuries. The answer is clear, at least as it relates to the systematic and unrelenting quest to strip Native communities of their lands, sovereignty and access to economic recovery: It’s never enough.
    The latest salvo in this unyielding attack is highlighted in, and furthered by, a recent series of Washington Post articles by Robert O’Harrow. In his skewed and context-deficient articles, Mr. O’Harrow targets Alaska Native Corporations, entities created by the U.S. government to help settle historic land and other claims by Alaska Natives. ANCs were sold to Alaska Natives as a way to build their economic futures. Overnight, their indigenous rights and claims were transformed into shares of corporations. The quid pro quo was giving up tremendously valuable resources, as the U.S. sought to acquire hundreds of millions of acres of oil-rich land to meet its burgeoning energy needs. Implicit in this exchange was a responsibility of the U.S. government to assist the ANCs in building their economies, so that their shareholders, Alaska Natives, might be able to escape the grinding poverty crippling many of their communities. This responsibility is similar to the U.S.’s relationship with Indian Nations, and its fundamental obligation to honor treaties guaranteeing crucial rights.
    Mr. O’Harrow, both explicitly and implicitly, complains about the ability of ANCs to participate in a level-setting federal contracting initiative administered by the Small Business Administration. Under this initiative, known as the “8(a) program,” companies owned by economically-disadvantaged minority individuals can access procurement channels in an effort to help level the playing field in the often relationship-driven world of federal contracting. ANCs, Indian Nations and Native Hawaiian Organizations also have this ability as the faces of Native community groups and sovereign nations. The 8(a) program is one of the few real opportunities available to ANCs, Indian Nations and NHOs to help better their poverty-challenged communities, arguably the most disadvantaged people in the U.S. Because the 8(a) program views Indian Nations and Native Hawaiian Organizations as essentially the same as ANCs, Mr. O’Harrow’s attacks against ANCs are leveled against all Native communities.
    As an enrolled citizen of the Seneca Nation of Indians, who works every day to help try to bring economic sustainability to our people, it saddens me to witness yet another assault on our efforts to rise above the effects of generational poverty created by years of governmental oppression. Our lands were stripped away. Our people were killed in a systematic removal process sponsored by governments offering cash for dead Indians. We were corralled onto tiny “reservations,” where we were expected to adapt almost overnight to foreign systems and values. In the face of all this, we’ve persevered. We’re still here, fighting to be self-sufficient and retain our priceless sovereignty as a people. However, outside forces often conspire to turn this uphill battle into a sheer cliff. We constantly face attempts to strip us of our remaining resources and opportunities, as state and federal governments consistently remind us that enough is never enough.
    The Seneca Nation has experienced this onslaught in spades. We retained tiny pieces of our original lands as the U.S. steamrolled over our communities. In the 1960s, despite our reliance on sacred treaty promises that it would never take more land, the U.S. built the Kinzua Dam, which put much of our territory literally underwater and resulted in the forcible relocation of many of our people. Just this year, the U.S. passed the PACT Act, which was purposefully designed to eviscerate the Seneca Nation’s successful tobacco industry, an industry that employed and supported thousands of people. It’s no secret that big tobacco corporations maneuvered and manipulated legislative backrooms to guarantee the passage of the PACT Act, as they quickly reacted to Indians taking slivers of their precious market share. And now, as we begin to enter the federal contracting space in an effort to build a sustainable and diversified economy, we’re hit by broadside attacks like Mr. O’Harrow’s.
    Mr. O’Harrow focuses on exceptions to prove the rule. Potential for abuse is inherent in any governmental system. To focus on a small number of isolated cases, however, just isn’t fair. His facts are selective. Many of his statements are opinion-laden and conveniently ignore important counterpoints. For example, Mr. O’Harrow attempts to characterize the contracts that ANCs receive as outsized. However, he doesn’t point out that ANCs, Indian Nations and Native Hawaiian Organizations combined receive less than 1.3 percent of all contracting dollars. He also tries to paint ANCs as cornering the market on sole-source government contracts. Again, he fails to put this into context. Just this year, Boeing received a single-source contract totaling $11.9 billion — more than twice what ANCs earned last year on a collective basis.
    Mr. O’Harrow also takes issue with the fact that Native companies hire some Non-Natives to help build operations. I am the first person to advocate for more Natives in leadership positions. We’re getting there, but it takes time. After years of forced boarding schools, substandard educational systems and efforts to marginalize our communities, we’re making great strides to build our business acumen while staying true to our traditions, culture and ways. As a Native educated in the “outside” world, it’s a privilege and honor for me to have the opportunity to come back to my nation to help further its economy. There are many others like me, and many more who work day-to-day to build the skills necessary to advance our nations within an environment with different systems and values. It’s a challenge to walk in two worlds, and it’s foolhardy to expect these important skills to be developed overnight on a broad scale. Our Native companies generate the funds necessary to continue to send our children to school and prepare for our collective future. It takes time to do this in a systematic way.
    Many new rules previously proposed by the SBA are designed to deal with the potential for abuse that Mr. O’Harrow highlights, rules that many ANCs, Indian Nations and other Native groups support. However, Mr. O’Harrow uses a broad brush as he attempts to paint all ANCs (and by association, Indian Nations and Native Hawaiian Organizations) with the color of a few self-selected, and non-representative, examples. To not put these isolated examples in the overall context of a necessary program that has demonstrably helped struggling Native communities is both inappropriate and irresponsible. Enough is enough.
    David Kimelberg is an enrolled citizen (Bear clan) of the Seneca Nation of Indians. He is the CEO of Seneca Holdings LLC, the investment arm of the Seneca Nation, and the founder of nativeinvestment.com, an online forum and blog about economic development in Indian Country. His views are his own and not necessarily those of the Seneca Nation of Indians or Seneca Holdings.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Does Housewife Michaele Salahis Confession of MS Help or Hinder Illness Awareness Issues

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    Does Housewife Michaele Salahis Confession of MS Help or Hinder Illness Awareness Issues

    If “Real Housewife” Michaele Salahi had an official brand name, it could be called Controversy and her recent announcement of multiple sclerosis has added in new debate. Is she faking it or isn’t she? Most people first heard of Salahi when she and her husband allegedly crashed a White House state dinner. Lately she has gotten into a scuffle with The View’s Whoopi Goldberg and she’s explained that the reason the Redskins have no record of her as a cheerleader is because she lied about her age.
    So, when Salahi announced that she had multiple sclerosis on September 15th, it came as no surprise that most people doubted her confession. Or, most people who do not have health issues, that is. In 2002 I began National Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week, held annually in September, and ironically the story of Salahi’s MS broke during the middle of the week this year. Web sites around the internet buzzed with controversial remarks.
    What was the controversy? Blog comments reflect that most people who are healthy believe it is just another one of Salahi’s tricks to gain publicity with the release of a tell-all book, Cirque Du Salahi, by Diane Dimond. However, those who live with invisible illnesses personally understand how one day she could be stuck in bed and another hinting behind the scene with NBC’s Today Show that she’d like to be on Dancing with the Stars.
    So does Michaele Salahi’s admission of living with MS help or hinder awareness about invisible illness or multiple sclerosis? I believe, despite her less than squeaky clean celebrity-hood there is the potential for benefit.
    Why?
    1. People with illness are angry enough to let their voice be heard.
    Frankly, I am surprised that so many reporters chose to do a fast story about their skepticism of her claim of MS rather than doing even a smidgen of research on invisible illnesses. According to statistics, about 96% of illnesses are invisible and no assistive device is used. I have seen few articles that ask, “What if she is telling the truth?” that are not written by someone who does not have an illness.
    Despite the ignorance of the reporters who jumped on the “liar, liar, pants on fire” bandwagon, controversy stirs talk. And people with invisible illness are commenting on articles and blogs more so than they ever will on an announcement of a new MS medication.
    2. Illness associations have a hot news topic for the week.
    I doubt the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (NMSS) would have chosen Salahi to be their next spokesperson, but it got their telephone ringing. NMSS spokesman Arney Rosenblat, in response to Salahi’s weight, stated, “Weight loss is not a typical symptom [of MS]. However, if you are on medication or you have depression or fatigue, you could have appetite issues. If you know someone with MS, you know its hallmark in unpredictability.” Unfortunately, most reporters quoted only his first sentence, making it sound as though even he had doubts about Salahi’s illness.
    3. It is an opportunity for patient advocates to create awareness about the variety of illness symptoms.
    Reporters and those without illness were quick to chatter about Salahi’s high heels and how she “looked so good.” NAMS Rosenblat’s comment “[MS] is often called the ‘You look so good’ disease because its symptoms are often unnoticeable to others” has been buried by the press, but patient advocates can grab it and remind people of this.
    4. Celebrity gossip will always scoop health information to make good T.V.
    When these stories happen patient advocates understand that the headlines will work far better for patient education than any PSA. On the Today Show September 24, Hoda Kotb tells Salahi, “I think now people come out with illnesses and. . . . no one looks down on someone,” and Kathie Lee Gifford agrees, “There’s no stigma to it.”
    But in my opinion, Salahi was right when she responded, “But there was a stigma. I remember being in a job where people got fired for less. . . .So I always had the fear. . . I thought, ‘Oh, gosh, I’ll be the next to go,’ so I kept it a secret. No matter, if my hands, I couldn’t feel them, or they went numb, I thought, ‘No way am I letting this secret out.’”
    Those who believe there is not a stigma have not lived with illness or they have likely been blessed with an unusual cocoon of support.
    5. It reminds us of celebrities with illness and their causes.
    Salahi told Kobt and Gifford she revealed her illness to scoop the media before they told the world. Many stars, including Michael J. Fox and Montel Williams have done the same thing. Like it or not, Salahi is now a part of the celebrity chronic illness club. The benefit is that it gets all celebrities who live with illness a boost in awareness of their causes.
    And celebrities with illness increases awareness about the disease. The article, “Media Coverage and Public Reaction to a Celebrity Cancer Diagnosis,” published in the Journal of Public Health last month, describes a studies results that showed a significant increase in public interest in disease prevention following celebrity diagnoses. Salahi’s revelation may just spur some people to say “I wonder if I should see a doctor about this.”
    In conclusion, while those of us with invisible illness may grow weary of celebrities getting the media’s attention about their diseases when we have suffered silently for years, we also recognize that it is the most likely way the challenges of coping with an invisible illness will get those prime time slots. Behind each celebrity there are millions of people living joyfully despite illness. Unlike Salahi, we may not have a doll that resembles us or a Bravo reality show, but we have passion for life reporters will be hard-pressed to find elsewhere. And we won’t even crash your dinner.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Twitterpated Censoring 140 Characters

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    Twitterpated Censoring 140 Characters

    In a single 24-hour period in September, Elizabeth Economy, the director for Asia Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, and Chinese dissident writer, Liao Yiwu, each commented on the potential of Twitter to affect political change in China. Presumably both were referring to Twitter clones, such as Weibo, since the Chinese Government began blocking the real Twitter over a year ago in advance of the twentieth anniversary of Tiananmen. In July the government also tightened the screws on some of China’s more popular Twitter clones. For any government to impose such censorship is inexcusable, however, censorship is an issue that has been addressed elsewhere. For this blogger, there is another aspect, a remaining question that is also deeply saddening. That is: how far has political discourse fallen that 140 characters, even in a language as concise as Chinese, is considered sufficient space to provide political commentary that is not only worth reading but worth censoring?
    To understand what I mean, read Mao’s Little Red Book, or Thomas Paine’s classical pamphlet: Common Sense. Ok, you don’t really have to actually read them, though you should, but at least have a look at them. When these works were published, in 1964 and 1776 respectively, they were intended to be short, snappy and sexy political prose that would help sell their respective ideologies to a class of people far less educated and literate than modern Americans or Chinese. Yet by today’s standard these political pamphlets are obscenely long with the Little Red Book amounting to 212 tweets in Chinese and Common Sense coming in at 871. The very idea that micro-blogs (Twitter and its clones) would have us measuring our messages in characters seems particularly silly in an era when smart phones, tablets, netbooks, and widespread wireless allow us to instantly send messages or post blogs of unlimited length from almost anywhere.
    Don’t get me wrong; Twitter has some value as a tool of communication. Its ability to instantly transmit a small piece of information to a large number of people can be used to quickly coordinate protests, and this is undoubtedly an important reason for autocratic governments fear it. But Twitter is only a minor improvement on the already well-established practice of using text messages or e-mails to organize demonstrations, and at any rate these can account for only a tiny fraction of politically related tweets. Twitter’s largest “contribution” to politics appears to be the further “sound-bite-ization” of political discourse.
    Micro-blogging not only promotes “sound-bite-ization” but actually precludes longer, more meaningful discussion. From Hugo Chvez to Sarah Palin, Twitter allows politicians and average citizens to communicate with the public in a medium so constrained as to disallow even the possibility of a substantive argument. The brevity required by Twitter not only excuses the lack of supporting fact or logic, but necessitates it, making it difficult to differentiate well-reasoned thoughts on important current events from nonsensical jabber. Reflecting back to the first paragraph of this blog, perhaps then there is a silver lining in the Chinese Communist Party’s deplorable censorship. If Chinese activists are forced off the internet entirely, they may begin self-publishing pamphlets sufficiently lengthy to allow for a coherent argument.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Blind Anger Obamanation Really Rita Smith Really

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    Blind Anger Obamanation Really Rita Smith Really

    Since this is my first blog, I’d like to introduce the tag line that I will be using for each entry: Blind Anger.
    It is more than a pun. When I first lost my eyesight, my primary reaction was anger. But what good is anger if you can’t use it to change things. I have used that extra energy to listen instead of just hearing people talk. Sometimes the things that I discover by listening surprise, shock and sadden me.
    In our busy, 24-hour news cycle, garbage-in-garbage-out, rants, tirades and temper tantrum filled days, I feel that it is important to listen to what people are actually saying. I am no longer burdened with the distractions of eyesight. and yet, in a way, I have found that I can “see” even more.
    The other day, I had the privilege of receiving a phone call to invite me to a “Tele-Town Hall” for the Ohio Senatorial candidate, Mr. Rob Portman. Even though my current voting district is in Florida, having moved out of Ohio in 2007, I was still quite interested in participating. I was torn between hanging up the phone, since I am no longer a resident of Ohio, and listening to the voices of my fellow countrymen and woman in an important political discussion. What I heard absolutely sickened me and I felt myself turning quite pale as I listened to the blatant racism of several callers and Mr. Portman’s casual and almost jovial response.
    Caller Rita Smith of Norwood, a mostly blue collar Cincinnati neighborhood, was given the opportunity to speak to the candidate. She identified herself as a loyal constituent, and wanted to know how she could best serve the interest of her candidate. She then proceeded to mention that she used to be active in local politics, but that she felt that she could no longer participate in her neighborhood because it had become, in her words, ” An Obamanation, if you know what I mean,” referring to the current integration of the area. Having lived in the nearby enclave of College Hill, I recognized the meaning behind her racist terminology. But what really set me back was the light-hearted response and agreeable acknowledgment of her comment by Mr. Portman. He laughed in agreement with her, and then espoused his recommendation of 10-10-10 (meaning that she should speak to 10 of her friends, 10 of her co-workers and 10 of her relatives, instead of just speaking to her neighbors).
    Not once did he denounce her racist attitude toward her neighbors, so one can only assume that he wanted her to contact 30 like-minded people to support his campaign.
    In running for the seat soon to be vacated by George Voinavich, his future constituents would be black, white, rich, poor, Christian, Jewish, young, middle-aged and seniors. Doesn’t he realize, that by agreeing with the racist comments of one part of his support base, he could potentially alienate others? Didn’t any Republicans learn from McCain’s 2008 campaign that it is potentially dangerous to embolden and encourage the racist right fringe that are out of control? (Remember the crazy-looking lady in the red shirt at his town hall, claiming that she couldn’t trust Obama because he was an Arab? McCain’s response was one of shock, and “oh, what have I done?”)
    Mr. Portman went on to answer more questions and tow the Republican lie about how the tax cuts for the wealthiest can help this country grow, when they have been a part of the problem for he last decade. Trickle-down, voodoo economics were proved to be wrong in the Reagan administration.
    But what really put a sour taste in my mouth was the dismissive attitude, if not encouraging demeanor of Mr. Portman toward his racist caller.
    I called in to one of his staffers to challenge Mr. Portman to show proof that tax breaks for the wealthy create jobs and restore our economy, but I also challenged him to show how perpetuation of racist attitudes was not dangerous and irresponsible, and tearing our nation apart.
    I’m still waiting for your response, Mr. Portman… Really.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    The Making of a Novel My Characters Religion

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    The Making of a Novel My Characters Religion

    I’ve spent all day re-working one page of dialogue. Two characters are speaking to each other upon the death of a man they have both loved. In order to imagine exactly what each would say in this moment, I’ve had to go very, very slowly. The reason for this is fascinating: it’s because the the minute someone starts talking about death, they are also talking about religion. And as soon as someone starts talking about religion, you have to think about their entire life. Did they grow up in a religious family? Did they attend church or temple regularly? If so, did they believe what they learned there? Do they still believe it? And did they marry someone who believed it, too? It turns out that you can’t get very far without knowing all this.
    If, in response to shocking news, someone says, “Oh my God,” is that because they are literally addressing their deity? Or is it a knee-jerk reaction of someone who actually doesn’t believe in God at all? Does the listener take offense if the remark is a knee-jerk one?
    I decided to have a funeral take place at St. John the Divine, a beautiful church in New York City. It’s an Episcopal church, and I love writing scenes that take place in these kinds of spaces — the soaring stone ceilings, the stained glass windows, the sound of the music as it reverberates through. But the character who dies was part of a publishing family by the name of Heller. I chose that name because it kind of reminded me of Harper, as in Harper-Collins. And it sounded good as a business name. The Heller Building. Heller Publishing. But Heller is often considered a Jewish name. Under what circumstances would a Jewish person have a service at an Episcopal church? Perhaps his wife was Episcopalian? Perhaps he converted? Perhaps he just liked pretty buildings, too? Perhaps he wasn’t Jewish at all. Perhaps I should change his name.
    I have to reconcile all this before I move on. I have found myself today on the websites of cemeteries and churches and religious organizations. I can’t get past this one page until I write the spiritual histories of at least three people.
    No wonder novels take so long to write….

    Follow Jennie Nash on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/jennienash

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Nigeria Bombing Change Needed By Peaceful Means

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    Nigeria Bombing Change Needed By Peaceful Means

    What Next For Nigeria
    On what was supposed to be a day to recognize the 50th anniversary of Nigeria on October 1, the capital, Abuja, was rocked by two car bombs, killing at least 12 people. First sympathies go out to the nation, and to the families of all those who lost their lives and were injured in this terrible bomb blast. Current reports are that elements of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, better known as MEND (a loose umbrella organization of militants and militant groups) perpetrated this act to underscore the issues in the oil-rich Niger Delta Region.
    Peaceful political and civil society groups have highlighted over many, many years the need to end corruption of oil wealth and to increase development in all sectors (education, health, agriculture) in the Niger Delta as well as the right of the Niger Deltans to have more say and influence in how resources and profits from the oil wealth are used to help improve the lives of those living in the Region. These are very legitimate issues, which need to be addressed. There are five key Nigerian states that make up the main oil states in the Niger Delta Region (Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, Akom Ibom, Cross River), and acts of sabotage, kidnapping, and disruption of oil infrastructure had been the tactic of choice of not only MEND but other militant groups in the Region.
    This is the second time in nearly 8 months that elements of MEND have used the car bombing tactic. I was in Nigeria the first time MEND used this tactic earlier in 2010 in Warri, a city in Nigeria’s Delta State in the Niger Delta Region, and also another militant group attacked a facility in the commercial capital, Lagos during the same period. In addition, over the last 2 years, elements of MEND have threatened, through letters sent and written to the press, such attacks in Abuja, but this is the first time that they have followed through on that threat and this is a very worrying sign and trend as the country grapples with trying to get its election process right so key social sector issues can be better addressed everywhere in Nigeria and particularly in the Niger Delta.
    There is a lot to be done to move Nigeria further forward than it is now, and changing the paradigms in the area of education, health, agriculture, fighting corruption, and better utilization of its oil wealth to benefit the Nigerian people are all things that need to be addressed, but peacefully. All of these sectors need more assistance and more improvement so Nigeria cannot only become the Giant that we all want it to be, but because it is necessary for the next generation of Nigerians to have a better life.
    MEND is not known to have been a totally cohesive group in the past, with a singular leader, but more of a loose affiliation of different militant interests. It is unclear now with this attack, which certainly would have required detailed planning and strategies, whether the affiliation has or is morphing into something different from the loose associations of the past of various militant interests. In addition since the amnesty for militants in 2009 and despite all the many problems with truly implementing the amnesty rehabilitation program with more consistent progress on training opportunities for militants, militant-related violence had diminished somewhat in the Region. This car bomb attack in the capital presents a new and worrying trend for Nigeria that we all need to pay attention to and work to bring those who perpetrated the act to justice. No one doubts the legitimate issues in the region, but we all must assist the nation in addressing and correcting these issues in the Niger Delta Region by supporting both political and civil society groups who want to make changes in the Region and improve its development and use of resources, but through peaceful means.
    (My BlogSpot views are personal and do not represent views of the U.S. Government, or any other institution.)

    Follow Amb. Robin Renee Sanders on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/rrsafrica

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Twitter founder Evan Williams steps down as CEO

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    Twitter founder Evan Williams steps down as CEO

    The co-founder of social networking site Twitter is standing down as its chief executive.
    Evan Williams, who has headed the company since 2008, is being replaced to allow him to focus on ways of making Twitter more profitable.
    Announcing the decision on Twitter's blog, Mr Williams said Twitter needed to “meet its potential as a profitable company”.
    He will be replaced by the current chief operating officer, Dick Costolo.
    Twitter has grown dramatically in recent years, with user numbers now topping 160 million, compared with three million two years ago.
    But Mr Williams said that in order to continue to be successful, the company now needed to start converting that growth into profit.
    “Growing big is not success in itself,” he said.
    “Success to us means meeting our potential as a profitable company that can retain its culture and user focus while having a positive impact on the world. This is no small task.
    “This is why I have decided to ask our COO, Dick Costolo, to become Twitter's CEO. Starting today, I'll be completely focused on product strategy.”
    The BBC's technology correspondent in Silicon Valley, Maggie Shiels, said the handover marked a “very important transition” for Twitter.
    “The announcement shows this is a company that is about to get really serious about making money… something they have tiptoed around for some time,” she said.
    “This is about turning Twitter from a communications platform into an advertising platform and a real money-making business.
    “That means it will be able to fight off being acquired by the likes of Google and also challenge the search giant for lucrative ad dollars.”

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    04

    American Express faces US lawsuit

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    American Express faces US lawsuit

    Credit-card company American Express is being sued by the US government over claims of anti-competitive practices.
    The Justice Department says the company's contracts with merchants prevent rivals from undercutting it on transaction charges.
    The government also sued credit-card giants MasterCard and Visa, but both firms agreed to settle their cases.
    American Express has not settled, and said it would fight the charges.
    At a press conference, the Justice Department said all three major card companies were stifling competition by stopping businesses from offering customers alternative cheaper forms of payment.
    When they sign up with a major credit card provider, restaurant or shop owners must pay fees charged by that provider.
    But contracts also prevent merchants from offering customers the chance to pay with rival credit cards that could be cheaper, Attorney General Eric Holder said.
    “Visa, MasterCard and American Express don't just impose fees, they also prevent merchants from offering consumers any cost-saving options such as discounts or rewards for using less expensive forms of payment,” he said.
    “The companies put merchants and consumers in a no-win situation: accept our card, pay our fees, and don't even think about trying to get a discount.”
    In settling their cases, Visa and MasterCard agreed not to prevent merchants from offering discounts on rival cards.
    But American Express rejected the idea that its agreements with merchants were anti-competitive.
    “We have no intention of settling the case,” said Kenneth Chenault, American Express's chief executive.
    “We will defend the rights of our card members at the point of sale, and our own ability to negotiate freely with merchants.”
    Credit card transaction fees are big business for the industry. According to the Justice Department they earned the three big providers 35bn last year alone.

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    04

    AB 32 RGGI and Climate Change The National Context of State Policies for a Global Commons Problem

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    AB 32 RGGI and Climate Change The National Context of State Policies for a Global Commons Problem

    Why should anyone be interested in the national context of a state policy? In the case of California’s Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32), the answer flows directly from the very nature of the problem — global climate change, the ultimate global commons problem. Greenhouse gases (GHGs) uniformly mix in the atmosphere. Therefore, any jurisdiction taking action — whether a nation, a state, or a city — will incur the costs of its actions, but the benefits of its actions (reduced risk of climate change damages) will be distributed globally. Hence, for virtually any jurisdiction, the benefits it reaps from its climatepolicy actions will be less than the cost it incurs. This is despite the fact that the global benefits of action may well be greater — possibly much greater — than global costs.
    This presents a classic free-rider problem, in which it is in the interest of each jurisdiction to wait for others to take action, and benefit from their actions (that is, free-ride). This is the fundamental reason why the highest levels of effective government should be involved, that is, sovereign states (nations). And this is why international, if not global, cooperation is essential. [See the extensive work in this area of the Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements.]
    Despite this fundamental reality, there can still be a valuable role for sub-national climate policies. Indeed, my purpose in this essay is to explore the potential for such state and regional policies — both in the presence of Federal climate policy and in the absence of such policy. I begin by describing the national climate policy context, and then turn to sub-national policies, such as California’s AB 32 and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the northeast. My focus is on how these sub-national policies will interact with a Federal climate policy. It turns out that some of the interactions will be problematic, others will be benign, and still others could be positive. I also examine the role that could be played by sub-national policies in the absence of a meaningful Federal policy, with the conclusion that — like it or not — we may find that Sacramento comes to take the place of Washington as the center of national climate policy.
    The (Long-Term) National Context: Carbon-Pricing
    I need not tell readers of this blog that virtually all economists and most other policy analysts favor a national carbonpricing policy (whether carbon tax or cap-and-trade) as the core of any meaningful climate policy action in the United States. Why is this approach so overwhelmingly favored by the analytical community?
    First, no other feasible approach can provide truly meaningful emissions reductions (such as an 80% cut in national CO2 emissions by mid-century). Second, it is the least costly approach in the short term, because abatement costs are exceptionally heterogeneous across sources. Only carbon-pricing provides strong incentives that push all sources to control at the same marginal abatement cost, thereby achieving a given aggregate target at the lowest possible cost. Third, it is the least costly approach in the long term, because it provides incentives for carbon-friendly technological change, which brings down costs over time. Fourth, although carbon pricing is not sufficient on its own (because of other market failures that reduce the impact of price signals — more about this below), it is a necessary component of a sensible climate policy, because of factors 1 through 3, above. [I've written about carbon-pricing in many previous blog posts, including on June 23, 2010, "The Real Options for U.S. Climate Policy."]
    But carbon-pricing is a hot-button political issue. This is primarily because it makes the costs of the policy transparent, unlike conventional policy instruments, such as performance and technology standards, which tend to hide costs. Carbon-pricing is easily associated with the dreaded T-word. Indeed, in Washington, cap-and-trade has been successfully demonized as “cap-and-tax.” As a result, the political reality now appears to be that a national, economy-wide carbon-pricing policy is unlikely to be enacted before 2013. Does this mean that there will be no Federal climate policy in the meantime? No, not at all.
    The (Short-Term) National Context: Federal Regulations on the Way or Already in Place
    Regulations of various kinds may soon be forthcoming — and in some cases, will definitely be forthcoming — as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA and the Obama administration’s subsequent “endangerment finding” that emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare. This triggered mobile source standards earlier this year, the promulgation of which identified carbon dioxide as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act, thereby initiating a process of using the Clean Air Act for stationary sources as well.
    Those new standards are scheduled to begin on January 2, 2011, with or without the socalled “tailoring rule” that would exempt smaller sources. Among the possible types of regulation that could be forthcoming for stationary sources under the Clean Air Act are: new source performance standards; performance standards for existing sources (Section 111(d)); and New Source Review with Best Available Control Technology standards under Section 165.
    The merits that have been suggested of such regulatory action are that it would be effective in some sectors, and that the threat of such regulation will spur Congress to take action with a more sensible approach, namely, an economy-wide capandtrade system. However, regulatory action on carbon dioxide under the Clean Air Act will accomplish relatively little and do so at relatively high cost, compared with carbon pricing. Also, it is not clear that this threat will force the hand of Congress; it clearly has not yet done so. Indeed, it is reasonable to ask whether this is a credible threat, or will instead turn out to be counterproductive (when stories about the implementation of inflexible, highcost regulatory approaches lend ammunition to the staunchest opponents of climate policy).
    It’s also possible that air pollution policies for nongreenhouse gas pollutants, the emissions of some of which are highly correlated with CO2 emissions, may play an important role. For example, threepollutant legislation focused on SOx, NOx, and mercury could have profound impacts on the construction and operation of coalfired electricity plants, without any direct CO2 requirements. Without any new legislation, a set of rules which could have significant impacts on coal-fired power plants are now making their way through the regulatory process — including regulations affecting ambient ozone, SO2/NO2, particulates, ash, hazardous air pollutants (mercury), and effluent water.
    There is also the possibility of new energy policies (not targeted exclusively at climate change) having significant impacts on CO2 emissions. The possible components of such an approach that would be relevant in the context of climate change include: a national renewable electricity standard; Federal financing for clean energy projects: energy efficiency measures (building, appliance, and industrial efficiency standards; home retrofit subsidies; and smart grid standards, subsidies, and dynamic pricing policies); and new Federal electricitytransmission siting authority.
    Even without action by the Congress or by the Administration, legal action on climate policy is likely to take place within the judicial realm. Public nuisance litigation will no doubt continue, with a diverse set of lawsuits being filed across the country in pursuit of injunctive relief and/or damages. Due to recent court decisions, the pace, the promise, and the problems of this approach remain uncertain.
    Beyond the welldefined area of public nuisance litigation, other interventions which are intended to block permits for new fossil energy investments, including both power plants and transmission lines will continue. Some of these interventions will be of the conventional NIMBY character, but others will no doubt be more strategic.
    But with political stalemate in Washington on carbon-pricing or national climate policy, attention is inevitably turning to regional, state, and even local policies intended to address climate change.
    Sub-National Climate Policies
    The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the Northeast has created a capandtrade system among electricity generators. More striking, California’s Global Warming Solutions Act (Assembly Bill 32, or AB 32) will likely lead to the creation of a very ambitious set of climate initiatives, including a statewide capandtrade system (unless it’s stopped by ballot initiative — Proposition 23 — or a new Governor, depending on the outcome of the November 2010 elections). The California system is likely to be linked with systems in other states and Canadian provinces under the Western Climate Initiative. Currently, more than half of the 50 states are contemplating, developing, or implementing climate policies.
    In the presence of a Federal policy, will such state efforts achieve their objectives? Will the efforts be cost-effective? The answer is that the interactions of state policies with Federal policy can be problematic, benign, or positive, depending upon their relative scope and stringency, and depending upon the specific policy instruments used. This is the topic of a paper which Professor Lawrence Goulder (Stanford University) and I have written, “Interactions Between State and Federal Climate Change Policies” (National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 16123, June 2010).
    Problematic Interactions
    Let’s start with the case of a Federal policy which limits emission quantities (as with cap-and-trade) or uses nationwide averaging of performance (as with some proposals for a national renewable portfolio standard). In this case, emission reductions accomplished by a “green state” with a more stringent policy than the Federal policy — for example, AB 32 combined with Waxman-Markey/H.R. 2454 — will reduce pressure on other states, thereby freeing, indeed encouraging (through lower allowance prices) emission increases in the other states. The result would be 100% leakage, no gain in environmental protection from the green state’s added activity, and a national loss of cost-effectiveness.
    Potential examples of this — depending upon the details of the regulations — include: first, AB 32 cap-and-trade combined with Federal cap-and-trade (H.R. 2454) or combined with some U.S. Clean Air Act performance standards; second, state limits on GHGs/mile combined with Federal CAFE standards; and third, state renewable fuels standards combined with a Federal RFS, or state renewable portfolio standards combined with a Federal RPS. A partial solution would be for these Federal programs to allow states to opt out of the Federal policy if they had an equally or more stringent state policy. Such a partial solution would not, however, be cost-effective.
    Benign Interactions
    One example of benign interactions of state and Federal climate policy is the case of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the northeast. In this case, the state policies are less stringent than an assumed Federal policy (such as H.R. 2454). The result is that the state policies become non-binding and hence largely irrelevant.
    A second example — that warms the hearts of economists, but appears to be politically irrelevant for the time being — is the case of a Federal policy that sets price, not quantity, i.e., a carbon tax, or a binding safety-valve or price collar in a cap-and-trade system. In this case, more stringent actions in green states do not lead to offsetting emissions in other states induced by a changing carbon price. It should be noted, however, that there will be different marginal abatement costs across states, and so aggregate reductions would not be achieved cost-effectively.
    Positive Interactions
    Three scenarios suggest the possibility of positive interactions of state and Federal climate policies. First, states can — in principle — address market failures not addressed by a Federal carbon-pricing policy. A prime example is the principalagent problem of insufficient energyefficiency investments in renteroccupied properties, even in the face of high energy prices. This is a problem that is best addressed at the state or even local level, such as through building codes and zoning.
    Second, state and regional authorities frequently argue that states can serve as valuable “laboratories” for policy design, and thereby provide useful information for the development of Federal policy. However, it is reasonable to ask whether state authorities will allow their “laboratory” to be closed after the experiment has been completed, the information delivered, and a Federal policy put in place. Pronouncements from some state leaders should cause concern in this regard.
    Third, states can create pressure for more stringent Federal policies. A timely example is provided by California’s Pavley I motor-vehicle fuel-efficiency standards and the subsequent change in Federal CAFE requirements. There is historical validation of this effect, with California repeatedly having increased the stringency of its local air pollution standards, followed by parallel Federal action under the Clean Air Act. This linkage is desirable if the previous Federal policy is insufficiently stringent, but whether that is the case is an empirical question.
    Thus, in the presence of Federal climate policy, interactions with sub-national policies can be problematic, benign, or positive, depending upon the relative scope and stringency of the sub-national and national policies, as well as the particular policy instruments employed at both levels. [For a more rigorous derivation of the findings above, as well as an examination of a larger set of examples, please see my paper with Stanford Professor Lawrence Goulder, referenced above.]
    But comprehensive Federal carbon-pricing policy appears to be delayed until 2013, at the earliest. And it is possible that pending Federal regulatory action under the Clean Air Act will be curtailed or significantly delayed either by the new Congress or by litigation. Therefore, it is important to consider the role of state and regional climate policies in the absence of Federal action.
    Sub-National Climate Policies in the Absence of Federal Action
    In brief, in the absence of meaningful Federal action, subnational climate policies could well become the core of national action. Problems will no doubt arise, including legal obstacles such as possible Federal preemption or litigation associated with the socalled Dormant Commerce Clause.
    Also, even a large portfolio of state and regional policies will not be comprehensive of the entire nation, that is, not truly national in scope (for a quick approximation of likely coverage, check out a recent map of blue states and red states).
    And even if the state and regional policies were nationally comprehensive, there would be different policies of different stringency in different parts of the country, and so carbon shadowprices would by no means be equivalent, meaning that the overall policy objectives would be achieved at excessive social cost.
    Is there a solution (if only a partial one)? Yes. If the primary policy instrument employed in the state and regional policies is cap-and-trade, then the respective carbon markets can be linked. Such linkage occurs through bilateral recognition of allowances, which results in reduced costs, reduced price volatility, reduced leakage, and reduced market power. Good news all around.
    Such bottomup linkage of state and regional capandtrade systems could be an important part or perhaps even the core of future of U.S. climate policy, at least until there is meaningful action at the Federal level. In the meantime, it is at least conceivable — and perhaps likely — that linkage of statelevel capandtrade systems will become the (interim) de facto national climate policy architecture.
    In this way, Sacramento would take the place of Washington as the center of national climate policy deliberations and action. No doubt, this possibility will please some, and frighten others.
    ————-
    P.S. For those of you interested in the topic of this blog post, you may also find of particular interest a conference organized by the University of California, taking place in Sacramento on October 4th, “California’s Climate Change Policy: The Economic and Environmental Impacts of AB 32.” You can learn more about it by clicking on this link.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    RECONCILING ISRAELS SECURITY WITH PALESTINIAN STATEHOOD

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    RECONCILING ISRAELS SECURITY WITH PALESTINIAN STATEHOOD

    The two interdependent issues which hover over every aspect of the Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations are satisfying Israel’s national security requirements while meeting the Palestinian demand to end the Israeli occupation. Whereas the Palestinians must understand that unless Israel feels secure, there will be no independent Palestinian state, similarly, Israel must recognize that a two-state solution must mean an end to Israeli occupation in any form. To achieve these two objectives, both sides must carefully consider not only each other’s requirements, but also demonstrate sensitivity to each other’s mindset, which has been ingrained for decades and continues to fuel their conflicting positions.
    Even a cursory review of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict suggests that Israel has legitimate national security concerns that must be alleviated in order to achieve a negotiated agreement on the establishment of a Palestinian state. Despite the fact that there are still several Palestinian groups who openly and consistently seek Israel’s destruction, and however arguable Israel’s linkage between its national security and its continued occupation, one thing remains indisputable: Israel’s withdrawal from a part of the territories in the past did not create the building blocks for peace. Instead, the evacuated territories were used as a staging ground for further violent attacks against Israel. The withdrawal from parts of the West Bank in the late 1990s did not prevent the second Intifada; the pull-out from Southern Lebanon in 2000 did not stop the violent exchanges with Hezbollah, which led to the 2006 war; and the evacuation of Gaza in 2005 created a launching pad for indiscriminate rocket attacks by Hamas and others, subsequently leading to Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in 2008-2009. Instead of utilizing the partial withdrawals as the basis for improved relations to encourage further Israeli withdrawals and an end to the occupation, the Palestinians mistakenly viewed the Israeli pullouts as a reaction to continued Palestinian violence. The Israelis’ painful retaliations against the Palestinians’ incessant violent provocations finally convinced the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the West Bank that continued violence against Israel is self-destructive. As a result, the PA determined to build the infrastructure of a Palestinian state (establishing the ‘Fayyad Plan’) and advance negotiations, rather than militant resistance.
    Because of past experiences and the mindset that evolved from these experiences, Israelis are extremely skeptical about the Palestinians’ true intentions to seek a durable peace. For these reasons, Israel will insist that four major security concerns are addressed prior to any significant withdrawal from the West Bank: a) that the PA is able to independently prevent the takeover of the territories by terrorist groups and act decisively against violent provocations, b) that there will be no smuggling of weapons, especially rockets to the West Bank which could pose an unacceptable security risk to Israel’s urban centers, c) that the PA never enter into a military alliance with a foreign nation, and finally, d) that the newly born Palestinian state be demilitarized, with the exception of robust internal security forces. Israel’s intelligence and defense establishments strongly believe that these issues can only be addressed by maintaining a significant residual Israeli force along the Jordanian border, because the PA is not ready, as yet, to meet its border security requirements. Such forces, Israel argues, will not only deal effectively with the country’s security concerns, but will also insure the sustainability of the Palestinian Authority as it will deter both internal and external elements from undermining peace.
    The Palestinians reject the Israeli demand to keep its forces on the ground in the Jordan Valley, maintaining that such a residual presence on Palestinian territory would amount to a continuation of the occupation. The PA further argues that keeping Israeli troops behind, even without the daily encroachment on Palestinian lives, would provoke tremendous resistance and provide Palestinian groups opposed to any agreement with Israel the munitions they need to undermine peace, including violent attacks. Moreover, forty-four years of Palestinian yearning to end the occupation has created a mindset that diametrically rejects not only continued presence of any Israeli soldiers, but also the symbols of occupation and its humiliating effect on their national dignity and pride. The Palestinians want to feel that they have finally won their independence, albeit not through militant resistance, but certainly without a shade of servitude. In this regard, they would rather maintain their current precarious situation than accede to Israel’s demands, which, from their perspective, would be tantamount to surrendering their national aspirations for an independent Palestinian state.
    To resolve their conflicting positions, both sides must carefully consider each other’s core requirements for peace as well the other’s national psychological disposition. There are four security measures that can be put in place with the help of the international community that would alleviate Israel’s security concerns without leaving a residual force in the Jordan Valley.
    First, although Israel is skeptical of multi-national forces intended to safeguard its security interests (the ineffectiveness of the international peace-keeping forces in Lebanon offer a glaring example), depending on the composition and the mandate of such a force, a multinational effort could potentially be effective. A force stationed along the Israel-Jordan border that includes military personnel from several leading Arab States, especially Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan-as each has vested interest in keeping the peace-in addition to a contingency of peace keepers from some NATO member states under US command, could be extraordinarily effective and essential. A robust force with a mandate to take action to stop the infiltration of terrorists and the smuggling of weapons could satisfy in part Israel’s security concerns, provided it is further augmented by other security provisions.
    Second, although the PA has demonstrated a remarkable capacity to keep the peace during the past two years and prevent violent attacks against Israel, the Palestinians should agree to a phased withdrawal of Israeli forces over a period of three to four years. During this period of time, the Palestinians’ internal security forces should be more than tripled to ensure an orderly takeover of all security responsibilities from Israel as they withdraw from areas B and eventually C as well, and allow Israel to prepare for relocating many settlers. Jordan, with American financial support, has done an impressive job in training the Palestinian security forces and could use this time to expand the effort to a much larger scale. Through this transitional period and beyond, the PA should recognize that the burden of proof-maintaining a non-violent atmosphere-falls squarely on its shoulders. They must know that Palestinians’ independence depends on Israel’s national security, and a repeat of the second Intifada or the firing of rockets at Israel’s densely populated areas following a new Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank would be a kiss of death for the hope for a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza.
    Third, the Palestinian state must remain demilitarized, not only to satisfy Israel’s requirements but also to conserve financial resources to enable investments in the infrastructure of the state, thereby increasing the vested interests in maintaining peace. There are 17 countries in the world who have virtually no armies and need not have one because they are simply not threatened by their neighbors and do not want to invest in military hardware to no avail. Similarly, the new Palestinian state will not be threatened by any of its neighbors; Jordan, Israel or Egypt, and even if the Palestinians invest billions of dollars to built a military machine, it would never be in a position to challenge Israel militarily or even deter it should Israel feel threatened by the Palestinian state.
    Finally, since Gaza must be a part of the equation, the Arab states, especially Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria in particular, should lean heavily on Hamas to join the peace process and accept the stationing of similar forces in Gaza in exchange for lifting the Israeli blockade completely. Whereas Israel could reach a peace agreement with the PA without Hamas, it would be extremely difficult to sustain it without, at a minimum, Hamas’ acquiescence. Thus, from a security perspective, not withstanding Israel’s rejection of Hamas as a terrorist organization, ignoring it will continue to pose security problems for Israel. For this reason Syria will be needed to support the peace process, and in order to induce Damascus to use its leverage on Hamas, it must be given a reason to believe that Israel is seeking a comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace that will include Syria.
    The Palestinians, including Hamas, must accept the fact that the prospect of establishing a state of their own is intertwined with Israel’s national security. Meanwhile, Israel must drop the illusion that it can insure its national security while maintaining even a semblance of the occupation. Neither side can realize what they want unless they accept this basic bitter-sweet reality.
    *A version of this article was originally published by the Jerusalem Post on October 1st, and can be accessed at http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=189630

    Follow Alon Ben-Meir on Twitter:
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    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    04

    Social Media And The Battle To Curb Climate Change

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    Social Media And The Battle To Curb Climate Change

    The phrase “to be determined” has never cut so deep. When the consequences are so steep, the threat so vast, the casualties so great, it is disheartening to hear words like political stagnation or stalemate tagged under the seemingly never-ending battle to develop effective climate change legislation.
    Beyond the White House and Westminster and beyond rhetoric near-cyclically disseminated lies clear and present tragedy. Devastation from floods in Pakistan, heat waves on an unprecedented global scale and ominous peril from the melting ice caps in the Arctic Circle fall to the wayside en route to producing firm political resolutions under a veil of “scientific uncertainty.”
    The initial reaction is a feeling of universal dis-empowerment; how can the voices of generations plagued by this silent killer become heard, supported, possibly inspire and potentially change enviro-business as usual? 1minutetosavetheworld and Open Planet Ideas are two online platforms helping to answer that question, using a globalized community and the internet as tools to promote the perspectives of those affected by environmental degradation and allow them a platform to showcase how they wish it to be curbed.
    Multinationals have long known the value of even just one minute of film. With the help of international partners, 1minutetosavetheworld uses short-film entries from aspiring directors from around the globe on an online stage to carry their respective voices far and wide in a campaign for the planet rallying public and political support in the lead up to the annual United Nations Climate Change Conference and continuing until CO2 targets have been met.
    A team of partners and sponsors from all professional sects have convened and lent their support to funding the non-profit organization and its 2010 competition by supplying them with innovative and exciting gifts for the winning filmmakers.
    “Never has the short film been such an important tool in raising awareness of probably the greatest threat our society currently faces. Climate change is happening now and through these films we aim to raise awareness, change policy and educate throughout all levels of society,” said 1minutetosavetheworld Producer Emma MacGregor. “With the advancement of communications, this competition makes this truly possible to touch people globally.”
    Open Planet Ideas is a new community driven initiative by Sony and WWF to encourage people to submit ideas on how to re-purpose existing technologies into tackling environmental challenges. “In today’s social media driven world, it is important to use the tools available to listen to what people have to say,” noted Susanna Halonen, Sony’s Open Planet Ideas Community Manager. “Open Planet Ideas aims to do just that, using crowd-sourcing to harness the ingenuity and creativity out there to re-purpose existing technology to address environmental challenges.”
    The internet has become an empowering web of opportunity and potential through individual perspective and achievement. These two campaigns serve as inspiration-producing platforms where voices from around the world can artistically accomplish great things and help promote the need for a greener planet in the face of an often silent killer.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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