Archive for November 5th, 2010

Nov
05

A Lame Duck Revolution Take Another Shot at the Public Option

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A Lame Duck Revolution Take Another Shot at the Public Option

There can be little doubt that a significant enthusiasm gap played a major role in the outcome of the midterm elections. The liberal Democratic base is disappointed, and if there’s one particular issue that underlies that disappointment it’s probably the lack of a public option in the health care bill that was passed. Without a public option, Obama’s plan amounts to a huge handout to the private insurance industry and will probably end up doing very little to rein in costs.
In his book Rebooting the American Dream, Thom Hartmann points out that Medicare — because it is an existing program — could be extended to all Americans via the reconciliation process. In other words, Medicare for all could be passed with 51 votes in the Senate (or even 50 plus the Vice President). Cenk Uygur made a similar argument here at the HuffingtonPost back in December, 2009.
Why not take another shot at it while we still have a Democratic Congress? Passage of a Medicare-based public option would be a dramatic victory for the liberal base that would do a great deal to restore enthusiasm and position the President for re-election.
More importantly, it would be good for the country and good for the vast majority of Americans. A viable public plan would keep the private health insurance industry in check, and would offer an increasingly powerful vehicle for controlling costs. Year after year, Congress votes to defer cuts in Medicare payments. It does this out of fear that doctors would refuse to see Medicare patients. There’s an obvious fix for that: expand Medicare so that it becomes the most important game (if not the only game) in town. Every other industrialized country uses the power of government to keep health care costs under control. The United States simply can’t afford to continue to buy into the ridiculous illusion that market forces alone will somehow halt the explosion of health care costs.
Once the new Congress comes to power in January, any chance for a major new initiative that will rally the Democratic base in 2012 is going to evaporate. Instead we’ll get trumped up ethics investigations and legislative gridlock. Private insurers are already increasing premiums and dropping some types of policies in direct response to passage of the reform bill. If that trend continues over the next two years — and it will — Obama could be looking at an even bigger backlash in 2012.
Republicans have already made it clear that they will try to obstruct implementation of the reform plan by blocking allocation of the funds required to set up the programs. Likewise, there will be a lawsuit arguing that the requirement for everyone to purchase insurance is unconstitutional. Neither of those approaches would be effective against the expansion of Medicare because it is already in place and working.
Republicans are going to play hardball starting in January; no amount of appeasement over the next two months is going to change that. Now would be a good time for the Democratic party to show it has some backbone and that it is the party that is prepared to fight for the interests of average Americans.
Passing a Medicare-based public option would give American families the health care security they deserve. The task might actually be made easier by the fact that a number of conservative “Blue Dog” Democrats lost to Republicans in the election and may now be more flexible in how they cast their final votes. Pelosi, Reid and Obama should take full advantage of this absolute last chance to get a public plan in place.
Martin Ford is the author of The Lights in the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future (available from Amazon or as a FREE PDF download) and has a blog at econfuture.wordpress.com.

This Blogger’s Books from
The Lights in the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future (Volume 1)
by Martin Ford

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Media Robots in an Age of Starvation

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Media Robots in an Age of Starvation

Given only one word to describe 15 years of digital media’s evolution it would have to be robotic. Nothing says this better than the balanced and comprehensive piece by Nicholas Spangler about his 40 hours, or so, as a Demand Media writer that appeared in the Columbia Journalism Review and was brought to light here thanks to MediaBistro’s Morning Newsfeed.
As a journalist that worked for years for The Miami Herald, Spangler writes with open resignation, but not malice, about the end of his journalistic world and the rise of the new one typified by Demand. It is a world of “commercial content,” driven by algorithms “without”, he writes (perhaps quoting Clay Shirky), “regard to civic value or subjective judgments about quality or any of the other sentimental trappings of the Murrow century.”
It is a drab landscape he paints. Gray and Eastern bloc-ish. It is all cement. Combined with similar trends on the media planning and buying side of the business – the automated this-and-that of real time buying and audience targeting – we appear ready to enter a machine-led world where imagination is being wrung from the fabric of information in order to reduce the high cost of it.
It is a world empty of bravery and out of step with the needs of brands except, perhaps, the needs of their capitalist overseers. As importantly, of course, it is world out-of-step with consumers. It seeks control.
Writes Nicholas Spangler:
No, it happened over 15 years ago. Demand Media didn’t invent the long tail. People did. And the point is that if fear weren’t the governing factor of life inside our new media industry today we might have stepped outside by now to discover a highly imaginative, highly responsive, highly personal, colorful, brave new world. Instead we send robots. Brave new world, indeed; one Huxley might recognize.
There will be a final conflict and the people will prevail.

Follow Jarvis Coffin on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Confessions of a Young Organizer Why the Democrats Lost the Midterm Elections

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Confessions of a Young Organizer Why the Democrats Lost the Midterm Elections

Five weeks ago, I walked into Wisconsin’s Organizing for America office and offered to go on sabbatical from the League of Young Voters to volunteer full-time for the campaign. I knew that I could help develop strategies to get “Obama voters” involved in the process this fall.
This was an extremely tough thing for me to do. Despite the fact that I have almost always voted for Democrats since I turned 18, I don’t consider myself a Democrat. I know many of my progressive friends will be mad at me for saying this publicly, but I simply have not seen a commitment from local Democrats to youth and communities of color. While there are many strong progressive elects and organizers hailing from the cheese state, the local party as a whole has yet to advance any bold ideas to conquer the intense economic issues impacting my friends, neighbors and loved ones.
To make matters worse, months before he hit the campaign trail, gubernatorial candidate Tom Barrett proposed a controversial state take-over of the Milwaukee Public Schools. I knew that in helping the Democrats, I would be putting my own social and political capital on the line. Not only had Barrett angered labor and community groups with his ill-timed takeover scheme, but in 2004, he defeated a well respected African American candidate in a racially tinged mayoral race. It would be an understatement to say that going into the election, there was a high level of skepticism in the traditional Democratic base.
So I thought it was an offer they couldn’t refuse. Not only have I personally canvassed nearly 100% of all the youth and low income African American precincts on Milwaukee’s impoverished north side, but I am also a nationally recognized progressive leader who has spent the last six years helping build a national youth movement through the creative use of technology, art and social media.
Still, heading into the office, I knew it was a long shot. The two young men I was meeting were 2008 campaign veterans; one had even given up his position in the White House to come back to his home state to “help the President.” But I was almost certain that I could win them over with a strong pitch. After all, despite the economic crisis, I had convinced a number of very strategic progressive donors to invest in my organization’s GOTV efforts this cycle.
After my pitch, OFA’s leadership was matter of fact, while also being sympathetic to my concerns. “These are great ideas, but they will probably cost a lot. This isn’t 2008. We don’t have the money to run programs like this. And we truly think that people will be inspired to help the President during these next couple of weeks,” said one of the senior staffers. I was perplexed. I wasn’t proposing to spend any extra money, just rearrange and remix what they had already planned to do. Even though it would be difficult, I knew that in four weeks I could use my cultural and social capital to help the Democrats’ “swag” problems.
“Look,” I said, trying to hide my emotions, “I am not trying to sell you anything here. I just think if you incorporate more art and social media into your efforts, we will all be better off. I will even hold the camera and get my friends to use their creative skills for free. And I know I can get you 20 seasoned canvassers who will be highly effective on the doors.”
“Sorry man, we have to go to our bosses to approve something like that. We will get back to you.” At that moment, I knew that the Democrats would lose.
Of course, the community did not go down without a fight. Over the next four weeks, local community leaders stepped up and engaged their networks to get out the vote in levels I have not seen since American Coming Together swooped into town in 2004. Through social media and peer-to-peer organizing, thousands of young people and community members engaged their neighbors to vote, without having a local candidate or cause to inspire them. In fact, local community groups did such a good job of mobilizing their folks to the polls that nearly 62% of voters in the city of Milwaukee turned out, overwhelmingly for the Democratic Party. And even though local party leadership will point to this as proof that they did enough to turn out the base, they are wrong. The community organized despite their efforts.
However, it is my wholehearted belief that Democrats could have picked up another 5 to 7 percent if they had made a strategic investment in young people and communities of color. While local party leadership has never made a deep investment in the base outside of GOTV, I truly believe that a bold, visionary campaign could have engaged more “Obama voters” while also bringing new blood into a party that has been stagnate for years.
So don’t blame young voters, Democrats, blame yourselves. We are doing our jobs, it’s time that you guys get bold and start investing in the future.
Biko Baker is the Executive Director of the League of Young Voters, a former political correspondent for The Source, a board member of the New Organizing Institute, a PhD candidate at UCLA and works closely with the Black Youth Project.

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Sheep With Wool Pulled Over Its Eyes

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Sheep With Wool Pulled Over Its Eyes

Yesterday the Federal Reserve announced they are pouring $600 billion into the economy to buy US bonds other countries are no longer buying. The Wall Street Journal.com wrote:
QE2 here we come. It is frustrating to see our economic foundation crumbling before our eyes, and most people are not aware of the potential ramifications. Today, I expressed this frustration with a colleague who is from Russia. She said that yesterday this news was all over Russian TV. In Russia, they are warning citizens of the possibility of the US dollar declining rapidly in value due to this ‘printing’ of money. She further explained that in Russia most people only hold the amount of Rubles they need to transact purchases, and hold most of their savings in US Dollars or Euros. In the past, it was considered safer to hold long term cash in more stable currencies. So the warning yesterday was to let the common citizens know there is an increased danger to hold the US currency. She said this was headline news and everyone was talking about de-investing from the US dollar. They further discussed how this could increase the possibility of inflation, not only in the US, but in the entire world. They warned their citizens of what this could mean and to prepare.
The big question is — where was the warning in the US? There was no warning. This news was not present at all for the common citizen on their local daily news. Most people are oblivious of the huge impact these decisions are having on their immediate future, and the future of their lives forever. I am so saddened to see hard working, financially responsible people ‘drinking the Kool-Aid’ and half-heartedly hoping somehow, someone else will solve the problem and everything will be all right. They are sheep with the wool pulled over their eyes — being led by the sheepherder. Sadly, they are being led to the slaughter of the middle class.
What would happen to you and your family if suddenly tomorrow, a big bank collapsed and all your credit and debit cards did not work? Would you have cash on hand to buy food and gas for your car? What if a few days later there was no food, water or supplies in the stores because the delivery trucks could not make deliveries? Would you have enough food in your home to survive until the situation improved? What if the US dollar became worth less and eventually worthless? Would you have goods or services you could barter to get by until commerce could resume? These are the hard questions we need to ask ourselves and be prepared to answer. Hopefully, these questions will never have to be asked — but, what if? Consider the warning of Russian TV — even if you do live in the United States.

Follow Lorrie Febus on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/thekeyisnow

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Zenyatta Is Ready to Run

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Zenyatta Is Ready to Run

Zenyatta steps off her van at Churchill Downs.
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Zenyatta arrives at Churchill Downs on November 2, 2010. She is being led by her groom Mario Espinoza. Zenyatta will be running in the 2010 Breeders’Cup Classic. A victory will secure her a recordmaking perfect score of 20 races run and 20 races won.
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Nov
05

50000 sign petition for Olbermann

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50000 sign petition for Olbermann

As Danny Shea, Sam Stein, and others are well documenting, Keith Olbermann’s suspension is getting a ton of attention. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee is organizing the public to do something about it. In less than three hours, MSNBC viewers signed our petition saying:
(UPDATE: It’s now up to 55,000 signers! Keep it going!)
Literally thousands of people have shared the petition on Facebook and Twitter, including Michael Moore who Tweeted, “Sign this emergency petition to @msnbc to put @KeithOlbermann back on the air.”
In our email to PCCC members announcing the petition, we pointed out the irony of this move — given this week’s election:
This is a no-brainer. Keith was one of the only people speaking truth to power for years — and we need to speak truth to power now, for him. Sign the petition today — then tell your friends.

Follow Adam Green on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/Adamgreenonline

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Downtown Oakland Before and After Mehserle Sentence Photos

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Downtown Oakland Before and After Mehserle Sentence Photos

Originally published on Youthradio.org, the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe.
By: Nick Bellizzi and Denise Tejada
Scenes from downtown streets moments before and after former BART transit cop Johannes Mehserle was sentenced.
Youth Radio/Youth Media International (YMI) is youth-driven converged media production company that delivers the best youth news, culture and undiscovered talent to a cross section of audiences. To read more youth news from around the globe and explore high quality audio and video features, visit Youthradio.org

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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Celebrating QE2Republican VictoryBush Tax Cuts

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Celebrating QE2Republican VictoryBush Tax Cuts

Celebrating QE2, Republican Victory And The Bush Tax Cuts
The results of the midterm elections are a fiscally necessary surprise gift for investors.
Robert Lenzner
All those investors who liquidated stocks for bonds must be licking their wounds after the great reflation of assets was inaugurated this week. The Bernanke Bump, the well-orchestrated promotion of Quantitative Easing along with the debasing of the dollar have been driving commodities, emerging markets and precious metals into a frenzy.
The Bush tax cuts will survive. QE2 wasn’t a surprise at all. But the better than expected results for Republicans in Congress prefigured an Obama compunction to compromise with his opponents. A very fiscally necessary surprise gift for investors.
The tax on the sale of stocks, bonds and other assets–what we call the capital gains tax–will remain at the at the historically low rate of 15%, as proposed by the George W. Bush administration in 2003, when the tax cuts were passed in order to improve the lot of investors after bear market of 2000-2002. In fact, the lower tax led to a greater number of transactions and far large tax revenues for Uncle Sam. For 2011 at least, and maybe longer, the capital gains tax will remain at 15%–not double or triple that, as the Obama administration was threatening.
So refocus your animal spirits on high-yield bonds (through the iShares High Yield Corporate Bond Fund ( HYG – news – people ), stocks that have a record of increasing their cash dividend for the past 25 years (the SPDR S&P Dividend ETF ( SDY – news – people )), and REITs that pay out a high percentage of their income in dividends.
Gold lovers must have woken up Thursday to celebrate QE2, a printing of more dollars with the purpose of driving the price of assets into the wild blue yonder. As a joyous occasion, Gold is still relatively inexpensive in comparison with the Dow Jones industrial average. If gold continues to run up, major gold miners like Randgold Resources ( GOLD – news – people ) could move up at a multiple of two to three times the price of bullion.
According to U.S. Global Investors ( GROW – news – people ), a mutual fund group in San Antonio, Texas, another, smaller gold holding that hasn’t run up as much is Medoro Resources, a Colombian gold producer (MRS), according to Frank Holmes, U.S. Global’s CEO.
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In the metals area, copper producer Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold ( FCX – news – people ) has run up mightily since the summer, from $60 to $105, and is still selling at only 12 times earnings. A classic example of a stock you must hold for the big move: Its copper reserves are being funneled off to China ever more quickly and at rising prices.
Here’s the November Irony to remember: QE2 seems a reward from Ben Bernanke to investors, speculators, gold and silver fanatics and the holders of currencies that rise as the dollar falls (Australia, Singapore, Korea, Brazil).

Follow Robert Lenzner on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

TJ Martell Foundation Celebrates 35 Years VIDEO

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TJ Martell Foundation Celebrates 35 Years VIDEO

Perhaps the music industry’s most supported nonprofit, The TJ Martell Foundation has raised more than $240 million dollars in its 35-year history to fund cancer, leukemia and AIDS research.
Their most famous fundraising tool is there annual star-studded gala, which took place last week in New York City and brought in $1.45 million.
To recap a bit, some of the highlights from the night included: performances from Kenny Loggins, Colbie Caillat, Charlie Daniels and Enrique Iglesias; Humanitarian of the Year awards given to music exec brothers Monte and Avery Lipman; and a $100,000 check presented by the wife of the late Ronnie James Dio. It was an event that very few organizations have the ability to accomplish successfully and it brought in a total that exceeds more than annual donations for many nonprofits.
What gets me excited about an organization like the TJ Martell Foundation, however, is not simply high profile nights like these, but rather the uninhibited potential they have to engage, educate and activate the masses around such important issues.
With some of music’s biggest names offering up their unwavering desire to help, matched by the people who pull the strings behind the scenes, I look forward to TJ Martell continuing to break boundaries with innovative fundraising, as they’re able to take advantage of new technologies that weren’t available 35, or even 10, years ago.
I also find it helpful that the foundation takes a diligent approach to tracking and measuring the milestones being achieved in cancer research, as numerous research studies can be rather elusive and disorganized.
I’ll spare you from listing any facts, but would encourage you to check out the “about us” section on their website if you’re interested learning more.

Follow Brandon Deroche on Twitter:
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
05

Do Girls Matter Sexism and Sexual Abuse

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Do Girls Matter Sexism and Sexual Abuse

by Vicki Polin
Over the last ten years there’s been so much emphasis and media attention on cases of clergy sexual abuse – with the perpetrators being priests, pastors, monks and rabbis – that we seem to be forgetting that forty-six percent of cases of child sexual abuse are perpetrated by family members. We also cannot forget that according to statistics girls get molested two to three times more often then boys — or that the effects and long-term ramifications are just as horrendous as their male counterparts.
Over the last twenty-six years of my involvement in the Anti-Rape movement I have to admit that I have been amazed at seeing so many male survivors coming forward with their disclosures of child molestation. Even Oprah’s on to the male survivor bandwagon, producing two shows on the topic of male survivors of sexual abuse; which will air on November 5th and 12th.
My concern is that girls and adult women who are survivors of child sexual abuse seem to be getting lost in this new shuffle. I have also noticed an altering of history from some survivor groups in which they are forgetting the roots of the Anti-Rape movement. Advocating for survivors of sex crimes did not get it’s start in 2002, with the Boston Globe’s expos on the Catholic Church. We cannot forget that if it wasn’t for several brave women joining together in consciousness raising groups back in the early 1970′s, we would have no idea about how many people were being molested as children, or how many adult men and women were being assaulted.
Why is it that even in 2010 we want to forget the value of the feminist movement? If it wasn’t for the brave heroes of the 1970′s getting together and sharing personal details of their lives we would never have been able to offer hope and support to those who had been sexually victimized. We would not have begun to educate the public on the issues and ramifications of rape nor would research that effects more then a quarter of the population of the world have been started.
How quickly we want to forget that back on January 24, 1971 the New York Radical Feminists sponsored the very first gathering to discuss sexual violence as a social issue. April 12, 1971 was the historic moment in which for the first time in history there was a gathering of survivors — all women, who created the very first “speak-out” — where they shared their personal stories publicly; and over 300 people attended.
I personally got my start in the Anti-Rape Movement back in 1985 working for one of the first incest survivor organizations. During the early years it was mostly only women who came forward sharing stories of child molestation. For the last 12 years of my work has been focusing in Jewish communities on an international basis. I have been amazed to see this same phenomenon happening within the orthodox world. Female survivors of sexual abuse have been taking a back seat to their male counter part. For every 10 males who come forward, there is only one woman willing to share her story, come forward and begin the healing process..
I have also encountered some discrimination at workshops and or with other organizations that have been popping up in the Jewish world; the leaders are all male. I have been told that they believe women are too emotional to be a part of the movement, let alone to speak out publicly. I understand the cultural differences of the Orthodox world in which it is frowned upon for a woman to speak or educate men in public for reasons of modesty, yet why are they not coming out speaking to each other? Will they really loose value as a person if it’s known that they were victims of a sex crime? Do we really have to put the shame and blame on them for the actions of a sexual predator?

Vicki Polin authored this article. Polin is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor and the founder and director of The Awareness Center, Inc., which is the international Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault

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Nov
05

Peru court paroles Lori Berenson for second time

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Peru court paroles Lori Berenson for second time
  • A court in Peru has granted parole for a second time to an American woman imprisoned for aiding a left-wing rebel group.
    Lori Berenson had served 15 years of a 20-year sentence when she was freed on parole in May.
    But she was returned to jail in August on a technicality.
    She has apologised for working with the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement and has denied having been a member or taking part in “violent acts”.
    The 40-year-old show no emotion as the court ruled she should be freed.
    As part of its insurgency, the Tupac Amaru robbed banks, kidnapped and killed a number of people in the 1980s and 90s.
    The Marxist group was active at the same time as the Shining Path guerrillas, who unleashed a brutal civil conflict in which nearly 70,000 people were killed.
    The daughter of university professors from New York, Berenson travelled to Central and South America in the 1990s.
    During her travels, she is believed to have made contact with the Tupac Amaru.
    She was arrested in November 1995 after she gained access to the Peruvian Congress on false journalist credentials alongside the wife of the Tupac Amaru leader.
    Military prosecutors accused her of gathering information for a rebel plot to kidnap members of Congress and exchange them for imprisoned rebel leaders.
    She was convicted of treason by a military court in 1996 and sentenced to life in prison. But she was retried in a civilian court after pressure from the US government.
    In 2001, she was found guilty of the lesser crime of terrorist collaboration and imprisoned for 20 years, five of which she had already served. Her family maintained she was a social activist who was wrongfully convicted.
    She gave birth to a son, Salvador, in prison in May 2009, and was released under parole a year later after a judge determined that she had exhibited good behaviour.
    However, polls suggested Peruvians widely disapproved of the decision to release her.
    In August, a court revoked her parole, saying that other legal authorities had failed to verify residential addresses in Lima that she had provided.

    Source:BBC

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    Nov
    05

    Failing the Victims of Genocide in the Balkans Again

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    Failing the Victims of Genocide in the Balkans Again

    The chic, blond-haired, blue-eyed woman lit her cigarette with a flare reminiscent of Marlene Dietrich as we chatted in a Sarajevo caf a few years ago. “I was twenty-eight years old when I lost my love, my husband,” said Zlata Mujic, a Bosnian Muslim. She lost a total of eleven family members in the Srebrenica Genocide of 1995, when Serb forces systematically murdered 8,000 Bosnian Muslims and dumped their bodies into clandestine mass graves.
    The body bags I saw piled eight-feet high at the International Commission for Missing Persons Headquarters evoked memories of my medical anatomy class, sans the sterility. Same nauseating odor of putrefied, rancid bodies, but with more chilling artifacts: wires used to tie people’s hands behind their backs, blindfolds for the mass executions, a blood-stained ID card denoting the ill-fated ethnicity: Bosnian Muslim.
    Today Gen. Ratko Mladic, who orchestrated the Srebrenica Genocide — Europe’s worst atrocity since WWII — remains free, even though the ICTY has indicted him on 15 counts of crimes against humanity. It is rumored that “The Butcher of the Balkans” currently hides in Serbia. The handover of Mladic to UN officials has long been considered a condition before the EU accepts Serbia’s bid for candidacy. For three years, the Netherlands and Britain opposed a trade agreement with Serbia, but this year they dropped their vetoes, despite Serbia’s failure to extradite a vicious war criminal. Last week, a historic EU referendum was passed; it paves the path for Serbia’s candidacy and can be seen as a reward for Serbia’s softened stance on Kosovo’s independence. Last year, a Bosnian television station aired footage of Mladic, contradicting Belgrade’s claims of actively hunting him. The video showed Mladic at a family wedding, playing tennis and cradling a newborn baby — all joys of life robbed from those exterminated in concentration camps under his command.
    Fully ratifying Serbia into the EU would nullify its wartime atrocities and reward a government that is responsible for the slaughter, torture, rape, and ethnic cleansing of thousands of innocents, and that now abets war criminals. The Dayton Agreement, or as Bosnians call it, the Dayton Disagreement, left the fragmented Balkans entrenched in ethnic rivalries. The town of Bratunac holds the highest number of unprosecuted war criminals per capita in all of Bosnia, many of whom serve in the police force and roam freely, taunting Bosnian Muslims at school and beating youth reconciliation groups. During last month’s elections, Serb nationalist PM Milorad Dodik was re-elected to the Republika Srpska, reflecting that the Balkans remains paralyzed at milestones of truce.
    Plagued by an economic abyss and steady undercurrents of ethnic tensions, the Balkan states are drowning in their own seas of intolerance. Some Serbs have even asked to ban the annual commemoration of the Srebrenica Genocide. Commemoration or not, Zlata Mujic will not forget. Neither will Hasan Nuhanovic. A translator for the UN during the war, Hasan told his parents to leave Srebrenica, knowing they would be slain. When we met a few years ago, he recalled falling in love with his girlfriend, now wife, despite being cut off from her during the war. He once traded $1,000 worth of black-market tobacco for a three-minute phone call with her, during which he played her the guitar. “We were abandoned… during the ‘open hunting season of Muslims,’” Hasan noted. This disdain for the international community’s apathy is reflected in a monument in Sarajevo: a massive replica of the UN food cans that were distributed during the war, which bears the caustic inscription, “With Eternal Thanks to the International Community, From the Grateful Citizens of Sarajevo.”
    Must we commit the same crime of negligence repeatedly, trampling over mass graves and stories of tragedy each time? The volatile Balkan region will implode once again unless we uphold justice. The European Union should not choose the Serbian narrative for these gruesome pages of history. It should choose Zlata’s: “They told me his [my husband's] body was dumped into the Drina River first. But the legs were found in one grave. The hands in another. The head was never found. Life has only been a fragment of existence since.”
    Srebrenica is but one horror in this grisly tale. According to the ICRC, approximately 10,000 remain missing. Just last month, the skeletal remains of 250 people were recovered from Perucac Lake in Bosnia. At the Foca Concentration Camp, also known as “Rape Camp,” girls as young as twelve were violently raped by up to 10 men at a time. Last week, a Bosnian prosecutor indicted four Serb police officers on charges of mass killing and torturing Muslims during the war. Three are still police officers and only one is detained. Currently, over 5,000 war crimes cases are registered, but many alleged perpetrators wander freely, some even boast of their sadistic wartime acts.
    When did we disintegrate into a depraved society that places trade agreements above punishing ethnic cleansing? We owe it to people like Hasan and Zlata to exert pressure on Belgrade authorities to arrest Mladic prior to consideration for EU membership.
    In an attempt to save face, I told Zlata that the international community has good hearts, really we do. I told her how I am an American humanitarian aid physician who works in areas of conflict and post-conflict. She took a drag on her cigarette with a pathos that only a survivor of a nightmare could, and with her despondent cobalt eyes full of anguish, scathingly asked, “Where were you when the Drina River was overflowing with the blood of my husband?”

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Haitian Women and Elections Presidents Politics and Power

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    Haitian Women and Elections Presidents Politics and Power

    Reconstructing Haiti is not about buildings, projects, or money. It’s about power — about who gets to control what the future Haiti looks like. Redistributing power, and creating a new society based on different theories and practices of it, are perhaps more important in the aftermath of the January 11 earthquake than ever.
    This priority is not particular to Haitian women. But they are most often the ones propelling it, and they and their children have the most to gain from it because of the special burdens that poverty and insecurity place on them. For the majority of women, their work to transform power is focused on including the excluded: the peasants, the residents of internally displaced people’s camps and shantytowns, all those who have little voice or participation in national political and economic decisions and who rarely benefit from those decisions.
    What could a new power paradigm that serves women look like? And how might a government emerging from the November 28 elections use its leadership to advance that paradigm? We asked Haitian women their thoughts on women, power, and the elections.
    Elisabeth Senatus is a journalist and member of the coordinating committee of the Petite Rivire Shelter Center internally displaced people’s camp in Logne. She describes her work as “service to humanity.”
    Some man made a declaration recently that he hopes a woman doesn’t win power, because if she does, all women are going to have power.
    But me, I hope it’s a woman exactly for that reason, and because of the recent experience we’ve had with government. I don’t ignore the fact that there are men who have beautiful dreams and who have capacity, but still I hope we get a woman as president. The entire world over, men want to govern without women and prevent women from advancing. They want women to stay in the home as mothers and indentured servants.
    All that women would do in terms of decentralization, development, education, health… a woman could do everything a man could do but with more attention to the needs of all society.
    We need equity in education, at least as many girls in secondary and college levels. We need education — traditional, sexual, professional, family — which is at the base of social and economic power. We can address prostitution by letting girls have a chance at education. We want decentralization [from Port-au-Prince], with adequate work opportunities and government services and offices everywhere. We want to create opportunities for creativity.
    If women take power, we’ll have a lot to do to educate everyone about women’s rights and responsibilities and gender equity.
    But a woman doesn’t need to be president to have power. If a woman is strong and is educated and has the capacity to make decisions, that’s already power.
    Claudette Werleigh is a long-time advocate for democracy, peace, and women’s empowerment. She has served as prime minister, minister of social affairs, and minister of foreign affairs. She is currently secretary general of Pax Christi International, and resides in Brussels.*
    Haitian women participate in politics. We’ve already had a female president, we’ve had a female prime minister, cabinet ministers, secretaries of state, and parliamentarians. But an important consideration is the final goal. Will a politician seek to ensure that the market vendors on the roadside, the charcoal merchant, and the peasant woman living in the hills can participate in decisions that determine their country’s politics? Will she choose to spend public funds for education and housing? She is biologically the holder of life, but will she have policies in favor of life?
    When we talk about women in politics, we should clearly define the type of women we’re referring to. Until all women in Haiti, not only the elite class, have access to the decision-making process, we can’t say that they really participate in the country’s politics.
    Women’s involvement shouldn’t just be a matter of their presence, but of their ability to offer an alternative course or to introduce something that’s lacking. The whole world is organized so you have political parties, you have a president, you have specific ways for people to play their role in politics. We have to find other ways that women can participate. We have to find ways to bring the qualities that women have in other fields into political life, to make things work better.
    *Narrative is taken from an interview she gave in 2000 for my book Walking on Fire: Haitian Women’s Stories of Survival and Resistance. When I wrote Claudette recently and asked I might reprint excerpts, she replied, “I can assure you that, a decade later, not only do I stand by every word I said then, but now that I have a broader experience, I am ready to extend those words to other fields of life.”
    Magalie Bretou is a member of the Regional Coordination of the South-west (KROS), a coalition of small-farmer organizations. She sits on the executive committee of the National Coordination of Peasant Women (KONAFAP), as well as the executive committee of the Coalition of Organizations for the Municipality of Belle-Anse (KODAP), which brings together women’s youth, and peasant groups. She also serves on the coordinating committee of KODAP’s women’s division.
    In the municipality of Belle-Anse, we’ve made choices for two candidates for the national Chamber of Deputies [the lower house] from within our women’s and peasants’ organizations. We chose our candidates together, and we’re all going to vote for them. We decided to do this because we needed someone with accountability.
    Both our candidates are men. No woman wanted to put herself forward in the elections. Maybe in the future that will happen, but we’d have to sit together as women and decide that.
    We don’t know yet what candidate we’ll support for president. Whoever it is, we’ll all go vote for that person so that we don’t undermine each others’ vote.
    It could be good for us if we had a woman president, but it would depend on who it was. She could be someone with a fancy skirt from Port-au-Prince who doesn’t even see us, who just says “This is how it’s going to happen,” and “That’s how it’s going to happen.” People in Port-au- Prince usually look to their own people in the capital; they don’t see us outside. Power will always be to their advantage. We don’t see ourselves reflected in them, as women or as peasants. They don’t represent an opening for us.
    We don’t yet have a way for rural women to integrate into politics and into new forms of power.
    What we need is leaders who come from the grassroots, who we can choose, train, and send up. Not just for some women, but for all women.
    Lucienne Darger was rendered homeless by the earthquake. She is now a member of the women-run leadership committee of a displaced person’s camp on Camp Nationale Route de Frres.
    The elections won’t resolve women’s problems. But to my mind, they have to happen anyway.
    A lot of people say they won’t vote as long as they’re living under a tarp, but if I can get a new electoral card [she lost her last when her home was crushed], I’m going to vote.
    We’ve had so many men in office, we took beatings for them, but they never did anything for us. When we’re here in these tents, not even able to breathe, I ask myself, “Is there no government in this country? What are they saying or doing for these women who are under these tents?”
    If I had the chance to vote for a woman like me, I would. Even if she couldn’t resolve my problems, I might get more access that way. Maybe she’d have more compassion for women who are suffering under tents.
    But even then, I suspect that when we’re done voting, she’d forget we’re there. All the new leaders: once they’ve gotten what they want from us, they won’t care any more that we’re living in camps. As soon as they are elected to the office they want, they’ll just forget us.
    Phalane Gilles has been studying social work in the State University for the past five years. She is now finishing her dissertation on prostitutes who were former street children. A mother of two, Phalane doesn’t have to take on outside work because her husband is “very understanding” and supports the family while she studies. She considers her domestic work, however, as a regular job.
    For me, the election that the government, politicians, media, keeps talking about: they make it seem like a sign of stability. But there are too many hidden hands in this. At the core, in this political moment, it’s just another opportunity for those who always control everything to hold on to their power. Whoever’s elected, I believe they’ll continue to be instruments of the imperialists and capitalists, people who want the country to stay how it is -or if it changes, to change in the interests of a few people while the majority stays in the same misery they’re in.
    What little I know about the Interim Commission for the Reconstruction of Haiti [the surrogate government, half of whose members are foreign] tells me that the head of state doesn’t have the space to really make a difference in Haiti. The president of the country is a marionette. He proves that by his positions toward those people who are supposedly coming to help Haiti. He gives in, he gives in. He seems like he’s working for the interests of the country, but in fact he’s working for those who only see in Haiti the possibility to increase their power and their wealth. We know there are contracts going to multinational corporations who have their own profits in mind. So whether it’s the administration that’s there now or another that takes power, the interests of the foreigners and of those who have nothing to do with the well-being of Haiti will predominate.
    We’ve seen political changes in terms of women: more women in the parliament, even if it’s only a few; more women active in parties; more women who are agents of change in the political system. But most of these women -most, if not all- position themselves within what they call feminism which, to me, is not true feminism. Why? Feminism which don’t consider first and foremost the social reality of the country that both women and men are living in, to me that’s not transformative. Transformative feminists don’t just deal with women, they question what’s at the core of all problems.
    The soul of women’s problems rests within society. Women’s problems aren’t contained within women; they’re living within a larger society. As long as the economic foundation and the foundation of social relations don’t change, nothing else will. As long as a few control the finances of the country, the vast majority will suffer.
    A true transformation of power to change political life in this country: it has to sit in a revolutionary movement. Some people don’t like the word ‘revolutionary’, they find it shocking because it implies changing a lot of things, and those changes are not in the interest of a lot of people. But if you don’t want to enter directly into the problem, whether you call yourself a feminist or not, we’ll always stay the same.
    Iliane Prospre resides in an internally displaced people’s camp in Martissant. She is an unemployed, single mother of three.
    To resolve the real problems of women, give us employment. Now if I need work, even if I had three diplomas, I would still have to sleep with the boss to get the job. If all women got work, women’s lives would start to change because they play the role of both women and men. Men are absent from the responsibilities of the household. Women are the pillar.
    For more perspectives on women and elections in Haiti, see “Haiti: Why Vote for A Woman?” and “Haiti, Women, and the Elections: Following Africa’s Lead”.
    Beverly Bell has worked with Haitian social movements for over 30 years. She is also author of the book Walking on Fire: Haitian Women’s Stories of Survival and Resistance. She coordinates Other Worlds, which promotes social and economic alternatives. She is also associate fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Dr Bob Saturday College Play

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    Dr Bob Saturday College Play

    I’m now 32-21-1 on my College Best Bets for the season and I have 5 College Best Bets for Saturday at drbobsports.com. I also have Free Analysis on 44 College and 10 NFL games.
    While this game wasn’t one of my 5 Best Bets, it is the favorite of my 4 Strong Opinions and my Strong Opinion are a very profitable 325-254-4 (56%) since 2003, so it is a good bet.
    Smu (-6 ) 33 UTEP 21
    UTEP has played an incredibly easy schedule this season and SMU will be the toughest team that the Miners have faced since losing 24-54 at Houston in week 2. El Paso has gained and allowed 5.6 yppl this season, but they’ve done so against teams that would combine to be out-gained 4.7 yppl to 6.1 yppl by an average Division 1A team – so the Miners are not close to being a mediocre team. SMU has out-gained their opponents 6.6 yppl to 5.1 yppl while rating at 0.9 yppl better than average on offense and 0.2 yppl better than average defensively, so the Mustangs should have no trouble winning this game – even on the road. SMU has faced 4 teams that are about UTEP’s caliber and they’ve won all 4 of those games by double-digit margins over UAB (by 21 points at home), Washington State (by 14 points at home), Rice (by 11 points on the road), and last week at Tulane (14 points). I’ll call for another double-digit win by the Mustangs over a bad team, as my math model gives SMU a 55.5% chance over covering at -6 points. I’ll consider SMU a Strong Opinion at -7 points or less.
    I will have free analysis of 10 NFL games and 44 College games this weekend (posted at 3 pm Pacific on Thursday) in the Free Analysis section of my website.

    Follow Bob Stoll on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/drbobsports

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Target Lost

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    Target Lost

    When Target contributed $150,000.00 to conservative anti-gay Minnesota Candidate for Governor Tom Emmer, they quickly became a target of boycott from the LGBT community and progressives.
    More importantly, their $150,000 bought millions of negative impressions on social networks, and even more clicks to negative stories on every major news outlet in the United States. Their $150,000 tarnished a well crafted image that cost Target their trendy cutting edge image that young urban people loved.
    Target also bought a losing candidate. Tom Emmer lost on Tuesday by about 10,000 votes. He was the first Republican to lose the Governor’s seat in Minnesota in 24 years.
    Will Target’s stupid move stop other companies from contributing to campaigns in the future. No way. They will just be sneakier about it.

    Follow Joe Mirabella on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/joemirabella

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    David Brooks on Stepin Fetchit A Rhyming Rant

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    David Brooks on Stepin Fetchit  A Rhyming Rant

    “Culturally, (Obama) will have to demonstrate that even though he comes from an unusual background, he is a fervent believer in the old-fashioned bourgeois virtues: order, self-discipline, punctuality and personal responsibility.” – David Brooks in the New York Times, October 29, 2010.
    David Brooks has to prove, demonstrate,
    That he’s not a race-baiter, a great
    One for calling blacks shiftless.
    Cuz it seems he’s not giftless.
    He’s is gifted at spreading race hate.
    David Brooks has to prove, make real clear,
    That he didn’t intend a race smear.
    Got that old “bourgeois virtue”?
    David, it wouldn’t hurt you
    To show virtue yourself: A sincere…
    …heartfelt “Sorry, I shouldn’t have said
    What I did — I just plain lost my head.”
    Just say that and perhaps,
    If Brooks doesn’t relapse,
    We will focus on Limbaugh instead.
    Oh yes, Brooks has to prove that he’s not
    A rank racist — the man has a lot
    Of explaining to do.
    And when Brooks is quite through,
    Well, I still say the man is a snot.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    YoHoHo And A Snifter Of Rum Sipping Rums To Enjoy Without Paper Umbrellas

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    YoHoHo And A Snifter Of Rum Sipping Rums To Enjoy Without Paper Umbrellas

    Say the word rum, and the image that will pop into most people’s heads — well, the ones who don’t instantly conjure up a pirate going “arrrrgghhh” — is a mojito, mai tai, or some similar sweet, summery cocktail. Rum isn’t something you drink. It’s something you put into a drink. You know, Bacardi and Diet Coke. Captain Morgan and, um, whatever those guys are swilling it with while they’re cavorting in those frat-boyish commercials.
    Rum doesn’t always get a fair shake nowadays. And that’s a shame, because at its best, it’s a sophisticated spirit that’s as complex and delicious as the whiskeys and cognacs beloved by so many spirits snobs. Labor Day may be the time to put away those umbrella-laden tiki drinks (although, hell, a Zombie is great year ’round), but autumn is the perfect season to break out the snifters and drink some dark sipping rums.
    Just in case you don’t know, rum is made from fermenting the juice of sugar cane or its derivatives, usually molasses. Once it’s distilled, it’s aged in wooden barrels — both new barrels and used ones that have contained everything from sherry to bourbon — which affects the color and flavor of the finished product. Clear or light rums are aged for about a year, and then are filtered to get rid of any color; they’re generally used as mixers. The rums discussed here, however, are aged much longer, up to 40 years in some cases. Their colors range across the spectrum from honeyed gold to deep amber to almost black in certain cases, and they can taste vastly different as well.
    What follows is a list, with tasting notes, of more than a dozen rums that don’t need blenders or straws or fruit juices or grenadine or any of the things you may normally associate with rum. I’m sure they’d all make a nifty mai tai, but doing that would be like slathering ketchup on a porterhouse steak. No, all you need to enjoy these sophisticated spirits is a glass and perhaps an ice cube or two. The list is by no means complete (feel free to add your favorite by clicking the ‘Add a Slide’ button), but you should be able to find at least one here to enjoy regardless of your taste in rum or the size of your wallet.

    Missing your favorite rum? Add it here.
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    I know, I know, I didn’t include your favorite rum. I haven’t had a real rum until I’ve tried (insert name of rum I didn’t mention here). That’s why I want your feedback. Don’t be shy — chime in below or click the ‘Add a Slide’ button above!

    Follow Tony Sachs on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/RetroManNYC

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Its Not As Bad as All That

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    Its Not As Bad as All That

    If you want to succeed as a pundit, first of all you have to man up: eschew wussy ambiguity and make flat out all-or-nothing statements. So it is not surprising that the election has been described, pre- and post- variously as a “bloodbath,” a “cataclysm,” and a “shellacking” for the Democrats — and in some quarters, even worse.
    Absolutism works for the pundit class. It makes them sound clear, authoritative, and knowledgeable. Although traditional oracles specialized in ambiguity (and therefore never made a false prediction), their modern descendants try to look as if they know what they mean and say it. This may sound like a dangerous game, since predictions are so often wrong. But in the world of 24/7 wraparound media, the very proliferation of punditry offers protection. Who remembers what any authority said about anything a year (or, all too often, a week) later? There’s just too much else going on. The poor sibyls and Delphic oracles had it much harder, since at any one moment there were only a few people in the game. So people remembered what they had said, and a wrong prediction or two could be very bad for survival (literal or figurative).
    Modern pundits — not too differently from their Classical peers — want to be the creators and bearers of meaning; they want to extract “the meaning” from an event, like marrow from a bone. But as desirable as this seems, reality dooms it to failure: events seldom have a single meaning. Sometimes, heaven help us, there may not be any meaning at all. But a pundit who understood these precepts and uttered punditries accordingly would not be in the game for very long.
    So the “bloodbath” theory of the 2010 midterm elections is satisfyingly sharp and clear. But what it sacrifices for clarity may be truth.
    The ’10 elections are being discussed in a vocabulary that brands them as exceptional. But their outcome may have been less extraordinary than the events that preceded them over the last few years, and which led inexorably (though typically unwittingly) to their outcome: the decision by Rahm Emanuel and Charles Schumer to encourage conservative and moderate Democrats to run for office in 2006 and 2008, in districts that were not in any real sense Democratic. Those who — surprisingly — won, won not because the voters in those districts suddenly turned liberal, but because these Democrats were really Republocrats and DINOs, and because in 2006 even many Republicans were sick of the Bush administration, and 2008 saw the extraordinary moment of the Obama candidacy. So voters who were essentially Republicans, then and now, didn’t really have to change their spots; the Emanuel-Schumer candidates obligingly changed theirs.
    But in 2010 voters in these districts no longer had a need to express anti-Bush sentiment, so they returned to their normal, Republican selves. If we subtract the losing Democrats from these districts from the 60+ total that is considered the Democratic “bloodbath,” the total becomes much less terrifying: more like somewhere in the 40s.
    Secondly, the “cataclysm” theory depends on a peculiar notion of “normal”: that the Democrats lose no seats, or even gain them. In part, this implicit belief is fueled by the outcomes of the 2008 and 2006 elections which, as we have seen, are the true aberrations. But the norm is for the party of the president to lose seats in midterm elections even when things are not too bad. The voters seem to have an innate preference for those constitutionally mandated checks and balances. When a single party controls both executive and legislative branches, the checks and balances tend not to operate very well, and people start to see the government as an unstoppable juggernaut — precisely the rhetoric we have been hearing. When both houses are controlled by the party of the president, the impetus to shake things up gets very strong.
    And it is also true that when the economy is in tatters, people get edgy and dissatisfied and want change. So it is unsurprising that they voted for it this year.
    Then if the Democrats had lost no — or even only a few — seats, that would have been the exception — indeed, the miracle. But no (or few) losses should not be rhetorically constructed as the norm, against which Democratic losses in this election can be reasonably labeled a “cataclysm.” The results of this election, which we will have to live with for at least two more years, may turn out to be cataclysmic. But the election itself is no such thing. And, as others have noted, the loss of Congress may be beneficial to the Democrats in many ways, and may position the President for victory in 2012.
    In other words: President Obama may have to eat crow, but it comes with a dollop of Sauce Bearnaise.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Canadian officials see through unbelievable disguise

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    Canadian officials see through unbelievable disguise

    Canadian officials have detained a young Asian man who apparently boarded a flight from Hong Kong disguised as an elderly white male.
    Canadian Border Services said the man wore a silicone mask covering his head and neck in what they called an “unbelievable case of concealment”.
    Suspicions were raised when an apparently elderly passenger was noticed with young-looking hands.
    Later he emerged from a washroom looking like a man in his twenties.
    An internal intelligence alert from the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA), obtained by AP news agency, shows before-and-after photos.
    The passenger was seen at the start of the flight as an “elderly Caucasian male who appeared to have young-looking hands,” the CBSA bulletin said.
    “The subject attended the washroom and emerged an Asian looking male that appeared to be in his early twenties.”
    The document said the man had a bag with a “disguise kit which consisted of a silicone type head and neck mask of an elderly Caucasian male, a brown leather cap, glasses and a thin brown cardigan.”
    “We can confirm that officials from the CBSA met a passenger arriving off AC018 Hong Kong to Vancouver on October 29 and the matter is still under investigation,” Air Canada spokesperson Angela Mah told AFP news agency.
    The man is reported to be seeking refugee status in Canada.

    Source:BBC

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    Nov
    05

    Whats Hot and Not About Prepaid Debit Cards

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    Whats Hot  and Not  About Prepaid Debit Cards

    If you listen to the media, you’d think we’d all dropped our credit cards in favor of swiping prepaid debit cards instead. Sure, there’s plenty to like about prepaid debit cards, but there are various downsides to think about, too. Before you kick your credit card to the curb, take a look at what’s hot — and not so hot — about prepaid debit cards.
    What’s Hot
    You’re forced to spend within your means: You determine how much you can spend, and then when the money’s gone, you’re forced to stop spending. If you have issues with self-control, this might help you stay out of debt.
    Those lime-green designer shoes you thought you had to have? Sorry, but if there’s not enough money left on your prepaid card, you can’t have those shoes. Unless there’s an earth-shattering reason why you need those shoes (and I can’t think of a single one), you’ve been saved from going into debt.
    Another good use for these cards is to limit how much your college-student kids can spend. Parents can give their college students a prepaid debit card to pay for books and an occasional pizza. You’ll still get a call asking for more money, but at least you’ll know how much they just spent.
    Your credit history doesn’t matter: If you don’t qualify for an unsecured credit card, no problem. You can get a prepaid card. There are no credit checks because you’re putting your own money on the card.
    Now, prepaid debit cards generally don’t improve your credit history. But there are some prepaid cards, such as the AccountNow Prepaid MasterCard, that function almost like a secured credit card. The difference is that the money you’ve loaded onto your card isn’t connected to a deposit in your bank account. According to the cardholder agreement, this is not a credit card, but they do report your payments to credit bureaus, which can build your credit history. But like many prepaid cards, it has an array of fees so read the cardholder’s agreement carefully.
    You get the convenience of a credit card: You could just use cash, but if you need to shop online and you don’t have a credit card, you’re in a pickle. This is one of the reasons prepaid debit cards have become an option for students and others who don’t qualify for a credit card. Sometimes you need plastic to get what you need. And like credit cards, some prepaid cards are even offering rewards features.
    A prepaid debit card is also a good option for the “unbanked,” or those who don’t have bank accounts. If you’re part of this growing demographic, these cards give you a place to park your paycheck.
    What’s Not
    All the fees: You’re to be commended for wanting to avoid paying interest charges on a credit card. But you have to know what you’re getting into with a prepaid debit card because the fees can eat up a lot of your balance. Read the “terms and conditions” statement carefully. There, you’ll get information about the fee structure as well as the limits placed on specific transactions.
    Here are a few fees to watch out for, with the estimated fee in parenthesis: activation fees ($9.95), ATM withdrawal fees ($2.50), balance inquiry fees ($1.00), monthly maintenance fees ($9.95), and even fees for calling customer service ($2 per call!). And how about this one? Bank teller cash advance charge: $4.95.
    If you want to add money to a prepaid card, you might be able to buy a Green Dot MoneyPak card at stores, such as Walmart and Kroger, for $4.95. You take the MoneyPak card to the cash register and decide how much cash you want to put on your prepaid card. But don’t forget that you pay $4.95 for this convenience.
    Weaker consumer protection: If someone steals your card and your PIN, you may get your money back, but it could be a long, painful process. You don’t have the same automatic federal statutes protecting you that you do when you use a credit card.
    According to the Federal Reserve, here’s how it works with debit cards. If your card is lost or stolen, report it within two days to limit your liability to $50. Beyond two days, your liability can be as high as $500. If it takes you more than sixty days to report the theft, you might be liable for the entire amount. Now, some card issuers offer more protection — even if it isn’t required by law. Read your card agreement carefully so you what your card issuer’s policy is just in case your card is stolen.
    No leverage on a bill dispute: Let’s say you buy a first-edition book online, but when it arrives, you’re unhappy with its condition. You try to contact the individual or company who sold it to you, but they’ve vanished into the night.
    With a credit card, you’re protected by federal law. You can contact your credit card issuer and you don’t have to pay the bill until you’ve settled the dispute. With a debit card, though, it’s as if you paid cash and there’s no recourse if the seller skips town.

    Follow Beverly Blair Harzog on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/@BeverlyHarzog

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    Expose the Double Bind

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    Expose the Double Bind

    The number of women in Congress has gone down in 2010 for the first time in 30 years despite a record number of women who ran for the House and Senate. Gender stereotyping is behind the decline.
    “It’s always been tougher for women to get elected in a tough economy because voters tend to think women aren’t as good on the economy,” said Democratic pollster Celinda Lake. “They don’t want to take risks in a bad economy, and they perceive women as being riskier.”
    Catalyst has found that gender stereotyping is rampant in corporate America, too, where women are deemed “too soft, too tough and never just right.” We call it the “double bind.” As I discussed in Monday’s post, when women act in ways consistent with gender stereotypes, they are viewed as incompetent. When they behave in ways that aren’t consistent with stereotypes, they are considered unfeminine. It’s a lose-lose situation.
    It shouldn’t be. The first female Congresswoman served in 1922–it’s hard to believe that nearly 90 years later we are still maligned based on gender when seeking, or serving in, public office.
    But when you combine the “double-bind” with media that is hostile to female candidates, it’s no surprise that in America men are nearly twice as likely as women to seriously consider running for state-level office and 65 percent more likely than women to assess themselves as “very qualified” to run. Sexist attacks reinforce negative stereotypes and can contribute to a climate that keeps women from entering politics.
    A Catalyzing reader asked me how we can change the toxic conversation into something more productive. A recent study found that gender-based attacks damage women candidates in the polls, but the damage could be lessened by addressing sexism head-on. The same is true at work. To escape the “double bind,” Catalyst advises women to talk openly about the issue — whether it is an inappropriate comment or a statement that unfairly generalizes about women’s abilities.
    What helps is to bring stereotyping out in the open — expose it when you see it.

    Cross-posted on Catalyzing

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    AFrame Opens in Culver City

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    AFrame Opens in Culver City

    Last night One for the Table got a sneak peek into what promises to be Culver City’s newest hot spot–A-Frame–the brainchild of restaurateur David Reiss and rockstar chef Roy Choi of Kogi BBQ fame. Like most of Choi’s ventures, the menu reads like a sugar-crazed kid’s take on gourmet cuisine. Blazin’ Jay’s kettle corn, sprinkled with furikake and mixed with Corn Pops, is a total guilty pleasure. And don’t get me started on the milk chocolate dipped churros or the fried apple pie with cheddar ice cream.
    My favorites, of course, veer on the lighter side. The crab cakes garnished with shiso leaves are plump and simple and the peel ‘n eat shrimp is fresh and juicy, with just the right amount of citrus and salt. And don’t neglect the Korean-style pickled side dishes, which, in true Choi fashion, veer from the traditional, featuring pears and endives alongside more expected vegetables, like radishes. And I have to admit the baby back ribs are worth getting your hands messy over and so is the totally indulgent carne asada torta (which should only be attempted if you have a serious appetite, and are maybe a little stoned).
    And did I mention the bar? There’s an extensive selection of craft beers on tap and unique, specialty cocktails. I recommend the Pek Pek.
    But the real star here is the design. Local design whiz Sean Knibb has done the impossible – turned a defunct IHOP into a sleek and sexy piece of modern architecture that seamlessly weaves outdoor and indoor space. Outside, white hoop skirts reimagined as chandeliers hang over Knibb’s signature “urban meadow”.
    Inside, streamlined communal tables and surprisingly comfortable, concrete benches create a cozy, indoor picnic vibe, perfect for the tapas-style menu. But don’t be fooled by the word tapas. There are no hefty price tags and nothing comes on a small plate (and if it does, the food is stacked high onto it). So come hungry.
    A-Frame
    12565 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City
    (310) 398-7700
    Kitchen Hours: 5pm-12midnight
    Bar serves until 2pm
    - By Maia Harari

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    First Nighter Richard Strausss MezzaMezz Intermezzo

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    First Nighter Richard Strausss MezzaMezz Intermezzo

    The family that flays together stays together. That’s the message Richard Strauss wanted to get across when, as a gift for his contentious wife, he wrote the music and libretto to Intermezzo — now in the New York City Opera’s fall season. There’s no doubt the composer believed in the layman’s popular psychological theory that the more a husband and wife argue, the more they flagellate one another verbally, the stronger their union becomes.
    Not everyone will agree with him, but if that’s the way he wanted to have it, he’s entitled. The problem is, however, that when in 1923 he constructed the mostly sung, sometimes spoken autobiographical piece, in which he put his contentious wife Pauline on stage as Christine and himself up there with her as composer Robert Storch, he created a challenge for himself and others not so easily met.
    As what Strauss liked to call “a bourgeois comedy” unfolds, Christine (Mary Dunleavy) is attacking Robert (Nicholas Pallesen) to some extent on the notion that if he says “Black,” it’s up to her to say “White.” She’s bridling at his leaving for a tour and after he does, she heads to a winter resort — for which clever designer Andrew Jackness provides a mountain slope for tobogganers — where she dallies with the young Baron Lummer (Andrew Bidlack).
    Hardly holding herself accountable for the marital transgression, she climbs on her high horse when she receives a note claiming hubby Robert has been twiddling his thumbs with a woman called Mitzi Mayer. Even when Robert proves to haughty Christine that Mayer’s partner in hanky-panky was Kapellmeister Stroh (Erik Nelson Werner), the determined lady still finds reasons to berate the wronged spouse. Only after some more of that unpleasantness do the two love birds declare they’ve never been more devoted to each other.
    Necessary for anyone taking on Christine is the ability to infuse her with comic grandiosity — as well as a soupcon of self-deprecation — so that she doesn’t strike audiences as nothing more than an unsympathetic harridan. In the role, Dunleavy sings the Strauss music with bright, rounded tones and hits the high notes as if cresting the mountain peaks the character visits. At no point, however, does she find a way into the comic part of the “bourgeois comedy.”
    Therefore, a significant element in the revival of Leon Major’s 1999 production is missing. But that’s not the only obstacle Strauss has placed along the ski trail to Intermezzo success. He’s really only telling an anecdote, but he’s extended it to two acts. Well, why not? The fellow had so much music in him needing to come out, a good deal of it for the cold-climate segment.
    So he supplied the piece with an abundance of lushly brittle orchestral stretches — all of it conducted here with the required brittle lushness by George Manahan. Although so much of it is too entrancing to be termed extraneous, it does mean a director has to deal with the abundant non-libretto passages. The tobogganing and ice-skating in the resort scenes (in-line skates used through these skaters’ waltzes) are sleighfuls of fun, but at other times Major has the supernumeraries battling with umbrellas in a storm or the uniformed Christine-Robert retainers romping around like extras in a two-reeler. Often, the occasionally silhouetted activity is too twee for words.
    Dunleavy isn’t the only one earning high musical marks for singing. Pallesen makes certain his baritone resounds throughout Robert’s dodging his wife’s assaults, but he doesn’t do much in the acting department to guarantee close attention. Neither does Bidlack, who remains regimentally rigid as the romantically adventurous Baron. His tenor is attractive, but there has to be a spectrum of womanizing idiosyncrasies he could be working that he isn’t. The photo accompanying his bio exudes more personality that he brings to the footlights.
    There is one extremely well-acted scene that contributes to the happy atmosphere. It’s the card game — Skat — during which Robert receives that damning letter. When he does, he abruptly terminates the betting-session but not before his friends (sung and spoken by David Kravitz, William Ledbetter, Matthew Burns and Jan Opalach) amusingly demonstrate that men gossip about women as much as vice versa.
    Strauss wrote the opera as one-third of a domestic trilogy — the others being Die Frau Ohne Schatten and Die Aegyptische Helena. In this revival, the effectiveness of Intermezzo is only intermittent.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Nov
    05

    10 Best Topical Jokes of the Week

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    10 Best Topical Jokes of the Week

    2010 Image created for Mark Miller by Nancy DeFrance

    http://defrancegraphics.com/

    A new study shows that smoking two packs a day more than doubles a person’s chances of developing Alzheimer’s. This was based on a survey of smokers who’ve forgotten who they are and where they live.
    A man in North Dakota was arrested after he allegedly shot a urinal in a local bar. In his defense, the urinal had been making threatening gestures.
    It was announced this week that the cast of Glee will be putting out a Christmas album this year. The title: “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like a Fortune from Syndication.”
    On Tuesday, a police officer in New York City, who stopped an armed robbery at the salon where she was getting her hair done, was promoted to detective. And given a free color treatment.
    Military officials said Tuesday that a computer failure caused a break in communication with 50 nuclear missiles at Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming during the weekend for about 45 minutes. Fortunately, the tech support guy in India was able to help.
    European military officials are testing new “blast boxers,” which are armored underwear that protects the groin from shrapnel. Another group expressing interest — wives who aren’t in the mood.
    A Chinese scientific research center has built the fastest supercomputer ever made, beating out the U.S. This computer is so fast, you’ve already owned it for two years.
    Several entrepreneurs are buying up thousands of internet domain names related to marijuana, hoping to resell the names once marijuana laws relax. I myself am the proud new owner of OhManI’mSoWastedPlusI’veGotTheMajorMunchies.com.
    Oprah Winfrey said this week that her new cable network, OWN, will be “fun and entertaining without tearing people down and calling them bitches.” Talk show host Jerry Springer responded, “What’s your point?”
    The Transportation Security Administration said that starting Thursday it will change the way it manually searches passengers. The new process will include an agent running his or her hand up the inside of a passenger’s leg. Rock star Courtney Love stated she’s used a similar technique on the men she dates for years.

    Follow Mark C. Miller on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/MarkMiller123

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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