Posts tagged ‘Barack Obama’

July 2, 2008

On Small Fees and Donated Funds

Well, since Wesley Clark brought it up, does military service make for better presidential leadership, or no?

. . . [H]istory is agnostic on whether great warriors make great presidents. In the “yea” column you’ll find George Washington. Because I’m feeling generous . . . I’ll thow in Teddy Roosevelt. And if you insist that I expand the column to include borderline cases, we could also talk about Andrew Jackson. . ., Harry Truman, and Ike. The “nay” column is far longer, so I’ll just hit the highlights: Zachary Taylor, U.S. Grant, Rutherford Hayes, James Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, John Kennedy, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, and, of course, George W. Bush.  Perhaps more interesting than any of the above, though, is this: the nation’s two greatest commanders in chief, and, not coincidentally, two greatest presidents, Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, never served in the military.

Much about Obama’s tax plan here:

. . . [I]n a better world, the findings from the TPC report would squelch the anti-Obama chatter around his tax plan vs. McCain’s. In that distortion chamber, the fact that Obama raises taxes on families with incomes above $250,000, and only on those families, morphs into a big tax increase on the middle class ($250K and up gets you in the top 3-4 percent, by the way). The report (compare tbls 1 and 6), in fact, clearly shows how topsy-turvy that critique really is. Obama’s middle-class tax cut, about $1,000, is three times that of McCain’s, about $300. Obama cuts the taxes of 81 percent of families; McCain, 56 percent.

Why the SC’s decision on the D.C. gun ban might be great for the Democrats:

. . . [T]he Court went and struck down the District of Columbia’s handgun ban, a decision that, for reasons cultural and chronological, will cast a shadow over every other case this term. And that, I’m convinced, is one of the best gifts the Court has given a democrat since West Coast Hotel. The reasons are simple: D.C. v. Heller takes the Court off the table as an electoral liability, and it takes the National Rifle Association off the table as an electoral threat. The first part of that claim is easy enough: a term that ends with a landmark conservative decision will not be easily spun into an urgent need to remedy what McCain has called federal judges who have “little regard for the authority of the president, the Congress, and the states.”

And, too, this:

It is possible that Obama does not realize this because he has been imbibed by so much of the propaganda of quislingism and if that is the case as I believe it to be then I tremulantly recommend we halt the malmish adulation heaped upon wretched misfits. If anything Obama has hair in his brain and even though we all are to some extent as hairy Obama sets the bar on the curve that much higher up the mountain.

Speaking of being pedantic, y’all:  apparently, we’re not supposed to say “correlation does not imply causation.”  Oops.

The U.S. is suffering from a decline in foreign tourists.  To remedy this, those tourists will now be charged $10 upon their arrival on U.S. soil.

I just want to say that I was charged an exit fee when I went through the Bangkok airport, despite a layover there being the only time I spent in Thailand (about two hours, total, never leaving the airport).  I had gone from one terminal to the check-in desk, and back again, after somebody wrongly told me this was the only way to change from the small Malaysian airline I’d flown in on, to another, larger flight for which I’d booked an entirely different ticket.  When I tried to reenter the terminal after checking in, not only was I forced to pay an exit fee, but in order to do so, I had to exchange money into freaking baht at an airport currency exchange counter.   Man, was I pissed.

I don’t know what that has to do with anything, really, but it feels good to share.

Humanitarian intervention is one of those complicated issues:

Contrast this with the economists’ way of approaching matters: will intervening do more harm than good? Would this law or that do more harm than good? Sociologists would be another case for comparison: whilst political philosophers (of the Rawlsian/Kantian variety) are predisposed to see democratic institutions as a requirement of justice, sociologists are likely to ask hard questions about whether this or that society has the social structure or culture that makes democracy possible. Historians might ask whether democracies intervening in non-democratic cultures have more often tended to be benign or, alternatively, genocidal.

Battered animals have 3,800 shelters.  Battered women have 1,500:

A woman who fundraises for a charity dedicated to helping battered women recently told me about her challenges raising money. Called the Retreat, the charity is located in East Hampton, a posh beach community, full of people who make philanthropy a part of their financial and social lives. Yet she struggles to find donors. In response to her requests, she often hears, “Well, no one I would know would be a victim of domestic violence. Besides, I already give money to the animal rescue charity.” The animal rescue charity is one of the best endowed in the area.

I actually have a lot to say about philanthropy focused on animal abuse in general (please don’t infer from my not going into it that I am against such efforts overall), but I’m too tired this morning to articulate my opinions on the matter in an intelligent and mature way.

So, I’ll just limit my remarks to VOMIT!!!!

Finally, the Phelps family is a good example of just how nuanced hatred can be:

Whence the hatred of a fellow Baptist, a man who seemed to share so many of Westboro’s grotesque views? The answer lies in the past of Falwell himself and of the Phelps family. Falwell was a shameless racist, and the Phelps family were, incredible as it may seem, pioneers of integration in their hometown of Topeka. The Phelps family’s law practice, headed formerly by the patriarch himself, Fred Phelps, took civil rights cases, often for black plaintiffs who had failed to find representation elsewhere. The Phelpses viewed racial discrimination as un-American and contrary to Biblical teaching, and their work helped to effectuate the Brown decision.

See?  Just because somebody’s entire life consists of waving ‘fag-enabler’ signs at funerals, does not mean you should assume they’re racist, as well.

June 24, 2008

Influencing Public Opinion Is Really Haaaard

Obama: still Muslim after all these smears:

“The rule that I was sort of raised on was … you never respond at greater volume and in a bigger medium,” said Mark Blumenthal, editor of Pollster.com and a longtime Democratic pollster. “The problem with that is that no one ever held a press conference [to say Obama is a Muslim], there were no ads, no campaigns embraced the notion of Obama as Muslim, yet it’s everywhere.” . . . “If the information can be disseminated that easily, the old rule can’t apply,” Blumenthal said. “You cannot be passive and be reluctant to engage.”

In addition to being Muslim, according to Karl Rove, Obama is also a judgmental tool:

“Even if you never met him, you know this guy. He’s the guy at the country club with the beautiful date, holding a martini and a cigarette that stands against the wall and makes snide comments about everyone who passes by.”

. . . Interesting that Mr. Rove would use a country club metaphor to describe the first major party African-American presidential candidate . . . .

(via TPM)

Meanwhile, the main trouble with Michelle Obama is that she’s just so…black:

She grew up on Chicago’s ethnically isolated South Side — wasn’t poor but was hardly rich, was raised with a keen awareness of racial barriers but was also raised to achieve. She went to Princeton, excelled, retained her racial conscience but also eventually commanded a six-figure salary. All of this confuses white people mightily, far more than Barack’s biracial status. In their frame of reference, Michelle has no reason to be angry and every reason to be content. Portrayed by the media as extraordinary, Michelle at heart is an ordinary black woman whose life experience and ambiguity about making it in white America resemble those of every other 40ish, middle-class black woman I know. This is wonderful news for us — we finally see an accurate reflection of ourselves in someone who may one day occupy the most exclusive address in the country. But for a good part of the nation, this is exactly the problem.

Meanwhile, McCain enjoys the benefits of being of little interest to anyone:

I just saw John McCain very gravely lamenting Barack Obama’s decision not to accept public financing for the general election campaign and opining about what it says about Obama’s ethics and trustworthiness. And I must confess that I’m a little confused why more Democrats are not hitting this preening peacock with the fact that he is as we speak breaking the campaign finance laws and specifically breaking the law on accepting public financing. Having opted into the system and gotten the advantage of it he’s now spending freely in defiance of the caps he agreed not to spend over. . . .It’s almost surreal that McCain is being allowed to get on his high horse on anything remotely connected to the public financing system.

Well, the Democratic Party typically steers clear of conflict:

Practically the entire record of the Democratic Party as a group over the past seven years is one misguided instance after another of “keeping their powder dry” in anticipation of a time when they held a stronger strategic position. . . . The GOP understands and is willing to demonstrate that “powder” is not a finite commodity that must be conserved and that, in fact, using your powder magically generates more powder.

Now, here’s how you influence public opinion:

Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the U.S. government has spent nearly $500 million on an Arabic language television and radio station.  Now an investigation finds that the project has not only been poorly run and hemorrhaged taxpayer money but is also airing bizarrely anti-American and anti-semitic coverage despite repeated complaints from the State Department and Congress.

Secret organizations, on the other hand, don’t wield as much influence as some people think (this article provides a guide to six):

I am a Freemason. . . . A meeting of Masons is as benign as a meeting of good friends around the fireplace. And yes, I know, that’s exactly what a Mason would say, which is why conspiracy theories are so hard to kill off. It is impossible to disprove the notion that somewhere out there is a roomful of people, bound by an oath of secrecy, pulling the invisible strings that make the world dance. The only way to know for sure is to become one.

On an entirely different topic, here’s yet another article about the nothingness of contemporary art:

It is the artists, and a certain line of thinking about art, that have given the people with the cash permission to buy and sell what amounts to nothing, and to do so for ever larger and more insane sums of money.

(via A&LD)

Well, really, you can substitute any number of other things for “artists” and “art” in the above sentence, and it still holds true.

May 22, 2008

Culture, Culture, Culture

So, Iceland (my knowledge about which begins and ends with Bjork) is tops on the UNDP’s Human Development Index ranking. Which is pretty cool, except you would have to live in Iceland (this is also the problem with Sweden…suicide, anyone?). But hey, check out this awesomeness: nine months of paid maternity leave to be split between the mom and dad as they choose. YES! Standing O, Iceland!! (Although, granted, it might not be the most workable thing to give Americans nine paid months off every time they successfully knock each other up.)

Another great deal along these lines: Zappos offers its new employees $1,000 to quit on their first day!

According to James Frey, he never reads what he writes. Explains a lot. Hey, speaking of fad books, can someone tell me why everybody in NYC is currently reading Middlesex? Is this just an amazing example of the collective groupmind at work, or did some cultural icon recently recommend it on a talk show? (Not that anyone listens to me, but if you’re currently working on it, I would suggest you spare yourself and put it down now – especially if it’s the only book you’ll be reading this year.)

Speaking of doing just as others do, let’s all talk about SITC: here, an impressionable young girl first becomes a ho like Samantha, and then a Mormon like her (the girl’s) husband. Hey, whatever’s in front of you…

Related, are civilization and culture in opposition to each other?

The problem is that civilisation needs culture even if it feels superior to it. Its own political authority will not operate unless it can bed itself down in a specific way of life. Men and women do not easily submit to a power that does not weave itself into the texture of their daily existence – one reason why culture remains so politically vital. Civilisation cannot get on with culture, and it cannot get on without it.

(via 3 Quarks Daily)

Eric Alterman responds to Brink Lindsey’s commentary (which I quoted yesterday):

I feel that libertarianism, as I understand it, is overly concerned with theoretical liberty at the expense of its actual practice. The freedom to starve, to see one’s labor unfairly exploited, to drink polluted water or breath polluted air, are not freedoms I strongly value. And to battle these and others like them, society requires collective institutional action and in many cases, government (or labor union) protection. I’m no fan of “big government” per se–and neither was Dewey. It’s merely that powerful forces like global corporations require powerful forces to balance them.

Lately, everyone seems to be saying that, while Clinton’s candidacy may have revealed a huge undercurrent of misogyny in our society, it did not actually suffer from this misogyny. That’s as it may be; however, speaking for myself at least, that revealed misogyny is exactly what has surprised and upset me throughout the primaries. I’m very disappointed by all of the openly hostile and condescendingly dismissive talk about Clinton’s campaign, both by men in the media and by guys I know in my own, personal life. I can say the same thing for racism laid bare by Obama’s campaign. Before this primary season, I naively thought that people (in my set, at any rate) had overcome at least the more overt racist and sexist thinking. Turns out, everyone has continued holding all the same racist and sexist opinions all this time – they’ve just learned to mostly keep their mouths shut about it.

Also, according to one of McCain’s advisers, calling Clinton a bitch isn’t misogynist, because, you see, Clinton really is a bitch.

Negotiating this week:  Israel and Syria, Lebanon and Hezbollah…and Pakistan and the Taliban:

Pakistan will pull its troops out of the Swat valley in its Northwest Frontier Province according to an agreement signed today by government negotiators and local Taliban leaders. Local authorities also agreed to enforce Sharia law so long as girls are allowed to attend school and militants do not carry weapons in public.

Finally, last night I saw Eric Bogosian do a benefit reading for Labyrinth Theater Company of some of his less frequently performed monologues. Eric Bogosian is one of my theatre heroes (I love all monologists, since my dream career involves me talking endlessly to myself, while crowds of people I never have to interact with face-to-face applaud thunderously somewhere out beyond the blaring lights), but I’ve never seen him perform – I’ve just watched whatever DVDs of his solo shows are available, and I’ve read all his stuff. In fact, just recently, I was randomly reading The Essential Bogosian, which includes several of the pieces he performed last night. This is one reason why living in NYC is actually cool – you can actually go see the people you like do the things you like (if you can rip yourself away from your laptop long enough).

April 22, 2008

Pro-League Networking

Hi, oh, thank you! Thank you! I really enjoyed playing for everyone, I was so glad to be asked. You’re…Gisele? Nice to meet, you, I’m Joni. Yeah. That’s sweet of you to say – a little while, actually. I’ve been playing for like…I don’t want to age myself! Well, I enjoy it. Yeah, it’s great, it’s great, I’ve had a lot of success with it, been really lucky, but it’s tough, you know. And sometimes, I need to step away- I recently, this is exciting – I’ve been doing some modeling for, um, Gap? Yeah, I don’t know if you’ve seen – yeah, that’s me, that’s me! Thanks! Well, I’m not like a real model, I would never…I think they just think I’m interesting-looking, you know. Oh, are you really? Are you really – isn’t that a coincidence! Well, I have to tell you, I have been surprised at…I mean, it is hard work, isn’t it? People think it’s just, right, standing around-but it is work! And it takes a lot of…I really don’t know how to express this, but it takes a lot of courage, doesn’t it? Like emotional courage? Somehow it, it takes a lot out of you. Oh, totally. So, I really respect what you do – I mean, you would know better than I, it’s not like, I mean, I really don’t even. Wow. It’s creative, too, modeling, and I think that’s why I so — I really like to mix it up. I find it so refreshing to switch mediums, every so often, you know? Like, you just have to, or you start to just, blah. Exactly, why limit what you– like okay, I’m a musician, but you know, I also write, I design, uh, I’m also a painter. Yeah, I’ve exhibited…I paint kind of like, I don’t know, Van Gogh-ish sort of self-portrait thingys, and I really feel like it all relates, you know? My mind is in the music, the music’s in the paintings, they all inform each other, and then all of it…braugh, right out there for the camera! I don’t hide it away, you know, Gisele – it’s there on a bus, for all the world to see, so. That’s just me.

Sheesh. How about this party, huh? I’m Joan. Nice to meet you, Bernadette. So, what do you do? Oh, really – that’s interesting, I’m also in the theatre. Well, just recently making my foray, really. I mean, I’m a writer, but I’ve just recently dramatized one of my memoirs. Yes, it’s running on Broadway now. And I was just so stoked, because I said to the producer – he was begging me for like a year, he was a huge fan of the memoir, he was like, you have to put this up as a show, and I’m like, I don’t know, I don’t know – because it was about some very personal events in my life, you know? Like, I’ve just had a lot of shit go down recently, it’s just been…anyway. So, it’s so hard, isn’t it? We have to be so revealing and sometimes you just think, enough! There’s only so much I can give. But then, you think, I’m a writer, I’m an artist, I can’t just, you know, squinch all up in my boudoir and hide from the world, right? We have to create, we must create, that’s what we do. So, anyway, I said I’ll do it, if…and this is a big if…Vanessa Redgrave has to do the part. Because I just…she is me, you know? I have always thought that she really just, we have this connection. So, he was like, Joan, I’ll get her. I will get her. And he did, I’m happy to say. Soooo…anywhooo…the whole process has just been so therapeutic and wonderful for me. It’s like, I have this whole new appreciation for you actors and you theatre people and what you do and who you are – it’s amazing, isn’t it? It’s just this huge, brilliant, courageous, sparkling service you do for us all, really, isn’t it, Bernadette? I mean, you sacrifice yourselves, you really do! Because the world is so- and pain- and we’re all- and the human cost- and suffering and joy— and whoosh- and laliday, too-too, I mean, really, bravo! Can I just applaud you right here?

Hello, I’m Barack. Barack. Baa like a sheep says, rock as in stone. Oh, no, don’t worry about it. No problem, I’m like totally Kenyan, everybody’s like…who? And you are… Iranka? Like Sri Lank– Oh, Ivanka! Great to meet you. I’ve met such great people tonight. And you’re an… Oh, so many fascinating people here tonight. No, I’m not an actor. I’ve thought about it, but… I mean, I used to act in college. I’m a Senator now, though. Yeah, it’s great, really satisfying. I mean, I really feel like it’s such a rewarding…thing. And it’s really super exciting right now, because I’m running for President. Yeah. I mean, it’s just in the primaries right now, so I don’t know, I don’t know, I don’t want to jinx it, but we’ll see. I really think…I shouldn’t say this, but I really have a good feeling about it, you know? Which is just so amazing, I’m so lucky, I mean, this is my first time out of the chute, and it’s just been, whoa. I never expected to get this far my first time out, but I’ve got great people. It’s all about the people, I can’t even tell you. And I’ve learned so much, really. Just so much. It’s been such a rewarding experience, I really, no matter what happens, I feel that. I’m so blessed to have had this opportunity. Have you ever thought about running? Oh, you should do it! You totally should do it! No, I can’t even tell you – you would be so happy you did. Do you – I’ll put you in touch with my guy. Seriously, are you – I don’t mean to get all schmoozy on you – but are you registered? Yeah, awesome! Yeah, I’d totally appreciate your vote. I mean, yeah, I’m really trying to get people to- oh, I hear you, it’s obnoxious, but you have to do it. I know, I know. I mean, we’re all trying to – here, take this postcard: it’s got all the info on it, my website’s on there, everything. Wait, are you on MySpace?

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