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Friday, November 28, 2008

Thankful on Thanksgiving

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Thanksgiving 2008 I rejoined my extended family and for that I am thankful. For complex medical reasons it had been three years since I joined my cousins, their families, my nieces and brother for a family get-together on a holiday.


My cousins, brothers and I are in our 50’s and 60’s. All our parents have died leaving us as the patriarchs of the family. We are no longer “the kids”. We refer to one another’s children as “the kids”. And some of those kids have kids of their own. A couple of my cousins are also grandparents. Wow – what a time warp from the days at Aunt Millie’s.


When we were the kids, Aunt Millie & Uncle Harry usually hosted Thanksgiving. The uncles played cards and watched football. Ping pong was the hot game and some of us were pretty good at it. Roger comes to mind. Sometimes one or two of the uncles would take on the kids. Uncle Dave and Uncle Bobby come to mind.


Our grandparents, Morris and Ida, had 5 children: Mildred, Sidney, Evelyn, Jerome and Sharon. All were raised in New York City. Their absence around the table is always sorely missed.




Mildred, Jerome, Sidney, Evelyn (front) - circa mid-1920's





Grandpa Morris - NYC's Amsterdam Avenue @ 124th Street - early 20th C.



I am grateful to have spent Thanksgiving with Randy, Paige, Jenna, Gene, Mark, Camilla, Beau, Dean, Barbro, Johannes, Oscar, Carol, Bob, Ricky, Danny, Ellen, Kim, and my partner Jorge. We missed Matt, Judi, Richard, Alene, Roger, Dustin, Lauri, Allan, AJ, Elyse, Artie, Chris, and Kathryn.


To my full extended family – I look forward to seeing all of you as my health improves.

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Thursday, November 27, 2008

Excuse Us While We Remodel

Google changed its templates making the text unreadable on some browsers, so a new look still to be fine-tuned.

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Dancing In the Streets

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It has taken this long for the election of Barrack Obama as the 44th president of the United States to sink in. The elation was surrealistic. The implications are many. In this article, dancing in the streets.


What especially struck me in the 10+ days following November 4 was the global celebration of Obama’s election. That was also the single most mentioned phenomenon by those with whom I’m in regular contact. History has never seen a global celebration of US presidential election results. Imagine that! Why in 2008 are people around the world overjoyed with the election of Barrack Obama?


The world has become smaller with the exponential advance in information technology. As the world’s sole superpower, events and policy decisions in the US flash across the world in real time, directly affecting the fortunes of populations worldwide.


George W. Bush was America’s face around the world. His is the America seen by much of the world as imperialistic, politically motivated, mistrusted, bullying, reckless and greedy. America had a kinder face before the ascension of Bush-Cheney. Barrack Obama is seen as the ultimate personification of America’s kinder face. Thus, the jubilation. Imagine how much we are despised around the world. The global poll for US president was a landslide for Obama. Citizens of the world knew that John McCain was more of the Bush Republican policies while Barack Obama was different – he offered and personified change. Thus, the jubilation. A small village in Kenya celebrated the son of one of its own elected president of the United States. Thus, the jubilation. He whose administration has brought the world to the precipice of an economic collapse will relinquish power to a president whose party left us a budget surplus in 2000. Thus, the jubilation. Citizens of the world saw the most powerful man in the world as a bad guy. The most powerful man in the world will soon be President of the United States Barrack Obama. Thus, the jubilation.


History shows us that the great presidents have taken office at a time of national crisis. Thus, the jubilation.





Sunday, November 9, 2008

Victory

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A Master Class in Democracy

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[From the
London Times – November 6, 2008]


From The Times

November 6, 2008


A Masterclass in Democracy


No-where is the competition for power more open, inspiring or capable of real change than in America. The rest of the world would do well to look and learn


When the moment came, TV panellists who had talked volubly all evening suddenly found it hard to say a word. In Grant Park, Chicago, Jesse Jackson wept. Nearby, an assemblyman from the Illinois black caucus was asked what the election meant for him. “Now I can look my grandchildren in the eye,” he said simply. “And I can tell them, if they want to, they can be president, too.”

On Tuesday night, with a countdown to precisely 10pm Chicago time, American democracy transformed in an instant not only the hopes and expectations of African Americans, but also the self-image of their country and their country’s image in the world.

Barack Obama stepped out to accept his city’s rapturous acclaim a few minutes later. “If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible . . .” he began, but at that moment it seemed no one did doubt it — anywhere. Bedlam had already taken hold in cities across the US, in Berlin, where Senator Obama drew a crowd of 200,000 when merely a candidate, and from Japan to Kenya, where his extended family now awaits their invitation to the inauguration.

Within hours Gordon Brown and David Cameron were vying in the House of Commons for scraps of the President-elect’s reflected glory. In Moscow, by contrast, in an 85-minute state-of-the-nation address, President Medvedev made no mention of the US election. Small wonder. Nothing is more alarming to the stage managers of phoney democracies than the sight of real ones sweeping entire political classes from the stage in a day of bloodless voting.

By the same token, nothing is more inspiring for ordinary citizens. One in 50 people on the planet voted in this election, but it was truly a global political event. This is not just because of the openness of the American electoral system and of its voters’ yearnings. It is not just because of the theatricality of the marathon campaigns, or because, despite its soaring deficits and disastrous loss of prestige in the Iraq war, the US remains the most powerful nation on earth.

The world has been fascinated and profoundly moved by this election most of all because of what America is — a nation founded on universal aspirations, and thus a mirror to humanity. For two centuries that mirror has seemed irreparably cracked by the legacy of slavery and segregation, a pernicious and enduring racism that remains a factor in the blighted lives of so many of the poor blacks among whom Mr Obama launched his political career. He is not the last role model they will ever need, but he is the most powerful proof his country has produced that it is ready to judge them by the content of their character, not the colour of their skin.

The delirium in Grant Park came mainly from the young, diverse, tech-savvy America that gave the Obama campaign many of its footsoldiers and much of its money. A very different America had gathered on the great lawn of the Arizona Biltmore. The Phoenix Boys’ Choir, in immaculate blue blazers, sang for miserable McCain campaign staff who turned off their big-screen TVs to be able to ignore the networks’ mounting evidence of defeat.

When Senator McCain conceded, he had to silence booing prompted by his rival’s name. But he did so in a speech of enormous grace and humility that conveyed not only his respect for the democratic process, but his understanding that in the manner of his losing the election he was helping to make history.

Yesterday President Bush called this election “a triumph of the American story”. It has been exactly that. America may have faltered in its efforts to export democracy, but this time, at home, it has delivered a masterclass in the real thing.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/leading_article/article5093551.ece


Wednesday, November 5, 2008

A New Era Dawns in America


“It’s been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America.”

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“… more than two centuries later, a government of the people, by the people and for the people has not perished from this Earth. This is your victory.”


President-Elect Barrack Obama, November 4, 2008





Sunday, November 2, 2008

Still Undecided After All These Years

It boggles the mind. As the polls open for the 2008 presidential election after the longest presidential campaign in memory, some voters are still undecided. Who are these undecided voters? Why can’t they decide? Why are 2 years of a non-stop media inundation of information not enough? Listen you undecideds – look back to previous presidential elections. Do you remember such a clear choice between candidates and their positions on issues affecting every American? Don’t you undecideds have a fundamental set of values that guide your political views? Does not one of these candidates fit more with your values than the other? I mean – come on folks – what are you waiting for, a burning bush?!


Or maybe not. According to an NBC poll released this afternoon it seems that the undecided demographic comprises a disproportionately large number of older, white women – hardcore, spiteful Hillary supporters. These voters are taking the outcome of their party’s nomination process personally. (See http://aboutnothing-doug.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-you-too-can-become-sexist.html) These voters are so self-absorbed that, despite being lifelong politically involved Democrats, they are undecided as to whether their hurt feelings are more important than their long held political values. How incredibly petty and pathetic is that?! Barack Obama beat the Clintons. Your candidate has fully and sincerely embraced the Obama candidacy and urged her supporters to do the same. That’s politics – get over it and move on.


Not surprisingly, the McCain campaign is capitalizing on this demographic by running robo-call campaigns today featuring Hillary Clinton’s voice. Call content? Don’t know but an educated guess would be a negative, out-of-context, primary campaign snippet aimed at Barack Obama. That any percentage of this allegedly sophisticated electoral demographic would be persuaded by robo-calls brings me to Jon Stewart’s pie chart of the undecided demographic. By far, the largest segment of Jon Stewart’s undecided demographic pie chart, weighing in at 45%, was the “STUPID” slice.


Unknowns in this election include the 2 overlapping undecided demographics, the Bradley Effect (PC with the pollster and a racist in the booth) and the Reverse Bradley Effect (good ole boy with the pollster and closet Obama supporter in the booth). Without a candidate running at 51+% in a state’s polls, these 4 factors play a potentially disproportionate role in determining swing state results. So what are we left with? Choosing our next president could potentially be left in the hands of Spiteful, Vengeful & Disgruntled (the Hillary dwarfs), the STUPID, the racists (Bradley-E) and the spineless (reverse Bradley-E).


The 2008 presidential race is a unique, historic election for the United States of America, determining its course at a critical juncture in our history. May the American electorate do justice to its place in history.