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Friday, September 30, 2011

BOATLIFT – An Untold Tale of 9/11

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In the largest-ever sea evacuation in history, boats of all types and sizes evacuated 500,000 people from Lower Manhattan in the wake of World Trade Center’s collapse on 9/11. With trains, tunnels, bridges and airports shut down, people were trapped on the island of Manhattan with no viable means of leaving.

Hundreds of thousands of people swarmed to the riverfront as the US Coast Guard sent out a call for boats to rescue those frantic to escape the destruction. The fall of the towers was seen by many as just the beginning of a coordinated attack on New York City.

In a mere nine hours, boats streaming into New York Harbor from all over the Northeast evacuated 500,000 people across the river to New Jersey. Compare that with history’s second-biggest evacuation: It took 9 days (June 26 through June 3 1940) to move 339,000 soldiers and civilians from Dunkirk, France across the English Channel to Great Britain during WW II.

This recently released short film narrated by Tom Hanks tells the story of this little known miracle on 9/11.

Double click video to watch full screen.





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Monday, September 26, 2011

Lady Gaga – “Bullying is for Losers”

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© Chris Pizzello/AP

Lady Gaga dedicates 'Hair' performance to bullied teen Jamey Rodemeyer

Sept. 25, 2011, 3:50 PM EST

By Carina Adly MacKenzie  

At the iHeartRadio Festival on Saturday in Las Vegas, Lady Gaga dedicated her song "Hair" to Jamey Rodemeyer, the 14-year-old Gaga fan who committed suicide last week after being tormented at school because of his sexual orientation.

"We lost a Little Monster this week," Gaga said, displaying a video of Jamey. His "It Gets Better" video mentioned Gaga and her music several times as he discussed the things that helped him get through the school day.

Before he ended his life, Jamey wrote to Gaga. "@LadyGaga Bye, Mother Monster. Thank you for all you have done, paws up forever," he tweeted.

"I wrote this record about how your identity is really all you've got when you're in school," Gaga said. "So tonight, Jamey, I know you're up there looking at us, and you're not a victim. You're a lesson to all of us. I know it's a bit of a downer, but sometimes the right thing is more important than the music."

During the song, an emotional Gaga turned to the crowd and said, "Bullying is for losers." She's vowed to meet with the president to establish anti-bullying laws. "I will not stop fighting. This must end," she tweeted. "Our generation has the power to end it. Trend it #MakeALawForJamey."

Watch Lady Gaga's performance:





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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Happy 70th, Frankie

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It happened one night in 1973. Ran into a good looking guy on the streets of New York City’s West Village. But this wasn’t any ordinary guy – he actually introduced himself very properly and politely: “Hi, I’m Frank and I’m 32 years old.” Being a mere 22 at that time I zipped past the huge age difference (omg, this guy is old!) and, as Humphrey Bogart said to Claude Rains, that night was “the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”

38 years later, Frank and I are still good friends. Today, September 24, 2011, is Frank’s 70th birthday. God bless you and your terrific partner AJ.

Happy Birthday, Frankie!

Love you,

Dougie


And now, a campy happy birthday video.




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Wednesday, September 21, 2011

As DADT Disappears Air Force Member Tells Dad He’s Gay

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From Yahoo’s Lookout Blog:

The military's ban on openly gay service officially ended …, and already one member of the Air Force has shared a video of his personal journey out of the closet.

A 21-year-old service member who had been keeping an anonymous blog about his quest to come out to his girlfriend, family, and comrades posted a video of his call to his father this morning to tell him he is gay. His father pauses before saying, "I still love you son. Doesn't change our relationship."


From the airman’s youtube post:

I called my dad to tell him the hardest thing that gay guys will ever have to say.





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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Beirut Airport Flash Mob

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Beirut Duty Free Rocks Airport with Dabke Dance - Full Version | دبكة في مطار بيروت

From the youtube blurb:

Whilst the idea of a flash mob isn't a new thing, a Dabke / Hip-Hop flash mob in Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport (Beirut Duty Free) at a time when the region is in flux is certainly a first.

On March 5th, 2011, passengers experienced something a little different. A flash mob performed a mix of Dabke and hip-hop to entertain and delight passengers and airport staff alike.

M&C Saatchi and Beirut Duty Free created this vibrant event as part of their "Take Back More" campaign. The aim was to literally create a wonderful memory of Lebanon that passengers could take with them on their journey.




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Sunday, September 11, 2011

From the Week of September 2001

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[Commemorating the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, below is an email I wrote during the week of 9/11/01. Following the email is a video tribute to the heroes and victims of the terrorist attacks.]



FROM ACROSS THE RIVER

[Thoughts of a native New Yorker recently transplanted to New Jersey]


It is still difficult to comprehend the enormity of the devastation. Only when my mind sort of "expands" am I able to fathom what happened on Tuesday – those flashes shake me to my very soul. I truly regret not living in the city at this time, feeling guilty being sheltered here across the river. I understand the effort and volunteerism pouring into Manhattan from across the country and around the world.

It is neither an overstatement nor a knee-jerk reaction to the immediacy of the horror to accept that the world has changed forever. We are witnesses to and participants in a defining event in world history - likely the defining event that will shape the world for the foreseeable future.

Do we all feel personally assaulted and violated? Are we all really so deeply patriotic to feel that such an attack on a tiny part of the US is a personal violation of each and every citizen of the world? I think so.

I am too frightened to cry or get choked up by flashes of Tuesday's horror. Listening to interviews with those desperately searching for lost loved ones is far too painful. What has moved me to tears several times has been the patriotic outpouring across the country and the world. Just now, before sitting down at my computer, I watched for the umpteenth time President Bush's bullhorned remarks to the rescue workers. This time, seeing the faces of the workers shouting "USA" brought tears to my eyes.

Thursday night, ABC did 2 pieces to wrap up one of its hours. You could see that Peter Jennings was near tears after each one. The first was a brief piece on Queen Elizabeth's Coldstream Guards being "ordered" by the Queen to play the "Star Spangled Banner" in front of Buckingham Palace. A tearful crowd stood in silence as the British band played our national anthem. The piece brought tears to my eyes. Following that was a report on the prevalent display of American flags. While a relatively mundane report, it evoked in me a deep sense of patriotism and again tears flowed.

This is the latest example of how a US president rises to the occasion - how the office itself is far bigger than its individual occupant. Despite Bush having been portrayed for so long as no more than a doofus, I am impressed with his performance in this crisis. There is a comforting feeling – shared by him with the rescue workers – to see our president take control and speak for the nation. It's the office that has this effect – not so much the man.

It is chilling to see and hear fighter planes patrolling the skies and warships stationed off our coastline. It is chilling to hear reports that more terrorists bent on further attacks are likely still in the country. It is chilling to learn that one of the hijackers lived in my own town here in New Jersey. It is chilling to be in a war zone. And it is likely that this is our country's immediate future. Will anyone really feel safe anymore? In our history, war and its devastation have always been "over there." Not any more. It is time for America to join the rest of the world in that respect. Imagine what it must have been like for Great Britain during WWII. Imagine what it was like for Great Britain under constant attack by IRA terrorists. Imagine what it is like for Israel – existing for 53 years under the daily threat of war, death and terror.

We have, in so many respects, been a sheltered nation - protected by our natural borders. Not since the War of 1812 have foreign enemy forces wreaked destruction in our country. Since then there has been a sense of invulnerable complacency – allowing us to enjoy freedoms and convenience not possible in other countries. As the world became smaller it was just a matter of time before the US would join the rest of the world in facing destruction and threats of destruction at home from terrorists and fanatics abroad. It was just a matter of time until the US had its own personal interests at heart when discussing and acting on the modern day version of international war – terrorism. How will that threat be deterred or, hopefully, eradicated now that the world's only superpower has taken up the challenge, burden and duty of "saving the world" from its latest threat of extinction? Only leadership, bipartisan Congressional support and unwavering support from a world shocked to its foundations will answer that question.

An immediate military response of some sort will likely come – even if only to show the world that we mean business and to give people a feeling of short-term satisfaction. It is necessary to take that first decisive military action to set a precedent for future actions by the US and its allies around the world.

I am overwhelmed by the outpouring of compassion and support from around the world. If one were to see just these reports, the magnitude of what happened would be clear. It is both ironic and magnificent to see the effect of an event in New York City evoking such an international outpouring of emotion. Yes, of course the attack was on America, but it was those too-often-maligned New Yorkers whose courage, bravery and devastation have captured the attention of the world. New Yorkers have shown the world how magnificent we really are; the world has shown New Yorkers how much it really does care about them, America and humanity.

Wednesday morning I proudly draped a 6 foot long American flag over the railing of my terrace. It was the only flag displayed in our building. Yesterday a few more appeared. Standing on my flag draped terrace, I look out over the Hudson down toward the financial district. Where the twin towers once anchored the city skyline, I see only smoke smoke portending a different world for all of us.

And I cannot stop watching the news.





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Saturday, September 10, 2011

Copenhagen Station – Orchestral Flash Mob

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The Copenhagen Philharmonic (Sjællands Symfoniorkester) did a flash mob at Copenhagen Central Station on May 2nd 2011 playing Ravel's Bolero. Conductor is Jesper Nordin.

Double click on the video to watch full screen.






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Thursday, September 8, 2011

The GOP War on Voting


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[From Rolling Stone – Politics]




The GOP War on Voting

In a campaign supported by the Koch brothers, Republicans are working to prevent millions of Democrats from voting next year

 by Ari Berman  •  Aug. 30, 2011

August 30, 2011 7:40 PM ET

As the nation gears up for the 2012 presidential election, Republican officials have launched an unprecedented, centrally coordinated campaign to suppress the elements of the Democratic vote that elected Barack Obama in 2008. Just as Dixiecrats once used poll taxes and literacy tests to bar black Southerners from voting, a new crop of GOP governors and state legislators has passed a series of seemingly disconnected measures that could prevent millions of students, minorities, immigrants, ex-convicts and the elderly from casting ballots. “What has happened this year is the most significant setback to voting rights in this country in a century,” says Judith Browne-Dianis, who monitors barriers to voting as co-director of the Advancement Project, a civil rights organization based in Washington, D.C.

Republicans have long tried to drive Democratic voters away from the polls. “I don’t want everybody to vote,” the influential conservative activist Paul Weyrich told a gathering of evangelical leaders in 1980. “As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down.” But since the 2010 election, thanks to a conservative advocacy group founded by Weyrich, the GOP’s effort to disrupt voting rights has been more widespread and effective than ever. In a systematic campaign orchestrated by the American Legislative Exchange Council – and funded in part by David and Charles Koch, the billionaire brothers who bankrolled the Tea Party – 38 states introduced legislation this year designed to impede voters at every step of the electoral process.

All told, a dozen states have approved new obstacles to voting. Kansas and Alabama now require would-be voters to provide proof of citizenship before registering. Florida and Texas made it harder for groups like the League of Women Voters to register new voters. Maine repealed Election Day voter registration, which had been on the books since 1973. Five states – Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Tennessee and West Virginia – cut short their early voting periods. Florida and Iowa barred all ex-felons from the polls, disenfranchising thousands of previously eligible voters. And six states controlled by Republican governors and legislatures – Alabama, Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Wisconsin – will require voters to produce a government-issued ID before casting ballots. More than 10 percent of U.S. citizens lack such identification, and the numbers are even higher among constituencies that traditionally lean Democratic – including 18 percent of young voters and 25 percent of African-Americans.

Read the full article here:


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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Are You Ugly Enough for Federal Protection?


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[The NY Times op-ed piece by economist Dan Hamermesh is followed by a critique of his piece by The Economic Policy Journal.]




Ugly? You May Have a Case

by DANIEL S. HAMERMESH  •  Aug. 27, 2011

Gray Matter

Daniel S. Hamermesh, a professor of economics at the University of Texas, Austin, is the author of "Beauty Pays," published this month. 

BEING good-looking is useful in so many ways.

In addition to whatever personal pleasure it gives you, being attractive also helps you earn more money, find a higher-earning spouse (and one who looks better, too!) and get better deals on mortgages. Each of these facts has been demonstrated over the past 20 years by many economists and other researchers. The effects are not small: one study showed that an American worker who was among the bottom one-seventh in looks, as assessed by randomly chosen observers, earned 10 to 15 percent less per year than a similar worker whose looks were assessed in the top one-third — a lifetime difference, in a typical case, of about $230,000.

Beauty is as much an issue for men as for women. While extensive research shows that women’s looks have bigger impacts in the market for mates, another large group of studies demonstrates that men’s looks have bigger impacts on the job.

Why this disparate treatment of looks in so many areas of life? It’s a matter of simple prejudice. Most of us, regardless of our professed attitudes, prefer as customers to buy from better-looking salespeople, as jurors to listen to better-looking attorneys, as voters to be led by better-looking politicians, as students to learn from better-looking professors. This is not a matter of evil employers’ refusing to hire the ugly: in our roles as workers, customers and potential lovers we are all responsible for these effects.

How could we remedy this injustice? With all the gains to being good-looking, you would think that more people would get plastic surgery or makeovers to improve their looks. Many of us do all those things, but as studies have shown, such refinements make only small differences in our beauty. All that spending may make us feel better, but it doesn’t help us much in getting a better job or a more desirable mate.

A more radical solution may be needed: why not offer legal protections to the ugly, as we do with racial, ethnic and religious minorities, women and handicapped individuals?

We actually already do offer such protections in a few places, including in some jurisdictions in California, and in the District of Columbia, where discriminatory treatment based on looks in hiring, promotions, housing and other areas is prohibited. Ugliness could be protected generally in the United States by small extensions of the Americans With Disabilities Act. Ugly people could be allowed to seek help from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other agencies in overcoming the effects of discrimination. We could even have affirmative-action programs for the ugly.

The mechanics of legislating this kind of protection are not as difficult as you might think. You might argue that people can’t be classified by their looks — that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. That aphorism is correct in one sense: if asked who is the most beautiful person in a group of beautiful people, you and I might well have different answers. But when it comes to differentiating classes of attractiveness, we all view beauty similarly: someone whom you consider good-looking will be viewed similarly by most others; someone you consider ugly will be viewed as ugly by most others. In one study, more than half of a group of people were assessed identically by each of two observers using a five-point scale; and very few assessments differed by more than one point.

For purposes of administering a law, we surely could agree on who is truly ugly, perhaps the worst-looking 1 or 2 percent of the population. The difficulties in classification are little greater than those faced in deciding who qualifies for protection on grounds of disabilities that limit the activities of daily life, as shown by conflicting decisions in numerous legal cases involving obesity.

There are other possible objections. “Ugliness” is not a personal trait that many people choose to embrace; those whom we classify as protected might not be willing to admit that they are ugly. But with the chance of obtaining extra pay and promotions amounting to $230,000 in lost lifetime earnings, there’s a large enough incentive to do so. Bringing anti-discrimination lawsuits is also costly, and few potential plaintiffs could afford to do so. But many attorneys would be willing to organize classes of plaintiffs to overcome these costs, just as they now do in racial-discrimination and other lawsuits.

Economic arguments for protecting the ugly are as strong as those for protecting some groups currently covered by legislation. So why not go ahead and expand protection to the looks-challenged? There’s one legitimate concern. With increasingly tight limits on government resources, expanding rights to yet another protected group would reduce protection for groups that have commanded our legislative and other attention for over 50 years.

We face a trade-off: ignore a deserving group of citizens, or help them but limit help available for other groups. Even though I myself have demonstrated the disadvantages of ugliness in 20 years of research, I nonetheless would hate to see anything that might reduce assistance to groups now aided by protective legislation.

You might reasonably disagree and argue for protecting all deserving groups. Either way, you shouldn’t be surprised to see the United States heading toward this new legal frontier.


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Monday, August 29, 2011


In NYT, economist Daniel Hamermesh  calls for laws to benefit ugly people:

Ugliness could be protected generally in the United States by small extensions of the Americans With Disabilities Act. Ugly people could be allowed to seek help from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other agencies in overcoming the effects of discrimination. We could even have affirmative-action programs for the ugly.

This is egalitarian micro-management gone mad. The underlying thought here is that ugly people are somehow cheated on life. However, I doubt the success/happiness barrier divides directly between attractive and ugly, as Hamermesh's theory implies. A year doesn't go by without some super attractive model or actress committing suicide. If beauty was the key to the kingdom of happiness, this wouldn't happen.

Further, basic economics teaches that if ugly people are in less demand, their wages would fall, which would cause entrepreneurs to bid their wages up close to that of attractive people, since there would be profit to do so.

The only thing ugly here is Hamermesh's mad call for more government interference in the economy, on the dubious contention that ugly people are getting short-changed and that there is some kind of objective method by which ugly people can be determined.


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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Deficit is Not the Problem, Beltway Idiots!


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The Fatal Distraction


Friday brought two numbers that should have everyone in Washington saying, “My God, what have we done?”

One of these numbers was zero — the number of jobs created in August. The other was two — the interest rate on 10-year U.S. bonds, almost as low as this rate has ever gone. Taken together, these numbers almost scream that the inside-the-Beltway crowd has been worrying about the wrong things, and inflicting grievous harm as a result.

Ever since the acute phase of the financial crisis ended, policy discussion in Washington has been dominated not by unemployment, but by the alleged dangers posed by budget deficits. Pundits and media organizations insisted that the biggest risk facing America was the threat that investors would pull the plug on U.S. debt. For example, in May 2009 The Wall Street Journal declared that the “bond vigilantes” were “returning with a vengeance,” telling readers that the Obama administration’s “epic spending spree” would send interest rates soaring.

The interest rate when that editorial was published was 3.7 percent. As of Friday, as I’ve already mentioned, it was only 2 percent.

I don’t mean to dismiss concerns about the long-run U.S. budget picture. If you look at fiscal prospects over, say, the next 20 years, they are indeed deeply worrying, largely because of rising health-care costs. But the experience of the past two years has overwhelmingly confirmed what some of us tried to argue from the beginning: The deficits we’re running right now — deficits we should be running, because deficit spending helps support a depressed economy — are no threat at all.

And by obsessing over a nonexistent threat, Washington has been making the real problem — mass unemployment, which is eating away at the foundations of our nation — much worse.

Although you’d never know it listening to the ranters, the past year has actually been a pretty good test of the theory that slashing government spending actually creates jobs. The deficit obsession has blocked a much-needed second round of federal stimulus, and with stimulus spending, such as it was, fading out, we’re experiencing de facto fiscal austerity. State and local governments, in particular, faced with the loss of federal aid, have been sharply cutting many programs and have been laying off a lot of workers, mostly schoolteachers.

And somehow the private sector hasn’t responded to these layoffs by rejoicing at the sight of a shrinking government and embarking on a hiring spree.

O.K., I know what the usual suspects will say — namely, that fears of regulation and higher taxes are holding businesses back. But this is just a right-wing fantasy. Multiple surveys have shown that lack of demand — a lack that is being exacerbated by government cutbacks — is the overwhelming problem businesses face, with regulation and taxes barely even in the picture.

For example, when McClatchy Newspapers recently canvassed a random selection of small-business owners to find out what was hurting them, not a single one complained about regulation of his or her industry, and few complained much about taxes. And did I mention that profits after taxes, as a share of national income, are at record levels?

So short-run deficits aren’t a problem; lack of demand is, and spending cuts are making things much worse. Maybe it’s time to change course?

Which brings me to President Obama’s planned speech on the economy.

I find it useful to think in terms of three questions: What should we be doing to create jobs? What will Republicans in Congress agree to? And given that political reality, what should the president propose?

The answer to the first question is that we should have a lot of job-creating spending on the part of the federal government, largely in the form of much-needed spending to repair and upgrade the nation’s infrastructure. Oh, and we need more aid to state and local governments, so that they can stop laying off schoolteachers.

But what will Republicans agree to? That’s easy: nothing. They will oppose anything Mr. Obama proposes, even if it would clearly help the economy — or maybe I should say, especially if it would help the economy, since high unemployment helps them politically.

This reality makes the third question — what the president should propose — hard to answer, since nothing he proposes will actually happen anytime soon. So I’m personally prepared to cut Mr. Obama a lot of slack on the specifics of his proposal, as long as it’s big and bold. For what he mostly needs to do now is to change the conversation — to get Washington talking again about jobs and how the government can help create them.

For the sake of the nation, and especially for millions of unemployed Americans who see little prospect of finding another job, I hope he pulls it off.


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Friday, September 2, 2011

Iraqi Orphan Leaves X-Factor Australia Judges In Tears


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Emmanuel Kelly and his brother lost their limbs due to chemical warfare in Iraq. They were later adopted by an Australian family. Emmanuel makes his emotional X-Factor Australia debut.



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