Sunday, December 24, 2006

New York Times: Hakeem Jeffries

The New York Times
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December 24, 2006

New Guard, and Style, for Politics in Brooklyn

In decades past, the politicians who came out of central Brooklyn, New York’s largest black community, were shaped by the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and ’60s, with many coming of age politically during the Vietnam War era.

But this year’s elections, as well as last year’s, represented a changing of the guard that could signal a wider shift of black political consciousness in the city: the emergence of a class of politicians spawned in the professional world, with experience in private industry, nonprofit organizations and other fields.

One new state lawmaker was recently a lawyer for CBS. Another raised money for private schools. A third was a police captain; while another, who is headed to the City Council, worked for the transit system.

They are largely politicians who have little to no association with Democratic Party clubhouse politicians in Brooklyn, which has been tainted by recent corruption scandals. And the sheer number of newly elected officials in central Brooklyn, perhaps the biggest changeover in years, is something of a milestone — particularly in a political world in which incumbency, at least for state lawmakers, can last virtually a lifetime.

“We are now seeing a very new group of political leaders in Brooklyn who are, quite frankly, crossover politicians who have successfully delivered a message that speaks to the interests of different constituencies,” said Craig Steven Wilder, a professor of urban history at Dartmouth College.

Mr. Wilder, author of the book “A Covenant with Color: Race and Social Power in Brooklyn,” said the new crop of elected officials was “different from the group who came to power in the 1970s and 1980s, who came to politics through civil rights issues.”

“This group represents the post-civil rights generation. And they have to deal with a different agenda,” he said. “That includes meeting the needs of people who are gentrifying their areas, people who have been there a long time and people who have been marginalized.”

Notable among the new breed is Hakeem Jeffries, 36, who left his job as a lawyer for CBS to go to Albany. He was elected this year to the Assembly seat held for 25 years by Roger L. Green, who was convicted in a petty larceny case.

Another new assemblyman is Karim Camara, 35, who served as the director of fund-raising for the Cush Campus Schools, a private elementary and middle school in Brooklyn. He is also executive pastor at the First Baptist Church of Crown Heights. Last year he succeeded Clarence Norman Jr., the former Brooklyn Democratic Party chairman who was first elected in 1982 and resigned in a scandal.

And on the City Council, there is Darlene Mealy, 42. She is a former executive assistant at New York City Transit who won a hotly contested primary last year, beating William F. Boyland Jr., the patriarch of one of Brooklyn’s well-known political families. Also elected this year was Eric Adams, 46, who will go to the State Senate, succeeding Carl Andrews. Mr. Adams, a former police captain, was also a founder of 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care.

The best known of the new group is Representative-elect Yvette D. Clarke, 42, a city councilwoman and a former director of business development at the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corporation.

Ms. Clarke won a Democratic primary in September that received national attention when a white candidate, David Yassky, tried to capture the seat that for decades had been held by black lawmakers: Major R. Owens, and before him, Shirley Chisholm.

For many people in central Brooklyn who closely watch local politics, the new officials are a refreshing change after a period in which some of the incumbents they succeeded were tainted by scandal.

“The election of so many new black officials in Brooklyn has made a lot of people, including me, feel hopeful,” said the Rev. Clinton M. Miller, pastor of the Brown Memorial Baptist Church in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn.

“I think many of these new leaders are viewed as representing the political prototype of what an elected official should be in this era: someone who is steeped in the community, but who also knows how to operate in corporate and business settings.”

Mr. Jeffries, for example, was an assistant general counsel who specialized in litigation at CBS. “We are all products of the community who have gone out and excelled in various endeavors,” Mr. Jeffries said.

“But we have come back to work in the community, to use politics as a way to make a difference in the communities that we come from. That’s what the civil rights movement was all about.”

But some Brooklyn Democrats question whether they will be able to avoid the infighting that has created friction among many of their predecessors.

In fact, a generation ago, central Brooklyn’s black leadership was splintered into two factions. One was a group whose de facto leader was Albert Vann, an assemblyman who started his public career as a teacher. Mr. Vann, who is now a city councilman, was a community leader in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville struggle between the black community and the United Federation of Teachers over the local school board’s power to hire teachers.

Mr. Vann, who was a supporter of Mr. Owens, was also the political mentor of Mr. Green and several others.

On the other side were politicians who were loyal to State Senator Vander L. Beatty. Mr. Beatty often worked in collaboration with Brooklyn’s regular Democratic organization, which until recently was led by white politicians from southern Brooklyn.

Indeed, a generation ago, candidates and officials in Brooklyn routinely complained that the infighting among central Brooklyn’s black officials often hampered their ability to bring resources and funds into the area.

The feuding among politicians in those days was heated. In one case, in a 1982 primary race for Congress between Mr. Beatty and Mr. Owens, Mr. Beatty’s supporters hid in a crawl space above a bathroom at the Board of Elections office in Brooklyn. After the office closed for the day, Mr. Beatty’s supporters went to where the voter files were kept and doctored registration cards of Mr. Owens’s supporters, apparently in an effort to thwart an Owens victory.

Although that was an extreme incident, there have been long-standing tensions and rivalries in the borough for years. The newer elected officials have hopes of avoiding such squabbling, with plans to meet often, perhaps at regularly scheduled breakfasts, to determine ways to allocate recourses to their districts.

“One of the things about that that I think is a good sign is that we all like each other and get along well,” Ms. Mealy said. “Some of them have not even taken office yet. But we have camaraderie already. And it will make things easier for us to work together and get things done.”

But getting things done might take more than friendship and amity. They all have the disadvantage of being low in seniority in their respective houses of government. And they generally have fewer staff members and less influence than their predecessors, who enjoyed the benefits of incumbency and the clout and resources that came with it.

Still, they insist that their lack of seniority will not limit their effectiveness.

“We have the wisdom and experience of our predecessors to build upon,” Ms. Clarke said. “And our job is to find ways of working together and making even more of a difference in this new era. And I’m sure that we will all find ways to make our mark.”

Hakeem Jeffries Debate 2
Hakeem Jeffries Debate
Hakeem Jeffries: Principled Compromise
Dean, DFNYC, Daily Kos, Justin, Brooklyn, Nepal

Saturday, December 23, 2006

The Devil Wears Prada



















I just watched the movie The Devil Wears Prada. It shook me that it is a 2006 movie. This is today. It is scary.

Smart girl lands a job right after school at a top magazine as an assistant to the editor who is a legend in the industry. Her boyfriend flips burgers. As she progresses, the boyfriend grows away. Less than a year later, she quits her job. The guy is still flipping burgers. Her quitting brings them back together.

That is so Martha Stewart, guys not being able to keep up with successful women. If nothing else, go enjoy the money!

Of course the movie made me think of the Obama-Hillary tussle that will soon unfold. I am for Obama. It is personal. But I do strongly believe Obama will have to take in the gender theme. He has to carry both race and gender to a whole new level. He has to think in concrete terms, like having half his cabinet female.

Meryl Streep is ugh. She is so good at what she does. Al Pacino and Meryl Streep. I always wondered why they did not end up a couple. Amitabh Bachchan and Jaya Bhaduri, the two most talented actors of their generation in the Hindi film industry did. But I guess they got married and Amitabh said he would not want his wife to be working from 9 AM to 9 PM, and so she just went ahead and quit.

This love and work balance thing is so not settled at all. This continues to be a very real issue.

I would like to design a company where half the workers are women. Number one reason: that company will beat the competition because of that because it will be running on all cylinders.

There's some great Madonna and U2 music in there, two artists in the musical realm that I adore. The movie is really, really well done. I have never watched an okay or bad Meryl Streep movie. She is rare.

I love the way she says, "That's all." It is like Donald Trump saying, "You're fired."


The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
The Devil Wears Prada
Apple - Trailers - The Devil Wears Prada
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA | HOME
The Devil Wears Prada - Movie Info - Yahoo! Movies
The Devil Wears Prada
Amazon.com: The Devil Wears Prada: A Novel: Books: Lauren Weisberger
The Devil Wears Prada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Devil Wears Prada
Netflix: The Devil Wears Prada - Rent from Netflix - Free Trial
www.myspace.com/tdwp
The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
Mark Goldblatt on The Devil Wears Prada on National Review Online
Amazon.com: The Devil Wears Prada (Widescreen Edition): DVD: Meryl ...
BBC - Movies - review - The Devil Wears Prada
The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
Devil Wears Prada, The Movie - Yahoo! Movies UK
Devil Wears Prada | Now Showing | Guardian Unlimited Film
The Devil Wears Prada (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Devil Wears Prada - Moviefone
ODEON - - The Devil Wears Prada
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA Movie Synopsis
Barnes & Noble.com - Books: Devil Wears Prada, by Lauren ...

Obama! Obama! Obama!



























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Thursday, December 21, 2006

Money And Manhattan


This town is full of people who went to good schools, work good jobs, make good money, are never going to become millionaires.

Money is in the air, you can feel it. There are the outer boroughs, and there is Manhattan. Like there was this one guy, he used to come to some of the same progressive meetings I used to. Then he gave up. "It is all yuppies," he complained.

Most of them must have worked very hard to get where they are at. Most of them continue to work very hard just to stay where they are at. More than the per capita income, it is the density. There are so many of them. Midtown Manhattan has the greatest concentration of office space per square foot than any place on earth. Each cubicle is someone in a decent income bracket.

Politicians come from all across the country to raise money here. This is supposed to be their all-weather ATM. There are people who specialize in doing fundraisers. It is socializing, it is entertainment, it is I-did-my-good-deed-for-the-day the Manhattan way.

Where do you live? Upper East Side. What do you ride? A cab. Those are status symbols.

My car died on me recently. What is it about cars? Too many fluids to keep a tab on. But I was kind of rediscovering the joys of the four-wheeler. But when I came into the city last summer, I was just so happy not to have to need a car. Everywhere else in America, you need a car for everything. Grocery shopping? Car. Haircut? Car. I relished the subway. I still feel that is the only place New Yorkers meet, it is just that I don't understand why those walls have not been painted in a hundred years. There have been some late night sojourns when I have slept through my station. Once I went all the way to the very last stop. The sky was already early blue.

The drink. The cab. The dress code.

At Drinking Liberally, the drinks are free, but I have mostly rather talked. I don't think I have ever enjoyed beer in my life. And who wants a beer belly? I think I am going to show up much less often. It is the same 10 faces week after week.

I have experimented with the dress code. It used to be utterly casual. Then I started dressing up, minus the tie, say no to Jesus. Then it has been dress up bottom, casual warm top, going for the Matrix look.

I have a healthy feeling about money. Money is like a good conversation. Money, like words, is a vehicle of expression. Wealth creation is like writing poetry. There's art and science involved.

This is more commercial than most cities. What do you do? That can be a pointed question. What does your cellphone look like? What color is your parachute? Mine is the one I got when I first got a cellphone. I am not a big fan. I am a laptop fan, not a cell fan. But the thing about mine is, you connect it to a laptop, and the laptop goes online, for free, on the same free nights and weekends deal. I have a few different cameras. I don't need a camera phone. I hardly ever need a phone. Mostly it gets used when you are near some place you have agreed to meet somebody, and they are not there on time, or it is a tussle locating the other person.

Otherwise the phone stays in the pocket, turned off. Try voice mail. And if you really intend to communicate, nothing works like email, Gmail to be precise.

Sam Walton had plastic chairs at his headquarters. I am listening.

The thing is, it gets said, you meet someone at some event for three minutes, and you never see them again. So at events, the air is electric. People make all this effort to show up, and they end up spending most of their time with these three people they already knew. When you step outside that familiarity zone, there are sharks out there. You don't want to be seen like you don't have friends. Standing alone for a few minutes is not meditation, it is something else.

Good thing I get a kick out of conversation. I don't care two whits about baseball, etc. But talk politics, and I am on. And business. Impressive salaries are not that impressive, they are still just salaries. But it is really something to get someone to talk about their work that they are really into. Oh, the craft of it. I don't care if it is pottery. It could be lawyering, it could be banking. Better still if its is entrepreneurship. But those are few and far between.

What do you do? How do you do?

It gets said New York City is the most diverse city on the planet. It gets said New York City is the most segregated city on the planet. Attitudes don't go away just like that. But then it is easy. If you don't connect, you don't connect. The city is a civil war in motion. Only bloodletting has been outlawed.

"We don't like minorities up there in Connecticut."

"We are the same here in New York." Whites are minority.

Playful talk with the funnyman at MYD, Aaron Short.

Organized chaos that the city is.

But most of the jitters are just plain awkwardness. It is hard for all people to go to a party and say hello to strangers. Mostly it is that. Going to political events eases that. You go often enough, you end up knowing all the movers and shakers, all the top people. You get that insider feeling. There are only so many of them. And they go to each other's events. A lot of cross pollination.

The city is the Amazon forest. All sorts of human life forms can be found. I think that is what people are talking about when they say either you love New York or you hate New York.

Rent is steep. Cabs charge money. There is the occasional racist comment. But mostly people are just running. Catch me if you can. In the subway, people are mostly withdrawn. Remember what mama said, don't talk to strangers.

Cabbies stream in from the outer boroughs. Many of my fanciest comrades from the April Revolution are cabbies in the city. I don't know of Manhattan progressives who have done anything fancier, or are likely. Nothing like that has ever happened in world history.

There are 40,000 Nepalis in the city, three of them lawyers. They get rockstar treatment.

Map of Manhattan, NY
Welcome to Manhattan College
Manhattan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manhattan - New York City
Manhattan (1979)
Manhattan Institute
Manhattan, KS!
Manhattan Chamber of Commerce - New York City, New York Chamber of ...
NY1: Manhattan
[PDF]MTA Manhattan Bus Map
Manhattan Project - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chase Manhattan Bank
Maps & Neighborhoods - Manhattan



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Barack Hussein Obama And The White Boys In The Media


Reminds me of the Buddhist monks in California that the right wingers went after in 1996, and the Dems failed to defend. Oh look at them Buddhists, they are giving money to Al Gore! As if being Buddhist is dirty. The donations were small, pocket change.

Times, they are a changing. These whities are just going to have to measure up. This might be a US presidential campaign, but it will take place in a globalized world. Racists jokes are offensive, they are not funny. These white boys are going to have to find other ways to bond.

Imagine making fun of the Rodham name. Rodham is Hillary's middle name. Or Jefferson, like in William Jefferson Clinton, or the Jefferson Davis pie, named after a guy who was on the wrong side in the civil war. Or Herbert Walker, like in George Herbert Walker Bush, or just plain W, W like in George Dumbo Bush.

It is offensive enough when right wingers do it, and they stand to pay for it. They are going to get hit back. Hard. But these supposedly mainstream white boys in the media, what are they up to now?

Fitzerald, like in JFK.

I once met a guy at my college in Kentucky who talked of Arabs as sand n______s. This was way before 9/11.

Those who see the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as wars against Islam deserve to go down in defeat. The Al Qaeda are like the KKK. No Muslim elected them. They don't hold offices. They are a few thousand in an ocean of hundreds of millions of extremely poor Muslims who just want the best by their families.

Obama is not Muslim. But what if he were a Muslim American? This question is personal to me because I am Buddhist.

Within the framework of religious diversity, I appreciate the various faiths, Chistianity, Islam, Judaism, and all the rest of them. There is going to be mutual respect. Take that framework out, and I don't give a f____ about Jesus.

Let this election be about ideas and who can best lead the country in this new century where globalization and the internet are all the rage. I think someone with a cosmopolitan message stands a good chance. Obama got to know paddy fields as a child, like I did. We bond.

Don't throw stones from your glass house.

Barack: Personal Concerns
Policy Making The Matrix Way
Obama's Weapon On Clinton: Iraq
Obama Will Announce In January
Eliot Spitzer For Running Mate
Barack Obama: Time For A Generation Shift
New Orleans: 2008 Democratic Convention
Next Stop: White House
On November 7: In Harlem: For Obama
Democratic Vision For The 21st Century
The Matrix
The Audacity Of Gravitas: Restore Intelligence To The White House
Barack Is A Deaniac
Barack Obama: This Is A New Century
Barack Obama: New Approaches To Old Problems
Switching To Obama



In The News

The Obama backlash. It's started. Chicago Sun-Times a body of anti-Obama material is surfacing--centering around his record and his religious beliefs and yes, his middle name, Hussein. It's a backlash--and a foreshadowing of what is to come. ....... Schlussel: Should Obama be president "when we are fighting the war of our lives against Islam"? ......... several media figures have taken it upon themselves to issue warnings to Obama of a purportedly ruthless Clinton operation that will attempt to win by brute force, or, as Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund put it, "haul out the brass knuckles." ......... Dick Morris falsely claimed that Obama has "never introduced a bill" in the Senate .......... right-wing pundit and regular MSNBC guest, Debbie Schlussel ....... Answering her own question, she wrote: “NO WAY, JOSE ... Or, is that, HUSSEIN?” ....... the bigoted conservative attacks against Senator Obama ...... The public discourse surrounding Senator Obama has devolved into a petty game of who can say his middle name more often or insult his character and ancestry with the most zeal. It’s time for this bigotry to stop. News outlets like MSNBC can make the first move. They shouldn’t give people like Schlussel airtime to spew their hate-filled conspiracy theories because when they do, they undermine their own reputations as legitimate news organizations.”......... numerous media figures have gone out of their way to highlight Obama’s middle name in recent weeks, a detailed accounting of which is available below or online at the following link: http://mediamatters.org/items/200612200005 ...... on November 7, co-anchor Chris Matthews remarked that Obama's "middle name is Hussein" and suggested that it would "be interesting down the road." ........ On November 27, MSNBC host Tucker Carlson referred to radio host Bill Press as "a true member of the Barack Hussein Obama fan club." ...... During the November 28 edition of MSNBC's Hardball, Republican strategist Ed Rogers referred to "Barack Hussein Obama." ....... On the December 5 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume, senior political correspondent Carl Cameron told viewers: "Though he's written two books about himself already, most people know very little about Barack Hussein Obama Junior's uncommonly privileged life." ....... On the December 11 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, correspondent Jeanne Moos noted that "[o]nly one little consonant differentiates" Obama and Osama. She then added, "[A]s if that similarity weren't enough. How about sharing the name of a former dictator? You know his middle name, Hussein." .......... On the December 11 edition of The Situation Room, CNN senior political analyst Jeff Greenfield compared the similarity of Obama's "business casual" clothing to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's "jacket-and-no-tie look." Greenfield concluded the segment by saying: "Now, it is one thing to have a last name that sounds like Osama and a middle name, Hussein, that is probably less than helpful. But an outfit that reminds people of a charter member of the axis of evil, why, this could leave his presidential hopes hanging by a thread." He later explained on the CNN website that he was making "a joke." .......... On December 13, Matthews teased another interview with Rogers by describing the strategist as "the one who just loves Barack Obama's middle name Hussein." ...... On the December 14 broadcast of his nationally syndicated radio program, Rush Limbaugh gave Obama a "nickname" -- "Barack Hussein Odumbo" (in reference to Obama's "big ears"). ....... On the December 14 edition of Hardball, NBC's Mike Viqueira announced "a man named Barack Obama, whose middle name, incidentally, is Hussein, running for president."
Obama smackdown, round 1: his tainted blood Houston Chronicle Many months ago, readers began asking me whether Barack Obama is Muslim. [Apparently Schlussel's readers are unfamiliar with Google or Wikipedia. Or she's just making it up. - JW] Since he identifies as a Christian, I said, "no," and responded that he was not raised by his Kenyan father.......... In Arab culture and under Islamic law, if your father is a Muslim, so are you. And once a Muslim, always a Muslim. You cannot go back. In Islamic eyes, Obama is certainly a Muslim. He may think he's a Christian, but they do not. ....... Imagine that - he's interested in the land of his parents. Unbelievable! (Excuse me while I go erase any signs of my own interest in Ireland, where my parents were born.) She closes the column hinting darkly that Obama cannot help but betray America.
Pins for Obama's balloon Washington Times Did you know Sen. Barack Obama's middle name is Hussein? You do now. ... Make no mistake: If he decides to run for president, quite a few people will be reminding you of it. Those people are not his friends. .... Republican consultant Ed Rogers' frustration was showing in the way he emphasized Mr. Obama's middle name on MSNBC's "Hardball": "Count me as someone who underestimates Barack Hussein Obama," he said, pronouncing "Barack" in a way that rhymed with hard rock. ...... Conservative radio windbag Rush Limbaugh similarly delights in mocking Mr. Obama's full name. El Rush-bo even posted a caricature on his Web site of Obama with huge floppy ears and the title "Barack Hussein Odumbo." Cute. Sort of like the class clown taking on the class valedictorian and prom king who is also basketball team captain. ..... he joked about the middle-name thing with just the right tone: astute, self-deprecating humor. His middle name is no big deal, he says, "when you are already starting with 'Barack Obama.' " ...... he tried marijuana and cocaine in his wayward youth, a refreshingly straightforward and revealing contrast to President Bush, who dodged probing drug questions as a candidate, and President Bill Clinton, who claimed never to have inhaled.
taking a second look at Barack Obama Kansas City Star
Video: Carol Marin Explores Obama's Political Past NBC5.com
Obama the anti-Bush
Los Angeles Times
Inexperience won't hold Obama back Wisconsin State Journal
Bill Clinton a looming force in Hillary's race
Scotsman
Hint: He's tall, in the Senate, on TV a lot Chicago Sun-Times
US has `never had a mother' be president, Sen. Clinton says
San Jose Mercury News

Obama to decide on White House run this week Chicago Tribune Another bit of Obama news is this. Gallup's pollsters are reporting today that nearly half of the public doesn't know who he is.

British Airways Cancels Heathrow Flights Amid Fog (Update5) Bloomberg
Drunk Muslim says divorce, Bihar village enforces it Telugu Portal
Six metros, rural Haryana to go WiMax Moneycontrol.com
US Carriers Vie for China Rights TheStreet.com
CORRECTED: New York's Spitzer refiles rejected H&R Block suit MSN Money
NASA's Space Shuttle Discovery Set to Land Friday NASA
Second lawsuit filed against Taco John's BusinessWeek
Israeli-Palestinian Summit Could Take Place by Year's End Voice of America
NEPAL: Ending impunity should be taken seriously by the government ...
Reuters AlertNet
CPN finalizes representation in Nepal's interim parliament People's Daily Online
CPN reforms to adapt to peace in Nepal
People's Daily Online

Google Takes Blogger Out Of Beta InformationWeek

WiMAX IPOs Are on the Way BusinessWeek
Wuhan picked to become China's fourth air hub China Daily
Mothers Against Drunk Driving severs ties with Miss Teen USA
San Jose Mercury News
Nepal to deploy citizenship certificate distribution teams
People's Daily Online
Barack Obama Disappoints Re Israel/Palestine New York Observer
IITs to come up in Rajasthan, AP and Bihar
Daily News & Analysis
Kerala tops literacy chart, Bihar at the bottom
Times of India
China fights EU shoe duty
MSNBC
Sen. Clinton Talks About Oval Office
Forbes
Sen. Clinton Would have Voted Against Iraq War Zaman Online
New York state board approves big Brooklyn redevelopment plan
International Herald Tribune
Leader hints US should talk to al-Qaida
Leading The Charge
India to ask Myanmar to crack down on terror camps
Times of India
Nasa and Google reach for the stars
Financial Times “This agreement between Nasa and Google will soon allow every American to experience a virtual flight over the surface of the moon or through the canyons of Mars,” said Michael Griffin, Nasa administrator. .... Nasa had more information on the planet and universe than any other entity in history, but much of it was scattered and difficult to access. .... the concept of an interplanetary internet
Google Earth Soon the Be Followed by Google Space Playfuls.com
US gives Sudan until year-end to accept UN force
Reuters AlertNet
Eminem finalises divorce number two from long-time love
Daily News & Analysis
Eminem and Kim Mathers Divorce Again AllHipHop
FIFA lifts soccer ban on Iran
CBC News
Fat Bacteria in Human Guts Tied to Obesity
NPR










Amitabh Bachchan, the most recognized face on the planet
YouTube: Amitabh

Monday, December 18, 2006

Laughing Liberally Brings The House Down December 30











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Laughing Liberally
Laughing Liberally - Upcoming Shows
Laughing Liberally | Democracy For NYC
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The Metropolist: Laughing Liberally Turns 1

Drinking Liberally
Drinking Liberally - Chapters
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Drinking Liberally - Mailing Lists
Drinking Liberally Boston
Drinking Liberally in Cincinnati
Drinking Liberally Asheville
Drinking Liberally of Salt Lake City
Drinking Liberally Fayetteville
Podcasting Liberally - Seattle, Washington
Drinking Liberally in Cincinnati: My Top 10 Music Picks for 2006
SquareState.net :: Drinking Liberally coming to Highlands Ranch
Drinking Liberally Bloomington
Drinking Liberally Idaho Falls
Drinking Liberally Addison
Drinking Liberally Palo Alto
Drinking Liberally in New Milford
Drinking Liberally Detroit
Drinking Liberally Olympia--Issues of the Moment
Drinking Liberally Capitol Hill
Scrutiny Hooligans: Drinking Liberally: Splitsville
Drinking Liberally, thinking globally
Drinking Liberally Aurora
The Inside Dope: Drinking Liberally tonight
NH-02 Progressive: Drinking Liberally This Friday
coloradolib: Drinking Liberally with Peggy Lamm
New Patriot: Reminder: Drinking Liberally TONIGHT in Minneapolis
Drinking Liberally Dallas
Drinking Liberally Moscow
Desert Rat Democrat: Drinking Liberally in Tucson
Drinking Liberally Lexington
Drinking Liberally Delaware County
Drinking Liberally Ogden
the chutry experiment: Fayetteville Drinking Liberally
Thoughts from Kansas: Drinking Liberally
~American Entropy~: Drinking Liberally - Charleston, SC
Cosmopolity - Drinking Liberally - West Bronx
Richard Sprague: Drinking Liberally on Mercer Island
F-Words: Moscow Drinking Liberally article available online
SquareState.net :: Drinking Liberally coming to Highlands Ranch
Drinking Liberally @ SLC | Democracy for Utah
ProgressNow Action | Event | Drinking Liberally Denver
The Daily Princetonian - Drinking Liberally at the Annex
Drinking Liberally Downtown Chicago
Liberal, Loud, and Proud: Drinking Liberally - Coming to Lansing!
Desert Rat Democrat: Drinking Liberally Phoenix, Tomorrow Night
Drinking Liberally | Pasadena Democrats: Electing Democrats ...
drinking liberally williamsburg/greenpoint
Drinking Liberally Delaware
Drinking Liberally Santa Barbara
Drinking Liberally Olympia

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Bushism Means No Talk, All Gunfire, Just Flatten Them Out


Bushism is a terrorist ideology. It says you put out a political philosophy, and then you demand submission, and if that does not happen soon enough, you flatten them out.

That is what Bin Laden does. He says he wants a fundamentalist Islamist government in your country, and if he is not going to get it, he is going to send in suicide bombers to create "spectacular" acts of destruction.

I know from my Nepal democracy movement experience
(The First Major Revolution Of The 21st Century Happened In Nepal) that the Nepalis in the city played a key role in the magic that happened in Nepal in April. That has got to be potentially true also of the Arab immigrants. But guess what Bushism doles out to them? Racist demonization. If you are Arab, you are a terrorist. I suspect you.

There are millions of Arabs in the US and Europe. They came for the good life. They are mainstream, want the best by their families, are harmless, and are pretty much boring like the millions of Christians, and Jews, and what have you.

There might be a few terrorists here and there. But then there are also murdereres and rapists in society. They stand uneliminated. How many white males have been demonized for every Unabomber that there was?

These Arabs in New York City would be the front line soldiers of non-violence for raging democracy movements in the Arab world which is the only recipe for lasting peace in the region.

Iran holds elections at all levels. But the US does not get along with Iran, does not so much as want to talk to Iran. The Saudis hold no elections whatsoever. Bush and the Saudis are buddy buddies. What's wrong in the picture?

Political solutions have to be sought. The military options always have to come in last. And if the political options are sought to the point of exhaustion, the military options need not be harnessed.

But Bushism goes the other way. Talking is too many words for Bush. He is too in love with his few, simple phrases. Dumbo. And so the guy goes and creates havoc.

9/11 cost a lot of innocent lives. That was the tragedy of the situation. These were not soldiers fighting a war. Innocent lives lost during the American adventurism in Iraq fall in the same category. Third World lives are not less valuable than American lives.

Democracy as an ideology, and nonviolent organizing is the way to go. I am not exactly talking nonviolence, although that I am. I am talking nonviolent militancy, to be precise. I am also talking war, but I am talking war with communications technology. I am suggesting The Matrix as the tool to organize New Yorkers to help spread democracy into the nooks and corners of the world.

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