Saturday, April 30, 2011

Fact Sheet: Executive Order, Syria Human Rights Abuses

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Today, President Obama signed an Executive Order imposing sanctions against Syrian officials and others responsible for human rights abuses, including through the use of violence against civilians and the commission of other human rights abuses.
 
This Order provides the United States with new tools to target individuals and entities determined to have engaged in human rights abuses in Syria, including those related to repression; to be a senior official of an entity whose property is blocked pursuant to the Order; to have provided material support to, or to be owned or controlled by, persons blocked under the Order.   
 
The United States strongly condemns the Syrian government’s continued use of violence and intimidation against the Syrian people.  We call upon the Syrian regime and its supporters to refrain from further acts of violence and other human rights abuses against Syrian citizens seeking to express their political aspirations.
 
In signing today’s Order, the President imposed sanctions on the following individuals and entities listed in the Annex to the Order:
 
·         Mahir al-Asad:  The brother of Syrian President Bashar al-Asad and brigade commander in the Syrian Army’s 4th Armored Division, who has played a leading role in the Syrian regime’s actions in Dar’a, where protesters have been killed by Syrian security forces.
 
·         Atif Najib:  A cousin of Syrian President Bashar al-Asad, Najib was the head of the Political Security Directorate (PSD) for Dar’a Province during March 2011, when protesters were killed there by Syrian security forces.
 
·         Ali Mamluk: director of Syria’s General Intelligence Directorate (GID).
 
·         Syrian General Intelligence Directorate (GID):  The overarching civilian intelligence service in Syria.  The GID represses internal dissent and monitors individual citizens, and has been involved in the Syrian regime’s actions in Dar’a where protesters were killed by Syrian security services.
 
·         Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – Qods Force (IRGC-QF):  Iran is providing material support to the Syrian government related to cracking down on unrest in Syria.  The conduit for this Iranian material support to the Syrian General Intelligence Directorate is the IRGC-QF.  Despite the Government of Iran’s public rhetoric claiming revolutionary solidarity with people throughout the region, Iran’s actions in support of the Syrian regime place it in stark opposition to the will of the Syrian people.  The IRGC-QF is a branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which is considered the military vanguard of Iran.  The IRGC-QF was designated by the Treasury Department in October 2007 for providing material support to terrorist groups around the world, including the Taliban, Lebanese Hizballah, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command.
 
As a result of this action, any property in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons in which the individuals listed in the Annex have an interest is blocked, and U.S. persons are generally prohibited from engaging in transactions with them.

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Republican Allegedly Sent E-Mail Depicting Obama as Monkey

Republican Allegedly Sent E-Mail Depicting Obama as Monkey

And they say many members of the Tea Party aren't racist.

An altered photo depicting President Barack Obama as an ape (pictured below) with the caption, "Now you know why no birth certificate," was allegedly sent out by Marilyn Davenport, a Tea Party activist and Orange County representative, and then leaked to the media.

Now GOP Orange County Chairman Scott Baugh is calling for her resignation:

"It's just highly inappropriate, it's a despicable message, it drips with racism and I think she should step down from the committee."
When newspaper OC Weekly first broke the story and asked Davenport to respond, she said,"It was just an Internet joke," but then reportedly retorted, "You're not going to make a big deal about this are you?"

It's funny. Folks on both sides of the political aisle often agree that former President George W. Bush was one of the most incompetent commander-in-chiefs this country has ever had, but he was never disrespected (barring the shoe throwing incident by an Iraqi journalist) the way our incumbent president has been.

And this vitriol has continuously spilled over to the First Lady. Michelle Obama was depicted as an ape on the Internet back in 2009; when Googlers inputted "Michelle Obama," they were served with the offensive ape image as the top-search result. The website that hosted the photos removed the image and issued an apology.

Still, the shameful images of the First Lady resurfaced once again with the term "hail to the chimp," and a few months later, Glenn Beck thought it was clever to resurrect this age-old insult by calling President Obama's America a "planet of the apes."

Republican Allegedly Sent E-Mail Depicting Obama as Monkey

What's the significance of equating black people with apes?

According to Assistant Professor of psychology Phillip Atiba Goff, this association -- both historically and currently -- makes it okay to abuse and or kill blacks.

New York Post cartoonist Sean Delonas ironically brought this concept to life in his cartoon, where an ape is shown with two bullets and the words, "They'll have to find someone else to sign the next stimulus bill."

Once the cartoon was met with stiff backlash, the newspaper released a lukewarm apology, with the editors insisting that "sometimes a cartoon is just a cartoon."

Goff's seven-year research on the "psychological phenomenon of dehumanization," though, reveals something much deeper. Participants in Goff's studies, which monitored how much of an association was made between blacks and apes and its consequences, tended to endorse police violence against blacks:

"In one study, participants who were made to think about apes were more likely to support police violence against black (but not white) criminal suspects. The association actually caused them to endorse anti-black violence."

Another study showed that in cases where black criminals were characterized in ape-like terms, they were more likely to receive the death penalty:

"Looking at a sample of death-eligible cases in Philadelphia from 1979 to 1999, the more that media coverage used ape-like metaphors to describe a murder trial (i.e. "urban jungle," "aping the suspects behavior," etc.) the more likely black suspects, but not white suspects, were to be put to death.Not surprisingly, black suspects were much more likely to be described in ape-like terms. And they were more frequently executed by the state."

Let's just let that settle.

We all know words and images are never just words and images. They shape and mold how we see ourselves and the way we see others. So if you can dehumanize someone by taking away their humanity and turn them into a beast, it makes it perfectly reasonable to abuse and kill that beast, because he was never really human after all.

Almost four years later, folks are still burning up about this nation's President and First Lady being black. I know four years doesn't compare to the 300-plus years of prejudice and social brainwashing that's occurred in this country, but it's time to really let this type of small-minded thinking go.

After all, with the GOP presenting no serious competition to the Democratic ticket in 2012, these haters would make better use of their time by humming to Young Jeezy's joint below:





 

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Someone tell Mariah Carey where babies come from

Doesn't she realise she's actually going to have to give birth at some point?

Mariah Carey's getting everything ready for the arrival of her twins in May. "I wanted to create a beautiful, tranquil, cosy environment for the babies," she told America's Life & Style magazine. See? All that stuff about demanding puppies or refusing to breath normal oxygen that hadn't been flavoured with sweeties or whatever it was she was said to be into ? it's all in the past. She's ready for this.

Oh, but hang on. "I feel like I'm bringing two individuals into the world," she continues, whimsically. Feels like? Jesus, did nobody in her entourage have the courage to tell her that there really are a couple of babies in her tum-tum that she'll have to give birth to at some point? Well, Lost in Showbiz won't flinch that easily: Mariah, the reason you "feel" as if you are bringing two individuals into the world is because you ACTUALLY ARE BRINGING TWO INDIVIDUALS INTO THE WORLD! And don't freak out when  they come out with no clothes on either. That's how it's supposed to happen.


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A year ago on Unclutterer

2010 And the fourth and final winner of the Fujitsu ScanSnap giveaway is … The fourth and final winner in the ScanSnap giveaway is @teal64. Congratulations! 2009 Unitasker Wednesday: The dog umbrella Have any of you seen a pet umbrella in action? It is definitely something to see. Ask Unclutterer: Storing sports equipment Reader Jesse [...]

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Young Americans and Blacks Remain Optimistic Despite Struggling Economy

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Due to today's struggling economy, many young people are less inclined to believe in the "American Dream" than their parents and grandparents. "More than 4 in 10 predict it will be tougher to raise a family and afford the lifestyle they want," according to a poll conducted by an Associate Press-Viacom poll of Americans aged 18 to 24. But this has not prevented African Americans or whites from feeling hopeful that they will be able to adapt and cope with their circumstances.


"Social Security may not even exist when I'm older. Health insurance is going up. Everything just costs more," said Ashley Yates, a nursing student at San Francisco State University. But students like her are not shaken by the dismal economy. 90 percent of the 1,104 participants surveyed actually believe that they will find a career that will bring them happiness.

Young adults are willing to take on second jobs to supplement their incomes to make up for low salaries and there is a trend of optimism. More students and young professionals are determined to better their individual circumstances even if they believe that the general population will not be able to accomplish their goals.

"Even if it never gets better permanently, we'll adjust to whatever it is," said Preus, 22, a linguistics and cognitive science grad from Cornell University who plans to pursue her passion for science in graduate school.

A Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation-Harvard University poll discovered the economic crisis within the last few years has eliminated nearly a fifth of Americans' net worth. African Americans and Hispanics were more likely to be left broke, jobless and concerned that they lack the skills needed to gain profitable careers. But they also remained the most hopeful that they would eventually be able to prosper.

AOL BlackVoices also reported that black teens were more optimistic about their economic futures compared to the general population. Seventy percent of black students ages 15 to 18 thought their standard of living would be better than their parents, compared with just 36 percent of white students, according to a Hamilton College poll.

In contrast, white baby boomers were not as hopeful. "I think things are going to get worse before they get better. A lot of people are going to have to buckle down because we've got a generation now that doesn't work," said David Still, 54, a married, white father of two who works as an electrician in Sumter, S.C.

Studies have speculated that the rise in optimism among blacks is due to the election of President Barack Obama despite the history of oppression and strife in America. Perhaps a generation where more students have seen traditional pathways to economic success feel they are more inclined to create their own road to accomplish their goals.

"A lot of stuff in the news is telling everyone that they can't, that the economy is crumbling and there's no room for anyone to do anything," said 23-year-old Lucas Ward. "But I'm watching that being disproven every day.

 

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Mario Balotelli gives Britain a new buffoon

The Premier League footballer's antics make those of Wayne Rooney and the rest seem parochial by comparison

Can this be right? That the week's most heartwarming piece of showbiz news comes from the terrifying grotesquery of perversion and horridness that is the Premier League's footballing community? Yes, it can. The Manchester City striker Mario Balotelli swaggered out of a casino last week and casually handed �1,000 to a homeless person. Where's the twist? Did he then demand sex from him? Or make him entertain his entourage by dancing like one of those miserable, enslaved Russian bears from the adverts? No. He just gave him the money and went off home. And suddenly, in some minuscule way, the footballing world's karmic scales were momentarily rebalanced.

From a PR point of view, it has been a particularly bad year for footballers, what with Ashley Cole accidentally shooting someone and Nani building a statue of himself and everything. Someone needed to act to show they weren't all bastards all of the time. It was fitting that Balotelli was that man. Since he arrived in the UK from his homeland of Italy in September last year, he has fast become a new figurehead for footballing buffoons. He is a real idiot's idiot: a man-child who makes the antics of Wayne Rooney and the rest seem so parochial and narrow-minded by comparison. Swearing on telly? Shagging your best mate's girlfriend? Pah! Crude, childish horseplay to Balotelli.

This season he has been sent off, caught fighting, professed to have an allergy to football pitches and already been fined repeatedly for misbehaviour. After all this we might have expected him to push the boundaries of unpleasantness further by, say, killing a dog, filling it with massive, ethically unsound diamonds and wearing it as a hat while he moonwalked on to the field of play, laughing hysterically and licking blood from his hands. But, you see, that is just the sort of thing his public would have expected from him. And Balotelli is anything but predictable.

Giving a wad of cash to a homeless person is exactly the sort of counter- intuitive behaviour he specialises in. No one expected him to trespass in a women's prison with his brother for a bit of a laugh. But last October, while recuperating from an operation back in Italy, that's exactly what he did. No one expected him to chuck darts at youth team players out of a window at Manchester City's training ground last month either, but he did that too. He blamed both incidents on boredom. See what I mean? He is an imaginative idiot. His brain is curious and enquiring, always seeking out new ways of being massively stupid. And that's what separates him from his dreary idiot-contemporaries, who are happy to play it safe with their predictable acts of street-brawling and incessant adultery.

According to the Sun's source, this was not the first time he had committed an act of charity. "Mario is really generous," they said. "He always hands �20 notes to the Big Issue boys without even taking the magazine." Hear that? Without even taking the magazine. Sounds like the sort of thing Jesus would do, right? Well, the Big Issue people would probably lecture him about the importance of giving homeless people a hand-up rather than a handout. But Mario wouldn't listen. As far as he is concerned there are only two ways of doing things: the Mario Balotelli way and the wrong way. It would be useless to point out the fine line between sincere acts of charity and self- aggrandising acts of vulgarity.

Like so many of his contemporaries, he is seemingly imbued with superhuman self-belief and a cast-iron sense of entitlement. He isn't guaranteed a starting place in the Manchester City team and is yet to establish himself as an international player, but this is what he has to say about his professional status: "There is only one player who is a little stronger than me: Messi."

He is just as comfortable with his wealth. When he wrote off his sports car in Manchester shortly after arriving in the city last year, attendant police officers searched him and discovered �5,000 in cash hanging out of his back pocket. Asked why he was carrying such a sum, Balotelli shrugged and said: "Because I am rich." Nobody can control him. His exasperated manager Roberto Mancini has commented: "Every day I fight against Mario and sometimes I would like to give him a punch." Mario's response? "He couldn't. I do Thai kick-boxing."

There are tiny hints of vulnerability behind the bravado. He has complained of being homesick for Italy. Last month, millions watched a heart-rending YouTube clip of him struggling to pull on a training bib during a pre-match warm up before losing his temper and instructing a member of the coaching staff to do it for him. It was almost poetic; a poignant encapsulation of this young man's inability to navigate himself through the daily challenges presented by a cruel universe without seeking refuge in rage and indignation.

Liam Gallagher recently said of him: "Mario's smart, I like the way he's a bit of a headcase." And so the torch was passed from the previous incumbent to the next: Britain has its new Idiot Laureate.


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The Top 5 Longreads of the Week [13]

Mother Jones guest blogger Mark Armstrong is the founder of Longreads, a site devoted to uncovering the best long-form nonfiction articles available online. And what better time to curl up with a great read than over the weekend? Below, a hand-picked bouquet of five interesting stories, including word count and approximate reading time. (Readers can also subscribe to The Top 5 Longreads of the Week by clicking here.)

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7-Year-Old Gets Handcuffed at School After Easter Egg Tantrum

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7-Year-Old Gets Handcuffed at School After Easter Egg Tantrum

Straight out of the WTF files, 7-year-old student Joseph Anderson (pictured) is traumatized because he was handcuffed at his school, thrown in to an ambulance and then sent to a local hospital for psychiatric evaluation. When Joseph, a special education student who has been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, didn't like the color of an egg he was painting, he became upset.

School staff reportedly told him to calm down, but Joseph allegedly jumped on to one of the tables and continued his tantrum. Here, the story gets murky: Joseph says he repeatedly said, "I just want my Mommy," but an unnamed source said the little boy was waving scissors and cursing.

Either way, by the time Joseph's mother, Jessica Anderson, arrived at Queens elementary school P.S. 153 from her job in Manhattan, her son had already been forcibly transported to Elmhurst Hospital Center, where she then learned from a nurse that her child had been handcuffed:

"I was crying. I broke down," she said. "They know that my son is [in] special ed. It's like they're trying to get rid of him, and it worked because I'm not sending him back there."

Describing her son's state, Anderson said:

"He was crying and saying, 'I want Mommy.' Why handcuff him? Why get the cops involved? He's only 7."

Ever since the incident, Joseph, who is speech delayed and is said to have emotional problems, haphazardly wets his pants and cries if he sees or hears an ambulance or the police:

"If he hears an ambulance, he runs under the bed and screams, 'They're going to get me,'" said the single Mom. "He's really traumatized. I don't let him watch the news anymore, because if he sees cops, he cries."

Still, City Education Department Spokeswoman Marge Feinberg maintains they made the right decision to cuff the kindergartener:

"The school tried to defuse the situation and then called for outside assistance when there was a concern the child would harm himself or others."

And the NYPD had this to say:

"[Joseph was] acting in a threatening manner."

But all I can think about are those pairs of plastic scissors my children use and have brought home from school -- you couldn't cut yourself with those scissors even if you tried.

I completely understand that kids have gotten out of hand in schools. What with the Columbine shootings, adolescent tantrums aren't what they used to be. Now, instead of just practicing fire drills, my children also practice "Intruder Drills" with their peers to protect against emotionally dysfunctional shooters.

But we are talking about a 7-year-old, who even if he brandished a plastic, blunted-edge scissor, only broke down and begged for his mommy.

If I were Anderson, I would sue. I would sue until each adult present and the policemen who actually handcuffed him were penniless. What? We really can't restrain a single-digit child anymore? As if he needed restraining. He sounds like he just needed some quiet time with the school counselor so that he could explain how he was feeling and discuss better behavior for next time.

After all, isn't he in special ed? Doesn't the school have people on staff -- if not within the classroom -- to deal with children who have special needs?

Or are they just getting this little black boy ready for a life of prison? You tell me.

Because last time I checked, we were supposed to support and build up our children, not treat them like hardened criminals who have hurt somebody.

If Joseph were mine, I'd surely get him therapy, but on my own, when he got scared, I would hold him in my arms and kiss him tenderly until his worries slipped away. I'd look him in those big brown eyes and tell him each day that he is precious ... and loved ... and safe. And then I'd remind him that he is going to be somebody great one day.


 

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Remarks by the President During Tour of Tornado Devastation

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release
Location: 
Alberta, Alabama

10:46 A.M. CDT
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, Michelle and I want to express, first of all, our deepest condolences to not just the city of Tuscaloosa but the state of Alabama and all the other states that have been affected by this unbelievable storm.  We just took a tour, and I’ve got to say I’ve never seen devastation like this.  It is heartbreaking.  We were just talking to some residents here who were lucky enough to escape alive, but have lost everything.  They mentioned that their neighbors had lost two of their grandchildren in the process.
 
     What you’re seeing here is the consequence of just a few minutes of this extraordinarily powerful storm sweeping through this community.  And as the governor was mentioning, Tuscaloosa typically gets a tornado during the season, but this is something that I don’t think anybody has seen before.
 
     In addition to keeping all the families who’ve been affected in our thoughts and prayers, obviously our biggest priority now is to help this community recover.  I want to thank Mayor Maddox for his extraordinary leadership.  Chief Burgess (ph) I know is having to dealing with a lot of difficulties.  One of the challenges that the mayor was explaining is, is that the assets of the city -- a fire station that we passed on the way in, police resources, emergency resources -- those too have been affected.
    
     Fortunately the governor has done an extraordinary job with his team in making sure that the resources of the state are mobilized and have been brought in here.  I’m very pleased that we’ve got a FEMA director in Craig Fugate who is as experienced as anybody in responding to disasters even of this magnitude.  And we’ve already provided the disaster designations -- we’ve already provided the disaster designations that are required to make sure that the maximum federal help comes here as quickly as possible.
 
Craig is working with the teams on the ground to make sure that we are seamlessly coordinating between the state, local and federal governments.  And I want to just make a commitment to the communities here that we are going to do everything we can to help these communities rebuild.
 
     We can’t bring those who have been lost back.  They’re alongside God at this point.  We can help maybe a little bit with the families dealing with the grief of having a loved one lost.  But the property damage, which is obviously extensive, that's something that we can do something about.
 
And so we’re going to do everything we can to partner with you, Mr. Mayor, with you, governor.  As the governor was pointing out, this community was hit as bad as any place, but there are communities all across Alabama and all across this region that have been affected, and we’re going to be making that same commitment to make sure that we’re doing whatever we can to make sure that people are okay.
 
That bee likes you.  (Laughter.)
 
     GOVERNOR BENTLEY:  It’s a wasp.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, got it.  There you go.
 
     GOVERNOR BENTLEY:  No, he got him away.  You didn’t get him.
 
     MAYOR MADDOX:  Where’s the Secret Service when you need them?  (Laughter.)
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Finally, let me just say this.  As you walk around, we were just talking to three young people over there -- college students here at the University of Alabama who are volunteering now to help clean up.  One of the young ladies there, she actually lived in this apartment; wasn’t here at the time the storm happened.
 
     What you’re struck by is people’s resilience and the way that the community has come together.  And obviously that's testimony to the leadership of the governor and the mayor, but it’s also inherent as part of the American spirit.  We go through hard times, but no matter how hard we may be tested, we maintain our faith and we look to each other to make sure that we’re supporting each other and helping each other.  I’m sure that that spirit is going to continue until this city is all the way back.
 
     So, Mr. Mayor -- he was pointing out that there’s a lot of national media down here now, and the mayor expressed the concern that perhaps the media will move on in a day or a week or a month, and that folks will forget what’s happened here.  And I want to assure him that the American people all across the country are with him and his community, and we’re going to make sure that you’re not forgotten and that we do everything we can to make sure that we rebuild.
 
     So with that, Governor, would you like to say a few words?
 
     GOVERNOR BENTLEY:  I would.  And, Mr. President, I would like to personally thank you and Mrs. Obama for coming and visiting Alabama because you know as you fly over this -- and I did yesterday -- as you fly over it from the air, it does not do it justice until you’re here on the ground.  And I just want you to know how much I appreciate that.
 
     We asked for -- we’ve mobilized the state.  We declared a state of emergency early on, even before the first tornadoes hit, and then we mobilized our National Guard the first day.  We then asked the President for aid and we asked him to expedite that, and they have done that.  And I just want you to know how much I appreciate that, Mr. President, because all these people appreciate that so much.
 
     We have eight counties across the state that have been hit by major tornadoes.  This probably is the worst one, but we have others.  As you go across the state, you see the same evidence of tornadoes all across the state.
 
And so there are people that are hurting.  We have now 210 confirmed deaths in Alabama.  We have 1,700 injured.  We have a number of people missing at the present time.  We’re going to continue to work in a rescue-type mode, but we’re now more in a recovery mode.
 
     Thank you, Mr. President.  (Laughter.)  If you’ll keep him off of me --
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  I’m going to keep my eye on you.  We’re looking out for each other.   That's --
 
     GOVERNOR BENTLEY:  Yes, sir.  Yes, sir.  (Laughter.)
 
     But I am -- let me say I am so proud of our first responders in this state.  They have done an outstanding job.  Our mayors, our county commissioners, our police, our firemen -- they have all just done a fantastic job.  Our EMA people, they have just -- we have got a great team.  They’ve all worked together.  And now we have the federal government helping us.  And, you know, that just shows when locals and state and federal government works together, we can get things accomplished, and that's what we’re going to do.
 
     And so, Mr. President, welcome to Alabama, but not under these circumstances.  We want you to come back and maybe go to a football game over here at a later day and when things are better.  But thank you for your help.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  I will gladly come back.
 
     GOVERNOR BENTLEY:  Thank you, sir.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Mr. Mayor, if you’d like to say a few words.
 
     MAYOR MADDOX:  Mr. President, Governor, Mrs. Obama, thank you for coming today.  The last 36 hours have been probably the most trying time in this community’s history.  But you’re going to see a new story being written here in Tuscaloosa.  And in the years to come these chapters are going to be fueled with hope and opportunity.
 
     Since this tragedy began, I’ve been using Romans 12:12 when Paul wrote under persecution, “Rejoice in our confident hope.”  Well, today, Mr. President, your visit here has brought a confident hope to this community.  And in the days, weeks and months to come, we’re going to be a story that you’re going to be very proud of and you can talk about across this land.
 
     Thank you again for coming today.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you for your leadership.  And two last points I want to make.  First of all, we’ve got our congressional delegation here, and I am absolutely confident that they will make sure that the resources are available to help rebuild.
 
     To all the local officials who are here, I know that they’ve been personally affected, but I know that they’re going to provide the leadership in this community, working with the mayor and the governor to do what is needed.
 
     And finally, I think the mayor said something very profound as we were driving over here.  He said, what's amazing is when something like this happens, folks forget all their petty differences.  Politics, differences of religion or race, all that fades away when we are confronted with the awesome power of nature.  And we’re reminded that all we have is each other.
 
     And so hopefully that spirit continues and grows.  If nothing else comes out of this tragedy, let’s hope that that's one of the things that comes out.
 
     So thank you very much, everybody.

END
10:56 A.M. CDT

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Pete Lawrie: A Little Brighter - review

(Island)

In an effort to avoid the "major-label singer-songwriter" tag, Welsh newcomer Pete Lawrie has made it known that he's a big fan of dubstep, but to no avail. What comes through on his debut album is absolute adherence to the commercial rulebook, from the top of his nicotine-streaked vocals to the bottom of his vaguely opaque lyrics ("I've kissed the girls and stayed out in the rain/ But I can count a good man as a friend of mine/ So how could I complain?" he rumbles rhetorically on How Could I Complain?). It's actually pleasant listening in a Springsteen's-nephew way; one track ? the trumpet-laced barnstormer All That We Keep ? is even fiercely uplifting. In the main, though, A Little Brighter isn't characterful enough to stand out, though America may take to Lawrie's being British, yet sounding like a blue-collar New Yorker.

Rating: 3/5


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AwayFind launches new features to help people curb their addiction to checking email

AwayFind launches two new features to help people overcome their addiction to constantly checking email.

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Five Ways to Outwit the ATM

This post is from GRS staff writer Donna Freedman. Donna writes a personal finance column for MSN Money. She also writes about frugality, intentional living, and life in general at her own blog, Surviving And Thriving. Automated teller machines are from the devil, and debit cards are Satan?s imps. Sure, it?s great to be able [...]

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President Obama's Mother Ann Dunham Is Brought to Life

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President Obama's Mother Ann Dunham


Reporter Janny Scott spent two years compiling information for a book on President Barack Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham (pictured above with her first husband, Barack Obama Sr.).

The book, "A Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama's Mother," was adapted into a six-page article in the New York Times, which is a delightfully inquisitive journey of the woman who was, as President Obama would later write, "the single constant in [his] life."

Scott merges those who knew Dunham with unexpected quotes and dialogue, illustrating a complex woman of courage who had a high-moral compass: Intentionally or not, the label [of being known as just a white woman from Kansas] obscures an extraordinary story - of a girl with a boy's name who grew up in the years before the women's movement, the pill and the antiwar movement; who married an African at a time when nearly two dozen states still had laws against interracial marriage; who, at 24, moved to Jakarta with her son in the waning days of an anticommunist bloodbath in which hundreds of thousands of Indonesians were slaughtered; who lived more than half her adult life in a place barely known to most Americans, in the country with the largest Muslim population in the world; who spent years working in villages where a lone Western woman was a rarity; who immersed herself in the study of blacksmithing, a craft long practiced exclusively by men; who, as a working and mostly single mother, brought up two biracial children; who believed her son in particular had the potential to be great; who raised him to be, as he has put it jokingly, a combination of Albert Einstein, Mahatma Gandhi and Harry Belafonte; and then died at 52, never knowing who or what he would become.

Another highlight presents Dunham as a stoic and steely matriarch when her son is attacked with racist jeers in Indonesia:

After lunch, the group [including Dunham, Barry and friend Elizabeth Bryant] took a walk, with Barry running ahead. A flock of Indonesian children began lobbing rocks in his direction. They ducked behind a wall and shouted racial epithets. He seemed unfazed, dancing around as though playing dodge ball "with unseen players," Bryant said. Ann did not react. Assuming she must not have understood the words, Bryant offered to intervene. "No, he's O.K.," Ann said. "He's used to it."

"We were floored that she'd bring a half-black child to Indonesia, knowing the disrespect they have for blacks," Bryant said. At the same time, she admired Ann for teaching her boy to be fearless.

Dunham always had the highest expectations for her son. She even spoke about Obama being president of the United States as a child:

It was clear to many that Ann believed Barry, in particular, was unusually gifted. She would boast about his brains, his achievements, how brave he was. Benji Bennington, a friend of Ann's from Hawaii, told me, "Sometimes when she talked about Barack, she'd say, 'Well, my son is so bright, he can do anything he ever wants in the world, even be president of the United States.' I re­member her saying that." Samardal Manan, who taught with Ann in Jakarta, remembered Ann saying something similar - that Barry could be, or perhaps wanted to be, the first black president.

"What do you want to be when you grow up?" Lolo asked Barry one evening, according to Saman.

"Oh, prime minister," Barry answered.

Even if you are not an Obama fan, this book sheds light on a woman who dared to live as she saw fit. Apparently, Dunham was able develop and rear the first black president of the United States while creating an existence that she could be proud of.

Read the entirety of the article on Dunham here.

Also check out her timeline.

 

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Pandora Background Listening for iPhone OS 4

Back in the summer of 2008, Pandora had over 10 million listeners on the web and we were growing at a pretty good clip. Then in July we released Pandora for iPhone and everything changed. Suddenly, people could take Pandora with them: into the gym, the car, the living room, the kitchen, outside while jogging... the list goes on. Pandora truly became an anytime, anywhere phenomenon and as a result the use of Pandora accelerated dramatically. Less than two years later, we have over 50 million listeners and mobile listening accounts for more than 40% of the hours we stream.

In the years that followed, we brought Pandora to more and more environments with the goal of being everywhere our listeners wanted us to be: on Blackberries and Androids, Blu-Rays and TVs.

However, there was still one thing missing for our iPhone users: background listening. That's all about to change.

Some weeks ago Apple invited us to a secret meeting where they revealed that background applications were coming to the iPhone OS 4 and that they'd like to use Pandora to show off these new capabilities at their big iPhone OS 4 product unveiling. Under the new operating system, Pandora will stream in the background while you use your iPhone to browse the web, read an e-book or play a game.

Participating in Apple's launch event meant sending an engineer to Apple to update our software for OS 4 (this took about a day) and many, many, many (many) hours of presentation preparation so that we'd be ready to share the stage with Steve Jobs. This of course was all done with the utmost secrecy. Just a tiny handful of people even inside Pandora knew what we were doing.

Getting to participate in one of these Apple events has been a kind of lifelong dream for me. The Apple folks are masters of these types of presentations and it was an incredible experience to get to experience it from the inside. As our Founder Tim and I stood on stage presenting, there was a moment about halfway through where my nerves calmed enough (The software was going to work! It was going to be ok!) that I could just enjoy the moment and just take it all in. I don't think I'll ever forget it.

Apple released the iPhone OS 4 Developer Preview this week so that engineers can start updating their applications in anticipation of the launch of the new OS sometime this summer. We're incredibly excited to enable background listening on the iPhone (and ultimately on the iPad too) -- we'll be ready just as soon as Apple ships the new OS.

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Readers' reviews: Jon Savage on Berlin, Terrence Malick, Glasvegas, Eric Bana

The best of your comments on the latest films and music

Oh, West Berlin! City of fascination for suburban Brits in the late 1970s and early 80s! Drugs! Sex! Great albums! Great films! More drugs! More sex!

Last week, Jon Savage outlined what made West Berlin so culturally fascinating 30 or so years ago: "An oasis of extremity created by the cold war ? peopled with bohemians and outcasts." One thing he didn't explain was why it was peopled by those bohemians and outcasts. Enter Hooper165, who explained that Berliners were exempt from conscription to the West German army, which "triggered in the 70s and early 80s a vast youth migration from all parts of Germany into Berlin". Showmaster expanded the point, explaining that even as the young were desperate to move in to the city, the old were desperate to move out. And why did the young live so much in the moment? Showmaster answered that from personal experience: "I needed to spend a few Sunday mornings listening to the rabbits setting off the mines to fully understand that it was completely surrounded by an extreme and aggressive neighbour. The well-understood military fact that for every allied soldier in Berlin the Russians had at least one tank and 1,000 troops waiting to invade created an amazing atmosphere in the city. One young person caught the zeitgeist when they revealed the common understanding: 'We are all dead in 20 minutes anyway, so live for those 20.'"

When West Berlin was attracting all those young bohemians, Terrence Malick was forging his reputation as a director with the films Badlands and Days of Heaven. Malick was the subject of David Thomson's Biographical Dictionary of Film column last week, and there was a certain amount of excitement from readers about the prospect of The Tree of Life, the forthcoming Malick movie. "The fact that this new film is completely conceived by him, as opposed to being an adaptation or an interpretation of historic incident, must mean we're going to get even more of his vision and sensibility up on the screen, surely?" suggested leroyhunter. "That's what I want to see anyway."

Sometimes the hearts of those who toil on F&M swell with pity, as we see our dear readers turn upon some poor subject with unbridled venom. The latest recipient of your ire is James Allan, the singer of Glasvegas (and an indoors sunglasses-wearer), interviewed last week by Dave Simpson. How, dear readers, would you describe Allan? "Pretentious self-indulgent twat," offered Mickyboy. "A total numpty," suggested martin77. "Musicians and music that should be muffled by pillows," said navro.

Maybe one's liking for Glasvegas is determined by one's tolerance for soul-baring, for when the band's defenders arrived, all praised Allan's willingness to be honest and empathetic in his lyrics. "I think it's an impressive thing to show your scars in public, as James Allan does," fazza said. "It is also very plausible that [he wears sunglasses because] he is shy and not a pretentious twat. They're an interesting band and he's an interesting man." DreadedSunnyDay added: "The man's lyrics are some of the most brutally honest I've heard in a long time. He possesses that very rare quality of uplifting the listener by way of genuine solice while making you feel absolutely distraught at the same time."

We suspect Joe Queenan has not yet been forgiven for what we now refer to, in hushed voices, as The Branagh Affair. Certainly, his piece lauding Eric Bana's talents led to a comments thread of vitriol, with his greatest crime being giving too many spoilers. In Joe's defence, it must be pointed out that no film whose ending was genuinely revealed was released later than 2009. As missfrankie put it: "All those complaining about spoilers should maybe try to have a discussion about the fate of characters in films without discussing the fate of characters in films. Not easy, is it?"


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