Archive for July, 2008

Jul 23 2008

Barackapella!

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

I stumbled across this on YouTube and thought it was wonderful, so I grabbed it for my Video Page.

Well - this is a group of mainly (maybe all) white kids singing Yes We Can accapella - and they basically handle it. Somehow, it feels like coming full circle to me. It brought a tear to my eye. Funny how music transcends, and also serves as markers of progress where it counts - among the people.

Check it out! The video is labelled “Barackapella” which is what the kids call themselves. :)

QT

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Jul 22 2008

Military Too Positive?

Published by QueenTiye under press coverage

Sometimes it just gets silly:

Above is video of Andrea Mitchell of MSNBC complaining bitterly about lack of press access in Iraq and Afghanistan. I wish I had a longer clip that had Andrea Mitchell responding to the idea of the military being too positive to the Obama campaign. The idea is laughable on its face. General Petraus has no particular reason to be overly friendly to Obama, as he and Obama clash on opinions about what to do in Iraq (in today’s news conference, Sen. Obama asserts that this clash is appropriate - that the generals on the ground have a single mission while the president, or any candidates for that office, have to think about the country as a whole, and not just one aspect of the country’s strategic objectives). My point is - it seems highly likely that McCain is the favorite of the military, NOT Obama - and if the press was shooed away from the goings on in Iraq and Afghanistan it was either for their protection, or because the candidate wanted an opportunity to do as close to a genuine assessment as he could - which likely necessitated being away from press view.

Anyway - I am curious to know how Andrea Mitchell felt about today’s press conference, or how she feels about McCain’s lambasting of the media in an upcoming ad.

QT

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Jul 21 2008

LA Times OpEd on Obama and Race

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized, race relations

A pretty good article: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-rodriguez21-2008jul21,0,1787991.column

I’ll quote this part here:

In the meantime, voters seem to be reading a whole lot of racial significance into an Obama triumph.

According to a recent USA Today/Gallup poll, about two-thirds of blacks and Latinos and just over one-half of whites agreed that an Obama victory would improve race relations. Blacks were the most optimistic, with 23% saying it would make race relations “a lot better,” compared with 13% of whites. Similarly, 85% of blacks said an Obama win would be a sign of progress toward racial equality in the U.S.

But does this mean that blacks would see a President Obama as a black leader who “speaks” for them, a leader in the mold of civil rights advocates? Asked who they would choose if they had to pick one individual to speak for them on issues of race, 29% of black respondents selected Obama. Although he got the most support as spokesman, 49% named someone else, and nearly a quarter named no one.

That’s amazingly good news to me. I’m thrilled to see stats confirming that black folks don’t think that Barack Obama is our spokesperson or savior. We like him, but we get it that he’s running for president of the United States… ;)

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Jul 20 2008

Obama in Kuwait (this will make you smile)

Published by QueenTiye under Barack Obama, Uncategorized

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Jul 20 2008

Photos And Video From Barack Obama’s Foreign Tour

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized


Pictures emerging from Barack Obama’s tour. Enjoy. I hope I can get one of him shooting hoops, but if not, here’s a link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bimTBZPYvWM

Seriously - I’m happy he visited the troops - they look so happy to see him, and he has a comfortability with them that’s really wonderful to see.

QT
More on Barack Obama
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

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Jul 19 2008

McCain Leaks Details Of Obama’s Iraq Trip

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

I’m hoping, against hope, that this is a choreographed fakeout between the two campaigns. I can’t see any good reason for McCain to need to look like he’s having a “senior moment” in order to shield Obama, since the media was doing just fine keeping the schedule under wraps (and of course, it was in the media’s best interest to keep it all under wraps, as their colleagues are travelling with Obama on his overseas tour), but I just want to have hope that no one could be so callous as to expose people to this kind of danger for political reasons.

QT
More on John McCain
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

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Jul 18 2008

McCain Surrogate: “The Muslims” Are “Going To Kill Us”

Published by QueenTiye under religious intolerance


Religious intolerance is one of the nasty subcurrents that is playing itself out in the 2008 election cycle. All this “Obama is Muslim” garbage, besides being fundamentally untrue, makes it seem as though there’s something WRONG with being Muslim - and fosters a climate whereby the general populace takes for granted the possibility that there is, after all, something wrong with Islam.

This notion that “the Muslims” want the US to bow down or be killed is offensive in the extreme - but it at least it is blatantly offensive - and out in the open. Maybe we can have this dialogue too?
More on John McCain
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

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Jul 18 2008

Obama Should Stop Lecturing African Americans

Published by QueenTiye under race relations


If Africans from Africa are some of the most successful immigrants, as has been argued by Mr. Cohen’s article, it isn’t “racism” alone holding African Americans back. And if African Americans - of which I am one -don’t get this reality and start owning up to it, we aren’t ever going to really move forward. African-Americans are some of the MOST successful in this country AND yet, when you look at the very worst of society - we are quite disproportionately represented there. So what’s the deal? Do white folks just hate blacks from America? Are we being pushed out in favor of guilt-free blacks from other countries? Or, do we actually bear some responsibility for some of the crap we go through in this country?

And why the heck can’t it ever be said? Is it maybe because the so called white liberals like us at the bottom and think we can’t ever get on with life without them? Maybe Barack Obama is treating us with more respect by firmly expecting that we are indeed capable of helping ourselves - especially if government does its part?
More on Barack Obama
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

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Jul 05 2008

Faith-Based Initiatives

Published by QueenTiye under Baha'i, press coverage, service

Obama’s going to get a lot of flack about the “faith-based initiatives” announcement he plans to make today, as part of his major speech about faith.  He gets 100% support from ME, because I believe this is a fundamentally African-American perspective.

I’ll pause here to apologize.  I meant to start this project talking about sexism, but then my life went a little haywire - my dad and his wife, both chronically ill, needed my attention, and then my stepmother died - and while I will soon make an Obama Project post about her, I’ve not had the heart to do it just yet.  In the meantime, this issue has caught my attention, because it brings home for me how much like my Dad Sen. Obama is.

African-Americans are considered to be much more conservative than much of the democratic party, and in my own personal experience, I find this to be true.  Attitudinally, I’m one of those conservative minded folk.  I find it liberating to be divorced from political parties, because it forces me to truly vote my conscience, and not according to partisan agendas.   At least one reason why African Americans are so conservative is because of our rootedness in our religious experience.   Perhaps Obama was thinking of the African American experience when he talked about people clinging to religion - black folks do so to a large extent - and to the extent that we do, the community hangs together, and when we lose that binding tie - we fall apart.  For African Americans - religion has been the portal to freedom and progress across the board.  Churches acted as stations in the Underground Railroad.   Biblical passages acted as beacons of hope in the stride toward freedom.  Preachers railed about injustice through the generations - Martin Luther King is just the most famous - not the first or only example of this… and Malcolm X, though he was of another faith, was yet another example of the expectation of blacks that faith would be an active force in today’s world, not just in the promise of a better hereafter.

Community activism therefore, frequently began and ended at the church - and in a disgraceful crisis of black male absence from religious life, the way to attract black men to faith has been in to assure them that they were not going to be passive waiters on God’s Accomplishment, but active instruments of God’s Will.  If they could pray, and then get up and sign up 50 new voters, or march on Washington, or city hall, or whatever - men could believe that there was something worthwhile in Faith.  Obama came to faith in this way - a trajectory that isn’t uncommon in the black community.

My dad was also a community organizer.  Raised Christian, having taken a turn with Islam, and having been for a while a Black Panther (original black panther), community activism was the hallmark of his life for most of mine. And while many would suppose that a former Black Panther would be against anything “white” - when I was old enough to observe my dad in action - one of his biggest allied organization was Catholic Charities - the Catholic church in his community ran a homeless shelter/soup kitchen/day care center/etc.  My dad worked with them to find funding, ran his own community service center in which he processed clients and referred them to Catholic Charities, etc.  Funding that became available through Lyndon Johnson dried up under Reagan, and took a considerable toll on his efforts as a small community organizer - and therefore on the community in which he served.

Looking at my dad’s example, I know that increased funding to charitable organizations - including religious ones, would have been a boon to the community.  My dad lived in Bedford-Stuyvesant in Brooklyn.  In Brooklyn, we called it ‘Do-or-Die Bed-Stuy” - which should give you a good idea of just how rough a neighborhood it is.  A community full of people falling through the cracks… the homeless who aren’t homeless enough to be counted as such, the kids being left to raise themselves as their parents struggle through addiction, the abandoned buildings that serve as tax shelters to whomever owns them but refuse to actually develop them (leaving the crack addicts to make these places their homes), etc… these aren’t problems government can fix alone - these are problems that absolutely require a partnership between the local community and the government.

My dad is now disabled, and I’ve been spending the last few weeks running around trying to get him situated with social services.  The bureaucracy involved is unbelievable.  Many reading this post will be squeezed, as I am, between children and parents needing care. But not many will be dealing with a parent who misses qualifying for medicaid by $24.00.  Not many will be struggling to figure out if HEAP and Section 8 will meet his need to survive on a budget of $769.00/month.  Not many will be banging their heads against a brick wall trying to get themselves established as the designated payee by social security for a parent who has short term memory loss, mild dementia, and is surrounded (and possibly influenced) by crack-addicts who know when his social security check arrives in the mail.  The bureaucracy that is absolutely necessary to ensure that our government services are being used appropriately - is in the way of the real person who needs help.  Local charitable organizations, including religious ones could help immensely - because being closer to the ground they are more able to make real assessments, and not rely on guidelines set  in abstract.

This perspective - one that rather disproportionately affects African Americans, is one that Obama has, first hand, as a community organizer from the South Side of Chicago.  I have no doubt that he’s seen this kind of problem first hand, over and over… and I have no doubt that this is what drives his decision to continue, and even expand, the faith-based policy that Bush established, while his personal eclectic background gives me confidence that he will genuinely apply the principles - it won’t be a “Christians only” kind of thing.

As a Baha’i, commitment to service is absolutely a fundamental of the Faith.  Much of the Faith’s efforts are wholly self-funded - only Baha’is are able to contribute to Baha’i funds.  That said - there have been a number of initiatives Baha’is have been involved in that have extended beyond the Faith and reached out in partnership with government and/or interfaith groups.  These would benefit from funding from Faith-Based initiatives - and I believe these would have truly transformative influence on the communities where they are based.

QT

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