Archive for June, 2009

Jun 30 2009

Pentagon mulls easing ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ law: Gates – Yahoo! News

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

Pentagon mulls easing ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ law: Gates – Yahoo! News.

Gates offered as an example “when we’re given information from someone with vengeance in mind or blackmail, somebody who has been jilted.

“If somebody is outed by a third party, does that force us to take action?” he said.

“That’s the kind of thing we’re looking at — seeing if there’s a more humane way to apply the law until it gets changed.”

Ok.  I appreciate the spirit of the idea here, but honestly, this would be a dumb move.  Or a very smart one, depending on your perspective.  If the new policy is that the president’s hand is not forced if someone is outed for less than honest reasons – the best thing for gay activists to do is out military personnel.  A subversive undoing of  DADT.

If that’s the president’s plan, then good.  But then I sure do wish he’d come up with a subversive way to get us a solid health plan.

QT

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Jun 25 2009

Is He Still Black? Remembering the Time Michael Answered the Question

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

Barack Obama faced this question, but years ago, so did Michael Jackson. This video answered the question, and was SUCH a big deal, what with it’s all star cast (Eddie Murphy, Iman and Magic Johnson!). Plus – claiming Egypt for black folks.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/nDxsM5jLNxM&amp;rel=0&amp;fs=1" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/v/nDxsM5jLNxM&amp;rel=0&amp;fs=1</a>

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Jun 25 2009

I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus – Jackson 5

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

(Song clip here)
When I was 4 years old – I heard my dad’s lp of the Jackson 5 Christmas Album. “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus” was my favorite, because I really sympathized, feeling sorry for Michael that his big brothers didn’t believe him… and I TOTALLY believed him. Song under the fold.
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Jun 25 2009

God Speed Your Journey, Michael Jackson.

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

Michael Jackson died today and I’m heartbroken. Here’s a link to prior blogging about him… and I’ll try to have something else to say:

QT’s prior posts about Michael Jackson

QT

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Jun 24 2009

Open Left:: Parcel Delivery with a Public Option

Published by QueenTiye under health care

Open Left:: Parcel Delivery with a Public Option.

Diarist tremayne at OpenLeft, with the most cogent example of how public and private can work effectively together:


… I immediately thought of the U.S. Postal Service. Here’s a government-run service that can deliver a paper document to any remote location you choose for 42 cents.  They can also deliver packages quickly and at a very competitive rate. Impressive.

But even with this efficiency the “public option” for package delivery has a number of healthy competitors. There’s FedEx (started in 1971 as Federal Express), DHL (founded in 1969), UPS (founded in 1907) among others.



Well said.  Repeat, repeat, repeat…

QT

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Jun 23 2009

My Letter to HealthReform.Gov

Published by QueenTiye under health care

Hopefully this will reach the president, but I’m not going to take chances – I’m going to write Rahm Emmanuel and Ari Emmanuel and the President myself.

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I’m not here to write a story. I’m here to share one, and to beg the president to make congress respond to the American people. This is America, not Iran, and when anywhere from 60 – 75% of the populace is in favor of a public plan, our elected representatives are obliged to hear us, and respond to US, and not the monied interests lining their pockets.

Mr. President – if our elected representatives are on the take – we have no one but you to turn to… or else we have to take to the streets and make our own green revolution. Our voices cannot be stolen. Please respond:
Dad, by Lee Stranahan

Well, I Wonder, by Lee Stranahan

Me

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Jun 23 2009

The Coop Plan

Published by QueenTiye under economy, health care

The Coop Plan – Kent Conrad’s compromise proposal instead of a public plan has been roundly criticized as too small to make a difference. Some of the reason it’s being criticised is that it would never eventually yield to a single-payer plan…a complaint I don’t think most Americans have. Some of the reason its being criticized though, is that it would be so small the big insurance companies would eat it alive, and it would never meet the prime objective of ensuring a large enough entity to force the big insurers to compete and improve business practices to drive down costs, while delivering better service. THAT’S a valid concern.

I like the idea of member cooperatives. Credit unions don’t outcompete the big banks, but they sure as heck provide better services. I would be excited about seeing member owned coops for health care delivery. So – I proposed the following to improve of Sen. Conrad’s idea:

1. create a national umbrella organization with regional chapters.
2. force the national insurers to break up similarly into regional chapters (think: the break up of Ma Bell)

In recent discussions - it seems that point #1 has been taken up as a good idea… if they follow through with point #2 – I’m onboard.

Btw – I’ll take the congressional public option too – it sounds like a solid plan. The negotiation between the congressional option and a stronger (from a regulatory standpoint) Conrad option – would yield something unique, and valuable for the American people.

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Jun 18 2009

Freedom of Conscience, and extremism

Published by QueenTiye under religious intolerance

Elvis Dingeldein asks a thoughtful question in a post called “Also, Don’t Blame Muhammad“, at bobcesca.com: what we can do to prevent the spike in violent religious extremism whenever the religious right is out of power in the US?  His original post was further clarified in the last segment of his radio show here: (June 4 podcast).

I’m going to take my time answering, because I don’t want to come across as having “the answer” – I don’t think I do.  But the question, now fully articulated, seems to suggest some immediate thoughts, and I wanted to share them.

I think, fundamentally – what CAN be done, is what IS being done, and we need to find ways to follow suit.

First – the beauty and challenge of American democracy is that it is predicated on freedom of conscience.   As long as we reserve the right to our freedom of conscience (expressed in the 1st amendment jointly as a restriction on government making any laws that would seem to “establish” a religion and the freedom from government interference with the expression of religion amongst private citizens), we will always have religious expression in the public square.  People hold ideas, be they religious or philosophical, and they reserve their right to act upon those ideas.

Second – and this is one that really hit me the other day – we need to remember that the howling of those who are now “out of power” is not just because they are out of power – it is because the foundation of their world is shaken.

That second one is a biggie.  I had a small glimpse of it the other day, when I saw the headline “Yankees drop 8 in a row to Bosox.”  Something in my stomach turned – and the world felt just slightly off kilter. Let me put that in context: I’m not a “fanatic” – I typically ignore baseball all year long, and only pay attention the the playoffs if the Yankees are in them.  All the rest of the year, baseball goings on are background noise.  So you see what kind of baseball fan I am.  At the same time, I know a lot of Yankee lore.  I know about the House that Babe built, and I remember  Reggie Jackson as Mr. October, and I know about “The Curse.” In fact, I know enough about the curse to have been worried, when the Yankees swindled Alex Rodriguez from the Red Sox, that the curse would be broken.  And sure enough, it was. As disinterested a fan as I am, this makes me feel a dreadful sense of anxiety.   All is not right with the world.  Perhaps the Yankees are the ones who are cursed now, I wonder.  And I’m angry.  I’m angry about the new Yankee Stadium (don’t like the idea at all).  I’m angry about the Alex Rodriguez deal.  I can’t stand Alex Rodriguez – never have liked him, and what little bit of liking I could have had for him dissipated when the Yankees lost to the Red Sox in the pennant.  All of this emotional investment over…. baseball.

Thinking on this slightly irrational reaction to a simple newspaper headline, I suddenly had a grasp of what the world must feel like to some people.  I’m talking about the people who remember when abortion was illegal, and only “those kinds of girls” had them.  I’m talking about people who remember segregation, and especially who remember when there just was no way a black man OR a woman could figure so prominently in national politics.  I’m talking about those whose foundational understanding of the world includes white men on top, all the time.  I’m thinking about how they must feel every morning when they wake up and think “WTF??” I’m thinking about how their knees must knock a little bit, and their stomachs roil whenever they have to hear on the news that there is someone called President Barack Hussein Obama.  Irrational though it may be, I suddenly had a great deal of sympathy for these who history has left behind.  I suddenly realize that for them, nothing may be more important than restoring balance and order to THEIR universe.  What would it take?

Well – there are a bunch of very wicked people who are playing on their fears.  Understanding that quaking sensation in the belly, these wicked people promote these fears, make it seem justified, for their own gain.  But President Obama has chosen another approach – he’s created safe space for those fearful ones.  He speaks in the language of faith to reassure these fearful ones that the world has not turned upside down.  He invites the religious in – because religion is that last bastion of stability that they hold on to.  In short – he reminds them that after all, they are NOT left behind – he’s bringing them along for the ride.

Many on the left decry these efforts by the President, but I think they are wrong to do so.  The toxic atmosphere can only grow more toxic unless people predisposed to feel displaced are instead empowered – but to do good, and to contribute to, rather than be left behind by the march of history.

To the extent that we can, we who are in President Obama’s corner, need to be reaching out for these displaced people, and showing them how they are empowered by the changes happening, rather than leaving them to the vile intent of those who seek only to manipulate their fears.

I said in a comment on Bob Cesca’s site that I was glad that Pat Buchanan was so thoroughly embraced on MSNBC.  He is one of those displaced people I’m talking about.  Surrounded by people who want to hear his opinion, but who disagree, sometimes sharply, his voice can be a part of the change that is happening, a dialectic that propels us forward, rather than a disruptive and destructive force that pulls us down.  I continually remember the anecdote of the campaign when a young canvasser knocked on a door of a poor white family.  The woman who answered, had to ask her husband who they were voting for… and upon the husband’s reply, repeated for the canvasser “We’re voting for the n*gg*r.”  You know what? I’m sure we were glad to have the vote.

QT

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Jun 18 2009

Public Health Care Option

Published by QueenTiye under Uncategorized

Spread the word!

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