Monday, October 29, 2007

Sox Win!!!

Expansion dream - Boston Sports Blog

Unreal. Another World Series championship.

As Eric Wilbur writes, it is not the same as 2004 and nothing ever will be. But this is sweet!

Sunday, October 28, 2007

By the Mississippi Delta, A Whole School Left Behind - washingtonpost.com

By the Mississippi Delta, A Whole School Left Behind - washingtonpost.com

If you have not seen Lalee's Kin - an HBO documentary on a poor black family in the Mississippi Delta region and the school district where they live - you must! The district in this article sounds a lot like it. The documentary has had a profound impact on my students. Two years ago, one class raised money to purchase textbooks for the elementary school there.

I wish we could have a serious discussion of how to fix our education system in this country. Until we address the inequities created by funding primarily from local property taxes, this problem will not go away. More standardized testing will not solve the problem. We need better teachers - with higher pay - and smaller classes. More and better preschool programs. More mentor programs. More and better after school programs.

If we don't fix this, we will continue to deny an embarrassingly large segment of our population the hope that life can get better, that the next generation can leave poverty behind. We will continue to deny ourselves the promise that some poor kid might invent a new source of energy or a cure for cancer. We will lower our chances for competing successfully with India and China in the coming decades, since only by tapping intot he full potential of all 300 million Americans can we hope to match their growing middle classes.

Like developing alternate sources of energy and forcing our government to stop adding to the $9 trillion federal debt, this is an issue of national security for the United States, not a liberal cause to be dismissed or ignored. We cannot afford to allow poverty and inadequate education to plague our country in the 21st century.

Pulling for Lester and the Red Sox...

Boston Red Sox - Extra Bases - Red Sox blog - Boston.com

Not wanting to jinx anything, I won't count my chickens before they hatch. But it is incredible that the Sox are on the verge of their second World Series victory in three years! My father waited his whole life for one and never saw it. My grandfather was at Fenway for the 1918 series and never saw them win again. I waited decades...

But here they are, up 3-0 in the series and with a made-for-tv-movie story in the making tonight. Cancer survivor Jon Lester takes the mound and could potentially be the winning pitcher in the clinching game. Unreal.

So far the Series has been a bit anticlimactic. Other than the 2-1 victory in game 2, the games have been dominated by the Sox. And there's an air of destiny about this team, like the 2004 version. they are happy, goofy even, and relaxed. Just taking it one game at a time. Francona has been brilliant at times in his game management and seems to do an even better job in the clubhouse. He's by far the best manager of the Sox in my lifetime.

The young guys - Pedroia and Ellsbury - have been spectacular. It will be good to be Jacoby this offseason - young, good looking, charming, and the hero of the World Series. Boston will be his city!

It is definitely not as nerve wracking as '04. That championship took care of so much baggage and anxiety. Now it's just a hunger for another. I almost feel like Goerge Steinbrenner - anything less than a WS victory is unacceptable with this team and ownership.

I also have to give credit, again, to the ownership and Theo Epstein the GM. Incredible to be back in the Series so quickly - and pretty much on the timetable Theo foresaw. Even more so to be on the verge of another WS sweep. And they did it with a dramatically different team, built around a core from '04 but with lots of new talent from the farm system, trades, and free agency. Theo has made his mistakes, but overall he's been amazing.

So here's hoping for a victory tonight for Jon Lester! I actually could end up going to game 6 or 7 if it goes that far, but I'd rather have the Sox close the deal ASAP in Colorado. Let's just win...

Friday, October 26, 2007

Cum Laude Speech

Below is the text of the speech I delivered October 25, 2007, at the induction ceremony for the Cum Laude Society at the school where I teach. As with everything on this site, you may quote from it with appropriate citation.

---
Cum Laude Speech – October 25, 2007

Note of thanks…

The late Kurt Vonnegut said, “We are here on Earth to fart around, and don't let anybody tell you different.”

I’m sure none of you will prove Vonnegut true as second semester seniors, but some of your peers might.

But with all due respect to Vonnegut and my good friend, who is a big fan Vonnegut, I disagree. There’s much more to our purpose here on Earth.

In all likelihood for the first time in your life, you are about to embark on a journey in which you are in almost total control of your day-to-day life. Until now, the majority of your waking hours have been dictated by your parents, the state of New York, the school board, your teachers, your coaches, and even your friends.

As you move on from high school, probably to college, your life is now your own to direct. Which classes will you take? Will you take mostly morning or afternoon classes? What will be your major? What will you do with the enormous amount of unscheduled time you will have every week? Perhaps most importantly for your parents, how often will you come home?

Across the country, however, your generation is struggling with this newfound independence, freedom, and responsibility. You are too used to having your lives controlled by others and being insulated from the consequences of their mistakes. You find it difficult to make decisions, to solve problems, to find your way.

Lots of experts on child development, education, and psychology have written about this phenomenon. But the solution, at least in part, may be as simple as having clear goals.

A Harvard Business School study reportedly asked Harvard graduates if they had goals and whether they had written them down. Twenty years later they interviewed the same group. The 3% of graduates who had written down their goals were making 10 times more than the average of all the other graduates…and 98% of all the wealth resided with that same 3%!

A former student of mine recently gave me a book to read: The Extreme Future, by James Canton. Canton is a global futurist, someone who studies trends and tries to predict the future for companies and governments. He often asks his clients, “What do you envision your company will look like in 2020?” After stares of disbelief, his clients are able to figure out their vision and goals, and then plan backward to develop plans and strategies for achieving those goals. Teachers also are encouraged to plan that way – figure out what you want your students to know and be able to do and then figure out how best to get them there.

It makes sense, right? After all, if you don’t know what your destination is, how can you begin to figure out what’s the best route for getting there?

Which leads me to two questions I want you to answer: What do you envision America and the world will look like in 2020? And, perhaps more importantly, what do you envision you will look like in 2020?

In 2020, many if not most of you will be turning 30. For many of us farther along on life’s journey, turning 30 was a big deal. In some ways, it’s been the true beginning of adulthood for people of my generation – the era in which we took on more responsibilities like marriage and parenthood, settled into our careers, and bought real estate. Our parents retired, our social lives mellowed a bit, we took fewer risks.

But that was us. In many ways, you are so very different from us. You seem to be more capable intellectually than we were at the same age. You have more distractions and more demands on your time. And you have grown up in a world dramatically different from the one we grew up in. Yours is the world of the internet. Of Tom Friedman’s “flat” world. Of 9/11 and al Qaeda. Of Iraq. Of global warming. Of stem cell research and nanotechnology. Of change that Canton says will be “blinding, comprehensive in scope, and will touch every aspect of your life.”

Some of that sounds scary. But hopefully some of it also sounds exciting! The new world you will live in is one of challenges and opportunities. And of infinite possibilities – possibilities you will create through the sheer force of your thoughts and beliefs.

So whom do you want to be in 2020? Let’s assume that you want to be someone who is happy and healthy in 2020. What will it take for you to be happy and healthy? What kind of values do you want to have? Where do you want to live? What do you want to be doing professionally? How do you want to spend your free time? What kind of people do you want to be surrounded by?

Canton and others suggest that having this vision, being able to imagine this future you, will help you make better decisions along the way and set you up for inevitable success. And the beauty of this process is that, as you travel along this journey, this vision can and probably should evolve. Like your first choice for a college major, you can and probably will change your mind along the way.

But without this vision, you will be like a captain without a compass, a map, or even a destination.

Now don’t be afraid to think big. Be audacious. Accept no limits on what that future you will look like. It’s not your job to place limits on your vision – it’s your job to imagine a future with maximum joy and love.

So now you’ve got your vision of yourself in 2020 – right? But as a social studies teacher - and someone who cares passionately about my country and my world – I have some kind of moral obligation to remind us of the other question I asked: What do you envision America and the world will look like in 2020? But what I’m really asking you to think about and imagine is what kind of America and world will you help create by 2020?

We live in a day and age in which, more than ever before, one person can make a difference. I’ve seen it and lived it myself, but the power you will have in your lifetime to affect and influence the course of events will dwarf that of previous generations. And given the fact that you will have been given a tremendous gift – the gift of a great education – you have an obligation to do what you can do to forge a future that will make you proud in 2020 and beyond. And your work starts today with the creation of your vision for that future world and the role you will play in creating it.

Today, America and the world around us are full of uncertainty and real and potential threats. But America and the world of 2020 also are, like the future you, full of infinite possibilities! By 2020, we could be well on the way to energy self-sufficiency, stopping or reversing the tide of global warming, eradicating AIDS and malaria in Africa, and eliminating poverty in America.

So which challenges and opportunities do you want America and the world to address in your lifetime? Which values do you want us to live up to? Which great new frontier in medicine, technology, culture, or even politics do you want us to explore?

Once you have your vision, you really have a simple task every day – stay focused. Think about your vision for yourself and the world around you. Give it texture and depth. Focus on how awesome you will feel in 12 short years when your dreams and desires have been realized – and it’s time to create new ones. Enjoy the progress you make every day, however incremental it might be, in moving toward the realization of that vision.

The future truly is in your hands.

Now Vonnegut argued that "True terror is to wake up one morning and discover that your high school class is running the country."

Well, that might have been true for Vonnegut or even me, but I think you all will be relieved that you and your peers will be running the country. So enjoy the freedom you have to create that future. Ignore the hecklers and naysayers. Surround yourself with people who will love and encourage you, not hold you back or tear you down. And remember to dream big.

I could not be more excited for you – and I can’t wait to receive what will probably be an email – or whatever we use for instant communication at that point - from you in 2020 letting me know what your vision for 2040 will be!

---

Monday, October 22, 2007

YouTube - Garry Kasparov on Bill Maher

YouTube - Garry Kasparov on Bill Maher

A fascinating interview with Kasparov. He's tough on Putin - and Bush - and is a sophisticated and witty political analyst. He talks about the same thing Tom Friedman has talked and written about - how high oil prices are propping up thugs like Putin. Chris Matthews notes at the end how impressive Kasparov is compared to American politicians, who tend to talk down to the American public. That is so true and drives me nuts. I long for a candidate who treats us like we have IQs over 50. FDR's fireside chats showed respect for the audience - where's that kind of respect?

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Believe!



Who would have thought that JD Drew of all people would hit the grand slam tonight? Unreal. He's actually having a great ALCS. And Schilling came through in yet another big game in the playoffs.

Dice-K better come up big, as must the bats again. I know that Beckett is going to be available in the 'pen, if necessary, but I hope he's a last resort. Assuming we make the WS - which we will! - we want him rested for game 1. Dice-K needs to be aggressive and challenge hitters. I listened to part of game 3 on a Cleveland radio station and the announcers were wondering why a guy who throws great stuff in the mid-90s doesn't challenge batters more often. As Buster Olney noted on SportsCenter tonight, he seems afraid of contact and nibbles around the edges of the plate. That's what killed Carmona tonight and in game 2. Dice-K has to challenge hitters with his fastball and then use his off-speed stuff to keep them honest and guessing.

As if I'm some kind of expert on pitching, right?

Go Sox!

Friday, October 19, 2007

A conversation with Samantha Power - Charlie Rose

A conversation with Samantha Power - Charlie Rose

Samantha, as usual, is compelling and thoughtful in this recent interview with Charlie Rose. Unfortunately, there is still a willingness on the part of Samantha and other leading voices in the Save Darfur movement to cut the Bush Administration slack over Darfur.

I acknowledge that the Administration has little or no moral or political credibility on this or any other issue abroad. That is no reason to excuse or even endorse what is essentially lip service to addressing genocide. The movement that forced Clinton to intervene in Bosnia and Kosovo had a clear goal (stopping the genocide without rewarding it) and was unwilling to compromise on that. Any pronouncements or policies that fell short of that were not acceptable. I wish the Darfur movement had that clarity, strength and persistence.

Having said that, I wish there were more people like Samantha, with her character, values, intelligence, and passion speaking at the national level about foreign policy and would love to see someone like her on the domestic side. she sees the big picture and is far from an inflexible ideologue. She also paints a very appealing picture of Obama...

Markets Slide as Wall Street Sees Signs of Trouble - New York Times

Markets Slide as Wall Street Sees Signs of Trouble - New York Times

More market jitters... Interesting and sobering excerpt:

---
But a prominent figure in the hedge fund industry, Julian H. Robertson Jr., said yesterday that the economy was heading for a “doozy of a recession.”

“I think the credit situation is worse than anybody realizes,” he said on CNBC. “I don’t think any of the normal indicators you would look at in the economy are really very strong. As a matter of fact, they are weak, and not really getting any better.”
---

The impact of the credit crisis could be enormous - some estimates are as big as $600 billion or more just in bad loans. Then there are the many institutions and investors with exposure to it.

And the oil market is incredibly volatile - almost $90 a barrel over nothing! Can you imagine what happens when demand catches supply or peak oil arrives?

Where's the sense of urgency?

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Eugene Robinson - Which Black America? - washingtonpost.com

Eugene Robinson - Which Black America? - washingtonpost.com

Good op-ed from Eugene Robinson in the Washington Post. Points out that many in America - especially the media and even some leading black organizations - do't understand that there really isn't a "black America" anymore. The black community is more diverse economically and socially than ever before.

That's probably one reason why so many of these problems have failed to be addressed seriously. The needs and challenges of middle class blacks in the suburbs are radically different than those of inner city poor blacks. There isn't a one-size-fits-all policy or program or message.

Bill Cosby on Meet the Press talking about race and poverty

Meet The Press with Tim Russert - Video, Podcasts, News and Politics, Transcripts - MSNBC.com - MSNBC.com

Bill Cosby and his co-author, Harvard professor Dr. Alvin Poussaint, were on Meet the Press today. I highly recommend the show - catch it on reruns tonight or this week or watch excerpts online (above).

Cosby's been one of the few prominent African Americans who has openly and starkly discussed the challenges and tragedies facing blacks in America today. he acknowledges that systemic racism that exists but calls on blacks to tackle their problems, as well - as his book title suggests, to move from victims to victors.

The systemic racism is tough to overcome, they note. But Cosby knows that just focusing on how one is victimized will just perpetuate the victimization.

The issues surrounding racism, discrimination, and iequality in our country are so important to me. I spend more time on these issues in my US History classes than any other. I would love to hear from anyone out there with some creative thinking on how we can begin to fix these problems. We cannot afford to let the current situation continue.

Ugh... The wheels come off in the 11th...

Boston Red Sox - Red Sox - Boston.com

The Sox had every opportunity to win the 2nd game of the ALCS tonight - but didn't. Cleveland hung in there and in a battle of bullpens came away 13-7 victors. Eric Gagne started the implosion for the Sox, but he had plenty of company after he was yanked; Lopez and Lester were no better. What a shame, since the 'pen had been mostly solid to that point. Manny Delcarmen was not on his game, but Okajima, Timlin, and Papelbon more than made up for it.

When the core of the Sox lineup - Papi, Manny, and Mike Lowell - went down in order in the bottom of the 10th against Mastny, with barely a wimper, things didn't look good for the home team. And the Sox left plenty of men on base tonight.

Even though the Sox couldn't score after the 5th, you'd like to think 6 runs should win a game. We need our starters to do better than Schill did tonight, allowing 5 runs in less than 5 innings. Hopefully Dice-K can give us at least 6 solid innings Monday.

Hopefully the Sox will shake it off on the way to Cleveland and Dice-K will find his early season stuff.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Frank Rich on Clarence Thomas and race

Nobody Knows the Lynchings He's Seen - New York Times

This op-ed by Frank Rich is a "must read!" Rich is writing in response to the media frenzy surrounding Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' new memoir and other recent events regarding race in the U.S. I'll let Rich speak for himself and won't attempt to summarize him here.

But recent events suggest that we really have made little progress addressing racial prejudice or the social and economic results of 300 years of discrimination and segregation. One only has to look around most corporate board rooms, high school classrooms, and suburban neighborhoods in America to know that while segregation and discrimination based on race are illegal in the U.S., segregation remains a fact of life in 2007. The headlines about nooses being hung in Jena and at Columbia University are harsh reminders that there are those who wish official segregation were still a reality and seek to terrorize those who seek equality and respect today.

According to the US Census Bureau, "[b]lack households had the lowest median income in 2004 ($30,134) among race groups. Asian households had the highest median income ($57,518). The median income for non-Hispanic white households was $48,977." (http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/income_wealth/005647.html)

In addition, the Census bureau reported that in 2006 the poverty rate for blacks was 24.3 but for non-Hispanic whites only 8.2% (http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/poverty06/pov06hi.html).

Just as troubling, the situation has become worse for blacks in the last decade. While poverty rates for blacks did not change much between Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination in 1968 (34.7% of blacks lived in poverty) throgh 1993 (33.1%), the economic expansion of the 1990s did pull some blacks out of poverty. By 2000, the black poverty rate was down to 22.7% - still far above the rate for whites (7.4%) but a considerable improvement. But now we see the rate for blacks inching back up to 24.2% in 2006. (http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/histpov/hstpov2.html)

This should be unacceptable to Americans. It is morally reprehensible that we have yet to redress the poisonous effects of segregation and discrimination in this country. And while the Roberts Court's support for a color-blind Constitution might be laudable, until the country - including our school systems - are truly color-blind and color neutral, we must pursue policies that will truly level the playing field.

It also is foolish for us to allow such a significant segment of the population to languish in poverty with little or no hope of escaping if we are to compete successfully with over one billion Indians and over 1.5 billion Chinese in the coming decades. We will need all Americans to have the opportunity and support to pursue their passions and explore their potential. We need to find and develop the potential innovators and CEOs who grow up in inner cities and poor rural areas as well as those living in comfortable and safe suburbs.

Barack Obama's candidacy has the potential to help shift our attitudes toward race in America. He might be judged by the voting public more by the content of his character instead of the color of his skin. If so, win or lose, Obama's candidacy will serve as evidence that we have made some progress since Dr. King's premature death. But only if Obama - or whoever does win the presidency next year - has the courage and vision to address the deeply rooted and tenacious causes of inequality and racism in our country will we truly be on the path to realizing Dr. King's dream.

Leak not destroy? - Who pays for this?

White House on Bin Laden: Leak not destroy? - MSNBC Video

If you have not seen this video from MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann, you need to watch it now. You may remember that the White House recently released the tape of Osama bin Laden's latest video. In fact, they released it days before Osama did! Incredible coup, right?

Well, the video was actually obtained by a private security firm that had found a "back door" to an extremist Islamist web site used by al Qaeda. Doing the right thing, the firm turned the video over to the White House, asking that the video and its source be kept private.

In an apparent attempt to deflect attention from inconvenient news that week - namely, the less than stellar report on Iraq by Gen. Petraeus - the White House leaked the video to Fox News Channel (surprise!). It should come as no shock that al Qaeda subsequently shut downt he web site.

So let's get this straight - the Bush White House compromised a potentially invaluable source on America's #1 enemy - al Qaeda - in order to diminish criticism about its failures in Iraq. Doesn't that sound like treason? I know that's a strong word, but our national security was compromised. What if that web site could have been a source of information on the plans for a future attack here in the US? What if innocent lives are lost as a result? We'll never know for sure the cost of this selfish and stupid act by the White House, but it sure looks like it could be potentialy devastating.

Someone whould be punished, right? Is this an impeachable offense?

We seem so tolerant of our leaders and their dishonorable acts these days. Clinton got reelected in spite of complicity in two genocides (Bosnia and Rwanda). He survived an impeachment trial in spite of committing perjury. bush got reelected in spite of allowing America to get attacked on 9/11, failing to defeat al Qaeda and capture bin Laden, and launching a disastrous war in Iraq. And he survives still - continuing his failed policies and seemingly making America less secure every day! - with over a year left to go...

When will we get fed up as a nation and finally hold our leaders accountable for their errors and crimes? We truly do get the leaders we deserve...

Boston Red Sox - Sox put a chill on Indians in opener - The Boston Globe

Boston Red Sox - Sox put a chill on Indians in opener - The Boston Globe

As Shaugnessy writes, this Sox team is feeling like a team of destiny. Last night's win, against a Cleveland team that handled the tough Yankees with relative ease in 4 games, was awesome! Manny and Papi are dialed in - they are in the zone with no signs of leaving before a parade in downtown Boston later this fall. Beckett, always a tough, hard-throwing force from the mound, is now a smart, patient, tough, hard-throwing force from the mound. He doesn't overthrow like he used to - as recently as last year on a regular basis. He isn't trying to make the perfect pitch all the time, and as a result seems to have amazing control these days. He uses his off-speed pitches with great effectiveness, buckling the knees of otherwise impressive hitters. The bullpen isn't perfect - Gagne continues to remind us of that - but it is avoiding the big mistakes and disastrous innings. They may bend - like Lopez giving up a run or Gagne two hits and a walk - but they don't break.

Of course, it's early - the Sox were down 0-3 in the 2004 ALCS, I know - but there's a feel to this team that is just incredible. It's the feel of destiny...

The Vision Thing

Listening to a discussion of the Republican candidates on Tim Russert's talk show on MSNBC, I was struck by the comparison of Fred Thompson's sober view of America - things are ok now but could get worse, that's why we need his leadership - vs. that of Ronald Reagan in 1980 (morning in America, etc.). The comparison is interesting for two reasons. First, Thompson is marketing himself as the reincarnation of Reagan - a larger-than-life former actor with a vision - the visions are so different in tone and even substance in many ways. Russert and Co. point out that Romney's vision is more Reagan-esque.

But I also found it interesting to take a step back and think about the vision I'd like to see guide America well into the 21st century. With the major candidates reluctant to get specific on their vision or detailed policies, the campaign is a bit frustrating. Chuck Todd of NBC noted how voters and focus groups want "authenticity" - for candidates to talk candidly about who they are, what they believe, and what they will do if elected. Me, too!

Let's take foreign policy. There have been strains of isolationism, protectionism, and nativism throughout our country's history - and we've seen those ideologies of fear, insecurity, and distrust in policies that avoided confronting the aggression and genocides of Hitler and Milosevic, raised tariffs that sparked reciprocal barriers to American companies trying to sell abroad, and established discriminatory and harsh immigration quotas that separated families and legitimized prejudices.

But America became the world's superpower - defeating the two greatest evils of the 20th century, fascism and communism - and grew an economy that not only dominates the new globalized world but also brought enormous wealth and hope to millions of Americans in an expanding middle class by demonstrating strength, courage, and persistence in confronting its enemies and challengers; promoting free trade; and harnessing the hard work and innovation of immigrants.

In The World Is Flat, Tom Friedman frames the choice for America as choosing between seeing the new "flat" world as one of challenges and opportunities or one full of threats, whether they be from new economic challengers in India and China or terrorists from al Qaeda and other extremist organizations.

It is my hope and belief that we will embrace this new world as one that presents vital challenges and opportunities. That we will tap into that great tradition of innovation and hard work - and, dare I say, sacrifice? - to seize the moment and solve our problems and lead the world into a new era of peace and prosperity.

That doesn't mean we should not press China to improve its labor and environmental laws and regulations or design a sensible immigration policy that will reduce the number of illegal immigrants while providing new workers and opportunities for family reunions. But it means that when we encounter problems and challenges we don't revert back to the failed ideologies of the past that were based on fear and prejudice. We need solutions that will be consistent with our time-hnored traditions and values and will make America even stronger in the coming decades.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Manny being Manny...

So we're in the second inning of the ALCS. Manny Ramirez - who drives me nuts - is having a grat game so far. RBI single in the first, great catch to end the top of the 2nd.

They showed his stats with Cleveland and with the Sox - almost the same # of games (a few less with Boston) and the stats are almost identical!!! Is he the most consistent hitter ever?

I really don't get Tito Francona starting Kielty for Drew. I'm no JD Drew fan - I'm not sure after this season one can be a Sox fan AND a Drew fan! - but Kielty's success against Sabathia is old news and Drew has been hot since early September, batting .367 with an OBP of .467 and SLG of .673 over the last 30 days according to the Sox web site.

Tito stuck with Drew all year and benches him now? Of course, it's easy for me to write now - I started this post when Kielty was on deck and then he struck out...

Monday, October 08, 2007

The Yankees lose! Theeee Yankees LOSE!

Game 4 Final: Indians 6, Yankees 3 - Bats - Baseball - New York Times Blog

A Yankees loss is almost as good as a Red Sox win - so I'm pretty darn happy tonight! The Sox move on to the ALCS and the Yankees do not! Now don't get me wrong - I'm not looking forward to Cleveland's pitching in the next round, but I couldn't be happier to see the Yanks go home early. Sweet justice...

I have had enormous respect for Joe Torre's incredible record of success in the 90s - and he seems like a classy guy - but he's been given so many chances with enormous payrolls and All-Star lineups with no WS victory that no one can fault George for finding a new manager.

Charge It to My Kids - New York Times

Charge It to My Kids - New York Times

Friedman is on target again with yesterday's op-ed piece. It drives me nuts that we continue to fund not only the Iraq War but upper class tax cuts and out of control government spending by borrowing on our kids' - including my kids'! - futures. the Republicans abandoned fiscal conservatism during the Reagan era and haven't looked back. Democrats have been loath to call for tax increases alongside spending reducations for fear that the Republicans will shine the spotlight only on the tax increases and the label of "tax and spend liberals" will be back.

But it's time for someone - anyone!!! - to start treating the American people like intelligent adults. Heck, even Ross Perot with his wacky personality was able to get deficit reduction on the front burner. You can't tell me that there isn't one major candidate in either party who couldn't pull off a similar feat this time around.

It is unconscionable that we continue to mortgage our children's future because we are not willing to pay our own bills, tighten our belts, or make some minor sacrifices. The resulting federal debt and reluctance to consider even sensible new taxes to pay for things like research into new sources of energy have tied our hands and limited our ability to invst for our - and our kids' future as well. So now our kids face a lifetime of paying for our inability to pay our own bills or invest in their future.

It's disgusting. It's not the American way - at least not the one my parents, part of the Greatest Generation, brought me up to be proud of.

Jimmy Carter's Shamefully Ignorant Statement on Darfur

Jimmy Carter's Shamefully Ignorant Statement on Darfur

Here we go again... Jimmy Carter is tryng to appease some of humanity's worst thugs. Again.

In spite of his reputation as a great humanitarian, Nobel Prize winner and former US President Jimmy Carter has made a second career out of kissing up to the post-Cold War world's worst dictators and genocidal maniacs. During the first round of the North Korea nuclear crisis, Carter undermined then-President Clinton's diplomacy to appease Kim Jong Il and cut a deal that essentially allowed North Korea to continue its nuclear program while receiving considerable US and Japanese economic aid. In Bosnia, Carter broke a US-backed isolation of Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic in another ill-fated effort at appeasement. Many human rights activists with whom I worked in DC during the 90s told me that at least several elections certified as "free and democratic" by Carter had been seriously tainted.

So now, as Eric Reeves so brilliantly points out, Carter is trying to sweep a genocide under the carpet in Darfur. If Marion Jones can be stripped of her five Olympic medals for using steroids, can Carter be stripped of his Nobel Prize for appeasing Sudan's genocidal leaders?

Sunday, October 07, 2007

Obama Explores Abortion Issue - The Caucus - Politics - New York Times Blog

Obama Explores Abortion Issue - The Caucus - Politics - New York Times Blog

This link is to a transcript from a recent campaign appearance in Iowa by Obama at which he answered a question from someone who is clearly "pro-life."

What I liked about Obama's answer - which is pretty much the same thing he wrote about the topic in his book, "The Audacity of Hope" - is that he seeks the common ground for those on both sides of this divisive issue: reducing the number of unwanted pregnancies.

The reality is that those who are "pro-life" or "pro-choice" are unlikely to switch sides. The only hope for a national policy that will actually reduce the number of abortions is one that focuses on reducing the number of unwanted pregnancies.

Much of Obama's book explores this kind of thinking about tough issues. He is adept at understanding both sides of an issue and seeing where common ground can be found without either side feeling like they sold out. Now that would be a refreshing kind of leadership in Washington...

Red Sox win ALDS!

Boston Red Sox - Red Sox - Boston.com

It's starting to feel like another special year for the Sox... They swept the Angels today and now await the winner of the Yankees-Indians series. Granted, the Angels were pretty beat up, but the Red Sox look like a well-oiled machine, pitching and hitting extremely well. They look confident, relaxed, and determined - much like 2004.

Unlike 2004, I'm not itching for a Red Sox-Yankees ALCS. The need to defeat the Yankees in the playoffs was satisfied in '04 when the Sox humiliated the Yankees by making history and coming back from an 0-3 deficit. Instead, I'm hoping for a Cleveland sweep tonight - it would be so sweet. Already, it's a great night - seeing Roger Clemens leave in the 3rd was nice. And a Yankees defeat would be the perfect way to end a day in which the Pats and Sox won big.

I'll admit that when it comes to the Yankees my usually good nature and kind heart turn cold. Too many memories from '78 and '03, too many Yankee fans and their arrogance pre-2004. Too many chants of "1918" before that incredible World Series victory.

Of course, this could all come back to bite me on the butt. The Yankees could still win tonight and win the ALDS. Or Cleveland could continue its dominant pitching in the ALCS. But for now, I'll enjoy the Sox sweep and hope the Indians brought their brooms to NYC, too...

Friday, October 05, 2007

Hillary distorts husband's record on Bosnia and dishonors the dead...

I finally watched Hillary Clinton's interview on This Week with George Stephanopolous from almost three weeks ago. I shouldn't be surprised that a Clinton would lie or misrepresent what had happened in the Balkans, but I have to admit that I was a bit shocked when she characterized her husband's Balkans policy in a way that portrayed him as the guy trying to stop ethnic cleansing and forge a coalition to stop the bloodshed in Bosnia and Kosovo. Outrageous! And she claimed the Republican-controlled Congress at the time tried to block her husband's efforts. Unbelievable.

The reality was that Bill Clinton and his aides repeatedly lied about and denied the genocide in Bosnia and refused to engage in a serious response to the Serbian aggression in Bosnia and Kosovo until forced to by bipartisan congressional pressure. In Bosnia, it was the passage of legislation - by veto-proof margins in both houses! - that would have allowed the Bosnians to defend themselves that compelled Clinton to finally step in, though the belated intervention was essentially to appease the infamous dictator Slobodan Milosevic. Clinton had refused to acknowledge that a genocide was being committed in Bosnia, refused to lift the arms embargo himself to allow the Bosnians to defend themselves (though he had pledged in the 1992 election to do exactly that!), and failed to live up to our NATO obligations to use air power to stop the shelling of civilians in so-called "safe areas" - actually the least safe areas in Bosnia during the war.

Hillary's gross distortion, turning her husband's complicity in Bosnia into an alleged heroic act, should come as no surprise. After all, her husband refused to intervene to stop the genocide in Rwanda, as in Bosnia denied it was a genocide, and even forced the UN to withdraw its limited peacekeeping force in Rwanda so that if it failed to stop the slaughter he would not feel pressure to send troops to protect innocent lives. Then several years later he had the audacity to travel to Rwanda and tell the survivors he wished we had known what ad happended there so we could have helped. Unbelievable.

I have not chosen a candidate to support in the '08 campaign. But I do know for whom I will not vote. I had enough of Clinton foreign policy failures and lies in the 1990s. And I've had enough of Hillary Clinton's disrepect for the truth and the victims of genocides who could have been saved had her husband just let others do what they wanted to do: defend the innocent.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Can a Plucky U.S. Economy Surmount $80 Oil? - New York Times

Can a Plucky U.S. Economy Surmount $80 Oil? - New York Times

Boy, isn't this one of the biggest questions we face today? With peak oil coming sooner rather than later, the degree to which our economy can handle a spike in oil prices - starting with the much feared $100/barrel mark - without triggering a significant recession or worse remains a great unknown. This article does a great job of exploring this question, though it doesn't even mention peak oil - a frustrating blind spot the media continues to have.

The problem is that we live in a global economy the likes of which we have never seen before and it is constantly changing. The U.S. may still be the world's largest consumer of oil - leading some economists to argue that a recession would in turn trigger lower oil prices - but at some point in the not too distant future China will overtake us in oil consumption. And before we even reach that mark, China and India and other countries will consume enough (and maybe do already) to prop up oil prices even if US consumptions declines in a recession.

Given the uncertainty, however, shouldn't we plan prudently and ratchet up our efforts to develop alternate energy sources, rather than using the uncertainty to ationalize a "do nothing" approach?

A Swiftly Melting Planet - New York Times

A Swiftly Melting Planet - New York Times

Is it me, or doesn't it seem that, in spite of Al Gore and Co. raising awareness about global warming, we continue to whistle past the graveyard? So the Arctic ice cap is melting faster than anticipated. Not a shock to me. And I've got plenty of friends and relatives who, in a change from 2-3 years ago, now list global warming as an urgent problem we need to address. Then they hop in their SUV or fail to buy more energy efficient light bulbs or appliances. Or to switch the electricity supplier to a green alternative (I'm able to get my electricity through a "green" ConEd option using wind and water power). They drive their kids to school instead of having them take the bus. They refuse to car pool. They pay little or no attention to the presidential candidates' positions on global warming or energy policy.

Time for us to hold ourselves and each other accountable. Time to walk the walk, not just talk the talk. Time to start acting like global warming and our addiction to oil are real problems we need to address now, not just paying lip service to sound like we care.

Monday, October 01, 2007

Friedman does it again...

9/11 Is Over - New York Times

Tom Friedman continues to be one of the best at seeing the big picture and having some kind of vision. This column calling for a vision for America that looks beyond the 9/11-centric politics of the Bush Administration (which Giuliani seeks to ride to the White House) should be required reading for all the presidential hopefuls.

I have been thirsty my whole life for a politican with real vision. I have never really voted "for" a candidate - I've voted against the opponent. Most politicians don't treat the voters with respect - they play to the lowest common denominator and fear the voters wouldn't really understand or appreciate the real issues and challenges of the day. the one exception, interestingly enough, was Ross Perot, who, in a modern day version of FDR's firside chats, would buy time on network TV to explain the danger of exploding deficits and fiscal irresponsibility to the voters. Perot believed - correctly - that if you treated the voters with respect and didn't talk down to them or play to their worst instincts, they would understand and vote accordingly. As a result, Perot, in spite of his eccentricities, garnered almost 20 % of the vote and his crusade against deficits was adopted by Bill Clinton and Republicans in Congress in 1993. By the end of the 1990s, the budget had been balanced.

We need a politician today who will provide some real "straight talk" to the American public. Someone who will explain, again, why annual deficits and a debt over $9 trillion are irresponsible and limit our ability to deal with current and future challenges and crises and to invest properly for the future. Someone who will make clear the urgency of developing and deploying new energy technologies in the face of global warming and peak oil. Someone who will shine the light on the challenges and opportunities of the "flat" world Friedman wrote about so powerfully, making it clear that if we are to compete in the 21st century we will need to finally redress the inequities in education and provide a real path out of poverty while fixing our health care system. Someone who will help Americans see that foreign policy is more than fighting terrorism and deaing with Bush's failed war in Iraq.

That's a tall order, I know. I'll take someone who can provide a clear and compelling vision on one or two of those issues, I suppose. Oh, and I'd like some charisma, if possible. And character does matter - I'm tired of Presidents who lie about sex with interns and WMDs.

Too much to ask? No! This is the United States of America - a country that aspires to be the greatest on the planet and has only begun to tap into the enormous potential it's incredible citizenry possess. We deserve the best leadership possible. We deserve a candidate we are proud to vote for.