Archive for the 'Faith, News, Sports & Politics' Category

a plea for civility

Image of early American protesters, dressed in Native American costums, dumping the contents of the recent tea shipment into Boston Harbour.  The protest against the King's taxation would spark a revolution and also begin a rich history of American protest.

The Boston Tea Party.

In the late eighteenth century, a group of protesters dressed as Native Americans boarded a merchant ship and then off loaded its cargo of tea directly into Boston Harbor [1].  That famous protest, known as the Boston Tea Party, became one of the first highlights in America’s rich history of protests and political activism.  Though the issues behind the Tea Party were long ago left in our past, the American protest spirit demonstrated during the Tea Party would perpetuate, each generation adopting a new issue, defining the social growth and progress of a people through its first two centuries.  With leaders such as Fredrick Douglas, Susan B. Anthony, and Martin Luther King, Jr., the protesters persistently, but peacefully, stood for their cause.  The match-ups were often uneven and greatly in favor of the oppressors: the colonists versus the King of England, women versus the male-dominated society/government, slaves and abolitionists versus deeply entrenched slaveholders, the minorities versus segregation and bigotry, and so many more.  Americans’ example of peaceful protest has been compared to, and even may have inspired, worldwide figures like Nelson Mandella, Mahatama Ghandi, and Desmond Tutu, who led social equality revolutions in their own countries.  America would not be where it is today without its protest history, but unfortunately its protest future looks dim.

My observation of recent protest and activist movements in the United States is that the role of aggressor has shifted from the oppressor to the protestor. This shift has occurred at all levels of the community, and now it is like we have taken protest for granted, and have changed it from the peaceful thing it once was into the hate-mongering thing it now is.  This has led to a break-down of civil political discourse in America, and the vicious speech employed by activists only further strengthen the barriers to communication and compromise.  This is especially true recently, as the last few years have seen activists breeding hate and unrest instead of pushing for peace and unity.

Starting at the top, lots of blame is due to the activist groups.  Organizations like PETA take to Washington streets dressed in almost nothing to demand animal rights[2], causing chaos and upsetting order in the process, while groups like Greenpeace vandalize corporate property or disrupt corporate activity[3] in an effort to make a point about that business’s environmental policies.  Meanwhile, groups like the Sierra Club, NRA, etc, pay lobbyists to delay the progress of our laws while their spokespeople bounce from news interviews to press conferences denouncing and embarrassing our elected leaders.  No longer is the protest movement based in the idea of lifting people out of an oppressed state, rather in those seeking further entitlement for causes not nearly important as those of the past.

MLK during the March on Washington.  What would he think of today's protesters and activists?

MLK during the March on Washington. What would he think of today's protesters and activists?

A recent example of a negative aggressive protest group is the PUMA group, or Party Unity My Ass un-Party, a group founded in protest of Hillary Clinton’s departure from/loss of the Democratic presidential primary.  These people spent time, money, and effort trying to undo the loss of their candidate claiming “disenfranchisement” and “deceptive practices”.  Leading up to the Democratic National Convention, they spent their efforts trying to demonize and minimize Obama as a viable candidate, presumably to allow McCain to win and then allow Hillary to run again in 2012.  Most who followed the PUMA movement would agree that it employed bitter, hateful aggression to try and make their point made.  Why?  They would say to make America better, most would say they accomplished the opposite.

Media figureheads who use media outlets as theaters to stage biased presentations of quote-un-quote news and opinion to further their views play a big role in this issue as well.  People like Michael Moore and Ann Coulter, in the name of their political affiliation, resort to lies, half-truths, conspiracies, and viscous verbal attacks to try and demean and beat down the beliefs of the other half of their America.  Meanwhile, Keith Olbermann, Rush Limbaugh, Chris Matthews, and Bill O’Reilly fill their airspace with heavily biased presentations, highlighting news that benefits their views while discarding that which does not and tearing apart their interviewees with different views while spoon feeding easy questions to like-minded interviewees.

Unfortunately, while the likes of media moguls and activist groups spew their vicious, sometimes hateful, words and stir unrest from the pulpit of American media outlets, everyday people express their own one-sided view of the world from the soapbox of blogs and social media websites.  It is there that the divisions are being further deepened, and is it on the web that I see no hope for America’s protest future.

The internet has undoubtedly changed the way my generation communicates with our world.  However, the internet’s greatest asset (and curse), the instant unmoderated flow of information and ideas, has given people the freedom to be as civilized or as barbaric as they choose, and most choose to be barbaric.

Good journalists write and rewrite their pieces, have them reviewed by an editor, and then rewrite it some more.  Their efforts, even if biased, usually are backed by research, offer some dissenting views, and are moderated by editors whose job it is to minimize bias and ensure good research.  Bloggers are rarely good journalists, often citing uncertain sources or unconventional and biased media, if citations are provided at all.  Their words back their own biased opinions and dissenting views are often ignored in favor of progressing their message.  Numerous fallacies are employed, possibly in an effort to throw the readers into an emotional state where they won’t question the work but either agree or dismiss it, or possibly because they know that research is not enough to justify their views.  Yet people consume this new form of media with vigor, hailing it as the future of the media, failing to see it for what it is, while traditional moderated media loses income and market share. Please don’t get me wrong, not every conventional media news article is perfect and not every blogger is biased, but in general what I have observed is supports my beliefs.

For instance, the other day I followed a link to a blog article where the the blogger was response to an accomplished journalist’s opinion piece on Republican Vice Presidental nominee Governor Sarah Palin.  In the opinion piece by Bradley Buston, which the blogger quotes in his post, the journalist explains his fear of us electing another politician unaware of his or her own shortcomings.  In the opinion piece, the journalist references an exchange between ABC’s Charlie Gibson and Gov. Palin during a media interview as evidence to support his belief.  The blogger fundamentally disagrees with the question that Gibson asked of Gov. Palin and therefore he argues that Gov. Palin’s response should not be considered as support to the journalist’s opinion.  But before the blogger even gets to establishing his counter arguement, he first says this of the journalist:

But what about Bradley Buston’s blindness to his own shortcomings: his unjustified certitude, his complacency, his arrogance, and his misinformedness?

How does this ad hominem attack further the message the blogger presenets? I would argue: not at all.  But what is does do is fires up all his like-minded readers while infurates all his those who aren’t.  And fruther down the hole we go.

One of the most common ways a regular American can protest is writing responses or opinion pieces for local to national news outlets.  The blog world has that too, call comments.  But they are abused.  Readers use the freedom of anonymous commenting to attempt, in whatever way possible, to strengthen or defeat the message of the writer.  Commentors carry out their effort by employing fallacy-rich argumentation lacking content but chock-full of unintelligent attacks.  Even after skimming through the heavily moderated comments section of the CNN Political Ticker, I found commentors calling candidates things like McChicken, spineless, and idiotic while accusing them of treason, perjury, and other unethical behavior.  How do these words benefit the discussion or the message?  How do these words strengthen America?  They don’t.  When as few as five years ago if you wanted to comment on a news article or opinion piece, your words were often thought out before submission and then of course moderated by the publisher, today you can respond, if you want, to a piece in seconds.  Nowadays, ones raw emotions can be typed up and submitted before there is a chance for even self-moderation, and then left online and unmoderated in the spirit of free speech.

From the high-profile activist groups, to the media mouguls, citizen journalists, and general people, the American protest and activist spirit has been tarnished by hate-mongering bigoted efforts of aggression.  In allowing our conventional and citizen media to feed us this, and in allowing ourselves to accept it, we are allowing America to deteriorate into a country of hate mongerers and aggressive protestors.  Yet when we turn on the TV and see a rally in Tehran, we express our gratitude for being Americans.  How shorted sighted we are, for if we allow our discourse and protest to further part from the peaceful civil roots it was founded in, we could be there sooner than anyone dares to believe.  I beg of America: civility please.  Let us not forget the responsibility that comes with the power of free speech, lest our abuse of it may lead to its demise.

freudian slip?

The New York Times, one of America’s most reputable newspapers, is a decent source of accurate news but also moderately biased newspaper when it comes to politics.  I took this screen shot of a funny error, a likely Freudian slip, on a NYT online article just before the Republican convention.  Check out the first sentence of the second paragraph.

Accessed on Aug 31, 2008 on NYT.com

PS: Sorry I posted this 10 days after I found it.

we all know McCain is older than dirt, but c’mon

McCain oh-eight, er 1908 (via Busted Tees

McCain oh-eight, er 1908 (via Busted Tees)

if polititians are out of touch, what is Diddy?

A new classic, from CNN via the AP:

Sean “Diddy” Combs complained about the “… too high” price of gas and pleaded for free oil from his “Saudi Arabia brothers and sisters” in a YouTube video posted Wednesday.

[...]

“I’m actually flying commercial,” Diddy said before walking onto an airplane, sitting in a first-class seat and flashing his boarding pass to the camera. “That’s how high gas prices are.” [...]

Haha!  I’d like to show him a thing or two about sacrafices because one can’t afford fuel!  How about riding a bus for an hour a day to school because it costs almost $6 a day to go to class.  Get real dumbass.

[EDIT: Found the Video]

ray nagin with “the idiotic comment of the century”

In my past life I was a meteorologist.  I almost chose that path in this life.  After dedicating three or four years studying tropical cyclogenisis side-by-side my other primary education coursework, including spending two summers tracking storms on my 14″x22″ Atlantic Ocean map, I know a thing or two about the development of tropical weather.  Gustav had the potential to be big, but three days ago the science was against it becoming the next Katrina… yet the media wanted it to be so much more.

“You need to be scared,” Nagin said of the Category 4 hurricane tearing along Cuba’s western coast. “You need to be concerned, and you need to get your butts moving out of New Orleans right now. This is the storm of the century.”    Source.

The problem with Hurricane evacuations is that they take a lot of effort and have a huge economic impact.  People don’t like doing them.  Every two years or so people in some area will be urged to evacuate and then have the storm miss them by a bit or weaken before landfall.  These people can’t survive the economic impact… the loss of work, the time away from home, the cost of hotels, food, and gas, so after six storms that miss them or weaken, they give up and decide to ride it out.  Then, when fewer and fewer people leave… the big one hits.  And you have a disaster like Katrina.

People need to be strongly encouraged to leave… every time.  But Nagin’s ’storm of the century’ statement, only three years after the real ’storm of the century’ hit (I’d prefer, ’storm of the generation’) was just plain stupid.  He succeeded in getting people out, props for that, but he made the likelihood of more staying behind next time far, far greater.  His words will result in the people’s mistrust, and therefore, a less safe population next time, and the time after that.

This century’s most idiotic comment award goes to: New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin.

thoughts on the dems convention

The last few days through the end of next week are exciting moments for political junkies like me.  This week’s Democratic National Convention has been loaded with plenty of classic lines and unforgettable moments already, with the culmination tonight as Obama accepted the nomination.

i. Mark Warner Keynote:

I believe that Obama, if elected, has huge potential to be an amazing President, but in 2006 I wasn’t yet on his bandwagon.  In 2006 I was gunning for Mark Warner.  As a casual observer of American politics, I have often noticed that legislators suck at running the country.  Legislators make the laws and executives apply them.  The reason we haven’t elected a senator or congressman in decades is for this very reason.  I have faith in Obama’s executive potential because his community organizing required him to do lots with little resources, a challenge that builds character and leadership, two traits that are easily scalable.  Also, his relatively short career in the senate was not long enough to corrupt him.  Under most circumstances though, I’d prefer a former Governor to a Senator, and former Virginia Governor Warner was my man.  Early in 2007 he formally let down the thousands who had joined the “Draft Mark Warner” groups, myself included, saying he and his family weren’t ready.  With the honor of being the keynote speaker at the Democratic National Convention, however, he is now well on his way to getting there.

Former Virginina Governor Mark Warner

Former Virginina Governor Mark Warner

Mark Warner’s speech was the one I was most looking forward to, and before tonight’s festivities, the one I was most wowed by.   His energy and idealism were nothing like Obama’s in 2004, but instead it was firm and decisive, strong and quote-un-quote Presidential. His message of the ‘race into the future’ was uplifting, essentially the content, and clear sequel, to Obama’s “Audacity of Hope” speech.  His message contrasting Obama to McCain echoed one of the prevalent Democratic themes of the election, that McCain would be more of the same, but he offered details to back up the claim.  His words were firm, detailed, and pointed, and though it may not have inspired people like Obama four years ago, it instead ignited people’s resolve to see the change we need actually occur.

The best part of his speech was his “greatest criticism of President Bush” which, according to Warner, was not about policy but inaction, when he failed to “tap into our greatest resource: the character and resolve of the American people”.  Here is a quote, definitely the most thought-provoking moment of Convention.

“People always ask me, ‘What’s my biggest criticism of President Bush?’ I’m sure you all have your own. Here’s mine—it’s not just the policy differences, it’s the fact that this president never tapped into our greatest resource: the character and resolve of the American people. He never asked us to step up.

“Think about it: after September 11th, if there was a call from the president to get us off foreign oil to stop funding the very terrorists who had just attacked us, every American would have said, “how can I do my part?” This administration failed to believe in what we can achieve as a nation, when all of us work together.”

With a future as bright as Warner’s, I hope he ends up on the short-list for the next Democratic ticket next time go round.

ii. Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer:

Throughout the convention the headlining speakers have done their job to deliver the message in the way we expected them to.  I will save you all the trouble and not re-hash the analysis of most of these speakers.  But in Brian Schweitzer we had a minor speaker inspire, entertain, and impress us in a way totally unexpected.  CNN was decidedly ignoring the man’s speech, picking apart Warner’s recent speech to the utmost detail, until suddenly the crowd was overheard cheering like crazy.  The anchors shut up and cut to Schweitzer.  What a great cut it was.

Montana Governor Brian Schweizer

Montana Governor Brian Schweizer

Immediately what we saw was a good ole western cowboy whose level-headed look at what America needs, his energetic approach to speaking, and his calculated comedy back wit and charm made for an unforgettable speech. His occasional “whoo-weee” and guttural phrases characterize him as a modern loud and proud American frontiersman (cowboy), masculine and not afraid to rise up and speak out. I hope this guy makes it to national politics, we need a guy like him.

There were many memorable moments in his speech, including a one-liner about McCain’s forgetfulness about the number of homes he owns—which was followed by a “whew-wee” as the crowd cheered, a moment where explained that the best barrel of oil is the one we don’t have to buy, and another when he told convention delegates to “get off [their] hind ends” and let the world know we were declaring our energy independence.

iii. Hillary Clinton:

Hillary had a job to do.  She did it and more.  Among the many excellent things she said, I was most happy with this quote, which summed up the reasons I get so frustrated with old Hillary supporters that “can’t bring themselves to vote for Obama”:

New York Senator Hillary Clinton

New York Senator Hillary Clinton

“I want you to ask yourselves: Were you in this campaign just for me? Or were you in it for that young Marine and others like him? Were you in it for that mom struggling with cancer while raising her kids? Were you in it for that boy and his mom surviving on the minimum wage? Were you in it for all the people in this country who feel invisible?”

Her words were spot on, uplifting, and well organized.  She made a case to her former supporters for Obama, and didn’t just say “I endorse him”, rather she told them why they must, for the sake of all they worked toward together, vote for him.

The next day when she interrupted the roll call of the states to motion to nominate Obama by acclimation, that was amazing.  I am proud of that woman.  I would have been proud to vote her.  She was and is good for America, and I am glad she had a role in this historic election.

iv. Obama:

After being picked apart by everyone under the sun, if you want to see some more intelligent commentary on Obama’s speech, check out any other website.  I just want to say this: it was great, at times it made me tear up, and it reminded me why he is my candidate.  Good job Obama, and good luck over the next few months.

v. See More:

All the speeches are archived on the convention website.  Especially check out Schweitzer’s speech if you have a moment.  You need Microsoft Silverlight (the new flash competitor) installed (boo), but the videos are high quality and worth it.

1/100th of a second… again

Today we wrapped up Olympic swimming until 2012, and it was monumental.

Everyone and their brother are talking about Michael Phelp’s 8th Gold Medal.  And congrats to him.  I’ll let everyone else comment on that accomplishment, as I have already discussed Phelps enough here.

What was also monumental tonight was that another race was decided by 1/100th of a second, the Women’s 50m Freestyle.  Again, the result included an American.  But this time, the American got Sliver.  Still, props to Dara Torres for that Silver, she deserved it.  She is another “crazy” person by my standards, she busted out three Silver medals in her sixth Olympic appearance since 1988. But she is not why I am posting.

I am posting because of 1/100th of a second.  Because twice the difference between Gold and Silver was 1/100th of a second!  I see an inspirational poster coming on… “Make every fraction of a second count, it could be the difference between success and failure, a win or a loss, your dream accomplished or missed, Gold or Silver”.

These two races, each with the same miniscule time difference but two different outcomes, highlight how we as a people should make every moment count.  Even those 1/100ths of a second.

1/100th of a second

1/100th of a second was the difference between Gold and Silver in the Men’s 100m Butterfly swimming event today.  1/100 of a second made Michael Phelps more of a history making figure than ever, as he now earned his seventh gold medal in Beijing, a perfect 7 for 7 with one event left and is tied for most medals won by a single person at a single games, and he still has an event left.

a different kind of investment

My mom wanted me and my siblings to care about our country.  I remember watching the coverage of the 1992 Presidential election with my parents when I was only 5 years old.  I didn’t understand what was going on, but every time a state went from gray to a color, I cheered.  I didn’t know why, but it seemed exciting.  In 1996 I played in Nickelodeons’ Kids Pick the President and ‘chose’ Clinton, probably because my parents liked him.  In 2000 I realized the power that a vote has, and in the weeks of dispute and uncertainty MSNBC educated me a great deal about how the system works.  Though disappointed with the results of 2000, I was not discouraged and when 2004 rolled along I was 18 and ready to start voting.  It was exciting.

Despite my interest in politics, which manifests itself in lengthy debates with families and long times reading opinions and research online or in print, I have not yet donated to a campaign.  This time its different, I have donated three times already in 2008, including today, bringing my total contributions to $100 so far.

Why the change? Because too much is at stake.

This year, our country is at a crossroads.  How we move forward will be critical to our future.  This year’s election will dictate how we greet the new decade.  How do you want America to move forward?  There a two candidates who each have a different answer to that question and a different vision.  Find the one who most closely mirrors your own vision, and vote for them.  If you have $10, contribute as well.

My contribution today was not a freebie for a budding politician, but a different kind of investment into my, and my country’s, future.  I encourage you to do the same.

wowed by Beijing

Scene from Beijing Opening Ceremony (Via Flickr user )

Scene from Beijing Opening Ceremony (Via Flickr user Ligadier Truffaut)

Tonight I watched the Opening Ceremonies for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.  I was expecting a show boasting of ethnic pride and national ego, but instead I witnessed a spectacle; a mix themes including history, hope, and world peace portrayed majestically by a masterfully choreographed mix of pyrotechnics, technology, performers, and music.  The show was unlike anything I’ve ever seen at the Olympics or otherwise, I sit here still stunned and still with a smile on my face.  This show turned my ill opinion of these games around, and it reminded why I love the games so much.

So here is to Beijing!  Go USA, and more importantly, go World!