Showing posts with label Road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Road. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Road Rage Fight During Live Interview with Police Chief

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Road Rage Fight During Live Interview with Police Chief

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

ON THE ROAD WITH RAND PAUL, DEMOCRATS SEEK TO NEUTERLIZE OBAMACARE, Gallup poll finds unemployment top American concern, CANTOR BLASTS ISOLATIONISTS


By Ginger Gibson (ggibson@politico.com or @GingerGibson)


ON THE ROAD WITH RAND PAUL – POLITICO’s Katie Glueck spent time in Texas with Sen. Rand Paul: “It’s 7 a.m. on a Saturday, Rand Paul is exhausted and airport security has just confiscated his morning joe. “The TSA took away my coffee,” the libertarian-leaning senator, Houston-bound for a day of events with GOP activists, complains of the federal agency he’s proposed abolishing. “I offered to drink it to show it wasn’t a bomb.”


“The Kentucky Republican has many more sleep-deprived moments in store as he prepares for a near-certain 2016 presidential bid. On an early February political swing through his native Texas, where Paul was joined by a POLITICO reporter, the contradictions and challenges that would define such a run were on vivid display — as was Paul’s belief that his blend of libertarian-infused conservatism could forge an entirely new path to the White House.


“In an extensive in-flight interview, the first-term senator outlined his vision for a more inclusive GOP — only to meet a frosty response hours later when he spoke favorably about immigration to a roomful of people enamored of the tea party’s luminary of the moment, Sen. Ted Cruz.” http://politi.co/1eLOufh


DEMOCRATS, OBAMACARE AND 2014 – POLITICO’s James Hohmann writes: “Democrats know their biggest problem in this year’s midterm election is Obamacare. So top party operatives have settled on a strategy to try blunting the GOP’s advantage: Tell voters Republicans would make the problem worse — raising prescription drug prices, empowering insurance companies and even endangering domestic violence victims.


“The battle plan, details of which were in a memo obtained by POLITICO, recognizes the unpopularity of the Affordable Care Act. But it also banks on voter fatigue with the GOP’s relentless demands for repeal and counts on poll-backed data that show many Americans would rather fix Obamacare’s problems than scrap it altogether.” http://politi.co/1bZ8lYB


– The New York Times’ Ashley Parker looks at some examples: “The ad supporting Representative Ann Kirkpatrick, Democrat of Arizona, opens with a montage of Americana Main Streets, followed by the green fields and dirt roads of the West — the “small towns and wide-open spaces,” the narrator explains, where Ms. Kirkpatrick “listens and learns.”


“His voice remains tranquil even as he turns to a more cutting message about President Obama’s signature health care law: “It’s why she blew the whistle on the disastrous health care website, calling it ‘stunning ineptitude’ and worked to fix it,” he says, before adding, “Ann Kirkpatrick: Seeing what’s wrong, doing what’s right.”


“As Democrats approach the 2014 midterm elections, they are grappling with an awkward reality: Their president’s health care law — passed with no Republican votes — remains a political liability in many states, threatening their ability to hold on to seats in the Senate and the House.” http://nyti.ms/1oJ7vrA


FLASHBACK: Headline from June 2013 “Democrats 2014 strategy: Own Obamacare” http://politi.co/1gcUFM6


– REPUBLICAN MEGA-DONORS ORGANIZE COUNCIL HEAD OF MIDTERMS: http://politi.co/1fv8Zhn


NRSC raised $ 4.62 million in January: http://politi.co/1gQpVCe


DOUTH PROTEST TOO MUCH? Rep. Issa was in New Hampshire this weekend – The New Hampshire Union Leader’s Doug Alden reports: “California Republican Darrell Issa opened his speech at Monday night’s Lincoln-Reagan Dinner saying he was not there as a candidate.


“I came here to hopefully shape the debate for 2016 — not join it — but shape it,” the congressman told the audience, which filled a banquet room at the Grappone Center. “I did so in part because over the last five years, I’ve had the distinction and dubious honor of overseeing an administration that doesn’t do the fundamentals of government well — but wants to grow government and expand it in new areas.” http://bit.ly/1gdJFhw


– And so does National Journal’s Billy House: “Rep. Darrell Issa, the bombastic chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee and prominent scourge of liberals everywhere, is in New Hampshire this week.


The 60-year-old Californian is making speeches. He published an op-ed that introduces his life story to Granite State residents. And he’s prompting the obvious question.


“He is not running for president,” said Kurt Bardella, a former Issa congressional aide whose firm, Endeavor Strategic Communications, now handles Issa’s politically related media inquiries.” http://bit.ly/1oLYdLk


CANTOR BLASTS ISOLATIONISTS – Politico Pro’s Austin Wright reports: “Make no mistake: Eric Cantor sides with the strong-on-defense wing of the GOP. In a Presidents Day at the Virginia Military Institute, the House majority leader offers a full-throated rebuke of the “isolationist sentiment” he says caused the United States to hesitate to enter World War II and again threatens to unleash global horrors. http://politi.co/1nI5msQ


DON’T DITCH PAPER YET – The Washington Post’s Lisa Rein reports on the efforts to hold on to good old fashioned paper in an increasingly digital age: “As the Obama administration pushes to do more business over the Internet, finally seeking to close the technology gap with the private sector, the digital makeover is running into a dogged opponent called Consumers for Paper Options.


“The group is working the halls of Congress in closed-door meetings, underwriting research favorable to its position and mounting a news media campaign in an effort to preserve Washington as the capital of paper — and slow the move away from printed checks, forms and other paper communication.”


“The lobbying group has had some recent victories, including language tucked into last month’s budget deal that requires the government to plan for resuming paper delivery of annual Social Security earnings statements to some of the nation’s 150 million future retirees. And it’s been claiming these wins in the name of the elderly and low-income Americans the Internet has left behind.” http://wapo.st/1e2e3so


**A message from POWERJobs: Jobs on our radar this week: Senior Data Modeler at Deloitte, Client Financial Management Analyst at Accenture and Director of Business Development at Evolver.  Interested? Apply to these jobs and more at www.POWERJobs.com; finally, a career site made for YOU!**


GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, FEB. 18, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Scott is out for the week, so send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to ggibson@politico.com. You can also heckle me on Twitter @GingerGibson.


TODAY IN CONGRESS –. The House and Senate have both recessed for the week. The House will meet in pro forma session at 2 p.m., bang the gavel and then get out.


AROUND THE HILL – All is quiet on Capitol Hill.


TRANSITIONS – After three years of wrangling over the farm bill and six years on the Hill, Cullen Schwartz is out as communications director for Sen. Debbie Stabenow. His last day is Wednesday. He heads a few blocks down the street to the USDA where he will start work as a press secretary March 10. His friends are toasting his new gig tonight from 5 to 7 p.m. at The 201 Bar on Mass Avenue.


WHAT MEMBERS WILL HEAR IN THEIR DISTRICTS – A Gallup poll out Monday found unemployment is now the top problem being cited by Americans. The numbers who cite the inability to find a job as their top problem was up 16 percent since January, with 23 percent naming unemployment as the most important problem facing the nation. Unemployment edged out unhappiness with government, politicians and Congress, which previous topped the biggest problem list in the Gallup poll. In fact, Congress and elected officials in Washington slipped to third. General concern about the economy also moved up into second place. The concerns shared bipartisan agreement, with Republicans, Democrats and independents all ranking unemployment and the economy as their top problems. Read the survey here: http://bit.ly/1eKe2cA


The months ahead for the House GOP – The Washington Post’s Robert Costa reports: “After a tumultuous week of party infighting and leadership stumbles, congressional Republicans are focused on calming their divided ranks in the months ahead, mostly by touting proposals that have wide backing within the GOP and shelving any big-ticket legislation for the rest of the year.


“Comprehensive immigration reform, tax reform, tweaks to the federal health-care law — bipartisan deals on each are probably dead in the water for the rest of this Congress.” http://wapo.st/1fv8Vhu


HAPPY ANNIVERSARY STIMULUS – The stimulus would be starting Kindergarten and there is still deep disagreement over what the law meant:


From House Speaker John Boehner’s statement: “The ‘stimulus’ has turned out to be a classic case of big promises and big spending with little results.  Five years and hundreds of billions of dollars later, millions of families are still asking ‘where are the jobs?’  More Americans are living at or below the poverty line.”


House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) also put out a statement: “Five years after the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, we can see the difference it made in the millions of jobs created and saved and in the small businesses able to survive the economic downturn and invest again for the future.”


MCCONNELL DEFENDS DEBT VOTE – Speaking to reporters in Kentucky, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell defended his vote on the debt deal. Louisville TV station WHAS’s Joe Arnold reports: “Under fire from the tea party for his part in allowing a senate vote to raise the nation’s debt ceiling, U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Friday he had to act in the best interests of the country to avoid default by the United States.


“My job is to protect the country when I can,” McConnell said at a campaign appearance in Louisville, “and to step up and lead on those occasions when it’s required.  That’s what I did.” Read more and watch the video: http://bit.ly/1bZLRXs


DEBT LIMIT AND THE SENATE ­– The New York Times’ Carl Hulse and Jonathan Martin look at the midterm implications of the Senate debt vote: “Senators Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn, two Republican leaders facing primary challenges, knew they would take an immediate political hit from the Republicans’ Tea Party wing by voting to clear the way for a debt-limit increase. They also knew that their willingness to cast that vote would enhance their party’s chances of gaining a majority in the Senate next year.


“It was not an easy exercise, but it keeps the focus on the issues we want it to be on,” said Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, who argued that by putting the debt limit fight behind it last week, his party had robbed Democrats of an opportunity to portray Republicans as reckless. “We dodged a bullet here.”


Democrats acknowledge that the Republican retreat on the debt issue was politically wise and represents yet another factor in the mounting concerns over their own Senate prospects. Democrats are counting on bursts of political extremism to wound Republican candidates. The move by Mr. McConnell, of Kentucky, and Mr. Cornyn, of Texas, showed that at least some Republicans have learned from past defeats.” http://nyti.ms/1bGPkj5


Rep. Thomas Petri (R-Wisc.) calls for investigation into himself – After news articles looking at the Wisconsin Republican’s lobbying, Petri sent a letter to the Ethics Committee requesting they look into the matter. The Hill’s Kristina Wong reports: “In the letter to the House Ethics Committee, the congressman said he was “distressed by the innuendo” that there is a conflict between his personal financial interests and his official actions in Washington.


“To end any questions, I am requesting that the committee formally review the matter and report back,” the letter read.” http://bit.ly/1fbYX8s Read the full letter here: http://bit.ly/1gXXFfZ


Obama thumbs up “Obamacare” moniker: Attention Nancy Pelosi (who has admonished reporters for calling the ACA by any other name), but President Barack Obama once again gave his approval of the health care shorthand. Politico’s Jose Del Real reports: “It may not be polling well, but President Barack Obama isn’t too worried about the Affordable Care Act’s nickname, Obamacare, or the health care law’s impact on his legacy.


“I like it. I don’t mind,” the president told former NBA star Charles Barkley in an interview that aired Sunday about the term Obamacare. “And I tell you, five years from now, when everybody’s saying, ‘Man, I’m sure glad we got health care,’ there are going to be a whole bunch of people who don’t call it Obamacare anymore because they don’t want me to get the credit.”” http://politi.co/1gwPp8r


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Wilfred Codrington was first to correctly answer that William Howard Taft was the president whose wife, Nellie Taft, was the main founder of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – On this day in 1885, Mark Twain published The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Twain spent one winter working in Washington D.C., including freelancing for several newspapers. Who was he writing for when he penned: “Congress doesn’t know anything about religion… You religious people there are too feeble, in intellect, in morality, in piety—in everything pretty much.” The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at ggibson@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


**A message from POWERJobs: Tap into the power of POWERJobs for the newest job opportunities in the Washington area from the area’s top employers, including METRO, Deloitte and AIPAC. Powered by names you trust – POLITICO, WTOP, WJLA/ABC-TV, NewsChannel 8 and Federal News Radio- POWERJOBS is the ultimate career site with more than 2 million job searches and nearly 17,000 applications submitted this year so far. Connect through Facebook or LinkedIn, search jobs by industry and set up job-specific email alerts using www.POWERJobs.com, the site for Washington’s top talent.**




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



ON THE ROAD WITH RAND PAUL, DEMOCRATS SEEK TO NEUTERLIZE OBAMACARE, Gallup poll finds unemployment top American concern, CANTOR BLASTS ISOLATIONISTS

Friday, January 31, 2014

Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip"

Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip"
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663871/s/369655de/sc/1/mf.gif

Hangout dubbed ‘first-ever presidential hangout road trip’ by White House as president took friendly questions from nine Americans












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


Read more about Obama answers citizens" questions in Google "hangout road trip" and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Ted Cruz doesn’t want you to know who’s bankrolling his road to the White House

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Ted Cruz doesn’t want you to know who’s bankrolling his road to the White House

Thursday, October 17, 2013

CHRIS MATTHEWS ROAD SHOW: sometimes hijacked by the Willy Nelson 911 Truther Organization...

A few nice political satire images I found:


CHRIS MATTHEWS ROAD SHOW: sometimes hijacked by the Willy Nelson 911 Truther Organization…


Image by roberthuffstutter


WHO WILL PREVENT ELECTION FRAUD IN THE NEXT TWO ELECTIONS?


Image by roberthuffstutter

Do you think the next elections should have a foreign nation monitoring the boothes to prevent election frauds?



CHRIS MATTHEWS ROAD SHOW: sometimes hijacked by the Willy Nelson 911 Truther Organization...

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Tor Can"t Always Keep You Safe; Just Ask Silk Road

via Wikipedia

It was the end of an era yesterday when the Internet’s largest (and highly profitable) black market website Silk Road was finally taken down by the feds. Its proprietor Ross William Ulbricht (aka Dread Pirate Roberts) was taken into custody and now we’re learning a lot about the site that offered everything from drugs to assassins. We’re also learning about the limits of online anonymity.


Silk Road
Named for the ancient cross-desert trade route, Silk Road was a marketplace designed to let users sell their wares—particularly, illegal goods and services. According to documents filed in conjunction with the investigation, the service saw billions of dollars pass through it in the form of untraceable Bitcoins.


To protect the site’s users, Silk Road took advantage of the Tor (The Onion Router) anonymity network which bounces your request around to make it harder to track. When you connect to Silk Road, and other websites secured by Tor, your request is bounced through a series of volunteer servers. The request uses encrypted layers, like an onion, so that each relay server can only see where the request has immediately arrived from and where it will go next.


For instance, if you’re on computer A trying to connect to website E, your request is bounced through Tor servers B, C, and D. Server B can see where you are because it’s the first hop in the chain, but it doesn’t know that you’re trying to reach website E. Server D does know what website your request is headed to, but it doesn’t know where you are. Server C doesn’t know much of anything.


It’s a clever system that has protected journalists and human rights activists, in addition to providing a modicum of security to less reputable operations. But like all security technology, it can be beaten.


Breaking Tor
Back when we looked at the Pirate Bay Browser, we highlighted a few of the problems with Tor. The big one, and the one that Tor has always admitted to, is that with careful traffic monitoring and a little math you can figure out who connects to what on Tor.


“The way we generally explain it is that Tor tries to protect against traffic analysis, where an attacker tries to learn whom to investigate,” reads a 2009 blogpost from Tor. “But Tor can’t protect against traffic confirmation (also known as end-to-end correlation), where an attacker tries to confirm a hypothesis by monitoring the right locations in the network and then doing the math.”


Basically, if you think that person A is connecting to website E, you can sit at the entry to the Tor network and at an exit point, you can eventually infer the path of travel. But you have to know who to watch before you start your investigation.


Alternatively, you can be infected with malware while on a Tor site and have your computer’s identifying information sent off to an observer. This is how the FBI was reportedly able to crack a notorious child pornography ring and bring charges against its operator, Eric Eoin Marques.


In that investigation, it appears that the FBI took control of Freedom Hosting—which hosted Marques’s site—and used them to display an error message. Within the error message was an iFrame which in turn injected code onto the computer of anyone who visited a Freedom Hosting site. Wired writes that this code captured the infected computer’s MAC address and Windows host name. This information was then packaged up and sent back to an unidentified server somewhere in Northern Virginia.


Plain Ol’ Detective Work
In the case of Silk Road, the investigation appears to have relied on more traditional policework than breaking Tor. Wired reports that the feds simply looked around for the earliest mention of Silk Road on the Internet. That led to a posting on a magic mushroom forum, which in turn led to Ulbricht’s Gmail account.


That’s not the whole story, and in fact there are a lot of gaps in the chain of events. Police somehow got a hold of several fake IDs with Ulbricht’s face on them during a border check, and somehow were able to trace Silk Road’s servers. But the initial connection to Ulbricht appears to have required no special hacking, just some persistent Googling and subpoenas.


The lesson here is that behind all the encryption and obfuscation is a person. A person who makes mistakes, a person who leaves clues, and a person who is now facing serious charges. As long as people are still people, they’ll always be vulnerable.


Image via Wikipedia




Security Watch



Tor Can"t Always Keep You Safe; Just Ask Silk Road

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Silk Road could have led the way to safer drug use | Oscar Rickett


The drug-selling website could have offered a real alternative to violent cartels – but for the FBI it was an easier target


In the end, it was relatively old-fashioned police work that brought down Ross William Ulbricht, a 29-year-old San Francisco resident who looks a bit like Emile Hirsch in Into the Wild and is thought to be the owner and operator of online drugs marketplace, Silk Road. It was partly through mundane, archaic websites such as LinkedIn and WordPress, as well as a Gmail account, that Ulbricht came to the authorities’ attention.


Like an upwardly mobile Apprentice candidate keen to impress Lord Sugar, Ulbricht just couldn’t quite stop himself from boasting of a new position on LinkedIn. Operating on the deep web, using Tor software, Silk Road was the next-generation, post-WikiLeaks way to buy drugs. The shutting down of the site feels a bit like a motorboat full of old-school toughs boarding a 21st-century pirate ship run by mild-mannered nerds. It also, despite allegations that Ulbricht paid a hitman to have a Silk Road user who was threatening him killed, feels like a shame. If the allegations are true, there is absolutely no defence for that, but they are inconclusive, and in stark contrast to descriptions of Ulbricht as an idealist, a young man who wanted to make the buying and selling of drugs a cleaner, safer affair.


The end of Silk Road feels like a shame because its closure – and the arrest of Ulbricht – simply tells us that the American government has found yet another way to waste time and money on the policing of drugs. The internet, particularly the deep web, has opened up a new front in the war on drugs. You can almost imagine drug authorities getting a perverse thrill from the prospect of a new type of adversary, a new breed of law-breaker to add colour to a picture that is mostly taken up by ultra-violent cartels. In steaming into this new world the drug authorities were, yet again, doing the wrong thing expensively.


Silk Road could have ended up providing a real alternative to the cartels. It could have taken money out of their pockets and put it into the pockets of people whose only crime was to sell drugs – as opposed to people whose many crimes include mass-murder and kidnapping. When I interviewed the former drug smuggler Brian O’Dea, he told me that it was the drug authorities’ decision to go after peaceful guys like him (“low hanging fruit”) that led to the drug-trafficking business being dominated by violent gangs. For O’Dea in the 1980s, read Ulbricht today.


Silk Road also provided a model for how the legalised selling of drugs might work. Reports suggest that the drugs were less contaminated and that the experience of buying them was less fraught. On the one hand, that just means less awkward sitting around in cars with guys you don’t really want to talk to – on the other hand, it means not being put in physical danger because you’d rather get high than get drunk.


We have to get out of the mindset of thinking that things are wrong because they are illegal. People make laws and people can change those laws. The war on drugs is hugely expensive. The criminalisation of drugs forces people to take risks they wouldn’t normally take and leads to overdoses and the contamination of substances that would not otherwise cause such extreme harm. It creates addicts and it creates dealers. Silk Road showed us a way – a hugely imperfect way, it should be noted – that these things could be overcome but our lawmakers, with their focus on punishment and their refusal to accept defeat, could not see the benefit in this. Prohibition never works but it’s still the order of the day.





theguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds









Comment is free | theguardian.com

Silk Road could have led the way to safer drug use | Oscar Rickett

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Road to Damascus


Some things you just (SET ITAL) have (END ITAL) to do, in spite of great uncertainty.
Launching missiles at Syria isn’t one of them.


Many pundits talk about going to war as if all we have to do is make up our minds about what “ought” to happen — who the bad guys are — and the rest is just details. If we decide we must punish a tyrant, let the military worry about how to get it done.


We ought to worry more about details.


Everyone agrees there are huge “known unknowns” in Syria — we barely know the composition of the rebel movement we’re supposed to aid — but we should be more concerned about “unknown unknowns,” to borrow former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s phrase.


Remember the confidence with which he and other Bush administration officials described their plans to remake Iraq? Dick Cheney said, “We will, in fact, be greeted as liberators.” The Wall Street Journal beat the drums for war for a year. I read that Iraq was full of repressed democratic activists just waiting for Saddam to be overthrown.


Pundits also argued that once the authoritarian ruler was gone, Iraq would blossom into a showcase of peace and democracy that would inspire transformation throughout the region. I wanted to believe it. Once they had a choice, why wouldn’t they pursue our way of life? It’s clearly better!


Instead, we’ve spent more than a decade fighting feuding factions that most Americans have never heard of — and still can’t name.


When pro-war pundits did admit to uncertainty about what would happen in Iraq, it was often to stoke fear about what would happen if we didn’t intervene. Saddam might use chemical weapons! Saddam might get nukes! Well, maybe.


I’m glad Saddam is gone, and Iraqis are better off. But the masses yearning to breathe free turned out to include more troublemakers than we expected.


I don’t trust John Kerry, but I’ll accept his claim that Syria’s leaders probably used chemical weapons to kill 1,400 people. Horrible.


But are we going to enforce a “red line” to tell dictators that if they murder their people, they better use conventional weapons?


Even if that’s the goal, our options are limited. Maybe we’ll:


–Lob a few cruise missiles, like Bill Clinton did in Sudan.


–Hit Assad’s compound, killing hundreds of innocents, without killing Assad.


–Kill Assad himself and then … what?


President Obama argues that limited intervention in Syria might accomplish good more quickly and cheaply than our efforts in Iraq did. He said he wants a two-day engagement instead of months of fighting.


But we thought that would happen in Iraq, too. We didn’t foresee years of civil war. What do we fail to foresee now? More intervention from Russia? China? Iran? World war?


Even if the conflict remains localized and contained — a dangerous assumption in the “fog of war” — we can’t assume that a new government will be more democratic or tolerant than Assad’s regime.


We already know that the rebel forces include factions allied with al-Qaida. Some of those people execute Christians and want to replace Assad’s repressive but multi-faith regime with Islamic totalitarianism. If they murder Christians while still fighting Assad, what will they do once in power?


Years ago, al-Qaida (and Osama bin Laden) gained power because America funded “rebels” fighting the Russians in Afghanistan.


Given what happened on Sept. 11, 2001, there are worse things than leaving murderous Russian-backed governments in place.


I hate Assad. I hate what’s happened in Syria. I also hate what happened in Rwanda and Darfur and what still happens in Somalia, China, Russia, Zimbabwe and so on. But there’s just not much we can do about it without making new enemies and exacerbating America’s coming bankruptcy. America cannot police the world and shouldn’t try.


Defense should mean defense. Unless we are attacked, we shouldn’t go to war. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Road to Damascus

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Matthews On Syria: This Is A Road Americans Wish We Were Not On


Matthews On Syria: This Is A Road Americans Wish We Were Not On


Chris Matthews reflects on the road which the American people finds themselves on with the situation on Syria.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Matthews On Syria: This Is A Road Americans Wish We Were Not On

Monday, August 26, 2013

Biden"s Uphill Road to 2016



His Republican foes branded it the “2016 Kickoff Tour” and vice-president Joe Biden made it clear to the people of “my native town, Scranton” that he hopes to build a White House campaign on tales of his humble upbringing in Pennsylvania coal country.


After recently seeming to bolster former secretary of state Hillary Clinton’s credentials to be his successor, President Barack Obama went out of his way to give a boost to his No 2.


Their joint appearance on Friday was also significant because coming from a place such as Scranton, an archetype of blue-collar America, is the modern equivalent of growing up in a log cabin.


“This was a signal that [Obama’s] not playing sides,” said Ed Mitchell, a long-time Democratic consultant in Pennsylvania.


“He wanted to be there together with Biden so that people didn’t think that because he’d had lunch with Secretary Clinton and said nice things about her on 60 Minutes that he was favouring her.”


Obama said at Friday’s rally to promote an initiative to make college more affordable that the “reason that I love Scranton is because if it weren’t for Scranton, I wouldn’t have Joe Biden”.


Noting that it was exactly five years since the “special day” that he selected Biden as his running mate, Obama piled on the praise. “It was the best decision that I ever made, politically, because I love this guy . . . and he’s got some Scranton in him,” he said.


Biden grinned broadly, perhaps imagining the campaign commercial that could be crafted from the event. “I tell you, it’s good to be home,” he said, of the city his family moved away from 60 years ago, when he was 10. Scranton was a place “where your heart stays” and where “community, hard work, personal responsibility, faith, family” helped to sustain the American dream.


As vice-president, by rights Biden should be Obama’s heir apparent and in pole position to be the next Democratic choice for the top job. The last occupant of the post to seek his party’s nomination for the White House and fail to land it was Alben Barkley in 1952.


Clinton, however, is viewed as the overwhelming Democratic favourite if, as expected, she chooses to run. A Public Policy Polling survey last month gave her a 59-point lead over Biden in first-voting Iowa. The 1952 analogy is not auspicious for Biden. Barkley was considered too old for the presidency — he was 74, the age Biden will be in 2016.


Supporters of Clinton are quick to point out that she is five years younger than Biden and only Ronald Reagan has been as old as 74 when elected, and that was for his second term in 1984. They also note that in 2008 Biden said that Clinton “might have been a better pick than me” for vice-president.


Biden does not even have the upper hand over Clinton in his birthplace, in part because she also has deep family connections there. Her great-grandparents came to Scranton in the 1880s from Wales, her grandfather worked as a boy at the Scranton Lace Factory and her father is buried in the city.


And while Obama’s words might have seemed an imprimatur, few in Washington will take them at face value. While Obama likes to portray Biden as “the scrappy kid from Scranton who beat the odds”, in large part this is to trade on Biden’s appeal to blue-collar whites, who have been slow to warm to the president’s aloof manner.


Biden’s blunders are legendary, and eagerly recounted by Republicans. The garrulous former senator for Delaware, who served in Congress for 36 years, once told a wheelchair-bound state senator: “Stand up, Chuck — let ’em see you.”


In his book This Town, a dirt-dishing account of the insider world of politics that has become a summer must-read in the American capital, Mark Leibovich describes Biden as “the lovable rodeo clown of the administration”, someone Obama talked about “with a patronising over-fondness — as if the VP were the beloved family dog that kept peeing on the carpet”.


Biden’s two previous runs for the White House were spectacular failures. In 2008, his folksy, long-winded style failed to resonate and he dropped out after securing just 0.9% of the vote in Iowa.


In 1987 he was forced to withdraw when it was revealed that he had plagiarised a speech by Neil Kinnock, then Labour party leader.


He also spoke then about “my ancestors who worked in the coalmines of northeast Pennsylvania and would come up after 12 hours and play football for four hours”.


It turned out that no known forebears had been miners. A great-grandfather he had thought had been a miner turned out to have been a university-educated engineer.


Steve Corbett, a local radio host, said that Biden was “privileged” in Scranton terms and was not quite the “working-class hero” that he purported to be. “A Biden presidential campaign will be like watching Benny Hill reruns,” he said. “Our Joey will be predictable — he’ll be as stale as a day-old sausage roll and cheeky in his own goofy way.


“In the eyes of most Scranton Democrats, Hillary Clinton has earned the presidency. Bill Clinton is much loved in Scranton and campaigned for Obama here on the eve of the election last year. Her brothers have a family cottage 20 miles away. If you face off with a Hillary-Joe Biden deal, then Hillary’s going to walk all over him.”


Joe Trippi, a veteran Democratic operative who ran Howard Dean’s presidential campaign in 2004, said he did not believe Biden would take on Clinton but it was possible that something unforeseeable might make her decide not to run or leave her weakened.


“He only has one more opportunity at this,” he said. “He’s got to go all out. But he’s a realist and in 2008 he understood very early how the cards were dealt.” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Biden"s Uphill Road to 2016

Saturday, July 20, 2013

From Ramen To Rotini: Following The Noodles Of The Silk Road





A member of the staff at the one-Michelin-starred restaurant Ho Hung Kee prepares wontons in Hong Kong.



AFP/AFP/Getty Images

A member of the staff at the one-Michelin-starred restaurant Ho Hung Kee prepares wontons in Hong Kong.



A member of the staff at the one-Michelin-starred restaurant Ho Hung Kee prepares wontons in Hong Kong.


AFP/AFP/Getty Images



Popular lore has it that the Italian merchant Marco Polo was responsible for introducing the noodle to China. This legend appeals to Italians, but if you ask the Chinese, they may beg to differ.





The Silk Road stretched from Eastern China to Europe and was the primary route for merchants in the ancient Chinese silk trade.



Wikimedia Commons

The Silk Road stretched from Eastern China to Europe and was the primary route for merchants in the ancient Chinese silk trade.



The Silk Road stretched from Eastern China to Europe and was the primary route for merchants in the ancient Chinese silk trade.


Wikimedia Commons



In her latest book, On the Noodle Road, author Jen Lin-Liu chronicles a six-month journey along the historic Silk Road from eastern China, through central Asia, Turkey, Iran and eventually arriving in Italy in search of the true origin of the noodle.


As Lin-Liu tells NPR’s Linda Wertheimer, the myth of pasta traveling from west to east was first popularized by Macaroni Journal, the official trade journal of the pasta manufacturers of the U.S. In 1929, the journal had a story “about how Marco Polo arrived at a destination that seemed more South Pacific than Chinese and came across natives drying strands of dough.”


But this couldn’t possibly be correct. “As it turns out, the Chinese don’t dry their pasta the way that Italians do,” she says.


So what are the historical origins of noodles in China?


“China has had a longer tradition of bread than noodles and the ripping of dough, either boiled or cooked, into a wok of boiling water was how noodles first originated in China,” says Lin-Liu.


In the Tibetan province of Qinghai, Lin-Liu finds women in a restaurant kitchen ripping long flat strands of noodles by hand to make the square shaped noodles that are typical to the region. Boiled in water, they are served up in a light mutton broth.


“They’re the right texture, chewy, just the right size, like a large postage stamp, and they’re stir-fried in a spicy broth with bits of green peppers and onions and either lamb or beef, and they’re delicious,” Lin-Liu says.





In Turkey, bits of meat are wrapped in squares of pasta to make manti.



thebittenworld/Flickr

In Turkey, bits of meat are wrapped in squares of pasta to make manti.



In Turkey, bits of meat are wrapped in squares of pasta to make manti.


thebittenworld/Flickr



Heading further west, she comes across all manner of small dough parcels containing spiced meats, vegetables and cheeses. The wontons and dumplings of China give way to the manta of Central Asia, the similarly-named manti of Turkey and finally the tortellini of Italy.


“Some people theorized that Ghengis Khan was responsible for carrying these filled pasta dishes all the way from China through Eastern Europe, where of course you have pierogies and other similar dishes,” says Lin-Liu.


But who does pasta best?


“I think that there’s a real toss-up between Italy and China,” Lin-Liu says. “At both ends of the Silk Road you really get a refinement of pasta and noodles that you don’t really see in the central part of the route.”


But this diversity along the way is what Lin-Liu believes make noodles so pleasurable. Not only can they be prepared in such different ways, but they can be topped with almost anything.




News



From Ramen To Rotini: Following The Noodles Of The Silk Road

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

World Chef: Silk Road travels inspire LA"s Hinoki & the Bird




Chef and owner of the restaurant Hinoki & the Bird David Myers (R) poses with chef Kuniko Yagi in the restaurant with one of their signature dishes, hinoki scented black cod, sweet potatoes and pistachios in Los Angeles April 19, 2013. REUTERS/Fred Prouser


1 of 2. Chef and owner of the restaurant Hinoki & the Bird David Myers (R) poses with chef Kuniko Yagi in the restaurant with one of their signature dishes, hinoki scented black cod, sweet potatoes and pistachios in Los Angeles April 19, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Fred Prouser






LOS ANGELES | Tue Jul 16, 2013 4:18am EDT



LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The exotic, earthy aroma from smoking sheets of smoldering hinoki wood hovering over exquisite black cod is the first hint that diners at celebrated chef David Myers’ newest restaurant are in for a culinary adventure.


Hinoki & the Bird, the Japanophile chef’s Silk Road-inspired restaurant, borrows heavily from the travels of Myers and Executive Chef Kuniko Yagi, who left banking a decade ago and worked her way up from the kitchen’s lowest rungs to her current, globe-trotting career.


The sleekly casual eatery, located near some of Los Angeles’ top talent agencies, is a departure from Sona, Myers’ elegant, Michelin one-star restaurant that opened in 2002 – a year before Food & Wine magazine bestowed on him a prestigious “Best New Chef” award.


After Sona closed in 2010, Myers and his executive chef hit the road – eating, tweeting and picking up inspiration throughout Asia.


Their journeys inform dishes such as spicy sambal skate wing, drunken duck breast and hinoki-scented black cod, the head-turning dish referenced earlier.


The telegenic duo, who are familiar to fans of foodie shows such as “Top Chef” and “Iron Chef America,” spoke with Reuters about how travel informed their careers and their latest project.


Q: David, what was the inspiration for Hinoki & the Bird’s name?


A: Hinoki is an incredible cypress tree in Japan that has the most wonderful aroma. The bird component was to capture the essence of travel and how important travel is to the creative process. It’s about the connection from California to Japan. We chronicle the bird’s travel and bring it into the menu.


Q: David, what is your vision for Hinoki & the Bird?


A: I think California is the gateway to Asia. The idea is to showcase the California bounty and the scent of the Silk Road. The flavors are light, vibrant and healthy. You can come in and eat several different things and you’re not feeling heavy. You’re feeling sharp and you’re ready to go the next day. I’ve only felt that in Asia – where you can eat a lot and drink a lot and feel great. The food of Southeast Asia is nothing but drinking food – it’s about going around having beers and going to the next place.


Q: David, which dish on Hinoki & the Bird’s menu best illustrates how your travels through Southeast Asia have influenced your food?


A: The sambal skate wing. That’s our version of a barbecue skate wing from a hawker’s stand in Singapore. That’s the classic hawker stand dish.


Q: Kuniko, what inspired you to leave banking and become a chef?


A: I wanted to make sure I could have a job anywhere in the world. I thought, maybe if I can cook really well I can go anywhere in the world and be able to have a job. (In the beginning) I wasn’t able to speak English much – but I thought I could mimic what people in the kitchen do.


Q: Kuniko, what advice would you give someone who makes a similar career leap?


A: Be humble about who you want to be. Nothing good happens in a year. I’ve been doing this for 10 years already. I started late. I was patient, and I had a couple of times where I wondered if I made the right choice.


Drunken Duck Breast


1/2 cup sake kasu (sake lees, a yeast by-product of sake making)


1 cup warm water


2 duck breasts


Salt & black pepper to taste


Pre-heat oven to 400 degrees.


In a small pot, place sake kasu and warm water and whisk over low heat until broken down to a loose texture. Remove from heat and let cool.


Score duck skin in a cross-hatch pattern and season with salt and pepper on both sides.


Cover the breasts with the sake kasu and cover with plastic wrap. Let it rest in the refrigerator for one hour.


Wash sake kasu off from duck breast and place the duck skin side down in a sauté pan over low heat, being careful not to burn. Render the skin from the breast, discarding the fat as you go.


When the skin has a golden brown color, place the breast in the oven for 7 minutes, skin side up, for medium rare.


(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)





Reuters: Lifestyle



World Chef: Silk Road travels inspire LA"s Hinoki & the Bird

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Chairmen hit the road to sell tax reform

Max Baucus and Dave Camp are pictured. | AP Photo

Baucus and Camp found themselves speaking before largely supportive crowds. | AP Photo





ST. PAUL, Minn. — It’s a favorite strategy for presidents who see their policy priorities struggle on Capitol Hill: Take the conversation outside the Beltway to rally the public’s support.


Lawmakers often dismiss such tactics as theatrics, but on Monday two of the most powerful members of Congress ripped a page from that playbook to promote tax reform.







House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) kicked off a summerlong “road show” with a pair of campaign-style stops here. They played with new technology from manufacturing giant 3M and ditched their suit coats for hard hats to tour the new facilities of a family-owned bakery.


(PHOTOS: 12 Republicans resigned to higher taxes)


They cracked jokes, listened to workers and, at one point, even held hands.


“There is a bit of a bubble in Washington, it’s true,” Baucus told an auditorium filled with about 100 employees at the 3M Innovation Center. “We are trying to break it.”


It’s not clear that such events will move the dial on tax reform. There was no talk about how the two lawmakers expect to move a complex overhaul package when the congressional calendar is currently dominated by immigration reform and will soon become consumed by efforts to raise the debt ceiling.


But like presidents who flee Washington for friendlier locales, Camp and Baucus found themselves speaking before largely supportive crowds who share their sense of urgency.


“Canada, with its 25 percent tax rate, is actually hurting us,” one 3M employee said during a question-and-answer session. “We are losing business that 3M should have here because a Canadian competitor can make it and ship it into the U.S. for cheaper than we can make it and sell it due to the tax rates.”


Still, the lawmakers weren’t able to entirely shake the political realities more than 1,000 miles away in Washington. Baucus, for instance, cast doubt on whether Congress would be able to slash the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent — the level sought by House Republicans.


“To be honest, I think 25 percent is a bit of a stretch,” Baucus said.


The decision to stop at 3M wasn’t a coincidence.


The company is one of the few corporations to explicitly say they’ll put all of their corporate tax breaks on the chopping block in exchange for a dramatically lower rate — music to the ears of tax writers who constantly hear companies beg for lower tax rates while employing teams of lobbyists to protect special breaks.


Standing inside 3M’s expo-style technology facility, Camp and Baucus said they were committed to getting a tax overhaul across the finish line.


“To make this happen, Dave and I believe it must be bipartisan, we must work together,” Baucus said. “I think we have a very good chance of success. It is like anything else in life — you make your own destiny.”


Most of the questions that Baucus and Camp heard were preselected. At one point, Baucus asked the crowd for a nonscripted question. One employee took the opportunity to ask a question on many minds in Washington: What guarantee do you have that tax reform will actually happen?


“At the end, it is going to have to be a bipartisan bill,” Camp said. “In the middle, it always looks like failure. The object is to get past that.”




POLITICO – Congress



Chairmen hit the road to sell tax reform

Chairmen hit the road to sell tax reform

Max Baucus and Dave Camp are pictured. | AP Photo

Baucus and Camp found themselves speaking before largely supportive crowds. | AP Photo





ST. PAUL, Minn. — It’s a favorite strategy for presidents who see their policy priorities struggle on Capitol Hill: Take the conversation outside the Beltway to rally the public’s support.


Lawmakers often dismiss such tactics as theatrics, but on Monday two of the most powerful members of Congress ripped a page from that playbook to promote tax reform.







House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) kicked off a summerlong “road show” with a pair of campaign-style stops here. They played with new technology from manufacturing giant 3M and ditched their suit coats for hard hats to tour the new facilities of a family-owned bakery.


(PHOTOS: 12 Republicans resigned to higher taxes)


They cracked jokes, listened to workers and, at one point, even held hands.


“There is a bit of a bubble in Washington, it’s true,” Baucus told an auditorium filled with about 100 employees at the 3M Innovation Center. “We are trying to break it.”


It’s not clear that such events will move the dial on tax reform. There was no talk about how the two lawmakers expect to move a complex overhaul package when the congressional calendar is currently dominated by immigration reform and will soon become consumed by efforts to raise the debt ceiling.


But like presidents who flee Washington for friendlier locales, Camp and Baucus found themselves speaking before largely supportive crowds who share their sense of urgency.


“Canada, with its 25 percent tax rate, is actually hurting us,” one 3M employee said during a question-and-answer session. “We are losing business that 3M should have here because a Canadian competitor can make it and ship it into the U.S. for cheaper than we can make it and sell it due to the tax rates.”


Still, the lawmakers weren’t able to entirely shake the political realities more than 1,000 miles away in Washington. Baucus, for instance, cast doubt on whether Congress would be able to slash the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent — the level sought by House Republicans.


“To be honest, I think 25 percent is a bit of a stretch,” Baucus said.


The decision to stop at 3M wasn’t a coincidence.


The company is one of the few corporations to explicitly say they’ll put all of their corporate tax breaks on the chopping block in exchange for a dramatically lower rate — music to the ears of tax writers who constantly hear companies beg for lower tax rates while employing teams of lobbyists to protect special breaks.


Standing inside 3M’s expo-style technology facility, Camp and Baucus said they were committed to getting a tax overhaul across the finish line.


“To make this happen, Dave and I believe it must be bipartisan, we must work together,” Baucus said. “I think we have a very good chance of success. It is like anything else in life — you make your own destiny.”


Most of the questions that Baucus and Camp heard were preselected. At one point, Baucus asked the crowd for a nonscripted question. One employee took the opportunity to ask a question on many minds in Washington: What guarantee do you have that tax reform will actually happen?


“At the end, it is going to have to be a bipartisan bill,” Camp said. “In the middle, it always looks like failure. The object is to get past that.”




POLITICO – Congress



Chairmen hit the road to sell tax reform

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Video game puts coach on road to World Cup glory




WINDHOEK | Tue Jun 11, 2013 11:31am EDT




WINDHOEK (Reuters) – A coach whose enthusiasm for the trade was forged by the ‘Football Manager’ video game will be thrown into the deep end on Wednesday when Nambia host African champions Nigeria in a World Cup qualifier.



Ricardo Mannetti, 38, won more than 60 caps for his country, played at the African Nations Cup finals and was a professional in the league in neighboring South Africa but had no desire to coach.


It was only after hours of playing the video game with his brother-in-law that his interested was fired.


Seven years later he takes charge of Namibia for the first time hoping for an upset victory that will keep alive their remote hopes of qualifying for next year’s finals in Brazil.


“I wasn’t into video games before that, I never had any interest in playing them, but Football Manager captured my imagination,” Mannetti told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.


“I was always winning and everyone said it proved I would make a good coach.”


Shortly after retiring from playing, Mannetti accepted an offer to coach his boyhood club in Windhoek after they were almost relegated.


“I thought ‘let me give a shot’ and that’s how I got into the job,” he said.


He won the Namibian Cup in his first season, finished second in the league and soon after moved on to the country’s biggest club, Black Africa.


In 2010 the Namibia Football Association brought Mannetti in to work with their junior teams.


He was then serving as an assistant to national coach Roger Palmgren when the Swede suddenly resigned on Monday after a month in the job, citing fears for his safety after an alleged altercation with a drunken fan.


“I’ve seen managers come and go but I didn’t see that one coming,” said Mannetti. “I’m a little bit nervous if I’m honest.


“It’s a big challenge for me and I just want the nation to shift the focus now from Roger on to the game.”


Mannetti said he had to move quickly to plot his strategy against Group F leaders Nigeria who have four points more than third-placed Namibia after four of their six matches.


One downside, he added, was that it meant there was no more time for video games.


(Editing by Tony Jimenez)



Powered By WizardRSS.com | RFID Wallet Blocking Cards

Reuters: Oddly Enough

Video game puts coach on road to World Cup glory

Video game puts coach on road to World Cup glory




WINDHOEK | Tue Jun 11, 2013 11:31am EDT




WINDHOEK (Reuters) – A coach whose enthusiasm for the trade was forged by the ‘Football Manager’ video game will be thrown into the deep end on Wednesday when Nambia host African champions Nigeria in a World Cup qualifier.



Ricardo Mannetti, 38, won more than 60 caps for his country, played at the African Nations Cup finals and was a professional in the league in neighboring South Africa but had no desire to coach.


It was only after hours of playing the video game with his brother-in-law that his interested was fired.


Seven years later he takes charge of Namibia for the first time hoping for an upset victory that will keep alive their remote hopes of qualifying for next year’s finals in Brazil.


“I wasn’t into video games before that, I never had any interest in playing them, but Football Manager captured my imagination,” Mannetti told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.


“I was always winning and everyone said it proved I would make a good coach.”


Shortly after retiring from playing, Mannetti accepted an offer to coach his boyhood club in Windhoek after they were almost relegated.


“I thought ‘let me give a shot’ and that’s how I got into the job,” he said.


He won the Namibian Cup in his first season, finished second in the league and soon after moved on to the country’s biggest club, Black Africa.


In 2010 the Namibia Football Association brought Mannetti in to work with their junior teams.


He was then serving as an assistant to national coach Roger Palmgren when the Swede suddenly resigned on Monday after a month in the job, citing fears for his safety after an alleged altercation with a drunken fan.


“I’ve seen managers come and go but I didn’t see that one coming,” said Mannetti. “I’m a little bit nervous if I’m honest.


“It’s a big challenge for me and I just want the nation to shift the focus now from Roger on to the game.”


Mannetti said he had to move quickly to plot his strategy against Group F leaders Nigeria who have four points more than third-placed Namibia after four of their six matches.


One downside, he added, was that it meant there was no more time for video games.


(Editing by Tony Jimenez)



Powered By WizardRSS.com | RFID Wallet Blocking Cards

Reuters: Oddly Enough

Video game puts coach on road to World Cup glory

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Poet, Author Alice Walker Meets the Inner Journey with Global Activism in "The Cushion in the Road"



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AARON MATÉ: We spend the rest of the hour with the legendary author, poet, activist, Alice Walker. In her newest book, The Cushion in the Road: Meditation and Wandering as the Whole World Awakens to Being in Harm’s Way, Alice Walker discusses many of the dominant themes in her life and work, including racism, activism, Palestine, Africa and President Obama. The collection of essays explores her conflicting desire for deep engagement in the world and for a retreat into quiet contemplation. Alice Walker is the first African-American woman to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. She won it in 1983 for her renowned novel The Color Purple, which also won the National Book Award for Fiction and was later adapted into a film and musical by the same name.


Alice Walker is also the subject of a new film that plays this Friday at the Seattle Film Festival and premiered in London on International Women’s Day in March. The film is called Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth and is directed by Pratibha Parmar. This is a clip from the trailer.


EVELYN WHITE: Alice claimed her space because she needed to be a writer. It saved her life in many regards.



DANNY GLOVER: Intrinsic in her writing is that part of her as a citizen, a citizen of the world, a woman, a woman of the world, and an activist.



ALICE WALKER: Three dollars cash
For a pair of catalog shoes
Was what the midwife charged
My mother
For bringing me.
“We wasn’t so country then,” says Mom,
“You being the last one
And we couldn’t, like
We done
When she brought your
Brother,
Send her out to the
Pen
And let her pick
Out
A pig.”



JEWELLE GOMEZ: Whatever perspective you have, when you read her work, you know she’s talking to you. And the you in her writing is really quite universal.



HOWARD ZINN: It’s interesting. In her creative writing, she puts herself on a firing line, in that she is herself. She is not going to conform to any idea of what a black writer should do.



BEVERLY GUY-SHEFTALL: I don’t know any other black writer who has experienced the venom that she experienced from her own community, the community that she cares the most about.



AMY GOODMAN: From the trailer of the new film, Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth. You heard Evelyn White, Danny Glover, Jewelle Gomez, Howard Zinn, Beverly Guy-Sheftall. In addition to Alice Walker’s new book, The Cushion in the Road, a new collection of her poetry has just come out, The World Will Follow Joy: Turning Madness into Flowers.


Alice Walker, it’s great to have you back on Democracy Now! Congratulations on these two books. Talk first about The Cushion in the Road. What do you mean by that?


ALICE WALKER: Good morning. I mean that my life is so full of so much activity, and yet my heart—my heart and my soul are longing for my cushion, which is a meditation cushion, where I can contemplate. I can drop into the deep source of our lives and draw a lot of richness from that. And what I discovered, though, was that I would sit on my cushion in meditation, and I prepared a beautiful place just for that, and the phone would ring, and the world would call. And so, in some ways, I was very torn and conflicted, until I realized, by dreaming it, that at that part of my life when I was, you know, called to the world, my solution was to take my cushion with me on the road. And so that is what I have tried to do.


AARON MATÉ: Alice Walker, you began your activism when you joined the civil rights movement in Mississippi over 40 years ago. I’m wondering if you could talk about that experience and how it has informed your activism that still continues today?


ALICE WALKER: Well, actually, my activism started when I got on the—when I was leaving my home in Georgia on the Greyhound bus, and my dad took me to the bus stop. It was such a small town, there was no station, so the bus just stopped by the side of the road. I got on the bus, and feeling the joy and the emotion of the movement starting up in Alabama and Mississippi and other places, I sat in the front of the bus, and I was immediately forced back to the back of the bus. And I had to make a decision whether I would risk my education—I was 17—or whether I would keep on the bus and go to my first year of college and join the movement at my school. And this is what I did, and that was really the beginning of my activism. And years later, I went back to—I went to Mississippi and worked in the movement.


AMY GOODMAN: Talk about—


ALICE WALKER: And how does it—


AMY GOODMAN: Go ahead, Alice.


ALICE WALKER: Now, how does it inform my activism? Well, I see myself in all the people in the world who are suffering and who are very badly treated and who are often made to feel that they have no place on this Earth. And this Earth actually belongs to all of us. The universe belongs to all of us. And we mustn’t forget it, you know. And I know firsthand how it feels when people tell you and make you think that, you know, they can have everything, they can have as much as they want, they can buy everything they desire, and you are supposed to have nothing. Well, this is not—it’s not right, and we must not accept it.


AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask you about Assata Shakur, who you’ve also written about recently. Earlier this month, the FBI added the former Black Panther to its Most Wanted Terrorists list, 40 years after the killing for which she was convicted. She became the first woman added to the list, and the reward for her capture was doubled to $ 2 million. This is a clip from the film Eyes of the Rainbow: The Assata Shakur Documentary, when she talks about her experience in prison.


ASSATA SHAKUR: Prisons are big business in the United States, and the building, running and supplying of prisons has become the fastest-growing industry in the country. Factories are moving into the prisons, and prisoners are forced to work for slave wages. This super-exploitation of human beings has meant the institutionalization of a new form of slavery. Those who cannot find work on the streets are forced to work in prison.



AMY GOODMAN: That was Assata Shakur, and that’s from Eyes of the Rainbow. Alice Walker, after the roadside shooting in which Assata Shakur was severely wounded, and she went to trial and was convicted, a crime she says she didn’t commit, she escaped from prison and got political asylum in Cuba, where she has lived for decades. Your thoughts on what has most recently happened, her being added to the terrorists list?


ALICE WALKER: Well, I see it as an attack, really, a sort of covert sneaky attack on Cuba. I think that the governments, all of them, in recent memory, have wanted to destroy the Cuban people, really, and their insistence on their freedom and their dignity. And I think this is a way of saying that, you know, you have a, quote, “terrorist” there, and we have a right to go in and get her. And so, this could cause a very big fight between these countries, which have never had peace in my lifetime.


AMY GOODMAN: You dedicated The Cushion in the Road: Meditation and Wandering as the Whole World Awakens to Being in Harm’s Way to Celia Sánchez Manduley and Fidel Castro Ruz. You say, “revolutionaries, teachers and spiritual guides who were, as well, one of the most inspiring power couples of the 20th century.” Why this dedication?


ALICE WALKER: Well, because they were. It’s just that we didn’t know anything about it. I think if you said to almost any North American, “Who was Celia Sánchez Manduley?” they wouldn’t have a clue. They wouldn’t know. And I didn’t know, actually, very much. But she and Fidel had this partnership and actually were co-revolutionaries together. And she was very prominent in the leadership of the Cuban revolution. And there’s a new book about her called One Day in December by Nancy Stout. It’s the life of Celia Sánchez. And this is a woman who can teach a lot of us about what it feels like and what it can be like to come face to face with the reality that your country is being not only stolen from you, but trashed, absolutely degraded—you know, your mountains despoiled, your rivers a mess, your children badly educated, if educated at all. So this book, I think, is crucial for people to have a guide, especially women, but also men, of course, a guide to see what it’s like to actually confront, you know, the forces that are literally destroying you, they’re destroying your children—horrible food, horrible laws, you know, rich people permitted to own much more than anyone should own of anything, and poor people being continually ground into the dust.


AARON MATÉ: Alice Walker, I want to ask about your travels. You’ve gone to Gaza. You’ve gone to Rwanda and eastern Congo. Can you talk about these experiences and what they left you with?


ALICE WALKER: Well, the Congo was the hardest, because there I saw that people will just do anything for gold and silver and coltan and whatever they can get, and that they care absolutely nothing about the suffering of the people. As you know, the Congo is called the worst place on the planet to be if you’re a woman. And I saw that in action. I saw the result of so much horrible atrocity in that place. But this is something that people should be very aware of in places where this kind of atrocity is not yet happening, because this is—you know, it’s crucial to see ourselves always as a part of whatever is going on, because we are. You know, this is one planet, and we are one people. And we learn from each other. We learn the awful things just as clearly as we learn the good things. And so, if you want to see what is a possibility for a really dreadful future, even here, go to the Congo and to places where, you know, people are fighting over minerals and resources that actually the people who live there will never benefit from.


AMY GOODMAN: You’ve also been to Burma, and you write about Aung San Suu Kyi.


ALICE WALKER: Well, I went to Burma before she was freed from house arrest. And we actually went and tried to get our cab driver to stop in front of her gate so we could just, you know, sort of bear witness, but he was so afraid, that he couldn’t stop, and he was—you know, sort of wanted us to get out of his cab because we put him in danger. But now she is out, of course. And, actually, once she was freed from her house arrest and she started talking to the world herself, I haven’t really kept up. You know, I feel that she’s such an amazing being, and she’s so smart, and she has a good heart, and she’s a practiced meditator, which I think is of value, because it means that her thinking is the kind of thinking that understands that the harm that you do to others is the harm that you do to yourself. And you cannot think, then, that you can cause wars in other parts of the world and destroy people and drone them, without this having a terrible impact on your own soul and your own consciousness.


AMY GOODMAN: Alice, your book of poetry, The World Will Follow Joy: Turning Madness into Flowers, could you read a poem from it?


ALICE WALKER: I would love to. This is a poem called “Coming to Worship the 1000 Year Old Cherry Tree.” And the preface to that is that I was in Japan at some point years ago for the Tokyo Book Fair, and I knew it was going to be a lot of work, and they did, too. And they, the people who invited me, insisted that not only could they take me to the countryside to have, you know, a wonderful bath and a beautiful place, you know, a massage, but they also wanted me to see this thousand-year-old cherry tree, which reminds us—this kind of old, beautiful tree reminds us of how long humans have been here and how much we have loved this planet. So, this poem is a result of going to see this wonder, this incredibly beautiful cherry tree in full blossom.


Life is good. Goodness is its character;
all else is defamation.
The Earth is good. Goodness is its nature.
Nature is good. Goodness is its essence.


People are also good. Goodness is our offering;
our predictable yet unfathomable flowering.


Thankful and encouraged
Infused with our peaceful inheritance,
Our peaceful inheritance,
May we not despair.


AMY GOODMAN: Alice Walker, reading from The World Will Follow Joy, her poem “”Coming to Worship the 1000 Year Old Cherry Tree.” Alice, tomorrow on Democracy Now! we will be interviewing Julian Assange from his, in a sense, cell. He has taken refuge in the Ecuadorean embassy in London. He is the WikiLeaks founder. And I was wondering if you have a message for him or a message for people in this country about Julian Assange. What do you think of WikiLeaks and his predicament right now?


ALICE WALKER: I think unless the people are given information about what is happening to them, they will die in ignorance. And I think that’s a big sin. I mean, if there is such a thing as a sin, that’s it, to destroy people and not have them have a clue about how this is happening. So I think that when people like Assange step up to this place of sharing knowledge about what is happening, I think it’s an honorable place. I know that there have been charges against him for, you know, other things, but personally, I would have to be convinced. And looking at just what he has given us in terms of sharing information that can help us, I think he’s very heroic.


AMY GOODMAN: Alice Walker—


ALICE WALKER: And I think that we should support him.


AMY GOODMAN: We have to leave it there, but we do part two post-show. Go to our website at democracynow.org. Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author.




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Poet, Author Alice Walker Meets the Inner Journey with Global Activism in "The Cushion in the Road"