Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Barbara Bush: I Hope Jeb Won"t Run


BARBARA BUSH: “I think this is a great American country, great country, and if we can’t find more than two or three families to run for high office, that’s silly, because there are great governors and great eligible people to run. And I think that the Kennedys, Clintons, Bushes, there are just more families than that. And I’m not arrogant enough to think that we alone are raising, but we’re — we’re raising public servants, whether they’re feeding the poor, like Lauren is, who’s fed 68 million children around the world, or Barbara, who’s bringing global health to the world, or Pierce is working for Big Brothers, Big Sisters.


But there are a lot of ways to serve. And being president is not the only one. And I would hope that someone else would run, although there’s no question in my mind that Jeb is the best qualified person to run for president, but I hope he won’t, because I think he’ll get all my enemies, all his brother’s, all — and there are other families. I refuse to accept that this great country isn’t raising other wonderful people.”




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Barbara Bush: I Hope Jeb Won"t Run

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Ron Paul: A New Hope


RON PAUL – A New Hope – Classic Congressman Ron Paul is the leading advocate for freedom in our nation’s capital. As a member of the U.S. House of Representa…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Ron Paul: A New Hope

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Chuck Hagel Offers Troops Rare Hope On Defense Budget

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Chuck Hagel Offers Troops Rare Hope On Defense Budget

Saturday, November 23, 2013

[WATCH] Alan Grayson calls GOP ‘crisis junkies’ who hope people ‘die quickly’


Rep. Alan GraysonRep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) sure isn’t deviating from his talking points much, re-upping his defense of the Affordable Care Act on MSNBC’s “The Ed Show” and saying the GOP’s plan for healthcare is “if you get sick, die quickly.”


Grayson joined host Ed Schultz on Friday to talk about the Republican Party and what he believes is the GOP’s alternative plan for healthcare — one he first outlined four years ago on the House floor. The Florida Democrat told Schulz that the plan for Republicans remains “if you get sick, die quickly,” and called Republicans “crisis junkies” who move from one crisis to the next.


“Look, we know what the Republican healthcare plan is: don’t get sick,” Grayson told Schultz. “Well, don’t get sick, but if you do get sick, die quickly. Look, it’s been four years. I wish they’d prove me wrong. What is their healthcare plan?”


When asked if Republicans were operating smear campaign against Obama and Democrats, Grayson, of “Puss in Boots” fame, said GOP lawmakers have been “crisis junkies” and “smear junkies.”


“The Republicans have been crisis junkies now for months, if not years,” Grayson said. “They lurch from one crisis to the next to the next, whether it’s the government shutdown or whether its the debt ceiling or anything else. Now they’re smear junkies. That’s all they ever do. They try to make the President and the Democrats look bad without offering any solutions to any problems at all.”


Grayson has hardly had a kind word for his Tea Party colleagues of late. In a campaign email sent out by his 2014 re-election campaign Grayson compared the Tea Party to the KKK, and said the “T” in Tea Party stands for a burning cross. The Florida Democrat refused to apologize for the comparison.


Watch the clip below, courtesy of Mediaiate.




Red Alert Politics



[WATCH] Alan Grayson calls GOP ‘crisis junkies’ who hope people ‘die quickly’

Sunday, November 10, 2013

RPT-Struggling U.S. cities hope small projects yield big results

RPT-Struggling U.S. cities hope small projects yield big results
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/a50ac__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Sun Nov 10, 2013 1:54pm EST



By Mary Wisniewski


GARY, Ind. Nov 9 (Reuters) – Struggling U.S. Rust Belt cities for years have tried to counter the loss of manufacturing jobs with big, expensive projects like casinos and stadiums.


For cities such as Gary, Indiana; Flint, Michigan; and Youngstown, Ohio, these projects brought hope and headlines. Some delivered new revenue, but others brought new costs and mixed results.


Gary’s underused Genesis Convention Center, for example, cost the city $ 3.6 million in repairs and operations in the past year alone.


Now, Gary Mayor Karen Freeman-Wilson and civic leaders of some other blighted cities are going small with strategic, narrowly focused ideas such as selling vacant homes for $ 1, demolishing derelict buildings and neighborhood clean-up projects that produce immediate results.


“It’s a movement away from this singular, mega-project,” said Toni Griffin, an architect and urban planner at City University of New York. “Where cities are moving to is a larger more strategic framework.”


Gary, a struggling city 30 miles south of Chicago along the shores of Lake Michigan, is a prime example of the trend.


Known as the “Magic City” in the roaring 1920s for its spectacular growth, Gary is still home to U.S. Steel’s largest plant, but the number of mill jobs has shrunk to 5,000 from 30,000 in the 1970s. Gary’s population in 1960 was more than 178,000, but it disintegrated to just 79,000 by 2012.


Some one-third of its residents live in poverty and the home and business vacancy rate is about 35 percent. Gary recorded 43 murders in 2012 – three times as many per capita as nearby Chicago.


S. Paul O’Hara, a Xavier University professor who wrote a history of Gary, said Gary’s problems may seem overwhelming, but a few small steps could build a foundation for better days.


Attempts have been made to revive Gary, including casinos and a minor-league baseball stadium.


Similar projects were tried in other cities – a trend known as the “Bilbao” effect after the Guggenheim Museum that revived Bilbao, Spain, said Terry Schwarz, director at Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative in Ohio.


SMALL STEPS TO REVIVAL


Flint provides an infamous example of how a big project can backfire. AutoWorld, an $ 80 million theme park opened in 1984, closed six months later due to low attendance. It was later demolished and the land acquired by the University of Michigan-Flint.


These days, Flint is having more success with the Genesee County Land Bank, which allows neighbors to buy adjoining lots cheaply, so they can expand their gardens. The Bank recently received $ 20.1 million in federal money for 1,661 building demolitions, according to the city.


The Bank also has helped revive the downtown, turning boarded-up buildings into apartments and restaurants, said Chris Waters, associate provost at the University of Michigan-Flint.


“There’s actually night life in Flint,” Waters said. “It still amazes me.”


In Youngstown, the Mahoning County Land Bank – an entity that manages and develops tax-foreclosed properties – helps move vacant buildings back onto tax rolls.


The city also has increased penalties for neglectful owners. One tactic is a $ 10,000 bond paid by any entity foreclosing on a building. The city can use the money for repairs if the property is neglected.


“We’re starting to see the visual impact,” Maureen O’Neil, Youngstown’s chief code official, said. “Some of our corridors look a lot better.”


BUILDING A FUTURE


Like Gary, Youngstown and Flint were heavily dependent on single industries and were devastated economically when tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs disappeared between the 1960s and 1980s. Youngstown lost jobs in steel, Flint in the auto industry.


Freeman-Wilson, elected last year as Gary’s first female mayor, sees its potential as a transportation hub. It lies in the center of the country, alongside Lake Michigan and 30 minutes from Chicago, with rail and highway connections. To build on its transportation potential, she said a bigger plan is to expand the airport’s runway by September 2014.


The mayor sees a tourism potential because the city was the hometown of pop star Michael Jackson. Gary’s real estate is also a bargain – the Miller Beach neighborhood attracts Chicagoans who want lake views at lower costs.


One wall of the mayor’s office is covered with ugly pictures including a hollowed-out train station and a crumbling frame house – all eyesores Freeman-Wilson wants revived or demolished.


“Some are gone, some are on their way out – that historic rail station we should really develop,” she said, tapping each picture in turn. She also has a plan for cleaning up the city block by block and is counting on volunteers to start scrubbing.


Freeman-Wilson, a Harvard-educated Gary native, says she sees why past mayors turned to big projects. “When you see a convention center, you regain hope.


“I understand that, but I don’t want to do that to the exclusion of smaller things.”






Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about RPT-Struggling U.S. cities hope small projects yield big results and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Writer and Farmer Wendell Berry on Hope, Direct Action, and the "Resettling" of the American Countryside


Wendell Berry on His Hopes for Humanity from BillMoyers.com on Vimeo.


Wendell Berry, a quiet and humble man, has become an outspoken advocate for revolution. He urges immediate action as he mourns how America has turned its back on the land and rejected Jeffersonian principles of respect for the environment and sustainable agriculture. Berry warns, “People who own the world outright for profit will have to be stopped; by influence, by power, by us.”




Truthout Stories



Writer and Farmer Wendell Berry on Hope, Direct Action, and the "Resettling" of the American Countryside

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms



Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms

Friday, August 9, 2013

Hope For Democracy in the Arab World



WASHINGTON — History tells us that revolution often triggers counterrevolution: The spontaneous, euphoric moments of liberation are eclipsed by the forces of repression — with reaction often dressed in uniform.
The counterrevolution is gathering momentum in the Arab world, two years after the uprisings that toppled rulers in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad has fought back brutally to preserve his dictatorship; Egypt’s generals ousted the Muslim Brotherhood government there. The men in the tanks seem to be winning the day.


Yet I’d be surprised if the Arab revolutions were permanently stalled. The forces that are undermining dictatorial rule are embedded in technology; a society where anyone can tweet a message or post a cellphone video will have difficulty repressing its citizens indefinitely.


Two books help make sense of what’s going on in the Arab world. They describe the foundations on which a new order might be built — economic and socio-political. They’re both contrarian, in that they challenge the pessimism of the moment, when democrats seem to be on the run and demagogues are back in the saddle.


The first is “Startup Rising: The Entrepreneurial Revolution Remaking the Middle East.” It’s written by Christopher M. Schroeder, a former colleague at the Washington Post Co. and a longtime friend. Chris is a startup guy, and over the last three years he has traveled the Arab world looking for kindred spirits.


What Schroeder found will startle even the most jaded observer. Despite the turmoil of the last few years, a new generation of entrepreneurs is inventing products, getting them funded, and bringing them to market. Even the dead weight of repressive government and religious intolerance hasn’t stopped this new breed.


Schroeder offers compelling illustrations to buttress his case: He wanders around a “celebration of entrepreneurship” in Dubai and finds a Saudi woman who has designed and marketed a line of iPod accessories, a Syrian who has created a computer-animation venture and a Kuwaiti who created a mobile game application that has been downloaded by more than a million users.


These Arab startup kids may be buffeted by political events, but they are tightly connected to the global technological base that Karl Marx woodenly described as the “means of production.” Schroeder tours the business landscape like an open-air bazaar: altibbi.com is an Arab version of WebMD; souq.com is the biggest online retailer in the region with 500 employees and 8 million customers; namshi.com is an online shoe retailer, like Zappos, that sells 12,000 different styles of shoes. A third of the Arab tech startups are founded by women, says Schroeder, a figure unheard of in Silicon Valley.


The base for rapid economic growth is there, in embryo, across the Arab world. But what about a political culture of tolerance and rule of law that could allow these businesses to flourish?


Here I turn to the second book on my contrarian summer reading list. It’s called “Why Civil Resistance Works: The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict,” written by Erica Chenoweth and Maria J. Stephan. It was brought to my attention by Peter Ackerman, the founding chair of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict.


In this study, Chenoweth and Stephan analyzed 323 resistance movements from 1900 to 2006. What they discovered was that non-violent campaigns of civil resistance (including protests, strikes and boycotts) succeeded 53 percent of the time, but violent campaigns only 26 percent. They also showed that, because of higher levels of citizen participation, nonviolent movements were 10 times more likely to lead to a democratic result.


Apply this analysis to the Arab revolutions. There’s hope for Egypt today, Ackerman argues, because the mass protest movement known as Tamarod mobilized 22 million Egyptians this spring to sign a petition demanding the recall of President Mohamed Morsi. That’s about two-thirds more people than voted for Morsi in the first place. Tamarod’s roots are in the nonviolent protest movement called Kefaya, created in 2004, which started the national mobilization that finally toppled Hosni Mubarak.


Egypt had never seen a mass nonviolent campaign like Tamarod, and it provided the backbone of popular support for the generals who ousted Morsi. This doesn’t excuse the generals’ heavy-handed tactics, but it reminds us that the open, diverse civic movement represented by Tamarod might prepare the ground for a real, working democracy in a way that the closed, conspiratorial Muslim Brotherhood couldn’t.


As for Syria and Libya, this study suggests that change agents there should embrace nonviolent resistance tactics.


There’s a riptide of counterrevolution on the Arab surface, to be sure. But these books remind us of the deeper currents in Arab economic and political life. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Hope For Democracy in the Arab World

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Video: Obama: False Hope, False Messiah


You may think this a fairy tale , but it’s not. It’s happening RIGHT NOW.



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Western Journalism



Video: Obama: False Hope, False Messiah

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Relatives of missing in India floods maintain hope



(AP) — A day after the government said it would treat more than 5,700 people missing in floods in northern India last month as presumed dead, relatives said Wednesday they still held out hope that their loved ones had survived.


The provisional death toll — officials said some of the missing still could turn up alive — would make the Uttarakhand floods the worst natural disaster in India since more than 10,000 people were killed here in the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004.


The toll was worsened by the presence of tens of thousands of Hindu pilgrims visiting the state’s temples and the many vacationers who head to its cool hills to escape the summer heat. The government said it was presuming those missing for a month were dead so it could start giving compensation to their families.


Anuradha Raizada, left her home in the state of Uttar Pradesh and went to the temple town of Kedarnath with her husband and two sons – Ashwal, 18, and Atharav, 16. She returned home alone.


On June 16, a wall of water struck the hotel where they were staying. Her husband and one of her sons were swept away.


“There was a deafening noise of water and rain. I clung to my younger son, who had injured his leg and could not walk,” she said. The next day, when he complained of thirst, she left to fetch him water, but she got lost when she tried to return to him. That was the last she saw of him.


She later stumbled across her husband’s dead body, recognizing him from the shirt he had been wearing. She still holds out hope for her children.


She met Chief Minister Vijay Bahuguna, who assured her that every corner of Kedar valley would be searched for her two sons, she said.


“I know my sons will return one day. They are safe somewhere in the hills,” she said.


Since the flood, Manoj Jaiswal, 40, has not heard from his brother, sister-in-law or their two children, who had been on a pilgrimage in the area. He said the morning just before the flood, his brother called him to say they were staying an extra day.


“This proved fatal for them,” he said.


Jaiswal had gone to the area to search for his relatives. “The hotel where they were staying is badly damaged. Twenty-eight people died in that hotel, but my brother’s name is not there in the casualty list,” he said.


The state government has been criticized for poor emergency preparedness in a disaster-prone Himalayan area, and chaotic development has been blamed for exacerbating the damage from mudslides and overflowing rivers.


Bahuguna said the government would address those concerns.


“We will devise a scientific system where a balance could be maintained between development and nature,” he said.


More than 1,100 roads were damaged because of the rains and landslides and many of them remained cut off, said R.P. Bhatt, the chief engineer at the Public Works Department. Entire villages were buried in silt and debris.


Ramesh Pokhriyal, a former chief minister of the state and a top official with the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party said many villages could not get food supplies and he feared people would begin dying of hunger if immediate action was not taken.


Bahuguna said the government was working on alleviating the suffering.


“Work is under way at a great speed to redevelop and reconstruct the affected areas and to provide relief to those hit by the disaster,” he said.


A report sent to Parliament by India’s top audit body in April, said the state was badly unprepared for disasters, even though it was vulnerable to earthquakes, landslides and torrential rain.


One state body formed to deal with disasters has never met since it was formed in 2007. Another group, the State Disaster Management Authority, set no rules, regulations or policies since it was formed the same year.


A disaster management plan was still being prepared, there was no early warning system in the state, communication infrastructure was inadequate, emergency service jobs were left unfilled and medical personnel were not trained to deal with disasters, the report said.


“The state authorities were virtually nonfunctional,” it said.


Nevertheless, army troops, paramilitary soldiers and volunteers rescued more than 100,000 people who had been stranded by the disaster.


The air force and private companies made thousands of helicopter sorties to pick up people stuck on rooftops or marooned on hilltops and to drop off food and drinking water.


In a rare feat, a mule stranded in a small island in the middle of the Alaknanda River, was tranquillized and airlifted by a helicopter to safety a month after being swept away in the floods, Captain Bhupinder of Sumit Aviation said. The owners of hundreds of other mules and horses staged a sit-in demanding the rescue of their injured and starving animals.


Associated Press



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Relatives of missing in India floods maintain hope

Sunday, June 30, 2013

LOOKING BACK: RFK"s "Ripple Of Hope" Speech In South Africa





A Meeting Of Great Minds: During his 1966 visit to South Africa, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy met with anti-apartheid activist Chief Luthuli and later spoke publicly about their meeting. Because of a government ban on media coverage of Luthuli, it was the first news many had of their leader in more than five years.



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A Meeting Of Great Minds: During his 1966 visit to South Africa, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy met with anti-apartheid activist Chief Luthuli and later spoke publicly about their meeting. Because of a government ban on media coverage of Luthuli, it was the first news many had of their leader in more than five years.



A Meeting Of Great Minds: During his 1966 visit to South Africa, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy met with anti-apartheid activist Chief Luthuli and later spoke publicly about their meeting. Because of a government ban on media coverage of Luthuli, it was the first news many had of their leader in more than five years.


Shoreline Productions



At South Africa’s University of Cape Town on Sunday, President Obama noted that he was speaking at the same place where, in 1966, then-Sen. Robert Kennedy, D-N.Y., delivered what some historians believe was the best speech of his life.


Obama was discussing about how, as a young man, he had come to believe that “I could be part of something bigger than myself; that my own salvation was bound up with those of others.”


Then the president brought up the late senator:


“That’s what Bobby Kennedy expressed, far better than I ever could, when he spoke here at the University of Cape Town in 1966. He said, ‘Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.’ “





Many historians consider Kennedy’s “Ripple of Hope” speech, which he delivered at the University of Cape Town on June 6, 1966, to be his greatest speech.



Shoreline Productions



Many historians consider Kennedy’s “Ripple of Hope” speech, which he delivered at the University of Cape Town on June 6, 1966, to be his greatest speech.


Shoreline Productions




The president’s comments about RFK and what came to be known as the senator’s “Ripple of Hope” speech, reminded us that in 2011, All Things Considered reported on a documentary — RFK In the Land of Apartheid — which explores “the unknown story of Robert Kennedy’s 1966 visit to South Africa during the worst years of Apartheid.”


The documentary’s website has a variety of materials about the senator’s speech, including the text of what’s formally known as Kennedy’s “Day of Affirmation” address (you can also read it at the bottom of this post). Along with the excerpt the president cited, we were also struck by:


— Kennedy’s Opening. “I came here because of my deep interest and affection for a land settled by the Dutch in the mid-seventeenth century, then taken over by the British, and at last independent; a land in which the native inhabitants were at first subdued, but relations with whom remain a problem to this day; a land which defined itself on a hostile frontier; a land which has tamed rich natural resources through the energetic application of modern technology; a land which once imported slaves, and now must struggle to wipe out the last traces of that former bondage. I refer, of course, to the United States of America.”


— His Call To Do “The Right Thing.” “We must recognize the full human equality of all of our people before God, before the law, and in the councils of government. We must do this, not because it is economically advantageous, although it is; not because of the laws of God command it, although they do; not because people in other lands wish it so. We must do it for the single and fundamental reason that it is the right thing to do.”


— The World Vision He Laid Out. “I think that we could agree on what kind of a world we would all want to build. It would be a world of independent nations, moving toward international community, each of which protected and respected the basic human freedoms. It would be a world which demanded of each government that it accept its responsibility to insure social justice. It would be a world of constantly accelerating economic progress-not material welfare as an end in itself, but as a means to liberate the capacity of every human being to pursue his talents and to pursue his hopes. It would, in short, be a world that we would be proud to have built.”


It’s also worth noting that Obama spent a considerable part of his speech Sunday talking to the young people of South Africa and how “the world will be watching what you do.” Kennedy, in 1966, spoke at length about the “young people around the world … the closeness of their goals, their desires and their concerns and their hope for the future.”


” It is a revolutionary world we live in, and thus, as I have said in Latin America and Asia, in Europe and in the United States, it is young people who must take the lead,” Kennedy said. “You, and your young compatriots everywhere, have had thrust upon you a greater burden of responsibility than any generation that has ever lived.”


We’re adding several things to this post for those who want to look back at RFK’s speech, including a video from PBS about the documentary.






News



LOOKING BACK: RFK"s "Ripple Of Hope" Speech In South Africa

Thursday, May 2, 2013

US economic reports hold out hope for hiring gains

WASHINGTON (AP) — Fewer Americans are losing their jobs. Employers are struggling to squeeze more work from their staffs. The U.S. is producing so much oil that imports are plunging, narrowing the trade deficit.
Business Headlines



US economic reports hold out hope for hiring gains