Category Archives: Social Commentary

‘Secession Ball’ Marks Start of American Civil War with Champagne and Dancing

I don’t quite believe things like this still happen…

Are people really still this clueless?

At least this time it’s not in Virginia…

Oh, and this is from the British paper, The Guardian, that I read fairly often.  Funny that this wasn’t covered in a U.S. Media outlet….

What is the appropriate way to mark the 150th anniversary of the political beginning of the American civil war? For about 300 people from Charleston, South Carolina, it seemed the best commemoration was a gala ball replete with champagne, period dress and dancing.

A ballroom full of white guests gathered last night, each paying $100 (£65), to mark the anniversary of 20 December 1860, the day that South Carolina became the first state in the US to declare secession from the Union in order to protect the right to slavery.

The evening began with a theatrical depiction of the secession convention in which 169 of the state’s politicians voted unanimously to break with the Union and declare independence. The show ended with a rousing speech in which the show’s narrator proclaimed: “The spirit of the south still stands. The spirit of freedom and honour gets passed from one generation to the next.”

Then the cast of the show and the audience, largely dressed in period costume of Confederate uniform for men and hoop skirts in the style of Gone With the Wind for women, joined in a rendition of Dixie. “Look away! Look away! Look away! Dixie Land.”

Most of those who attended the evening were directly descended from Confederate soldiers who fought against the north in the civil war. Though the historical consensus is that the south fought to preserve its right to slavery, and the economic riches that it brought, the prevailing opinion at the ball was that slavery had very little to do with it.

“For us the secession is not about a racial issue,” said Michael Givens, the commander-in-chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, which sponsored the event. “We are not celebrating slavery, we are celebrating the courage and the tenacity of the people who were prepared to go out and defend their homes.”

But outside the ballroom a crowd of about 150 protesters convened by the largest civil rights group in America, the NAACP, had a very different take on the proceedings. “What would happen if Japanese Americans decided to have a ball to celebrate Pearl Harbour?” Rev Nelson Rivers asked the protesters. “Or if German Americans celebrated the Holocaust? For African Americans tonight, that is exactly what’s happening here.”

via ‘Secession ball’ marks start of American civil war with champagne and dancing | World news | guardian.co.uk.

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Filed under History, Race, Social Commentary, The South

23 Percent Can’t Pass Military Exam, 75 Percent Fail Other Criteria

This tells you a lot about how bad our educational, food and fitness issues have become…

MIAMI -Nearly one-fourth of the students who try to join the military fail its entrance exam, painting a grim picture of an education system that produces graduates who can’t answer basic math, science and reading questions.

The report by The Education Trust found that 23 percent of recent high school graduates don’t get the minimum score needed on the enlistment test to join any branch of the military. The study, released exclusively to The Associated Press on Tuesday, comes on top of Pentagon data that shows 75 percent of those aged 17 to 24 don’t qualify for the military because they are physically unfit, have a criminal record or didn’t graduate high school.

“Too many of our high school students are not graduating ready to begin college or a career — and many are not eligible to serve in our armed forces,” U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the AP. “I am deeply troubled by the national security burden created by America’s underperforming education system.”

More:   APNewsBreak: 23 percent can’t pass military exam.

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Bill Clinton Named PETA’s 2010 Person of the Year | PETA.org

Interesting….

I just can’t be a full time vegan-I think you really have to be rich and have a personal chief to do it right.

I prefer to try to eat locally grown food and to eat organic food and naturally raised meat whenever possible.

I just have to have a good steak a few times a year and can’t imagine giving up chicken and seafood…

Still, this is pretty cool….

Former President Bill Clinton, who is renowned for his charisma and eloquence, has worked to shed light on numerous global issues through his humanitarian efforts and his many public speaking engagements. Recently, he has taken time out of his busy schedule to promote vegan eating. Thanks to his new plant-based diet, he’s shed some pounds, decreased his risk of future heart problems, and spared the lives of many animals.

Because he uses his influence to promote the benefits of following a vegan diet, PETA is pleased to name Bill Clinton its 2010 Person of the Year.

More:   Bill Clinton Named PETA’s 2010 Person of the Year | PETA.org.

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Filed under Food, Politics, Social Commentary

Sarah Palin: Americans Have “God-Given Right” to Be Fat?

Every time I think she can’t say anything to make herself sound dumber or trashier, she tops herself…

CBS) Americans don’t usually get fitness advice from Sarah Palin, but last week the mother of five lashed out at Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” program to help curb childhood obesity by helping kids eat well and stay active.

“Take her anti-obesity thing that she is on. She is on this kick, right. What she is telling us is she cannot trust parents to make decisions for their own children, for their own families in what we should eat,” Palin said on Laura Ingraham’s national radio show.

“Instead of a government thinking that they need to take over and make decisions for us according to some politician or politician’s wife’s priorities, just leave us alone, get off our back, and allow us as individuals to exercise our own God-given rights to make our own decisions and then our country gets back on the right track.”

The “God-given rights” Palin hopes to protect apparently involve not having to listen to healthy eating advice, learning about portion size and encouraging kids to play more sports and watch less TV.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, childhood obesity has tripled in the last 30 years, putting millions of kids at risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease and bone and joint disorders.

via Sarah Palin: Americans Have “God-Given Right” to Be Fat? – Health Blog – CBS News.

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Filed under Food, Health Care, Media, Politics, Social Commentary

US Workers Are Incredibly Productive, So Why Aren’t They Earning More? – Yahoo! Finance

Something to think about….

Seriously think about ….

Since 1978, productivity in the nonfarm business sector is up 86% but real compensation per hour is up just 37%. Is that fair?

That’s the question economist Alan Blinder asked in his Friday column in the Wall Street Journal. There are two levels to the conundrum: (1) Why is this happening and (2) What, if anything, should government do to fix it?

Let’s turn to the first question: If the US worker is making more stuff in less time, where is that productivity going if it’s not going to higher wages? For the answer, look at manufacturing. Our industrial production has grown by a factor of five since the 1950s (graph below). Over the same period, manufacturing jobs as a share of the economy have fallen from 25% to 11% in 2008. The difference is machines. Technology helps companies make more stuff, faster, for less money. It also replaces the need for workers. So in the last few decades, manufacturing has learned to produce much more stuff with fewer humans.

More:   US Workers Are Incredibly Productive, So Why Aren’t They Earning More? – Yahoo! Finance.

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Filed under Politics, Social Commentary, The Economy

Narcissism: The New Normal?

This is both scary and probably accurate….

The other day a patient sent me an email with a link to a New York Times article that reported that the upcoming revision of the psychiatric diagnostic standards manual, the DSM-V, has removed the narcissistic personality disorder from its roster.

She asked me, “Are they crazy?”

I wrote back, “I think so.” Then, I thought, maybe the lunatics really are running the asylum.

“Removed” in this case appears to mean two things: 1) that the syndrome as they have hitherto described it is not, in their opinions, clear enough to be described as a character pathology; and 2) that it will no longer be an acceptable diagnosis for reimbursement. Insurance companies, hospitals, treatment facilities and protocols will no longer recognize it or use it to direct treatment.

Should that give us hope or terrify us? Does that mean narcissism is slowly going the way of the Dodo, or does it mean that it has become so pervasive that it’s no longer thought of as pathological?

My experience personally and professionally has me leaning in the direction of the latter, that it has become so much a part of our culture, particularly our parenting, that narcissistic traits are considered norma — so much so that if we don’t have a reality show named after us, we use our own phones or video up-links to transmit our private lives to anyone from Alaska to Antarctica who will watch.

Our culture, the media-infused air we breathe, has itself become both a breeding ground and a reflecting pool for narcissists.

MORE:   Judith Acosta, LISW, CHT: Narcissism: The New Normal?.

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A Gay Commander in Chief – Ready or Not? – NYTimes.com

Maureen Dowd frequently gets on my nerves, but I love this column.

There is a lot of truth and things to think.

And it’s fun….

Click the link to the full article for a really good reading experience…

Jimmy Carter is putting the out in outspokenness.

In an interview with bigthink.com, the former president was asked, “Is the country ready for a gay president?”

Even as John McCain and other ossified Republicans were staging last-minute maneuvers to torpedo the “don’t ask, don’t tell” repeal, the 86-year-old Carter was envisioning a grander civil rights victory.

“I would say that the answer is yes,” he said. “I don’t know about the next election, but I think in the near future.”

The news that Leonardo DiCaprio and Armie Hammer will smooch in an upcoming movie about J. Edgar Hoover and his aide Clyde Tolson — buried near each other in the Congressional Cemetery on Capitol Hill — is a reminder of an “Advise and Consent” Washington where being a closeted gay official made you vulnerable to blackmail.

Others feel we’re not ready for a gay president, citing the fear and loathing unleashed by the election of the first black president. “Can you imagine how much a gay president would have to overcompensate to please the macho ninnies who control our national debate?” Bill Maher told me. “Women like Hillary have to do it, Obama had to do it because he’s black and liberal, but a gay president? He’d have to nuke something the first week.”

Link to Full Article:   A Gay Commander in Chief – Ready or Not? – NYTimes.com.

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Filed under Gay, Media, Politics, Social Commentary

The Bipartisanship Racket – NYTimes.com

A couple of excerpts from Frank Rich’s Sunday New York Times Column…

Dead-on accurate, as usual…

The notion that civility and nominal bipartisanship would accomplish any of the heavy lifting required to rebuild America is childish magical thinking, and, worse, a mindless distraction from the real work before the nation. Sure, it would be swell if rhetorical peace broke out in Washington — or on cable news networks — but given that American politics have been rancorous since Boston’s original Tea Party, wishing will not make it so. Bipartisanship is equally extinct — as made all too evident this month by the pathetic fate of the much-hyped Simpson-Bowles deficit commission. Less than a week after the panel released its recommendations, the Democratic president and the Republican Congressional leadership both signed off on a tax-cut package that made a mockery of all its proposals by adding another $858 billion to the deficit. Even the Iraq Study Group — Washington’s last stab at delegating tough choices to a blue-ribbon bipartisan commission — enjoyed a slightly longer shelf life before its recommendations were unceremoniously dumped into the garbage.

AND

WHAT America needs is not another political organization with a toothless agenda and less-than-transparent finances. The country will not rest easy until there are brave leaders in both parties willing to reform the system that let perpetrators of the Great Recession escape while the rest of us got stuck with the wreckage. As Jesse Eisinger of the investigative journalistic organization ProPublica summed up in The Times this month: “Nobody from Lehman, Merrill Lynch or Citigroup has been charged criminally with anything. No top executives at Bear Stearns have been indicted. All former American International Group executives are running free.” For No Labels to battle this status quo would require actual political courage — true bipartisan courage, in fact.

Link to full Article:   The Bipartisanship Racket – NYTimes.com.

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Filed under History, Media, Politics, Social Commentary

Christmas Quote of the Day

My partner Steve posted this Stephen Colbert quote on FaceBook.

I hope all the Republicans- especially the Religious Right ones- read this and take time to think about it.

But that’s probably a hopeless dream.  If they thought about things, they wouldn’t be Republicans.

From Stephen Colbert via Steve Willis:

Thoughtful quote of the day–and particularly good for this time of year:

“If this is going to be a Christian nation that doesn’t help the poor, either we’ve got to pretend that Jesus was just as selfish as we are or we’ve got to acknowledge that he commanded us to love the poor and serve the needy without condition.

And then admit that we just don’t want to do it.”       Stephen Colbert

I hope this quote goes viral on FaceBook….

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Filed under Education, Health Care, Holidays, Politics, Religion, Social Commentary

Gay troops cautiously optimistic following ‘don’t ask’ repeal

Great article from the Washington Post on the real impact of DADT repeal to actively serving Gay troops.

People need to remember that John Wayne is dead and it’s a totally different world now compared to 25 or 30 years ago.  Thank god….

KABUL – The gay Army lieutenant’s heart had been racing all night.

Shuffling between meetings at his outpost in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday night, the 27-year-old officer kept popping his head into the main office to catch a glimpse of Fox News’s coverage of the Senate debate that led to a vote lifting the ban on gay men and lesbians serving in the military openly.

“Don’t cry,” a 21-year-old specialist, one of the lieutenant’s confidants, told his boss jokingly when news broke that 65 senators had voted to repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

“I’m completely numb,” was all the lieutenant could mutter.

Across the world, other gay troops whose lives, careers and relationships have been indelibly, if sometimes quietly, shaped by the ban reacted to the news with a mixture of rapture and disbelief.

Many had seethed for weeks as the political debate over the repeal became laden with sexual innuendo and suggestions that openly gay soldiers on the front lines might become life-threatening distractions.

“I was flipping out,” the lieutenant said Saturday night, speaking by phone. “This turned into a [expletive] political fight. We were caught in the middle of it. But the people who it affects the most couldn’t do anything about it. We felt used.”

The stakes were also high for the specialist. His brother is gay and had vowed to join the Air Force if the policy were repealed this year. Their father is also gay, which made attending military events somewhat awkward for the family.

MORE:   Gay troops cautiously optimistic following ‘don’t ask’ repeal.

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