To Obama with Love: Nothing Less Than a Public Option
A clear, supportive, insistent video from Obama supporters pressuring for the public option
A clear, supportive, insistent video from Obama supporters pressuring for the public option
Great day to be in Brooklyn yall!
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I have decided to embody the character I created last Spring on Twitter. I will be spraying people, shaking hands with H1N1 creme, injected them and passing out used, H1N1-infected tissues. Long live @The_Swine_Flu!! Death to humanity!!!
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MSNBC producers confused Jesse with the OTHER black guy. At least she didn't call him "Mr. President"
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Without specifying who he suspects of making the alleged threats, he also said on his radio show that "They've threatened my wife, they've now fired a shot at my house while my wife was standing next to the car." Concluding with a call for "truth, justice and the American way," Dobbs cautioned "if anybody thinks that we're not engaged in the battle for the soul of this country right now, you're sorely mistaken." And during an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Thursday, Dobbs spoke again about the gunfire incident, linking it to "threatening phone calls tied to the positions I've taken on illegal immigration."
Interviews with the New Jersey State Police yielded a rather different assessment of the events described by Dobbs. In a phone interview conducted yesterday, Sgt. Stephen Jones, a NJ State Police spokesperson, chuckled out loud after he heard about Dobbs' account of the gunfire incident. Jones commented that he "wouldn't classify it [the gunfire incident] as very unusual." He also confirmed that there are hunters in the area, and stated that, "at this time of year hunter [shooting] complaints go up."
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I definitely remember Len Bias all over the news in DC in the 80s. I can't believe it's been 23 years.
This film airs November 3rd on ESPN HD
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On Monday, November 2nd at 3:30 p.m. EST, Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett will hold an extended online chat to discuss how health insurance reform will impact minority communities and all Americans. Submit your questions now, or join us on Monday here at WhiteHouse.gov or at Facebook.com/WhiteHouse to submit your question live during the discussion.
click through the link to submit your questions now.
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Most times I change the channel when I see African children on my television screen. The images are formulaic—poverty stricken brown babies, bellies swollen, faces scowled in sadness—hopeless, save for the potential grace that a "dollar-a-day" might provide. I balk at the images, not because I begrudge these children those dollars for food and shelter, but because as an African it offends my sensibilities to be constantly saddled with only one side of what I know to be a complex and crucially important story. How many of us know that for that same "dollar-a-day" you could send an African child to college, and he could someday not only feed himself and his family, but perhaps even be a part of building a society "no-longer-in-need-of-donations?" African's don't make these commercials. We're just the cast in a story someone else is telling. I read Uwem Akpan's debut novel Say You're One of Them and was confronted with an African story told on a "channel" I could not change. Akpan writes a compelling, near-hypnotic text, introducing the lives of African children negotiating five experiences that almost defy description. Written in a seamless blending of literary English and colloquial banter, Akpan tackles both the profound and the profane through the uncensored lens of childhood innocence. The author goes beyond the maudlin images of babies covered in flies, and does what no 60 second commercial can—he gives genuine humanity to these kids. He takes us into their hearts and allows us to peer out into the world as they see it. In so doing he makes these fictional children a part of us, and the proximity of their breath, their sense of wonder and their indomitable hope make them more than statistics. Their aspirations cause our spirits to rise, tentative with hope for resolution, but fearful of the dark realities that lie beyond the limits of a child's comprehension. And when those realities manifest, it hurts.
I'm not just posting this cause Derrick is a friend. He's sensitive to the oversaturation of one-sided media images of Africa (and black people generally) as well as the tangible effects of media imagery on people. So his review of this book comes with special weight.
I just bought the book from Amazon for my Kindle. http://bit.ly/yvZnw
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So I just watched all 20 of the 30 second finalists for OFA's health reform video challenge. The winning video will be aired as a TV ad to help push for reform. I strongly encourage you to head over, watch and vote for your favorites. Here are my top 4 picks
#4 Spin, featuring Nikko Prosser#3 Is This Really The Way It Should Work, by Nicholas Wagner #2 I Deserve Health Care, by Eric Hurt #1 Serve & Protect, by Free Love ForumComments [0]
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