Old Town Alexandria

(Community Matters) some DC pics from earlier this week

the Cramer family as we’re out & about in Old Alexandria
@ the Torpedo Factory where Sonya engaged us all in games to survey the art

David Corn & Sonya Cohen-Cramer

David Corn (the Mother Jones Washington Bureau chief) wrote a good story about the MA Senate race – it’s all about the independents.  Reid Cramer (head of research at the New America Foundation and Director, Asset Building Programs) has posted good pieces on the importance of consumer protections and financial regulatory reform here.

I enjoyed my debate and conversations with Reid & David, my banter & fun with the kids, and I cherish the depth of conversation with Sonya Cohen-Cramer – the artist among us.

Fiscal Responsibility

(Community Matters) During the Q&A in posting below, Texas Republican Congressman Jeb -> Hensarling from Dallas and East Texas, asked the President about deficits, suggesting that government debt was tripling under President Obama

President Obama corrected Rep Hensarling, reminding him that:  when this administration came into office, the deficit was already $1.3 trillion with $8 trillion more of debt projected for the next decade because of unfunded mandates, programs and other commitments.

When Republicans took over the White House and Congress in 2000, they enjoyed a surplus of $200 billion.  They enacted 2 tax cuts that weren’t paid for, passed a prescription drug plan (the biggest entitlement program launched in decades and didn’t pay for it) and failed to pay for 2 wars.  Additionally, the deficit increased by another $3 trillion as a result of the economic slowdown, even before Obama was sworn into office.  Legislation passed under Obama, has added $1 trillion to the deficit.

Ok, we agree – unsustainable deficits and spending  need be brought under control.  But, if the conversation is about fiscal responsibility, if it deteriorates into blame, we start with what this administration has inherited and who has acted most fiscally irresponsible.  Though, that’s much less productive than moving forward.

We must also be sensitive to the economic recovery.  Our relapse in the Great Depression happened when Washington prematurely reacted to the deficits and retreated on economic stimulus.  And, it’s a reality that a progressive agenda won the election – we will enact healthcare reforms, environmental protections and investment in infrastructure & education.  Taxes will increase – primarily to pay for the $9 trillion+ inherited deficit.

President Obama’s Speech at the House Republican Retreat

(Community Matters) Pres Obama’s speech and Q&A at Republican’s retreat yesterday in Baltimore. I highly recommend watching this

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And, the Q&A

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more about “YouTube – President Obama Full Q&A“, posted with vodpod

ManCrunch SuperBowl Ad

CBS rejecting this ad from Super Bowl airing

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more about "ManCrunch SuperBowl Ad ", posted with vodpod

Kirk Rudy’s Acceptance Speech

(Community Matters) Kirk Rudy’s acceptance speech at last night’s ADL Torch of Liberty Dinner. He challenges all of us

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Part II:


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Amy Rudy’s Acceptance Speech

(Community Matters) Amy’s acceptance speech last night – “being a bit more sensitive”

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State of the Union Address

(Community Matters) Rebuilding our economy is the #1 priority. Infrastructure is crumbling and too many honest, hard-working Americans must earn money to keep their homes, their cars and feed their children – I’m not talking about the crooks who lied on their mortgage applications or the foolhardy who borrowed three times against paper profits. The government must help Americans when there’s systemic unemployment created by a failed and gamed economy.  It isn’t partisan; it’s American.

It’s not 15% or 25% unemployment as it might have been without the economic recovery act, and 10% is still way too high. Even signs of recovery are too anemic.  It was good to remind us that Bush inherited a budget surplus and spent us into a trillion dollar deficit while cutting taxes in the middle of two wars.  And, that’s not a buy; it’s Obama’s baby now (our baby now), and we gotta fix it or be tossed out on our asses.

I emailed my cousin this morning about the extraordinary progress underway at the agency level.  I’ve now had a chance to hear directly from the secretaries of energy and the EPA (the latter called the administrator) as well as top deputies at education and energy.  These people blow me away.  They aren’t waiting for legislation to pass, they’ve hired the very best & brightest, and have started enforcing laws, judiciously spending their budgets, and are already making huge differences in improving America’s economy and Americans’ lives.

Good things are underway, and a hell of a lot more needs to be done – today.  Rescue, rebuild, restore must be substantive and immediate.  Our citizens are tired of political rhetoric and partisan bullshit.

“Obama didn’t sound like a president buffeted and beleaguered by the political fates. He sounded determined, patient, forceful, good-humored, at times even mischievous.” -the Most Rev. Eugene Robinson

Rudys

(Community Matters) Finally met Honey, officially known as Alan Rudy, Kirk’s dad.  He and Stephanie (already my buddy from door to door in Grand Rapids during the election) in for today’s Torch of Liberty DinnerSteven, Zac and I joined them, Amy & Ellie for dinner and State of the Union watching.  good gosh, I think (actually I know) I just invited ourselves over.  My presumptuousness even embarrasses me sometimes – well, kinda, sorta, okay – not really.

Washington DC

(Community Matters) It was a terrific trip.  DNC meetings for our national finance committee and national advisory board.  Heard from lots of folks.  We asked for a meeting reflecting accountability for spend and how we’re responding to electorates’ priorities and sensitivities.  I went keenly attuned to the investment of our donors’ monies and the promises we made them as we raised, as well as the promises of the Administration & those of us who worked to elect him to the electorate.

I came away impressed by the thought and reflection, by the articulation of lessons learned – not only in MA but in NJ and VA as well.  I don’t mean to suggest the left will be any more pleased than the pragmatic middle of our party from the president’s speech tonight – obviously, I haven’t read it. Since early 2008, I’ve noted that the President is a pragmatic man.  He’s always promised a keen focus on the middle class, on healthcare, on energy/climate control, on rescuing our economy and on education.

Has it been foolhardy to spend so much political capital in the first year on rescuing the economy, insuring children (s-chip), establishing a strategy & spend on two wars, hiring thousands of top level people, rebuilding America’s standing in the world, and fighting for healthcare?  I think not.  Have we handled healthcare correctly, many say not.  And, yet we’ve gotten further than any previous administration in 60 years – though, admittedly, close doesn’t count.  It’s not over by a long shot.

Have we lost perspective of Americans’ demand for more focus on the deficit and spending?  I guess there are initiatives being announced to address this.

Down to 59 in the Senate – I’ve already said on here, I’d prefer 58.  Let’s thank Senator Liebermann for his chairmanship this last year and move forward with a new one.  Fifty nine (or fifty eight) – these are incredible numbers.  I think we’re better off with a little competition and the need to strike some consensus.  If Republicans decide they only want to obstruct, pull the trigger – do away with the filibuster using the same rules they proposed.

As far as all the Wall Street bankers screaming that the populist rhetoric is not what we promised while running:  You are spending hundreds of millions on an army of mercenaries (lobbyists) to kill all proposed regulatory reform and consumer protections.  You are jacking up credit card and banking fees.  You are still borrowing at the Fed window, relying on gov’t guarantees for money market accounts & commercial paper lines, and paying yourselves obscene amounts of money.  If this were pre-revolutionary France, you’d have already lost your heads.   Until you negotiate in good faith and call off your mercenaries, you cannot complain with any integrity.

photo: http://www.solarnavigator.net

PiH ED Upon Arriving in Haiti

(Community Matters) Partners in Health executive director Ophelia Dahl after arriving in Haiti on Friday:

Haiti’s catastrophe will forever divide its history into before earthquake and after.

Dust has not settled. Flying towards pap you could see a thick layer of smog lingering above the city. The air is acrid, stings the eyes and makes you cough.  The airport is its own world. A spread of tents large and small, containers, supplies, boxes, vehicles, bicycles, and people wandering about in and out of uniform.

We bumped into Jens, the UN engineer who had worked with us on the bridge we helped build in Boucan Carre, who was the last person to be pulled out alive from the UN meeting building. He had been under rubble for 6-8 days. Needless to say he looked like a walking skeleton and sounded very jittery. He simply said, “I had a lot of luck”. Continue reading

Kennedy Center

(Community Matters) It’d been four years since I’ve seen Thais Austin – she looks great and is as engaged in community as ever.  Obviously, DC agrees with her.  Pleased to hear she and Ted Smith have become running buddies.

Tour of the Kennedy Center with friends late afternoon.  Can’t believe I’ve never seen a performance there.  Radically impressive, if needs-an-update, site, especially in context of DC’s dearth of performance art spaces prior.  Exquisite 60s design and build.  Extraordinary gifts of lights, art, stage curtains, marble and everything else from the world’s countries.

Dinner with Haylie Rudy last night, yeah – and her daddy too – and two dear family friends.  Total treat, get to be with the extended Rudy family on Thursday/Friday.  getting excited about ADL Torch of Liberty Dinner honoring Amy & Kirkearly bird preview: not available for a bit

(photo: President’s box at Eisenhower Theatre)

Skull Cap & Hoodies

(Community Matters) Skull caps, hoodies and low-rise pants – not expecting a Starbucks manager to emerge from the back dressed this way.  Because I was having trouble signing onto their wireless, I asked for help and the barista called for the manager.  I’m immediately struck that this is awkward dress for a manager but only for a second and my mind moved on.

A few minutes later, an African American female customer totally dressed him down – ranted at him for being inappropriately dressed.  Told him to pull up his pants and take off the hoodie & cap.  He wasn’t gracious or accepting of her advice, saying he was off the clock – which appears not to be the case

I haven’t thought for a while about the challenge of professional judgment based on cultural dress. Liberal biases aside, if I were the regional manager, I wouldn’t allow this. The baristas are wearing caps with Starbucks logos but not skull caps and not hoodies.  I admit I could be wrong.