Monday, March 31, 2008

Aloha, Aloha







And while we're saying goodbyes, let's not forget the airline that just recently carried us back across the Pacific from the Hawaiian Islands, Aloha Airlines, which shut down passenger service this weekend after once again filing for bankruptcy protection.

Aloha.

On a Sad Personal Note











I'm mourning the death of a building, and a great local institution.

The Wausau Club, the private club in Wausau, Wisconsin, where our wedding was held, closed its doors a few years ago, and was facing possible demolition before three investors picked it up and made public plans to rehabilitate it and reopen it as a restaurant, several shops and catering facilities.

Now, it's been made known the investors have run aground and will likely to be able to complete their plans for the famous and well beloved building.

It holds many happy memories for many of us, and is the sign of a time past perhaps never yet now reclaimable.

Bowling for Altoona














In his zeal to win over the voters of working class Pennsylvania, candidate Barack Obama took his magic into the bowling alley over the weekend in Altoona. Unfortunately, he couldn't break a 37.

Memo to the campaign: Keep your candidate in situations where he does what he does best. Winning.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Class Act













It's been a big week for Chelsea Clinton, former first daughter who's out on the stump the past few months campaigning for her mother, Senator Hillary Clinton, occasionally alongside her father, former President Bill Clinton. Having done a pretty good job of fencing the press corps, and keeping them at a safe distance (no interviews allowed), she has nonetheless shown to be a faithful and undaunted spokesperson for her mother at college campuses and other campaign stops across the country.

At a college in Indiana earlier this week, she was faced with a question she'd not yet been asked, when a male college student asked her how her mother handled the Monica Lewinsky crisis.

Chelsea handled the question with great grace and dignity, and is being hailed by many, including those supporting other candidates, for her response in telling the young man that really it was none of his business. As it was supposed to be the last question of the gathering, she entertained another question, this one about global warming. As it turns out, the Lewinsky question came from a Clinton supporter who has gone on record in the media subsequently indicating that Chelsea Clinton's response did not change his support for her mother.

More recently, a couple of days ago Chelsea Clinton was asked on the campaign trail if her mother would make a better president than her father was. Again, she handled the question deftly, and responded, quite emphatically, in the affirmative.

Her most recent line of questioning this weekend had her assuring the audience that neither her mother nor her father had asked her to campaign for the Clinton campaign these past few months, and that she was doing it because she firmly believed in her mother as the person best qualified and suited to be, as she expressed it, Her President.

Brava, Chelsea.

Bill and Hillary Clinton might be criticized for all manner of things in their years of public service, but the thing they've clearly done most right is raising an incredibly gracious, articulate and elegant daughter.

Feeding a Starving Nation

I continue to be amazed by the messianic elements of the Obama movement, particularly so when those who might otherwise have rejected organized religion and would be sitting in secular campsites are lining up to happily drink the Kool-Aid. It speaks to me of a deeper need that an entire segment of the electorate seems to have, to want to be led, to want to be inspired, to want to have their hopes and dreams fulfilled in the life and leadership of one person. I've never completely witnessed this before in my lifetime, and yes, I find it frightening.

Herewith, "We Are Building a Religion" and "Personal Jesus."




Saturday, March 29, 2008

Baby Bees






I've only been stung by a bee twice, and both times, I sat on the bee.

The first time, I was in high school, got out of the shower and sat down on the edge of my bed. At the time, colors like avocado, orange and gold were in fashion, and my floral bedspread completely hid the small body of a bee waiting there for me to sit on it. Since I'd been doing sewing recently, I thought I'd accidentally left a stray needle in the bed. It hurt. Bad. Poor bee.

This afternoon I was over at the swimming pool, spread my beach towels out on the lounge chair and settled in to relax and sunbathe, when suddenly, I felt like I had been poked in the shoulder with a sharp knife. I couldn't imagine what could inflict that much sudden pain. I got up, shook out the towel, and there it was, the struggling carcass of a tiny baby bee, which clearly had not been able to withstand my body come down in a crushing blow on its little stinger. I felt bad for the bee, truly. But this really really hurts.

Poor bees. Poor me.

Maya In the Middle









The Reverend Jeremiah Wright, conspicuously absent from his prescheduled events this past week, surfaced last night in a most unexpected place--his home city of Chicago--at St. Sabina Catholic Church, a predominantly black congregation, where poet Maya Angelou was being honored in advance of her 82nd birthday upcoming on April 4th.

Maya has been an outspoken and steadfast supporter of Senator Hillary Clinton, and continues to proclaim her support for Clinton in spite of the fact that she acknowledges Obama as a worthy opponent. She is also a close friend and mentor to Oprah Winfrey, Obama's chief patron, and to Wright, Obama's self-proclaimed spiritual mentor.

LiZa




















One of my most impassioned memories from the '70's is seeing the film "Cabaret" while in college, and being mesmerized by the performance of a then relatively unknown Liza Minelli as Sally Bowles. I memorized that soundtrack, and the soundtrack to her later "New York, New York" (with Robert DiNiro), and spent countless hours belting out "Mein Herr," "Lucky Star," and "Maybe This Time." Oh, and of course, "Cabaret."

It was life changing. She was a life force.

Tonight we got to spend the evening with Miss Liza Minelli at the local Barbara B. Mann Concert Hall here in Fort Myers. At 62, even when she gets breathless, she struts around the stage with more energy, and more voice, than I would ever have, in her lanky, sparkly black costumes, and we are spellbound.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Overheard in a Chinese Restaurant











I hear the craziest things in Chinese restaurants. Last night, as we were there rather late, there weren't many tables filled, and I was overhearing conversations at two nearby. Both of them were talking, not surprisingly, about the election.

Table #1, two middle-aged men, probably in their late 60's, apparently single, either widowed or divorced, sharing an evening together:

Man #1, "I don't want that Obama. All he's shown me is that he's a Radical Islamist. I don't care what he says. That's the last thing this country needs."

Man #2, "Oh yeah?"

Man #1, "Yeah. And that Hillary. All she's shown me is that she's Bill Jr." (groan)

Man #2, "Yeah."


Table #2, a couple, probably in their 40's, either married or seriously dating, looked like they could be from any large cosmopolitan city, San Francisco, Miami, New York:

Man, "That Obama really has some trouble with that pastor friend of his. He's done for. No one's gonna stand for that."

Woman, "I hadn't heard. Tell me about it."

Man, "He's saying all sorts of bad things about white people, now Italians and Jews specifically. If anyone had said that about black people, forget it. They're giving him a pass, and I don't know why."

Woman, "That's interesting."

Man, "They might be giving him a pass now, but it won't last. He won't get through November.

"Hey, this is the craziest fortune cookie fortune ever. Everyone in this restaurant, I want you to hear this, because this is the craziest fortune cookie fortune ever. 'Be smart. Order take out.'"

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain















The Wizard of Ahhhhhhhhs.

O Give Me A Home












Lest any of us spend too much time pitying the Reverend Jeremiah Wright in his recent retirement, it was disclosed today that his former church, Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Illinois, is building for Wright and his wife a $1.6 million, 10,000 square foot retirement home in suburban Chicago.

Die Another Day












A newly released Rasmussen poll indicates that despite the prevailing wisdom that there is a big push for Senator Hillary Clinton to withdraw from the presidential primary race, an equal number of Democratic voters nationwide, 22%, want Senator Barack Obama to withdraw.

That would seem to reinforce what some have long alleged, that there is slanted representation in the media, since calls for Obama's withdrawal are not being reported.

A Different Kind of Woman

In the realm of fascinating ads, Cadillac has recently unleashed a series of visually stunning ones, including this one, my favorite new postfeminist television commercial.


Mac and Crow









Sheryl Crow recently told the press that she's planning an upcoming collaboration with band Fleetwood Mac.

Trouble is, it's news to them.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Better Pad Up






















Better pad up, Obama. Former President Bill Clinton, on the stump for his wife yesterday, gave his own version of the "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen" speech, which is to say, "Don't run for office if you can't take some hits."

Pad up.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Honey for the Bear


















CNBC's is characterizing this morning's NYSE opening as "Jamie's Rally," in the wake of JP Morgan sweetening their bid for troubled financial institution Bear Stearns from $2 to $10 a share. JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon held a conference call on Sunday evening to tout the deal to American financial institutions.

Dancing with the Yamaguchi

Kristi Yamaguchi looks like she's staked out a claim for this season's Dancing with the Stars title, as a serious contender alongside partner and master choreographer Mark Ballas, who made an unscheduled exit last season with Cheetah Girl girlfriend Sabrina Bryan.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Real Dogs Don't Eat Quiche


















Or do they? My Sweetie has recently demonstrated a particular affinity for the egg-and-cream delicacy, after only recently coming into his scrambled egg own. So much for being Type A Mr. Testosterone.

Barry Takes a Breather














After a rough week, the Obamas take an extended Easter weekend vacation in the Caribbean island of St. Thomas.

You've Got to Be Taught

















Ed Koch has an interesting take on the Obama race speech with respect to the impact sitting in Reverend Wright's sermons will have on Barack and Michelle Obama's two daughters.

Once




This is a magnificently surprisingly little Irish indie film that I enjoyed, at long last, on the flight over to Honolulu, and I have been forever transformed by it. Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová are brilliant and endearing as they weave a musical story through the busker-laden streets of Dublin, and ultimately, into a recording studio. The backstory of the real performers is equally inspiring.

The image of Irglová toting a Hoover through Dublin streets is the film in its purest essence.

The soundtrack is genius, with the Academy Award winning "Falling Slowly" and "If You Want Me" among its shining stars. This 5/4 masterpiece, however, is transcendent. Put on your best headphones, and crank up the volume as loud as your music adoring sensibilities can tolerate.

The Torch Has Been Lit






High atop Mount Olympus, the Olympic torch was lit earlier today in Greece to begin its 85,000 mile journey around the globe before arriving in Beijing for the summer games. Because of security concerns in the wake of the protests over violence in Tibet, part of the route will be kept secret so the torch can be safely kept burning until it reaches its ultimate destination.

A High Profile Conversion














A high-profile conversion took place Saturday evening in Rome, when Pope Benedict XVI baptized Rome-based journalist and Muslim critic Magdi Allam. Time Magazine has excellent coverage of the conversion and its potential impact.

Kristol's Ball

















New York Times columnist William Kristol makes an excellent point in this morning's edition regarding the state of the race, and race.

"Let's Not, and Say We Did"

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Peeps for Obama






















We are the change we have been waiting for.

In the spirit of the season, photographer Victoria Bernal has posted on her Flickr site these delightful Peeps pics, including a series of Peeps for Obama.

Oops







Just as the Obama campaign has been clamoring for an investigation into the breach of passport records of not only Senator Obama, but also Senators Clinton and McCain, it is disclosed that the contractor involved in the breach is a security advisor for Obama.

So much for conspiracy theories that the Clinton camp or Bush administration was somehow to blame.

Sun and Moon








This extraordinary photograph was taken at the North Pole, sunset below the moon at its lowest point.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

The Gender Card

Much has been made of playing "the race card" in this presidential primary season, but one has to wonder if in this video clip below, Zbigniew Brzezinksi, former National Security Adviser and father to MSNBC's Morning Joe program co-anchor Mika Brzezinksi, on which program he was appearing, isn't playing a card of his own, this time, "the gender card."

The comparisons to his travel agent and Mamie Eisenhower are grossly flawed at their base. Did his travel agent travel to countries as a representative of the United States, either as a resident of the White House or a member of the U.S. Senate? Did Mamie Eisenhower graduate from law school, practice at a prestigious law firm, go to work on behalf of children's interests, and serve in the Senate for seven years? One cannot even rightly compare the climate of 1960 and that election to one in 2008, and as much as one tries, one cannot make the shoe that once fit John F. Kennedy somehow squeeze onto the foot of Barack Obama.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Cash's Passion

The Good Friday Problem






















Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico, after a long courtship by both Democratic candidates, today breaks his silence and will officially endorse Senator Barack Obama for President of the United States.

There's just one problem, and it's not a small one. Today is Good Friday.

Memo to Obama: Today is Good Friday. You've just lost the Catholic vote. You're likely also risking a segment of the Protestant vote. If you're going to try to salvage your image as a self-professed Christian, cancel your campaign events and pep rallies scheduled on what is for many Christians a day of great solemnity and part of the holiest weekend of the year for most Christians. Positioning a Catholic next to you publicly on this day for anything other than a Good Friday observance does nothing to help you, particularly with the segment of the electorate you hope to persuade by this action.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

A Saint for All Seasons

















A Franciscan nun who happens to be a good friend of ours related an amusing story earlier this week about a statue that was in residence in her community many years ago.

This statue, according to Sister Antoine, was of a saint, but oddly enough, none of the novitiates knew exactly which saint it was.

So it became, of necessity, a Saint for All Seasons.

For those sisters who needed it to be, it was suddenly Saint Boniface. At the appointed time, it later became Saint Patrick.

And so on.

No one ever learned the true identity of the saint. It morphed into whatever was needed by those involved at the time.

Not unlike contemporary politics.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Dear Diary






















This morning, the William Jefferson Clinton Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, released the official White House schedules of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton during her tenure as First Lady 1992-2000.

V Makes a Stunning Debut

















In the largest initial public offering in U.S. trading history, credit card supergiant Visa made its splash into the markets at an initial price of $44 for 406 million shares, raising nearly $18 billion. Hoping to duplicate the performance of recent market entry MasterCard, which has a smaller slice of the credit card pie, Visa was successful in getting a coveted single letter 'V' as its stock symbol.

Just hours after its debut, the stock has popped almost 50%, with a high of $65/share.

Lama Drama









Reiterating a statement that he originally made more than fifteen years ago, yesterday His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama proclaimed that he would have no choice but to resign as spokesman for the people of Tibet if the majority of Tibetans resorted to violence in their struggle with the Chinese.

To be clear, however, he cannot resign as Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of the Tibetan people, only as head of the government in exile.

Monday, March 17, 2008

God Bless the River Liffey


















I once told Himself, if I'm ever terminally ill, hook me up to an I.V. of Guinness.

Here, in the spirit of the season, two creative culinary spins on the timeless nectar:

Guinness Cake, accompanied by Guinness Ice Cream.

Slainte.

Barach O'Bama

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Whale Song















One of the (many) reasons I come to the Hawaiian Islands in midwinter is to join the humpback whales, who are here mating and giving birth after a several week migration from their feeding grounds in Alaska.

I've always said the humpbacks have it right. Summer in Sitka. Winter in Maui.

We should all be so fortunate.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The Politics of Passion



Truth continues to be stranger than fiction.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Plumeria Blossoms



One of the most amazing things about the islands is the fragrant air. The minute one steps onto Hawaiian soil, generally in an open-air airport terminal, the perfume of a thousand flowers is heady, redolent.

Reigning monarch of the Hawaiian flora is the plumeria, which finds its way into countless fragile leis, adorning the neckline of lovers, the hair of keiki hula girls, and mourning oceans. They hang on headboards and adorn pillows, enticing the dreamer into blissful sleep.

There used to be a place driving north of Kapaa on the island of Kauai where one could find a sign by the side of the highway--LEIS $2. I wonder if it's still there.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

It's Okay to Cry

Friday, March 7, 2008

I Love You More Than Hawaii


















Perched on the precipice of an unlikely return to the Islands of Aloha after a conspicuous four-year absence, I am faced with the truth.

I love you more than Hawaii.

As we dropped you off in the kennel this afternoon, our hearts ripped.  Your dad broke down and sobbed.  We won't do this again.

We love you more than Hawaii.

Where the Buffalo Roam



















I don't particularly remember a time that my home state of Wyoming had any significant impact on the presidential primary season.  But this year, all bets are off, as candidates and their surrogates descend on the sparsely populated expanse of sagebrush in advance of tomorrow's caucuses.

Winter Is God's Joke on Dog Owners



















Walking the dog outside in the -6 below cold, snow and ice this morning, I have to wonder what we were thinking.

What were we thinking going from Florida to Hawaii by way of Minnesota?

What were we thinking going from 87 degrees to 87 degrees by way of sub-zero?

Crazy.

Someone in the elevator is wearing licorice cologne.  Flight crews are off to their early morning runs.  I have on two coats, a Burberry scarf, knit gloves, socks and closed-toe shoes (something I almost never wear), and still I come back from my early morning dog walk nearly frostbitten.  A hot bath in the hotel thaws me out.

Sweetie has forgotten what snow and ice are, obviously, despite the cold winter he spent here in Minnesota three years ago.  He shakes one paw, and then the next, almost falls through a snowbank, and decides that the most entertaining thing is writing yellow notes in the snow.

What were we thinking?

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Move Over, Dior
























There's a new Christian in town.  Christian Siriano, that is.

Last night,  Season Four of Project Runway crowned the 21-year-old fashion prodigy as their season winner, thereby launching what is likely to be a promising career in couture.  After showing his collection on the runway at New York Fashion Week, Siriano was judged, along with two of his collegues, by a panel that included reigning Project Runway queen Heidi Klum and guest judge Victoria Beckham, who fairly gushed over Siriano's edgy designs.


The Silly Season


















Perhaps it's just me, but there's something highly intrusive about asking someone to make their tax returns public.  It ranks right up there with the famous "boxers or briefs" questions.  The appropriate response to my mind is, none of your business.

After the primaries of this past Tuesday, Senator Obama is coming back swinging, since he feels that's how he himself got hit, and the latest strident demands from his campaign are that Senator Clinton make public her (2006) tax returns.  Senator Obama started vocalizing on this theme shortly after the Clinton campaign announced in earlier weeks that their candidate had indeed loaned herself $5 million for campaign use out of the couple's joint funds, as though he was mystified at how she could afford such a loan (while his own experience at writing best selling books should inform him to the contrary).  Senator Clinton, for her part, is quick to respond that she and her husband liquidated their investments going into her campaign, to avoid any conflict of interest.

The press release from the Obama camp yesterday makes some weary attempts at humor.   As Lynn Sweet of the Chicago Sun-Times notes in her blog yesterday, the Obama campaign protests as follows, "Senator Clinton has claimed she is 'too busy' to release her tax returns.  Given the fact that she is able to loan her campaign $5 million, you would think the Clintons would be able to hire an accountant."

As former residents of the White House, the Clintons made public their tax returns several years in a row.  But it's no state secret that the bulk of their wealth has come in their post-White House years, where both have published best-selling books with hefty advances, and the former President has been engaged in consulting and public speaking ventures worldwide.

The Obamas have released their 2006 tax return, which is not being widely publicized.  It reveals that Mrs. Obama, a hospital administrator, is now making over $300,000 a year in her job at a Chicago hospital and that they had a total reportable gross income of almost $1 million in 2006 (a drop from about $1.6 million in 2005), not bad for a junior senator who touts living on "the south side."  Almost half of that came from income from his two best-selling books, which no doubt has skyrocketed since his foray into presidential politics.  Mrs. Obama's income jumped over $200,000 when her husband was elected to the Illinois State Senate.

If the argument they are trying to make is one of financial transparency, it's a hard case to make against people who released their financial information every year for over eight years to the American public.  If the argument is that people will reject candidates who are doing well financially, it's unlikely their house is any less glass than his jaw.

A River Runs Through It





















The Grand Canyon is being deliberately flooded this week in an attempt to renew and balance the ecosystem.  The controversial flooding, which has taken place twice before, in 1996 and 2004, is opposed by some who say that an $80 million research project studying the effects of flooding on the Grand Canyon indicated the net effect will be harmful.

Regardless, it makes for some spectacular photography.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Swayze Battling Cancer
























It was publicly acknowledged today that actor Patrick Swayze is battling pancreatic cancer.  The 55-year-old star best known for roles in Dirty Dancing and Ghost is apparently responding well to treatment, according to his physician.

This is too personal for us.   We are well aware that pancreatic cancer is nothing to take lightly, particularly after Larry had his own diagnosis of the same in 2004.

Pancreatic carcinoma, one of the forms of pancreatic cancer, is highly lethal and generally takes patients within a matter of a few months (noting that nothing in the news releases indicates which form of pancreatic cancer Swayze has).  We wish him, and his family, well facing this challenging ordeal.

Rinse, Repeat





















Florida Governor Charlie Crist and the Florida legislature are intervening to have the delegates of both Florida and Michigan seated at their respective national conventions.  At a hastily called press conference less than an hour ago, Governor Crist (R) and his Michigan counterpart, Governor Jennifer Granholm (D), issued a joint statement expressing their wish that the voices of 5.1 million voters not be disenfranchised.

This is a tangled mess, unlikely to smooth out easily.  There are no simple solutions.

As Florida residents, we have a vested interest in the outcome.  

Those of us who voted in the Florida primary did so in good faith, with the expectation that our vote would eventually count for something.  While all of the Republican candidates campaigned in this state (the Republican National Committee penalized Florida by allowing only half of Republican delegates to be assigned, unlike their Democratic counterparts, who removed all Florida delegates) , none of the Democratic candidates did, so it cannot be alleged that the playing field was uneven.  Voter turnout in the Democratic party in Florida was high, and we had good exposure to the national campaigns of all candidates who were running at the time.  Both Democratic frontrunners, Obama and Clinton, received commanding votes in the state.

There cannot be a caucus as a substitute for the primary; that is a completely unsatisfactory resolution.  There cannot even be a redo on the primary and have it be fair; a large portion of the state's residents, ourselves included, are snowbirds, seasonal residents from other, generally northern and midwestern states, many of whom will be leaving soon, some who have left already, to return to their northern homes.

Florida residents, seasonal or permanent, will not likely stand for being disenfranchised, particularly after the mess of 2000, but appreciate well the problems of trying to redo the vote.  

When we voted initially, there was a full slate of candidates, both Democratic and Republican, on the ballots.  It was not an open primary; that is, only those registered as Democrats and Republicans could vote in their respective primaries, and no independent or cross-over voting was allowed.

There is really no way to do it over.  But it's unlikely it will ever be acceptable to all parties concerned regardless.

Crist, who gave a surprise last-minute endorsement to John McCain on the eve of the Florida primary, is touted as a possible running mate to McCain in the upcoming election.  

West Wing Redux

It's no coincidence that the campaign of Barack Obama is eerily similar to that played by Jimmy Smits as Matthew Santos in The West Wing.

They both had the same scriptwriter. David Axelrod.

Of Eiderdown and Bubble Baths



















For those who've had better weeks.

Ritz Carlton and American Express team up with their own brand of mini-film advertising, in the same spirit as the newly launched Louis Vuitton promotion.

Canadians Heart Obama

The Hollow Man
























Christopher Hitchens, the darling of the secular planet,
has proclaimed candidate Barack Obama as "shallow and flaky."

Not that I particularly care what Christopher Hitchens has
to say.  It's rare he has anything positive to say about anyone.
Almost no one escapes his scathing pen.

It's only noteworthy because, as candidates go, Senator
Obama might be the one more favored by people who tend
to actually quote Christopher Hitchens to support their own
life view.  That gives fans of both Obama and Hitchens a
difficult choice--either ditch Hitchens now that he's betrayed
their candidate, or wonder if Hitchens saw something they
didn't.

The Actress Hasn't Learned the Lines You'd Like to Hear












At 12:50 AM Eastern Time, CNN called Texas for Hillary Clinton,
who lives to fight another day.




Tuesday, March 4, 2008

The Tortoise and the Hare






























By the narrowest of margins, Senator Hillary Clinton
has just overtaken Senator Barack Obama's lead in 
Texas, after earlier stopping his 12-contest winning
streak with a win in Rhode Island, and what appears

It's A Wrap























The Maverick wraps it up.  

Governor Mike Huckabee is scheduled to drop out
of the Republican race on Thursday, and McCain
is slated to get the formal endorsement of the
current president tomorrow.

LATE BREAKING:  Huckabee will announce later
tonight that he is indeed dropping out of the race, 
and has already communicated his congratulations
to Senator McCain.



Say It Isn't So






















Say it isn't so, Brett.  Don't go.  Please don't go.

Of Cherry Trees and Cherry Picking



















When we were children, there was no President's Day.  
We celebrated, individually, the birthdays of two famous
U.S. Presidents,  Abraham Lincoln and George Washington
both in February.  In more recent years,  a national holiday 
was declared to consolidate both into what is now known as 
President's Day.

An important part of what was celebrated on Washington's birthday
every February was the story of a young George Washington learning
a childhood lesson when he most unfortunately chopped down a 
cherry tree, and was asked by his father about it.  As schoolchildren,
we heard that folktale often.

a couple of weeks ago as the nation was preparing to celebrate
President's Day, was the core moral concept behind the story
of our first president's untimely youthful ax swing.

It wasn't really about whether the newly elected governor of
It wasn't even really about whether the lines in question were written 
by David Axelrod, advisor to campaigns for both.  Plagiarism, 
while a serious charge, wasn't at the heart of what was troubling 
about not only the action, but the subsequent response.

In that moment, Senator Barack Obama lost an important opportunity.

We teach our children to revere honesty.  We use the example
of the person known affectionately as the "father of our country"
to reinforce that principle.  

The young senator from Illinois could have seized that moment
to be, like the young George Washington, unable to tell a lie.

The lesson learned in the cherry tree is not that mistakes should
never be made.   The lesson learned is how we respond to, and
defend, those mistakes.  In glimpsing his possible future and the
impact he might have on a nation's youth, an entire generation,
a generation taught that copying schoolwork is wrong, that
stealing intellectual property is wrong, he could been presidential.

The speech to Wisconsin's Democrats would have been equally
effective, if not more so, if Obama had prefaced the lines in
question thusly, "As Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts so
wisely stated when faced with the same challenge. . ."

But the cherry tree, once cut, could not be put back, any
more than Humpty Dumpty could be reassembled.  So
Senator Obama, instead of backtracking, dissembling, or trying 
to point out examples of other people doing the same, could have 
stood tall and said, "I've been running my campaign on honesty 
and principle, and to use the words of someone else without
attributing them, as though they were my own, sets a bad
example for the children of this country.  I was wrong."

a cohesive cover story, and make it mesh with the candidate's
words, it was clear that there was parsing of words, and
the important lesson of the moment was being lost.

Unfortunately, we saw an example of the same when Obama,
confronted in a previous debate, led the American electorate to
believe he really didn't know Chicago financier Tony Rezko.

It was clear, later, that was a less than accurate characterization.

Again, this week, we saw another example of the same when
the Obama campaign, and the candidate himself, claimed that
no conversation had taken place between the Obama campaign
and any officials of the Canadian government regarding double-
speak on the North American Free Trade Agreement.  Faced
with the truth of that situation, Obama could truly shed the
politics of the past against which he's ardently running, and
stand tall in his boots with the firm conviction of the first man
to hold the highest office in the land,

"I cannot tell a lie."

Instead, those who hope for change in this great nation will 
be left with the sad realization that instead of aspiring to 
our higher angels, another candidate was doing just what
was necessary to get elected, and get by, without getting caught.
Those who stake out the moral high ground for themselves
need to cling to it.  Leadership requires setting an example.

Senator Obama had an opportunity to indelibly write on a moment
in history, to inspire and to lead, and he missed it.  It's doubtful
it has yet occurred to him.  

Whether it will be lost on a nation's children is the question.


La Vie en 9/11
















French actress Marion Cotillard, who not only delighted audiences
with her award winning performance as singer Edith Piaf in
La Vie En Rose, but also with her poignant Oscar acceptance
speech, has, sadly, fallen from grace.


An interview recently surfaced from French television
a couple of years ago where Cotillard raises the question of
9/11 being an inside conspiracy.


While she claims to regret the comments, it has, if even
temporarily, tarnished an image she deservedly polished.


Monday, March 3, 2008

Boneheaded




















It isn't often that a politician admits to making a mistake, let
alone a mistake in judgment, particularly when they're running

But such was the case when Senator Barack Obama recently

The transaction in question involved Senator and Mrs. Obama


Now, the Senator has amended that somewhat to admit that
he took Rezko on a tour of his $1.5 million mansion on
the south side of Chicago prior to purchasing it--the same
the same seller, and then later sold it to the Obamas.

for some time now; there is gavel to gavel coverage
of the trial here.

While it might not have long term negative political
impact for Obama, it's certain to be a gnat he'd prefer

Fearmongering With the Big O












The Oracle of Omaha, that is.

When Warren talks, people listen.






The Chairman of the Board of Berkshire Hathaway sat down for a
Omaha, snippets of which are airing on CNBC's Squakbox today, 
and revealed to the business world what most of us have already
sensed--we are officially in a recession.  Oh, and stocks are not
yet cheap.