middle-aged AfricanAmerican/Cherokee woman, expat podcast/video producer in Tokyo. wrote a book called 'Bush in Wonderland' (only released in Japan, though). Deaniac.
Kossack since: 2003-10-16: UID: 1729
Hi y'all. I'm sitting in the Darcy Burner panel about prepping to run. Darcy is full of cool geekiness and true courage: hope I get to interview her over the weekend.
So, re: the Unofficial Netroots Nation Podcast, I've been getting to talk with some wonderful folks, both known and not. Here's the Chair of the DNC, our very own Gov. Howard Dean, talking with tlg, the incoming DNC member for Asia, backstage before his Keynote speech:
Okay, so, IMHO the urgency of the quest to get decent health care in America for every single person ought to help folks remember that there are Americans who worry about their health and not being able to care for themselves and their loved ones, in a way that precludes worry about FISA, important though it is. With that in mind, here's an alternative view to think about:
I know, this has nothing to do with politics. I could make the cat a metaphor for building bridges or something. But, I just thought, as there are so many Kossacks who love cats, you might enjoy this story.
I promised to create a podcast & videocast series at Netroots Nation. To prepare for doing just that, I'd like to ask the community for your input on the categories of folks we interview. I wish it were possible to interview every single Kossack. But, we'd already be well into the Obama Administration before I could make that work :-)
She, and my Dad taught me and my brother a thing or two about hope and reality and the content of our characters. I should note that they taught this by example. And therein lies...
I'm boiling mad, and I don't get that way easily. I'm very much a person who dislikes conflict, and I will take a conciliatory tone to try to build bridges.
But I believe that Gov. Dean is being railroaded by big donors in the Democratic party, because they have the money and therefore they believe they have all the power and the right to ignore reality and dictate terms.
Nemazee, a Clinton national finance chair, pointedly asked Dean why he and the DNC were not doing more to seat the Florida and Michigan delegates. Dean energetically defended himself, saying it was up to the states and the candidates to reach a solution, and that DNC involvement could be perceived as unfairly assisting one campaign or the other. As he spoke, some Clinton supporters protested, while the Obama supporters mostly sat quietly, according to the attendees.
Hey y'all. hat tip for this article goes to The Littlest Gator over at The Group News Blog I have to say, the idea of a little town on the sea of Japan rooting for Barack...well, darnit, I teared up (though, full disclosure, I also tear up at squirrels in conflict...)
(crossposted at Democrats Abroad Japan There is so much amazing work going on at the Group News Blog Anybody who followed Steve Gilliard's News Blog knows that Steve and his great friend/blog partner Jen created a community that had some of the most amazing writers, stuff that hits hearts with sledgehammers, teaches, and changes minds.
There are folks that I like to imagine drifting around us, who've gone on, the giants on whose shoulders we stand and I think about what they've said, the visions that powered them...
I've been ill, and the wretched boredom of chronic pain circles like shadows. I couldn't read, and still have trouble with too much computer time. So, I'm left to my own thoughts: horrors!:-)
Seriously, the last thing I want to have to do is occupy my own mind without a book or a blog...
But, when forced, as life will, to do something I really don't want to do, I found in it a kind of...not peace, exactly. Just a sense that there are large perspectives to this fight we have, to get to the bottom of what ails America and effect a lasting cure...
Okay, this is necessarily short - I don't have time, and just want to ask that people support this effort. also crossposted on Democrats Abroad Japan
I met the Color of Change folks at YearlyKos, and it was inspirational to hear how they used the blogosphere as a tool to get word of insanity like the racist persecution in the Jena 6 case
So I signed up. And I promised to do something tangible every week. Money is too tight to mention, but I have a voice in the blogosphere, and I'm hoping to use that voice to greater effect than I have in the past.
And so we come to Color of Change's Katrina project. I'll let them tell it, below:
I sometimes feel, even at 49, that I'm still a mixed up kid. Unlike the situation that Jesse Wendel writes about here both of my folks were very supportive and patient with me, in the midst of their own struggles to make sure we would survive poverty, racism, and other facts of Queens Village life...
But I wonder sometimes why I am so set against having children (meaning me, not others), and glad not to have them at this ripe middle-age. And I think that, rather than the reason being because I didn't see good parenting in action (I did), it's that I'm still that mixed up kid, and balancing my own inadequacies is going to be my work during this lifetime.
for a bit of personal meta and a question, inspired by Jesse's post (which I highly recommend, both for the post itself and for the comments), please follow me...
I never wanted to learn about war. I never wanted to have to.
I wanted to see even the worst people stop short of war. But, then the worst people got into office, and wage war as a child plays with plastic soldiers.
With no thought. No care. Worse, the appearance of care, all plastic, like that damn turkey.
I learned that, as a citizen, my political will is the 'stop' button when it comes to many things, including the horror of war. And it behooves me to educate myself.
He posted a thank you to the youtube community for participating in the candidate debates, and, true to the desperation that these poor, ignorant souls are feeling, the trolls are trying to overwhelm the comments. It would be great if people see intelligent positivity - or at least nimble snark:-)
I couldn't figure out how to title this post, because I'm still so heartbroken that there's even a need for it. So many of us miss the hell out of Steve. It's like a big hole in our hearts not to go to our familiar homestead at The News Blog, and settle in for intelligence and tea and humor and anger and knowledge and truth and food and relationships and race and...all the wonders that Steve brought to the table.
(follow me below the fold for some really good news)
I played the jack 'gainst the queen and it made the dealer sing.
Jack o'Diamonds is in my ear. Corey Harris' guitar reminds me, like never before, that hope is here. Not on the way. but here, right in this tiny room in Tokyo. Wednesday at 7am we'll gather at our most active activists' place to watch returns, then head off to work.
hope is rising.
And hope is there in Montana. Jag said so, and you know it is true:-)
I'm up at 5am watching one of the family of spiders (the fauna in my little room think that it's a zoo, for some reason. no mention of paying rent) crawl up my wall as I lean back and wish it well (do not fall on me, it will do neither of us any good).
But, if you're an American citizen living abroad, this message from Move On will definitely do you good.
We're down to the wire, because Americans abroad have to register to vote much earlier than you folks in the States, it's super important to get the word out in the next few days, so people can register, get their ballots, vote and get them back to their counties.