Men with Oars

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The men of the University of Warwick Boat Club in Coventry, United Kingdom have decided to display their solidarity with the gay / lesbian community by rowing naked.  They’re trying to draw attention to inequities in health care that GLBT folks often face.  I don’t know how U.K. lesbians feel about a bunch of college boys getting undressed on their behalf, but as always, it’s the thought that counts.

“We are thrilled to be launching the UKs first dedicated fitness space with the Warwick Rowers,” said Dave Viney, manager of the LGBT Health and Wellbeing Centre in Birmingham.  “It’s great to see homophobia in sport and homophobic bullying creatively challenged by a predominantly heterosexual sports team.”

The rowers previously stripped down for a sports calendar to raise funds for charity, so this might be the start of a trend.  When you realize that athletes competed nude in the ancient Olympics, old school might not be a bad thing.

http://vimeo.com/54312887

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Happy Birthday Ron Reagan, Jr.!

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Born May 20, 1958, in Los Angeles, Ronald Prescott Reagan is the son of the late Ronald Reagan and Nancy Davis Reagan.  He’s also one of my favorite political commentators; a clear liberal voice that often rises above the muck of TV news.  It’s ironic, considering that his father is a conservative icon.  But, Ron has no patience for the new brand of Republican.  He openly supported John Kerry during Kerry’s bid for the presidency in 2004.  A year earlier he condemned the Bush Administration for trying to take the helm of conservatism.  “The Bush people have no right to speak for my father, particularly because of the position he’s in now,” Ron, Jr., said. “Yes, some of the current policies are an extension of the ‘80s.  But the overall thrust of this administration is not my father’s – these people are overly reaching, overly aggressive, overly secretive, and just plain corrupt.  I don’t trust these people.”

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Class of ‘73

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This past Friday, May 17, marked the 40th anniversary of the start of the Watergate hearings.  The Watergate scandal was a cataclysmic event in American politics; an imbroglio that brought down a sitting president and exposed the seedy underside of government.  It also made the American public realize their worst fears about elected officials were true.

Watergate actually refers to the Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C., a luxurious complex overlooking the Potomac River.  Here in the pre-dawn hours of June 17, 1972, Frank Wills, a night security guard happened to stumble upon a group of men breaking into the Democratic National Party’s headquarters.  Ronald Zigler, then President Richard Nixon’s press secretary, denounced it as a “third rate burglary.”  It was enough to stave off any connection to Nixon who coasted to a landslide victory over South Dakota Senator George McGovern that November.  Nixon wasn’t that popular.  His constant delays in failing to end the Vietnam War looked to be a portent to his reelection, especially considering that 1972 was the first year 18 – 20 year olds could vote.  But, McGovern – despite his staunch anti-war views – wasn’t that effective or ambitious.  He only took one state: Massachusetts.  He tried to make Watergate an issue, but no information had surfaced yet tying Nixon to the burglary.  After the scandal broke, Bay State residents started driving around with bumper stickers proclaiming, “Don’t blame me.  I’m from Massachusetts.”

Jim Lehrer, who turns 79 today, was an early player in the media obsession over the Watergate Hearings.  He and fellow journalist Robert MacNeil commenced a then-innovative programming venture by covering the hearings live during the day and then discussing them in the evening.  In the days before cable TV and the Internet, Americans received most of their news from TV and print sources.  Critics condemned the move; insisting that PBS should focus more on its original intent: cultural and educational subjects.  But, the public was hooked.  Besides, the hearings quickly proved educational, in that people learned the minutia of daily government; plus, it was definitely a cultural milestone in American history.

I was only 9 when those hearings started.  My parents would rush home after work that summer to eat dinner and drop down on the couch to watch PBS.  I was more obsessed with my new German shepherd puppy.  But, I have vague recollections of those hearings and I quickly realized how significant the entire mess was.

Watergate was a critical juncture in American history; a cumbersome and frightening crossroad on the political and legal front.  It bridged the nation’s faux gold-plated past of high-minded constitutionalists fighting for democracy and liberty with the brutal reality of government corruption and deceit.  The country had almost self-destructed under the commotion of the 1960s: the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy; the battles of the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago; and the decade’s various civil rights movements.  Its brightest point – the only event that truly united us – seemed to be the 1969 moon landing.

Then, came Watergate, and everything in America changed.  Political figures never had much of an angelic reputation, here in the U.S. or anywhere.  But, not many in the American populace ever suspected their own president would stoop to overseeing a burglary.  Nixon apparently was so determined to win reelection he would break the law to find anything nefarious about his opponent.  Nixon’s tapes, recorded in what he thought was the sanctity and privacy of the Oval Office, sealed his fate.  Americans were shocked to learn how foul-mouthed and hateful he was.  Reading the excerpts in the local newspaper – with the word ‘expletive’ carefully juxtapositioned amidst the rest of the text – my parents couldn’t believe it.

By the summer of 1974 – as more details of the Watergate affair became clear, due in part to the dogged efforts of “The Washington Post’s” Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward – the hearings metamorphosed into impeachment proceedings.  For only the second time in our nation’s history, a sitting American president faced the possibility of forced removal from office.  In August of that year, with the jaws of the scandal enveloping him, Nixon became the first president in American history to resign.  His Vice-President, Gerald R. Ford, ascended to the Oval Office.  Ford was almost a product of chance.  Spiro Agnew had been Nixon’s vice-president.  But, as the Watergate mess unfolded, Agnew faced his own quandary; he was indicted for tax fraud while governor of Maryland.  Under threat of impeachment, Agnew resigned in October 1973; only the second time that has happened in U.S. history.  When Ford assumed the presidency, he appointed Nelson Rockefeller as his vice-president.  Another dubious first: Americans found themselves with both a president and vice-president for whom they did not vote.

Ford exacerbated the problem by pardoning Nixon a month after taking office, and – along with the burgeoning energy crises, the Vietnam disaster and Jimmy Carter’s own disastrous presidency – the entire 1970s seemed like an unmitigated failure.  The only high point was the 1976 Bicentennial celebration.

That was the death knell for American politics as the nation knew it.  Whatever shred of dignity remained in the concept of public service splattered against the fan of volatility.  Nixon’s tactics established an unsettling trend: political candidates now focus more on what’s wrong with their opponent than on their own achievements.  It reached an apex during the 2000 presidential elections when George W. Bush’s inner circle used every filthy machination they could pull out of their rectal sewers to assail the other side.  It was the only way they could get an otherwise inept and unenviable candidate into the presidency.  They had done it six years earlier, when Bush first ran for governor of Texas.  His cronies began planting rumors that incumbent Governor Ann Richards had – gasp! – homosexuals serving openly in her administration.  That was enough to send the God-fearing rednecks to the voting booth – as if that had anything to do with governing.  But, people fell for it.

And, that’s just it.  Some people keep buying into the validity of such nonsense.  They believe, for example, that the Bill Clinton sex scandal really was a threat to national security, or that Barack Obama was actually born in Kenya.  I watch every presidential debate, along with other political discourses, and wonder, ‘What do you plan to do for me?’  Texas’ newest senator, Ted Cruz, gave an impassioned defense on why Chuck Hagel shouldn’t be Secretary of Defense, but has said virtually nothing about working with the president on the economy.  If anything, Cruz seems determined not to work with President Obama on anything!

Thus, is the spawn of Watergate.  Politics has become filthy, putrid and unmerciful.  Countless numbers of qualified individuals – well-educated, well-intentioned, articulate and compassionate – won’t sacrifice their souls and the souls of their families to the evil deity known as the American political machine.  After all, who wants to jump into that mess?

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Happy Birthday Jim Lehrer!

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Born in Wichita, Kansas on May 19, 1934, Jim Lehrer is best known for the “MacNeil – Lehrer Report” (now the “PBS News Hour”) on PBS, but he has a distinguished career in journalism.  Lehrer earned degrees in journalism from Victoria College and the University of Missouri, before serving in the U.S. Marine Corps.  Afterwards, he went to work for the “Dallas Morning News” in 1959 and then with the “Dallas Times Herald” in 1966.  His newspaper work led him to KERA-TV, the Dallas affiliate of PBS, where he became executive director of public affairs.

He remained with PBS when he transferred to Washington, D.C., a move that proved vital for him and public television.  Once there, he met and teamed up with another veteran journalist Robert MacNeil.  The duo gained recognition for journalistic integrity and excellence when they began covering the Watergate hearings live in 1973.  It was unprecedented for its time; an early version of reality TV.

I had the pleasure of meeting Jim Lehrer at a writers’ conference in Austin in May of 2009.  He is the author of 20 books, 2 memoirs, 3 plays and a non-fiction piece about presidential debates entitled “Tension City.”  He is more affable than he appears on television and entertained the small crowd with backroom stories of the news arena.  Looking at all the talking heads on national television, I can honestly say very few compare to Jim Lehrer.

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All Clear!

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Next time you plan a garage or yard sale, take a closer look at what you have: it actually might be worth more than a couple of bucks.  When a family in southeast England decided to have a clearance sale last year, they didn’t think much of a postcard-size painting of Queen Elizabeth I they found amidst the unwanted items.  Officials with England’s National Portrait Gallery now say it dates to around 1590.

“It does show you what is to be found in people’s attics unknown and unrecorded,” says the Gallery’s Dr. Tarnya Cooper.

Elizabeth appears as Paris, holding an apple, alongside the goddesses of marriage, war and love.  Paris, also known as Alexander or Alexandros, was a prominent figure in Greek mythology.  The painting is credited to Isaac Oliver, a French-born English painter who lived around the same time as Elizabeth.

“It’s unlikely that the original owner knew what they had,” says Cooper.  “We are clear we are looking at a very high quality image by a 16th century artist.”

The painting is undergoing conservation and will be part of a display of Elizabethan artifacts later this year.

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Best Quote of the Week

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“How many brothers and sisters find themselves in this situation?  Not paying fairly, not giving a job because you are only looking at balance sheets, only looking at how to make a profit.  That goes against God!”

– Pope Francis, about the fire and collapse of a garment factory in Savar, Bangladesh that killed over 1,100 people on April 24.  The calamity already ranks as the worst industrial accident in history.

Laws were enacted over a century ago here in the U.S. and other developed nations to prevent such work-place disasters.  Corporations screamed and hollered that regulations would impact their profits, which in their pathetic little minds, is so much more important.  I guess that’s why such companies as Wal-Mart and the Gap Corporation keep shipping jobs over there.

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Worst Quote of the Week

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“I will tell you, as I have been home in my district, in the sixth district of Minnesota, there isn’t a weekend that hasn’t gone by that someone says to me, ‘Michele, what in the world are you all waiting for in Congress?  Why aren’t you impeaching the president?  He’s been making unconstitutional actions since he came into office.’”

Rep. Michele Bachmann, to a “Tea Party” crowd outside Capitol Hill on May 16.

Minnesota’s resident lunatic joins such geniuses as Texas’ own Louie Gohmert in entertaining the concept of impeachment proceedings against Obama over the ongoing Benghazi mess and the new scandal involving the Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of conservative groups in recent years.  The “Tea Party” gang suddenly feels victimized – like evangelical Christians – by an allegedly oppressive American oligarchy.  They’re obviously just looking for any reason to get Obama out of office.  I have 2 words for them: PRESIDENT BIDEN!  Hell, that even scares me!

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Smartest Quote of the Week

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“It’s sort of a cartoonish impression of military capabilities and military forces.  The one thing that our forces are noted for is planning and preparation before we send people in harm’s way, and there just wasn’t time to do that.”

Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, on the Benghazi incident.  In an interview with CBS News last week, Gates said he would have handled the response to the attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi in the same manner as the Obama Administration.

Considering that Gates was at the helm of one of the worst international incidents in American history – the Iraq War – that certainly says a hell of a lot.

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Dumbest Quote of the Week

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“I am a true Christian woman.  Not only am I covered under the blood of Jesus…I am swimming in it.  My Jesus has control over my life & the title of mayor doesn’t define who I am as a person. North Miami chose ‘Luciefer’ over Jesus.  Thank you for your trust & support, your final contribution, and most importantly – your prayers!  I have lost a hard fought battle but not a war.”

– Anna Pierre, a North Miami, Florida mayoral candidate on her Facebook page.  Pierre had declared at the start of her campaign that Jesus had endorsed her candidacy.  On May 14, she received 56 votes and lost.

Run, Anna!  Run!  There are only 56 people in North Miami who believe in Jesus!  That means 60,087 people in your city believe in Luciefer!  You’re outnumbered, girl!  Don’t ask questions!  Just run!

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Strangest Quote of the Week

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“Yes, I have changed my political affiliation to the Democratic Party.  It doesn’t take much to see the culture of intolerance surrounding the Republican Party today.  I have wondered before about the seemingly harsh undertones about immigrants and others.  Look no further; a well-known organization recently confirms the intolerance of that which seems different or strange to them.”

– Pablo Pantoja, announcing his resignation as Director of Hispanic Outreach for the Republican National Party in Florida.

Pantoja cites the RNP’s inaction on immigration reform as a catalyst for his decision, but says a report by the extremist Heritage Foundation that suggested Hispanics have lower IQs finally just pushed him into the other camp.  These days a southern Republican switching to the Democratic Party is like an Indian joining Custer’s army.  I know a few Hispanics who vote Republican on a regular basis – including some in my own family – but I love them anyway.  I keep saying that immigration is not the only issue affecting Hispanics.  To most of us, the economy and jobs are top priority.  And, since the Republican Party seems hell-bent on doing nothing about that, their “outreach” efforts will keep falling on its collective ass.

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