May the lives sacrificed by those who courageously assisted and protected others on September 11, 2001 be remembered always, and may the lives of those rescuers who survived be forever blessed. Our nation owes a great debt to them all.






May the lives sacrificed by those who courageously assisted and protected others on September 11, 2001 be remembered always, and may the lives of those rescuers who survived be forever blessed. Our nation owes a great debt to them all.






Posted in Uncategorized | Tags: 9/11, FDNY, heroes, NYPD, September 11, world trade center
In case you missed it, non-partisan, Pulitzer Prize-winning website PolitiFact has weighed in on Representative Joe Wilson’s commentary. You can click here to read it – http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/sep/09/joe-wilson/joe-wilson-south-carolina-said-obama-lied-he-didnt/ - or you can scan the bottom line right here:


Joe Wilson on Wednesday, September 9th, 2009 in the audience at a joint session of Congress
….so who’s the liar now? Please, let’s all recognize that there’s no other way to spin this: Representative Wilson may have been impassioned and emotional, but he got the facts wrong and he chose the wrong avenue to lodge his complaint. Many people have written to political sites today to support Wilson, because they say he “spoke truth to power”. Well, if it WAS truth he was speaking, then we might take that into consideration. But his anger was based on his personal interpretation of language in the bill, and from all objective accounts, there is no intent on either side to provide government-funded health care coverage to illegal immigrants. If the language in the bill is still ambivalent on that point, then Representative Wilson and others who share his concern can hammer those details out before the final measure is written, and they can vote against any bill which they feel they cannot support. That’s how to solve the problem – not shouting out in the middle of a speech.
More importantly, his intentions do not excuse his actions. We cannot, and should not, throw civilized discussion out the window because we believe that the end justifies the means. Why should Representative Wilson get a pass for being out of order during a joint session of Congress? He’s there to do a job, and the halls of Congress are his workplace. Just like any other workplace, Congress has certain guidelines for conduct. If you break the stated rules regarding conduct at any job, you get a warning, at the very least. Representative Wilson should be no different and anyone who wants to excuse his error is just inviting a huge, unruly mess. If spontaneous, disrespectful outburts are OK for him, then it needs to be OK for everyone else to do the same. His supporters have to tell America, straight out, that there is no longer any room for rules, manners, decorum, tradition, order or common courtesy in American government. It’s a free-for-all, and everyone who is angry enough about something can just yell at everyone else until the cows come home.
That’s great, but just remember, it’s not just conservatives or republicans that get angry. Liberals were angry when we organized in support of Barack Obama’s campaign. We were angry when we pulled in a record number of young voters, Hispanic voters, and other voters who had not traditionally chosen to vote (or to vote for Democrats) in previous elections. We were angry when we raised record sums of money for the campaign. We were angry when we rose up as a majority and asked the Republican party to get out of the White House before they started any more wars based on false information, ran up any more foreign debt, burned bridges with any more of our former allies and took away any more of our civil liberties. We were angry – and we won. We won BIG. Not by trying to shout down the opposition, but by outworking them, and by addressing people’s concerns instead of stoking people’s baser instincts. It was a good strategy then and it’s a good strategy now, but if those on the right simply cannot keep their rage in check long enough to do the work that’s needed for their side, as we did last year, they will not be able to connect with the majority of Americans.
So if conservatives are changing the rules of the game, and declaring that it’s all about who can shout the loudest from now on, they should remember that they are not the only ones with something to shout about.
Posted in Politics, Uncategorized | Tags: Congress, conservatives, Democrats, health care, illegal immigrants, Joe Wilson, liberals, Politifact, President Obama, Republicans, Wilson lied, you lie
During this evening’s Presidential address to the joint session of Congress, South Carolina made a real contribution. Representative Joe Wilson called out “You lie!” to President Obama in response to a point about insurance coverage for illegal immigrants.
This is a perfect crystallization of the ugliness that has infiltrated and poisoned our nation in recent months. All the crazy juice that people have been drinking, from town hall meetings to tea bag protests to birther rallies – it all came into focus in this one, nationally-televised WTF moment.
When those elected to represent us publicly embrace the angry mob mentality, in the hallowed halls of Congress no less, we all have to realize that the lunatics have truly taken over the asylum.
And so I am posting the content of an email I sent earlier this evening to Representative Wilson, and I encourage all of you who found his actions inexcusable to do the same. His address is http://www.house.gov/formwilson/IMA/issue.htm. While you’re at it, let the Speaker of the House know that you support official Congressional censure for the “gentleman” from South Carolina: http://www.speaker.gov/contact.
AN OPEN LETTER TO REPRESENTATIVE JOE WILSON
Representative Wilson – I realize that, because I am not a member of your constituency, my opinion may be irrelevant to you. However, I am first and foremost an American citizen, and my allegiance to this great nation and the principles on which it was founded mean far more to me than my place of residence or my party affiliation. I would have expected that, as an elected member of Congress, you would share my “Country First” attitude, but your deplorable actions during the President’s address before the joint session of Congress have proven otherwise.
I feel compelled to write to you because, even though you were not elected to represent me or the place where I live specifically, you were elected to serve the country and to advance the best interests of its people. This is something you failed to do tonight, and I must protest in the strongest possible terms the way you have contributed to the backwards momentum of public debate in this country. I have watched political events on television for decades and have never witnessed such an utter lack of respect for the President. In addition, the tactic you used devalued your own office as well. You should be ashamed, sir, and I would not be surprised if many of your constituents were ashamed of you as well.
Unfortunately, I realize that in this partisan world in which we live, you may also have many constituents who applaud you for having the “courage” to yell at the President during his address. Make no mistake, those who do are part of the problem, just as you have become tonight. Your outburst served no purpose other than to underline the sorry state of American political discourse. You and those who may support or Heaven forbid, emulate you, will have much to answer for when the process of open discussion and debate in this country finally buckles under the weight of the unchecked anger, fear and self-righteousness of those who respect no boundaries, or even the Golden Rule, in their efforts to drown out the words of others with whom they do not agree.
You have already issued an apology – I am in no position to say how sincere it is, or whether it was merely another act of political self-interest. I do know that many Americans share my disgust and will be letting you and the rest of the political world know how we feel, whether it matters to you or not. Frankly, what I and others think shouldn’t even enter into it. You should already know yourself that what you did was uncalled for and unacceptable – we the people should not need to tell you that, but since we have been forced to do so by your lack of self-awareness, I do hope you will listen.
Posted in Politics | Tags: address, censure, Congress, disrespect, health care, heckling, Joe Wilson, joint session, President Obama, South Carolina, Speaker of the House, speech, you lie
Folks, I try to keep informed about the world around me. But, like most relatively comfortable Americans, I really don’t have a clue about the things that go on every day in many less fortunate parts of the world. One example of this is the plight of human trafficking.
I recently came upon an article discussing this topic - specifically, the trafficking of women into a forced life in the sex trade. The article was an interview with English actress Emma Thompson, who works with a British organization called the Helen Bamber Foundation to publicise and drum up public support on this issue. Last year, Emma Thompson put together a project which drew upon the experiences of one of the many women forced into this hellish situation, and illuminated the experience from start to finish.
The result was an interactive installation called Journey, which was a collaborative effort with several acclaimed artists. It was presented in London’s Trafalgar Square a year ago, and has since been exhibited elsewhere around the world. It will be coming to the US sometime in 2009; Thompson says she is attempting to get clearance to set the installation up in New York in the spring.
I cannot put into words how brutally moving this installation is. It forces the viewer to see this life for what it is, and to see how cruelly and mercilessly these women are treated. With the promise of a good job in another country, impoverished women are lured from their families and homes to become pawns in the sex trade, existing in relative slavery and forced to endure physical, mental, and emotional horors which no human being should ever have to live through.
I wanted to share the information here, in the hopes that more of us might become educated and aware of this issue. I do realize that it’s easier not to look, and I will warn you that the links below will take you to material which you may find very difficult to watch or read. But if you want to make a difference, please check these out and spread the word. The more people know about this situation, the more we can use our energies to try and fight it. Donate to the cause, write to a governmental official, join the Facebook group for the Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking ( affiliated with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime), and keep your eyes open. Most importantly, don’t look away.
Emma Thompson narrates a short overview of the Journey installation:
A public service announcement on behalf of the UNGIFT:
Information about human trafficking from the UNODC:
Posted in Uncategorized | Tags: art installation, Emma Thompson, human trafficking, Journey, prostitution, sex trade, slavery, United Nations
OK, so I was goofing off a bit today, and taking a break from my daily drudgery, when I got an email from a friend of mine. She forwarded me a few links which she wanted me to check out, for an artist and photographer named Charlie White. He’s been on the scene for a while, but I hadn’t heard of him until today.
Boy oh boy, is this guy somethin’. His gig is setting up secenarios which incorporate real people, puppets, sets and special effects, so his photos have the feel of a still shot from a film. But the common link seems to be weirdness. He has created some fairly odd and disturbing stuff, and I’m not sure what the hell is going on in some of it, but I really like it (not sure what that says about me, exactly, but you can be the judge of that).
Here are a few of the works I found to be most interesting. If you’re keen to find out more about him or his art, you can check out his website here.
The Persuaders (2003)

Jonestown (2006)

Cocktail Party (2001 – from the series Understanding Joshua, which is definitely worth checking out in further detail here)

Bizzaro, no? But so cool, too. Although that opinion is coming from someone who thinks the same thing about David Lynch and David Cronenberg films, so take that for what it’s worth.
And speaking of films, Charlie White has also directed a couple of short ones.
One is the video for the Interpol song Evil – which is an effing good tune anyway -and it features a really eerie lookin’ puppet dude who has survived a horrific car crash:

You can use this link to check out the full video (sorry, but I can’t get the videos to post properly in my blog): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_OcR0fbf6g
Also, White created one in a series of viral promotional videos for Adidas, and his was called Pink.

I love this piece…it gets stuck in your head, for real, and it manages to make a pink stuffed bear seem reeeally creepy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dKcrCkbcDQ
As the mom of a young girl, I really feel this one and I have my own theory about what White is trying to say in this, but I’m probably wrong. If you wanna add your two cents, feel free.
‘Kay, now that I’m done creeping y’all out for the day, I need to go back to work. No time for art when there’s floors to mop, am I right? Have a good one, peeps…
Posted in Random posts | Tags: Adidas Pink, art, Charlie White, Cocktail Party, Jonestown, photography, The Persuaders, understanding Joshua
Alrighty then…I have been way too busy to sit and blog for the past several weeks. Now that the election’s over and I’m no longer spending hours on following politics, I have gotten back to my normal routine and am running around like a crazy person, dealing with my kid’s school and social schedules, getting ready for Christmas, and all that good stuff.
I had to stop in and mention something though. As I was surfing the net this evening, I came across this article from Marc Ambinder’s blog on The Atlantic website. It says that Jeb Bush, the brother of George W. and the former governor of my home state of Florida, is thinking of running for Senate, following the announcement that incumbent Mel Martinez will retire.
Folks, do I even have to tell you that this disturbs me, on many levels? I swear, if he does run, I will lose a good percentage of the happy mojo I’ve had goin’ for me since Obama won the general election. Seriously, what a buzzkill – here I was, all excited that the days of Dubya were numbered, and then this news rears its ugly head. We just can’t seem to get rid of these Bush wingnuts!
Florida loved this guy when he was governor, for the most part, though I don’t really understand why. As you may have guessed, I was never a member of his fan club, but I was in the minority at the time. However, I do wonder if the place has shifted a bit since then. We were the only state in the Southeast to go blue for Obama. Maybe the grip of the conservative voter has loosened just a bit, and maybe we’re entering the 21st century at last. But I wouldn’t bet on it, and I can just see Jeb riding a wave of GOP love right into the Senate. All those white men who freaked out when McCain lost are frantically looking for a way to edge the Republican party back into the sphere of governmental influence, and they would weep tears of joy if they had a chance to restore Jeb to an elected office.
And so, with a sense of deja vu mixed with creeping dread, I wait to hear the pronouncement from on high, when and if it comes. I’m sure it will, because Jeb always wanted to get back into the fray and this opportunity is one he just wouldn’t pass up. I’ll just have to keep my fingers crossed that something comes up and prevents him from going through with it. Who knows? Maybe now that he’s gonna have all kinds of time on his hands, Dubya will call him up, and offer to take his bro on an extended fishing trip. For 5 or 6 years. Off the Somali coast, where the pirates will hijack their vessel and we won’t have to hear from either one of ‘em ever again. *sigh* A girl can dream, can’t she?
Posted in Politics | Tags: election, Florida, George Bush, Jeb Bush, Mel Martinez, Senate