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October 12, 2008

Liberals vs. Conservatives: A Tie

A loop of thought I regularly have is triggered almost daily by all of this election madness. Generally I subscribe to the idea that at some level we are all one, and everything that reality presents us with is also inherent us. There is no there ''out there' that is not also 'in here'. To create world peace, we must create peace in ourselves. There is no 'us' vs. 'them', ultimately we are all one and the same.

But lately I find myself thinking thoughts that are peppered with phrases such as  'Those people...', 'What's wrong with them?...', 'Those dummies...', 'Idiots!', 'Flyover zone'- a lot.  So this video on TED arrived not a minute to soon. Some very interesting ideas on the real differences between liberals and conservatives.

Post-Palin Freak Out

I sent an email out awhile ago urging some sort of action or another. I got a lot of  humorous (and encouraging) emails back from friends near and far:

From a former Munich expat colleague now in Seattle:
"I'm throwing Baracktoberfest in Seattle. Go Obama!"

Also from Seattle:
"Trust me, I'm all over this election! I have extra voter registration forms at work and make sure that the young people here are registered..."

From L.A.:
mccain does not want to be close or slightly tilting obama because the democrats have the bigger surge in new registrations and turnout, knowmsayin'? in a few states during the primaries, can't remember which, more votes were cast for obama than all of the leading republican candidates combined! the polls only tell part of the story, the rest of it is who actually shows up and obama has a nasty habit of stirring up the little people to come out in droves (caucus wins over hillary, donation record this month, filling stadiums on each of his stops, etc). obama only has to fear those old cryptkeeper mummies who are in their coffins at home answering polls and only arise on nov 4 to vote.

i would also be shocked if the debates matter much in the end unless someone really gets a whoopin' and starts crying with full snot coming out of their empty heads. people honestly see what they want to see. but if i were to guess, i'm thinking mccain would rather the election end today while palin is still wrapped in her media burka of silence and he is still remembered as shouting his depends off in a mavericky way at the convention. -t


More from L.A.:
" oy to the vey is right.  We spent the weekend phone banking for Obama. We tried to go to Las Vegas to register voters since Bush only won it by 2% last time, but our car broke down :( (It all turned out fine though).

Obviously we are very motivated to do as much as we can to get Obama in the oval office. The Palin pick and speech was so horrifying it really lit a fire under my ass. The good news is that our experience at the LA Obama headquarters was great - people are very energized and it's run like a swiss watch - which is a reflection of how well he'd run the govt.

I think it will be close, but I think we can pull this one out of the hat. And if not, I'll just dig a hole, Saddam Hussein style, and not come out until 2012 - just in time for the end of the world!"

March 15, 2008

Live From Brussels: EMEA Democrats Abroad Caucus, Pt. 1

Greetings from Brux! I'm writing this post sitting at a conference room table in the Crowne Plaza Brussels, the democratic process swirling around me.

Some context: Democrats Abroad counts as a 51st state in the Democratic primaries. DOA voted 2 to 1 for Obama in the global primary, and now each region goes through the process of electing delegates to send to the convention in Denver. The EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) Region gets to send a total of 6 delegates according to the global DOA primary results - 2 for Hillary, 4 for Barack, and the caucus site is here in Brussels.  In spite of having no idea how this thing works and having to pay my own way (everyone does), I applied, wrote my candidate statement and got approval from the Obama campaign (it's a rubber stamp - everyone gets approval) 3 days(!) before the caucus. I kissed Armin goodbye, wished him a fun weekend on the slopes (and away from my incessant election chatter) and flew to Belgium on Friday.  I figured at the least I would meet some interesting like-minded ex-pats.

It has absolutely not disappointed! The festivities started last night with an all-the-Belgian-beer-you can drink 'social' near the stunning Grand Palace. The place was packed -there are easily 400 people here, all kinds of different people, young, old, black, white, you know the deal. Within 20 minutes I had my first small world moment when I was talking to an interesting guy around my age who's also worked in the web industry and knows my friend Natalie B. in Boston - Natalie, Jonah says 'hi'.

It's funny - the first thing people ask is 'where are you from?' and although we're all Americans, the response is automatically the host country we're living in.  The answers so far have included: Spain, Germany, France, UK, Lebanon, Norway, South Africa, Israel, Slovakia, Switzerland, Nigeria,  The Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, Sweden,Turkey...I am soooo in my element.

I fell in with a crowd of people that moved on to a nearby restaurant.  I chomped on Mussels and pommes frittes next to two 'Lebanese'  guys (also around my age) one from Hyde Park, and one from Berkley and also sat across from an older 'South African' woman, who is actually African-American from Chicago's south side - all Obama peeps, of course - in fact the guy from Hyde Park had Obama as a constitutional law professor when he was at University - fascinating!.  The beer and conversation flowed until we all stumbled back to the hotel well over mid-night. I got my first taste of caucusing and horse-trading politics when, while walking back with the larger group, several people started talking about 'not letting the larger countries (UK, France, Germany) take over again like last time' and agreed to have an early morning meeting of the small countries to start coalition building, I shrugged my shoulders and apologized for being German.

Stay Tuned for more! - a lot more on the way.

January 22, 2008

Why I Baracked the Vote

This is really, really, long - but it's all I'm gonna say about it.

Living here in Germany as I do, I get my absentee ballot about 2 months before the primary. When it arrived in my Breifkasten in early December, the election wasn't yet in fever pitch, and I hadn't fully tuned into the noise. I was sort of leaning towards Hillary after seeing a 5 minute segment on 'Hillaryland' on Good Morning America some months prior, and my 29 year old sister, who lives in the Berkley-Oakland area, had mentioned something about Barack Obama but he seemed too...too, I don't know, too someone I would have voted for too in my twenties when I was also living in the east bay.

So I did what any sensible person interested in the issues does, I bought each of their books. The bottom line for me is to get a sense of who each person is. In my experience, a book is the most direct way to get into someone's head and heart. Or so I thought.

I started with 'Living History', Hillary Clinton's autobiography. I'm a pretty voracious reader and can also force myself through some dreck, but I couldn't finish this. It was a shameless, utterly - sorry to say - calculated piece of marketing garbage. It should have been titled 'I like Yellow Daisies and Little Old Ladies' and the cover image should have been her giving the reader the finger. It was such an insult. Basically she was not going to reveal ANY of who she was, but rather put together something that would offend no one, risk nothing, push all the right buttons in whatever constituency she was targeting, and add some money to her campaign war chest. Fine then, next.

I started 'Audacity of Hope'after Christmas(before the Iowa caucuses).Pretty much from the moment I started it I was enthralled. The book is a collection of essays on Republicans and Democrats, Values, Our Constitution, Politics, Oppportunity, Faith, Race, The World Beyond Our Borders and Family. Page after page was filled with insightful, thoughtful and incredibly articulate observations on all of these themes. Even if he were not running for President, the book was well worth the read. Halfway into the book it was difficult not to get completely excited about this
person. What shone through clearly in chapter after chapter was someone who is incredibly intelligent,is honest about navigating life's gray areas and compromises, someone who deeply loves America and it's promise, has a great compassion for humanity,is self-reflective and generally just 'gets it'.

I often feel that I never got to live through the days 'When America was Great' which, to my mind, is mostly the FDR/WWII years. On top of that, living abroad almost exclusively through the Bush presidency has made it very, very difficult to feel proud of being an American and good about America in general. This came into sharp focus during the world cup when I witnessed some American college kids, being truly ugly Americans during the USA vs. Ghana match (screaming obscenities and dissing the Ghanians who also came to watch the game by loudly announcing-as we were losing- that at least we were a 'World Power'). When I later ran into some German friends who teased me because the US lost (Ihr konnt nach Hause fahren! Ihr konnt nach Hause fahren! - You can go home!) I was irrationally upset and started crying. I was shocked by how much I overreacted. Upon later reflection I knew what it was: we sucked, we just sucked, as a country, as a people, and there was no denying it. I couldn't wave a flag and feel good about what that flag represented. Everything good America was supposed to symbolize, freedom, hope, multicultarlism, openness, opportunity, self-determination, fairness, no longer seemed true.

When I got back to Germany after being home at length after my surgery last year, I commented to Armin that I had never seen America so polarized. There were bitter arguments between family and friends, despair and cynicism all around. I wondered if it had always been that way, or did I just notice it because I've been gone for so long?

Whichever it was it left me depressed and troubled.After reading his book, I see an Obama presidency as a chance to heal the deep divisions in America - which are real, dangerous and sad. I also see his election as a chance to return to all the good things about America that even I didn't know I held so dear. By the time the Iowa caucuses rolled around and I watched his victory speech, I felt as Larry David did when he said, "I had never felt so proud to be an American in my life then at that moment." Really and truly.

This is a moment in our history when we need Leadership - not solid  management - but Leadership, the two are radically different. Leadership gets people to self-organize and do whatever needs to be done. Management tells everyone what to do, bosses,prods and forces people to get things done. That's fine, but it's not what we need right now. In his book Obama has pointed out in clear and concise prose all of the challenges laying at our door : globalization, AIDS, the divide between rich and poor, terrorism, global warming (well, nobody's perfect). The core of his platform is about 'what we are going to do' not what 'he is going to do'.

The 'lack of experience' arguments don't bother me, Abraham Lincoln had less experience when he took office (he was only a congressman for 2 years) and he went on to save the union. As Barack often points out there are no shortage of ideas and intelligent people in America. What is missing is the will, the motivation and the inspiration to come together and get things done. I think this is what ultimately appeals to me about his message, it is a rallying cry for us to work together, it invites us to move away from being consumers and return to being citizens. It's fine for a candidate to talk about all of the things he or she will get done, but I'd rather be invited or inspired to become part of the force to bring about (sorry) change, and to be one of the many to contribute and help to get things done. I suppose that's why the FDR years inspire me so much, back then everyone, EVERYONE came together to just KICK ASS and do the impossible, and that's what I want to do too. 

So I say: Barack on.

December 11, 2007

Holiday Freebie!

Logo_2_2

Ladies and Gentlemen! Announcing e.m.papers. This is the resurrection of an invitation/card business my friend Molly Hart and I started before I moved to Germany (ergo the 'e' and 'm' before papers). It was always something I felt we could've made a go at, but alas I was young and adventure called.  In the meantime the web and home-printing have matured and during our big trip last summer the idea came to me - why not just sell the invitation and card designs as PDF's on the web, and let people print them out at home? The online store is still in the process of being built, but you can get a sneak peak now and also download a free fun and whimsical gift label template (you'll need #5260 Avery labels).