Monday Mornning S and M

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In countries like Finland, Norway, Denmark, poverty has almost been eliminated. All people have healthcare as a right of citizenship. College education is available to all people, regardless of income, virtually free. They have been very aggressive in trying to move to sustainable energy. They have a lot of political participation, high voter turnouts. I think there is a lot to be learned from countries that have created more egalitarian societies than has the United States of America.

Senator Bernie Sanders, on Democracy Now

You know, my campaign office, since the very beginning, looked like the UN. We had everybody in the room, people of all faiths, all cultures, all colors, working together behind a progressive agenda to challenge this Iraq policy, to raise the issue about the 47 million uninsured, to talk about fair working conditions and middle class economics, to talk about the right to organize in labor unions, clean renewable energy, behind a progressive agenda.

Representative Keith Ellison, on Democracy Now

Amy Goodman has a way of reminding me of things. Last week she noted that there were several firsts in the midterm elections. There will be a woman in charge of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi is now the most powerful women ever elected in the United States. She will be third in line, so once we get those impeachment hearings out of the way… Try to picture Bush and Cheney’s mug shot next to Delay’s.

Anyway, we also voted our first Socialist into the Senate, Senator Bernie Sanders, and our first Muslim into the House, Representative Keith Ellison. Americans too often vilify Socialists and Muslims, so it’s a remarkable event.

It’s strange to think that so many people have opposed the kinds of things people like Pelosi, Ellison, Sanders, and even Goodman want: health care for everyone, strong labor laws, affordable college educations.

Delay and his ilk offered little of anything, yet people voted them in again and again for a dozen years. I am not sure if that is sadism or masochism.

“The goats and father are well—especially the goats.”

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The Civil War was the first “modern war.” Abraham Lincoln became president of a divided nation during a period of both technological and social revolution. Among the many modern marvels was the telegraph, which Lincoln used to stay connected to the forces in the field in almost real time. No leader in history had ever possessed such a powerful tool. As a result Lincoln had to learn for himself how to use the power of electronic messages. Without precedent to guide him, Lincoln developed his own model of electronic communications — an approach that echoes today in our use of email.

Tom Wheeler, from Mr. Lincoln’s T-Mails

I found this story (and the image) on Lifehacker the other day and since it is an Illinois kind of story, I had to include it here. The subject line quote is from a note sent by Lincoln to Mary Todd on April 28, 1864. Mrs. Lincoln and Tad were in New York and Tad was concerned about his pets.

An enterprising writer named Chirag Mehta has created Tag Clouds of over 300 historical documents written by presidents, called the US Presidential Speeches Tag Cloud. It includes Lincoln’s first two inaugural addresses as well as The Emancipation Proclamation. There’s more on the history of the telegraph here, too.

We’re #23!

Reporters Without Borders compiled a questionnaire with 52 criteria for assessing the state of press freedom in each country. It includes every kind of violation directly affecting journalists (such as murders, imprisonment, physical attacks and threats) and news media (censorship, confiscation of issues, searches and harassment).

It registers the degree of impunity enjoyed by those responsible for such violations. It also takes account of the legal situation affecting the news media (such as penalties for press offences, the existence of a state monopoly in certain areas and the existence of a regulatory body) and the behaviour of the authorities towards the state-owned news media and the foreign press. It also takes account of the main obstacles to the free flow of information on the Internet.

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=11716

The report from Reporters sans Frontieres isn’t surprising in many ways. It notes that freedom of the press is “threatened most in East Asia (with North Korea at the bottom of the entire list at 167th place, followed by Burma 165th, China 162nd, Vietnam 161st and Laos 153rd) and the Middle East (Saudi Arabia 159th, Iran 158th, Syria 155th, Iraq 148th).”

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