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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Slaughter of the Lambs and Abraham's Christian Legacy


St. Francis' Day of blessing of the animals. Photograph is for St. James' at Meeker Colorado

I had originally titled my post Slaughter of the Lambs as Slaughter of the Innocent. I changed it to Slaughter of the Lambs because I realized that Islam has no love of animals.

Robert Spencer, of Jihad Watch, writes:
Muhammad didn't like dogs:

"Once Gabriel promised the Prophet (that he would visit him, but Gabriel did not come) and later on he said, 'We, angels, do not enter a house which contains a picture or a dog.'" -- Sahih Bukhari 4.54.50

"Abdullah (b. Umar) (Allah be pleased with them) reported: Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) ordered the killing of dogs and we would send (men) in Medina and its corners and we did not spare any dog that we did not kill, so much so that we killed the dog that accompanied the wet she-camel belonging to the people of the desert." -- Sahih Muslim 10.3811

"Ibn Mughaffal reported: The Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) ordered killing of the dogs, and then said: What about them, i. e. about other dogs? and then granted concession (to keep) the dog for hunting and the dog for (the security) of the herd, and said: When the dog licks the utensil, wash it seven times, and rub it with earth the eighth time." -- Sahih Muslim 551

Still, this is a new one: "'Puppy Bombs' Rescued from Egyptian Violence," by Ari Yashar for Israel National News, October 29 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):

Two puppies from Egypt were rescued just moments before they were to be used by the Muslim Brotherhood in their protests as "puppy bombs" dipped in gasoline and set on fire.

The revelation about the Brotherhood's cruel tactic used two weeks ago at Tahrir Square during demonstrations against the ouster of President Mohamed Morsi's was made known by Robyn Urman, a pet rescuer in Tenafly, New Jersey, as reported by CBS 2.
The generous Tiberge, at Gallia Watch, writes about the slaughter of sheep for the Muslim holiday Aid-el-Kebir, and Résistance Républicaine's leader Christine Tasin arguing with a Muslim about the sheep that are slaughtered for the holiday:
Even though animal cruelty is the major accusation hurled at Muslims from animal rights organizations, we have to remember that we too are cruel to animals in many ways. Christine's Muslim opponent pointed that out.
This is the argument that the Muslim man makes to Tasin. He says:
"Do you find it normal that one breeds battery chicken?...You only have a problem with Islam."
I think this is what threw Tiberge off. Yes, battery hen breeding is a phenomenon in this century, but breeders go to great lenghts to make these conditions as bearable as possible for the hens, while thousands of anti-battery chicken movements speak up for these birds.

Where in Islam is anyone protesting the cruel slaying of these sheep in an annual Muslim ritual? And where in Islam is an effort made to kill these sheep in a more humane way?

The sheep are killed in this manner:
These animals were slaughtered in open fields, by untrained people. They were held down while their throats were cut and left to bleed slowly to death. This barbaric and despicable cruelty has outraged millions of civilized people. Agriculture Commissioner Franz Fischler has made it clear in two letters to me that ritual slaughter in the open air is illegal under EU law, and must only be performed in an abattoir. Will the Commission immediately take steps to prosecute the French authorities under Article 169 [Source: EUR-Lex: Access to European Union law, 20 May 1997]
Is this the kind of culture and religion we want to accommodate in our wonderful Multicultural Mosaic? Do we want to be confronted with streaming blood and the knowledge of deep animal suffering in order to be all-accepting of anything and any-one in the name of equality and multiculturalism?

That should be the core of Tasin's protest, and her response (of course not directly to this aggressive Muslim, or she could be rushed to the emergency room) to arguments brought by Muslims who compare Muslim animal cruelty with barely existing Christian ones, and Western treatment of animals.

In fact, the various denominations and churches have a "Blessing of the Animals" services, where animals are brought in on a specific day, to be blessed by the priest. This was a ritual established by St. Francis. What Muslim "saint" celebrates, and blesses, animals?

And Christ is known as The Good Shepard, who protects and guides his sheep. What is Mohammed's benevolent title? He is known for killing dogs, those loyal friends of man, and shepherds.

As Robert Spencer writes in Jihad watch:
Muhammad didn't like dogs:

"Once Gabriel promised the Prophet (that he would visit him, but Gabriel did not come) and later on he said, 'We, angels, do not enter a house which contains a picture or a dog.'" -- Sahih Bukhari 4.54.50
And here is more from the Hadith, where Mohammed orders to "Kill the dogs":
Sahih Muslim 5248:

Narrated Maymunah: “One morning Allah's Messenger was silent with grief. Maymunah said: Allah's Messenger, I find a change in your mood today. Allah's Messenger said: Gabriel had promised me that he would meet me last night, but he did not meet me. By Allah, he never broke his promises; and Allah's Messenger spent the day in this sad (mood). Then it occurred to him that there had been a puppy under their cot. He gave an order and it was turned out. He then took some water in his hand and sprinkled it on the place. When it was evening Gabriel met him and he said to him: You promised me that you would meet me the previous night. He said: Yes, but we do not enter a house in which there is a dog or a picture. So the very next morning he commanded the dogs to be killed. He announced that the dog kept for the orchards should also be killed, but he spared the dog used for the protection of extensive fields (or big gardens).”
Christ's sacrifice as The Lamb of God was his gift to humankind, giving up his life so that we might be saved.

Muslims slaughter sheep to "remember" Abraham's near-sacrifice of his son Isaac, and when God, seeing Abraham's faith, told him to sacrifice a sheep instead. But Abraham sacrificed one sheep, and there is no mention in our Bible that he did this in the cruel and vicious way that Muslims sacrifice their multitudes of sheep. This is the Muslim way: a bastardization of Goodness; a re-telling in exaggerated and horrific ways, of our Good Book.


St. Francis blessing the animals
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Let's All Pray


Here is a screenshot of the sophomiric design for Chelsea Clinton's new project
Of Many Institute for Multifaith Leadership. Scribbled words tell us to
"get our newsletter," and now! The links are designed like a "tag cloud."
But what does the larger "CLUBS" mean - that there is
more activity in that section than in the other sections? No, it is a
"hip" design to attract all those adolescent twenty-something year-olds
who seem to be the target for the organization.


Chelsea Clinton, the odd daughter of Hillary and Bill, who isn't as smart as either of her parents, has started an "interfaith" organization at New York University.

The New York Post's gossipy Page Six informs us:
Multitasking, job-hopping Chelsea Clinton has quietly taken on a big new job at New York University.

The former first daughter has tackled what the school calls a “multifaith” role as co-founder and co-chair of its brand-new Of Many Institute. The program is described by the university as aiming to “develop multifaith dialogue and train multifaith leaders.”

[...]

She’s recently spoken of a desire to lead a program discussing faith and academics. Back in September, Clinton — who’s married to banker Marc Mezvinsky — told Time of her desire to study faith and education: “With all candor, because my husband is Jewish and I’m Christian, and we’re both practicing, it’s something that’s quite close to home,” she said.
And Frontpage Magazine's Daniel Greenfield answers his own questions:
What is a multi-faith leader you may ask? Does this mean that Chelsea Clinton is now an Imam, Pope and Rabbi? It’s entirely possible.
A commenter under this article quips:
Multi-faith, shake and bake, we're all one big happy family.
I've written several posts on Chelsea, and here is one titled Busy Chelsea, Married Lady that summarizes most of my observations, where I write:
She is newly hired to work for the NBC Nightly News "Rock Center with Brian Williams" and its "Making a Difference" series.

[..]

Commentators who are calling her debut a "journalistically-bankrupt decision" may be exaggerating, and are surprisingly mean-spirited, but Breitbart is a little more informative:
Her delivery sounds more fit for an obscure web series than broadcast television; she mumbles and low talks through her questions and response. This, coupled with her name and the general knowledge of how she got her job, strikes a discordance against the sort of story she’s reporting. A tale of elite privilege sharing the story of poverty.
Such is the life of Busy Chelsea.


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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Slaughter of the Lambs

 photo BelfortBetweenBloodAndIslam1_zpsb7afb023.jpg
Christine Tasin, founder of Résistance Républicaine

[I should add that made the collage above. News media are too cautious to lay blame, and especially with religious implications, as I fasion Tasin to do above. I don't think she even sees the problem in religious terms, but in cultural ones.]

Tiberge at GalliaWatch has a post on the Muslim holiday Aid-el-Kebir.

She writes:
On October 15, and for three days thereafter, thousands of sheep were slaughtered in France in the annual Muslim blood-bath called Aïd-el-Kébir (or Aïd-el-Adha). Belfort, in the region of Franche-Comté, was one of many cities to host the Islamic spectacle of ritual sacrifice, and, because of the magnitude of the deed, gained some notorious publicity. Christine Tasin, founder of Résistance Républicaine attended the ceremony in Belfort (from outside the improvised slaughterhouse) and engaged in a bitter quarrel with Muslims who interviewed her (video above [here]). Veterinarian Alain de Peretti, who administers the anti-halal website Vigilance Halal, wrote the following article that also appears at Riposte Laïque.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Monday, October 28, 2013

Jofi Joseph: National Security Risk



"White House staffer fired for tweeting" reads the headline of this article. When I first saw this story on Fox News, I thought: "He looks Indian. It sounds like one of those "American" children of Third World immigrants."

I've written about this extensively. This is what I said about Anuradha Bhagwati, a former Captain and Company Commander in the Marine Corps.
Here is a fascinating video of Bhagwati rambling on in free-style fashion about the evils of the military, misogynistic white men, fighting wars, and the hegemonic empire that is the United States. The video is titled: "Interview With a Reluctant Veteran: Anuradha Bhagwatl." I've transcribed it below from around the 15 minute point in the video to the end, to show the quality of her mind.
Well now, it looks like we have another "alienated" "American" of Indian background. Jofi Joseph was director of nuclear non-proliferation on the White House National Security Council staff, until he got fired for "tweeting."

Here are some excerpts form the story White House staffer fired for tweeting:
- Former White House national security advisor Jofi Joseph - fired from his job for anonymous posts to Twitter.com - was raised in Muskegon [Michigan].

- Joseph and his parents were natives of India who moved to Muskegon from West Germany when he was only 6 months old.

- Joseph is the 1990 valedictorian of Muskegon Catholic Central High School.

- At Muskegon Catholic Central, he won an array of academic honors.

- He went on to an illustrious career in academics and public policy, and was a Truman Scholar at Princeton University.

- Among his academic accolades was a trip to Rotary Fellowship at the Universitat Salzburg in Austria.

- "I really have a strong interest in government and international affairs," Joseph told the Chronicle's Loretta Robinson in 1993. "It's my commitment to public service. I want to make a difference in life, and the best way to do this is a career in this, helping to shape our nation and foreign policy."
Here is more on the kind of responsibilities Joseph had as director of the White House's nuclear non-proliferation program:
The Treaty comprises legally binding nonproliferation commitments and is the basis for international cooperation on stemming the spread of nuclear weapons. It is widely regarded as the legal and political cornerstone of the nuclear nonproliferation regime and as containing three main concepts or “pillars” – nuclear nonproliferation, disarmament, and the peaceful use of nuclear energy. In Prague on April 5, 2009 President Obama said that the basic bargain at the core of the Treaty is sound: “countries with nuclear weapons will move towards disarmament; countries without nuclear weapons will not acquire them; and all countries can access peaceful nuclear energy.” The President also called on NPT parties to take steps to strengthen this vital nonproliferation instrument.
Tweeting is harmless enough. But it is disturbing that this high-level government official, dealing with sensitive national security information, should abandon his duties to write even one of those messages.

This article reveals that:
Joseph could be sarcastic and bitter, especially in regard to colleagues who were given higher-level positions that he did not think they were qualified for.
This seems like a vindictive grudge. He clearly was in a plum post, with challenging responsibilities. Colleagues praise him as:
...a smart, ambitious foreign policy aide who specialized in nuclear nonproliferation issues.
Which makes his neglect of duty troubling. It is one thing for a low-level, not very smart, government worker to spend time on the internet, but quite another matter for someone like Joseph to do so. How can we be sure that he wasn't interacting with foreign governments, and for example, with his country of origin, India, relaying to them sensitive information? This isn't the first time that American-born or American university-educated Asians have passed on sensitive documents to their countries of origin.

The news is filled with the National Security Agency "spying" on foreign leaders. Collecting information through various means to ensure the safety of a nation is not "spying." Yet, now, we have foreigners who fit the actual definition of spies:
A person employed by a government or other organization to secretly obtain information on an enemy or competitor. [Source: Oxford Dictionaries]
I would add to that, in this world of multiculturalism and easy immigration: "A foreign person employed..."

If Joseph wasn't doing this already, what's to stop him for doing so eventually? Firing him over tweeting is ridding the agency of a potential, much bigger, security risk.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Sunday, October 27, 2013

Autumn in New York


Central Park Mall, running through the park from 66th street to 72 street



Autumn in New York
By Frank Sinatra

Autumn in New York
Why does it seem so inviting?
Autumn in New York
It spells the thrill of first-knighting.

Glittering crowds and shimmering clouds
In canyons of steel,
They're making me feel
I'm home.

It's autumn in New York
That brings the promise of new love.
Autumn in New York
Is often mingled with pain.

Dreamers with empty hands
May sigh for exotic lands.
It's autumn in New York,
It's good to live it again.

Lovers that bless the dark
On benches in Central Park.
It's autumn in New York,
It's good to live it again.
[Note: I cannot find any punctuation for the lyrics,
so, I've added them myself]


Below is Peter Mintun singing Autumn in New York with the piano accompanying. The song is from the Veron Duke's Broadway musical Thumbs Up!.



I cannot find the original performer in the musical, J. Harold Murray, singing Autumn in New York, but below is probably an original 1923 recording (I wish Youtube posters would give us precise information - dates, recordings, performers, etc!) of him singing Faded Love Letters. This gives us an idea of his voice and his style. Of course, very different from Frank Sinatra.



Below is Charlie Parkers saxophone version:



And Sarah Vaughn's vocal version:



And Chet Baker on his trumpet:



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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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The Grandeur of Autumn


Antonio Vivaldi
Performed by Itzhak Perlman with the London Philharmonic Orchestra
Recorded on 18-20 May 1976, No. 1 Studio, Abbey Road, London


The Youtube source above has conflicting information. It describes the above recording as both by the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. I found another recording of Perlman playing The Four Seasons, clearly identified as with the London Philharmonic, and the Youtube version above matches this recording (in performance style). I am therefore labeling the above recording as with the London Philharmonic Orchestra



This source has the following description on the recording:
- Recorded on 18-20 May 1976 at No.1 Studio, Abbey Road, London.

- 180g Audiophile Vinyl Cut from the Original Analogue EMI Master Tapes at Abbey Road Studios

- The London Philharmonic Orchestra performs Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, Op. 8 led by violinist, conductor Itzhak Perlman...

- Cut at Abbey Road Studios from the original stereo analogue master tapes with the Neumann VMS82 lathe fed an analogue pre-cut signal from a specially adapted Studer A80 tape deck with additional 'advance' playback head, making the cut a totally analogue process.

Musicians:
Itzhak Perlman, violin, conductor
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Rodney Friend, leader
John Toll, harpsichord

And here is a review the recording:
In the original February 1976 review, Edward Greenfield of the GRAMOPHONE wrote:
"Perlman... presents a personality performance, one which naturally brings out the individuality of his artistry. So the momentary hesitations in the bird noises have the finesse of a great artist to make them more compelling, and on balance Perlman's style of phrasing is a degree freer and more overtly expressive than Galway's [version for flute], except that for a movement like the central Adagio of "Summer" he adopts a deliberately simple style, stilling his vibrato. There is flair too in the quirky contrasts between the alternating sections of the first movement of that concerto, and generally contrasts of all kinds are heightened. The LPO strings play with great refinement, and with a rather more intimate acoustic than to the other versions, the result is both in scale and sharply defined..."

The album cover is described as "original artwork." I tried to find the artist, but often on album covers, he remains anonymous. In any case, it is a lovely, delicate illustration, and looks like an Art Nouveau style of the 19th century, a little like a William Morris, depicting the four seasons.


Album Cover Illustration
(Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter)



Collage of Charles Voysey's designs. Voysey is a contemporary of William Morris,
working in the Art Nouveau style of the 19th century
I'm labeling the pieces: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter

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Posted BY: Kidist P. Asrat
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Friday, October 25, 2013

Marchesa's D'Extase



The couture clothing line Marchesa, run by the sisters Georgina Chapman and Keren Craig, released its first perfume last year, called D'Extase. I've been to Sephora to try it, and as usual, they gave me a small sample to test. Often with perfume the initial spurt is not enough to release the middle and base notes. A small sample helps me test the perfume through the day, as it changes and reaches its final scent.

Here are the notes:
Top Notes: Iris, Freesia, Black Current, Violet Leaves
Middle Notes: Jasmine, Bulgarian Rose, Orange Blossom
Base Notes: Iris, Musk
I forgot about this perfume until recently, when I saw the lovely bottle again during a recent trip to Sephora's. My original sample had evaporated by then, so I asked the shop girl to give me another.

The perfume has a light beginning, but it then blossoms into a sweet florals and a warm musk. The jasmine gives it a powdery softness. It lasts for several hours, and stays on sprayed fabric for days.

The ad below has one of the sisters rambling on about the perfume making a woman feel powerful, special, intoxicating, beautiful, sensual, confident, strong, ethereal. Is there any adjective missing for this woman who wants it all?



Still, these woman have designed a good perfume. It's no Chanel or Dior, but it is a warm welcome to to the cold days ahead.

The perfume bottle is crystal-encrusted, after the evening clutches designed by Marchesa.



Below is an evening clutch from the Marchesa collection, which I particularly like:


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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Women, Careers, Politics, and God



Michele Bachmann started her professional and political life when her some of her children were still quite young. She started a Christian charter school with her husband in 1993, when she still had a six-year-old, a three-year-old and one-year-old. She finished law school in 1988 (she started in 1976, and the eight years it took her was probably its conflict with her family obligations). She worked as a tax litigator from 1988-1993, when she resigned to to stay home and take care of her younger children, then raging in age from six to twelve (her oldest was eighteen by then). She entered local Minnesota politics in 2000, when her children's ages ranged from six to eighteen She was Minnesota's state senator from 2000-2006. She was first elected to the U.S. Congress in 2006, representing the 6th Congressional District of Minnesota. She was re-elected in 2008, and again in 2011. She announced her candidacy for president in June 27, 2011. She exited the GOP race in January 2012, after placing last with only 5% of the vote in the Iowa caucuses. She has announced in May 2013 that she will not run for re-election in Congress in 2014. In an interview on June 2013, she said that she's not taking anything off the table for the 2016 presidential run. Her political fight at the moment is to repeal Obamacare, and to fight against the debt ceiling. On October 10, 2013, she filed procedures to impeach President Obama due to his refusal to negotiate Obamacare, which led to a two-week government shutdown. On Oct. 16, 2013 she voted against a bill that would raise the debt ceiling.

Her professional life took her away from her family, but she entered it at the bidding of her husband, and through God's calling:
In a campaign appearance at the Living Word Christian Center in Brooklyn Park, Minn., on Oct. 15, 2006, Bachmann discussed the importance of God's calling at critical moments in her life. She told the audience how she met Marcus Bachmann, how she earned a law degree at Oral Roberts University, and how she returned to law school for a second degree, this one in tax law.

"My husband said, 'Now you need to go and get a postdoctorate degree in tax law,'" Bachmann told the audience. "Tax law? I hate taxes. Why should I go and do something like that? But the Lord said, 'Be submissive. Wives, you are to be submissive to your husband.' And so we moved to Virginia Beach, Virginia, and I went to William and Mary Law School there. ... Never had a tax course in my background, never had a desire for it, but by faith, I was going to be faithful to what I felt God was calling me to do through my husband."

Bachmann went on to say that God later called her to run for the state Senate in Minnesota and, still later, for the U.S. Congress. After the church posted a video of her appearance on its website, a left-wing blogger picked it up and spread it on anti-Bachmann sites. If Bachmann's opponents were hoping it would be the end of her campaign, they were wrong; Bachmann won the race in 2006 and has been re-elected twice since.

But Bachmann's statement -- in public, on stage, microphone in hand, in the context of a political campaign -- raised a legitimate question. What role does her husband play in her performance in public office? With that in mind, at the Fox News-Washington Examiner debate in Ames, Iowa, on Aug. 11, I asked Bachmann whether, as president, she would be submissive to her husband.

The question prompted boos in the Republican-filled hall, and then cheers when Bachmann answered. "What submission means to us," she said, "if that's what your question is, it means respect." [Source: Townhall.com]
As her husband advised her, her preparation in tax law is now bearing fruit.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Yes, She Can


Michele Bachmann and Charlie Rangel on CNN's Crossfire
which aired September 19, 2013


Michele Bachmann stands her ground with humor and strength on CNN's Crossfire with race hustler Charlie Rangel, which aired on September 19, 2013.

Below is the video. Her "interaction" with Rangel begins aroud the 1:13 point. Here is the full transcript.



Here are some amusing sections, with Bachmann playing along, but also serious about her points. I've numbered the different sections.
1. BACHMANN: You believe in equal protection for all. You believe everyone should be treated equally.

RANGEL: I believe in the Constitution.

BACHMANN: Hey, we're on the same side. But you believe that everyone should be treated equally. I know you do.

[...]

2.

BACHMANN: Unfortunately President Obama decided he was going to give an exemption for big business...

JONES [Co-host]: Hold on a second.

BACHMANN: ... but not for Joe Six Pack. I'm for Joe Six Pack. Why aren't you for Joe Six Pack, Charlie?

[...]

3. RANGEL: The president got reelected on the issues.

BACHMANN: And so did I. And so did I.

[...]

4. RANGEL: She's a lawyer. She's a very good legislator.

BACHMANN: And don't forget attractive.

RANGEL: There's only one question. What?

BACHMANN: That came out of your mouth.

RANGEL: It did. I say that so often people say that that's sexist and everything, so...

BACHMANN: No, no, no, we like that.

RANGEL: I don't know about that "we," but no one's going to challenge your beauty.

CUPP: All right. Someone has to break up this love fest.

RANGEL: And even the beauty of having so many children that you've raised. So -- but...

BACHMANN: I like Charlie.

[...]

5. RANGEL: ...no one's going to challenge your beauty.

CUPP [co-host at Crossfire]: All right. Someone has to break up this love fest.

RANGEL: And even the beauty of having so many children that you've raised. So -- but...

BACHMANN: I like Charlie.

[...]

6. RANGEL: Do you agree with me that the Republican Party as a national party, it is so dead in ten years based on a whole lot of strange..

BACHMANN: Watch the phoenix rise from the ashes, Charlie.

RANGEL: And I need the Republican Party, because we've got to have someone to beat up on.

BACHMANN: Oh, Charlie, as a Congressman, you're going to be sorely disappointed.
Rangel is quite taken in by Bachmann. But, she won't let him argue based on her "beauty" and instead mocks him for not putting up a fight.
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Published by Kidist P. Asrat
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What's in a Name?



Michele Bachmann is being touted as the ditz-in-politics across the left-wing, liberal media. But she's far from it.

Starting with her name. I wondered at the odd spelling, but it is more accurate than it seems.

Michele is the actual French spelling for Michelle, although the first e has an accent. It is written Michèle in French.

The Swiss/German Bachmann spelling appears to be a variation for the Anglicized version which is what we are used to in America. But, the ending with two n's is not uncommon.
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Mocker in Chief



I think news on Michele Bachmann will continue for a while. She has placed herself in the limelight. She has made her position clear. As I wrote int this post, she said on October 9, 2013:
I want the Tea Party to know they made a profound difference, and what they're fighting for is to see if we're actually going to be a constitutional republic or if we're going to be totally devolved into a dictatorship under somebody like Barack Obama.
Obama knows an adversary when he sees one. And he then starts his attacks. This article shows he has already started:
Obama mocks Michele Bachmann's worry that Obamacare "literally kills women".

Here is what he says:
I mean these are quotes. I am not making this stuff up. And here's one more that I've heard. I like this one. We have to, and I am quoting here. We have to 'repeal this failure before it literally kills women, kills children, kills senior citizens.' Now I have to say that that one was from six months ago. I just want to point out that we still have women. We still have children, and we still have senior citizens.
This is distorting what Bachmann said, during a speech on the House floor on March 12, 2013:
The American people, especially vulnerable women, vulnerable children, vulnerable senior citizens, now get to pay more and they get less. That’s why we’re here, because we’re saying let’s repeal this failure before it literally kills women, kills children, kills senior citizens. Let’s not do that. Let’s love people. Let’s care about people.
I took the above photograph of Obama from the site which posted the article that I quote. The article is "pro-Obama" yet it's publishers seem to note the unflattering body language and facial expression that I've also noted.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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"A Dictatorship Under Somebody Like Barack Obama..."



I wrote yesterday about Obama:
In 2012, I posted in Obama's fascistic, arrogant character that he displayed during his Democratic National Convention speech in Charlotte, N.C. on September 6 2012, where he tells us:
"I am no longer the candidate. I'm the President."
Well, Michele Bachmann says something very similar during an interview with talk show host Rusty Humphries (the interview took place before October 9, 2013, according to a post on the Tea Party website):
This fight that we’re in right now is so much bigger than just Obamacare. It’s bigger than the out-of-control debt. What this is about is whether or not we will hold on to our constitutional republic. Because Barack Obama has decided that he is going to arrogate power to himself, and that we don't count with our voices in the House. It doesn't matter that Republicans control. It doesn't matter that conservatives dominate. Everything has to be his way. That's what his position is no negotiation. Well, that is not going to happen. We're going to insist that we are the two branches in the House, in the Senate and the Congress and the president and we have a voice too. Because let me say this, otherwise that means people will only take one vote, and that's for president, and then congress will be rendered meaningless. And we'll go on, and we'll talk about more things, but I want the Tea Party to know they made a profound difference, and what they're fighting for is to see if we're actually going to be a constitutional republic or if we're going to be totally devolved into a dictatorship under somebody like Barack Obama.
Below is the full interview. The bold section above starts around the 3:30 minute point.


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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Michele Bachmann Votes No for the American People: Barack Obama Resolves to Fight the American People


Here, Bachmann looks like a girl about to play some practical joke.
But, it is the usual depiction of her as a non-serious person
that photographers have been taking of her since
she entered the national political scene.
The photo is, not suprisingly, from the leftist
Minnesota Public Radio website.




Above, Bachmann is participating in a Fox News interview with Democrat Henry Cuellar from Texas (who has a Spanish accent), looking serious and attentive. Nothing ditzy about her here.

Although I wonder about the masculine attire? I think she's trying to get away from the feminine look that has resulted with so much mockery. I don't think she should have capitulated, at least in these images. But, we'll wait and see. It could be that she's just trying to wear comfortable clothes for these long and arduous "meetings."

An article follows the photograph: Most of Minnesota congressional delegation votes for budget deal.

Here is what Bachmann says in the article:
What he did is count on the fact that Republicans would be the adults in the room and at the end of the day we would be unwilling to see not only our credit rating hurt but also see the United States default on the debt. We wouldn’t do that, we’re responsible people, it wouldn’t happen,” Bachmann said.
What she means by Obama counting on the Republicans being "the adults int he room" is that Republicans wouldn't disrupt the meeting. Her second statement is closer to her first: Being adult means being responsible, even if the action causes antagonisms and frictions. Her words are fighting words, but more subtle and sophisticated (and responsible) than Obama's words during his speech.

In 2012, I posted in Obama's fascistic, arrogant character that he displayed during his Democratic National Convention speech in Charlotte, N.C. on September 6 2012, where he tells us:
"I am no longer the candidate. I'm the President."
Below is a clip of his statement.



Below is the image I copied from the video where he tells us "I am the President," with his strange vacant, but antagonistic expression. It is as though he is trying to connect with the audience, but cannot. And has to resort to some sort of instinctive "fight" (as opposed to flight) mode. I don't think any American president has given us such an array of strange and hostile expressions as has Obama.


Barack Obama tells us "I am the President,"
with his strange vacant, but antagonistic expression.
He gets a prolonged applause and cheer after this statement.
But, he doesn't seem to know what to do with it,
and surveys the crowd as the cheers proceed.


Now, in 2013, Obama is no longer in "flight" mode. He is someone who is going to fight the fight, to the end. His confidence and his arrogance have grown over the years.


Obama "thumb-ups" as he enters the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House
On October 17, 2013 to deliver his post-government shutdown speech.
[Image source: National Review Online Photo File]


The photo below shows him making his post-shutdown speech, or more precisely his post-shutdown announcement, on October 17, 2013. He still has that vacant expression, but his manner is more aggressive. He is in no flight mode.


Obama speaking in the State Dining Room of the
White House in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013


His post-shutdown speech was vindictive and aggressive. I would even call it vicious.

Below are excerpts from the speech. It is peppered with antagonistic words and phrases. It is sophisticated and subtle. It is clearly a speech about the "Good Guys" and the "Bad Guys." The Bad Guys, of course being the "extremes" from the Republican party, which of course includes Michele Bachmann.

Even conservative news analysts don't know what to make of it, other than to begrudgingly praise it. Here is a writer at the conservative Town Hall, who titles his article: Six Thoughts on Obama's Post-Shutdown Speech. His first "thought" is: "As far as this president's speeches go, this one was relatively conciliatory and productive."

Wishful thinking, or sloppy journalism? I wonder if he read the speech after listening to it? I always read speeches, to analyse statements and to review points I have missed. And I'm just a blogger.

Here are excerpts from the speech. I have highlighted in bold some significant words or phrases. The full transcript of the speech is here.
We hear some members who pushed for the shutdown say they were doing it to save the American economy. But nothing has done more to undermine our economy these past three years than the kind of tactics that create these manufactured crises.

[...]

Some of the same folks who pushed for the shutdown and threatened default claim their actions were needed to get America back on the right track, to make sure we're strong.

[...]

And now that the government has reopened and this threat to our economy is removed, all of us need to stop focusing on the lobbyists, and the bloggers, and the talking heads on radio and the professional activists who profit from conflict, and focus on what the majority of Americans sent us here to do...

[...]

Now, that won't be easy. We all know that we have divided government right now. There's a lot of noise out there, and the pressure from the extremes affect how lot of members of Congress see the day-to-day work that's supposed to be done here.

[...]

And had one side not decided to pursue a strategy of brinksmanship, each side could have gotten together and figured out how do we shape a budget

[...]

But probably nothing has done more damage to America's credibility in the world, our standing with other countries, than the spectacle that we've seen these past several weeks.

[...]

But that should not hold back our efforts in areas where we do agree. We shouldn't fail to act on areas that we do agree or could agree just because we don't think it's good politics, just because the extremes in our party don't like the word "compromise." I will look for willing partners wherever I can to get important work done. And there's no good reason why we can't govern responsibly, despite our differences, without lurching from manufactured crisis to manufactured crisis.

[...]

So let's work together to make government work better instead of treating it like an enemy or purposely making it work worse. That's not what the founders of this nation envisioned when they gave us the gift of self-government. You don't like a particular policy or a particular president? Then argue for your position. Go out there and win an election. Push to change it. But don't break it. Don't break what our predecessors spent over two centuries building. That's not being faithful to what this country's about.

And had one side not decided to pursue a strategy of brinksmanship, each side could have gotten together and figured out how do we shape a budget...
This is what Bachmann is fighting against. Below is her statement posted on her Facebook page, where she "could not vote for this bill as it does nothing to give relief to the countless Americans hurting under Obamacare, nor does it address our out of control spending and $17 trillion national debt."
President Obama’s position of no negotiation took us to the brink of government default to advance his political agenda over the best interests of the American people. Republicans were the adults in the room, offering compromise after compromise and urging the President to come to the table and do what’s right for our country.

President Obama may have won an immediate political battle for his radical agenda but it comes at a great cost to the economy, to our health care system, and to the American people. It means we will continue on the same trajectory towards economic decline, skyrocketing national debt, and greater government intrusion in our health care.

After an embarrassing two weeks of Obamacare failures, I hope President Obama will soon realize that forcing every American to purchase a health insurance policy that they don’t want at a price they can’t afford from a website that doesn’t work is not a sustainable course of action.

I could not vote for this bill as it does nothing to give relief to the countless Americans hurting under Obamacare, nor does it address our out of control spending and $17 trillion national debt.

Bachmann at the SpaceX facility on August 30, 2013.
Comfortable and approachable, but also serious.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Beauty and Brains



I recently posted on the perils (to society) of women attempting to enter masculine fields while I reviewed the charming film The Devil Wears Prada. I wrote about the young female protagonist:
Andy does make it into "real" journalism at the end of the film, securing a position at some New York Post type of newspaper, where she will be writing about social inequalities and other "issues." But she gets to keep her Gucci too. That's the trick: she gets it all! Which is what modern media wants young women to believe: wear your Diors and get that socially responsible degree. She should look pretty while saving the world. If the message is too hard-core, young, socially responsible women, who still want to look pretty if not beautiful, would be running as far away as possible from social consciousness.
Once in a while, a woman enters the masculine sphere of running the world, and she is successful. I think we're seeing that with Michele Bachmann. She has hinted that she will run in the 2016 presidential elections, but in the meantime, she is setting America straight.

Try as political-destroyers might, they cannot find anything to damage her. But, no-one can fault beauty unless its benefactor turns wily. Bachmann is serious, and always looks serious. She is feminine because she is feminine (as in female). And her beauty and her femininity are not some crutch she uses to enter where she pleases. She looks like someone who earns her way.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Columbus Day


Columbus Circle, New York, view from the Time Warner Building


Statue of Christopher Columbus
The monument at the center of Columbus Circle, created by Italian sculptor Gaetano Russo, was erected as part of New York's 1892 commemoration of the 400th anniversary of Columbus' landing in the Americas. Constructed with funds raised by Il Progresso, a New York City-based Italian-language newspaper, the monument consists of a marble statue of Columbus atop a 70-foot (21 m) granite rostral column decorated with bronze reliefs representing Columbus' ships: the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa María. Its pedestal features an angel holding a globe. [Source: Wikipedia]

Close-up of the three ships: Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria




Base of the statue of an angel holding a globe


Aerial view of the Circle, with Central Park


USS Maine National Monument, in front of Central Park
On the northeast lies the Merchant's Gate to Central Park, dominated by the USS Maine National Monument designed by Harold Van Buren Magonigle and sculpted by Attilio Piccirilli, who did the colossal group and figures and Charles Keck, who was responsible for the "In Memoriam" plaque. An imposing Beaux-Arts edifice of marble and gilded bronze, it was built in 1913 as a memorial to sailors killed aboard the battleship USS Maine, whose mysterious 1898 explosion in Havana harbor precipitated the Spanish-American War. [Source: Wikipedia]

Close-up of the gilded bronze figure: Columbia Triumphant
The gilded bronze figures atop the pylon represent Columbia Triumphant leading a seashell chariot of three hippocampi - part horse, part sea-creature and are said to be cast from metal recovered from the guns of the Maine itself. The figures reflect America's new position as a dominant world force just as the imposing Beaux-Arts structure symbolizes America's bold and grandiose domination of territories. [Source: Central Park Conservancy]
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Reclaiming our Civilization


Wendi Deng and Rupert Murdoch, about whom I've written here

There are a couple of fascinating reports by an anonymous blogger who calls himself The Educational Realist, who is reporting on "The Asian IQ." I write this in quotation marks, because I myself have posted on the much touted Asian IQ superiority, but have found many loopholes in the measurement to conclude that Asian "high" IQs don't tell us much about Asian intelligence.

In fact, regarding many things about Asians, whites in the US and Canada are having a wide-eyed love affair with Asians (literally and figuratively). But I'm beginning to find out that this indiscriminate wide-eyedness is slowly beginning to squint a little, to have a better view of what' really going on.

Here are the two articles:

College Admissions, Race, and Unintended Consequences

and

Asian Immigrants and What No One Mentions Aloud

Excerpts from the first article:

- In November of 1996, the UC system was told by the people of California that it was not allowed to consider race in admissions anymore.

- Asians, particularly recent immigrant Asians, kill whites on grades. The test score advantage is getting (suspiciously) worse, but the grade advantage is huge.

- So in 1995, 14% of Asians, 5.8% of whites, and .6% of blacks scored over 700 in math, which means that the percentile for 700 was 86%, 94%, and 99%. In 2010 (confirm here), those percentiles were 77%, 94%, and 1%.

Only Asians got a lot smarter? Weird. Not impossible. A lot more Chinese and Koreans are taking the test. Not my pick as an explanation, though.

- [E]ither Asian Americans have gotten phenomenally better, the Chinese/Korean nationals are also getting high Verbal SAT scores, or….what? What explains this jump?

- The reason for this is that Asian students seem to be very good at figuring out the technical requirements of UC [University of California] eligibility.

Excerpts from the second article:

- [F]irst and second generation Chinese, Korean, and Indian Americans, as well as nationals from these countries, often fail to embody the sterling academic credentials they include with their applications, and do not live up to the expectations these universities have for top tier students.

- Less delicately put: They cheat.

- Scratch the surface of any cheating story and odds are well above average the school or the class in question is disproportionately Asian.

- Chaos cheating [collaborative cheating]...the testers rush into the room as chaotically as possible, pull chairs close together, sit next to a buddy, whine like crazy when the proctor tries to impose seating order. The proctor sighs, exhorts them not to cheat, and pretty much turns over control of the class to the students. At that point, the kids can quietly discuss answers, text a buddy for help, and basically “collaborate” in any way needed.

- Collaborative cheating also includes splitting up homework assignments and texting answers on in-school tests and quizzes.

- Another cheating scandal that involved both chaos cheating and texting occurred in Orange County, in which students were “allowed to talk, consult study aids, send text messages to friends and leave the room in groups during the exam” [I think by "allowed, the writer doesn't mean it was an official policy of the school, but that no-one stopped the students from those behaviors].

- Prior Knowledge...students are aware of the specific content of the test before taking it. ...Students take advantage of prior knowledge in school by breaking in or in some other way obtaining the tests ahead of time...Notice that none of the schools mention the dominant race of the students involved, but the hints are there and all but one of the example schools are over 40% Asian.

- Then there’s the national high stakes prior knowledge cheating scandals, in which the parties get the actual test information, sometimes from the Korean hagwons who pay testers to take pictures of the test, sometimes from principal whose brother works at a SAT academy that clearly has a large Asian clientele. (Wait–Asian schools in Plano, Texas? No way. Way: 32% Asian. Yeah, surprised me, too.)

- [M]any of the parents, who are recent immigrants, are ruthlessly and endlessly demanding...I know teachers who have quit Asian schools because of the 100 or more emails they get daily, demanding that grades be changed reconsidered.

- The universities look at the resumes of all Asian kids—recent immigrants, long-established natives, nationals—and know that many of them are fraudulent. They know that many of the kids they accept will not be able to function on their campus, whereas others will be able to get great grades so long as they cheat. They know that many of the students don’t have the inquisitive mind, genuine interest in intellectual pursuits that universities like to see in students (or pretend they do). But the universities want the great, if often fraudulent, stats to puff up their numbers for the rankings systems...

- [T]he cheating I describe perpetuates two frauds. The first, of course, benefits the cheaters and their schools at both high school and university level. But the second perpetuates a much larger misconception: People really believe that our top high school students are taking ten-twelve AP courses during their high school year, maintaining 4.5 GPAs, and have the underlying knowledge one would expect from such study. But this almost certainly isn’t true. And once you understand the reality, it’s hard not to wonder about all the “weeding out courses” in organic chemistry and other brutal STEM college courses, the ones that Americans are abandoning in large numbers. The willingness to accept the cheating, to slap it on the wrist if that, is leading to lies that convince a lot of American kids that they aren’t smart enough for tough courses because they don’t cheat and aren’t aware that others are.

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I've written about this on several posts, but I left the threads alone because I had more positive things to do than investigate Asians' inferiorities. I have a book project, and a long-term movement, which I've called Reclaiming Beauty: Winning Back Our Civilization

But, I will make a brief commentary on these articles.

1. Every single Asian with whom I have been close friends (or close colleagues) has surprised me with his (actually, it is one male and three female) inferior abilities. Now, this doesn't mean that they were stupid or intellectually incompetent, but that the actual results of their performance wasn't up to par with their initial input. Their abilities are also deceptive, since initially, they start out with high abilities, but this starts to wane with time, and with the complexities of the study or the project.

And in subtle ways, they start to find an easy way out, which is a form of cheating.

For example:

I studied on a PhD level in a program called Nutritional Sciences at the University of Connecticut, performing a clinical sciences project. My project was to analyze vitamin B12 levels in blood to test for early B12 deficiency, and eventually to develop a sensitive test for descerning micro-levels of B12 depletion in the body (not full-blown deficiency). One of the objectives of this project was to establish an early detection method for vitamin B12 depletion in susceptible patients. Another was to test and eventually modify a quick vitamin B12 detection kit, again for clinical purposes.

I was good friends with a Korean student at the time. I had serious reservations about my research, and in fact left my program for six months. My friend, in the mean time, was advising me to just "get it done," like her. She ended up doing a data analysis dissertation, which involved doing correlative analyses of Mexican pre-school children's dietary status. Much of her finding was inconclusive, as in no significant correlations. In order to finish the dissertation, and have it published in a scholarly journal, she tweaked and rearranged her data. She received high praise for her "innovative" data analysis. By her own admission, when she discussed her work with me, she said that the correlations were hard to find. The professors were "in" on her methods, approved them and allowed her to pass. At that time, I was too polite, and too much of a friend, to call her out on it and to tell her that her work was basically a form of cheating. She had already abandoned two "international nutrition" (a euphemism for Third World malnutrition) post-graduate programs, in Tufts and in Columbia. Her father was paying all her way through school, and she had to return with some completed degree. She was also expected to teach at university level (with jobs lined up), and that required a graduate degree.

2. Asians in the public sphere, despite an initial spurt, produce inferior thoughts, designs, research, literature, architecture, and any other kind of endeavor they undertake in Western societies.

I compare Asians to whites. They certainly do have abilities, which does place them in challenging positions. But, their credentials and performance are sub-par to whites, as I discussed above.

- I've written here about Vera Wang, the wedding dress designer, who is now designing fluffy, unstructured, wedding dresses in red and black.

- I discuss here and here the mediocre orchestral musicians of Asian origin.

- I discuss here the inferior intellectual abilities of Asians, abandoning higher level positions for lower level ones once they find their up-graded positions too challenging.

- Here is an article who elaborates on: East Asians, though their average IQ is higher than European Caucasians (105 IQ to 100 IQ), are not as inventive, creative, or as historically accomplished as European Caucasians.

- And here is an article by Steve Sailer comparing cheating by "high ability" Asians and by "high ability" Blacks and Hispanics. He concludes:
Cheating by high ability black and Hispanic students is virtually unknown, both in my own experience and a complete dearth of reported stories.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Friday, October 11, 2013

Inner Beauty with a Lumpy Sweater

Andy Sachs in The Devil Wears Prada, in her "lumpy blue sweater"

Oscar de la Renta
Spring, 2007 Ready To Wear Cirulean Dresses


In the back-and-forth world of movies and fashion, it could be that Miranda Priestly's reference to an Oscar de la Renta cirulean gown in The Devil Wears Prada (which did not exist when the movie came out in 2006), could have influenced the designer to produce the cirulean gowns above!

Miranda Priestly, to Andy Sachs:
And you're also blithely unaware of the fact that in 2002, Oscar de la Renta did a collection of cerulean gowns?
Anna Wintour, after whom Miranda Prieslty is modeled,
in Marc Jacobs, in 2012.
For her, attractive, colorful clothes.
For Vogue, post-modern black and twisted shapes.

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Sometimes a silly film inadvertently tells us some truth. But, I don't really think it is inadvertent as much as how much of the truth can deliberate truth-destroyers destroy. At some point, things clear up and the unadulturated truth pops up.

Such is the case in the pleasant movie The Devil Wears Prada, where a jobless recent graduate of journalism school finally gets an interview with Runway, a fashion magazine.

I wonder why its producers, directors, financiers, film critics, who are 99% liberal and anti-beauty and hence anti-fashion, showed the film in such a warm light? The film is pleasant to watch, and doesn't have any of the bitterness of beauty-haters.

Well, Andy does make it into "real" journalism at the end of the film, securing a position at some New York Post type of newspaper, where she will be writing about social inequalities and other "issues." But she gets to keep her Gucci too. That's the trick: she gets it all! Which is what modern media wants young women to believe: wear your Diors and get that socially responsible degree. She should look pretty while saving the world. If the message is too hard-core, young, socially responsible women, who still want to look pretty if not beautiful, would be running as far away as possible from social consciousness.

But is Andy's "social issues" type of journalism really challenging? Does she really save the world with it? Is she willing to relocate to Somalia for several months to report on the social inequalities there? Or will she simply maneuver her position to stay in beautiful New York, live in a smart downtown apartment, and travel occasionally to Harlem on the A train (the subway line romanticized by Duke Ellington's song) in a more modest Gucci, to write about social inequalities there? And while in Harlem, why not try one of those (safely located) soul food restaurants that are sprouting up all over Harlem for the likes of her: socially conscious whites looking for "safe" places to eat in Harlem?


Take the A Train
(Music by Billy Strayhorn.
With singer Joya Sherrill, who is credited for the lyrics
(she starts singing around the 1:10 point)


Take the A Train

You must take the A train
To go sugar hill 'way up in Harlem
If you miss the A train
You'll find you've missed the quickest way to Harlem

Hurry, get on now it's coming
Listen to those rails a thrumming
All 'board get on the A train
Soon you will be on sugar hill in Harlem

Harlem Renaissance
Women in Sugar Hill, Harlem, ca. 1920
Attributed to James Van Der Zee


Why, New York is the solution. She can have her cake and her soul food - a chef-baked cake from that quaint store in SoHo, and the soulful catfish from the Harlem kitchen - and compose her heart-felt social inequality columns on her laptop, sitting at the desk she recently bought from that antique store in Chelsea.

The antique desk for all those thoughtful articles Andy will be writing

French Bakery in Chelsea, and Southern Cooking in Harlem

But these clever social engineers know that practical lumpy sweaters will start to take over. Who has time to look like a Vogue model, and write that article by a deadline? Other biological determinants will also start to dictate, like young women wanting to be kind and nice unlike that horrifically callous male boss who sees projects as objects and not as people. So try as they might, these social engineers cannot change the essence of girls, and women, so they have to sugar coat their goals in softer language.

Miranda Priestly, the editor-in-chief of Runway, is supposed to be a take on Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour. But Priestly is concerned only with the aesthetics of her magazine, whereas Wintour is a social engineer par excellence, where she interlaces the big and heavy Vogue (the October 2013 issue has 380 pages, September's - which I discuss here - 902 pages) with causes and "issues" mostly featuring women (and if men are featured, their wives take up much of the article, as in the article on Rand Paul in the October 2013 issue, where a profile of his wife takes up a chunk of the issue.

In the September 2013 issue there is a profile of Susan Rice titled The Comeback Queen (pp 506-510):
She makes her entrance wearing a scoop-neck blouse, black trousers, and a striking green Ultrasuede jacket accented with circles cut above the hem that she bought at a Smithsonian Craft Show. Her hair is combed back to her shoulders, and a gold watch and bracelet flash on her wrists. She introduces [New York Times's executive editor Jill] Abramson to Gerard Araud, the French ambassador to the U.N., embraces [Mia] Farrow, then spots David Dinkins, the venerable former mayor of New York. She hands him her own champagne flute, says "Cheers," and fist-bumps the glass.
In the October 2013 isse, there is an article on Cori Bergman, who
...has quietly become one of the country's most respected neuroscientists. Now she's leading President Obama's $100 million effort to solve the mysteries of the human brain. [Vogue, September 2013, p179-186]
Even the advertisements have a political angle. A Bulgari advertisement takes up two pages, featuring a necklace of emerald and ruby cabochons on the bare torso of Mrs. Nicolas Sarkozy, who has clearly returned to her modeling roots.

Ex-Madame La Présidente Carla Bruni in a Vogue adverisement

Vogue, under Wintour' stewardship, has gone into an odd amalgam of some beautiful things (mostly in the advertisements), to a "journalistic" type of magazine with interviews and stories on non-fashion subjects somewhat glamorized to fit the magazine. This is a magazine for the serious and fashionable woman.

Wintour, of course when things go too extreme can be ruthlessly Pro Beauty ( or pro decorum, at least). She banned the Hispanic pop star Jennifer Lopez from Vogue photo shoots (calling Lopez "low class") in after Lopez took off with some of the photo shoot clothing. It's o.k. if Lopez shows up as a bare-bodied prostitute, and appears as such in Vogue, but lo the repercussions if she steals items which would have been tossed out anyway.

Anna Wintour, who I think is at the mercy of her staff (everything seems to got through a committee in the life of these multi-million-dollar-generating magazines), and their "research" and "observations" would tell them that women are not into beauty anymore, and thus they should dig out ugliness, and of course politics. But, this is an utterly mistaken observation. Women want beauty as much as ever. It is Vogue, and the post-modern, modernist, anti-beauty elite that is dictating the terms.

But, there is no denying that the elitist Wintour does dress well.

Of course, for the elite, and especially the liberal elite (Wintour is a die-hard liberal and Obama supporter), all these experiments like building a world around ugliness, is for the rest of the world, as they, the elite, live in their gated lives (ideologically and geographically) to keep them immune for the havocs they wreck.

But watching The Devil Wears Prada a second time around, I found it surprisingly non-conventional (as in pursuing beauty seriously, and not in a post-modern, dark and and nihilistic way, but as something worthy of awe and wonder) where where Andy, the typical modern girl who has rejected of beauty, or more precisely picked up the in vogue idea of fashion as rejecting beauty, is beaten down by Runway's Miranda Priestly, and the assistant (played wonderfully by Stanley Tucci, whose played Julia Child's husband in Julie and Julia again with the formidable Meryl Streep) who tries to get this girl in the lumpy blue sweater to wear some couture.

The film is for young women (and older women like Streep who want to "mother" these young women). And young women, as I said above, still want to look pretty and nice. Older women almost always want to mother young women. And, to repeat myself, if this film tried to masculinize or uglify Andy, and demonize Miranda, it would not make it into the box office.

Perhaps "essence" will win over engineering. But so far, these social re-creators seem to have the upper hand.

Below are transcripts of a couple of scenes from The Devil Wears Prada:
Andy Comes for an interview to work in Runway, a fashion magazine run by Miranda Priestly

Miranda: Who are you?

Andy: Uh, my name is Andy Sachs. I recently graduated from Northwestern University.

Miranda: And what are you doing here?

Andy: Well I think I could do a good job as your assistant. And um……Yeah, I came to New York to be a journalist and sent letters out everywhere and finally got a call from Elias-Clarke. And met with Sherry up at Human Resources. Basically it’s this or Auto Universe.

Miranda : So you don’t read Runway ?

Andy : Uh, no.

Miranda : And before today, you had never heard of me.

Andy : No.

Miranda : And you have no style or sense of fashion.

Andy : I think that depends on what you’re-

Miranda : No, no. That wasn’t a question.

Andy: Um, I was editor in chief of the Daily Northwestern. I also, um, won a national competition for College journalists with my series on the Janitors union. Which exposed the exploitation of-

Miranda: That’s all

(Andy turns around to leave, then comes back)

Andy: Yeah. You know, okay. You’re right. I don’t fit in here. I am not skinny or glamorous and I don’t know that much about fashion but I’m smart. I learn fast and I will work very hard.

(Andy waists for a response, then turns around and leaves)

Andy: Thank you for your time.

---------------------------------------------------


Andy spills some food on her sweater while out to buy some take-out with her new collegue Nigel

Andy: Oh. Shoot.

Nigel: Oh, never mind. I'm sure you have plenty more polyblend where that came from.

Andy: Okay. You think my clothes are hideous. I get it. But, you know, I'm not going to be in fashion forever! So I don't see the point of changing everything about myself just because I have this job.

Nigel: Yes, that's true. That's really what this multibillion-dollar industry is all about anyway, isn't it? Inner beauty.

---------------------------------------------------
Andy gets taught a lesson (or two) by Miranda

Miranda: Where are the belts for this dress?­ Why is no one ready?

Assistant: Here. It's a tough call.

Miranda: They're so different. -[Miranda] Hmm.

Andy[Snorts, Chuckles]

Miranda: Something funny?

Andy: No. No, no. Nothing's...You know, it's just that both those belts look exactly the same to me. You know, I'm still learning about this stuff and, uh¡...

Miranda: 'This stuff'? Oh. Okay. I see. You think this has nothing to do with you. You go to your closet and you select... I don't know... that lumpy blue sweater, for instance because you're trying to tell the world that you take yourself too seriously to care about what you put on your back. But what you don't know is that that sweater is not just blue, it's not turquoise. It's not lapis. It's actually cerulean. And you're also blithely unaware of the fact that in 2002, Oscar de la Renta did a collection of cerulean gowns? And then I think it was Yves Saint Laurent... wasn't it who showed cerulean military jackets? I think we need a jacket here.

Nigel: Mmm.

Miranda: And then cerulean quickly showed up in the collections of eight different designers. And then it, uh, filtered down through the department stores and then trickled on down into some tragic Casual Corner where you, no doubt, fished it out of some clearance bin. However, that blue represents millions of dollars and countless jobs and it's sort of comical how you think that you've made a choice that exempts you from the fashion industry when, in fact, you're wearing the sweater that was selected for you by the people in this room from a pile of stuff.


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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, October 5, 2013

A Beauty Movement



A Beauty Movement
Read more following the link.

[The current posts are below this, now semi-permanent, post.]

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Delmonico's: Rib Eye for $45

Delmonico's Business Men
Lunching on Steak


A reader sent this comment on my post about Delmonico's:
Have you sampled [Delmonico's] wares? Their signature rib-eye is $47 and I guess you pay extra for sides. I'm beyond help - so cheap. I buy a rib eye every week from my local family butcher for 5.98. And then...... I bash it thin and fast fry it. Then........ my wife and I share it!!!

We usually have it with green beans (sometimes Sechuan style) and baked sweet potato.
I am the family cook (most of the time) but full time now as my wife fractured her hip 5 weeks.
Here is Delmonico's recipe for rib-eye steak, posted at an ABC feature on the restaurant:

Delmonico's Rib Eye Steak
Rib Eye Steak

Ingredients:

Six 20-ounce prime rib-eye steaks, at room temperature

Sea salt and coarsely ground black pepper to taste

1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil

Meat Butter (recipe follows)

Method:

Clean, oil, and preheat the grill.

Wipe excess moisture from the exterior of the steaks using a paper towel. Season one side with salt and pepper.

Place the steaks on the hot grill, seasoned side down. Grill for 3 minutes. Season the top side and, using tongs, turn the steaks and grill for 3 minutes to just sear the exterior.

Remove the steaks from the grill and, using a pastry brush, lightly coat both sides of each steak with olive oil.

Return the steaks to the grill and cook, turning occasionally, until the exterior is nicely charred and the interior has reached the desired degree of doneness on an instant-read thermometer.

Remove from the grill and let rest for 5 minutes before serving with a generous pat of Meat Butter.

Meat Butter:

Ingredients:

3 fresh bay leaves

1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves

2 tablespoons sea salt

1 pound (4 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature

Method:

Combine the bay leaves, thyme, and salt in a spice grinder and process until powdery.

Place the butter in a mixing bowl. Add the powdered mixture and, using a hand-held electric mixer, blend well.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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