The art of Kevin Blythe Sampson

THE ART OF
KEVIN BLYTHE SAMPSON

9/27/09

Papa John and the Manson Women: The Dark Legacy of the '60s

 

If you watched any of the trailers for Ang Lee's recent Taking Woodstock, you'd think that the '60s were a gentle-hearted, kooky time filled with benign cross-dressing and bad haircuts. There has been a thorough pop cultural rewriting of the '60s, which was a time of national chaos, violence, and upheaval. Two news stories dominating headlines today—about Woodstock-era rock star John Phillips raping his own daughter Mackenzie, and about the death of Manson follower Susan Atkins—remind us that it wasn't all folk songs and love-ins.

By: Jessica Grose

Posted: September 25, 2009 at 6:25 PM

SEO Headline:

Papa John and the Manson women: The dark legacy of the '60s.

Deck:

<p>The pop cultural legacy of the '60s has been completely sanitized. Two news stories this week show the fallout from that era.</p>

Blurb:

If you watched any of the trailers for Ang Lee's recent Taking Woodstock, you'd think that the '60s were a gentle-hearted, kooky time filled with benign cross-dressing and bad haircuts. There has been a thorough pop cultural rewriting of the '60s, which was a time of national chaos, violence, and upheaval. Two news stories dominating headlines today—about Woodstock-era rock star John Phillips raping his own daughter Mackenzie, and about the death of Manson follower Susan Atkins—remind us that it wasn't all folk songs and love-ins.

If you watched any of the trailers [1] for Ang Lee's recent Taking Woodstock [2], you'd think that the '60s were a gentle-hearted, kooky time filled with benign cross-dressing and bad haircuts. There has been a thorough pop cultural rewriting of the '60s, which in reality was a time of national chaos, violence, and upheaval—the center was not holding [3], as Joan Didion said at the time. Two news stories dominating headlines today—about Woodstock-era rock star John Phillips [4] raping his own daughter Mackenzie, and about the death of Manson follower Susan Atkins [5]—remind us that it wasn't all folk songs and love-ins.

Lifestyles like Phillips'—one quarter of the Mamas and the Papas—have been thoroughly defanged, commodified, and romanticized in the intervening 40 years. The legacy of the Manson followers is different, as most people think they're still monsters. But people like writer and director John Waters have [6]stood up for these female acolytes of Charles Manson, even though they brutally murdered Sharon Tate and several others. Of course, not every work of pop needs to be entirely faithful to reality. It's just good to be reminded that sometimes there are really bad acid flashbacks.

How the Naked Photos of Jackie Kennedy Showed Her Inner Marilyn

The sexy, sly vixen hiding under a pill box hat.

By: Raechal Leone

Jackie Onassis.

Posted: August 28, 2009 at 1:48 PM

SEO Headline:

What Jackie O.’s naked pictures reveal about her.

Deck:

<p>The sexy, sly vixen hiding under a pill box hat.</p>

Author:

Raechal Leone [1]

Posting Date:

08/28/2009 - 1:48pm

When the archivists sorting through pop artist Andy Warhol's possessions this month found an autographed nude photo of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis [2], we heard a collective gasp. (Maybe from the same people shocked and appalled by the length of Michelle Obama's shorts?)

I really wasn't surprised, at least not about the existence of the photo. The second season of Mad Men [3] featured an ad campaign asking women whether they were a Jackie or Marilyn. [4] But it doesn’t really work like that. Despite her oh-so-chic wardrobe and prim and proper manners, I knew deep down Jackie had a Marilyn (yes, as in Monroe) side to her personality—because most glamorous women do. Also, as a biography addict who's long read about both Jackie and her husband's most famous mistress, I immediately recognized the similarities to nude photos Marilyn took on the set of her last film, Something's Got To Give [5]. Shot within months of Marilyn's death in August 1962, the photos of her with a glistening pool in the background continue to appear in books and articles about the legendary actress.

Many women who are drawn to Jackie hold back a little. Yes, she was classy and eminently photogenic. But it's hard to truly love a woman in a pillbox hat who waves her way through the world like a beauty queen. And even harder to forgive her for suffering silently through her husband's affairs. But this photo, passed on to someone she must have suspected might not keep the secret, is like a message to all of us almost-Jackie-lovers. Yes, I have a Marilyn side, and I will take on those naked mistresses of his, not with bitterness or anger, but with sweet revenge ... carefully orchestrated.

How did those 1971 Jackie-without-her-swimsuit photos come to be? The Associated Press reported that Jackie's second husband [6], Aristotle Onassis, "got a paparazzi to take pictures of her skinny-dipping." Their source was Matt Wrbican, the leader of the archivists sorting out Warhol's eclectic stash. However, a 1972 story in Time [7] offered a different version, describing a drive-by shooting fraught with challenges for a paparazzo: "It has been rumored that ten photographers worked 15 months on or under the waters off Skorpios and that one of them almost drowned."

Whom to believe? Who cares! The discovery of what was obviously a gag gift—she signed the poster-size image, "For Andy, with enduring affection, Jackie Montauk," in a nod to her visits to Warhol's New York estate—clearly conveys that Jackie's vanilla public image covered a wicked sense of humor. It's like a message from Jackie saying that hey, even in my 40s I can be the sexpot if I choose to be ... but you probably couldn't handle it. Famously averse to the paparazzi, she must have known the risks of lounging in the buff on her husband's island of Skorpios, where photographers had flocked in the past. She must have known they would potentially end up in a magazine like Hustler, where 14 of them were published in 1975. (In his book Sex, Lies & Politics: The Naked Truth [8], publisher Larry Flynt referred to the snapshots as "the smartest investment of my life.")

More to the point, Jackie had surely heard about the naked-in-the-water images shot nine years earlier of Monroe, a woman who proudly wore the sultry siren label, whether playing the gorgeous fool in movies like Some Like it Hot [9] or singing "Happy Birthday" to Jackie's presidential husband [10]. A celebrity photographer shot Monroe skinny-dipping as she filmed the first nude scene featuring a major movie star, for a film that ended up unfinished after Marilyn was fired and, soon after, died. And let's just say for a minute that Jackie truly didn't want those snapshots taken of her; she had to have appreciated them to send one to a friend like Warhol with a flourish.

Her poster-size joke was just one more sign that, particularly in her post-Camelot years, Jackie was stronger than the public persona she projected. It was the Jackie who had held it together beautifully after her husband was murdered before her eyes. And who moved her children to New York to begin a new life, rather than seeking long-term solace in the ever powerful Kennedy clan, which would have in some way extended the life of a Kennedy woman that she had begun a decade earlier.

Maybe it's just that we've been too enthralled with tales of the Kennedy dynasty all these years to see the real, multifaceted Jackie O. Now we new generation of feminists have a choice between criticizing Jackie for the kind of woman she should have been, or we can see more of the woman she was when she was completely and utterly herself— the kind who's comfortable enough in her skin to strip off her clothes and spoof her late husband's mistress in a way too smart for most people to notice. That's a kind of sexiness with sly humor, strength, and dignity— the kind that can shakes things up if she happens to be in the mood.

Even the feminist in me can love her for that.

Blurb Image:

Jackie Onassis.

Large Image:

Jackie Onassis.

Photo Credit:

Photograph by AFP/Getty Images.

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Related Articles:

Don't Call Naomi Sims a Supermodel [11]

Blogette Girl [12]

Michelle, Put on Some Pantyhose [13]


Source URL: http://www.doublex.com/section/news-politics/how-naked-photos-jackie-kennedy-showed-her-inner-marilyn

Sotomayor on Taking Obama's Big Call

 

Published on Double X (http://www.doublex.com)

Home > Sotomayor on Taking Obama's Big Call


Sonia Sotomayor talked to Susan Swain of C-SPAN about her Big Call from President Obama: "I actually stood by my balcony doors, and I had the—my cell phone in my right hand and I had my left hand over my chest trying to calm my beating heart, literally."

By: Emily Bazelon

Posted: September 25, 2009 at 3:06 PM

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Sotomayor on taking Obama's big call.

Deck:

<p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;">Sonia Sotomayor talks to Susan Swain of C-SPAN.</span></span></p>

Blurb:

Sonia Sotomayor talked to Susan Swain of C-SPAN about her Big Call from President Obama: "I actually stood by my balcony doors, and I had the—my cell phone in my right hand and I had my left hand over my chest trying to calm my beating heart, literally."

In her first TV interview since being nominated to the Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayor talked to Susan Swain of C-SPAN and gives the skinny on getting the Big Call from President Obama. Excerpts from the interview transcript:

SWAIN: I’m wondering if you would mind, for history, telling us the story of when you got the telephone call?

SOTOMAYOR: I was told that Monday that the President would—I had been told all weekend that the president would be making up his mind, making his decision sometime on Monday, and I had been sitting in my office from 8:00 that morning waiting for a phone call. ...

It’s now nearly 7:00 in the evening, and I call the White House and say, ‘Well you’re getting my family to Washington, have any of you given any thought about how I’m going to get there?” And they stopped and said, ‘Oh I guess we should figure that out, shouldn’t we?’ Literally that was the response. What I was told was that the president had gotten distracted with some important other business that was going on at the time, and that he would call me at about 8:00 p.m. but that I should go home and pack to come to Washington, and that they would prefer that I didn’t take a plane.

[Sotomayor asked a friend to drive her to Washington.]

And he came, or was on his way, and at 8:10 p.m. I received a call at my—on my cell phone. The White House operator tells you that the president is on the line. … I actually stood by my balcony doors, and I had the—my cell phone in my right hand and I had my left hand over my chest trying to calm my beating heart, literally. And the president got on the phone and said to me, ‘Judge, I would like to announce you as my selection to be the next Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.’

And I said to him—I caught my breath and started to cry and said, ‘Thank you, Mr. President.’ That was what the moment was like.

SWAIN: And then what?

SOTOMAYOR: He asked me to make him two promises. The first was to remain the person I was, and the second was to stay connected to my community. And I said to him that those were two easy promises to make, because those two things I could not change.

[And then banality returned: Sotomayor got lost on the drive to D.C., after a rain storm knocked out the car’s GPS device.]

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Source URL: http://www.doublex.com/blog/xxfactor/sotomayor-taking-obamas-big-call

Black President, Black Caucus, More Powerful Than Ever?

 

By: Dayo Olopade and Eboni Farmer

Posted: September 25, 2009 at 12:31 PM

Members of the Congressional Black Caucus speak out.

The Congressional Black Caucus is 40 years old this year, and with one of its former members in the White House, members are feeling more powerful than ever. As the CBC gathers in Washington for its annual legislative conference weekend—the first since Barack Obama was elected president—some members say the CBC, with a record 43 members, may be more influential now than at anytime in its history. 

“We have more chairmen, more subcommittee chairmen, more seniority and the president—so one has to say we have more influence on national policy,” says Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.

For most of its history, the CBC represented the embodiment of mainstream black political power. These were the one or two or three dozen black men and women who were able to succeed in mainstream American politics in the most traditional way; they were elected to Congress. Initially, they were activists, children of the civil rights movement. Later they were savvy politicians who mastered the rules of the game. Later they were Barack Obama. 

Before the election of Obama, the CBC’s annual legislative weekend was the most potent show of black political force in the United States. It was an opportunity for black members of Congress to lay out an agenda of what was important to black communities all across the country. It was a chance to remind people that there was an important coalition of influential black leaders. With Obama's election, such reminders seem less necessary. Obama's history with the CBC is important to the moment. After all, his relationship with it began as soon as he came to Washington. The president was the only member of the Senate in the CBC from 2005 until he resigned from the Senate last November after his election. During those years, says Rep. James Clyburn, the House Democratic Whip, Obama was a regular participant in the legislative agenda of the caucus.

“He'd be our resource as to what he thought would be salable in the Senate,” he says, adding, however, that Obama “never tried to show any kind of a leadership role as far as the CBC agenda.”

At the CBC’s first official session with the president last winter, Chairwoman Barbara Lee called the open meeting on the stimulus package, job creation and the Democratic legislative agenda “a historic moment for the Congressional Black Caucus.”

“This is a new era for our communities, our congressional districts and for the country,” said Rep. Charles Rangel. He compared their early March meeting with Obama to the CBC's long wait for President Richard Nixon to recognize them. He was in the White House when the CBC was formed. “We’re very excited about the opportunity.”

Dayo Olopade is Washington reporter for The Root. Eboni Farmer is an intern for The Root and online editor for The Hilltop.

Why the Dalai Lama Needs to Get Real

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Why the Dalai Lama Needs to Get Real

Advocates of Tibetan rights are disappointed that Barack Obama has chosen not to meet with the holy man who carries their banner. But they should be learning from the U.S. president's pragmatism instead.

BY WEN LIAO | SEPTEMBER 23, 2009

Just as a prophet is without honor in his homeland, a holy man is mostly unwelcome in the realm of international realpolitik. In the 50th year of his exile from Tibet, the Dalai Lama is undoubtedly familiar with that unofficial diplomatic wisdom. But the idealists who supported Barack Obama in his presidential campaign received a rude lesson last week when the U.S. president declined to meet the Dalai Lama. The pragmatism that is Obama's diplomatic lodestar, it seems, comes at a price: Illusions must be abandoned. Publicly recognizing China's territorial unity is the sin qua non for effective bilateral diplomatic relations, and Obama knows it.

The Bush administration made much of the idea of China becoming a "responsible stakeholder" in the international system, but actually did little to implement that goal. But in the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, and given China's vastly increased importance to global economic stability, the Obama administration must recognize China's enlarged role in international decision-making. Antagonizing China's government over Tibet is no way to get it to act responsibly, whether on economic issues or on climate change. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signaled her recognition of this reality earlier this year when, on her first visit to China, she deliberately avoided the issue of human rights in Tibet.

Why does Tibet matter so much to China? Sixty years ago, when Mao proclaimed the birth of a new China, he did so in the name of reasserting not only the country's independence from colonial influence, but also its unity. Coherence is a key concept in a country that, as recently as the Warlord Period of the early 20th century (1916-1928), was splintered into separate, rival regions. And territorial integrity is all the more important to the government's legitimacy now that Maoist ideology has been jettisoned.

So, while loudly proclaiming the unity of the Chinese state, China's leadership is obsessed with workinh to reduce tensions between its provinces.

Official rhetoric does not admit this fear, insisting instead that all of China's peoples, including non-Chinese in Tibet, Inner Mongolia, and Xinjiang, are firm and loyal patriots. But the government's frequent rotation of local officials tells a different story. Keen to prevent any coalescence of regional identity and local authority, senior officers in China's seven military districts are also transferred regularly.

The central government also takes care to shape the country's military districts so that they do not overlap with regional or economic divisions. This is meant to ensure that military and economic regionalism cancel each other out and thus pose no risk to the country's unity. If China's rulers are so cautious to ensure obeisance in regions peopled by the dominant Han population, they are even more anxious to make certain that regions where ethnic minorities reside -- such as Tibet -- remain quiescent.

But the Tibetans have been anything but silent in their quest to proclaim the independence of "Greater Tibet," a territory that includes not only the autonomous region of Tibet but also any neighboring territory within China that has Tibetan inhabitants. Last year, the Chinese government was forced by the violent pre-Olympic protests in Tibet and other ethnic Tibetan parts of China to take some action, reviving confidence-building talks with envoys nominated by the Dalai Lama. Neither side placed much hope in the process: China was patently concerned with preventing the protests from disrupting the Olympics, while Tibetans were divided about what they wanted the talks to achieve.

In the discussions, China's negotiators asked the Tibetans to present their demands. Most people around the world think that these demands reflect the Dalai Lama's desire for an autonomous Tibet within China, which he has advocated since 1988 -- and which China's lead representative denounced as amounting to "disguised independence." But autonomy means something slightly different for the Dalai Lama.

The "Memorandum on Genuine Autonomy for the Tibetan People," which guides the Tibetan government-in-exile's policy, calls for major concessions including  the creation of a new self-governing territory encompassing all areas inhabited by ethnic Tibetans (approximately 25 percent of China's total territory); restrictions on non-Tibetans moving to Tibetan areas; and power over all affairs within this "Tibetan" territory (including control over the transfer of non-state-owned land), except for external defense and some aspects of foreign relations.

China will never accept the basic premise of this demand -- a self-governing Greater Tibet. For China's leadership, that demand amounts not only to a step toward full independence (a Greater Tibetan nation would almost certainly fuel an even more assertive Tibetan nationalism than exists today), but also as incitement to others -- such as the Uighurs of Xinjiang -- to demand equal independence.

Moreover, the Chinese view the very concept of Greater Tibet as one that reveals the Dalai Lama's hidden intentions. Many of the Tibetans who live in the Chinese provinces that border Tibet and would be part of a Greater Tibet arrived in these areas only in the last 50 years. So to ordinary Chinese it seems hypocritical that Han Chinese shouldn't be allowed to move to Tibet, but that Tibetans who emigrate into other Chinese provinces somehow gain a claim to self-government in those regions.

Unfortunately for the Dalai Lama, he will find it hard to retreat from the idea of a Greater Tibet without appearing to sell out his followers. Indeed, his failure to make progress in negotiations with China has encouraged some exiled Tibetans to demand full independence.

Faced with this dilemma, leaders of the Tibetan exile government retreat to the one strategy that both unites them and mobilizes international public opinion: demonizing China for human rights abuses in Tibet. But this strategy is increasingly alienating the Chinese population, which senses a growing anti-Han racial rage. This racial antagonism, moreover, only serves to energize grassroots Chinese nationalism, because past national suffering, including war, famine, and foreign occupation, is associated with a weak and fragmented state.

The only solution for the Tibetans is to engage with China in ways that do not conjure up visions of disintegration and ethnic separatism. Here the crucial first step is for the Dalai Lama to reconsider the scope of the autonomy for which the Tibetans are asking. Demands that Tibetans living outside the boundaries of Tibet should fall under the autonomous structure the Dalai Lama seeks are, quite simply, not acceptable for the Chinese.

If the Dalai Lama is to be taken seriously by China as a negotiating partner, in fact, he must emulate President Obama and learn realpolitik. That means acknowledging that he is negotiating only over the territory contained within the borders of the Tibet that he fled 50 years ago. Only by limiting Tibetan demands in this way will it be possible to begin to convince ordinary Chinese that he is not hellbent on splitting their country.

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MICHAL CIZEK/AFP/Getty Images

Are Republicans Now Officially a Southern Party?

Joshua A. Tucker

Joshua A. Tucker, Professor of Politics, NYU:

Are Republicans Now Officially a Southern Party? Plus a Modest Proposal for Reporting Poll Data   (Cross-posted from the Monkey Cage)

I found the following somewhat stunning graph on Steve Benen’s Political Animal blog at the Washington Monthly; Bremen created the graph from data from the Daily Kos Weekly State of the Nation Poll, which can be found here.

GOP_by_region.png

I have no a priori knowledge about the reliability of the Daily Kos poll, but even if it had a generally left or right wing bias, that still shouldn’t affect the variation across regions. While I am not surprised that the Republican party is more popular in the South than other regions, the starkness of this distinction is beyond what I had expected. Reduce...

Moreover, while I would have expected the Republican party to be unpopular in the Northeast, I did not expect such similar numbers from the West and Midwest. Quite seriously, if I saw this type of regional distribution of support for a political party in a country like Slovakia, I would assume the party represented an ethnic minority. For comparison’s sake, here is the vote share received by the Hungarian Coalition - an ethnic minority party - by region in the 2006 Slovak parliamentary election:

Slovakia_2006.png

Click here for a larger (and more legible) version of the table.

With all this mind, my question for those who study public opinion and partisanship in the United States is whether this distribution of regional support is unique in the modern postwar era. Has there ever been a period of time when one of the parties was this disliked across so much of the country while enjoying such proportionately stronger support in one region of the country? Either way, what should we infer about the future of the Republican party from this distribution of support?

One other interesting point from the Daily Kos data: despite all the noise about Obama’s falling approval ratings, outside of the South of 82% of those in the Northeast have a favorable view of Obama (vs. 10% having an unfavorable view), 62% have a favorable view (vs. 31%) in the Midwest, and 59% (vs. 34%) have a favorable view in the West. It is only in the South, where 67% (!) have an unfavorable view of the president (vs. 27% holding a favorable view) that Obama appears to have a serious problem. Again, the regional distribution is quite dramatic.

Taken together, I wonder if we’ve hit the point where the mainstream media ought to be reporting support for the president, congress, political parties, etc. not in terms of the country as a whole, but rather by providing two numbers: support in the South and support in the rest of the country excluding the South?

Newark USA roller derby matchup Branch Brook Park

image

Borrowed from

http://newarkusa.blogspot.com/

Name: L Craig Schoonmaker
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Picasa Content
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Location: Newark,

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Action and Reflection

I went to the roller derby matchup last nite at the Branch Brook Park Roller Skating Center. I arrived an hour after it started, but since I was there just to see what it was like and take some pictures, that wasn't important to me. There were, I am pleased to say, no parking places left in the parking lot around the rink, so there was pretty good attendance, at least as against what the rink usually gets (assuming the operators gauged correctly the number of spaces they'd need for customers).

The rink was britely lited and the polished wood looked terrific. When I got there, the Ironbound Maidens were behind by 6 points. Note that the time seems to contain a semicolon rather than colon.

for tons of pictures and much more click link below

http://newarkusa.blogspot.com/

Alicia comments on the documentary Brick city

I saw your comment about Brick City on Face book.  I watched every episode and found myself crying at some point in every episode.  Interestingly enough, the tears came more frequently as the week progressed.  Needless to say, this weekend has been emotionally ruined. 
It was an awesome look, that's important, but it was just a look at one part of a pretty dynamic city.  Production value was pretty high and whoever is going to challenge Booker in the next election has really got to saturate the public with his/her image.  Booker's def going places, but I still am not sure how I feel about him.  I'm so gullible and likely to swallow this portrayal of him, but I know a few people who are so passionately against this man, I'd like to hear their side too.
So, the reason for all the tears:  I'm still doing the subbing thing and since the second day of school, I've been a long term sub for a 4th and 5th grade special needs class at ...................  Everyday I walk into that school, some new shit is going down.  While all this craziness is happening, I read my students journal writing and  read things like, "My goal is to read better than last year."  "I want an education for I can help my education get an education.  Then their kids." 
One day the conversation of Halloween came up and a little girl said she hated Halloween because "too many people die." 
So, Brick City I'm sure was illuminating to many liberals across America.  I think it was just too much reality for those of us who live here everyday. 

Kevins New show at AVAM opens this week

"Life, Liberty & The Pursuit Of Happiness" Visionary Art Exhibition Opening October 3

The quest for human rights and the search for personal fulfillment, as proposed in the 1776 American Declaration of Independence, provide the starting point for this international exhibition of visionary art curated by Roger Manley.

Painted gourd by Rev. Benjamin F. Perkins

Painted gourd by Rev. Benjamin F. Perkins

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PRLog (Press Release)Sep 24, 2009 – BALTIMORE, MD
Opening to the public on Saturday, October 3, 2009, "LIFE, LIBERTY & THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS" is the 15th annual thematic exhibition produced by the American Visionary Art Museum – America's official national museum for self-taught, intuitive artistry - and runs through September 5, 2010.
The quest for human rights and the search for personal fulfillment, as proposed in the 1776 American Declaration of Independence, provide the starting point for this international exhibition curated by Roger Manley (curator of three shows at AVAM, including the mega-popular Inaugural Exhibition "Tree of Life" in 1995.) Works by the last surviving descendant of the Tsars of Russia, Iroquois Indians, French Revolutionaries, illegal immigrants, Algerian War veterans, Guantánamo Bay detainees, Holocaust survivors, incarcerated prisoners, African-American civil rights activists and Iraqi doctors are among those by the 80 visionary artists to be featured. Illustrator Renaldo Kuhler’s vast imaginary country of Rocaterrania, Tilden Stone’s masterful Furnitures of Secrets, and Duncan Laurie’s Purr Generator (a “happiness machine”) are among the many works that will never have been shown publicly before.
“We think of big ideas like ‘life’ and ‘liberty’ as if they have to do with sweeping numbers of people,” says curator Manley, “but in fact they begin with the individual. And who could be better suited to reveal that, than self-taught visionaries? By definition, these are some of the most independent and individual thinkers and doers of all, and they’ve found some amazing, revealing, and entertaining ways to express their take on what makes our country what it is—or what it should be.”  
A Media Preview is scheduled for Wednesday, September 30 at 10 AM — featuring an exhibition tour by the curator as well as appearances by exhibiting artists. [Media, please RSVP: pete@avam.org] An exhibition preview party will be held at AVAM on Friday, October 2, 7PM. Artists, Lenders, Museum Members, exhibition curator Roger Manley, museum Founder Rebecca Hoffberger and YOU! [Media contact for tickets: pete@avam.org]. Public welcome: tickets are $20 at the door.   
The Media Preview, and the other events surrounding the opening will feature appearances by the following artists - a real treat:
• Dr. Ala Bashir, a surgeon, and formerly Saddam Hussein's personal physician (!)
• Andrew Romanoff, the last surviving full-descendant of the Tsars of Russia - who has illustrated his life story in Shrinky Dinks
• Duncan Laurie, creator of the Purr Generator (a "happiness machine") that visitors will be able to experience
• Renaldo Kuhler, a scientific illustrator whose imaginary country of "Rocaterrania" will be on display for the first time
• Kevin Sampson, former NJ cop, the son of a major civil rights organizer, and now sculptor
• Adam Morales, "the driftwood guy" from the swamps of Louisiana whose driftwood Statue of Liberty has already become an icon of the show
• and more
AMERICAN VISIONARY ART MUSEUM (AVAM) is America’s official national museum for self-taught, intuitive artistry located in Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1995, the museum seeks to promote the recognition of intuitive, self-reliant, creative contribution as both an important historic and essential living piece of treasured human legacy. The one-of-a-kind American Visionary Art Museum is located on a 1.1 acre wonderland campus at 800 Key Highway, Baltimore Inner Harbor. Museum hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 10 AM–6PM. Museum admission is $14 for adults, $10 for seniors (60 and up), $8 for students, Children 6 and under are Free! For additional information regarding the museum or the exhibition, please contact: Pete Hilsee • American Visionary Art Museum • 410.244.1900 x241 • pete@avam.org
ROGER MANLEY has worked as a photographer, folklorist, curator, filmmaker and writer with areas of interest ranging from outsider artists and tribal peoples to fairy tales and gardens. For the past eight years he has lived in Paris, where he co-directed a film for French cultural television, MANA—beyond belief. Roger currently resides in Durham, NC.
Manley has produced numerous award-winning books, catalogues, videos and films as well as exhibitions of his own photographs of Hispanic migrant farmworkers, Palestinian villagers, Gullah Sea Islanders, Australian Aboriginals, Native Americans, Canadian gold miners, prisoners, textile mill and factory workers, and self-taught artists. His photographs are in the collections of a number of internationally recognized institutions.  
He was formerly the curator for NC State University's Gallery of Art & Design (now the Gregg Museum), and has been a fellow of the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Art Foundation of La Napoule (France), as well as long-term artist-in-residence programs in Virginia, and North and South Carolina. He is a recipient of both the NEA Artists Fellowship and the NEH Scholars Fellowship Grants. Manley founded the biennial Meta Conferences at Black Mountain, which has brought together hundreds of artists, scientists and other creative individuals from all over the world for regular collaborative exchanges over the past two decades.
Manley was born in 1952 in San Antonio, Texas, and graduated from Davidson College in 1974, after which he spent two years living in the Australian Outback among a tribe of Aboriginals with a Thomas J. Watson Foundation Fellowship. He later completed graduate work in Education at the University of Denver, and in Folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  He is married to writer/photographer Theadora Brack.

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About American Visionary Art Museum (AVAM):
AVAM is America’s official national museum for self-taught, intuitive artistry located in Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1995, the museum seeks to promote the recognition of intuitive, self-reliant, creative contribution as both an important historic and essential living piece of treasured human legacy. The one-of-a-kind American Visionary Art Museum is located on a 1.1 acre wonderland campus at 800 Key Highway, Baltimore Inner Harbor. Museum hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 10 AM–6PM.

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Sep 24, 2009

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Clinton and Gore: Still the odd couple

 


By: Bill Nichols
September 27, 2009 07:11 AM EST

In his new book based on a series of interviews with Bill Clinton, Taylor Branch provides a remarkable account of a conversation between Clinton and Al Gore late in 2000, after Gore’s presidential campaign had finally ended in perhaps the post painful defeat imaginable. 
Clinton told Gore, Branch writes, that he was disappointed that he wasn’t used more in the campaign’s final days and that Gore had not developed any overarching theme. Gore countered that Clinton had never personally apologized to him for the Monica Lewinsky scandal and that he was still traumatized by the 1996 fundraising scandals. Gore also suggested that Clinton was to blame for his defeat by George W. Bush
“I thought he was in Neverland,” Clinton told Branch.
But even Lost Boys grow up. And while appearances can and often have been deceiving when it comes to the complicated case of Al Gore and Bill Clinton, friends and current and former associates say there are increasing signs that they are growing back into a friendship . . . or a least a civil relationship in which bygones remain bygones.
A joint appearance at Jackson Day dinner in Nashville in late August marked three co-billed Clinton/Gore events in the past several months. One of those, the airport tarmac return in Burbank, Calif., of two journalists held by North Korea, featured Gore saluting Clinton as “my partner and friend,” and wrapping him in a lengthy, seemingly genuine hug.
In Music City, Gore said not once, but twice, that he was “so proud of Bill Clinton.” And Clinton was similarly effusive. Gore, he said “was the best vice president this country ever had. And if you think about the difference between Al Gore and Dick Cheney, no one can say it doesn’t make any difference who the vice president is.”
Is this sense of détente real? Friend and former aides say it is, at least to a point.
Clinton always wanted Gore’s friendship, in the same fashion that he prefers to be friends with almost everyone he meets. Gore’s feelings, people close to him say, have always been more complicated. But he seems to have mellowed on Clinton as he has gained his own celebrity and international stature and his former partner’s gigantic shadow over him has lessened. The sting of Gore’s 2000 disputed Electoral College loss to Bush is also receding.
Gore associates also say Clinton’s role in helping deliver the two journalists, who worked for Gore’s Current TV project in California, can not be underestimated in adding new warmth to their relationship and that Gore’s emotion in thanking Clinton was very real.
A former Clinton White House official — who, like most contacted for this story, wanted no part of talking about the Clinton-Gore relationship on the record — said Gore’s rage toward Clinton has eased and that there is something to the perception that they are reaching for a new civility.
But the former official also warned against believing the two men have become soul mates — and suggested that a shared interest in seeing the Obama administration’s key goals achieved is more of a factor here than the healing of deep, old wounds.
“It started thawing around Sept. 11, when they were forced to do events together. But I know that for quite some time, Gore would not be seen with Clinton,” the former Clinton aide said.
“As Gore has cut his own path and with all of the accolades, he seems to be settling down as far as this relationship goes. Clinton, as always, does not want this to end the wrong way.
“My guess is that it is a continuing process in the personal direction — but at its heart, it’s a business relationship,” the aide concluded. “It’s not a personal one.” 
The circumstances surrounding the Jackson Day dinner tend to support that view. Clinton agreed to appear after he was asked by his old friend, former Tennessee governor Ned Ray McWherter, whose son Mike is running for governor. Gore then asked to join, according to a state Democratic official, because he made a pretty basic political calculus: “Clinton is coming to my town, so I guess I better show up.”

Several Gore associates also warned against reading too much into the summer mini-tour by Clinton and Gore, which also included an energy event in Las Vegas at the quest of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. 
In their view, the Clinton-Gore feud was never as bad as the media has made it out to be and the seeming distance between the two men was a natural byproduct of the fact that they no longer worked in the same building or lived in the same city.
“When you see three events, it’s a trend, but I think their relationship is a lot like an iceberg — there is a lot more below the surface than what meets the eye. What’s happened this year is there’s been a lot more above the surface,” said a Gore insider who also requested anonymity in order to speak freely.
“People don’t see phone calls. Those things aren’t necessarily publicized, nor should they be. Here are two guys interested in a lot of the same things and what’s interesting now is that action is possible on a lot of the issues they care about.”
A former aide to both Clinton and Gore said that while the relationship has seen predictable ups and downs, a connection has always endured.
“They live in different cities, so it’s not like they would run into each other in the normal course of events. They talk often and see each other on these occasions when their schedules overlap. ... They still remain two of the most popular figures in the party,” the former aide said.
“There was a time when they spent three-quarters of their day together. That’s not possible anymore, but there is a bond there. And given everything that they’ve gone through together, it’s a pretty strong bond. It would have to be.”
Other Clinton administration veterans, however, question how strong the Clinton-Gore bond ever was and suggest that the depiction of the two as characters from a politically-themed buddy movie in 1992 was largely a media myth.
While most of their colleagues agree that Clinton and Gore had a cohesive working relationship in their first term, they never saw them as having a deep personal friendship. “They were never really friends but business partners where their interests lined up perfectly in the '92 campaign and first term,” said the former White House official.
They were, and are, deeply different personalities. With his once-in-a-generation political skills and effortless gift of gab, Clinton never quite got Gore’s brainy awkwardness and seeming inability to totally master the basic stagecraft of running for office. For his part, Gore, by numerous accounts, was horrified by Clinton’s lack of discipline, an irritation that grew to near-revulsion when the details of his affair with Lewinsky finally became public.
There is also the clash of southern archetypes in the Clinton-Gore saga — a clash that has often echoed in the lives of both men. Clinton, for all his tours through Oxford, New Haven and ultimately Washington, is at his heart a lower-middle class kid from Hot Springs, Ark. He saw Gore, the son of Tennessee who actually grew up in Washington as the son of a senator, as a quintessential elitist. As Clinton once said of another stiff Southern politician who has stayed too long in the North: “He’d ask for Chablis at a fish fry.”
Yet the pride both men clearly feel in what they accomplished in office seems — now, nearly 10 years on — to have begun to override all that. As does the sense often felt by their less celebrated fellow citizens that the longer you live, the harder it can be to remember why you are so mad at someone.
Many of those who worked with them hope that a friendship, however uneasy, ultimately broadens between the two men who, for better or worse, have come to define a successful era of Democratic politics.
“Remember, Ford and Carter beat each others brains out, as did (George H.W.) Bush and Clinton, and they became pretty close,” said the former White House official. “I don't see why Clinton and Gore can't do the same.”

© 2009 Capitol News Company, LLC

9/26/09

Newark shooting victim is sixth struck in seven day span

 

By James Queally
September 24, 2009, 11:00PM

NEWARK - An unidentified man was shot outside of the Saint James Apartments in Newark’s Central Ward tonight, marking the sixth time a person was struck by gunfire in the city in the past seven days, police said.

Officers responded to a report of shots near the intersection of Washington Street and West Kinney Avenue around 8 p.m., where they discovered a vehicle with multiple bullet holes, city police spokesman Detective

A short time later, emergency service crews told police that an unidentified person walked into University Hospital claiming he had been shot near that same intersection, according to McClendon. Information concerning the victim’s condition was not immediately available, police said.

A security guard for the apartment complex, who asked not to be identified for fear of reprisal, said the victim was not a resident of the building, and described the shooting as an "isolated incident."

On Friday, Rashawn Blondel, an 18-year-old described as a Bloods gang member by investigators, was caught in the middle of an ongoing war over drug turf and shot to death on Salem Street.

Three days later, one man was shot in the chest and two women suffered graze wounds when an unidentified gunman opened fire outside of a home on South 18th Street Monday night. And a dispute between neighbors turned violent Wednesday when a man was shot in the foot on Leslie Street following an argument.

The victims in Monday’s and Wednesday’s attacks were taken to University Hospital in stable condition.

Bashir Akinyele, a spokesman for the Newark chapter of the New Black Panther Party and a member of a citywide "Stop the Violence" coalition that staged several protests over the summer, described the shooting as "unfortunate," and called for city officials to come together with community leaders to help bring an end to the increasing gunplay.

"These situations and these conditions are going to force elected officials to come together with community grassroots organizations and leaders to find a solution to the violence in the city of Newark," he said.

The Awful Stain of Misunderstanding Passing Judgment on Caster Semenya

Wednesday, September 16, 2009
By DeAngelo Starnes

 

Imagine you’re eighteen years old and you worked hard to become the best in your chosen event in track.  You’re chosen to represent your country in the world championship, which in itself is an honor.  You go to the world championship and you run your heats beating the competition such that now you’ve qualified for the finals.  Another honor because you’ve just been chosen as one of the best and you’re running against the best.  Then you dominate the chosen few and are honored as the best in the world.  Suddenly, after it’s over, someone cries “foul” and claims you’re not who you claim to be.

This happened to Caster Semenya last month after she dominated the 800 meters race at the World Athletics Championships in Berlin.  Upon her crushing victory she suffered crushing humiliation as questions about her gender immediately arose and tainted her victory.

What followed had to be horribly humiliating with stories accompanied by photos describing her alleged masculine features.  It was said she had a deep voice, heavy musculature, a thin mustache, and no breasts.  The stories were wrought with heavy skepticism highlighting a quote from her parents saying, in paraphrase, they had no doubt she was a girl.  No doubt?  Reading the quote made me cringe as it seemed to imply the parents had their suspicions, too.

We find ourselves intrigued by this story about Ms. Semenya because there is no question about cross-gender but rather one of intersexuality.  Intersexuality is the new term for hermaphrodite, albeit maybe one of political correctness, but maybe not accurate.  Intersexuality describes a complex issue of chromosomes and developed or underdeveloped sexual organs.

Essentially, what occurs in the womb is that one possesses the X chromosome until that Y chromosome determines that a penis and loads of testosterone demarcates your gender from female to male, give or take a few scientific assumptions.  What’s true is that sexuality is ambiguous for a period until it is determined one way versus the other.  For some folks, the genetics don’t make a decision. But this is not something to be judged by.  It’s a condition.  But because we divide ourselves by the existence of a penis versus vagina, we judge.

It’s rare that one’s gender is questioned. Behavior in response to agenda, yes, but not actual gender. Pull down your pants and the issue is resolved, right?  Apparently, it’s not that simple.  Because they have tests to determine how many XY versus XX chromosomes you possess, and how much testosterone is emitted in your bloodstream.  XY and a lot of testosterone equals male.  But what if you possess those traits without possessing a penis?

And so it was that an eighteen-year old who had lived her whole life as a woman was duped into thinking she was being tested for doping but instead they were measuring her XY chromosomes and testosterone count.  Did they think she was a cross-dresser?   Sure, some men act effeminate and some women masculine.  But as cross-genderish as they may act, you don’t doubt they are a man or woman.  We may get fooled by transvestites at times, but again, there is no question about their gender when the pants come off.  So if they have to go beyond the pants test, what does that say about the Competition Committee?

The person who said life ain’t fair couldn’t have spoken a greater truth.  Because there will always be haters.  Worse there will always be haters in control.  And even worse there will always be haters in control of the message about you.

The Creator bestows upon us many gifts which benefit us in any number of given situations. Most of the time, we marvel at these gifts.  We wish we could run that fast or jump that high or hit a ball travelling faster than we drive on the highway, or move on snow and ice at a high speed with amazing dexterity.  The bottom line is when we choose to do so, the ability to do these things has to do with the physical condition the Creator bestowed upon us.  It’s generally thought of as a blessing – not a curse.

But we have seemed to curse this young woman for her physical condition.  Worse, we have chosen to publicly discuss and speculate about it, and then test her about it, and then publicize the results for public sport.  As a result, we have crushed her psyche such that she wants to return the medal, her coach has quit, and the International Representative says, “He handled it wrong.”

On that last note, damn right he did.  If you don’t read the foreign press, you believe the parents suspected she was a male all along (they didn’t and are more outraged than these biased ESPN reports let on). If you rely on the test results, which should not have been released, you think she cheated.  If you listen to the jokes, you get a stunted idea of the issue.

This is a person who was raised a female, treated like a female for her eighteen young years.  This controversy, all in the name of so-called competition, has stained her for life.  Will she even be able to run track on the world stage again?  And if so, how loud will the accusations be when she dominates again?

We are not talking about someone who cheated to win but who may have been cheated by Nature.  In life, we define and demarcate.  What happens when you have to check multiple boxes or none at all?  What happens when you can’t choose?  You fall into some nether-category?

We pass judgment so many times based on differences without having taken a step in the other’s shoe.   We talk about deformity without sensitizing ourselves to the impact of that designation.  We talk about aesthetics without recourse to the Law of Life that beauty is in the eye of the beholder.  Judgment says more about us and our insecurities than the subject of judgment. Unfortunately, judgment becomes so-called fact which founds the basis of action.  Karma and the Universe will judge the judgers at some point, and it won’t relent in that judgment.

Let me be the first to say out loud, Caster Semenya is a unique being whose accomplishment deserves to be praised – not questioned.  She won that race fair and square.  You don’t punish someone because the Creator blessed her with exceptional strength.  You don’t tear her blessing down and call it a defect.  Allow her to be who she is and live life the way we all live it, or wish to live it.  Do not condemn her by calling her physical nature a curse or a shortcoming.  Life may not be fair but we can extract some justice from it.  Race on, Caster Semenya!

DeAngelo Starnes is a freelance writer and attorney who resides with his wife and son in Denver, CO. He welcomes direct constructive feedback at deangelo_starnes@hotmail.com.

Review: Brick City a tedious political fluff piece

By April MacIntyre
Sep 20, 2009, 20:21 GMT

Docu-drama "Brick City" is hailed by actor and Punk'd auteur Ashton Kutcher as "...outstanding. There is the love story going on but then there is all the drama of everything going on.  The amazing thing is that you are watching it feels like a fictional tale but it's not and the fact that you live inside of that every single day is outstanding and I really have to tell you, I really admire the things you do."

Full disclosure before I am accused of being a ditto head, tea partier or racist. I'm not. 

What I am is a lifelong registered Independent, who neither watches Glenn Beck or anything with Ashton Kutcher.  The earnest efforts of the incredibly talented Executive Producer Forest Whitaker, who I love to watch in anything, smacks of pure political manipulation and fluff for a comely Obama doppelgänger named Cory Booker.  And, it's way too long.

Sundance Channel will air this series Mon.-Fri. September 21-25, at 10 p.m.
Mayor Cory Booker is handsome, young and single, and he has the energy to deal with one of the most cocked-up American cities on the east coast: Newark, New Jersey.

In an ode to The Wire, with a dash of some MTV Real World efforts, producers weave stories of the Brick City amidst glowing, near Panglossian efforts to revive Newark, N.J., while showing the challenges facing the police and inner-city residents trying to break the murderous cycle of drugs, gangs and crime. 

We even have an ode to Romeo and Juliet; a Crip falls in love with a Blood, there's hope for us all! 

But wait, the pregnant Blood is cheated on by her Creep Crip (his actual name) and the fairytale ends.  Side note: Interesting to see how easy it is to sashay into a government office and become a "non profit" and get federal funds.

Well, lots of Mayors, good ones all over the US, are doing the exact same thing as Booker, but why focus on him?

Whitaker must have crossed paths during the Halcyon days of giddy ObamaNation building and must have noticed the incredible similarities in educational rags-to-riches stories, combined with Booker's catnip camera-ready charisma. 

Booker is a total package; he is eloquent, sexy, thinks on his feet and has aspirations of much more politically, down the road.

You can almost see a future Oprah episode: America's most eligible bachelor, who will be Cory's first lady?

Shot over several months in 2008, the series takes you along with Cory as he navigates the populace and wheels and deals, while his minions listen and jot down ideas on their notepads.

Filmmakers Marc Levin and Mark Benjamin share producing credit with actor Forest Whitaker.

© Copyright 2007 by monstersandcritics.com.
This notice cannot be removed without permission.

'Brick City' review - Sepinwall on TV

By Alan Sepinwall

September 15, 2009, 7:45PM

Newark Mayor Cory Booker addressing a graduating police academy class in Sundance Channel's "Brick City."

Early in the first episode of "Brick City," Sundance Channel's five-part documentary series chronicling a half-year in the life of Newark, the camera crew follows Mayor Cory Booker to the scene where a 10-year-old boy was shot in the neck. A bystander confronts the crew with a profane rant about how TV only turns up to report on tragedies in the black community.

"Go find a good story!" he screams. "Go find some black people having a good (expletive) time, right here, right now!"

If that man has cable, he'll get to see that the "Brick City" filmmakers were taking his advice even before he angrily offered it. There is tragedy aplenty in these five hours, but also comedy and political intrigue and, yes, black people having a good time.

Though the film will probably get most of its attention for the access that directors Marc Levin and Mark Benjamin (and producer Forest Whitaker) got to Booker and Police Director Garry McCarthy, "Brick City" takes a broader view of the city. We spend a lot of time with Booker and McCarthy, but also with Central High School principal Ras Baraka, with community activist Street Doctor (real name: Earl Best), and, especially, with a pair of star-crossed lovers with rival gang affiliations named Jayda (a Blood) and Creep (a Crip).

We see Booker and McCarthy try to restructure the Newark Police Department and make it more efficient, but we also see efforts at improvement on a smaller scale. Jayda starts a youth mentoring program. Street Doctor passes out Entenmann's cakes in poor neighborhoods, noting that a sweet treat might put someone out of the mood to commit violence. ("It sounds stupid," he acknowledges, "but it work, man.")

In that attempt to illuminate the lives of a cross-section of a struggling city -- and the difficulty that individuals have in trying to swim against an institutionalized tide -- "Brick City" isn't unlike a non-fiction version of HBO's "The Wire." In particular, the story of Booker and McCarthy's plan to lower the crime rate -- and how that plan is derailed by an imploding economy -- will be familiar to any "Wire" fan who watched its final seasons, particularly a scene where Booker asks his aides to try to do "more with less."

("The Wire" was itself based on real events in Baltimore. Life imitates art imitates life.)

The filmmakers, while praising the acclaimed but bleak HBO drama, have tried to distance their project from the obvious comparisons. At a press conference with TV critics last month, Bejamin said that, "in this film series, unlike 'The Wire,' we focus on healers," and Whitaker said that "Brick City" offered a more hopeful, "holistic approach" to the problems facing urban America.

"Brick City" is certainly a more optimistic endeavor, but what it also shares with "The Wire" is a willingness to view its characters from all sides, good and bad. Booker gives inspiring speeches and comforts grieving relatives of crime victims, but he also despairs as the economy goes south and makes the occasional private gaffe in front of the cameras. (Told the crime statistics are good, he boasts, "Cocked and locked, baby! Ready to fire," then looks sheepish and admits, "Bad metaphor.") Jayda's plan to mentor at-risk teen girls is noble, but she's also dealing with an old assault charge, and after she and Creep have a fight, she kicks him out and threatens to abort their unborn baby as punishment.

Each hour is built around a central storyline, like the battle for control of the Newark PD between McCarthy and then-chief Anthony Campos, or the struggle to get the new Central High building open in time for the start of a new school year. That episode has one of the series' simplest and most emotionally affecting scenes, as a Central vice-principal teaches a group of boys who have grown up without fathers how to tie a tie.

The real world is messier than fiction (even fiction, like "The Wire," heavily based on reality), and so "Brick City" doesn't have an entirely satisfying narrative through-line. It's an involving, often moving, slice of Newark city life, but in the end, the stories of both the city and its spotlighted residents feel very unfinished.

It's hard to expect closure, though, from a city that most of the residents admit only sometimes makes sense.

"I've had discussion with some politicians here in Newark who tell me even they don't understand the politics of Newark," says McCarthy, "and that's their employment."

Latinos in Suffolk County face racial intolerance, report says

Story Highlights

  • New York county studied by Southern Poverty Law Center after slaying
  • Ecuadorian immigrant was killed in '08 in what prosecutors call a race crime
  • Latinos "regularly taunted, spit upon and pelted" with objects, report says
  • "What we found is really the tip of a very ugly iceberg," law center spokesman says

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Latino immigrants living in Suffolk County, New York, have been living in an environment of intolerance and attacks against them, a report released Wednesday by the Southern Poverty Law Center said.

The atmosphere of intolerance is stoked in part by anti-immigrant groups, an indifferent police department, and county leaders themselves, according to the report.

The law center, which researches and keeps tabs on hate groups, became interested in the Long Island county after the November 8, 2008, murder of Marcelo Lucero, an Ecuadorian immigrant in Patchogue, New York. Prosecutors allege that the killers were a group of teenagers who targeted Latinos as part of a sport they called "beaner-hopping."

After four months of research in Suffolk County that included interviews with more than 70 Latino immigrants, 30 local religious leaders and other community leaders, the law center said it found a pattern of ethnic intolerance going back 10 years.

Low-level harassment of Latinos in Suffolk County is common, the report said.

"They are regularly taunted, spit upon and pelted with apples, full soda cans, beer bottles and other projectiles," the report said.

Latino residents riding bikes have been run off the road and others have been beaten with baseball bats or shot at with BB guns, the report said.

"Our feeling is that what we found is really the tip of a very ugly iceberg," Mark Potok, who edited the report, said at a news conference Wednesday. "We were told stories that are absolutely hair-raising."

The findings point to a disturbing larger trend, the report said.

The situation in Suffolk "is a microcosm of a problem facing the entire United States, where FBI statistics suggest a 40 percent rise in anti-Latino hate crimes between 2003 and 2007," the report said.

Tuesday night in Patchogue, the same city where Lucero was killed, a church frequented by Latinos was vandalized with anti-Mexican graffiti, Potok said.

The climate of fear in Suffolk County was created in part by anti-immigration voices that found sympathetic ears in the area, according to the report.

Anti-immigrant groups, such as the now-defunct Sachem Quality of Life, "heavily influenced the tone for public discourse on immigration in the area," the report said.

This stance was adopted by county leaders themselves, the law center said.

In August 2001, county legislator Michael D'Andre said that if his community were "attacked" by Latino day laborers, "we'll be up in arms; we'll be out with baseball bats."

In March 2007, another county legislator, Elie Mystal, said of Latino day laborers looking for work, "If I'm living in a neighborhood and people are gathering like that, I would load my gun and start shooting, period."

Both men later apologized for their remarks, according to news reports.

Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy, who was also criticized in the report for employing measures seen as anti-immigrant, responded to the report Wednesday with a list of facts he says were distorted or taken out of context by the law center.

For instance, a statement in the report that raids evicted day laborers from their homes in Suffolk County was distorted, Levy's office said. The action in question affected a condemned house where 60 people were living in hazardous conditions, the statement said.

The law center's contention that Levy tried to downplay the significance of the Lucero murder was a misrepresentation of a comment the executive made to a reporter, the statement said.

The law center report also said Latinos who had suffered harassment and crimes against them seldom reported them to police because they seemed indifferent.

"Many said police did not take their reports of attacks seriously, often blaming the victim instead," the report said.

The law center recommended that police receive training to take hate-motivated crimes more seriously, and that area leaders avoid language that could be conducive to inciting violence against immigrants.

All AboutSouthern Poverty Law CenterSuffolk CountyRacial Issues

Gay Latino Americans are 'coming of age'

Story Highlights

  • Hollywood blogger Perez Hilton talks about coming out
  • Openly gay Latino public figures like Hilton are rare
  • Gay Latinos say they face discrimination in and outside their community
  • Gay activist: "I thought that God had given me a second chance"

By John Blake
CNN

(CNN) -- Perez Hilton is a celebrity blogger who dishes out the latest Hollywood gossip, but there's something about his personal life you may not know.

Hilton is a Latino pioneer. He is one of the first Latino public figures in the U.S. to be openly gay. While Latinos have broken ground on the U.S. Supreme Court, in Hollywood and in professional sports, gay Latinos in the nation's public arena remain largely invisible.

Hilton says deep-seated homophobia within the Latino community has forced many gay Latinos to go underground, but attitudes are shifting.

"At the beginning, when I came out to my mom, she reacted with a sigh and said, 'You're my son and I have to love you,' " Hilton says. "But now she says, 'You're the best son in the world, and we need to find you a man.' "

Some gay Latino leaders are starting to share Hilton's optimism. The Latino community has long had a reputation for being notoriously homophobic. But some surprising developments within the Latino world -- in the United States and abroad -- suggest that may be changing, gay scholars and activists say.

'Walls are starting to crumble'

"A lot of walls are starting to crumble," says Charlie Vazquez, a New York-based author whose fiction has appeared in books such as "Best Gay Love Stories: NYC."

"We're at a crossroads," he says. "A new generation of better-educated Latinos is coming of age."

Gay Latino activists point to several signs of this transformation:

El Diario La Prensa, one of the oldest and largest Spanish-language newspapers in the U.S., recently endorsed the rights of same-sex couples to marry.

Within the past three years, lawmakers in countries as diverse as Uruguay, Colombia and Mexico have passed laws granting rights and protections to gays and lesbians.

Christian Chavez, lead singer of the popular pop Mexican band RBD, recently announced that he was gay.

"He wasn't rejected by any of his band mates or fans," Hilton says of Chavez. "That's a huge step for gay visibility in the Latino media world."

And far away from the stage, even some of the most vulnerable gay Latinos -- ordinary students in public high schools -- are finding more support, one group says.

While many gay Latino students still face physical and verbal harassment from classmates and teachers, more are becoming bolder about affirming their sexual identity, a recent survey found.

A 2007 survey conducted by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network discovered that at schools where a Gay Student Alliance club existed, 59 percent of gay Latino students participated in the club, says Elizabeth Diaz, a senior researcher at the network. The survey defined gay youths as those who were lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

The network also says that since 1999, at least 4,000 Gay Student Alliances have formed groups at public and private schools in the United States.

"While harassment in schools for Latino gay students remained high, we also know that these students have more support than in past generations," Diaz says.

At least one Latina scholar is now even questioning a fundamental assumption about homophobia in the Latino community.

Lourdes Torres, president of Amigas Latinas, a lesbian and bisexual support group, says the notion that Latino people are more homophobic and its men more macho is not only false, but tinged with racism.

Men from all sorts of ethnic groups have long acted in a patriarchal manner, but only Latino men have the term "machismo" attached to their behavior, she says.

"People tend to think that somehow, we're more repressed and living in the Dark Ages," says Torres, a professor at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois.

"They forget that just as things are changing in the U.S., they're also changing in Latin America," she says.

The walls that still stand

Yet Torres and others also say that being gay and Latino presents special challenges.

Like other gay people of color, Latino gays face a double bind: discrimination from mainstream culture and from their own community, Torres says.

This double bind presents an obstacle to Latinos who consider coming out, Torres says. Their challenge: risking rejection from their family when they need their family as a refuge from racism, she says.

"The family is the unit that provides the support and the one place that people can feel free and protected," Torres says. "It becomes doubly difficult for people to come out."

Those who take that risk may pay a price.

Emanuel Xavier, a gay poet and spoken word artist, says he almost destroyed himself because he couldn't find acceptance within the Latino community.

The New York-based poet says he grew up knowing that his sexual identity infuriated other Latinos. He once saw kids pelt a gay Latino hairdresser with stones. He routinely heard Roman Catholic priests condemn homosexuals.

His own mother called him names when she discovered he was gay, says Xavier, editor of "Mariposas: A Modern Anthology of Queer Latino Poetry."

Xavier says he was so filled with self-loathing that he once sold drugs and engaged in risky sexual behavior.

"I became all those things society expected me to become," he says. "I thought that was the only thing I could be."

Xavier says he decided to ditch his reckless lifestyle and become a poet. He reconciled with his mother and took on a new mission. He wanted to show others that one could be Latino, gay and proud.

"Fortunately, I walked away unscathed," he says of his earlier days. "I thought that God had given me a second chance, and I felt like I had to do something with that."

Gay Latinos like Xavier who decide to become activists, though, may run into an unexpected problem. How do you organize a community that is so fragmented?

People often talk about the Latino community in the U.S. as if it is one community. Yet Latino leaders often point out that there is not one Latino community in the U.S., but many.

A U.S. citizen from Guatemala, for example, may not appreciate being called a Mexican. Politics, food, history -- they all differ among various Latino groups in the U.S.

Andres Duque, a gay Latino activist and journalist, says those differences can make it difficult to mobilize support for Latino gay issues.

"It's difficult to get united around a single issue," says Duque, whose blogging name is "Blabbeando."

"When people are trying to form a Latino voice, it's difficult because you have different cultures with different visions and goals," Duque says.

For now, Hilton, the Hollywood blogger, may seem like a coalition of one -- a Latino public figure who is proud of being gay. But he says he doesn't feel isolated.

"I really don't think I'm alone," he says. "I don't feel alone."

He says that gay Latinos who decide to stop living undercover will become more commonplace in the future.

"It's tough -- I'm not saying it's not there," Hilton says of homophobia in the Latino community. "But as time goes on, it will change."

All AboutHispanic and Latino IssuesGay and Lesbian RelationshipsThe Roman Catholic Church

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Brooklyn family keeps Latino-Jewish traditions alive

Story Highlights

  • Moshe and ChanaLeah Nunez are Latino Jews who were raised in Christian homes
  • Nunez believes he is a decendant of Jews who left oppression in medieval Europe
  • He and his wife converted to Judaism and moved to a Hasidic New York area
  • The couple and their children blend Latino and Jewish culture in their lives

By Dana Rosenblatt
CNN

BROOKLYN, New York (CNN) -- Every Friday evening, the Nunez family sits down to a traditional religious dinner.

Like most families in their Crown Heights neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, their Jewish Sabbath meal includes blessings over the wine and bread, the company of family and friends and excellent food.

But for the Nunez family, the Sabbath table would not be complete without salsa picada and jalapeno dip.

Moshe Nunez, an information technology consultant and motivational speaker, was born to a Mexican father and American mother and raised in Guadalajara, Mexico.

His wife, ChanaLeah, grew up in Panama, the daughter of a Salvadoran mother and American-born father.

"Our home is a Latin American home," Nunez says.

"We bring into our home a mixture of the American and Latin culture, and that's reflected in the way we eat. We also enjoy hosting guests, so it's a very Hispanic thing, and a Jewish thing."

The couple and their two children moved to Brooklyn's Crown Heights area about five years ago so their son, Michael, 17, and daughter, Simcha, 18, could have "the best Jewish education available," Nunez says.

Crown Heights is the headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, a branch of Hasidism that is itself a form of Orthodox Judaism. Among the thousands of Hasidic families in the neighborhood, a significant number are also Latinos, Nunez says.

"There are a lot of Latin American Jews here," Nunez says. "Some of them have moved from countries like Venezuela, Colombia and Argentina, where there's political unrest. We make a life here, settle down and become part of the fabric of American society, but we still don't lose our roots." Join the conversation: How has America changed Latinos?

Many non-Jewish Latinos are surprised to see Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn who speak Spanish, carry on their Hispanic traditions and even keep up with soccer scores from their home countries, Nunez says.

Although Moshe and ChanaLeah Nunez were raised in Christian homes, they believe that Moshe's family name is proof that his ancestors are Marranos -- Jews who were forced to denounce or abandon their faith centuries ago in Europe.

Moshe Nunez began studying his family genealogy about 13 years ago, while the family was living in Atlanta, Georgia.

He met Lorraine Nunez, a woman raised as a Christian who believed she was a direct descendant of Samuel Nunez, a Portuguese physician who fled Europe in the early 1700s to help start one of the oldest Jewish synagogues in the United States, Congregation Mikve Israel in Savannah, Georgia.

Like other Marranos living in Europe, Samuel Nunez pretended to be Catholic and practiced Judaism in secret, according to Chabad.org, the Chabad-Lubavitch movement's Web site.

Meeting Lorraine Nunez inspired Moshe Nunez -- who was still going by his Christian name, Marco -- to further explore his own genealogy.

ChanaLeah -- who was going by her Christian name, Jacqueline -- had already known that her grandfather, a well-known army colonel in El Salvador, was Jewish. Like many Jews of his time, he hid his Judaism and married a non-Jewish woman.

Marco and Jacqueline believed that their descendants were also Marranos from Spain and Portugal who had to hide their Judaism for fear of persecution.

"The Nunez family started as a Jewish name," Moshe Nunez says. "During the Inquisition they were forced to convert or practice their faith in secret. Most of the Nunez family... like mine assimilated and lost their Judaism." VideoWatch Nunez talk about his life in Crown Heights »

While researching his genealogy, Moshe Nunez also began to study the Bible more closely, including the Torah, the first five books of the Old Testament.

"When I began studying the Torah, I saw that the Sabbath was on Saturday and not Sunday," he says.

"That opened [a] Pandora's Box," he says, figuring that "if the Jews had the Sabbath right, maybe they have other stuff right, too."

Around that time, the Nunez family relocated to Milan, Italy, for Nunez' work as a consultant. Marco and Jacqueline -- who changed their names to the Hebrew Moshe and ChanaLeah while in Italy -- continued their Judaic studies under the tutelage of Orthodox rabbis and decided to undergo an Orthodox conversion to Judaism.

"When I got to Italy and continued to research our family name and studied the Torah, I decided we were going to live a Jewish life," Nunez says.

The Jewish community in Milan welcomed the family "with open arms," Moshe said. "The rabbi said to me, 'Moshe, you are Jewish, you were always Jewish.'"

Moshe says he and ChanaLeah "took every step together," going through a formal conversion process. As part of the process Moshe and his son had ritual circumcisions. (They had both been circumcised at birth.)

The final step was for the family to appear before a Beit Din, or religious council, to approve the conversion.

"We decided we had to make our full return to Judaism, and we had such good mazal (luck) because the rabbis made it relatively easy. They saw that we were serious people that had studied the religion," Nunez says.

The Nunez family's story is not out of the ordinary, says Rabbi Shea Rubenstein, an Argentine rabbi who leads the Jewish Latin American Connection at The Shul in Surfside, Florida.

"We have a very vibrant synagogue, and a very large percentage happen to be from Spanish background from countries such as Venezuela, Peru, Argentina, Mexico and Cuba," the rabbi says.

Rubenstein says that quite a few non-Jewish Hispanics come to The Shul to learn more about Judaism, and while they may not be able to prove they are Jewish, they believe they are descendants of Jews and seek to reconnect with their Jewish roots.

If a person wants to practice Judaism but cannot verify their Jewish roots, Rubenstein recommends they go through a formal conversion as the Nunez family did.

"It's difficult to verify because there's some 400 or 500 years of history that people cannot trace, especially since Judaism is passed through the mother and the last name reflects that of the father," Rubenstein says.

Inspired by their experiences, Moshe and ChanaLeah -- both songwriters and musicians -- wrote a song called "Jews of Spain," with lyrics in Spanish, English and Hebrew. Nunez recorded the song, part of the album "Kol Haneshema (Every Soul)."

Aside from his work as a consultant and musician, Nunez leads seminars, conducts a weekly program called Quality Life Now at the Empire State Building and teaches weekly Webinars from his Brooklyn home. His seminars, taught in both Spanish and English, focus on seven core values found in the Old Testament.

The seven values are often referred to as the Noahide Laws. According to the Bible, the laws were given from God to Noah to serve as a moral code for all humankind.

"I've taken the seven Noahide Laws and I teach them as universal core values, so everyday people can apply them to their lifestyle," Nunez says.

He says he hopes to share his teachings with all of mankind, regardless of religion, to help them lead a more meaningful life.

"Sharing the knowledge of Torah to the world through education, songs and acts of kindness will help ensure that what happened to the Marranos during the Inquisition will never happen again."

All AboutHispanic and Latino IssuesJudaism

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Bird-eating frog among 163 new species found in Mekong region

Story Highlights

  • Discoveries highlight extent of region's biodiversity, World Wildlife Fund says
  • 100 plants, 28 fish, 18 reptiles, 14 amphibians, two mammals, 1 bird species found
  • WWF: Pace of development in region, climate change threaten species to extinction
  • Since 1997, nearly 1,200 new species have been discovered in Greater Mekong

By Emanuella Grinberg
CNN

(CNN) -- A frog that eats birds and a gecko with leopard stripes are among the 163 new species discovered last year in the Greater Mekong region of southeast Asia, according to a report by the World Wildlife Fund.

The discovery of 100 new plants, 28 fish, 18 reptiles, 14 amphibians, two mammals and one bird species highlights the extent of the biodiversity in the region, said Barney Long, head of the WWF's Asian Species Conservation program.

"It's a melting pot of diverse habitats. It has some of the wettest forests on the planet, high mountains, and a diverse array of terrestrial and marine habitats, including the Mekong River," he said.

"We continue to find new species of fish, primates and mammals, and nowhere else compares to the amount of large mammals that have been discovered in the region. It shows how little we know about species in the region," he said. "From a biodiversity perspective, there are still huge amounts to discover about region."

The Greater Mekong consists of the countries through which the Mekong River flows: Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Yunnan Province of China.

With 16 global ecoregions -- areas defined by their shared ecological features and animal communities -- the Greater Mekong has more protected spaces than anywhere else on mainland Asia, according to the WWF.

The colorful Cat Ba leopard gecko of northern Vietnam has large, orange-brown "catlike eyes" and a body of leopard stripes, according to a report released Friday.

Its name refers to its place of origin, Cat Ba Island, the largest of 366 islands in Cat Ba Archipelago and home to many rare species that can only be found on the island. Scientists believe the high number of species unique to the island might be due to the long separation of the island from continental Vietnam, the report says.

Limnonectes megastomias -- a fanged frog with an appetite for other frogs, insects and birds -- has only been found in three remote areas of medium-to-high altitudes in eastern Thailand.

Globally, new species of mammals are rare finds, but in 2008 alone, new species of the mouselike musk shrew and a tube-nosed bat emerged from the region. PhotoSee photos of newly discovered species »

War and political unrest have kept large parts of the region, particularly Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar, off-limits to scientific exploration up until the past two decades, Long said.

Since 1997, nearly 1,200 new species have been discovered, many that cannot be found anywhere else, said Dekila Chungyalpa, director of WWF's Greater Mekong Program.

But the rapid pace of development in the Mekong region, coupled with the effects of climate change, are threatening to drive the species into extinction, Chungyalpa said.

"As we become familiar with more species in the region, our understanding of climate change and how it impacts these new species is changing," she said.

Chungyalpa said conservative estimates by the WWF project a 1-meter rise in sea level on the delta's coastline over the next decade, which will affect not only marine life, but also people who rely on the delta as a source of sustenance and employment, she said.

In 2007, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its Fourth Assessment Report, which projected that global sea levels could rise from 18 to 59 centimeters (7 to 23 inches) over the next century based on six possible scenarios.

Already, Chungyalpa said, the area has been affected by an increase in tropical storms off the coast, which brings in more seawater and changes the flooding patterns in the delta. Some researchers, however, have questioned the link between climate change and more intense tropical storms. Apart from climate change, construction of dams and hydropower plants along the delta could further disrupt its waters, potentially displacing millions, destroying sources of drinkable water and disrupting the production of rice, Chungyalpa said.

"The delta is the rice bowl of the region. What will happen to people who depend on it if it's no longer there?" she said.

The WWF says it supports the idea of an agreement among the Mekong countries on how to respond to infrastructure development and climate change in terms of protecting its natural resources and people.

"Climate change is making it obvious that we can't treat development like it's a separate issue," she said. "We need to be addressing this issue now. It's such an immediate issue for us and it's going to change everything in this region if we don't address it."

All AboutMekong RiverWorld Wide Fund for NatureGlobal Climate Change

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http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/09/26/mekong.species/index.html