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Posts Tagged ‘Obama’

Feminist Leaders Gather in Support of Obama: Declaring “Bring it” and “You Ain’t Seen Nothin Yet”

Posted by Laurel Conrad on July 11, 2012

The National Organization for Women (NOW), Feminist Majority, National Congress of Black Women, US Women Connect, and Women’s Information Network gathered at the National Press Club today to convey their support for President Obama and Vice President Biden. The theme would be the “War on Women” allegedly waged by conservatives against women everywhere.

When putting together my feminist-chic ensemble for today’s press conference, I lamented that I own too much pink.

Eleanor Smeal, President at Feminist Majority, gave the opening remarks. She said that we are facing a climate in which issue after issue is under assault at either the state or federal level. She began with a background of the term “War on Women” which denotes conservatives’  “attack on women’s fundamental rights”.

She said that “Romney is a stunning comparison” to Obama and that this election is a “stunning contrast with one group favoring and pushing into the future for equality for women”. She undoubtedly referenced Obama. Conservatives would disagree on which group is really advocating for equality for men and women, and which group just wants free contraception.

She continued that “the unthinkable is happening- a fight over birth control”.

Smeal then became emotional. She cited her long history of feminist activism and stated that “I believe that in this election everything is on the line” and bemoaned that the Supreme Court is a primary issue because Romney likes Judge Robert Bork, who believes that “politicians at the state level should be able to decide women’s birth control”. This is apparently appalling to her. She remarked that it is a “disgrace that we’re even discussing it”. She believes that Mitt Romney wishes to “stop the clock and turn us back to yester year”.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Harvard Prof. Takes on Evolving Political Environment

Posted by Alfonse Muglia on September 22, 2011

“I call this ‘Obama’s half-New Deal’. Perhaps it needs the subtitle: ‘How to mystify your friends, while provoking your enemies.’” - Professor Skocpol

Lewis Auditorium was at full capacity this evening, as some of the most brilliant, politically-minded individuals on campus flocked to the lecture hall in Goldwin Smith. The event that drew them was titled “Obama’s New Deal, Tea Party Reaction, and America’s Political Future,” presented by Theda Skocpol, Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard University.

“As Barack Obama was getting elected two years ago, I thought about how great it would be to form a committee to track what a change-oriented administration attempted to do in a moment of economic downturn,” opened Professor Skocpol. With all the comparisons of Obama to FDR – highlighted by a Times Magazine cover presenting Obama sitting “FDR-style” with the headline “The New, New Deal” – and the abundance of optimistic media coverage, Skocpol and her colleagues thought it would be interesting to keep track of what was actually accomplished.

Nearly three years since she set out on her journey, few would question the turn away from the optimism associated with the Obama Moment. Similarly, so too has Skocpol’s research taken a turn.

“We also looked at the political aftereffects,” she later added, “which turned out to be even more interesting than the policy.”

“I call this ‘Obama’s half-New Deal’. Perhaps it needs the subtitle: ‘How to mystify your friends, while provoking your enemies.’”

Skocpol, who began her political activism in the 1960s during the Civil Rights Movement, draws her credibility on her experience, dedication, and effective research. She has already published a book on the first two years of Obama’s administration and expects to release another in the coming months. This second book, regarding the recent changes in the Republican Party due to the Tea Party, was the topic of the second half of her speech.

Skocpol didn’t shy away from the opportunity to take jabs at the conservative media and free-market elitists for seizing the opportunity to make a difference in establishing the national public policy agenda over the past three years. She also pointed the finger at these entities for covering – and thus “promoting” – the message of the grassroots Tea Party organizations. At one point, she specifically attacked FOX News as “a propaganda and entertainment channel, not a News Channel.”

“This trend to the Right is the most extreme leap in an American political ideology than we have seen since the Civil War. There are numbers in my book that support that.”

That being said, Professor Skocpol also recognized Obama’s shortcomings.

“You can admit that Obama didn’t try very hard. He waited two years to give a significant national speech on the state of the economy, despite the fact that this was in the forefront of Americans’ minds.”

One thing that Professor Skocpol failed to mention was that much of the popularity and appeal of the Tea Party movement – at its grassroots – came from the mentality of many Americans that they could affect the political system. To its credit, that’s one thing that the Obama Moment was able to foster: the belief that ordinary Americans should have the hope and confidence that they can affect change in their country and in their own lives.

The turning point, and thus the popularity spike of the Tea Party movement, came when Americans realized soon into Obama’s presidency that this change and optimism did not come from the federal government, but from educated Americans who sought change at the grassroots and worked to get those individuals, who believed along their ideological lines, elected. And, as Prosser Skocpol mentioned, after their success in the 2010 midterm elections, the majority of these activists have kept close tabs on their elected officials, ensuring that they stay true to their beliefs.

The dynamic Tea Party movement – at all levels – had a strategy: regain control of the nation’s political agenda.

“The strategy of these elitists has worked, and if they get control they will get sweeping reform, for they are more motivated than Obama,” Skocpol concluded. Therefore, “the 2012 election will be even higher stakes for the future of American politics than the 2008 election.”

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MRM #74

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on November 7, 2010

- Drug and alcohol violations on the rise at Tompkins County campuses.

- WashPo has more on the Cornell coffee robot arm.

- Cornell funding may fall after the midterm elections.

- Hide your money, lock your restaurant, ‘cuz they robbin’ everybody out here.

- Don’t eat at these restaurants.

- Cornell “tags along” with Obama to India.

- Football continues to lose, hockey picks up its first win (!).

- Rundown of Cornellians in the midterm elections.

- The Justice Department may be looking into the college football Bowl Championship Series.

- What Americans think about the Tea Party.

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MRM # 69

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on October 3, 2010

- Via MetaEzra, Cornell’s endowment grows 13%.

- Despite the MacArthur awarded to a Cornell professor last week, WSJ says New York is suffering from a crisis of geniuses.

- Post on Cornell’s real Superman. (HT MetaEzra)

- Women’s hockey ranks #2 in preseason polls.

- Football picks up its first win against Bucknell.

- Ithaca sports gambling ring busted.

- The med school is appealing a federal jury’s verdict that it committed grant fraud.

- Cornell professor highlights Iraq’s record for the longest time between holding a parliamentary election and forming a government.

- Obama has done a better job explaining his plans and vision for the future than Republican leaders. The same can’t be said for Congressional Democrats (more here).

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Please Hold For the President

Posted by Oliver Renick on September 27, 2010

President Obama got on the phone this afternoon with several college students in a publicly-broadcast conference call, where he fielded questions from student journalists.  His objective was relatively simple – garner support for health care initiatives that allow students to remain on their parents’ plan until they are 26, and encourage young people to take part in the upcoming midterm elections.

“I want to remind young people they have to get reengaged in this process and vote in these midterm elections,” he told one caller.  It sounds as if Mr. Obama, who received widespread youth support in 2008, may be realizing the fickle tendencies of the youth.

Obama credited health care costs for the hardships of graduating college students, saying “if I keep increasing pell grants and college funding but health care keeps going up and inflation of tuition prices rises, we’re right back to where we started.”

The president also recounted the good ol’ days of his college years.  “When i was going to college food at the cafeteria was notoriously bad – we didn’t have a lot of options, we used to joke about what was for lunch that day.  There was a lot of nondescript stuff that wasnt edible.  We need to ask, what can we do to make universities more cost effective?  There should be pie charts at every university that show you where every dollar your spending is going.”  Bold words for a Harvard man.

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Incumbent Dems Distance Themselves from Obama

Posted by Lucia Rafanelli on September 22, 2010

According to a September 12th New York Times article, with a critical midterm election cycle approaching, a number of Democratic candidates for national office are attempting to distance themselves from their party and its recent legislative actions. Rather than riding President Obama’s coattails, it seems Democrats are marketing themselves as the renegades (or mavericks, if you will) of their party.

For instance, Democratic House Representatives Mark Schauer, Suzanne M. Kosmas, and Glenn Nye all ran campaign ads in which they criticized the status quo in Washington, the latter explicitly stating “‘I stood up to my party leaders and voted no.’”

It is worth noting that this strategic distancing is taking place as Republican candidates and groups run significant numbers of advertisements criticizing current “Washington insiders”, namely President Obama and Nancy Pelosi. This is likely more than just political coincidence. Both parties appear to sense a general dissatisfaction with the current state of national politics. Further, both are trying to capitalize on it– Republicans by drawing the public’s attention to the undesirable consequences of two years of Democratic political control, and Democrats by dissociating themselves with the political mechanism that produced these consequences.

This dynamic is strikingly similar to that which dominated the national political scene in the time surrounding the 2008 presidential elections. After eight years of the Bush presidency, Democrats insisted on an urgent need for new leadership, while Republicans looked to endorse “political outsiders” who could not be blamed for the Bush-era policies the American public found so unsatisfactory.

Interestingly enough, it has only taken President Obama two years to reach an analagous– if less extreme– state of political exile in his own party, and this begs the question, “How will Democrats view his administration come the 2012 elections, and how eager will they be to put their full support behind his reelection?”

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MRM #67

Posted by Cornell Insider Staff on September 19, 2010

- Elie’s post on Cornell and TFA.

- Cornell researchers monitor freshmen getting fat.

- Cornell spring football rolls. Big football.. doesn’t roll.

- The Cavalier discusses those puzzling WSJ rankings. And some spin.

- And they have a good discussion of new anti-Greek policies.

- Another set of rankings of “most desirable schools.” Not quite sure how they calculated Harvard’s average SAT score as 1580, though.

- Looks like permanent bridge barriers won’t be up for awhile.

- Cornell alum Bill Maher receives Hollywood walk of fame star.

- Sun confirms Insider reports on jaywalking enforcement. Ithaca police are also planning to step up traffic law enforcement.

- Obama appoints Cornellian as new ambassador to Pakistan.

- Smoking might soon be completely banned in the Commons.

- Otherwise unrelated article confirms that parking sucks at Cornell.

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Obama Endorses “Right” to Mosque

Posted by Brendan Patrick Devine on August 15, 2010

This story came out from the AP yesterday:

WASHINGTON – Weighing his words carefully on a fiery political issue, President Barack Obama said Saturday that Muslims have the right to build a mosque near New York’s Ground Zero, but he did not say whether he believes it is a good idea to do so.

Obama commented during a trip to Florida, where he expanded on a Friday night White House speech asserting that Muslims have the same right to freedom of religion as everyone else in America.

The president’s statements thrust him squarely into a debate that he had skirted for weeks and could put Democrats on the spot three months before midterm elections where they already were nervous about holding control of the House and maybe even the Senate. Until Friday, the White House had asserted that it did not want to get involved in local decision-making.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an independent who has been a strong supporter of the mosque, welcomed Obama’s White House speech as a “clarion defense of the freedom of religion.”

Gov. Charlie Crist, R-Fla., who was among those who met with Obama on Saturday, lauded the president’s position.

“I think he’s right — I mean you know we’re a country that in my view stands for freedom of religion and respect for others,” Christ said after the Florida meeting with Obama and other officials. “I know there are sensitivities and I understand them. This is a place where you’re supposed to be able to practice your religion without the government telling you you can’t.”

Others were quick to pounce.

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Jeff Greene of Florida took Obama’s Friday speech to mean the president supports the construction.

“President Obama has this all wrong and I strongly oppose his support for building a mosque near Ground Zero especially since Islamic terrorists have bragged and celebrated destroying the Twin Towers and killing nearly 3,000 Americans,” Greene said. “Freedom of religion might provide the right to build the mosque in the shadow of Ground Zero, but common sense and respect for those who lost their lives and loved ones gives sensible reason to build the mosque someplace else.”

The mosque would be part of a $100 million Islamic community center two blocks from where nearly 3,000 people perished when hijacked jetliners slammed into the World Trade Center towers on Sept. 11, 2001.

The proposed construction has sparked debate around the country that included opposition from top Republicans including Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich as well as the Jewish civil rights group the Anti-Defamation League.

Obama’s Friday comment was taken by some to mean that he strongly supports the building of an Islamic center near the site of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, something he never actually said.

Speaking to a gathering at the White House Friday evening to observe the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, Obama said that he believes “Muslims have the same right to practice their religion as everyone else in this country.”

“That includes the right to build a place of worship and a community center on private property in lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and ordinances,” he said. “This is America, and our commitment to religious freedom must be unshakable.”

Asked Saturday about the issue during his trip to Florida, Obama said: “I was not commenting and I will not comment on the wisdom of making a decision to put a mosque there. I was commenting very specifically on the right that people have that dates back to our founding.”

Obama said that “my intention was simply to let people know what I thought. Which was that in this country we treat everybody equally and in accordance with the law, regardless of race, regardless of religion.”

Some relatives of people killed in the Sept. 11 attacks supported Obama’s comments.

The mosque is “in many ways … a fitting tribute,” said Colleen Kelly of the Bronx, who lost her brother Bill Kelly Jr. in the attacks.

“This is the voice of Islam that I believe needs a wider audience,” said Kelly, who is Catholic. “This is what moderate Islam is all about.”

Opinions are mixed among family members.

Sally Regenhard, whose firefighter son was killed at the World Trade Center, has said the president’s comments show “a gross lack of sensitivity to the 9/11 families and to the people who were lost.”

Ground zero, awaiting what uses it is given.

The President’s endorsement of the “right” to a mosque, whether he believes it or not, is in poor and sour taste; he’d have been better served remaining silent. Mayor Bloomberg, for whatever reason, has seen fit to support the mosque project for the same purpse. Interestingly, Cuomo and his Democrat running mate in the gubernatorial race oppose the project, or at least would like to re-locate it.

Ms. Kelly, the woman quoted in the above article who lost family on 9/11, sees the mosque asa “fitting tribute” to the day, a possible rout to “moderate Islam,” whatever that is. Islam, which has the honor of being the only religion founded by an epileptic child rapist, historically builds mosques at sites of great victories over the infidel. A great Catholic/Orthodox Cathedral, the Hagia Sophia, became a mosque after the Ottoman Turks finally took Constantinople; the Dome on the Rock stands athwart the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and over the remains of the Temple of Solomon.

Can we learn anything from this?

The Imam in charge of the mosque project, Feisal Adbul Rauf, is lauded by popular press for his moderation, however he seems quick to blame Christians for their opposition to the mosque rather than display any sympathy for the victims. His immediate reflections on 9/11 reflect his mind better than any news article can:

In a “60 Minutes” interview 19 days after Sept. 11, he was asked whether the United States deserved the attack.

His muddled answer: “I wouldn’t say that the United States deserved what happened. But the United States’ policies were an accessory to the crime that happened.”

An accessory? How? “Because we have been accessory to a lot of innocent lives dying in the world. In fact, in the most direct sense, Osama bin Laden is made in the USA.”

People in positions of authority need to reconsider their understanding of the Bill of Rights. The first amendment clearly grants freedom of religion. In that period, the most divergent religious choices were between Episcopalianism and Unitarianism, or perhaps even Catholicism. Islam, or any other philosophy in deadlock with Western culture, was not part of the consideration. Thomas Jefferson’s copy of the Koran was used to swear in Keith Ellison, the first ever Muslim member of Congress. Many political pundits saw the move as a checkmate against those who believe the West to be permanently fixed against Islam. Would this not be true if Jefferson, America’s Renaissance man, was a reader of the Koran? Truth be told, most of Jefferson’s foreign policy as President was geared against Muslim pirates in the Mediterranean and Africa. On that note, I’ll leave the “Clash of Civilizations” rhetoric to Samuel Huntington.

Americans might be overreacting to the mosque project, but I doubt it: they oppose it at a 68% rate. Maybe some politicians, like the President, do privately believe Muslim have a right to build a mosque, and indeed they do. However, their active use of their bully-pulpits for such a distateful and possibly nefarious cause leaves a justifiably bitter aftertaste in the mouths of most people.

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The Midweek Post Where We Talk About Things Going On In Our World (6/29)

Posted by Lucia Rafanelli on June 29, 2010

This week’s Midweek Post features Campus Editor Brendan Devine ’11, Lucia Rafanelli ’13, and News Editor Joe Bonica ’12.

Grade Inflation at Cornell: How Big Of A Problem Is It, And What Can Be Done?

Partially inspired by this discussion.

Brendan: Schools first began generous grading practices during the Vietnam War. Students needed passing grades to be exempt from the draft. The problem was that professors could not just lift up the bottom portion—since that would have been transparently disingenuous, so, over time, they began to lift up the mean grades and the practice has never ceased since. I would venture to say that part of the problem is Cornell’s (or Harvard’s or any other elite school’s) status; grade deflation might make our graduates look comparatively weaker to employers and graduate programs, which are of course the things outsiders judge institutions by. If Cornell does not put a cap on grade inflation it may end up in a Brobdingnagian state like Harvard, where 55% of the students graduate with honors. How is a Human Resources person or a graduate school admission counselor supposed to judge how well you performed when half the school is, paradoxically, exceptional? I think the innovation Dennis mentioned, where the student’s grades and the class mean are both on the report card, provides Cornell with a remunerative contingency to re-adjust grades without cost to the school’s general standing, but will the school take that opportunity?
Lucia:
Certainly, extreme grade inflation is a problem, as it disincentivizes hard work and commitments to education. However, one thing I find troubling about the discussion cited above is its treatment of hours spent studying as a good indicator of whether or not students truly earn their high grades. One would hope that college classes focus on developing critical thinking skills and that the tests in these classes ask students to analyze/evaluate situations relevant to their fields of study rather than simply recall information. High school classes, on the other hand, likely focus more on developing recall/comprehension skills, at least to a certain degree. These types of skills may require more study time to master, but surely are not more important than critical thinking skills, and the ability to think on one’s feet, especially at a college level. Thus, study time may not be an accurate gauge of whether or not students have earned good grades.
Joe: In general , grade inflation is a serious problem, for all the reasons discussed above (inability to accurately judge performance, lack of critical thinking instruction, etc.) While there is certainly some grade inflation at Cornell, it is not nearly as bad as in the other Ivies, especially Harvard. I forget the exact numbers, but far less than 55% graduate Cornell with honors.  I’ve had my fair share of difficult classes where I’ve earned (truly earned) a not-so spectacular grade, so I wouldn’t say we are past the point of no return; in fact we are well behind it. Still, this can be changed.

Elena Kagan: Will She Be Confirmed?

Brendan: I cannot envision how she will not be. Presidents almost always get their way with Supreme Court nominees unless the press manage to make the nominee (Bork and Harriet Miers) look like a missionary for a derranged cause. Since so few of her papers have been released there seems to be little any Republican might be able to bowdlerize or use to delay her confirmation. She has only published nine articles since 1992, one of which, called “Private Speech, Public Purpose,” advocates for government distribution of free speech. Kagan seems to mirror Obama’s attitude towards reparations for any sort of disparity and, whether we like it or not, we are going to have to live with it.
Lucia: At this point, it appears she will probably be confirmed. She’s the appointee of a liberal president with a liberal congress, and she hasn’t been the object of any major controversy.
Joe: As Brendan said, unless she commits murder at some point during these hearings, Elena Kagan will be confirmed. Even if she turns off a lot of people who are on the fence, the sheer majority of the Democratic Party in the Senate will ensure her place on the court.

Obama Administration’s Response To BP Oil Spill (just give a short, concise argument about how the administration has been doing and how its image will be damaged (or improved?) by its response).

Brendan: Had the President done something to ameliorate the problems caused by the spill, such as visit the Gulf before 8 weeks had ellapsed or not obstructed Governor Jindal’s cleanup barges with petty charges of life-jacket shortages, I would not mind his attendance of White Sox games or visits from Paul “Back in the USSR” McCartney. Some may succumb to the temptation to say that the odds were agianst the President and there was nothing he could do in the wake of such a catastrophe, however Governor Jindal seems to have taken great precautions to protect his shoreline, that is until the President decided to paint the Lousiana coastline black with oil. The President has simply done remarkably little to prevent disaster or clean it up. Since he made no effort whatsoever to protect the coastlines he will have to begin the more protracted and harder task of cleaning up the oil. The only question is, will he have blackballed the oil industry enough to pass Cap ‘n’ Tax by the time the cleanup stage commences?
Lucia: It is important to remember that this is not simply a public policy problem- it is an engineering problem. Thus, the government has limited power to deal with it directly. Aside from perhaps overseeing BP’s work or preparing panels of experts to discuss potential solutions, there is not much the government can do to actually repair the leak, because it simply does not have the necessary expert knowledge.
Joe: Obama’s response to the BP spill is no better or worse than Bush’s response to Hurricane Katrina. Both meant well, but ended up merely getting in the way of state-led clean-up efforts. There are a few differences here of course; first off, the major corporation responsible for the spill is contributing hugely to the clean up, an advantage Bush never had and that Obama seems to be squandering, even alienating. Secondly, Bush and FEMA acted fairly quickly with the hurricane, while Obama took his sweet time in responding to the spill, which only made his public image worse.


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Has the Recession Boosted Cornell’s Appeal?

Posted by Brendan Patrick Devine on June 28, 2010

A recent article from the Syracuse Post-Standard chronicles some of the misgivings newly admitted college students have about attending high-cost, private colleges. One student in the article puts the problem rather succinctly:

“It just wasn’t enough,” said Polsin, who picked the State University College at Buffalo. “I can’t afford to pay $200,000 in loans when I graduate.”

The current trend is towards state universities and 2 year stops at community colleges as a means of lightening the financial load. These decisions are deserving of some sympathy; a large portion of what Cornell calls “aid” is actually one or two very large student loans with somewhat generous rates of interests, not grants.

The “University Industrial Complex,” as a whitty friend of mine hath named it, seems to be taking a hit: New York State colleges hit a record in the number of applicants this year, forcing private schools to produce more scholarships and other forms of aid that do not require repayment.

So, how does Cornell fit in to this trend? Penn saw a 17% rise in its total number of applicants, but only a 5% rise in the number of Early Decision (that’s the binding one) applicants, meaning a greater number of people would prefer the [slightly] lower odds of admission in exchange for the chance of a better financial aid package else where. Cornell, a school which most Ivy League applicants probably consider, is giving out more financial aid these days:

At $9,775 in 2009-10, the average cost of attendance (net of financial aid) is the lowest in 10 years for families who earn less than $75,000 a year. The number of students who received $40,000 or more in grants almost doubled from 2008 to 2009. And 13 percent more undergraduates receive need-based aid, compared with 2008.

Cornell has managed to lower the cost of attendance significantly in light of the recession. The Chronicle article I quoted above cites 36,000 applicants this past season, an unspectacular 5% increase, but since Cornell is probably already popular among applicants to other Ivy League schools, this means the school is branching out. The lower cost of attending one of the landgrant schools at Cornell (such as the Ag school, where one someone interested in biology or chemsitry can find a cheaper education in that field than at the Arts school) is probably one of the culprits. Cornell is uniquely suited to draw appeal during the recession, particularly to New Yorkers such as the ones mentioned in the Post-Standard piece, because it can offer prestigious education on the cheap. No wonder Skorton endorses Obama’s policy proposals; they virtually assure a horrible economic environment, giving Cornell a competitive advantage in attracting students.

((That was sarcastic, well… sorta))

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