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18 May 2009, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Art, Business, Culture, Entertainment, Politics, Portfolio, Technology, 0 Comments

Can you change everything?


This is a good post from Seth Godin’s Blog about getting out of ruts (I know we all face them from time to time).

You might not be as permanently stuck in a rut as you think. The rut you’re in isn’t permanent, nor is it perfect. There are certainly less perfect ruts, but there may be better ones as well. The certain thing is that you can change everything…

  1. Buy a competitor
  2. Sell to a competitor
  3. Publish your best work for free online
  4. Close your worst-performing locations
  5. Open a new branch in a high-traffic location
  6. Hire the best salesperson away from the competition
  7. Join the competition
  8. Host a conference for your competitors
  9. Connect your best customers and organize a tribe
  10. Fire the 80% of your customers that account for 20% of your sales
  11. Start a blog
  12. Start a digital bootstrap business on the weekends
  13. While looking for a job, spend 40 hours a week volunteering and freelancing for good causes
  14. Go on tour and visit your best customers in person
  15. Answer the customer service line for a day
  16. Learn to be a killer presenter
  17. Let the most junior person in the organization run things for a day
  18. Delete your website and start over with the simplest possible site
  19. Call former employees and ask for advice
  20. Move to Thailand
  21. Listen to audio books in your car instead of the radio
  22. Sell your cash cow division to the competition and invest everything in the new thing
  23. Find more products for your existing customers to buy
  24. Become a gadfly and tell the truth about your industry
  25. Quit your job
  26. Move your operations to another city
  27. Become a vegan
  28. Have all meetings in a room with no chairs, and everyone wears a bathrobe over their clothes
  29. Open your offices only four hours a day
  30. Open your offices 24 hours a day for a week
  31. Find every project that is near the danger zone (in terms of p&l or deadlines) and cancel it, no appeals
  32. Go for a walk during lunch
  33. Get an RSS reader and read a lot more blogs
  34. Go offline for longer than you thought possible
  35. Write five thank you notes every day
  36. Stop sending spam
  37. Do your work somewhere else. Set up your chiropractic table at the mall
  38. Have everyone at work switch offices
  39. Give your most valuable possessions to a stranger
  40. Go see live music
  41. Start a company scrapbook and take daily notes
  42. Hire a firm to make a documentary about your organization
  43. Buy some art
  44. Make some art.
  45. Do the work.
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21 Feb 2009, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, 0 Comments

Remembering Socks the Cat


From MSNBC:

Former First Cat Socks, one of the world’s most famous felines, died Friday at the age of 20 after battling throat cancer since November. A stray cat rescued by the Clinton’s daughter, Chelsea, Socks lived in the governor’s mansion in Arkansas and later moved with the family to the White House.

“Socks brought much happiness to Chelsea and us over the years, and enjoyment to kids and cat lovers everywhere,” the Clintons said in a statement, released first to PEOPLE.COM. “We’re grateful for those memories, and we especially want to thank our good friend, Betty Currie, for taking such loving care of Socks for so many years.”

Currie, the president’s personal secretary, and her husband, Bob, took over care of Socks after the Clintons left the White House. It was near their home in Maryland that Socks was put to sleep Friday morning. “He could no longer stand and wasn’t eating,” according to family friend and presidential historian Barry Landau.

His pal Buddy the Lab
Though much was made of the fact that Buddy, the family’s beloved brown Labrador retriever – who died after being hit by a car in 2002 – remained with the Clintons while Socks did not, Landau says, “The truth be known, Betty asked if Socks could come live with her. The Clintons didn’t abandon Socks. They were totally conflicted. It broke their hearts, but they knew it would be the right thing for Socks’ welfare.”

“Betty had lost a close family member and a dog and they wanted to do something nice for her,” continues Landau, noting that Hillary Clinton had just been elected to the U.S. Senate.

During the family’s days in the White House, Socks had become attached to Betty, with whom he spent many hours every day. “Socks was always curled up on a blue striped silk chair, next to Betty,” in her office outside the Oval Office, Landau says. “Socks didn’t act like a cat. Socks was very dog-like, and Buddy and Socks got along well.” Landau adds that even visiting heads of state asked to have pictures taken with the cat.

A taste for chicken
In the years since he left the White House, Landau says, “Socks had an incredible life. Betty cooked for Socks,” he said, noting the cat loved chicken. He was also the subject (along with the family dog) of a book by Hillary Clinton titled Dear Socks, Dear Buddy: Kids’ Letters to the First Pets.

On Thursday, Currie took Socks for one last walk; she plans to have the cat cremated.

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10 Feb 2009, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Politics, 0 Comments

Happy Birthday, Abe!


Tomorrow marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln. The Library of Congress has launched an extensive website dedicated to the Lincoln Bicentennial, which includes a detailed history of our 16th president—including timelines, speeches, podcasts and histories of of his family members. The website can consume a good amount of time to peruse, but if you’re like me, and Lincoln is your favorite president, you’ll be glad you did.

Here is Lincoln’s official White House biography:

The son of a Kentucky frontiersman, Abraham Lincoln had to struggle to live and learn. Five months before receiving his party’s nomination for President, he sketched his life:

“I was born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. My parents were both born in Virginia, of undistinguished families—second families, perhaps I should say. My mother, who died in my tenth year, was of a family of the name of Hanks…. My father … removed from Kentucky to … Indiana, in my eighth year…. It was a wild region, with many bears and other wild animals still in the woods. There I grew up…. Of course when I came of age I did not know much. Still somehow, I could read, write, and cipher … but that was all.”

Lincoln made extraordinary efforts to attain knowledge while working on a farm, splitting rails for fences, and keeping store at New Salem, Illinois. He was a captain in the Black Hawk War, spent eight years in the Illinois legislature, and as a lawyer rode the circuit of courts for many years. His law partner said of him, “His ambition was a little engine that knew no rest.”

He married Mary Todd, and they had four boys, only one of whom lived to maturity. In 1858 Lincoln ran against Stephen A. Douglas for Senator. He lost the election, but in debating with Douglas he gained a national reputation that won him the Republican nomination for President in 1860.

Lincoln warned the South in his Inaugural Address: “In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you…. You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect and defend it.”

Lincoln thought secession illegal, and was willing to use force to defend Federal law and the Union. When Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, and forced its surrender, he called on the states for 75,000 volunteers. Four more slave states joined the Confederacy but four remained within the Union. The Civil War had begun.

As President, he built the new Republican Party into a strong national organization. Further, he rallied most of the northern Democrats to the Union cause. On January 1, 1863, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation that declared forever free those slaves within the Confederacy.

Lincoln never let the world forget that the Civil War involved an even larger issue. This he stated most movingly in dedicating the military cemetery at Gettysburg: “that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

Lincoln won re-election in 1864, as Union military triumphs heralded an end to war. In his planning for peace, the President was flexible and generous, encouraging Southerners to lay down their arms and join speedily in reunion.

The spirit that guided him was clearly that of his Second Inaugural Address, now inscribed on one wall of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C.: “With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds…. ”

On Good Friday, April 14, 1865, Lincoln was assassinated at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, DC, by John Wilkes Booth, an actor who thought he was helping the South. The opposite was the result, for with Lincoln’s death, the possibility of peace with magnanimity died.

President Lincoln died at 7:22 the next morning. Following a funeral at the White House, his casket was viewed by millions as it was carried on a special train back to Illinois.  He was buried May 4 in Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield.

Happy 200th, Abe!

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14 Jan 2009, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Science, 0 Comments

Don’t Mess with Mother Nature


It seems a plan to remove cats from an Australian island to save the sea birds has backfired. From the Associated Press:

BANGKOK, Thailand – It seemed like a good idea at the time: Remove all the feral cats from a famous Australian island to save the native seabirds.

But the decision to eradicate the felines from Macquarie island allowed the rabbit population to explode and, in turn, destroy much of its fragile vegetation that birds depend on for cover, researchers said Tuesday.

Removing the cats from Macquarie “caused environmental devastation” that will cost authorities 24 million Australian dollars ($16.2 million) to remedy, Dana Bergstrom of the Australian Antarctic Division and her colleagues wrote in the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Applied Ecology.

“Our study shows that between 2000 and 2007, there has been widespread ecosystem devastation and decades of conservation effort compromised,” Bergstrom said in a statement.

The unintended consequences of the cat-removal project show the dangers of meddling with an ecosystem — even with the best of intentions — without thinking long and hard, the study said.

“The lessons for conservation agencies globally is that interventions should be comprehensive, and includerisk assessments to explicitly consider and plan for indirect effects, or face substantial subsequent costs,” Bergstrom said.

Located about halfway between Australia and the Antarctic continent, Macquarie was designated a World Heritage site in 1997 as the world’s only island composed entirely of oceanic crust. It is known for its wind-swept landscape, and about 3.5 million seabirds and 80,000 elephant seals arrive there each year to breed.

The cats, rabbits, rats and mice are all nonnative species to Macquarie, probably introduced in the past 100 years by passing ships. Authorities have struggled for decades to remove them.

The invader predators menaced the native seabirds, some of them threatened species. So in 1995, the Parks and Wildlife Service of Tasmania that manages Macquarie tried to undo the damage by removing most of the cats.

Several conservation groups including the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Birds Australia said the problem was not the original eradication effort itself — but that it didn’t go far enough. They said the project should have taken aim at all the invasive mammals on the island at once.

“What was wrong was that the rabbits were not eradicated at the same time as the cats,” University of Auckland Prof. Mick Clout, who also is a member of the Union’s invasive species specialist group. “It would have been ideal if the cats and rabbits were eradicated at the same time, or the rabbits first and the cats subsequently.”

Liz Wren, a spokeswoman for the Parks and Wildlife Service of Tasmania, said authorities were aware from the beginning that removing the feral cats would increase the rabbit population. But at the time, researchers argued it was worth the risk considering the damage the cats were doing to the seabird populations.

“The alternative was to accept the known and extensive impacts of cats and not do anything for fear of other unknown impacts,” Wren said. “Since cats were eradicated, the grey petrel successfully bred on the island for the first time in a century and the recovery of Antarctic prions has continued since the eradication of feral cats.”

Now, the parks service has a new plan to finish the job, using technology and poisons that weren’t available a decade ago.

Wren said plans to eradicate both rabbits as well as rats and mice from the island will begin in 2010. Helicopters using global positioning systems will drop poisonous bait that targets all three pests. Later, teams will shoot, fumigate and trap the remaining rabbits, she said.

Some of the earlier critics are now behind this latest eradication effort, saying it should help the island’s ecosystem fully recover because it would remove the last remaining invasive species.

“Without this action, there will be serious long-term consequences for the majestic seabirds which nest on the island including the four threatened albatross species, and for the health of the island ecosystem as a whole,” said Dean Ingwersen, Bird Australia’s threatened bird network coordinator.

“We believe that the process they are going to follow uses best practice for this type of work,” Ingwersen said. “And that all possible ramifications have now been considered.”

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08 Jan 2009, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Politics, 1 Comments

Presidential Aging


Here’s an interesting computer simulation from CNN showing how Barack Obama may change after just four years in office. According to experts, presidents age at a rate that is double the average American. According to one expert:
“Chronic stress can produce lots of wear and tear on the body,” said James A. McCubbin, a Clemson University professor of psychology and senior associate dean of the College of Business and Behavioral Science. “This is what we see in the changes in the appearance in the beginning and end of the presidency.”

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22 Nov 2008, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, 0 Comments

Remembering Brenden Foster


A couple weeks a go I wrote about a young boy’s dying wish: To feed the homeless. Sadly, that heroic young man passed away from Leukemia yesterday. Brenden Foster was just 11-years-old. Below is one of the initial reports on Brenden’s passing away:

From OpEdNews:

Eleven year old Brenden Foster died this day of Friday, 21 November 2008, but throughout this world he will be remembered always. His darkest hour was his brightest light. This is a story as much of his words as it is of his deeds.

His dying wish was to help the homeless. “They’re probably starving, so give ‘em a chance, food and water.” It has become a national movement. He wasn’t afraid to die. He had said that he just wanted to make a difference, before his time came. And he did!

 

He was a regular kid, who wanted to become marine photographer. Some time ago had been diagnosed with leukemia. As death was staring him in his face, it’s others that he was thinking about. The homeless caught Brenden’s heartfelt attention. He had said, “Well, I was getting back from one of my appointments and I saw this big thing full of homeless people and then I thought. I should just get them something.” That the country, even the world responded, he said, “I think that is great. You think that’s great?”

He had one more wish, and that was to sprinkle wildflower seeds to save the bees. He had heard that the bees were dying off. His wish was answered by a retired pilot who asked his flying friends to sprinkle wild flower seeds around the world on Brenden’s behalf.

He spoke with the wisdom of ages. Of that which made him feel sad, he had said was, “When someone gives up.” His advice was, “Follow your dreams. Don’t let anything stop you.” Asked what he thought the best things in life are, he said, “Just having one.”

If we can learn anything in this life, we can be inspired to do so by this young man.

Three years ago, doctors diagnosed Brenden with leukemia. His body may have been held back but his spirit excelled far beyond the dreams of most of us. On death, “It happens. It’s natural,” He said.

“I should be gone in a week or so”, he had said. “I had a great time. And until my time comes, I’m going to keep having a great time,” he said. I heard that he saw angels coming for him three times in the night before he left us. Then Brenden took his darkest hour and turned it into the brightest of light that truly can inspire the world.

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10 Nov 2008, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, 4 Comments

Brenden Foster’s Last Wish


Someday, when it’s my time to depart from this world I hope I will have the same strength and positive attitude that Brenden Foster has about his last week or so of life. He really is an inspiration to us all. The video and article below from KOMO says it all about this courageous little guy.

From KOMO News Seattle:

LYNNWOOD, Wash. — Doctors gave 11-year-old Brenden Foster two weeks to live.

Those two weeks were up on Wednesday. On Friday, he shared his last wish.

Not yet a teenager, Brenden’s time to die has come.

“I should be gone in a week or so,” he said.

Brenden was the kid who ran the fastest, climbed the highest and dreamed of becoming a marine photographer. Leukemia took away all those things, but not his dying wish to help others.

“He’s always thought about others. Never complained about having to go through this, ever,” said his mother, Wendy Foster.

When Brenden was first diagnosed with leukemia, he and his mom began a new tradition. Every night they list three positive things that happened during the day, and they have to share a laugh. A chuckle will do, Brenden said, but a fake laugh will never do.

In the last days of his life, it was a homeless camp, namely Nickelsville, that captured the boy’s heart.

“I was coming back from one of my clinic appoints and I saw this big thing of homeless people, and then I thought I should just get them something,” he said.

Brenden is too ill to leave his bed and feed the homeless. He walked into an emergency room last December and hasn’t walked since.

But Brenden’s wish will not go unfulfilled. A group planned to gather in his honor on Friday night to make sandwiches and deliver them to the homeless.

“We’re making 200 sandwiches — half ham and cheese, and half peanut butter and jelly. He didn’t want them all to be peanut butter and jelly in case somebody was allergic to peanut butter,” said Jennifer Morrison, one of the participants.

“They’re probably starving, so give them a chance,” said Brenden.

Brenden, surrounded by love and wise beyond his years, urges others to follow their dreams.

“Mine already came true,” he said.

Brenden has relapsed for the last time. There is no chemo, no more transfusions; just comfort medications.

“It’s devastating, but I find great peace in knowing we’ve had our time together and that we will see each other again,” said Wendy.

Brenden has one more wish for the afterlife: become an angel who accomplishes even more in heaven than he did on Earth.

“I had a great time and until my time has come, I’m gonna keep having a good time,” he said.

Don’t cry for Brenden. He doesn’t want leukemia to claim any more tears.

 

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06 Nov 2008, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Politics, 0 Comments

Change in America


In case you’ve been hiding in a cave like Osama Bin Laden and didn’t hear, Barack Obama was elected 44th President of the United States Tuesday evening. Yes, it’s historic, monumental and symbolic beyond measure, but I won’t get into all of that. The (beautiful) article below from Boyd Reed sums it all up. Thanks to my friend Kelly for sending this along, and thanks to Boyd for such a poetic and touching piece:

I Didn’t Vote For Obama Today

I have a confession to make.

I did not vote for Barack Obama today.

I’ve openly supported Obama since March.  But I didn’t vote for him today.

I wanted to vote for Ronald Woods.  He was my algebra teacher at Clark Junior High in East St. Louis, IL.  He died 15 years ago when his truck skidded head-first into a utility pole.  He spent many a day teaching us many things besides the Pythagorean Theorem.  He taught us about Medgar Evers, Ralph Abernathy, John Lewis and many other civil rights figures who get lost in the shadow cast by Martin Luther King, Jr.

But I didn’t vote for Mr. Woods.

I wanted to vote for Willie Mae Cross.  She owned and operated Crossroads Preparatory Academy for almost 30 years, educating and empowering thousands of kids before her death in 2003.  I was her first student.  She gave me my first job, teaching chess and math concepts to kids in grades K-4 in her summer program.  She was always there for advice, cheer and consolation.  Ms. Cross, in her own way, taught me more about walking in faith than anyone else I ever knew.

But I didn’t vote for Ms. Cross.

I wanted to vote for Arthur Mells Jackson, Sr. and Jr.  Jackson Senior was a Latin professor.  He has a gifted school named for him in my hometown.  Jackson Junior was the pre-eminent physician in my hometown for over 30 years.  He has a heliport named for him at a hospital in my hometown.  They were my great-grandfather and great-uncle, respectively.

But I didn’t vote for Prof. Jackson or Dr. Jackson.

I wanted to vote for A.B. Palmer.  She was a leading civil rights figure in Shreveport, Louisiana, where my mother grew up and where I still have dozens of family members.  She was a strong-willed woman who earned the grudging respect of the town’s leaders because she never, ever backed down from anyone and always gave better than she got.  She lived to the ripe old age of 99, and has a community center named for her in Shreveport.

But I didn’t vote for Mrs. Palmer.

I wanted to vote for these people, who did not live to see a day where a Black man would appear on their ballots on a crisp November morning.

In the end, though, I realized that I could not vote for them any more than I could vote for Obama himself. 

So who did I vote for?

No one.

I didn’t vote.  Not for President, anyway. 

Oh, I went to the voting booth.  I signed, was given my stub, and was walked over to a voting machine.  I cast votes for statewide races and a state referendum on water and sewer improvements.

I stood there, and I thought about all of these people, who influenced my life so greatly.  But I didn’t vote for who would be the 44th President of the United States.

When my ballot was complete, except for the top line, I finally decided who I was going to vote for – and then decided to let him vote for me.  I reached down, picked him up, and told him to find Obama’s name on the screen and touch it.

And so it came to pass that Alexander Reed, age 5, read the voting screen, found the right candidate, touched his name, and actually cast a vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Oh, the vote will be recorded as mine.  But I didn’t cast it. 

Then again, the person who actually pressed the Obama box and the red “vote” button was the person I was really voting for all along. 

It made the months of donating, phonebanking, canvassing, door hanger distributing, sign posting, blogging, arguing and persuading so much sweeter. 

So, no, I didn’t vote for Barack Obama.  I voted for a boy who now has every reason to believe he, too, can grow up to be anything he wants…even President.

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03 Nov 2008, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Politics, 0 Comments

Maya Angelou: It’s Time to Lift America’s Spirit


Here’s a great interview CNN did with Maya Angelou on politics and tomorrow’s election:

NEW YORK (CNN) – At 80, Maya Angelou says her “knees are not all that swift and my lungs need some extra help but other than that, my desire to learn and to share, that has not abated.”

She shares what she’s learned in an eventful life in her best-selling new book, “Letter to My Daughter.” Angelou achieved fame for her autobiographical writing, including “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” and her poetry.

She read her poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at President Clinton’s first inauguration. She was only the second poet invited to read at the swearing in of a new president.

But her career has had many facets — Angelou has been a singer, dancer, playwright, director and teacher.

In 166 pages, “Letter to My Daughter” distills stories from Angelou’s life into universal lessons. She writes about birth, life and death, about the ways people misunderstand each other and then transcend their conflict. She calls on national leaders to raise the country’s spirit and on Americans to remember that this is the nation that defeated the Nazis and expanded people’s freedom through the civil rights movement.

“Politicians must set their aims for the high ground and according to our various leanings, Democratic, Republican, Independent, we will follow,” she writes. “Politicians must be told if they continue to sink into the mud of obscenity, they will proceed alone.”

In an interview last week in her 1881 brownstone in Harlem, decorated in vibrant, bright colors, Angelou sat at the round table in her dining room, sipping coffee, as she talked about the election and her work.

She supported Sen. Hillary Clinton’s bid for the Democratic nomination and then backed Sen. Barack Obama once the primaries were over.

CNN: In the chapter called “National Spirit,” you call on political leaders to raise the level of discussion. Could you elaborate on that?

Maya Angelou: What I’ve encouraged voters to do is to vote for the person I am extolling, and also don’t expect that if your man or woman gets in, that all things will be rectified immediately. It’s taken us a long time to come to this place of weariness and almost hopelessness.

So because Obama gets in or McCain gets in, it’s not going to be repaired overnight. The economy is not going to be repaired, the schools — the disaster in our schools — will not be repaired overnight. Nor will the social conversation be repaired overnight.

However, I would encourage every voter to say to his or her candidate, go in and do it, and you will not do it alone. I will help. You have to get up off that sofa or off that couch and give something to the country — even if it’s one hour every other week to an old people’s home — I will read, go into the children’s ward and read, or give to your church or your synagogue or your mosque. … Offer something to the country. So you don’t just sit there.

CNN: What does it say about the country that Barack Obama is a candidate to be president?

Angelou: The country is growing up and confessing to something we’ve know all along. What prevented us from admitting that we knew that? And I was taken back to slavery.

If you will have a person enslaved, the first thing you must do is convince yourself that the person is subhuman. The second thing you have to do is convince your allies so you’ll have some help, and the third and probably unkindest cut of all is to convince that person that he or she is subhuman and deserves it.

Well, such a job has been done on all of us that people found it very difficult to admit that human beings are more alike than we are unalike. We’ve known it. But to admit it, you have to stop saying because this guy speaks another language, because their eyes are shaped differently from mine, because they’re first-generation Americans from Eastern Europe, then they don’t count, I don’t have to consider them. With this, the country is finally able to see through complexion and see community.

CNN: You’ve known and worked with people like Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Could you imagine what their reaction would be to this?

Angelou: I think everybody would be weeping tears of joy really.

I think of my grandmother who raised me. She was a daughter of a former slave. She knew this was going to happen. You know that when I was young, I was physically abused and so I stopped talking. I thought that my voice had killed the criminal. … The man had been found dead. Police said he had been beaten to death. So I knew, because I told [people] that he did it, that my voice could just go out and kill people.

So after a few months, my mother’s people sent me and my brother back to this little village in Arkansas to my grandmother, my father’s mother who was raising me, and she used to braid my hair.

My hair was huge and very curly, black. And my grandmother put her hand behind my neck and held it so she wouldn’t break my neck by accident. And she would start to brush my hair and she would say, “Sister, Mama don’t care what these people say about you, that you must be an idiot, you must be a moron because you can’t talk. Mama know when you and the good Lord get ready, you’re going to teach all over this world. You’re going to be a mighty teacher.”

I didn’t speak for six years. She said that to me all the time, in this little village in Arkansas. [Now] I teach all over the world, I teach in French and Spanish, so when I stand up on a stage or see a book of mine gets accolades or a piece of music I’ve written, I think about my Mama, and she died before I really came of age, and I just think she knew it.

CNN: She was prophetic about you, but beyond that?

Angelou: Yes, [she believed] it will get better. And you have to continue to prepare yourself, continue to build yourself, continue to elevate yourself and be a benefit, be a blessing rather than a curse, and things will get better. And they have, so when I think of Dr. King and Malcolm, Fannie Lou Hamer, Medgar Evers, I also think of Chief Albert Luthuli, one of the first Africans to earn the Nobel Prize.

I mean that after Chief Luthuli, apartheid was so rigid, unbreakable that men had to carry their IDs on plastic cards that were too large for any suit, so they flapped, reminding them constantly who they were. It was my blessing to meet Nelson Mandela before he went into prison and I’ve seen him many times since. He knew this day would come, and to be able to stay in prison for 27 years, knowing that the day would come.

CNN: What gave you the inspiration to call the book, “Letter to My Daughter,” even though you don’t have a daughter? [Angelou has a son, the writer Guy Johnson.]

Angelou:There was an African-American poet, her name was Anne Spencer; she wrote a poem called “Letter to My Sister,” around the turn of the 20th Century. … I started making notes to Oprah [Winfrey] about 20 years ago. She really became a daughter to me.

So there were things I wanted to talk to her about; I made notes, copious notes, and about a year and a half ago, I got out that box called WIP, works in progress, and I started going through two or three lines and I said, “Hmmm, there’s an essay in here.”

So it is a letter to all my daughters, to those who don’t know they are. It is my intent to say you may encounter many defeats, but you must not be defeated. You will be changed, events will change you, but you have to decide not to be reduced.

CNN: Have you been in touch with Oprah lately about the election?

Angelou:I spoke to her about a week ago … [During the primaries], a newspaper reporter said this proves that Oprah Winfrey doesn’t listen to everything Maya Angelou says, because she was supporting Sen. Obama and I was supporting Sen. Clinton.

And when I was asked by the reporter, “What do you say to Oprah?” my answer was, “I say nothing, she’s a woman who thinks carefully and profoundly and she has courage. So she’s chosen the person she thinks would be the best person for our country. I do the same.”

The primaries proved that Oprah had selected the one that most people wanted, so I went to Sen. Obama right after that. Hillary Clinton … telephoned me and thanked me for my unwavering support, and then asked me to please put that same energy behind Mr. Obama.

CNN: Another theme in the book is to believe in yourself, to have faith in yourself. Why is that important?

AngelouYou need to know that you can go somewhere. You’re not just like grass growing on the street. You’re like trees, you have roots, and they’ve done wonderful things, and you need to know that, and by knowing that, you see how outfitted you are for these times. And that you really owe it to those who went before so that you can add to them for those who are yet to come.

You need to know that you are in a continuum, and if you understand that, you realize that you are worthwhile. This continuum would be broken without me.

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31 Oct 2008, Posted by Chris Kaufman in Culture, Politics, 0 Comments

Dead People Voting in Florida


1,636 registered voters in Florida are dead. If you don’t think 1,636 voters is a lot, consider that Bush won Florida (and subsequently the presidency) in 2000 by less than 200 votes. That’s the graduating class of a small town high school. If you sit down and make a list, you can probably think of 200 people you know. Imagine if a group as small as your list of friends and family could shift an entire presidential election, because it did. No matter what your political persuasion, realize how powerful just a few votes can be in a nation of 300 million people. Think about that if you don’t plan on making it out to the polls this Tuesday.

From WFTV:

Dead People Voting Throughout Florida

Thursday, October 30, 2008 – updated: 3:41 pm EDT October 30, 2008

VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. – Thousands of dead Floridians are registered to vote and some in Central Florida had ballots cast in their names long after their deaths.  

“That is scary,” said Jim Branch. 

Branch’s mother Marjorie died in 2004 but someone voted for her in 2006. Branch had tried to get his mother removed from the voter rolls. 

“It was much easier for me calling Social Security and taking her off not getting any more checks here, than it was that (voter registration),” he sid. 

County records show James Santiago voted in the 2006 general election. He too, was dead. His wife, Joann, sees this as an open invitation for voter fraud. 

“I think it leaves it open to sign his name, during an election, especially an important one like this year,” said Joann. 

Channel Nine discovered 1,636 registered voters in Central Florida are dead. 

“This is what makes Supervisors of Elections lose sleep at night,” said Volusia County Supervisor of Elections Ann McFall. 

McFall said it used to be easy to clear out voter rolls. 

“We had two people who did nothing but cut obituary notices out of the papers,” she said. “That’s how we found out someone died.” 

But 2002’s Help America Vote act, which made it easier to register to vote, also made it more difficult to remove voters from the rolls. But Orange County Election Supervisor Bill Cowles doesn’t worry. 

“I think the mechanisms are in place. There’s enough checks and balances in place,” he said. 

However, 90 days before the election, voter rolls can’t be changed and if the state doesn’t tell elections offices a voter has died, that voter can be on the rolls for years. 

“The minute I said he was deceased, they should’ve made note, they should’ve done whatever they had to do, the people sitting behind that table, they should have done something,” said Joann Santiago 

Elections supervisors say they are pushing the state to allow them to accept death certificates from families as reasonable evidence to remove dead voters from the rolls.

 

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