VOA News: ‘VOA On Assignment: Can Jeff Bezos Save The Washington Post?’

VOA News: Can Jeff Bezos Save The Washington Post?Source:VOA News with a look at the paper of record, at least in Washington, The Washington Post.

“VOA business reporter Mil Arcega talks with On Assignment’s Philip Alexiou about the significance of Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos purchasing The Washington Post. What could it mean for the newspaper industry as a whole? Mil explains.”

From VOA News

“Voice of America (VOA or VoA) is the state-owned news network and international radio broadcaster of the United States of America. It is the largest[3] and oldest of the U.S.-funded international broadcasters.[4][5] VOA produces digital, TV, and radio content in 48 languages,[6] which it distributes to affiliate stations around the world. Its targeted and primary audience is non-American.

VOA was established in 1942,[7] and the VOA charter (Public Laws 94-350 and 103-415)[8] was signed into law in 1976 by President Gerald Ford.

VOA is headquartered in Washington, D.C., and overseen by the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), an independent agency of the U.S. government.[9] Funds are appropriated annually under the budget for embassies and consulates. As of 2022, VOA has a weekly worldwide audience of approximately 326 million (up from 236.6 million in 2016) and employs 961 staff with annual budget of $252 million…

Voice of America is seen by some listeners[who?] as having a positive impact while others[like whom?] see it as American propaganda; it also serves US diplomacy.”

From Wikipedia

If saving The Washington Post means turning it into another celebrity or tabloid or soft news newspaper, where a lot of these softball stories become national and front page stories for them and moving The Post away from its hard news tradition and standards, (sort of the direction that CNN and MSNBC at least to a certain extent have moved into) then The Post as we know it won’t have been saved and the Washington Post will be gone replaced by some softball publication, that only calls itself The Washington Post. But if saving the Post means making hard news profitable in the 21st century, then maybe this is a good move.

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President Franklin Roosevelt: The New Deal

FDR - Franklin D. Roosevelt

Source:Kyrack Kramer– President Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat, New York) 32nd President of the United States (1933-45) the New Deal is probably his most memorable domestic legislative accomplishment.

“Franklin Delano Roosevelt died in office on 12 April 1945, just a few months before WWII ended and during a time of great economic recovery. The reason America was doing so well, in spite of being in a horrific war, was FDR’s New Deal and its three ‘R’s (Relief for the impoverished, Recovery of the economy, and Reform of banking and Wall Street) … what is basically democratic socialism.”

From Kyrack Kramer

“Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes Pulitzer Prize winning historian David M. Kennedy for a discussion of what is to be learned from The Great Depression. Professor Kennedy, author of Freedom From Fear, The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945, analyzes the genius of Roosevelt’s leadership, the tragedy of Herbert Hoover, the relationshp between FDR’s short term goals to deal with the economy and his long term goals to establish a new political coalition and create institutions to stabilize American capitalism and more equitably distribute its resources. Professor Kennedy goes on to draw parallels wtih the current global economic crisis and the lessons that the Obama administration could learn from the New Deal.”

Conversations with History - David M_ Kennedy

Source:UC Berkeley Events– Presidential historian David Kennedy, talking about Franklin D. Roosevelt.

From UC Berkeley Events

As a Liberal myself I don’t like hearing Franklin Roosevelt being viewed as a Liberal, especially when it comes to civil liberties, equal rights, the United States Constitution, and individual liberty broadly, areas where President Roosevelt doesn’t score very well with me and other Americans.

I mean President Roosevelt is a bigger inspiration for today’s Neoconservatives, who take the view that national security is more important than individual liberty. And that national security concerns even trump the U.S. Constitution. As we’ve seen with the so-called War on Terror like with the Patriot Act.

The way his the FDR Administration dealt with German, Italian and Japanese-Americans during World War II, three important ethnic groups in America, groups who all immigrated or descended from those main countries that the United States were fighting against during World War II. Germany, Italy and Japan, these ethnic groups were being detained and held by the Roosevelt Administration and held in concentration camps. Similar to how German-Jews were being detained by the Nazi Germans in Germany, because of their ethnicity and were seen as threats to the state because of their ethnic background. And seen loyal to someone other than their home country.

Now of course these Americans were certainly treated better than the European-Jews. But what they have in common is they were being held because of their ethnicity. No real Liberal would have a policy, or support a policy that detained people because of their ethnicity, or race. So on that score alone FDR scores really bad as a Liberal.

Neoconservative, comes to mind when I look at Franklin Roosevelt when it comes to civil liberties and individual freedom. A Liberal, wouldn’t have done that and been much farther ahead of FDR when it came to civil and equal right for all Americans. Not treating non-Anglo-Saxon-Americans as intruders in their own country.

When you think of economic liberalism, it is about using government to empower people in need and other people. So they have the tools that they need to live well in life be successful. Not use government to take care of people and not expect anything from them on their own. And make them dependent on the state for their economic well-being.

The New Deal was successful because it created a system that people could go to when they were in need and simply did not have the economic resources to take care of themselves.

That is where the safety net not welfare state starts. But not where it ends and in many cases like with Welfare Insurance, that is where the safety net ends with the New Deal. So in that sense FDR was more of a Progressive in his first two terms and  more of a  Social Democrat in his last term as someone who wanted to use government to take care of people like with a welfare state. And not using government to empower people to be able to take care of themselves.

And then you get to civil rights where President Roosevelt was either not interested in it, or didn’t believe all Americans deserved the same constitutional rights and be treated equally under law. Which again no real Liberal believes in and you get to two key areas where FDR doesn’t score very well as a Liberal: civil liberties and equal rights.

But where FDR does very well as a Progressive or Social Democrats when it came to economic policy, has to do with the safety net and infrastructure investment. And other government work projects programs.

But where FDR does score very well as a Progressive is where it comes to infrastructure investment, economic regulation, not economic statism, or state-ownership which is different.

And foreign policy where FDR was a clear Liberal Internationalist and a big reason why America won World War II and the Cold War and FDR does very well as a Progressive, but not in the other key areas of progressivism. Which is about using government to help people in need, not run their lives for them. While protecting our individual rights.

I’m not sure Franklin Roosevelt ever knew his own political philosophy, or ever had one. He was someone at least as President that took issues as they came and did what he thought was best. But someone who developed an economic philosophy as he became President and became a real economic Progressive. Someone who wanted an activist government to make government a great country for more Americans.

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C-SPAN: Clarence Jones- Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have a Dream’ Speech

CSPAN: Clarence Jones: Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" SpeechSource:CSPAN– Dr. Martin L. King’s speechwriter.

“Preview – Full Program Airs August 25, 2013 at 5:05pm & 2:05am ET”

Source:C-SPAN

The I have a Dream speech was a vision for how all Americans should be treated in the United States, which was equally. And be judged by the content of their character and not by the color of their skin.

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ABC News: Good Morning America: Is Governor Chris Christie’s Gay Conversion Ban a Sign for 2016?

ABC News: Is Chris Christie's Gay 'Conversion' Ban a Sign for 2016_Source:ABC News– Governor Chris Christie (Republican, New Jersey)

“The New Jersey governor’s latest move could affect how voters see him if he runs for president.”

From ABC News

The religious-right must see Chris Christie as a devil right now

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The Washington Post: ‘Mitch McConnell’s Worst Week’

Mitch McConnell's 'Worst Week'Source:The Washington Post Chris Cillizza playing political satirist. Or is it cartoonist? Perhaps buffoonist? I don’t know. I expect my followers to figure out the major details and then let me in on them.

“The Senate minority leader held his nose despite his face — and had a very bad week.”

From The Washington Post

To try to sound serious, or try to play a serious person on this: (perhaps give an Oscar winning performance as a serious person) I have to pushback a little bit on what Chris Cillizza said here.

The only people who knew that one of Ron Paul’s former aides, now works for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, is the aid himself, (unless he’s just suddenly went braindead) perhaps Ron Paul, perhaps is son Senator Rand Paul, maybe the major newspapers in Kentucky, especially their Congressional reporters, the Senate Republican Leadership. All right, that’s not a lot of people.

Mitch McConnell is already as popular as skunks at weddings, Snoop Dogg at a KKK rally, prostitutes at Southern Baptist Convention, gay marriage in Mississippi, etc. Hopefully you get the point by now, because I’m running out of references here. If he loses to some populist blowhole like Matt Bevin, because one of his staffers is a Libertarian, then I think a Socialist could be the Senate Minority Leader, even statewide in Guntucky. (Or is that Kentucky?)

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ABC News: This Week in Politics: ‘This Week Roundtable’

ABC News: This Week in Politics_ 'This Week' RoundtableSource:ABC News with This Week’s roundtable.

“Rep. Keith Ellison, Bill Kristol, David Plouffe and Carly Fiorina on ‘This Week.'”

From ABC News

The problem with the Republican Party is that they don’t have a message that can unite the party, that could get Independents and non-traditional Republicans behind them that are looking for an alternative to the Democratic Party. That have things in common with the GOP as it relates to small business, taxes and regulations.

I believe the Republican Leadership knows they need new voters, but they also know that if they move too fast for those voters, it will cost them their traditional Protestant-Fundamentalist-Populist base of voters that are still fighting the culture war in America. And see the country as going downhill since the 1960s, that would like to impose their moral values and lifestyle on the rest of the country.

And unfortunately the GOP needs this base of voters to succeed in the short-term but for them to succeed long-term, they are going to have to move away from this base and bring in new voters. So the GOP right now is transitioning from the old Republican Party to a potential new Republican Party ten years from now. And right now they are caught in-between.

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The White House: President Obama’s Weekly Address (08-17-13)

The White House: Weekly Address: Working to Implement the Affordable Care ActSource:The White House– President Barack H. Obama (Democrat, Illinois)

“President Obama says we are on the way to fully implementing the Affordable Care Act and helping millions of Americans.”

From The White House

President Obama sending mixed signals this week about the Affordable Care Act. A few days ago he delays consumer protections in the bill and now he’s speaking in favor of it. Another example of why the ACA a law that I support is so unpopular when even the President sends mixed signals about his own law.

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C-SPAN: American Artifacts Preview: One Life: Martin Luther King Jr.

C-SPAN covering the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington this weekend, should be interesting

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The Washington Post: Nia-Malika Henderson: ‘Congress: As Unproductive As it is Unpopular!’

Congress_ As unproductive as it is unpopular!Source:The Washington Post– left to right: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Democrat, Nevada) and House Speaker John (don’t call me Boner) Boehner) the odd couple of inaction and dysfunction. Oh yeah, Nia-Malika Henderson. Perhaps you can tell who is who on your own.

“Americans REALLY don’t like Congress. Nia-Malika Henderson explains just how low Congressional approval is, and why Americans are so unhappy with their elected leaders. Watch the full episode of On Background here…

From The Washington Post

If you had the choice of being a member of Congress, or a member of Club Fed Prison, which one would you take? I would probably select Congress, especially the Senate, instead of the House. But I would hold out before I finally made my decision and be like: “Come on, these can’t be the only options here.”

When you are a member of Congress, especially in the leadership and your party controls the chamber that you are a member of and personal accident attorneys are more trusted then your place of employment, senators and representatives have a big problem.

But as the great political satirist George Carlin once said: American voters get the government that they voted for. And I would only add, the government that we deserve. This is what happens when you have a divided government, including a divided Congress, in a a country that’s as politically divided as we are, unlimited gridlock.

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Associated Press: ‘Attorney General Eric Holder Wants Changes in Criminal Justice System’

Holder Wants Changes in Criminal Justice SystemSource:Associated Press-U.S.Attorney General Eric Holder.

“With the U.S. facing massive prison overflow, Attorney General Eric Holder called Monday for major changes to the criminal justice system that would scale back harsh sentences for certain drug related crimes.”

From the Associated Press

Prisons are for real criminals, people who represent real threats to society because they’ve harmed people intentionally. Either because they like hurting people, or to support themselves. Not for people who’ve made mistakes in life but otherwise do not represent serious threats to society. Who could otherwise take care of themselves and perhaps just need the skills to do that. Rather than wasting their lives in prison accomplishing nothing and having their bills paid for by tax payers.

There are people who commit crimes and do need to be sanctioned for that. But a lot of these offenders do not need prison time and society would be much better off if these nonviolent offenders were in halfway houses or jail. Where they can be contributing to society and even paying for their cost of living until they are ready to return to society.

And for the offenders that do need to be in prison like violent offenders, prisons shouldn’t be warehouses either, but a place for inmates to do their time and have opportunities to prepare themselves to be successful on the outside.

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