We’ve brought you regular updates about 2012 presidential hopeful Herman Cain not only because he’s the only GOP member to make a strong indication that he’s running for president, but also because he’s an interesting guy. We bring you this video that fulfills both criteria. In an interview with CBN’s David Brody , Cain decided to get poetic when talking about the upcoming presidential race. According to him, he’s looking forward to a crowded GOP field because it will give him the chance to shine. Or, as he says it: “My grandparents on both sides were farmers. Small farmers. They had just enough farm to raise enough food to feed the family. They didn’t make long trips to the Farmer’s Market so they can make money. They raised food, raised hogs, raised chickens and eggs to live off of.  I’ll never forget as a child watching my grandmother churn milk and watch the butter rise to the top. That’s what’s going to happen in this Republican Primary competition. The butter is going to rise to the top because the American people re the ones that are churning the candidates that are there.” Brody’s response is priceless: “You’re going to be the butter guy? You’re the Parkay?” As someone who grew up in Wisconsin, I can certainly appreciate the analogy.

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Herman Cain: I‘m ’Butter‘ That Will ’Rise to the Top’

In October 1995, then law-school lecturer and new author Barack Obama did an interview with The Crisis , the official magazine of the NAACP. The interview has now been posted to Google Books; to the best of my knowledge, Obama's comments in this interview have not yet been brought to light elsewhere in the media. Images of the magazine pages can be found here . A couple of the more notable comments: Crisis: How do you feel to hear people say mixed-race children are children in limbo? Obama: In a society as divided as we are, there are certain problems you can confront if you know your white side of the family. If I”m looking into the face of my mother, those kids of differences do arise. Take my grandmother, while she loves me, she still has a fear of strange black men. For her, her suspicions and fears are real. We all confront that to varying degrees along the spectrum . . . It's on the nightly news. In May 2008, the Jeremiah Wright sermons came to light, and Obama discussed his grandmother in his widely analyzed speech on race relations. Some called his criticism of his grandmother, and equating her comments to Wright's sermons, “throwing grandma under the bus.” But this interview indicates Obama cited his grandmother as an example of white racism for many years before he ran for president. Crisis: Looking to the future, do you think race will play a major role among people, or will economics and classism dictate how we define ourselves? Obama: Yes. The world will look like Brazil, with its racial mix. Folks love Michael Jordan. He's as black as my father was. People don't think of (Jordan) as black. Integration is not a victory on our part. And while I'm not advocating segregation, in segregated black communities, there was a lot to be grateful for. There were black doctors, black lawyers. They didn't leave the black community when they became successful, like so many successful blacks do today. Crisis: Will race relations get better? Obama: Not in the short term. We're moving out of a period of American preeminence on the world economic stage. Global competition means increasing economic uncertainty for the majority of Americans, black and white. Unfortunately, politicians in this country find it convenient to define these problems in racial terms — affirmative action, immigration and so on. It's always easier to organize people around tribe than around principle. These last comments are rather fascinating, as the young Obama expressed a belief that America was in economic decline just as the 1990s boom was picking up steam, peaking with the dot-com mania of the late 1990s. Jim Geraghty

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Obama, in 1995: ‘My grandmother, while she loves me, still has a fear of strange black men.’

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McLEAN, Va. (AP) — A toddler has died after police say she was thrown six stories off a shopping mall walkway in Virginia by a woman believed to be her grandmother. Police said the 2½-year-old girl fell Monday night from a walkway that links the mall to a parking garage at Tysons Corner Center. The girl was taken to a hospital where she later died.

Carmela Dela Rosa, charged with throwing her grandaughter off a 6-story walkway.

Fairfax County police spokeswoman Tawny Wright said 50-year-old Carmela Dela Rosa of Fairfax was arrested and charged with aggravated malicious wounding. Wright said the charge will be amended to murder now that the girl, Angelyn Ogdoc, has died. Wright said the toddler and Dela Rosa were leaving the mall with family when Dela Rosa allegedly picked the girl up and threw her off the walkway.

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Woman Charged With Throwing Grandaughter Off 6-Story Mall Walkway

Thanksgiving travel quote

On November 23, 2010, in Uncategorized, by

I’m sitting here in the airport waiting for my vacation flight (I might post a pic later to make everyone jealous) and I heard one of the best quotes possibly ever in the entire history of Thanksgiving travels. Elderly Lady 1: I got three grandchildren. Elderly Lady 2: Oh? Elderly Lady 1: Yeah, none of them have committed a major crime, and two have their master’s degree. Elderly Lady 2: That’s nice. I hope my grandmother brags about me in terms of my lack of major crimes committed.

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Thanksgiving travel quote

Refusing to Give Up Books

On September 2, 2010, in Uncategorized, by If Bush Did It

From Emma Silvers, at Slate : On the 2 train uptown during the morning commute the other day, I was in my usual state of sleepwalk — face crammed into a fellow passenger’s armpit — when a young woman standing 3 feet away from me removed an Amazon Kindle from her oversize designer purse and began to read. A surprising wave of disgust overcame me as I stared at the smooth metallic back of the thing, at her manicured fingernails positioned against it, at her face as she read … whatever it was that she was reading. That was part of it, I realized, trying to analyze my own ridiculous, knee-jerk judgment of this stranger. I couldn’t see what she was reading, and it bothered me. I couldn’t peer in that tiny window onto someone’s interior world, or delight in the juxtaposition that a book choice sometimes presents — when you notice a stuffy, 90-something grandma buried in a trashy romance novel, or a would-be gangsta engrossed in “Love in the Time of Cholera.” But at 26, a supposed child of the Internet generation (who, I recently discovered, must henceforth be referred to as “The Millennials,” and discussed in the media mainly in reference to our refusal to get real jobs or move out of our parents’ basements), I’ve begun to feel out of step with this particular aspect of youth culture. I’m starting to understand what my grandmother must feel when she heads to the library once a week to dutifully check the e-mail account my uncle created for her. As I stared at the woman, fully engaged, happily using this very practical and very expensive device that, for all I know, she saved her pennies for a year to buy, I felt something entirely out of proportion with the situation: I felt personally slighted. I never thought my lack of interest in e-readers made me particularly unique — until recently, when Consumer Reports and national headlines started implying I was actually in a freakish minority. Earlier this summer, you could practically hear the collective weeping of small publishers nationwide when Amazon announced that Kindle books were outselling hardcovers by a 180-to-100 margin. Then came the drumbeat for the thinner, cheaper Kindle model forthcoming in September, and the competitors’ accompanying rush to stay in the game. A crop of stories attempted to sort out the so-called e-reader wars: Kindle vs. iPad vs. Nook – which is right for you? More service-oriented articles provided tips for all the people who aren’t me: “Copying Text From Your Kindle to Computer,” or “The Best Way to Highlight Passages on Your Nook” (hint: not with an actual highlighter). These articles all had slightly different aims, but their bottom line was the same: Of course you need to buy an e-reader. What are you, a Mennonite? One recent story in the New York Times went so far as to claim that iPads and Kindles and Nooks are making the very act of reading better by — of course — making it social. As one user explained, “We are in a high-tech era and the sleekness and portability of the iPad erases any negative notions or stigmas associated with reading alone.” Hear that? There’s a stigma about reading alone . (How does everyone else read before bed — in pre-organized groups?) Regardless, it turns out that, for the last two decades, I’ve been Doing It Wrong. And funny enough, up until e-books came along, reading was one of the few things I felt confident I was doing exactly right. More at the link . I haven’t made the leap yet, although I doubt I’m as opposed to e-reading as our essayist here.

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Refusing to Give Up Books

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Obama seeks respite in Maine (AFP)

On July 16, 2010, in barack obama, Uncategorized, by If Bush Did It

AFP – US President Barack Obama escaped the heat — political and meteorological — of Washington on Friday for a family weekend in Acadia National Park in the northeastern state of Maine.

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Obama seeks respite in Maine
(AFP)