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High ResolutionI’m utterly mad for Maddow. Look at how her face radiates eloquence and knowledge! (at Atlanta Symphony Hall)
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swissmiss | CreativeMornings: Ping Fu
“Bamboo is flexible, bending in the wind but never breaking.”
Ping Fu, a pioneering software innovator and Silicon Valley entrepreneur, gives a talk to CreativeMornings about happiness and resilience. Before she was entrepreneur of the year, she grew up knowing what it’s like to be a child soldier, a factory worker, and a political prisoner during Mao’s Cultural Revolution (1966-76).
To Mao, the Cultural Revolution was his vision for a resurgence of possibilities and prosperity for his people. But in reality, the results were (albeit in my western-taught perspective) devastating: Thousands of books were burned, teachers were persecuted and publicly humiliated, individuals were jailed if they possessed copies of western literature/culture, families were torn apart by betrayal… the effects are still felt today.
I hear stories from my mom and Ping Fu and I thank my lucky stars (every single one of them) that billions of years of evolution and circumstances have led to where and who I am today. Hearing their stories, I imagine what could have been and I’m so incredibly grateful that they’re just that: imaginary. It makes me appreciate my mother so much more for making her life here, more than I think she’ll ever know.
(via swiss-miss)
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We the People petition the Obama Administration to increase the budget of NASA
I’ve been on a science/NASA kick lately. Why? Because I’m flabbergasted, confused, and disturbed as to why NASA is so underfunded by the government.
What, another federal program that needs money? Pfft, tell me something new, Grace.
Well consider this nugget by BAMF Neil Degrasse Tyson:
As a fraction of your tax dollar today, what is the total cost of all spaceborne telescopes, planetary probes, the rovers on Mars, the International Space Station, the space shuttle, telescopes yet to orbit, and missions yet to fly?’ Answer: one-half of one percent of each tax dollar. Half a penny. I’d prefer it were more: perhaps two cents on the dollar. Even during the storied Apollo era, peak NASA spending amounted to little more than four cents on the tax dollar. (From Space Chronicles)
Before there was Kickstarter, your tax dollars could fund NASA research that turns into crazy amazing stuff you can have at home. If you woke up this morning from a restful sleep on your Tempurpedic, sign this petition to increase the budget of NASA. If you can’t imagine life without cloud technology and wireless syncing, sign this petition. If you’ve ever had a successful surgical operation, sign this petition.
The world seems a little darker these days, but what keeps us from being engulfed by darkness is the light cast from our dreams. We must continue dreaming, and that starts with funding NASA adequately by calling for the budget to be increased to at least 1% of the US annual budget. By investing in NASA, we’re investing in America.
If you would like to donate directly to NASA, you can do so through Penny4NASA (not officially affiliated with NASA itself).
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Dear Young Conservative
Dear young conservative,
My name is DC Pierson and I hope you are reading this. My ideal reader for this piece is an actual person under thirty years old who self-identifies as conservative. I would like it very much if this letter found readers beyond my typical (and beloved) echo chamber of liberal comedians and comedy fans. If you’re reading this and you’re not a young conservative, I’ll bet you’re friends with one on Facebook and I would love it if you could pass this along to them.
First off: I in no way mean for this to be patronizing. I’m not mocking you, young conservative. I know what it is to be a young conservative. I was one.
When I was in high school, in the early part of the first George W. Bush presidency, it seemed kind of cool and punk to me to identify as conservative. I didn’t agree with their social policies, but that wasn’t the point. The point was, what if all my liberal high-school-kid friends were wrong? It was a ton of fun to think of myself as the sole voice of reason among a bunch of wrong-headed young people who hadn’t read the same blogs I had, and hadn’t been introduced to Ayn Rand by their girlfriend last summer the way I had.
Looking back on all that, on the times I argued with my History teacher in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, among other things, I am deeply ashamed. And this shame comes not from the fact that I now have different political beliefs, different political beliefs shared, in some form, by almost all of my colleagues and friends. I almost always relish having a minority opinion. It’s a stubborn, age-resistant part of my personality. I am still the guy who loves hating the thing everyone else likes, or liking the thing everyone else hates. I didn’t like the movie DRIVE very much. I know. Come at me. So I’d be the first person to want to have a political belief counter to the ones treasured by all my friends. I argue most frequently with people I’m actually in total agreement with. I’m just that asshole. So it’s not that I felt the need to join the herd and now that I have, I’m ashamed to have ever felt differently than I do now.
I am ashamed because I accepted into my heart and head a system of thought I now believe to be, to borrow a term from my old friend Ayn Rand, anti-life: that government should only exist to make it easy for businesses to do business, the idea that it is our civic duty to have no civic duty. I no longer believe that the way to make things better for everyone is to let people with money do whatever they want, whenever they want. I feel I’ve earned the crap out of this belief, given that I used to believe precisely the opposite, and I’ve taken a long journey to the side I stand on now.
And I urge you, before you dismiss me as a long-haired Hollywood goofball liberal, to read on, and to listen to me in every bit the earnest that I am writing to you. Please don’t pull the dismissive ripcord in your mind, the one labeled “You’re just saying that because you’re biased, etc…” that all of us use every day to reject the idea that someone who disagrees with us may have a point. This ripcord is cynicism, plain and simple, and it mars political discourse and if we continue to pull it every time someone starts to say something that doesn’t jibe with what we already think, life on this planet will soon be quite literally impossible.
So:
Food for thought. Liberals, read it for a little insight into your conservative friends. Above all, everyone should read this.
What else are you going to do? Watch Wolf Blitzer molest a few more maps?
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High ResolutionTV Radio
Illustrator Wendy Macnaughton is hand-drawing the election hullabaloo at NPR headquarters in DC.
Much better coverage of the election.
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Nondenominational #govote

#govote by Travis Ladue
Click here to find your polling station and share these images with your friends to make sure they #GoVote as well.
For more #govote images and to submit your own go to: govote.org
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REASON 86: BARACK OBAMA IS PERHAPS THE GREATEST PRESIDENT OF MODERN TIMES AT COMMUNICATING DIRECTLY WITH FOREIGN POPULATIONS. HE HAS ALSO CHANGED THE WAY THE GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATES WITH ITS OWN CITIZENS ABOUT THE OUTSIDE WORLD.
I am excited for four more years of an Obama presidency for many reasons, but the one I am going to write about is selfish: I want four more sweet years of Canadians liking Americans. The Republicans will try to convince America that President Obama being a good communicator is somehow a bad thing. Often times politicians act as if the only use of public speaking is trying to get elected. In fact, this kind of personal charisma is perhaps the most direct way a president can pursue America’s interests abroad. Being able to communicate in a compelling way, and engaging other countries as partners and adults, is in America’s best interest.
There was a great example of this over the summer when Mitt Romney visited London for the Olympic games. In attempting to pander to a U.S. audience and show how “presidential” he was, he ended up convincing our greatest ally that he’s prone to terrible gaffes that could jeopardize relationships with our allies—delicate relationships where a few misplaced words can do great harm.
The most compelling recent example of President Obama’s abilities as a communicator came in his recent address to the United Nations. This speech was broadcast all over Canada and the world, and it detailed America’s vision for human rights, democratic change in the Middle East, and its priority to change the global status of women.
I felt so proud—as an American citizen living in a socially progressive country like Canada—that our president understands that there are global moral imperatives that unite us all.—
Montreal, Quebec, Canada(via 90days90reasons.com)
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Bill Maher - Irritable Bowl Syndrome (by Fraser Davidson)
Bill Maher’s words, animated by Fraser Davidson and set to an audio recording of his book The New New Rules: A Funny Look at How Everybody but Me Has Their Head Up Their Ass. Really fascinating comparison between the NFL and socialism.
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shaving for the nation

Dollar Shave Club is back, this time with alternate Presidential candidates for your voting pleasure. Because that’s what great razor companies do.
Click through for more and to learn interesting facts about our past Presidents.
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If You Succumb to Cynicism, The Regressives Win it All
This is for those of you who consider yourself to be progressive but have given up on politics because it seems rotten to the core. You may prefer Obama to Romney but don’t think there’s a huge difference between the two, so you may not even vote.
Your cynicism is understandable. But cynicism is a self-fulfilling prophesy. If you succumb to it, the regressives who want to take this nation back to the 19th century win it all.
The Koch brothers, Karl Rove, the rabid Republican right, CEOs and Wall Street titans who want to entrench their privileges and tax advantages – all of them would like nothing better than for every progressive in America to throw in the towel.
Then America is entirely theirs.
The alternative to cynicism is to become more involved in politics. Help create a progressive force in this nation that grows into a movement that can’t be stopped.
We almost had it last year in the Occupy movement. We had the arguments and the energy. What we lacked was organization and discipline.
I’ve spent years in Washington and I know nothing good happens there unless good people outside Washington are organized and mobilized to put pressure on Washington to make it happen.
This isn’t new. In the election of 1936, a constituent approached FDR with a list of things she wanted him to do if reelected. “Ma’am,” he said, “I’d like to do all those things. But if I’m reelected, you must make me.”
We must make them.
I suggest a two-step plan.
Step one: Vote for Barack Obama for President and vote for every Democratic senator and representative in Congress. Get off your ass and make sure your friends and relatives do the same.
Step two: Starting Election Day, regardless of who’s elected, commit at least three hours every week to political organizing and mobilizing. Connect with other progressives in your city and state. Help find and recruit new progressive candidates to run against Republicans in swing states, and against conservative Democrats. Support the members of the progressive caucus in Congress. Raise money. Raise a ruckus.
Make it our goal to reverse Citizens United, even if it takes a constitutional amendment. And have public financing of elections (including requiring the media to provide free political advertising as part of their commitment to public service).
Also break up the biggest banks and resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act.
Put a 2 percent surtax on wealth in excess of $3 million. And a one-tenth of 1 percent transaction tax on every financial transaction. And restore top tax rates to what they were before Ronald Reagan became president.
Use half this revenue to pay down the national debt and half to make sure every American has a world-class education.
Put a tax on carbon, and use the revenues to reduce or replace payroll taxes.
Have a single-payer health-care system that delivers care at far less cost than our current balkonized and inefficient one.
And much else.
You say it can’t happen — the system is too rotten.
It won’t happen if you wallow in the comfort of your cynicism. But it will happen if you and others like you get fired up.
We’ve done it before.
I remember when progressives joined with African-Americans to get enacted the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts. I remember when progressives stopped the Vietnam War. When women finally got freedom of choice over their own bodies. When the Environmental Protection Act became law.
Who would have imagined two decades ago that America would elect an African-American as President of the United States? Who would have supposed gays and lesbians would begin to achieve equal marriage rights?
Of course we can take America back.
Stop complaining and start organizing.
And by all means, vote.
(via coketalk)
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Lena Dunham: Your First Time (by BarackObamadotcom)
Hahahaha
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High Resolution -

High ResolutionFor all the details on how the Romney-Ryan tax plan can cut taxes by $5 trillion without raising taxes on the middle class or exploding the deficit, go to this site.
GENIUS GENIUS GENIUS
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Steve Martin, Home Crafts Expert, Endorses Bob Kerrey (by bobkerrey)
BEST. POLITICAL. AD. EVER.
God, I love Steve Martin.
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Walk and Talk the Vote - West Wing Reunion - Bridget Mary McCormack (by Bridget McCormack)
Yay West Wing Reun—oh wait, it’s a political ad too. SNEAKY.
Fun fact: Supreme Justice candidate Bridget Mary McCormack is the older sister of Mary McCormack (who plays Kate Harper on the West Wing). Now it all makes sense.



