Talking Heads

November 23, 2015

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Vice News

(From Dec. 2, 2014)

VICE News and the New York Review of Books have partnered to create Talking Heads, a series about the big issues of the day as seen by the Review‘s distinguished contributors.

In this episode of Talking Heads, Mark Danner discusses his essay “Iraq: The New War.” Danner wrote this essay in mid-2003, outlining how American policy during the Iraq war effectively helped incite in many ways what was then an emerging insurgency. The occupation of Iraq post-9/11 created a broad front to which militant jihadists began to flock. The mishandling of the Iraqi army sent thousands of highly-trained, angry men into the streets with no jobs. And photos of Iraqis being tortured by American personnel at the Abu Ghraib prison provided telegenic images that helped these groups recruit from an increasingly indignant public.

Over a decade before it happened, Danner’s analysis of the insurgency forecasted how it would evolve into what we know today as the Islamic State.

VICE News sat down with Danner to discuss how the United States’ invasion of Iraq and the ensuing war provided what he described as a warm petri dish in which insurgent elements would grow.

https://news.vice.com/video/talking-heads-how-the-us-created-the-islamic-state?utm_source=vicenewstwitter

Charlie Mike-‘The Best War Book of 2015’

November 16, 2015

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They came home from Iraq and Afghanistan with psychological wounds that healed only in helping brothers and strangers. Here, an excerpt from Joe Klein’s new book, Charlie Mike.

From ‘The Daily Beast’

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/11/15/charlie-mike-the-best-war-book-of-2015.html?source=socialflow&via=twitter_page&account=thedailybeast&medium=twitter

A gift from Seth Godin.

 Free-Thanksgiving-Printable-Banner

‘Thank you for everything you do, and for the difference you make to your family and the people who care about you.’

~

A Thanksgiving Reader

“In ten days, just about everyone in the United States will celebrate the best holiday of the year: Thanksgiving. I’m hoping that this year, you and your family will help me start a new holiday tradition.

At its best, this is a holiday about gratitude, about family and about possibility. It brings people together to not only celebrate the end of the harvest, but to look one in another in the eye and share something magical.

In a digital age, one where humanity has been corrupted by commerce at every turn, there are very few Thanksgiving piñatas stuffed with coins, no huge market in Thanksgiving wrapping paper, no rush to the stores. We mostly save that for the next day, when the retail-industrial establishment kicks into high gear.

I’m delighted to point you to the Thanksgiving Reader. 

http://www.thethanksgivingreader.com 

The file you’ll find there is free, it’s printable, it’s sharable and it might give us something universal and personal to do this Thanksgiving.

The idea is simple: At your Thanksgiving celebration (and yes, it’s okay to use it outside the US!), consider going around the table and having each person read a section aloud.

During these ten or fifteen minutes, millions of people will all be reading the same words, thinking about the same issues, connecting with each other over the essence of what we celebrate. After all the travel and the cooking and the hassle, for these ten or fifteen minutes, perhaps we can all breathe the same air and think hard about what we’re thankful for.

It’s free to download and share. I hope you’ll let some people in your life know about it and incorporate it in your celebration this year. There’s no commercial element involved—after all, it’s Thanksgiving. 

[and for international readers, in troubled times…]

Wherever you are, you could celebrate Thanksgiving today. Or any day.

Not the Thanksgiving of a bountiful Massachusetts harvest before the long winter, the holiday of pilgrims and pie. That’s a holiday of scarcity averted. I’m imagining something else…

A modern Thanksgiving would celebrate two things:

The people in our lives who give us the support and love we need to make a difference, and…

The opportunity to build something bigger than ourselves, something worth contributing to. The ability to make connections, to lend a hand, to invent and create.

There are more of both now than there have ever been before. For me, for you, for just about all of us. Thank you.”

A story from the Talmud.

‘…soft paradox of how we all journey alone together. A Rabbi asks his students, “How do you know the first moment of dawn has arrived?” After a great silence, one pipes up “When you can tell the difference between a sheep and a dog.” The Rabbi shakes his head no. Another offers, “When you can tell the difference between a fig tree and an olive tree.” Again the Rabbi shakes his head no. There are no other answers. The Rabbi circles their silence and walks between them, “You know the first moment of dawn has arrived when you look into the eyes of another human being and see yourself.’

-Mark Nepo

Mark Nepo.

November 15, 2015

‘Only when we can accept that we are fragile gusts on this Earth, only then will we be at home where ever we are.’

Thank you, Jean.

November 14, 2015

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Time Magazine

In all this horror there’s something positive that people are coming together in a sense of unity and peace.”

Jean Jullien had just begun his vacation when he heard on the radio about the terrorist attacks in his native France that killed more than 120 people on Friday. While others around the world struggled to put their feelings about the violence in Paris into words on social media, Jullien, a professional illustrator, picked up his brush instead.

“I express myself visually, so my first reaction was to draw a symbol of peace for Paris,” Jullien, who says his friends and family are safe and accounted for, told TIME over Skype on Saturday from a location he did not wish to disclose. “From there it seems to have gotten a bit out of my hands.”

That poignant painting has quickly become a unifying symbol for people in France and beyond. A cell-phone picture of the illustration that Jullien posted to his Instagram on Friday evening has garnered at least 129,000 likes on Instagram and 48,000 retweets on Twitter, as well as countless other uncredited shares. Instagram’s own post of the image has topped 1.3 million likes.

“I can’t say I’m happy because it’s such a tragedy and such a horrible event,” he says. “I can just say that in all this horror there’s something positive that people are coming together in a sense of unity and peace.”

It’s even been shared by celebrities such John legend and One Direction’s Harry Styles. “People are asking me, ‘Are you proud?’ and all that,” Jullien said of the famous figures distributing his work. “No, at the moment what touched me more, so to speak, is the fact that everyone shared it—not just famous people but everyone all over the world. The main purpose of the image was to communicate peace and solidarity, and that’s exactly what it seems to have done.”

Jullien also says he’s not bothered by all the people sharing the image without attributing it to him. “Some people were trying to alert me that people were using it without credit,” he says. “That’s not really the point. I did not create the image to get credit. I created a symbol for everyone to share. It’s not for ownership and pride.”

And while his illustrations are typically more humor-based than the image that’s now brought him international attention, Jullien notes that his Paris peace sign has had a similar impact on those who see it. “What I normal do is try to bring a smile on peoples’ faces with my work,” he says. “I got someone emailing me saying they were happy to have seen my message because the feeling of peace and unity took over the raw anger that can come from such an event.”

Yes.

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Gratitude saves the life of a troubled vet…

November 13, 2015
11/11/2015-Boston,MA. Boston police Captain Haseeb Hosein is seen working at a construction detail on Columbia Rd. Wednesday afternoon, 35 minutes after he helped subdue a distraught, hatchet-wielding man on an MBTA bus. Ed note, bus in background is not the bus involved in incident. Boston Police media relations officer Jamie Kenneally identified Hosein on scene. Staff photo by Mark Garfinkel

11/11/2015-Boston,MA. Boston police Captain Haseeb Hosein is seen working at a construction detail on Columbia Rd. Wednesday afternoon, 35 minutes after he helped subdue a distraught, hatchet-wielding man on an MBTA bus. Ed note, bus in background is not the bus involved in incident. Boston Police media relations officer Jamie Kenneally identified Hosein on scene. Staff photo by Mark Garfinkel

“Sir, I want to thank you for your service.”

Boston Herald

Boston police Capt. Haseeb Hosein is the district commander at Area B-3 in Mattapan. He was off yesterday, Veterans Day, but rather than hang around the house he decided to work a detail near the intersection of Columbia Road and Stoughton Street.

When you’ve worked the streets of Roxbury, Dorchester and Mattapan as long as Haseeb Hosein has, you understand that a detail is actually front-line duty. And so it was yesterday, when a piece of life and death rolled his way around 12:30 p.m. on an MBTA bus.

Passengers who nervously bolted from the bus near the intersection of Columbia Road and Stoughton told Hosein about the guy standing in the rear, holding a hatchet to his neck and yelling that he was going to kill himself.

When he boarded the bus, Hosein saw a man he judged to be around 50. In a tone closer to a parish priest than a cop, Hosein calmly asked him, “What can we do to help? What do you need?”

Hosein noticed the man was clutching the hatchet close enough to his neck to break the skin. He told Hosein that he was a veteran, staying at the homeless shelter on Court Street downtown.

By the time the vet made that declaration, Haseeb Hosein was joined by BPD patrol officer David Godin, who uttered the words that may well have saved one troubled vet’s life.

“Sir, I want to thank you for your service,” Godin told him.

Hosein told colleagues later that David Godin essentially neutralized a very tense situation almost immediately with those words of gratitude and respect.

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/peter_gelzinis/2015/11/gelzinis_basic_gratitude_saves_day_life_of_troubled_vet

~♥~

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Saint Francis

November 10, 2015

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‘You are that which you are seeking.’

-Saint Francis

Hunger Coalition Thanksgiving Baskets

November 4, 2015

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If you, your family,or someone in your community needs assistance this Thanksgiving holiday, please contact the Hunger Coalition, St. Luke’s Center for Community Health, or the Advocates.

For more information call 788-0121.

Thanksgiving Baskets will be shared at the Community Campus on Monday, Nov. 23, from 4-6 pm.

If you’d like to donate, visit the website at: https://connect.clickandpledge.com/Organization/thehungercoalition/campaign/holidaymeals

Northern Rockies Music Festival

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Help fund the festival to keep it in Hailey, Idaho.

The annual Wood River Valley event started in 1977, and with competition from other festivals, it has become increasingly difficult to finance the festival and keep it viable in the valley.

There’s an online funding event account at: https://www.gofundme.com/savenrmusicfest

The 2-day festival takes place the first weekend every summer in August at Hailey’s Hop Porter Park.

St. Luke’s Community Health Fair

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St. Luke’s annual Health Fair, “Discover Health,” is scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 7th, from 10 to 2 at the Community Campus in Hailey. This event is free, family friendly, and open to the public.

  • hands-on exhibits
  • health screenings
  • education
  • games
  • activities,
  • local health and wellness resources
  • For more information call St. Luke’s at 208-727-8733.

Vote.

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400,000 lower income Kentucky residents, many racially diverse, will soon be without medical care because two white guys in Kansas believe the government should not help those in need. How were these marginalized groups informed, or not informed, about what could happen to them if they didn’t vote? This governor-elect, a conservative right-wing Tea Party candidate who was elected yesterday in Kentucky, was supported by huge donations from the Koch brothers during the election. Who voted? Conservative white people. Votes count. Every single one.

❥❥

November 2, 2015

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Today I Rise: This beautiful short film is like a love poem for your heart and soul.

http://www.filmsforaction.org/watch/today-i-rise/

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