Saturday, May 9, 2009

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Karin Kloosterman: Why the Strings of Peace Were Silenced Top
Scanning through the weekend news looking for ideas, a New York Times story caught my eye. Beyond all the expected political rhetoric, Palestinian kids from the West Bank town of Jenin had played a concert for Holocaust survivors in Holon, outside of Tel Aviv. My heart jumped with happiness. If you are reading this from the comfort of your multicultural cities in Berlin, Toronto or New York, you might have read the same headline, yawned and flipped the page. Arab kids playing classical music for some old Jewish fogies in Israel - what's the big deal? But in the context of the bitter divide between Israelis and Palestinians, this is was indeed unique. Palestinian teens from Jenin, under the guidance of their Israeli Arab music teacher, had come to play for Holocaust survivors in Israel with no strings attached. The story began three years ago when Wafa Younis, a 52-year-old music teacher from northern Israel, decided she would show Palestinian children the virtues of playing music. She called the group Strings of Peace. Her Israeli citizenship meant she could pass freely between the West Bank and Israel. After the rehearsals, parents signed forms, and entry permits to Israel were arranged. The kids had already played a couple of shows in Israel before the mid-March annual Good Deeds Day performance. In attendance was the day's benefactor, the wealthiest woman in the Middle East - Shari Arison, who danced to their music. The audience included elderly Arab-Israeli citizens and Jewish-Israeli Holocaust survivors. Most Palestinian kids have no idea what the Holocaust is or means in the Israeli collective identity, while most Israelis have no idea what life is like in the occupied Palestinian territories. This was a genuine opportunity for both sides to learn about each other and see the humanity in the other. And all would have gone off without a hitch if Hamas leaders in the West Bank hadn't heard about the show and then spun the Holocaust into another political issue. Their leadership quickly dashed any chance those Palestinian kids had to be heroes; their parents quickly showed allegiance to the authorities and provided the requisite death threats to their kids' much-loved teacher. A week later, Strings of Peace was disbanded, their rehearsal room boarded up and money to support them seized. Younis is back in Israel. Worst of all, the kids' instruments were taken away, report media outlets. "Hamas accused us of normalization activities, of identifying with the enemy, so we were forced to expel Younis. The subject is now closed," said a Fatah official. Another Palestinian political leader, Adnan Hindi, said that creating a bridge for peace with Holocaust survivors was too wide a divide for the West Bank kids to cross. The kids had been "tricked" into playing for Israelis, he said, adding that the Holocaust was a political issue. "If I had known this was a political excursion, I would not have let my son go," said a father of one of the kids. Of course he'd say something like that. It's risky business allowing your kids to go against the norm, to make peaceful gestures to the enemy. Living in the West Bank or Gaza today is not much different from living in communist Russia, or what being stranded on the metaphorical Lord of the Flies island must have been like. Groupthink prevails over individuality, the emotional over the rational. In this environment, it's almost impossible to stand up and make sincere gestures of peace with Israel. Doing so could lead to fatal consequences. This makes the actions of the children and teacher of Strings of Peace even more remarkable. In the movie The Pianist, the Jewish protagonist hiding from the Nazis next door finds solace, and a way to keep the music playing. Despite not being able to strike one key, a symphony comes to life in his head as his fingers gently sweep the air above the keyboard. Can the kids in Jenin do the same, and let the music in their hearts and minds keep playing to trump hate and ignorance? If so, they'll be my heroes forever. ### Karin Kloosterman is an Israeli-based journalist, editor and blogger from Canada. She is currently building greenprophet.com , the only environment news site focusing on the Middle East. Karin writes about green issues on TreeHugger.com and is an associate editor at the beyond-the-conflict news source, ISRAEL21c.org . This article was written for the Common Ground News Service (CGNews). More on Hamas
 
Pope Calls For Cooperation Between Christians And Muslims Top
Pope Benedict XVI today called on Christians and Muslims to serve mankind with the "light of God's truth" while warning that extremists in nations such as Iraq were exploiting religious differences for political and violent agendas. More on Jordan
 
Karin Kloosterman: Last Minute Green and Shiny Baubles for Mom Top
Last time I ordered flowers for my mom it backfired. Although promised by Canada Flowers to arrive on the special day, they arrived a day late. Flowers are not so environmentally friendly any way . If your mom has seen too many flowers in her lifetime and likes jewelry, but more upscale than recycled bottle cap earrings or purses made from car tires, TreeHugger has featured a number of mid to upper scale ethical jewelers and designers she might like. A great alternative to junk Mom might just throw away, and certainly something more permanent than flowers. A few weeks ago I interviewed NY's fashion insider Marilyn Kirshner . Reporting on the fashion know in her newsletter LookOnline , Marliyn gave me a few tips for ethical and green jewelry designers and companies that are making it in the fashion world. Since I'm more opt to attend an Agritech conference, over a red carpet fashion event, her advice was well taken. Her full interview can be accessed on TreeHugger and Gallery Atlantic where I first wrote the piece. For a recap, Marilyn recommends: Justin Giunta's Subversive Jewelry . His recycled designs have a "More is More" aesthetic that makes us think of swathes of artfully draped loot, from a pirate's treasure. Kirschner characterizes Giunta's jewelry as "Very baroque looking, but very cool and hip." Natural Jewels by Caboclo Jewellery features objects found on the rainforest floors, handmade by the local artisans of Brazil's Amazon river region. They use a variety of materials gleaned from the area - the seeds of plants are mixed with stones, bone, fiber, leather, mother-of-pearl and other natural materials - to create one-of-a-kind treasures. On the higher end of the green jewelry tree hang Danforth Diamonds, Brilliant Earth , and GreenKarat . All three companies offer gems that are conflict free and of ethical origin in settings that are recycled from scrap precious metal or post-consumer sources. Danforth Diamonds offers rings that use eco-friendly recycled precious metals "Refined, Not Mined," and conflict-free diamonds or diamonds sourced from Canada. To hear and read the whole interview, visit Gallery Atlantic . (Kirschner was quick to tell me that "The ultimate recycling is wearing vintage," of course.) But don't stop here, TreeHugger has a fabulously green and gorgeous gift guide for Mother's Day tomorrow . :: green jewelry on Gallery Atlantic More on Mother's Day gifts Mother's Day Green Bling Guide Brilliant Earth Jewelry GreenKarat Is Ethical And Sustainable Eight Green Gifts Every Mother Will Love
 
Obama Meets With Richard Phillips At The White House Top
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama has met with the captain of a U.S. cargo ship who was held hostage by Somali pirates last month. Obama met with the captain, Richard Phillips, and Phillips' his wife, Andrea, in the Oval Office on Saturday. The White House released a photograph of the three sitting together, but did not announce the meeting ahead of time. Phillips was captain of the Maersk Alabama when Somali pirates attacked it. Phillips was held hostage on a lifeboat for five days and was freed when U.S. Navy snipers killed three of his captors. He is in Washington to attend the White House Correspondents Association dinner on Saturday evening. Obama later left the White House to play basketball. More on Barack Obama
 
Body Found Near Where Georgia Professor's Jeep Was Located Top
BOGART, Ga. — Police dogs searching for a University of Georgia professor accused of killing his wife and two other people discovered a body Saturday near where the teacher's abandoned Jeep was found. Police said the body was taken to a state crime lab for identification. The body was found 1.3 miles from where George Zinkhan's Jeep was located about a week after the April 25 shootings, the Athens-Clarke County Police Department said in a news release. Authorities planned a news conference for Saturday afternoon. Zinkhan has been on the run since police say the marketing professor opened fire on a reunion for a local theater group a short distance from the university's campus. Authorities said they believed Zinkhan left his two young children in the car at the time of the shootings. He was last seen dropping the children off at a neighbor's house shortly after the shooting, saying there was an emergency. At one point, more than 200 law enforcement officers scoured the forest where the Jeep was found wrecked in a ravine near Zinkhan's home, trying to locate him. His passport also was found in the Jeep. Bulletins were issues nationwide and authorities kept watch on airports in case Zinkhan tried to flee to Amsterdam, where he has taught part-time at a university there since 2007. Federal authorities later revealed Zinkhan had an upcoming flight booked to Amsterdam, but the professor never showed up at the airport. Zinkhan had been a professor in the university's Terry College of Business and had no disciplinary problems, school officials said. He had taught at UGA since the 1990s and was fired after the shootings. The shooting victims were identified as Zinkhan's wife Marie Bruce, 47; Ben Teague, 63; and Tom Tanner, 40. Two others were injured by bullet fragments. Authorities said initially they had no motive for the shooting. Later the FBI said interviews with family and friends indicated Bruce may have been considering a divorce and said the shooting was likely a domestic dispute. Zinkhan's wife, a family law attorney, had been serving as president of Town & Gown Players, the local theater group that was having the reunion at the Athens Community Theater. Tanner was a Clemson University economist who taught at the Strom Thurmond Institute of Government and Public Affairs in Clemson, South Carolina. Tanner was playing Dr. John Watson in the group's performance of "Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure." Teague was one of Town & Gown's longest-serving volunteers and was married to a popular University of Georgia English professor. Bogart is a rural town about 60 miles east of Atlanta.
 
Effort To Create 'Virtual Fence' At Border Resumes Top
In announcing the resumption of a "virtual fence" on the U.S.-Mexican border yesterday, the Obama administration sent a powerful message of continuity with President George W. Bush, who included a pledge to secure the border as part of a 2006 effort to persuade Congress to overhaul the nation's immigration laws.
 
Georgianne Nienaber: Volcanic Eruptions Threaten Beleaguered Eastern Congo Top
Email from Congo: In Goma people are very worried. The volcano eruption might happen once more for both volcanoes Nyamulagira and Nyiragongo. Nyamulagira spits lava in the park [Virunga Park] while Nyiragongo which is the most dangerous for the Goma people spits its lava in town. We keep on praying. As you know, Goma is where our families live and where we work. IMAGE: Nyiragongo viewed from Rwanda (2006) © G. Nienaber The news from Kivu Provinces in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo can't seem to get any worse, but it does. After over a decade of killing, rapes, and disease 1.3 million people now face a possible eruption of the Nyiragongo and Nyamulagira volcanoes. The murdered primatologist, Dian Fossey, wrote about watching the lava flows from Nyiragongo in letters to her friends in 1977, and likened the red glow to anger and retribution from "Mother Gongo." Reports are now coming in that villagers are fleeing due to tremors and increased lava flows. With 1.2 million already in refugee camps because of the war, and a province already overrun with 28,000 militia of varying alliances, the situation is grave. Perhaps Fossey was correct in saying that Gongo is capable of vengeance. She wrote the words while visiting her friend Rosamond Carr's home at Mugongo Plantation near Gisenyi in Rwanda. One wonders if Mother Gongo is just plain fed up with the senseless violence, which dates back to Fossey's time, and wants to put an end to it all. When Mount Nyiragongo last erupted in 2002, half of the city of Goma was destroyed and the rest of the area was flooded with lava, which remains to this day. Second story entrances to buildings became the first floor and first floors remain underground. Image: Goma (2009) © G. Nienaber Scientists now predict that Nyamulagira, which is located 16 miles (24 km) away, will erupt any day now. Nyiragongo crater is 11 miles north of Lake Kivu. The Provincial capitol Goma is located on the shores of Kivu and so is the Rwandan border town of Gisenyi. Both towns lie in the path of possible eruptions from the twin volcanoes, when lava can flow at the rate of sixty miles per hour. The glow from Nyiragongo is always visible from Gisenyi and Goma. It is something fascinating to observe on clear evenings along the border, but the glow has morphed into something much more sinister. Nyiragongo is considered one of the eight most dangerous volcanoes in the world, but Nyamulagira is considered most likely to erupt first. It has erupted 30 times since 1880. Image: Medical Clinic in Goma (2009) © G. Nienaber The Red Cross is mobilizing, but what is important for people to understand is that there is absolutely no infrastructure in this part of the world to handle the humanitarian crisis which will occur if a major eruption takes place. Scientists say the eruption "is imminent," and that more than half a million people are in danger. Image: Refugees In Goma now in harm's way (2009) © G. Nienaber Scientists from Goma's Volcanological Observatory are reporting "Intense volcanic activity, including tremors, pools of lava and plumes of smoke." Reports say the air in Goma is thick with smoke today. For people who have endured a conflict resulting in close to six million dead and a humanitarian crisis that grows daily because of the war, this news is just too much to bear. More on Congo
 
Daniel Cubias: A Latino Rodney King? Top
In my last post , I wrote about how many conservatives used the H1N1 flu outbreak to launch xenophobic attacks on Hispanics. But if the right wing's reaction to the swine-flu outbreak was a depressing example of the disgust that many Americans hold for Latinos, what are we to make of the news out of Pennsylvania? Just over a week ago, a jury in that state acquitted two teenagers of beating a man to death in a street brawl. The case apparently had too many contradictory versions of the truth, with multiple witnesses unable to clarify who did what to whom and why. The bottom line is that the teens were convicted of lesser charges and will more or less go on with their lives. What has caught the eye of Hispanics and people interested in civil rights is that the town where the crime took place, Shenandoah, has a history of racial tension. The victim, Luis Ramirez, was a Mexican immigrant. The teens, as well as the other kids who earlier pled guilty to lesser charges, were white. They jury was all white. It is impossible to escape the perception, therefore, that a mob of angry whites can beat a Latino to death right in the street without fear of being punished. Of course, those of us who weren't at the trail (like me) can't definitively say that this is a miscarriage of justice. But at the risk of getting all knee-jerky, I have to say that it appears highly suspicious. Lawyers for the teens admitted that the kids were drunk and got into a fight with Ramirez, who was apparently walking down the street, minding his own business. Prosecutors said that the teens flung racial epithets at Ramirez, then followed up with kicks and punches. The result was that Ramirez ended up with his brain leaking out of his head, and he died two days later. For no one to be seriously punished over such a crime can only mean one of two things: 1. A Latino man living in an economically depressed small town, where racial issues have flared in the past, inexplicably provoked a group of drunken white males to fight him. They had no choice but to defend themselves by kicking him in the head repeatedly. Or 2. It's ok to bludgeon an immigrant to death. The verdict would actually make more sense if the teens had been acquitted of all charges. In that case, the implication is that the boys had nothing to do with the fight or Ramirez's death. Instead, by convicting them of a lesser charge (simple assault), the jury basically said, "Yeah, you walloped the guy, and he died, but we don't think you should do time. It's not like he was anybody important." The Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund is pressuring the Department of Justice to file federal charges against the teens. This, as you may recall, was the route that civil-rights groups took after the cops were acquitted in the Rodney King case. Regardless of how it turns out this time, there is one big difference between the cases. Rodney King is still alive, and Luis Ramirez is not. More on Immigration
 
Yoani Sanchez: An Italian Filmmaker Celebrates Fidel, Attacks Cuban Bloggers, From the Freedom of Italy Top
Note: Gianni Mina is an Italian filmmaker and writer whose work celebrates Fidel Castro. Recently he wrote a blog post about Yoani. The whole rhetoric--so widespread in the sixties of the last century--displays its death throes in the millennium that recently began. It's a type of discussion that reminds me of the "barricades," in that opponents crouch behind the parapets and from this safe vantage point throw insults instead of arguments. Gianni Mina has dusted off a little of this worn out artillery. The arsenal he has flung at me is composed of accusations that I am manufactured by the North and that I have forgotten to mention--on purpose--the advantages of today's Cuban system. In conclusion he repeats the refrain that I am "unknown" in Cuba, forgetting that I have always boasted of my smallness and insignificance. Mina, however, has a history of great deeds. He managed to interview the one who has guided the destiny of my country for five decades, when we Cubans ourselves have not been able to question him or respond to him with our ballots. The book that resulted from that meeting was in the bookstores during the years when I was thinking of leaving college because I did not have shoes to wear. From this side of the world, away from the windows displaying his extensive interview in a deluxe edition, something very different was happening: pockets were emptying, frustration growing and fear proliferating. None of this appeared in the eulogistic phrases of that publication and the author didn't care to prepare a second edition to fill in these omissions. I would like to suggest a couple of questions for a new meeting between him and Fidel Castro, which will probably never happen. Investigate Mr. Mina--you who can speak with Him--why he hasn't decreed an amnesty for Adolfo Fernandez Sainz and his colleagues, who have now served six years in prison for crimes of opinion. Mark on your agenda, please, the doubts my neighbor has about the denial of permission for his brother to enter Cuba, after "deserting" while at a conference abroad. Transmit to him the question of my son Teo who doesn't understand why, to study in higher education, one must meet a set of ideological requirements. If you can get close to Him--closer than any of us could manage--ask him to let these "unknown" citizens freely associate, found a newspaper, create a radio station, run for president, or enjoy that right that you exercise in full, of publicly writing opinions very different from those of your country. I assure you that this interview--the one you will never have--would be a bestseller on this Island. Yoani's blog, Generation Y , can be read here in English translation. More on Cuba
 
Geoffrey R. Stone: The Next Justice: What Obama Wants Top
What criteria will President Obama take into account is selecting his first nominee to the Supreme Court? I think four factors will be especially important to him. 1. High level of intellectual ability . As a professor of constitutional law, Obama fully understands the complexity of a Supreme Court justice's responsibilities and the importance of analytical fire-power both to meet those responsibilities and to persuade colleagues. He will want his legacy to include the appointment of Supreme Court justices of whom he can be proud. A very high level of intellectual ability is certainly a prerequisite to that. Anyone can cast a vote. Obama will want much more than that. 2. Moderate liberal . Obama will want his nominee at the very least to be as "liberal" as Souter, Breyer, Ginsburg and Stevens. He will not want to make an error on this, and therefore he will appoint someone whose record is well established. He definitely will not want to appoint a justice who later turns out to be conservative. The terms "conservative" and "moderate liberal" are not self-defining, of course. But at their essence for Obama, I suspect, is his continuing reference to "empathy." He wants to appoint a justice who understands that a unique role of the judiciary in our system of government is to be especially attentive to the interests of the unrepresented, the oppressed, political and religious dissenters, those accused of crime, and minorities who have traditionally lost out in the political process. On the other hand, I do not think Obama will appoint a "true liberal," like William Brennan or Thurgood Marshall. Although the Court desperately needs such a voice to counterbalance the very conservative voices of Scalia, Thomas, Roberts and Alito, my guess is that at this moment in time Obama will be reluctant to spend the political capital that might be needed to overcome the opposition to such a nominee. The difference, in my view, between what I'm calling a "moderate liberal" and a "true liberal" is that the former tends to be incrementalist in decision making whereas the latter tends to be much bolder and visionary. 3. A strong voice about the role of the Supreme Court. For several decades, conservatives have articulated and promoted a highly conservative conception of the proper exercise of the judicial power, using such catch-phrases as "originalism" and "strict construction." Although there is much less to these notions than people think, conservatives have quite effectively changed the terms of the debate about constitutional law since the Warren Court era. For several decades, progressives have struggled to counter this public relations onslaught, but largely without success. There is now no clear consensus about what a "liberal" or "moderate liberal" justice does, other than to decide individual cases in a particular way. The Court and the nation badly need a justice who can articulate a progressive view of constitutional interpretation, both to counter the conservatives on the Court and to change the terms of the national debate. Obama will want a justice who can do this. 4. Build consensus within the Court . For the long run, the Court needs a progressive justice who can work effectively to build consensus on controversial cases. William Brennan was a master at this. Some of the current justices do this well, but among the moderate liberal justices they are all nearing retirement. Obama will want to appoint a justice who is a strong voice, but at the same time knows how to compromise and to find common ground. A justice with a highly adversarial-style, like Antonin Scalia or William Douglas, would not serve Obama's interests. 5. Diversity . Among the possible nominees who satisfy the first four criteria, Obama will want to appoint a justice who adds a measure of diversity of experience and perspective within the Court. This suggests a woman, a Hispanic, or an African-American. More on Supreme Court
 
Buddy Winston: Visiting the Fox Hole Top
When Bill O'Reilly invited me to appear as a guest on his show to weigh in about their premise that the late night comedians were going easy on Obama my first reaction was to decline and I told the producer that I was not a fan. He replied saying: "We get that all the time". I decided to follow the advice of ancient Chinese General Sun-Tzu to "Keep your friends close, and your enemies closer" and possibly catapult my career as a high paid monologue writer out of obscurity. They didn't contact me through my agent, they found me on Facebook. I now had five days to figure out how not to avoid making a complete fool of myself on national television defending the Late Night Monologue Masters for the way they choose to go light on lampooning our current president. I opened up a blank page in Word on my Macbook Pro, which is having trouble with the "Y" key after I spilled a bottle of Kambucha on the keyboard, and began to formulate my ideas. At this point I have never met O'Reilly but since I see FOX as a main conspirator in creating the propaganda that lead to the Iraq War I wanted to be sure that the viewers knew right away that I was not brainwashed into their ideology like the brilliant Dennis Miller, who without Fox would have trouble finding a mainstream forum for his obscure referenced rightwing diatribes and would be lucky to even host Monday Night FOOS ball. I kept in mind that I was going to be a guest on Bill's show and I promised myself I would try to be civil as well as appreciative that he was generous enough to share his popular pulpit with me after he read the recent article in the LA Times about the same topic in which I was quoted as saying: "You have to remember that most comedy writers on these shows are more liberal than conservative, it was much easier to write comedy when the enemy was the target." What Bill did not know was that the reason I believed there were more liberal writers on the show was because conservatives are interested in inflicting the wounds and creating a custom made target for their jokes whereas most liberal late night writers just hop on the wave of political public opinion and milk the mania. Late night shows are primarily about entertainment and are more apt to hire scribes that are interested in getting laughs than attracting lackeys. Conservative writers are also big on religious references and after the Bush Regime I now think there should be a Separation of Church and stage . The limo driver arrived at my home in Santa Barbara hours before the show was due to tape because they anticipated gridlock due to the current fires which have directly affected so many of my friends that I felt a sense of guilt that this day was going to be fun and exciting for me. Between the smoke, the helicopters, and my O'Reilly anticipation I got very little sleep the night before. There was no traffic and we arrived at the studio with hours to spare. True to the image I had of Fox, the studio was still in construction looking like a set on 24 where they would drag someone for interrogation. When I peeked into the room where I would tape the show it became suddenly apparent that I would be sitting in a standard director's chair speaking my lines right into a camera with no image of Bill O'Reilly to react to. Although Bill is expecting a liberal I actually label myself as an "eccentric", one of those crazy people that believe in humanity and I relate much better when there is eye contact. That concern was instantly dispelled when I saw that the chroma-key green screen made the hair on the top of my head seem to vanish on the monitor and there is no way I was going to agree to go on this show pre-scalped. It would have been easy to start creating conspiracy theories about how this was Fox's way of making me off-kilter so Bill could appear fair and balanced but there was no way I was going to take the bait and started to finally worry instead about holding my own against a seasoned curmudgeon. With minutes to go a producer from the O'Reilly show in New York chimed into my plastic earpiece asking me to straighten my tie. When I explained that I was not wearing one and it was my artsy Robert Graham collar he confirmed and a sexy sounding woman came on telling me that Bill would be on in a second to welcome me. True to their word; "Hi Buddy Winston, this is Bill O'Reilly. How are you?" I told him I was fine and ready to have fun. He laughed, agreed, and the show began. I was suddenly shot out of a canon. When the segment was over I felt like I survived a tsunami. I never got to the part about everyone giving too much credence to talk show hosts citing that Arlen Specter didn't leave the Republican Party because he couldn't stand the Late Night Monologue Militia. And that Bill was acting like the Republicans are trying to stop Al Franken from taking his seat in the senate not because it will give the Democrats a potentially filibuster proof majority but because he's a comedian. I didn't get to point out the irony that Obama is black but the Republicans are acting like they're the oppressed minority. There is a growing philosophy in conservative circles that late night comedians are afraid to make fun of Obama because he's black. I wanted to point out that black humor is fine when it's not stereotypical giving as an example: The other night Bill, Ann Coulter appeared on your show and in reference to Colin Powell claimed that the hardest thing in the world was being a black Republican. Like there's some guy in a small hut in Darfur thinking thank God I didn't have that fate. I also wanted to point out to those that think that Obama may be getting special treatment because he is a President during a national crisis: George Bush was given another term for that reason and then turned his administration into a national crisis. And to the myriad of conservatives who sent me hate mail after the show claiming that I and Obama are imbeciles and included a list of every stupid thing our President has ever done I assure you that his day in monologue sun will come and all the whining in the world won't make the public ridicule him any sooner. It will probably have the adverse effect. Maybe you'll get lucky and this technology president will look for a female Supreme Court replacement on Match.com. Thank you Bill O'reilly for actually treating me like a guest and not to be ungrateful but did you ever consider that the O in O'Reilly may stand for Olbermann? http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/b67edf67c8/words-of-winston More on Barack Obama
 

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