Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Wednesday Watering Hole: Check In & Hangout for the Herd

Good morning meese! Happy happy Wednesday!


  PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
 

        Recs on the weather jar comment are still welcome.

The common Moose, Alces alces, unlike other members of the deer family, is a solitary animal that doesn’t form herds. Not so its rarer but nearest relative, Alces purplius, the Motley Moose. Though sometimes solitary, the Motley Moose herds in ever shifting groups at the local watering hole to exchange news and just pass the time.

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The morning check-in is an open thread and general social hour.

It’s traditional but not obligatory to give us a weather check where you are and let us know what’s new, interesting, challenging or even routine in your life lately. Nothing is particularly obligatory here except:

Always remember the Moose Golden (Purple?) Rule:

Be kind to each other… or else.

What could be simpler than that, right?

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They kill white people too




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As a black woman, I’m used to living with racial hatred against me and mine. It’s just one of those things that is part of the wallpaper of my life. When you are black it just “is”. It doesn’t take over my life, and I don’t worry about it daily. It’s just the the way my world is ordered-with an underlying malaise you start learning to live with as soon as you are old enough to know you are somehow “different”. Have lived through segregation and Jim Crow signs, seeing the Klan up close, and being spit on, beaten and jailed when fighting back. I’ve had partners and friends shot down by racist cops. I deal with racial microaggressions daily.

I also know that on the left that we have white allies against racism, and that’s important. But too often that alliance is to stop racism against blacks, or latinos or asians or native americans, and there is not enough discussion about how racism and white supremacy affects white people.  

Perhaps more white people will wake up to the danger to their lives, their world if they realize that white supremacists don’t just kill the Goodmans and Schwerners and Liuzzos of “our side” of the struggle against injustice. They don’t just massacre Sikhs in a temple.

Read the SPLC report: Users of leading white supremacist web forum responsible for many deadly hate crimes, mass killings

Nearly 100 people in the last five years have been murdered by active users of the leading racist website, Stormfront, according to a report released today by the SPLC’s Intelligence Project. Registered Stormfront users have been disproportionately responsible for some of the most lethal hate crimes and mass killings since the web forum became the first hate site on the Internet in 1995, a month before the Oklahoma City bombing. The report found that hate killings by Stormfront members began to accelerate rapidly in early 2009, when Barack Obama took office as the nation’s first black president.

A similar racist web forum, Vanguard News Network (VNN), was used by neo-Nazi and former Klan leader Frazier Glenn Miller, who has been charged with the Sunday murder of three people he mistakenly believed were Jews in Overland Park, Kan. Miller, who apparently changed his last name in recent years to Cross, logged more than 12,000 posts on VNN, whose slogan is, “No Jews, Just Right.” “Stormfront is the murder capital of the racist Internet,” said Heidi Beirich, report author and Intelligence Project director. “It has been a magnet for the deadly and deranged. And VNN is almost as bad.”

Stormfront users have included Wade Michael Page, who shot to death six people before killing himself at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin in 2012; Richard Andrew Poplawski, who murdered three Pittsburgh police officers in 2009; and Anders Behring Breivik, who bombed a government building in Norway, killing eight people, and then massacred 69 people, most of them teenagers, at a summer camp in 2011.

Read the data they’ve compiled on White Homicide Worldwide:

A typical murderer drawn to the racist forum Stormfront.org is a frustrated, unemployed, white adult male living with his mother or an estranged spouse or girlfriend. She is the sole provider in the household. Forensic psychologists call him a “wound collector.” Instead of building his resume, seeking employment or further education, he projects his grievances on society and searches the Internet for an excuse or an explanation unrelated to his behavior or the choices he has made in life.

His escalation follows a predictable trajectory. From right-wing antigovernment websites and conspiracy hatcheries, he migrates to militant hate sites that blame society’s ills on ethnicity and shifting demographics. He soon learns his race is endangered – a target of “white genocide.” After reading and lurking for a while, he needs to talk to someone about it, signing up as a registered user on a racist forum where he commiserates in an echo chamber of angry fellow failures where Jews, gays, minorities and multiculturalism are blamed for everything

The rabidly imbalanced legions inspired by Stormfront and other whites supremacist hate groups are egged on by the paranoid ravings on hate-talk radio and on the teevee nightly on Fox get white folks killed too. Look at Las Vegas. At the Georgia Courthouse. (Sadly there was no mass public outcry about the Sikh temple massacre. They were othered by being brown with turbans.)

As long as cops are required to be public servants of a government which allows a black man to sit in the White House, they are targets of white supremacists with visions of a new world order with them back on top where they believe they should be-by right.

The right of whiteness.

Jewish Americans know that they too are at risk. The anti-black haters in this country also reject Jews by spewing virulent antisemitism. Jews are still not white in their book, and any one not a wing-nut Christian loses their white hang-out card. But supremacists also target law enforcement, and the police shootings have been of mostly white cops. No coincidence that the ADL released this after the Las Vegas shootings:

ADL Says Las Vegas Shootings Underscore Growing Trend of Right-Wing Extremists Targeting Police

“The two police officers who lost their lives are only the latest in a series of casualties in a de facto war being waged against police by right-wing extremists, including both anti-government extremists and white supremacists,” said Mark Pitcavage, ADL Director of Investigative Research. “Some extremists have deliberately targeted police, while others have responded violently when meeting police in unplanned encounters. The killings are not the effort of a concerted campaign, but rather a series of independent attacks and clashes stemming from right-wing ideologies.”

Jerad and Amanda Miller — identified by their Internet writings as anti-government extremists of the “Patriot” movement variety — are suspected of fatally shooting Las Vegas Police Officers Alyn Beck and Igor Soldo and a civilian before taking their own lives on June 8.

Based on their Internet writings, the Millers believed in common militia-type conspiracy theories about the “New World Order,” including “concentration camps” for Americans, coming martial law and “chemtrails,” among others. The most recent entry on Jerad Miller’s Facebook page on June 7 chillingly read:  “The dawn of a new day.  May all of our coming sacrifices be worth it.”

The GA Courthouse shooter, Dennis Marx, has been tied to the Sovereign Citizens,  who have a history of violence

When a sovereign feels particularly desperate, angry, battle-weary and cornered, his next government contact, no matter how minor, can be his final straw. The resulting rage can be lethal. In 1995 in Ohio, a sovereign named Michael Hill pulled a gun on an officer during a traffic stop. Hill was killed. In 1997, New Hampshire extremist Carl Drega shot dead two officers and two civilians, and wounded another three officers before being killed himself. In that same year in Idaho, when brothers Doug and Craig Broderick were pulled over for failing to signal, they killed one officer and wounded another before being killed themselves in a violent gun battle. In December 2003, members of the Bixby family, who lived outside of Abbeville, S.C., killed two law enforcement officers in a dispute over a small sliver of land next to their home. And in May 2010, Jerry and Joseph Kane, a father and son sovereign team, shot to death two West Memphis, Ark., police officers who had pulled them over in a routine traffic stop. Later that day, the Kanes were killed in a fierce shootout with police that wounded two other officers.

They have a warped history

The ideas of the “sovereign citizens” movement originate in the ideology of the Posse Comitatus, an anti-Semitic group that raged through the Midwest in the late 1970s and 1980s…Sovereign citizens also often distinguish between so-called “14th Amendment citizens,” who are subject to federal and state governments, and themselves, who are also known as “organic citizens” – an ideology that causes adherents to claim that black people, who only became legal citizens when the 14th Amendment was passed after the Civil War, have far fewer rights than whites. Some of the more famous adherents of sovereign citizens ideology include Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols and members of the Montana Freemen.

Virulent racism against black folks doesn’t just affect us people of color. Those same supremacist white nationalist and sovereign terrorists are also anti-LGBT and anti-women.

If you aren’t black or a person of color-you need to think about this-in your own self interest. They could decide to kill you. Someone you know or love or work with or live next door to may be the next person gunned down or caught in the crossfire, or bombed. This is not about “lone wolf” mentally deranged loners. Don’t kid yourselves. And it isn’t just about guns (though these people should have zero access to them and we need to take on the NRA), since virulent haters use bombs and other means to kill.

Take off the blindfold.

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You are either part of the problem or part of the solution-but first you need to accept that there is a problem, and it isn’t just one for black folks or brown folks, or red folks or Muslims, Sikhs or Jews.

I was thinking about Martin Niemöller’s words:

First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out–

Because I was not a Socialist.

Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out–

Because I was not a Trade Unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out–

Because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me–and there was no one left to speak for me.

If you are white substitute and change that to:

First they killed and dispossessed Native Americans…

then enslaved, lynched and still target blacks…

(insert groups)

and close with…”then they came to shoot me”

Cross-posted from Black Kos


Tuesday Morning Herd Check-in

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

So … what’s going on in your part of Moosylvania??


Motley Monday Check in and Mooselaneous Musings

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Good morning Motley Meese! Hope your weekend was lovely. The above is another shot from my fabjabulous new camera.


  PLEASE Don’t Recommend the check-in diary!
 

        Fierces on the weather jar comment are still welcome.

The check-in is an open thread and general social hour.

It’s traditional but not obligatory to give us a weather check where you are and let us know what’s new, interesting, challenging or even routine in your life lately. Nothing is particularly obligatory here except:

Always remember the Moose Golden (Purple?) Rule:

Be kind to each other… or else.

What could be simpler than that, right?

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Love Equals Love: Utah Pride Parade

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Photo Credit: Victor Hugo Pinilla-Coxe (my friend)

I moved to Utah 27 years ago, end of May 1987.  I already knew a few LGBTQ people, mostly from college and campus ministry, and a couple in my small home town.  AIDS was still kind of new, and scary.  My church has long welcomed everyone, and I had friends: they were a lesbian couple with two adopted children.  

Equal marriage was a fantasy, barely on the radar.  Mostly, I wanted my friends to be safe, and able to have jobs & places to live.  I moved away, back, away again, and finally back 16.5 years ago.  

As you may have heard, there is equal marriage breaking out all over our country.  Court cases for every state without it right now.  Utah had 17 blessed days of equal marriage last winter.  Now, we are waiting and waiting to hear from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.  And we are waiting, like all of you, for June 2015 and SCOTUS.  

I want equal civil and social rights for all people.  Just all people.  I am teaching my two children this also. For years, I sat in my chair and blogged about stuff here and a couple other places.  Last fall, I went out and about and became involved in local politics.  I was asked to help with a few things around the Utah Pride Festival, and even though I have my kids this weekend, I said “YES!”

Yesterday, I took cash for entry at the Utah Pride Festival, with the Women’s Democratic Club. Kos-friend Ballerina XX invited me several times, and I finally went two months ago to their Lunch!  

This morning, I registered voters along the parade route with some friends.  Then I checked on my kids, and stayed for communion with Utah Pride Interfaith Coalition.  My church walks with this group!  The kids and I also went to the service Thursday night.  

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My kids with me! They dressed in rainbow colors!  

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Photo Credit:  Victor Hugo Pinilla-Coxe

Then back to the Women’s Democratic Club to see the float, and chat, and wait, and decide which candidates to hold signs for, wear T-shirts for, etc.  I am working with the county party, and several candidates, and I am the official Volunteer Coordinator for Chris Stout. He is in a primary, so he walked right after our State Attorney General candidate.  This is also in the news, since the two previous AG’s are in trouble with the FBI, among other agencies.  I ended up with a Charles Stormont T-shirt and a Chris Stout sign.  

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The Capitol 13 have their own story in activism.

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A few people disagreed with us.  We will love them anyway!  

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One float I saw while we were waiting!  This parade was a BIG DEAL!  Over 100 entries.  

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Our Attorney General candidate can hulahoop!  With the County Sheriff candidate supporters in the background.  

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Peter Corroon also can hulahoop it up!  He is a former Mayor of Salt Lake County, and is now our State Party Chair.  

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This is my friend Valerie, the Campaign Manager for Charles Stormont, and his lovely wife!  Their children are also in this darling car!  

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A few spectators were on top of this downtown building!  

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Lest you think Utah is not fun, here is one other picture from my friend Vincent!  

After I walked with my candidate, I walked quickly and RAN back to the start of the parade, and walked the route again with my children, church, and the Interfaith Coalition.

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The last entry in the parade is the Interfaith Coalition Rainbow Giant Banner.  Here it is just as they start to roll it up.  These two photos are from my friend Sarah Bang.  

Everyone was there!  Mormons Building Bridges!  Some very special Boy Scouts!  Thanks to the Utah Pride Center for this great event!  

I hope you enjoy my pictures, and the 3 I am using from my friend Victor.  Please ask questions, and please believe there is always hope!  


Odds & Ends: News/Humor

   

I post a weekly diary of historical notes, arts & science items, foreign news (often receiving little notice in the US) and whimsical pieces from the outside world that I often feature in “Cheers & Jeers”.  

OK, you’ve been warned – here is this week’s tomfoolery material that I posted

ART NOTES – works by J.M.W. Turner entitled Turner & the Sea are at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts to September 1st.

FOR A VARIETY of reasons, men in South Korea are marrying women from elsewhere in Asia.

A PSYCHOTHERAPIST in Germany has founded an institute of humor, believing that it is not only vital in medicine, but to her corporate clients as well.

THURSDAY’s CHILD is Amelia the Cat – a Philadelphia kitteh who was voted #1 in a Top Bookstore Cat contest.

BRAIN TEASER – try this Quiz of the Week’s News from the BBC.

LITERARY NOTES – writings the late author Douglas Adams cut from his Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy novels are to be published for the first time (after being found in his archive).

FRIDAY’s CHILD is Freya the Cat – the kitteh of Britain’s finance minister (Chancellor of the Exchequer) George Osborne, who had wandered away from Downing Street before being located (1-1/2 miles away) by a group of women heading home after going for dinner.

Kate Jones, who works as a homelessness outreach worker, telephoned the number on Freya’s collar before learning how far she had travelled. She had worked to find housing for poor people all day, then watched as Freya returned home via … chauffeur. She posted a photo of the kitteh, along with this dig at the Conservative finance minister: “Found – on the streets of Vauxhall. Not everyone is as lucky as Freya. George, please stop cutting homeless services.”

THE OTHER NIGHT yours truly hosted the Top Comments diary with a look at the veteran comic/actor Robert Klein – my favorite stand-up comedian, and whose recent memoirs rekindled my interest in his TV, film and theater career, as well.

DIRECT DESCENDANTS? – Erwin Schrödinger (the Nobel Prize-winning Austrian physicist, noted for his thought experiment ‘Schrödinger’s Cat’) and film star James Woods.

   

…… and finally, for a song of the week ………………….. while he has settled into the role of an elder statesman of New Orleans music of all kinds: at one time Dr. John was considered an avant-garde psychedelic performer where everyday was Mardi Gras. His career has taken some twists and turns, but in the aftermath of Katrina the media sought out a few familiar faces: The Neville Brothers, Harry Connick Jr., Irma Thomas, Allen Toussaint … and Dr. John, whom CBS’s “Sunday Morning” profiled in the wake of that disaster. The identification is that strong.

Born as Malcolm (Mac) Rebennack in 1940, he began as a session guitarist and keyboardist in his native city, appearing on recordings by Frankie Ford (of “Sea Cruise” fame) and his mentor, Professor Longhair. He had a regional hit (“Storm Warning”) in 1959 while still a teenager. Shortly thereafter he became an A&R man for local record labels, before concentrating on keyboards when his left ring finger was injured (by a gunshot) while defending an old friend.

With events such as this and some early drug use, he left New Orleans for Los Angeles in 1963 – where he became a featured session musician (as seen in the first photo, below). He performed on recordings from Sonny & Cher to Canned Heat.

In 1968 he was signed to Atco (an Atlantic Records subsidiary) and by that time had honed his own persona: he became Dr. John Creaux (based on a voodoo practitioner of the 19th Century) as well as the Night Tripper (based on … well, ….) and his stage show combined voodoo, New Orleans R&B, traditional blues and the emerging psychedelic rock sound. This culminated in his first album Gris-Gris – recorded during left-over studio time booked by Sonny & Cher. It featured tunes such as “Mama Roux” and “Danse Fambeaux” and added … even a touch of vaudeville to the mix.

Upon hearing it, the late Atlantic Records president Ahmet Ertegun (who didn’t sign Rebennack personally) is supposed to have exclaimed, “How are we supposed to sell this boogaloo crap?!?” The album didn’t chart, but was named by Rolling Stone as #143 on its 500 Greatest Albums of All-Time list, and after being out-of-print for a long time: Gris-Gris became available on the Collector’s Choice label. More importantly for our purposes: years later it gave our own Floja Roja an idea for a name for her (then) new kitteh.

Rebennack gained a following not only with the public, but also with many rock stars (Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton) eager to embrace a sound not played by anyone else. And from 1969-1971: Dr. John’s sound (on albums such as Remedies and The Sun, Moon and Herbs continued to evolve, with several guest rock stars appearing on them. I recall seeing him perform during this period but – alas – he was the opening act for rock acts Foghat and the James Gang (post-Joe Walsh era) and the fans at the show were … ummm ……. well, less than enthusiastic about his brand of music.

It was his next recording Dr. John’s Gumbo from 1972 where he began to shift-out of his psychedelia mode (although vestiges have remained to this day). His first chart success came with a cover version of the Mardi Gras-themed song Iko Iko (which, incidentally, needed a 2002 court case to resolve its authorship). The album had other New Orleans R&B tunes such as “Tipitina” and “Junko Partner” and was named by Rolling Stone as #404 on its 500 Greatest Albums listing.

Rebennack dropped the Night Tripper name and had his biggest hit with next year’s Right Place, Wrong Time plus Such a Night that saw him appear on Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert and other shows of its time. Later in 1973, he appeared along with guitarists Mike Bloomfield and John Hammond on the album Triumvirate and his career seemed wide open. He co-wrote songs with Doc Pomus (and years later sang at his 1991 funeral) plus he performed on The Band’s 1976 The Last Waltz album.

But he had difficulties the rest of the decade (substance abuse among them) and the All-Music Guide’s Richie Unterberger also cites his unpredictability as hampering his commercial success, as well as his being all-too-willing to coast on performing traditional R&B rather than challenge himself with original material. He did branch-out in the mid-1980’s: with solo piano recordings, a 1989 Great American Songbook effort, a tour with Englishman Chris Barber, and even an album with old-fashioned Dixieland performers Al Hirt and Pete Fountain.

Since 1990, he has continued on that unpredictable path: with albums of mostly original songs (1994’s “Television“, 1998’s Anutha Zone with Paul Weller of The Jam and 2001’s “Creole Moon” along with ballads/tribute albums: such as 1995’s “Afterglow”, 2000’s Duke Elegant and 2006’s Mercernary – the songs of Johnny Mercer.

But in the wake of Katrina, he has worked tirelessly at benefit shows and telethons: with 2005’s EP Sippiana Hericane as well as two of Dr. John’s best-reviewed albums in years: his 2008 recording The City that Care Forgot – with some not-so-thinly disguised criticism of politicians we used to know – and 2009’s Tribal.

His most recent album was 2012’s Locked Down produced by Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys, which won Rebennack his 6th Grammy Award. For a “Best Of” album, try 2006’s Definitive Pop Collection on Rhino.

In 1995 he released his autobiography and while his chart-topping days may have passed – if you listen closely, you can hear his music everywhere: from the Stones’ “Let it Loose” (from 1972’s “Exile on Main Street”) to the Blues Brothers 2000 film (“How Blue Can You Get”, a gumbo-flavored version of “Season of the Witch”) and more recently Disney’s 2009 “Princess and the Frog” (“Down in New Orleans”).

Mac Rebennack will turn age 74 this coming November, was inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008, is the winner of six Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2012.

He just completed the European portion of his current tour – which brings him next to the Chicago Blues Festival on June 15th. And if we’re lucky ….. Dr. John will be making house calls for some time to come.

For all of his work: I still treasure the closing tune on his first album, I Walk on Gilded Splinters which captured the spirit of his early Night Tripper days in one tune. The song has been covered by Marsha Hunt, Paul Weller of The Jam and – most famously – an epic-length version from Humble Pie’s Performance: Rocking the Fillmore 1971 live album.  

And below you can hear Dr. John perform it.

Some people think they jive me

But I know they must be crazy

They don’t see their misfortune

If they’re just too lazy

Walk through the fire

Fly through the smoke

See my enemy

at the end of their rope

Walk on pins and needles

See what they can do

Walk on gilded splinters

With the King of the Zulus


Michelle Obama Speaks at Maya Angelou’s Memorial Service

First Lady Michelle Obama was one of the speakers at the Memorial Service for Dr. Maya Angelou Saturday morning.

She spoke of how inspired she was by Dr. Angelou’s words. Her own words are inspirational as well.

I first came into her presence in 2008, when she spoke at a campaign rally here in North Carolina. At that point, she was in a wheelchair, hooked up to an oxygen tank to help her breathe. But let me tell you, she rolled up like she owned the place. (Laughter.) She took the stage, as she always did, like she’d been born there. And I was so completely awed and overwhelmed by her presence I could barely concentrate on what she was saying to me.

But while I don’t remember her exact words, I do remember exactly how she made me feel. (Applause.) She made me feel like I owned the place, too. She made me feel like I had been born on that stage right next to her. And I remember thinking to myself, “Maya Angelou knows who I am, and she’s rooting for me. So, now I’m good. I can do this. I can do this.” (Applause.)

And that’s really true for us all, because in so many ways, Maya Angelou knew us. She knew our hope, our pain, our ambition, our fear, our anger, our shame. And she assured us that despite it all — in fact, because of it all — we were good. And in doing so, she paved the way for me and Oprah and so many others just to be our good, old, black-woman selves. (Applause.)

She showed us that eventually, if we stayed true to who we are, then the world would embrace us. (Applause.) And she did this not just for black women, but for all women, for all human beings. She taught us all that it is okay to be your regular old self, whatever that is — your poor self, your broken self, your brilliant, bold, phenomenal self.

Full transcript below the fold along with a video of the entire service.

Remarks by the First Lady at Memorial Service for Dr. Maya Angelou

MRS. OBAMA: Thank you so much. (Applause.) My heart is so full. My heart is so full. Bebe — Oprah, why did you do that? Just why did you put me after this? (Laughter.)

To the family, Guy, to all of you; to the friends; President Clinton; Oprah; my mother, Cicely Tyson; Ambassador Young — let me just share something with you. My mother, Marian Robinson, never cares about anything I do. (Laughter.) But when Dr. Maya Angelou passed, she said, you’re going, aren’t you? I said, well, Mom, I’m not really sure, I have to check with my schedule. She said, you are going, right? (Laughter.) I said, well, I’m going to get back to you but I have to check with the people, figure it out. I came back up to her room when I found out that I was scheduled to go, and she said, that’s good, now I’m happy. (Laughter.)

It is such a profound honor, truly, a profound honor, to be here today on behalf of myself and my husband as we celebrate one of the greatest spirits our world has ever known, our dear friend, Dr. Maya Angelou.

In the Book of Psalms it reads: “I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the Earth.” What a perfect description of Maya Angelou, and the gift she gave to her family and to all who loved her.

She taught us that we are each wonderfully made, intricately woven, and put on this Earth for a purpose far greater than we could ever imagine. And when I think about Maya Angelou, I think about the affirming power of her words.

The first time I read “Phenomenal Woman”, I was struck by how she celebrated black women’s beauty like no one had ever dared to before. (Applause.) Our curves, our stride, our strength, our grace. Her words were clever and sassy; they were powerful and sexual and boastful. And in that one singular poem, Maya Angelou spoke to the essence of black women, but she also graced us with an anthem for all women — a call for all of us to embrace our God-given beauty.

And, oh, how desperately black girls needed that message. As a young woman, I needed that message. As a child, my first doll was Malibu Barbie. (Laughter.) That was the standard for perfection. That was what the world told me to aspire to. But then I discovered Maya Angelou, and her words lifted me right out of my own little head.

Her message was very simple. She told us that our worth has nothing to do with what the world might say. Instead, she said, “Each of us comes from the creator trailing wisps of glory.” She reminded us that we must each find our own voice, decide our own value, and then announce it to the world with all the pride and joy that is our birthright as members of the human race.

Dr. Angelou’s words sustained me on every step of my journey — through lonely moments in ivy-covered classrooms and colorless skyscrapers; through blissful moments mothering two splendid baby girls; through long years on the campaign trail where, at times, my very womanhood was dissected and questioned. For me, that was the power of Maya Angelou’s words — words so powerful that they carried a little black girl from the South Side of Chicago all the way to the White House. (Applause.)

And today, as First Lady, whenever the term “authentic” is used to describe me, I take it as a tremendous compliment, because I know that I am following in the footsteps of great women like Maya Angelou. But really, I’m just a beginner — I am baby-authentic. (Laughter.) Maya Angelou, now she was the original, she was the master. For at a time when there were such stifling constraints on how black women could exist in the world, she serenely disregarded all the rules with fiercely passionate, unapologetic self. She was comfortable in every last inch of her glorious brown skin.

But for Dr. Angelou, her own transition was never enough. You see, she didn’t just want to be phenomenal herself, she wanted all of us to be phenomenal right alongside her. (Applause.) So that’s what she did throughout her lifetime — she gathered so many of us under her wing. I wish I was a daughter, but I was right under that wing sharing her wisdom, her genius, and her boundless love.

I first came into her presence in 2008, when she spoke at a campaign rally here in North Carolina. At that point, she was in a wheelchair, hooked up to an oxygen tank to help her breathe. But let me tell you, she rolled up like she owned the place. (Laughter.) She took the stage, as she always did, like she’d been born there. And I was so completely awed and overwhelmed by her presence I could barely concentrate on what she was saying to me.

But while I don’t remember her exact words, I do remember exactly how she made me feel. (Applause.) She made me feel like I owned the place, too. She made me feel like I had been born on that stage right next to her. And I remember thinking to myself, “Maya Angelou knows who I am, and she’s rooting for me. So, now I’m good. I can do this. I can do this.” (Applause.)

And that’s really true for us all, because in so many ways, Maya Angelou knew us. She knew our hope, our pain, our ambition, our fear, our anger, our shame. And she assured us that despite it all — in fact, because of it all — we were good. And in doing so, she paved the way for me and Oprah and so many others just to be our good, old, black-woman selves. (Applause.)

She showed us that eventually, if we stayed true to who we are, then the world would embrace us. (Applause.) And she did this not just for black women, but for all women, for all human beings. She taught us all that it is okay to be your regular old self, whatever that is — your poor self, your broken self, your brilliant, bold, phenomenal self.

That was Maya Angelou’s reach. She touched me. She touched all of you. She touched people all across the globe, including a young white woman from Kansas who named her daughter after Maya, and raised her son to be the first black President of the United States. (Applause.)

So when I heard that Dr. Angelou had passed, while I felt a deep sense of loss, I also felt a profound sense of peace. Because there is no question that Maya Angelou will always be with us, because there was something truly divine about Maya. I know that now, as always, she is right where she belongs.

May her memory be a blessing to us all. Thank you. God bless. (Applause.)

The entire service can be viewed here (h/t DeniseVelez):


Sunday All Day Check-in for the Herd

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

On weekends (and holidays), you may find the check-in thread earlier or later than normal because … it is the weekend! Moosies need their beauty rest:

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

So … what’s going on in your part of Moosylvania??



~


Weekly Address: President Obama – Supporting America’s Students

The President’s Weekly Address post is also the Weekend Open News Thread. Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.

 

From the White HouseWeekly Address

In this week’s address, President Obama underscored the importance of helping to lift the burden of crushing student loan debt faced by too many Americans and highlighted the efforts he’s taken to ensure we uphold America’s commitment to provide a quality education for all who are willing to work for it. While the President will continue to take action on his own, he urged Congress to do its part and commended Senate Democrats for working on a bill that would help more young people save money.

Transcript: Weekly Address: Supporting America’s Students

Hi, everybody.  This is commencement season, a time for graduates and their families to celebrate one of the greatest achievements of a young person’s life. But for many graduates, it also means feeling trapped by a whole lot of student loan debt.  And we’ve got to do more to lift that burden.

See, in a 21st century economy, the surest pathway into the middle class is some form of higher education.  The unemployment rate for workers with a bachelor’s degree is just 3.3 percent – about half what it is for high school graduates.  The typical graduate of a four-year college earns $15,000 more per year than someone with just a high school degree.  

But at a time when college has never been more important, it’s also never been more expensive.

That’s why, since I took office, I’ve worked to make college more affordable.  We reformed a student loan system that gave away billions of taxpayer dollars to big banks and invested that money where it makes a bigger bang – in helping more young people afford a higher education.

But over the past three decades, the average tuition at a public four-year college has more than tripled.  The average undergraduate student who borrows for college now graduates owing almost $30,000. And I’ve heard from too many young people who are frustrated that they’ve done everything they were supposed to do – and now they’re paying the price.

I’ve taken action on my own to offer millions of students the opportunity to cap their monthly student loan payments to 10% of their income.  But Congress needs to do its part. The good news is that Senate Democrats are working on a bill that would help more young people save money.  Just like you can refinance your mortgage at a lower interest rate, this bill would let you refinance your student loans.  And we’d pay for it by closing loopholes that allow some millionaires to pay a lower tax rate than the middle class.

That’s the choice that your representatives in Congress will make in the coming weeks – protect young people from crushing debt, or protect tax breaks for millionaires. And while Congress decides what it’s going to do, I will keep doing whatever I can without Congress to help responsible young people pay off their loans – including new action I will take this week.

This country has always made a commitment to put a good education within the reach of all who are willing to work for it.  That’s what made us an economic superpower.  That’s what makes us special.  And as long as I hold this office, I’ll keep fighting to give more young people the chance to earn their own piece of the American Dream.  Thanks, and have a great weekend.

Bolding added.

~


Saturday All Day Check-in for the Herd

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

On weekends (and holidays), you may find the check-in thread earlier or later than normal because … it is the weekend! Moosies need their beauty rest:

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

So … what’s going on in your part of Moosylvania??