MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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It’s a New Day for S. African Women

By Homepage, New York Daily News, South Africa: The Freedom VoteNo Comments

By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer | Sunday, May 8, 1994

JOHANNESBURG—Zodwa Tshabalala, her left leg shattered at the knee, crawled through an open gate as neighbors who heard her screaming clustered around her.
“I’ll kill you if you are not gone by the time I come back,” her fiancé told her before he drove away.
Thembi, the fiancé, spent this March afternoon battering her, punching her face, kicking her prone, injured body. He then threw her and their eight-month-old daughter out of the home the couple bought when they decided to marry months earlier.
It has been two months since the attack.
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Mandela, ANC Readying for Power

By Homepage, New York Daily News, South Africa: The Freedom VoteNo Comments

By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer | Sunday, May 8, 1994

JOHANNESBURG—South Africa’s new national assembly sits for the first time tomorrow, and the African National Congress, which holds 252 of the chamber’s 400 seats, will select Nelson Mandela, as president.

On Tuesday, he will be sworn in as the nation’s first president chosen democratically. The theme of the inauguration concert, with some 3,000 performers, is “Many Cultures, One Nation.”

The weight of history, of course, demands this.

Much of the world is coming to share in the celebration—and, perhaps, taste some of the smoked crocodile and ostrich dishes on the menu.
Delegations representing more than 125 nations, including 40 heads of state, plan to attend. The American contingent is headed by Vice President Al Gore.
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Mandela Sworn in as Freedom Reigns

By Homepage, New York Daily News, South Africa: The Freedom VoteNo Comments

By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer | Wednesday, May 11, 1994

PRETORIA—Climaxing his journey from political prisoner to nation builder, Nelson Mandela assumed the office of president of South Africa yesterday vowing that “never again” would racial exploitation be tolerated.

In a joyous ceremony that marked the end of the country’s pariah status and celebrated the nation’s transformation into a beacon of racial reconciliation, Mandela proclaimed: “Let freedom reign.”

The American delegation included U.S. Vice President Al Gore, First Lady Hillary Clinton and Jesse Jackson. Gore said South Africa has sent a powerful message to the world that differences can be set aside for the sake of a nation.

Watched by international visitors including Vice President Gore, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, Palestinian Leader Yasser Arafat, and Cuban President Fidel Castro, Mandela spoke in deep, measured tones as he swore allegiance to the new republic and its constitution.

As he said, “So help me God,” shouts of “Viva” rang out from the huge, multi-racial crowd gathered at the foot of the Union Buildings amphitheater.

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A sour tale of home sweet homeland By MICHAEL O. ALLEN

By Homepage, New York Daily News, South Africa: The Freedom VoteNo Comments

My recent journey to South Africa to witness its epic sprint to democracy plunged me, like a pebble flung into a stream, deep into memories of my childhood in Africa.
Beside unleashing bred-in-bone memories, my sojourn forced me to examine thoughts I had long held, especially about myself. By the time I left South Africa, my persona, carefully constructed as to be shorn of race, had been sorely tested, shaken and ultimately redrawn.
My story began 31 years ago in Accra, Ghana, West Africa, where I was born.
The strongest ripple of boyhood memory was of a night lit by the moon as my mother, Esther Lamiley Mills, sang sweet songs to me while I tapped on a drum. It was masquerade season, similar to Halloween, and we sat in a makeshift hut of palm fronds we had put up in a small compound that my grandfather shared with his children. I was 5 years old and my mother was 20.
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Rush Limbaugh for The Progressive

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This is an illustration for an article in this month’s Progressive, Conservatives in Crisis by Ruth Conniff, about how conservatives are facing an ideological crisis after eight years of Bush and their trouncing in the election.

From the article:

“While Obama is declaring the argument between big-government liberals  and free-market-fundamentalist conservatives over, Rush Limbaugh is  keeping up the fight: ‘The battle’s never going to be over, the war is  never going to be over because battles are going to be fought  continually over and over again, because this is who these people  are,’ he says. And then he recites the rightwing bromide that FDR  ‘prolonged’ the Great Depression with his New Deal programs.”

After reading the article, I knew right off the bat that I wanted to picture Limbaugh as a human cannonball: a sham display of Big Top bravado.

Speaking, plainly

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I guess Chris Rock has always spoken this way. This was from his Bigger and Blacker 1999 tour.

This excerpt of the transcript is courtesy of Drew’s Script-O-Rama

Racism everywhere, everybody pissed off.
Black people yelling, ”Racism.”

White people yelling, ”Reverse racism.”

Chinese people yelling, ”Sideways racism!”

And the lndians ain’t yelling shit ’cause they dead.

So everybody bitch about how bad their people got it.

Nobody got it worse than the American lndian.

Everybody need to calm the fuck down.

lndians got it bad. lndians got it the worst.

You know how bad the lndians got it?
When’s the last time you met two lndians?

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Facebook baby

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When I was a kid, I was crazy for Mad Magazine, and a passionate follower of Mad’s campaign against consumerism and materialism in general, and against Madison Avenue and the world of advertising in particular.

Lots has happened since then. When Mad talked about advertising, it was talking about television, radio and newspapers. There was no Internet. The debate back then was over whether TV, which catered to the sponsors, would kill off newspapers, which took pains to separate the news from the ads. Now the Internet, originally an academic project financed by the American military, has become the World Wide Web, which is both a powerful vehicle for disseminating information and a mighty commercial mechanism. And it’s proving to be the Web which is finally killing off the newspapers.

New web ventures have a patina of geeky chic, but behind them all are hard-nosed venture capitalists who are trying to figure out how to monetize the web – their polite way of saying they want to make money from web users. This is something of a challenge since the Web started off free; we have many warnings that this will change, and that our culture will veer off into an even higher stage of materialism and consumerism.

What’s more frightening is that many efforts to monetize the web accomplish it with a massive invasion of our privacy. Our web searches reveal what we are thinking about and interested in; our emails explicitly contain our personal concerns and professional activities. All this information is fair game for Web businesses to collect, analyze and use or sell in an effort to make advertising more effective.

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Where To, Mr. Daschle?

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Tom Daschle, President Obama’s nominee for secretary of Health and Human services, is facing some hard questions today regarding his failure to pay more than $140,000 in taxes, much of it related to a chauffeur-driven car provided to him by big-time Democratic donor Leo Hindery, Jr.

To make things worse for Daschle, his tax problems came to light just as his financial statement to the Office of Government Ethics was made public. This  required report showed that he made millions of dollars giving public speeches and private counsel to insurers, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and other firms with complex regulatory and legislative interests in Washington.

Daschle was also an adviser to the law and lobbying firm Alston & Bird, which paid him $2.1 million last year in addition to providing him with a 401k plan worth between $100,000 and $250,000. During his three years with the lobbying group they earned more than $16 million working on behalf of some of the leaders in the health care industry in their dealings with the government, often before the department he’s in line to lead.

He managed to do all this without ever registering as a lobbyist. But the bottom line is that he got a lot of money from health care, pharmaceutical and insurance companies which have billions of dollars at stake in the regulations from the Health and Human Services.

The Senate Finance Committee has scheduled a closed-door session today to discuss Daschle’s tax problems. I wonder how all his old buddies will view these revelations?

To read a little more, here’s an article in the Washington Post, and another on Politico.

Where To, Mr. Daschle?

By HomepageNo Comments

Tom Daschle, President Obama’s nominee for secretary of Health and Human services, is facing some hard questions today regarding his failure to pay more than $140,000 in taxes, much of it related to a chauffeur-driven car provided to him by big-time Democratic donor Leo Hindery, Jr.

To make things worse for Daschle, his tax problems came to light just as his financial statement to the Office of Government Ethics was made public. This  required report showed that he made millions of dollars giving public speeches and private counsel to insurers, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and other firms with complex regulatory and legislative interests in Washington.

Daschle was also an adviser to the law and lobbying firm Alston & Bird, which paid him $2.1 million last year in addition to providing him with a 401k plan worth between $100,000 and $250,000. During his three years with the lobbying group they earned more than $16 million working on behalf of some of the leaders in the health care industry in their dealings with the government, often before the department he’s in line to lead.

He managed to do all this without ever registering as a lobbyist. But the bottom line is that he got a lot of money from health care, pharmaceutical and insurance companies which have billions of dollars at stake in the regulations from the Health and Human Services.

The Senate Finance Committee has scheduled a closed-door session today to discuss Daschle’s tax problems. I wonder how all his old buddies will view these revelations?

To read a little more, here’s an article in the Washington Post, and another on Politico.