Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Arnold's Evil Twin Sister...?

Iris Kyle, Winner
Arnold's Miss International Body Building Competiton,
Arnold's Sports Festival
03/06/09


A few days ago I received an email from a friend. I almost deleted it, because of the title. The Subject read: Arnold's Evil Twin Sister. And if you read my rant when Ahhrnold tried to extort the Native Tribes for more money to pay off the budget deficits, that 'white men with forked tongues' had created, then you know he doesn't impress me.
And no, in case you didn't read the caption, the woman in the photo above is NOT his twin sister. Nor is she evil.
I just wanted to see if you were...paying attention.
However, I'm glad I opened and quickly read the message. It details the recent speech given by Meg Whitman, former CEO of eBAY as she announced her candidacy for govenor of California.
Humph....Republican women on the move...
Is it just me, or is there a conspiracy afoot by the Republican party? You see, also this week, headlines read that, Alaska's former Governor Sarah Palin's autobiograpy which is due to be released November 17th, has already earned 'best seller' status.

Brings to mind the image of long cancelled late night TV host Arsenio Hall, when he'd place his hand to the side of his narrow face, tap his temple with his index finger, raise his eyebrow, and nod his head while uttering that famous "Hhmmm".

Yep folks, keep your eyes and ears open, cause more "Things that Make You Go Hhmm," are about to go dancing by.

From my scan of her speech, Whitman seems to be putting all her eggs in 'Business' Basket' as the place where societies problems can be hatched.

In my book, helping Business does nothing, if Business doesn't share it's profits with it's workers.

And lowering the taxes on Businesses and deregulating agencies that keep Business mindful of how it's activities effect communities' health and well-being, creates cities and nations with polluted air and toxic water sources.



Take these months to learn all you can, about the candidates, so that your decisions are well rounded. The introduction that came with this email is biased. In fact it came with the title "Arnold's Evil Twin Sister," and because my friend is a former State employee, there was an urging from her colleagues that,

We need to get the word out to NOT vote for this lady for our next Governor if you treasure your state jobs!!!!!!!!

And this was the introduction that followed,

This is the same woman who has been making life miserable for people who sell on eBay. She was the CEO when changes were made, such as sellers not being able to leave negative feedback against ANY buyers, whether they were paid or not. She was trying to attract large companies like GMC, Ford, etc, and has left the little guys in the dust. Since eBAY receives a percentage of every sale, they no longer care about someone who is making a few hundred dollars a month, because they don't bring in a huge amount. Just look her opinion of State workers, and ask yourself... DO YOU WANT THIS PERSON TO BE THE GOVERNOR?

You, intelligent reader, can begin forming your own analysis, by reading her speech below. It's long, but very clear, and worth the time to become introduced to her agenda. Even though November 2, 2010 is more than a year away, we might as well begin paying attention now to this important race. Afterall, it's still hold true in many areas, that as 'California goes, so does the nation'.

Meg Whitman formally announcing her candidacy 9/22/09 in Fullerton, CA .


It’s such a privilege to be here with all of you. Since February, when I began to explore my possible run for governor, I’ve been going non-stop listening to people, sharing ideas, thinking hard about the problems Californians face. I’ve visited dozens of towns in every corner of our state and participated in more than 100 events.
Californians have welcomed me into their homes, shown me their businesses, and introduced me to their families and communities. I’ve been deeply touched.
I’m quickly learning that the campaign trail is as rewarding as it is tough. Yes, there are some grueling days, but actually, every day is a gift. I already treasure the time I’ve spent with Californians during the campaign, and we’re only just beginning.
As I said, I’ve traveled to every corner of our state, and what I’ve heard time and again, from Californians in every walk of life – from Republicans to Democrats to decline to state voters – is that people desperately want California to be great again.
There’s a profound hunger for change, for leadership, and for authenticity. Californians want to trust their leaders again. They want to be told the truth. And most of all, they want to live in a place of opportunity and optimism, not a place of small dreams and scaled-down ambitions.
Californians love their state, but they understand that their home is in deep trouble. They know because they’re confronted by the problems every day.
More than 2.2 million Californians are out of work. Our unemployment rate is at a record-shattering 12.2 percent. And in some parts of the state, things are much worse. In Mendota, unemployment is at 38 percent. In Huron, we’re at almost 35 percent. And parts of Riverside County hover at around 30 percent unemployment.
Think about what that means… Think about the number of heartbreaking conversations that have taken place: Employers telling long-time employees they must go… Husbands telling wives that they can’t afford their homes… Parents telling children their college dreams are over.
For Californians who still have jobs, taxes and fees are eating into their lives. Every year we pay more to sustain an out-of-control state bureaucracy… A wasteful bureaucracy, out of touch with the needs of Californians… And a selfish and arrogant bureaucracy, unwilling to give an inch even in the toughest of economic times.
During the past decade, California ’s government spending has grown by 80 percent, while our bureaucracy has increased by 28 percent. Do you feel like our state is 80 percent better? … Of course it isn’t…
And since 2004, state government has added more than 40,000 employees. This year, at a time of deep recession, when local governments, families and businesses across our state are cutting back, the government of California has actually hired 10,000 more bureaucrats! Is it any wonder that Californians are fed up?
And if unemployment, taxes, fees, and out-of-control spending don’t ruin your day, there’s a good chance you’re very worried about your children’s education.
Too many Californians send their children to broken public schools. Schools where our best teachers lose faith and where union rules give our worst teachers a free pass. Schools where our children fail to learn and where the state’s future diminishes a little more each day. Is it any wonder that Californians are fed up? … Of course not…
Californians have every right to be in a foul mood. Cynicism towards everything Sacramento – towards the politics and the politicians – runs deep. People are tired of the lies. They’re angry at the lack of values and commitment. And they’re worried that if we don’t do something soon, it may just be too late.
I understand those feelings. I’ve lived in California for nearly 28 years. My sons were born here. I built a business here. My husband became a doctor here. I care deeply about this state. And I refuse to accept that California cannot be better than it is today.
I refuse to let California fail. The time has come for all of us to take a stand – to make an all out effort to reclaim the California we love. And that is why today I’m here before you to officially announce my candidacy for governor of the state of California .
Now, for those of you who know me, you know that first I’m a mom. I have two older boys, one’s in college and one just graduated. And I’m happy to report that the college graduate has actually found a job and is paying his own rent!
My husband, Griff, is a neurosurgeon at Stanford. We’ve been married 29 years. And after all those years, he’s still the love of my life, my inspiration… without him I wouldn’t be standing here today.
I’ve spent the past 30 years in business. I’ve worked for such great companies as Procter & Gamble, Disney, Hasbro, Stride Rite, and FTD. I’ve had to be confident, efficient, focused, and accountable.
During the past 10 years, I was the President and CEO of eBay. I built eBay from a 30-person, $4 million dollar company, to a company of 15,000 employees and nearly $8 billion in revenues.
eBay was the culmination of my business career. It’s the place where I tested my years of experience and honed my leadership skills. But it was also much more.
At eBay, I helped millions of people create small businesses in the marketplace. I became intimately familiar with the challenges small businesses face in this country.
I came to understand that job creation is dependent on a fragile mix of circumstances – circumstances all too often disrupted by the intrusive hand of government.
And I came to love the inspired individual – a person set free to pursue his or her dreams by an open marketplace and a free society.
Government does not create wealth in this country – inspired individuals create wealth. Helping those people succeed on eBay was the privilege of a lifetime.
My interest in public service blossomed from my years at eBay. It’s an interest that was fueled by my parents, both of whom served their country in the Pacific during World War II. And it’s an interest that was inspired by my long friendships with Mitt Romney and John McCain.
I am running for governor because California simply cannot continue on the path it’s on. And I want your support because I believe I’m uniquely qualified to help turn our state around.
California is the world’s 8th largest economy. It contributes 13 percent of our nation’s gross domestic product. America ’s future is deeply woven into the fabric of California . And I believe that the outcome of our struggles to govern our state and fix our problems will define America ’s destiny in the 21st century.
California is at a tipping point. Our finances are bankrupt. Much of our society’s infrastructure – the roads, the ports, the water delivery systems – is at the breaking point. Our schools don’t teach our kids. Our taxes force people and businesses to leave the state. And our politics and government are so broken that people wonder whether Californians are even capable of governing themselves.
Now, we can continue down the path we’re on: We can bury our heads and just accept the inevitability of reckless government spending…
We can keep sucking up tax increase after tax increase…
We can pretend that it’s not a big deal when a neighbor we know or a business we depend on moves to another state…
We can ignore the schools, especially if our kids aren’t in them…
And we can blame the whole mess on the politicians and move on.
But if we do that – if we continue down the ugly path we’re on – our children and grandchildren will inherit a much-diminished state… a state with much lowered expectations and limited opportunity…
California will become a symbol not for what’s possible, but for the missed potential of a great people.
I want to take a different approach. I’m a big believer in focus. And I believe the next governor has to focus on three things to save our state. She must create jobs, cut spending, and fix our broken education system.
We could spend hours talking about each of these areas. Instead, what I’ll do now is share the main parts of what I propose to do. I invite you to visit my website at Meg Whitman dot-com for more details.
Since early this year, I’ve been crystal clear that if I’m elected I will look at everything through the lens of job creation. California simply cannot begin to solve its problems until our people are working again. We must put jobs first.
My number one goal as governor will be to help the private sector create at least 2 million jobs for Californians by 2015. This is the amount we need if we’re going to replace the jobs our economy has stopped producing or is losing to neighboring states. It’s the target we need to hit if we’re going to restore prosperity.
The way you create jobs is by lowering taxes and eliminating redundant and ill-conceived regulations that stifle job growth. You have to create an environment where businesses can afford to stay in California and create more jobs.
As governor, I’ll cut taxes to create jobs. … Specifically, I’ll cut taxes on job-creating businesses of every size and implement targeted tax relief to rebuild manufacturing in California . I’ll expand research and development tax credits. I’ll establish tax incentives and credits for companies that train and hire displaced workers.
And I’ll establish a cabinet-level position in my administration dedicated to private sector job growth.
Times have changed and California has to compete for jobs. When I was CEO of eBay, I frequently got calls from governors around the country trying to get me to move business to their states. If I’m elected, you can bet I’ll be burning up the phone lines to businesses in Nevada , Utah , Colorado , Texas , and beyond.
If the burden of taxes and fees in California don’t kill off your business, don’t worry, regulation will.
When I began to tour the state, I expected to get an earful about taxes, and I have. But the passion I’ve seen around government regulation, especially from small business owners, has been just as strong, and with good reason.
For the sake of one cause or another, California has piled mountains of bad regulations on business. We do a lousy job of anticipating the unintended consequences of all those rules. Half the time, we don’t even bother to check whether existing laws address a particular problem. …
You see, bureaucrats rarely have the desire to think things through, and politicians rarely have the courage. And that’s why California ’s regulatory environment is a proven job killer.
I recently visited Teixeira Farms in Santa Maria . Teixeira Farms owns about 4,500 acres in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. They produce huge amounts of broccoli, cabbage, celery, lettuce, and cauliflower. I’m certain you’ve eaten their produce.
Mark Teixeira, general manager of the farm, is a 5th generation California farmer. Mark and his sister, Pam, pride themselves on their family’s history and the fact that they use the latest technology to run their farm.
As I toured the farm with Mark, he explained to me how often government bureaucracy had stifled his intentions to do the right thing, whether it was to create better conditions for his workers, plant new fields, or improve water usage and reclamation.
Mark’s stories are simply remarkable. He told me about government commissions fighting with each other at his expense. About political appointees with no farm experience telling him how to plant his crops. And about smug, government-backed environmentalists telling him that farming destroys the environment and should be restricted. As Mark said to me, “don’t these people eat?”
Now, all this might be frustrating to just Mark and his family, except the same thing is happening across every type of business in California . …
If you elect me, I’ll stop the insanity. On my first day in office, I’ll issue a moratorium on all new regulations until our economy has begun to recover. I’ll initiate a complete review of the state’s existing regulations to root out and eliminate the rules that don’t make sense or are outdated. I’ll appoint people who share my view on regulations. …
And once the economy is stronger, I will require that all new regulations be thoroughly reviewed for their impact on businesses and jobs in our state.
And if I’m elected, I’ll take a careful, thoughtful approach to environmental regulation.
The environment of California is important to all of us. California ’s natural beauty is one of the reasons I love this state so much. And I worry that man has not always been a careful steward of our state’s natural resources.
As governor, I will work hard to protect our environment. But, the needs of our environment have to be balanced with the needs of our people and our economy.
We have unilaterally implemented too many over-reaching environmental regulations – laws that have left us at an economic disadvantage.
AB 32 is a prime example. Governor Schwarzenegger signed this legislation into law in 2006. It’s goal was admirable – to reduce statewide greenhouse gas emissions. But the consequences to the economy were ignored.
A recent study estimates that AB 32 could cost the state more than a million jobs and implementation costs could exceed $100 billion. That’s devastating.
As governor, I would place a moratorium on AB-32 by executive order, until we fully understand the law’s impact on our economy.
My bottom line is this: I love California ’s environment. But I reject radical environmental policies that do little for the environment and devastate California ’s economic future. … Liberal environmentalists may not like jobs or people, but California needs both.
Now, let’s talk about spending. And honestly, when I talk about spending, I get mad. I simply do not understand how even politicians could have let things get so bad.
It’s really very simple. California cannot spend more money than it takes in. Why is it so hard for politicians to come to terms with this concept? Families get it. Businesses get it. We all get it.
Our problem is not revenue. We collect enough taxes to run this state and then some. Our problem – our addiction – is spending. And it’s an addiction that’s killing us. It is killing our state and it is killing our country.
Simply put, Californians can no longer afford the government they have. The Democrats and special interests can jump up and down all they want and try to convince us that our taxes are reasonable, and that we should all just be grateful to live here. But people know better.
Californians are tapped out. They have no more money to give to Sacramento or Washington for that matter. And Californians are mad. They don’t have the luxury of getting a pay raise whenever they need one. So why does California ’s government get to raise our taxes whenever they want more money?
We need a governor with a spine of steel who will look at the books, decide on priorities, deal with the legislature, and take the heat for what we cut and what we fund. If being popular and getting re-elected is your goal, then being governor is a really bad job-person fit.
As I committed to in February, if elected I will identify and implement at least $15 billion in permanent spending cuts from the state budget. I’ll eliminate redundant and underperforming government agencies and commissions. And I will reduce the state workforce by at least 40,000 employees. That’s a 17 percent reduction that would reset the workforce to 2004-2005 levels and save the state a projected $3.3 billion annually.
But cutting simply isn’t enough. We have to get our heads around the concept that mismanagement and waste in government is sapping precious dollars away from the things we want to do.
Did you know that almost every state worker receives a merit pay increase every year until they reach the top of their pay scale? How can that be? Are your pay raises guaranteed?
With automatic pay increases every year, there is no incentive for state workers to perform, and managing performance is nearly impossible.
As governor, I’ll reform government management. I’ll crack down on the overly generous benefits of state employees. I’m deadly serious about rooting out the waste of tax dollars.
And I am serious about the need for California ’s government to finally enter the 21st century.
Technology and innovation have improved business efficiency and saved companies billions of dollars during the past decade. We need to systematically apply technology to our government agencies, so we can realize the same savings and efficiencies that have helped our overall economy.
Finally, I believe you can only manage what you can measure. I want to start measuring government performance. I will create meaningful performance goals for departments and publish the results on line. I want our government – and your governor – to be held responsible for delivering the services Californians are paying for.
Education must be the third priority for our next governor. And again, the issue here is very simple.
If we don’t rededicate ourselves to education with the same energy Americans have applied to going to the moon and fighting wars, the results will be profound. We will lose our ability to innovate and create the next generation of companies and jobs in California – to create the next eBay, the next Google, or the next Genentech. We will permanently erode California ’s prosperity.
We must start producing more and better-qualified high school graduates – graduates ready for advanced studies or prepared for strong vocational careers.
More than fifty percent of our state budget, or about $50 billion, goes to education, and we are still failing our children. We’re ranked at the bottom in the quality of our K-12 education. In two of the most important skills for elementary school education – math and reading – our state ranks 47th and 48th. In science, we rank 43rd.
The issue is not money. There’s plenty of money. It’s how the money is spent.
If you send me to Sacramento , I’ll put more control in the hands of local educators and parents…
I’ll grade our schools A through F and put the results on line so parents can easily determine how their schools are doing…
I’ll give parents the ability to move their children out of failing schools…
And I’ll remove the state cap on the number of charter schools so we can have more competition in our education system…
I will reform our spending programs so that the people closest to our children – teachers and principals – can make spending decisions that make sense. Right now, too much is decided by bureaucrats in Sacramento …
Finally, I’ll reward outstanding teachers and those in key areas, such as math and science.
My goal is nothing short of bringing California ’s schools back to number one. It’s an audacious goal. It won’t be easy and it won’t happen right away. But it has to happen. The prosperity of California and the strength of our nation depend on our success at reclaiming educational excellence.
As I hope you’ve noticed by now, the theme of my campaign is A New California. And I’ve been pleasantly surprised by how well Californians seem to like the phrase. People will come up to me just to talk about what A New California means to them. And this has been really interesting.
For most of the older Californians I meet, A New California means the California they grew up in… the idealized California of the past… where jobs were plentiful, schools were strong, the roads were new, taxes were under control, and California had its act together. Our state was the envy of the world. Our leaders seemed honest and bold. Things were better, safer, less confused, and more optimistic.
For younger people, the phrase speaks to the future. They talk about how they want things to be. And guess what? They talk about honest and bold leaders. Plentiful jobs. They want strong schools and better roads. They want to be able to afford an education. They love technology and its ability to change things. They want to be optimistic.
Californians young and old want the same thing – they want California to be great again. They want their communities to be strong and safe. They want jobs that pay well and give them a chance to enjoy the American dream. They want government in its proper place.
Californians want to feel opportunity again – the joy of knowing that when they work hard and play by the rules, really terrific things will happen. That the future can always be better than today, and that California ’s best days are ahead, not behind.
I’m asking for your help. I need your support. Restoring California is a daunting challenge. Too much has gone wrong for too long. But there’s so much that can go right.
The potential of our state and her people has never been greater. For generations, Californians have shown that they’re wired for innovation, courage, creativity, and compassion. Our struggles have been the struggles of our nation, and California ’s success has defined the American experience.
If today’s Californians can come together to uproot old habits, old ways of thinking, and old ways of doing business, then we will save the state we love and the country we cherish.
I invite you to join my campaign… I look forward to building A New California with you.
Thank you so much…

Friday, September 18, 2009

A Portrait of Change

President Obama hugged his half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, at her December 2003
wedding to Konrad Ng, third from right, in Hawaii.
From left, his daughters, Sasha and Malia; his grandmother Madelyne Dunham, seated; Konrad's parents, Joan and Howard Ng, and brother Perry Ng; and Michelle Obama.

This is an article that was written in January 2009, but it's just now coming to my attention. I'm sharing it in case, you also have not seen it. I absolutely love how it details a deeper significance to the Obama election and presence on the global scene.

His individual life, the history of his and Michelle's ancestry, their genetic coding, and the cultural blending that their sensibilities have made of it all, are symbolique of a truth that most people still do not want to, or know how to accept.

And that is that all human beings of the animal kingdom, are all members of One Family ~ The Human race. The Obama - Robinson household are a living expression of this truth.

And oh, how their individual family histories speak of men and women rich in 'open mindedness', the spirit of adventure, courage, soul-based integrity and spunk. Yes, in these Lifelines exists a practice of listenening to what one's Heart is dictating, and following that lead, even when the societal rules and boundaries appear to put one in conflict with the norm.


We see in the movement of these lives, people establishing high goals for themselves, that are born out of their dreams. We see people doing their part, giving 100% of their best effort, so that as the wave of their destiny sweeps in and lifts them up in it's crest, they are able to stand up, and "Walk the Board", and majestically surf the seas of great opportunity.


These people are having fun. I repeat. They are having fun.
Their lives continue to be as good as they are because they Listen Internally. They Listen and follow their Hearts deliberations.

Not caring what society, family members, religions, the media, academics, psychologists, etc. are saying. They have found that Inner Voice that exists within us all, loving us more than all of those listed above. And from that Inner grounding, they move forward, wholesomely, and joyfully into greater fulfillment.

Ooh! I want more of that as my Life's expression!!! Some years ago, I made a prayer that I wanted to see, and find love (Good) in 'New places and new faces'. Reading this article has refreshed my committment to continue to call this into my existence.

My only prayer, is that as the President, Barack Obama, continues his way of deep mindfulness, with his ear turned inward.

I hope that he is stubborn to the cries for political expediency and compromise that dilute the objective. I hope he is not moved by the catcalls and slings of the opposition and those from his own cabinent and party. It's sad to see the Democrats, again, disappoint us with their preferences for the status quo.



The continued appeasement of the inorganic, morally bankrupt, decrepit and defunct values, imposed by a few and programmed into Western culture is what has weakened and destroyed the fiber of America's coat (image) here and abroad.

Too long She has swaggered through the halls of decisions, a 'glamourous' glib, forked tongued Diva in swapmeet garments, gaudy (bling) fake jewels and Walmart shoes. Here She comes, with nothing of true quality from, on, or about Her. But roll out the red carpet, flatter and kiss Her flabby ass, and do Her bidding (that is unless you're Israel), because if you piss Her off, She's got warehouses of Weapons of Mass Destruction ready to launch. And until recently, there were fools at the trigger button.

Completely concerned with material wealth and PROFIT and the quickest way to accumulate it, this culture has lost sight of the primary importance of those intangible aspects of Life, that are nourishing, and lasting. And the way this culture makes choices and it's sense of judgement has lost all credibility. Mother Nature Herself, has proven that case, and condemned the planet for the offenses.


In a thoughtful moment last week, it came to me that for my satisfaction, President Obama does not need to make decisions that will insure him another 4 years.

I just want him to 'Do The Right Thing', in each moment of these four.
Kentke



In First Family, a Nation's Many Faces


January 21, 2009

By JODI KANTOR

WASHINGTON - The president's elderly stepgrandmother brought him an oxtail fly whisk,
a mark of power at home in Kenya . Cousins journeyed from the South Carolina town where
the first lady's great-great-grandfather was born into slavery, while the rabbi in the family
came from the synagogue where he had been commemorating Martin Luther King's Birthday.
The president and first lady's siblings were there, too, of course: his Indonesian-American
half-sister, who brought her Chinese-Canadian husband, and her brother, a black man with
a white wife.

When President Barack Obama was sworn in on Tuesday, he was surrounded by an
extended clan that would have shocked past generations of Americans and instantly redrew
the image of a first family for future ones.

As they convened to take their family's final step in its journey from Africa and into the
White House, the group seemed as if it had stepped out of the pages of Mr. Obama's
memoir - no longer the disparate kin of a young man wondering how he fit in, but the
embodiment of a new president's promise of change.

For well over two centuries, the United States has been vastly more diverse than its ruling
families. Now the Obama family has flipped that around, with a Technicolor cast that looks
almost nothing like their overwhelmingly white, overwhelmingly Protestant predecessors in
the role. The family that produced Barack and Michelle Obama is black and white and
Asian, Christian, Muslim and Jewish. They speak English; Indonesian; French; Cantonese;
German; Hebrew; African languages including Swahili, Luo and Igbo; and even a few phrases
of Gullah, the Creole dialect of the South Carolina Lowcountry. Very few are wealthy, and
some - like Sarah Obama, the stepgrandmother who only recently got electricity and
running water in her metal-roofed shack - are quite poor.

"Our family is new in terms of the White House, but I don't think it's new in terms of the
country," Maya Soetoro-Ng, the president's younger half-sister, said last week. "I don't
think the White House has always reflected the textures and flavors of this country."
Though the world is recognizing the inauguration of the first African-American president,
the story is a more complex narrative, about immigration, social mobility and the desegregation of one of the last divided institutions in American life: the family. It is a tale of self-determination, full of refusals to follow the tracks laid by history or religion or parentage.

Mr. Obama follows the second President Bush, who had a presidential son's self-assured
grip on power. Aside from a top-quality education, the new president came to politics with none of his predecessor's advantages: no famous last name, no deep-pocketed parents to finance early forays into politics and, in fact, not much of a father at all. So Mr. Obama built his political career from scratch, with best-selling books and long-shot runs for office, leaving his relatives astonished at where he has brought them.

"It is so mind-boggling that there is a black president," Craig Robinson, Mrs. Obama's brother,
said in an interview. "Then you layer on top of it that I am related to him? And then you layer
on top of that that it's my brother-in-law? That is so overwhelming, I can't hardly think about it."


Though Mr. Obama is the son of a black Kenyan, he has some conventionally presidential roots on his white mother's side: abolitionists who, according to family legend, were chased out of Missouri , a slave state; Midwesterners who weathered the Depression; even a handful of distant ancestors who fought in the Revolutionary War. (Ever since he became a United States senator, the Sons of the American Revolution has tried to recruit him. )

But far less has been known about Mrs. Obama's roots - even by the first lady herself.
Growing up on the South Side of Chicago, "it was sort of passed-down folklore that
so-and-so was related to so-and-so and their mother and father was a slave," Mr. Robinson
said.
Drawing on old census data, family records and interviews, it is clear that Mrs. Obama is
indeed the descendant of slaves and a daughter of the Great Migration, the mass movement
of African-Americans northward in the first half of the 20th century in search of opportunity.
Mrs. Obama's family found it, but not without outsize measures of adversity and
disappointment along the way.
Tracing Family Roots




Only five generations ago, the first lady's great-great-grandfather, Jim Robinson, was born
a slave on Friendfield Plantation in Georgetown , S.C. , where he almost certainly drained
swamps, harvested rice and was buried in an unmarked grave. As a child, Mrs. Obama used
to visit her Georgetown relatives, but she only learned during the campaign that her forebears
had been enslaved in the same town where she and her cousins had played.


According to Megan Smolenyak, a genealogist who has uncovered the roots of many political figures, Mrs. Obama has ancestors with similar backgrounds across the South. The public
records they left behind give only the briefest glimpses of their lives:

Fanny Laws Humphrey, one of Mrs. Obama's great-great-grandmothers, was a cook in Birmingham , Ala. , born before the end of the Civil War.

Another set of great-great-grandparents, Mary and Nelson Moten, seem to have left Kentucky for Chicago in the early 1860s, a hint they might have been free before the end of the Civil War.

And in 1910, some of Mrs. Obama's ancestors are listed in a census as mulatto, adding some support to family whispers of a white ancestor.


The jobs that her relatives held in the early 20th century - domestic servant, coal sorter, dressmaker - suggest an escape from sharecropping, the system that trapped many former slaves and their children in penury for generations.


Still, the family's progress has a two steps forward, one step back quality. Jim Robinson was
born into slavery, but his son, Fraser, ran a lunch truck in Georgetown . In turn, his son, Fraser Jr., struck out for Chicago in search of something better. But he was unable to find work, and left his wife and children for 14 years, according to his son Nomenee Robinson.

As a result, Mrs. Obama's father was on welfare as a boy and started working on a milk
truck at 11. After serving in the Army in World War II and finally securing a job as a postal clerk, Fraser Robinson Jr. rejoined his family. He was so thrifty that he would bring home
chemicals to do the family dry cleaning in the bathtub.


But his son - Mrs. Obama's father, Fraser Robinson III - became overwhelmed with debt and dropped out of college after a year. He worked in a city boiler room for the rest of his life, helping to send his four younger siblings to college, then his two children, Mrs. Obama and her brother, to Princeton .


Classroom Values


For all of the vast differences in the Obama and Robinson histories, a few common threads
run through. Education is one of them. As a young man, Mr. Obama's father herded goats, then won a scholarship to study in the Kenyan capital. When Mr. Obama lived in Indonesia
as a child, his mother woke him up for at 4 a.m. for English lessons; meanwhile, in Chicago, Mrs. Obama's mother was bringing home math and reading workbooks so her children would always be a few lessons ahead in school.

Only through education, generations of Robinsons taught their children, would they ever
succeed in a racist society, relatives said. "My mother would say, 'When you acquire
knowledge, you acquire something no one could take away from you,' " Craig Robinson said.
The families also share a kind of adventurous self-determination. In the standard telling, the
Obama side is the one that bent the rules of geography and ethnicity.


Yet the first lady's family, the supposed South Side traditionalists, includes several members who literally or figuratively ventured far from home. Nomenee Robinson was an early participant in the Peace Corps, serving in India for two years; later, he moved to Nigeria , where he met his wife; the couple now live in Chicago . Capers Funnye Jr., a cousin of Mrs. Obama's and a rabbi, was brought up in the black church, he said, but as a young man, he felt a calling to Judaism he could not ignore.

In daring cross-cultural leaps, no figure quite matches Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro,
Mr. Obama's mother. As a university student in Honolulu, she hung out at the East-West
Center, a cultural exchange organization, meeting two successive husbands there:
Barack Obama, an economics student from Kenya, and later, Lolo Soetoro, an Indonesian.

Decades later, her daughter Maya Soetoro was picking up fliers at the same
East-West Center when she noticed Konrad Ng, a Chinese-Canadian student, now
her husband.

Now the Obama-Robinson family's move to the White House seems like a symbolic end
point for the once-firm idea that people of different backgrounds should not date, marry
or bear children. In Mr. Obama's lifetime, racial intermarriage not only became legal
everywhere in the United States , but has started to flourish.

As many as a quarter of white Americans and nearly half of black Americans belong to a multiracial family, estimates Joshua R. Goldstein of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. Diversity inside families, said Michael J. Rosenfeld, a sociologist at Stanford University, is "the most interesting kind of diversity there is, because it brings people together cheek by jowl in a way that they never were before."

"There's nothing as powerful as family relationships," Mr. Rosenfeld said, "and that's why
interracial marriage was illegal for so long in the U.S. "

Initially, some of the unions in the Obama family caused consternation. "What can you say when your son announces he's going to marry a Mzungu?" said Sarah Obama in an interview, using the Swahili term for "white person." But it was too late, she said, because the couple was deeply in love.

Now, the relatives say, their family feels natural and right to them, that they think of each
other as individuals, not as members of groups. Ms. Soetoro-Ng said she was not "the
Indonesian sister," but just Maya.

A Special Reunion

On Monday, some of Mr. Obama's Kenyan relatives milled around the lobby of the
Mayflower Hotel here, their colorful headscarves earning them more curious glances than
even the sports and pop music stars in the room. Zeituni Onyango, the president's aunt,
explained that their family had always been able to absorb newcomers.

Pointing out that her male relatives used to take on multiple wives, she said, "My daddy said anyone coming into my family is my family." (Ms. Onyango, who lives in Boston , recently
faced deportation charges, but those orders have been stayed and she is pursuing a
green card.)


At holidays and celebrations, "you get a whole lot of people who are happy to be around
family," Craig Robinson said. "They happen to be from different cultures, but the common
thing is that they are all family."


"Like the inauguration, those celebrations draw on a happy mishmash of traditions and
histories. Take the Obamas' 1992 wedding, which included Kenyan family in traditional
dress, a cloth-binding ceremony in which the bride and groom's hands were symbolically
tied, and blues, jazz and classical music at the reception (held at a cultural center that was
once a country club where black and Jewish Chicagoans were denied admission).



White House events may now take on some of the same feel. Four years ago, when the
family descended on Washington for Mr. Obama's Senate swearing-in, Mr. Ng strolled
over to the White House gates and took a picture of his then-infant daughter,
Suhaila - "gentle" in Swahili - sleeping in her stroller.


Days before leaving Hawaii for the inauguration, Mr. Ng stared at the picture and wondered
how much had changed since it was taken. After Tuesday's ceremony, he said, "folks like
me will have a chance to be on the other side."

Monday, September 14, 2009

Disgraceful - What

Scroll all the way to the bottom for ~


A couple of great examples of what MONEY or TALENT can't buy you ~

Class, Grace, Good Character and Love










Posted on 11. Sep, 2009


Various news sources are reporting that a Wells Fargo & Co. Executive banker moved into a lavish $12 million Malibu beach home, shortly after it was foreclosed on.

The executive in question is reportedly Cheronda Guyton. Click here to see a photo image of Cheronda Guyton, formerly Cheronda P. Brown.
http://topgoogletrends.netcashdaily.net/cheronda-guyton-photos-and-pictures

Ms. Guyton who is a Los Angeles based Wells Fargo executive is responsible for the Foreclosed Commercial Properties Division.

It is said that the home’s previous owners were forced to hand the property back to the bank, after losing much of their wealth in the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme.

Cheronda Guyton is accused of throwing galas and other extravagant parties in the house. The owners signed an agreement that required Wells Fargo to keep the house off the market for a while.

Cheronda Guyton’s Resume reads~

Senior Vice PresidentWells Fargo Bank
1992 — Present (17 years)
Head of Commercial ORE

Cheronda Guyton’s Education
USC MBA , 1994 — 1996
Emory University, 1987 — 1991

Special thanks to “Bubba Dubya” who found the picture of Cheronda Guyton.

Kanye West Taylor Swift VMA 2009


Kanye West MTV Outburst –


Kanye West made a fool of himself again by running up on the stage and interrupting Taylor Swift’s acceptance speech during Sunday’s MTV Video Music Awards by saying:

“I’m really happy for you. I’mma let you finish, but Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time.”
He later apologized by writing on his blog:

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