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Obama gets it right

November 19th 2009 02:09
obama bow

When US President Barack Obama met Japanese Emperor Akihito in Tokyo last week, he both shook hands and bowed.

It was a deep bow in the Japanese style, and immediately had wags calling it “stoop-id” and others questioning such an obsequious gesture by a US president to anyone, let alone the son of Japanese war-time Emperor Hirohito.


It was an opportunity for newspaper headline writers and anyone with a political agenda against President Obama.

It is a regrettable, and boring, fact of political life that anything you do will have its critics. To hold your handkerchief in one hand while blowing your nose is to instantly insult, wound and disenfranchise the majority of honest citizens who use two hands. Or so someone will claim.

Obama’s bow to the 65-year-old Emperor was a gracious, graceful and dignified gesture. It was as appropriate as it was civilised.

It is telling that it went almost unnoticed in Japan, where the bow is as ubiquitous as the handshake in the US. Indeed, the Japanese would only have had cause for comment if Obama had not bowed, or not bowed deeply enough.

In a way, it was an unremarkable thing that the President did, no more or less than most thinking people would have expected. But it didn’t stop negative knee-jerks from self-serving knockers who wouldn’t recognize a gracious act if it bit them on the nose.


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Hanging out their dirty Washington

October 1st 2009 23:56
senator john ensign
US Senator John Naughty Boy Ensign

Sex scandals have been around almost as long as politicians, and American Senator John Ensign has just added his name to a long list of parliamentarians who followed elect with erect.


The senator, one of those curious Americans known as conservative Christians, spent considerable time and energy last year helping out a senior member of his staff who had decided to quit the bright lights of politics and go home to Nevada. His name is Douglas Hampton and Senator Ensign rang political and corporate supporters trying to find a job for him.

“He’s a competent guy, and he’s looking to come back to Nevada. Do you know of anything?” he reportedly asked.

Eventually a political consulting firm said yes, and Hampton went to work as a lobbyist.

This story first hit the news a little later when it was revealed that Senator Ensign was further helping his old mate by peddling the interests of Hampton's new clients around Washington. This was thought to be in violation of a law that bans senior aides from lobbying the Senate for a year after leaving their posts.

Of course, politicians serving their own interests by bending the rules they are elected in good faith to uphold is hardly front page news, but the John Ensign story had a salacious twist.

Douglas Hampton's wife, Cynthia, also worked for the Senator, in more ways than one. Apart from her day job in the office, it has now been revealed that she did plenty of unpaid overtime. Or should that be under time?

Reports now say the relationship between Douglas Hampton and John Ensign has ended in bitterness and recriminations. Because the politician was having an affair with his wife? No, because Hampton apparently grew increasingly frustrated about his financial situation, believing that the senator had reneged on a deal to find him enough clients to sustain his income.



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William Safire, 1929-2009

September 27th 2009 23:39
william safire
William Safire receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2006

William Lewis Safire, Pulitzer Prize winner, language expert, long-time columnist for The New York Times and speech writer for President Nixon, has died at the age of 79. The Baltimore Sun newspaper described him as a conservative columnist and word warrior who feared no politician or corner of the English language.

Author Eric Alterman, in his 1999 book Sound and Fury: The Making of the Punditocracy, called Safire an institution. "Few insiders doubt that William Safire is the most influential and respected pundit alive," Alterman wrote.

He was born William Lewis Safir (he added an e to his surname later for what he described as pronunciation reasons) on December 17, 1929. A Jew, Safire was throughout his life a staunch and vocal advocate of Israel. The young William attended the Bronx High School of Science and then spent two years at Syracuse University before dropping out. He worked as a radio and television producer, in public relations and as a publicist before joining the Nixon presidential campaign in 1960.

In 1973 Safire joined The New York Times as a political columnist, beginning a 32-year stint as one of America's most respected political pundits and its mostly widely read language expert. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for commentary on the alleged budgetary irregularities of Bert Lance, an adviser to Jimmy Carter (and widely acknowledged as originator of the saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it").

Safire described himself as a "libertarian conservative", defined by Wikipedia as, "A term adopted by a broad spectrum of political philosophies which advocate the maximization of individual liberty and the minimization or even abolition of the state".

Bill Clinton was more interested in Safire's nose than his prose. Clinton said he wanted to punch that nose after Safire called his wife "a congenital liar".

Safire also wrote several novels and was chairman of the Dana Foundation, a philanthropic organisation which supports brain science, immunology and arts education.

Upon announcing the retirement of Safire's political column in 2005, Arthur Sulzberger Jr, publisher of The New York Times, said, "The New York Times without Bill Safire is all but unimaginable. Whether you agreed with him or not was never the point — his writing is delightful, informed and engaging."
Image: UPI.com




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George W Bush, who in 2000 started his forceful march to the US presidency by asking, "Is our children learning", leaves the public stage shortly, which is sad because he will now have fewer opportunities to mangle the language.

Debate may rage forever over relative merit of the gaffs which have come to be known collectively as Bushisms, but The Global Language Monitor, an organisation which tracks language trends, has just published its Top 15 list of Bushisms, and coming out on top is "misunderestimate


[ Click here to read more ]
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God bless America

October 19th 2008 04:12
ernie chambers
Senator Ernie Chambers

One is led to wonder at the amount of cynicism and scepticism being aimed at American politicians at the moment. Are we all getting complacent? Aren't these democratically elected citizens our natural leaders and guides in questions of community values and behaviour?

[ Click here to read more ]
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