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  • Main-Street Republicans, Hard-Pressed Democrats, Bystanders and Post Moderns: The Political Typology

    The Pew Research Center For the People & The Press has put together an update on political attitudes across the US, finely characterizing views and positions with new groupings, definitions and clarity:

    With the economy still struggling and the nation involved in multiple military operations overseas, the public’s political mood is fractious. In this environment, many political attitudes have become more doctrinaire at both ends of the ideological spectrum, a polarization that reflects the current atmosphere in Washington.

    Yet at the same time, a growing number of Americans are choosing not to identify with either political party, and the center of the political spectrum is increasingly diverse. Rather than being moderate, many of these independents hold extremely strong ideological positions on issues such as the role of government, immigration, the environment and social issues. But they combine these views in ways that defy liberal or conservative orthodoxy.

    For political leaders in both parties, the challenge is not only one of appeasing ideological and moderate “wings” within their coalitions, but rather holding together remarkably disparate groups, many of whom have strong disagreements with core principles that have defined each party’s political character in recent years.

    The most visible shift in the political landscape since Pew Research’s previous political typology in early 2005 is the emergence of a single bloc of across-the-board conservatives. The long-standing divide between economic, pro-business conservatives and social conservatives has blurred. Today, Staunch Conservatives take extremely conservative positions on nearly all issues — on the size and role of government, on economics, foreign policy, social issues and moral concerns. Most agree with the Tea Party and even more very strongly disapprove of Barack Obama’s job performance. A second core group of Republicans — Main Street Republicans — also is conservative, but less consistently so.

  • New State Department Travel Advisory and Requirement

    Today the State Department  issued a new security alert. Again, we advise prospective travelers to always consult the State Department site for alerts of this nature as well as referring to the site when first making travel plans.

    Instructions for subscribing to travel alerts are below, including the program known as Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP)

    May 01, 2011

    The US Department of State alerts US citizens traveling and residing abroad to the enhanced potential for anti-American violence given recent counter-terrorism activity in Pakistan. Given the uncertainty and volatility of the current situation, US citizens in areas where recent events could cause anti-American violence are strongly urged to limit their travel outside of their homes and hotels and avoid mass gatherings and demonstrations. US citizens should stay current with media coverage of local events and be aware of their surroundings at all times. This Travel Alert expires August 1, 2011.

    US Embassy operations in affected areas will continue to the extent possible under the constraints of any evolving security situation. US government facilities worldwide remain at a heightened state of alert. These facilities may temporarily close or periodically suspend public services to assess their security posture. In those instances, US Embassies and Consulates will make every effort to provide emergency services to US citizens. US citizens abroad are urged to monitor the local news and maintain contact with the nearest US Embassy or Consulate.

    Media coverage of local events may cause family and friends to become concerned for their loved ones traveling and residing abroad. We urge US citizens to keep in regular contact with family and friends. US citizens living or traveling abroad are encouraged to enroll in the Department of State’s Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP), to receive the latest travel updates and information and to obtain updated information on travel and security issues. US citizens without Internet access may register directly with the appropriate US Embassy or Consulate. By enrolling, US citizens make it easier for the US Embassy or Consulate to contact them in case of emergency.

    Travel information is also available at travel.state.gov. Up-to-date information on security can also be obtained by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll-free in the United States and Canada or, for callers outside the United States and Canada, a regular toll line at 1-202-501-4444.

    For information on “What the Department of State Can and Can’t Do in a Crisis,” please visit the Bureau of Consular Affairs’ website at travel.state.gov. For further information on specific countries, US citizens should consult the Country Specific Information pages, Travel Alerts, and Travel Warnings, as well as the Worldwide Caution. Follow us on Twitter and the Bureau of Consular Affairs’ page on Facebook as well.

  • She Was Just 17; The Gagosian Gallery Presents Picasso and Marie-Therese: L’amour fou

    Charcoal of Marie Therese in beret

    by Val Castronovo

    It was a chance encounter on a boulevard in Paris in 1927. She was 17 and on her way to buy a Peter Pan collar — a “col Claudine” — at the Galeries Lafayette. He was 45 and married to a very possessive former ballerina. “You have an interesting face,” he said. “I would like to do your portrait. I have a feeling we will do great things together. I am Picasso.”

    She had never heard of him, the story goes, so he took her to a bookstore and produced a volume of his paintings to prove his point. They agreed to meet again, “Monday at eleven o’clock at the Saint-Lazare station,” Picasso friend, biographer and co-curator John Richardson writes in an essay in the show’s soon-to-be-published catalogue.

    Without question, they did great things together, as this exhibition of nearly 90 paintings, sculptures, drawings and prints demonstrates. It is the third, themed Picasso show organized by the Gagosian over the last several years. There was Picasso: Mosqueteros in the New York gallery in 2009, followed by Picasso: The Mediterranean Years in London in 2010.

    Marie-Thérèse Walter became Picasso’s secret lover and an enduring muse. The so-called Marie-Thérèse years from 1927 to 1940 are regarded as “a period of unprecedented creative explosion, giving rise to the artist’s liveliest and often most studied works,” art historian and co-curator Diana Widmaier Picasso, the artist’s granddaughter, writes in a separate essay for the catalogue. “Today, works of this period command the highest prices at auction.” But Picasso and Marie-Thérèse: L’amour fou (crazy or obsessive love) is the first major exhibition devoted to the mysterious middle-class girl from a suburb of Paris who was seduced by one of the world’s most famous artists.

    References to Marie-Thérèse, a full-figured, blonde beauty with a prominent “Greek” nose, were often camouflaged, or appeared in code, in Picasso’s art (e.g., Guitàre a la main blanche, 1927, with her initials and a chalk-white hand), and her identity was a closely hidden secret, as was the birth of their daughter Maya in 1935. (Maya was Diana Widmaier Picasso’s mother.) The artist bought mother and child a country house in Boiseloup, some 70 kilometers northwest of Paris, and commenced a secret life apart from his wife, Olga. As Richardson writes, “Picasso was more in love than he had ever been.”

  • A Royal Wedding Program to Download and Ceremony Details

    Canaletto's Westminister Abbey

    Regardless of when (and if) the British Royal wedding ceremony is watched (we’re choosing BBC America for commercial free viewing, recorded), a downloadable copy of the Programme is available at the official site we’ve posted previously.

    The Programme is 28 pages in length, by the way, and is being sold at various locations with the proceeds going to the UK Scout Association. Explorer Scouts will be distributing the official Royal Wedding Programme on behalf of William and Catherine. The money raised from programme sales will go to the couple’s chosen charities.

    Videos may be watched on the Royal YouTube Channel.  The Royal Wedding website has such teasers as:

    The Royal Channel Live Stream: The wedding of Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton will be available to watch on the Royal Channel Live Stream, accompanied by a live multi-media blog put together by St. James’s Palace.

    Read more

    The Service at Westminster Abbey: The service will be held at Westminster Abbey. Click on the link below to find out more about the musicians for the Royal wedding service.

    Read more

    The Reception at Buckingham Palace: The wedding reception will be held at Buckingham Palace and will be hosted by Her Majesty The Queen. Find out more about the Royal Wedding cakes that will be at the reception by clicking the link below. Coverage of the Royal Wedding dress rehearsal with members of the armed forces participate in a dress rehearsal for the forthcoming Royal Wedding, London, 27 April 2011. © Press Association

    Read more

    Image: Westminster Abbey with a procession of Knights of the Bath, by Canaletto, 1749.

  • Bernanke’s First Press Conference

    On a day that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve held his first press conference (and Sarah Palin declared the reason the President released his birth certificate was to distract from Chairman Bernanke’s conference), the following statement was released with a table summarizing the Fed’s economic projections (Attachment, 65 KB PDF):

    Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in March indicates that the economic recovery is proceeding at a moderate pace and overall conditions in the labor market are improving gradually.  Household spending and business investment in equipment and software continue to expand.  However, investment in nonresidential structures is still weak, and the housing sector continues to be depressed.  Commodity prices have risen significantly since last summer, and concerns about global supplies of crude oil have contributed to a further increase in oil prices since the Committee met in March.  Inflation has picked up in recent months, but longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable and measures of underlying inflation are still subdued.

    Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability.  The unemployment rate remains elevated, and measures of underlying inflation continue to be somewhat low, relative to levels that the Committee judges to be consistent, over the longer run, with its dual mandate.  Increases in the prices of energy and other commodities have pushed up inflation in recent months.  The Committee expects these effects to be transitory, but it will pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.  The Committee continues to anticipate a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability.

    To promote a stronger pace of economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to continue expanding its holdings of securities as announced in November.  In particular, the Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings and will complete purchases of $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the current quarter.  The Committee will regularly review the size and composition of its securities holdings in light of incoming information and is prepared to adjust those holdings as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.

    The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate for an extended period.

    The Committee will continue to monitor the economic outlook and financial developments and will employ its policy tools as necessary to support the economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate.

    Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Richard W. Fisher; Narayana Kocherlakota; Charles I. Plosser; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen.

  • A Really, Really Long Distance Mother’s Day Phone Call

    by Elaine Soloway


    “Mom, where are you?” I said. My query was directed to the computer’s screen. We were using iChat, and I was anxious to see my mother’s face.

    “A minute, a minute,” I could hear her say.

    I turned up the volume on my Mac and heard clicks —  a lipstick top being circled downward, a pocket mirror snapped shut.

    “You don’t have to put on a face for me,” I said. I raised my voice, not only because we were using technology to manage our two-way conversation, but also because my mother and I were so far away from each other. Me, here on earth. Her, up in heaven.  I had managed a similar conversation with my father using an iPhone app and because of that success; I decided to try a visual iChat with Mom. So far;  so good.


    “What kind of example would I set coming to see my daughter with a plain face?” she asked. Slowly, the colored pixels on my screen swirled and combined into my mother’s beautiful face. Blue eyes the color of Lake Michigan, Max Factor’s bold red lipstick, and pinkish rouge that highlighted her cheeks as she smiled.

    “You look gorgeous as always,” I said. I was telling the truth. In all the 67-years of her life, I doubt if she had a homely minute. Even when she lay in the hospital, on the last day of her life, she remained the prettiest woman I had ever seen.

    “So, you’re still wearing your hair grey,” she said. The corners of her mouth turned down, as did her voice. “And so short? Why not a little color? I liked it when you were a redhead,” she continued. “Some length wouldn’t be so bad either.”

    I laughed. When she was on earth, judgments like that would sting. But with her gone more than 20 years, I relished any of her comments. And, I was a big girl now, a mother and grandmother, four years older than she ever got to be. With age and wisdom, I realized her enormous love for me pushed her improvement efforts.

    “Listen, Mom,” I said. “I have to apologize. I think I was too hard on you in my memoir.”Image from Amazon
    (
    The Division Street Princess: A Memoir)

    “You think?” she repeated. The tone was sarcastic, but she was smiling. Her eyes confirmed she was kidding.

    “Writers embellish,” she said. She tossed a manicured hand upward, as if to fling my apology away. “That’s what I told the crowd here. She had to have conflict, drama. What kind of an author would my daughter be, I told them, if it was blah. No fights.”

    “Whew, I’m glad to hear that,” I said. “I’ve been worried about your reaction.”

  • Opioids: Extensively Misprescribed, Misused, and Abused, Says the FDA

    Drug Information Update – Opioid Drugs and Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies (REMS)

    FDA/CDER/Division of Drug Information (DDI)

    The Division of Drug Information (DDI) is CDER’s focal point for public inquiries. We serve the public by providing information on human drug products and drug product regulation by FDA.


    Last week, the White House unveiled a multi-agency plan aimed at reducing the “epidemic” of prescription drug abuse in the US. In concert with the White House plan, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing a new risk reduction program — called a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy — for all extended-release and long-acting opioid medications.

    FDA experts say extended-release and long-acting opioids — including OxyContin, Avinza, Dolophine, Duragesic, and eight other brand names — are extensively misprescribed, misused, and abused, leading to overdoses, addiction, and even deaths across the United States. FDA says a 2007 survey revealed that more than half of opioid abusers got the drug from a friend or relative.

    Opioids — such as morphine and oxycodone — are used to treat moderate and severe pain. Over the past few decades, drug makers have developed extended-release opioid formulas to treat people in pain over a long period.

    The new REMS plan focuses primarily on: educating doctors about proper pain management, patient selection, and other requirements and improving patient awareness about how to use these drugs safely. As part of the plan, FDA wants companies to give patients education materials, including a medication guide that uses consumer friendly language to explain safe use and disposal.

    For more information, please visit: Opiod REMS

    List of Long-Acting and Extended-Release Opioid Products Required to Have an Opioid REMS:

  • When a Pension Overhaul Comes Without Social Security

    By Pamela M. Prah, Stateline Staff Writer, Stateline, a Pew Center for the States Project

    iStockphoto


    Like many retirees, Crystal Ward of Lewiston, Maine, worries whether her pension from working as a teacher for 34 years will be enough for her to live on. But unlike most retirees in the country, Ward, 60, can’t bank on Social Security.

    Ward is among an estimated 6 million public sector workers whose jobs aren’t covered by Social Security. For many of them, a pension paid by their state or local government employer is all they have to live on.

    Ward gets a pension check from the state of about $2,500 per month, although she notes that $300 of that goes straight to health insurance. “Most people believe we get both a state pension and Social Security,” Ward says. “But teachers in Maine don’t.”

    In states across the country — most notably Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida — fights are breaking out over how generous public pension benefits should be and who should pay them. But the debate in Maine is a little different. The math behind any big change in pension rules doesn’t look the same when state employees and teachers sit outside the Social Security system.

    Related Stateline stories

    Since 2009, Maine has exploring whether and how to get those workers covered. It was one of the ideas considered by a state task force formed by the Legislature to study different ideas for reforming the state pension system. Steven Crouse, a member of that task force who heads up government relations at the Maine Education Association, a teachers’ union, says the Social Security proposal is “a viable option,” although he has a number of concerns with it.

    Not an easy question

    When Social Security went into effect in the 1930s, state and local employees were expressly excluded. That’s because there were constitutional questions about whether the federal government could impose the Social Security payroll tax on state governments. This changed in the 1950s, when a federal law allowed states to get coverage for public employees if they wanted to.

    To this day, all states have some public sector workers who don’t participate in Social Security. But coverage varies widely. In Vermont, some 98 percent of state and local public employees are covered by Social Security, according to a 2010 report from the US Government Accountability Office. Meanwhile, just 3 percent are covered in Ohio.

  • Revisiting the Cooper-Hewitt Shop

    Since we’ve moved from the east coast, our in-person trips to the Cooper-Hewitt shop have been rare but the Van Cleef & Arpels review by Val Castronovo  gave us a chance for a virtual  stroll  to the online shop. The Museum itself is undergoing renovation. Because the Museum itself is a paean to the art of design, it’s not surprising that the shop has some less-frequently-seen items:

    The Tate Tote is perhaps one of the most fashionable-looking totes (as long as you don’t bog it down and inflate the profile) we’ve seen but then, I’m partial to pleats and the color blue. There’s a green version, too, and since it’s Earth Day territory, apt. The copper turtle grater will be a conversation point as will the parrot corkscrew; since we’re in wedding season, why not consider practical but striking kitchen implements? A propeller trivet always is useful for supporting hot or cold dishes and a Swiss Spice  Salt and Pepper couldn’t be more practical and economical as a house gift. The Gradient Journal starts with a pure white and graduates to a deeper and deeper red, page after page.

    For children, the zoo playing cards which features a little boy visiting the zoo and the variety of animals he meets along the way, are not only a good game for plane trips, but are useful as flash learning cards. What could be simpler and more practical than animal rubber bands and the same could be said for History by the Meter with the past 2000 years of world history unfolding on the 2 meters ruler. Don’t overlook the Bruno Munari books while at the children’s section. One example is the The Green Conjuror,  the fifth book in the historic series created for children by Munari in 1945: Alfonso, the thoroughly likeable green magician, disappears and reappears in trunks and boxes. At the end he finally manages to play his violin in peace.

    For the office, the Firenze Wall Clock again has that magic attribute, a vivid blue color.

    Finally, there’s the spy coin made of silver and nickel, to transfer messages between borders, between lovers and between betweens: “Jan. 11, 2007: The US issues a spy coin warning after discovering tiny transmitters planted in Canadian coins. The government said the mysterious coins were found planted on US contractors with classified security clearances on at least three separate occasions between October, 2005 and January, 2006 as the contractors traveled through Canada.”

  • CultureWatch Reviews:The Tiger’s Wife and Henrietta Lacks

    In This Issue:

    The Tiger’s Wife is a knockout novel that portends great things ahead, for both Ms. Obreht, and for her readers. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, now in paperback, is both a cautionary tale and a call for justice. In 1951 no laws were broken when Henrietta Lacks’ tumor cells were passed on, but ethical issues were and are real and a just accounting has yet to occur.

    THE TIGER’S WIFE
    by Téa Obreht, © 2011
    Published by
    Random House; Hardcover: 338 pp

    Reviewed by Julia Sneden

    Téa Obreht’s book is her first novel. Born in 1985 in Belgrade, Obreht came to live in America at the age of 12. At her current age of 26 or 27, her writing has already appeared in The New Yorker, the Atlantic, Harper’s, and the Guardian. Her work has appeared in The Best American Short Stories as well as The Best American Nonrequired Reading. The New Yorker put her on their list of the twenty best American fiction writers under 40, and she also made the National Book Foundation’s list of “5 Under 35.”

    This is an astounding record for one so young, never mind that we assume she is writing in her second language. The power and intricacy of The Tiger’s Wife mark the beginning of what, if she keeps writing, should become a distinguished literary career.

    The Tiger’s Wife is set in the Balkans, in a country that is unnamed, in a time after the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia, and shortly after the Dayton Negotiations and Peace Accords has put an uneasy end to sectarian and national violence. There are still dangers like landmines in the ground in rural areas, and crossing the border from one country to another is fraught with tension and red tape. The populace, having been fragmented by both religion and politics, is trying to adjust to the new order of their lives.

    The polarization of political and religious views during the civil war led to an “us versus them” mentality that splintered a people who had, under “The Marshal” (one assumes this is Josip Broz Tito), considered themselves one nation. The author describes her generation of young adults during the war as nihilists whose attitude of “What the hell, we’re going to die anyway!” now has to be re-calibrated.

    The story begins as reminiscence by Natalia, a young doctor, who relates her childhood visits to the zoo with her grandfather, also a doctor. Natalia and he often spend an afternoon at the zoo, lingering long at the tiger cage. The Grandfather always carries always a copy of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book in his breast pocket, and often reads it aloud to young Natalia.

    We skip ahead a few years, and Natalia is herself now a doctor. She and her childhood friend, Zora (yet another doctor) are about to go on a mission of mercy, crossing the newly-defined border to administer vaccinations to children in an orphanage.

    Her grandfather was born in the country to which they’re going, but, as a young man, had moved to the country where they now live. His speech at times still betrays the accent of his native territory, but he married within his chosen country, and has long been settled there.

    During Natalia’s adolescence, the closeness she felt with her grandfather was stretched a bit, but as an adult, she and he again found a tight bond, partly through her career choice. At the time of this story, the grandfather has told her that he is suffering from a terminal disease (never named, but we imagine it is cancer of some kind), swearing her to secrecy because he wants to delay causing her grandmother distress.