The monarchy sidesteps the awkwardness of patriotism and allows us to feel a rare British pride What memory will live on? For those who lined the Mall, painting their faces red, white and blue, or who just stayed home watching on television — what will they remember? The kiss on the balcony will be the image replayed in perpetuity, just as it was when William’s mother and father married 30 years ago — the difference being that this time they looked like a couple genuinely in love. Others will talk about the pageantry, a show no one lays on quite like the British. It’s a fair bet that almost no one will remember the words. Even the eyes of the wedding couple wandered during the spoken bits. Yet when the Dean of Westminster invoked a “mystical union”, he surely got close to the essence both of the royal wedding and of something much larger. The literal reference was to the bond between Christ and the church, but he could just as easily have been describing the “mystical union” that exists, and was reinforced in spectacular style, between Britain and the royal family. For what we witnessed was the mysterious alchemy that somehow converts love of country into affection for the House of Windsor. The emblem of it was the banner waved by many in the crowds, the same one that has been on display in shop windows throughout the land: a union flag, with a portrait of William and Kate at its centre. The scale of the crowds, like the fervour of the broadcasters, was a reminder of just how rare such displays are in Britain. We have no national day, no Fourth of July. World Cup victories are rarer than coronations and, besides, sporting events are complicated: the teams often represent England or Scotland or Wales or Northern Ireland alone rather than Britain. As for the union flag, that too can be fraught – residually associated with a nasty strain of nationalism rather than simple, sentimental patriotism. Royal occasions sidestep all these difficulties. They are all-encompassingly British – note the Scottish titles handed to William and Kate, as well as the one that makes the prince sound like a pub: the Duke of Cambridge. But they are also unthreatening, the union flag rendered utterly benign once there’s a smiling young couple in the middle of it. This, then, is how Britain does patriotism. Too ironic and embarrassed to make the “Is this a great country or what?” declarations of the Americans, we channel our feelings through the outlet of a single family, praising them rather than ourselves. Note our national anthem. Not a song about us at all, it is entirely focused on them. We don’t ask God to save Britain – but to save the Queen. How else to explain the hunger of those crowds, camping for several nights, just to get a glimpse of the bride in her dress? It’s nothing Kate Middleton herself has done: she looked lovely and seems perfectly decent, but she would be the first to admit that she has hardly notched up some great human achievement. The people who cheered themselves hoarse love her the way football fans love a new signing to the team – because she has joined the select group of people who embody the entity to which they feel they belong. Viewed this way, as our chief vehicle for national pride, royalty has several advantages. For one thing, a family story has an emotional resonance few abstract ideas can match. And the Windsors have proved to be a compelling story. Yesterday’s event had an extra poignancy for those who remembered William’s last major appearance at Westminster Abbey, as a 15-year-old boy come to bury his mother. Indeed, the tension – and peril for the royal family – of that dizzy week in 1997 seemed long ago. Monarchists will have noted the warm cheers that greeted Charles and Camilla’s limousine as it approached the abbey – unimaginable in the heat of Diana week – and smiled with satisfaction. The threat of those days, when the institution itself seemed fragile, has receded. The wound has closed over. A family can also promise what might elude other national institutions: a permanent connection to the past and the possibility of a future. Take that balcony appearance. At the edges were the Queen and Prince Philip, who stood in that same spot before similar crowds after their own wedding in 1947. Continuity with the national past is built-in. At the centre, though, was Kate Middleton — who an hour earlier had heard the most senior cleric in the land pray for her to bear children. She brings fresh blood into the royal family, offering the prospect of a new generation and a secure succession. For William, this may have been a wedding. For the institution of monarchy, it was a blood transfusion. Above all, royalty is able to be ruthlessly selective about what it does – and does not – represent. Outside party politics, it need not stand for any of the difficult decisions associated with governments, past or present. It can blame those on the politicians. But it can co-opt the good bits without shame. Striking yesterday was the flypast by the Battle of Britain memorial flight: the Lancaster bomber and Spitfires overhead recalling Britain’s “finest hour”, our solitary defiance of the Nazis in 1940. That story now has the status of a creation myth in Britain and the royal family can put themselves at its centre. There are drawbacks to this practice of ours, making a single dynasty the symbol of our nationhood. It can end up in a curious disdain for democracy. The exclusion of two past prime ministers – Tony Blair and Gordon Brown – from the abbey was not just an insult to them or to Labour. Those men are part of our nation’s history now; Blair was elected by the British people three times. And yet, in royal terms, that counts for nothing. Our royal habit also makes us an object of fascination abroad, but of a variety we might not relish. We are seen as the keepers of a tradition last seen in storybooks. One US TV network, seeking to discover what Kate Middleton’s life would be like as a princess, went to Disneyland to interview Snow White and Cinderella. Republicans in Britain have long made their case in the language of political institutions, explaining why an elected head of state would be a better system. They’ve couched the argument as if abolishing the monarchy were like a move to AV. It’s nothing of the sort. What we saw yesterday is proof that a shift away from royalty would require an entirely new form of British patriotism – for the two are utterly bound together, hand in hand, like a prince and his bride at a gorgeous wedding. Royal wedding Monarchy Jonathan Freedland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Charles Krauthammer on Friday perfectly elucidated the media's hypocrisy concerning their avid defense of Barack Obama against attacks from Donald Trump and the birthers. As the discussion on PBS's “Inside Washington”
Continue reading …Shuttle Endeavor Launch Postponed Anne Caraccio: Where I Want to Be Preparations Underway for Second-to-Last Space Shuttle Launch President Obama arrives at Kennedy Space Center – The Write Stuff … The Write Stuff covers news on NASA’s shuttle program, Kennedy Space Center , the international space station, robotic missions to the planets and rock. Kennedy Space Center : Space shuttle launch scrubbed until Monday … Launch control at the Kennedy Space Center canceled the space shuttle launch scheduled for Friday afternoon, which was set to be watched by President Obama and. Florida's Kennedy Space Center : Body Building Blog | Free Fitness … Kennedy Space Center United States is “gateway to the stars’, from where the rockets, sat? Satellites and astronauts are put in place in the universe to explore the unknown. Our feet well and truly on the ground, more? to never bring … Space Shuttle Launch on NASA TV at the Kennedy Space Center … Fox News Space Shuttle Launch on NASA TV at the Kennedy Space Center Postponed Newstar Media NASA cited issues with the shuttle’s APU heaters as the reason for the cancellation of today’s launch. Endeavour was to begin its final journey … Final Space Shuttle Discovery Crew Arrives at NASA's Kennedy Space … 20 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center , Fla., for their prelaunch preparations. Liftoff of shuttle Discovery’s STS-133 mission to the International Space Station is scheduled for 4:50 pm on Feb. Veribatim says: Not a launch, but still space-esque. #NASA (@ Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex w/ 13 others) http://4sq.com/lGSeCl
Continue reading …Technical fault in the power unit derails launch during countdown to liftoff The penultimate space shuttle launch was postponed on Friday because of mechanical problems, dashing the hopes of the biggest crowd of spectators in years, including the mission commander’s wife, Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona congresswoman who survived an assassination attempt earlier this year. Nasa hopes to try again to send space shuttle Endeavour on its final voyage on Monday. President Barack Obama and his family visited Kennedy Space Centre anyway and met Giffords, who is recovering from a gunshot wound to the head and has been in Cape Canaveral since Wednesday to attend her husband’s launch. The White House said Obama saw Giffords for about 10 minutes before meeting the shuttle’s crew. Giffords has not been seen publicly since the assassination attempt on 8 January, and left her Houston rehabilitation hospital for the first time to travel to Florida. It was not immediately known whether she would stay for the next attempt, or return to Houston. She had been expected to watch the liftoff in private – as were the other astronauts’ families. “Bummed about the scrub!! But important to make sure everything on shuttle is working properly,” her staff said via Twitter. Endeavour was fuelled and the six astronauts were heading to the launchpad when the countdown was halted about three and a half hours before the liftoff, at 3.47pm local time. Nasa’s silver-coloured astrovan did a U-turn at the launch control centre and returned the crew to quarters. It would have been the first time in Nasa history that a sitting president and his family witnessed a launch. As a consolation, Obama and his family got an up-close look at Atlantis. It will make the last shuttle flight this summer as Nasa winds up the 30-year programme and retires the fleet to museums. The president and his wife met briefly with Endeavour’s crew. Obama told the crew he was hoping to get back to Florida for a shuttle launch. “One more chance, we may be able to get down here,” he said. Launch director Mike Leinbach said the next launch attempt for Endeavour would be Monday at the earliest – and hinted at an even longer delay. Technicians will have to crawl into the shuttle’s engine compartment to track a suspected electrical short circuit in a power distribution box. As many as 700,000 spectators had been expected to visit the area around the launch site. Endeavour’s upcoming mission to the International Space Station is the last in its 19-year history. It will deliver a $2bn physics experiment. The shuttle – the youngest in the fleet – was built to replace Challenger, destroyed during liftoff in 1986, and made its maiden voyage in 1992. The space shuttle Space Nasa United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Peter Moss, a British travel writer, was among 16 victims of a remote-controlled nail bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe A British travel writer and novelist has been named among the 16 victims of a terrorist bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe in Marrakech. Peter Moss, 59, was at the Argana cafe in the popular Jamaa el-Fnaa square when a remote-controlled nail bomb was detonated at lunchtime. A video released before the attack by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb reportedly claimed responsibility, with terrorism experts saying the group was one of several likely candidates. Moss, a father-of-two, was a writer, broadcaster and comedian, who had earned praise for several screenplays and novels including The Singing Tree and The Age of Elephants. At the British Press Awards in 2004, while working for the Jewish Chronicle, he was celebrated as “one of the country’s finest travel writers, with an unmatched eye for detail”. Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said: “While we do not yet know the exact cause of the blast, reports from the Moroccan authorities are that this may have been a result of terrorism. An act of this kind, causing the death of 16 innocent people, is cruel and wrong, and I condemn it in the strongest terms.” As investigations continued into the blast, the country’s deadliest for eight years, Moroccan authorities said the bomb had been packed with nails and set off remotely and not by a suicide bomber. Jamaa el-Fnaa square, next to the city’s historic market area, draws crowds of tourists with its snake charmers, fire-eaters and tooth pullers. Most of the dead were foreign nationals – including French, Dutch and Canadian tourists – and at least 23 others were injured by the explosion. British ambassador Tim Morris has travelled to Marrakech to bolster the UK team dealing with the aftermath and Interpol has described the attack as “senseless and deplorable”. While police from both Morocco and Spain could be seen working in the wreckage, friends and family of the victims gathered at the city’s Ibn Tofail hospital. Mouhou Rachid, a cafe worker, said at least one of his co-workers had died and another was in hospital with serious injuries. “The explosion was terrible. When I recovered consciousness I saw people picking up victims. My friend has injuries in the stomach, face and head.” Israel’s foreign ministry said two of the victims, a man and a woman, were Jews living in Shanghai and that the woman apparently had Israeli citizenship. The attack is the deadliest in Morocco since 12 suicide bombers killed 33 people in co-ordinated strikes in Casablanca in 2003. The latest attack was a blow to Morocco’s most important tourist city. Tourism is Morocco’s biggest source of foreign currency and the second biggest employer after agriculture. “We are going to work very hard so that this does not have an impact on tourism in Marrakesh,” said Salaheddine Mezouar, the finance minister.”To go to a country as a tourist and return dead is a terrible thing.” Fernando Reinares, a terrorism expert at Spain’s Royal Elcano Institute, told RNE radio there were few doubts that jihadists were behind the attack. “Morocco and its monarchy are a target for al-Qaida and for the north African groups that have been associated with al-Qaida.” The attack adds to the challenges facing Morocco’s ruler, King Mohammed VI, as he tries to prevent the uprisings in the Arab world from reaching his normally stable kingdom. He recently pardoned a raft of political prisoners, including some alleged militant Islamists. The monarch has promised to reform the constitution to placate pro-democracy protesters. But more protests are planned for Sunday. Morocco Global terrorism Damien Pearse Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The decision-making authority of elected officials in Benton Harbor, Michigan was suspended under a new emergency manager law passed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. In a speech Wednesday, Snyder said he also wanted to abolish the minimum number of hours children are required to be in school. He announced that he was targeting 23 school districts for takeover by state-appointed unilateral executives. “Every single one of those places has just been told that them having locally elected officials, that’s a problem,” MSNBC Rachel Maddow explained Thursday. “That democracy is in the way of making things more efficient in Michigan, that Democracy is not the way we fix problems in America, that it is a problem.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The decision-making authority of elected officials in Benton Harbor, Michigan was suspended under a new emergency manager law passed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. In a speech Wednesday, Snyder said he also wanted to abolish the minimum number of hours children are required to be in school. He announced that he was targeting 23 school districts for takeover by state-appointed unilateral executives. “Every single one of those places has just been told that them having locally elected officials, that’s a problem,” MSNBC Rachel Maddow explained Thursday. “That democracy is in the way of making things more efficient in Michigan, that Democracy is not the way we fix problems in America, that it is a problem.”
Continue reading …‘In the early years I tried leaving many times, but my husband would threaten to kill me and I was demoralised enough to believe him’ When my husband John
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly thinks it’s just shameful that liberals are calling out the Birthers for their racism so hlast ight he brought on Margaret Hoover and Alicia Menendez to talk about it. Of course, Hoover thought it was entirely “predictable” that people would decry the innate racism of the Birther theories and their progenitors — which is like saying it’s “predictable” people would be distraught by a terrorist attack. Then Menendez sort of agreed with Hoover, but added: MENENDEZ: There are big conversations we need to be having about the fact that there are so many racial tensions and anxieties in this country. O’REILLY: Well, let me stop you there. MENENDEZ: When you start calling people racist… O’REILLY: Let me stop you there. I don’t see all of these racial confrontations in this country, and I do this every day. What I see is Barack Obama elected president with 43 percent of the white vote. He got something like 67 percent of the Hispanic vote. I don’t see it. And unless you can show it to me, Alicia… … Look, wouldn’t you both agree that calling somebody a racist, anybody, without proof beyond a reasonable doubt is a vicious, hateful thing to do? Would you agree? MENENDEZ: As vicious as suggesting that the president of the United States is not a real American. O’REILLY: No, no, no. Just answer my question, Alicia. Calling somebody a racist without proof beyond a reasonable doubt, a vicious, hateful thing, yes or no? MENENDEZ: I agree. O’REILLY: OK, you agree. MENENDEZ: I think that part of the reason you see that rhetoric… O’REILLY: Now we have a cadre of people on national television doing a vicious, hateful thing. Yet… MENENDEZ: But Bill, they’re doing it in response to what was a vicious and hateful thing coming out of the right. And there were very few people like you who are being honest and calling it what it was. O’REILLY: No. 1, you don’t commit bad behavior and point to other bad behavior. And what came out of the right — that’s true, Alicia. Write it down. Don’t justify bad behavior by pointing to other. Wait a minute. And the second thing is what came out of the right and was absolutely blown apart on this broadcast was the birth certificate might be phony. I didn’t think that had any racial overtone at all. It was a birth certificate deal. MENENDEZ: So you think — you think it’s just coincidental that the first president to have this type of public questioning of his land of origin of being a real American happens to be our first black president? That’s just a weird coincidence? O’REILLY: It’s born out of hatred for the man. They’ll get — the people who hate Barack Obama will latch onto anything. S’funny: Do any of you remember Bill O’Reilly getting all outraged and denouncing Glenn Beck when he called President Obama a racist who hates white people? Hm? No, I seem instead to recall him launching a multi-city “speaking” tour with Beck. Strange how O’Reilly’s rather selective outrage works, isn’t it? What’s especially noteworthy is that he and Margaret Hoover seem to believe that we’re long past the days of naked racism and bigotry and that racial tensions don’t really exist. Let me point them first to Baratunde Thurston’s reply to Donald Trump on that score. Or, for that matter, to those little ol’ jus’ folks Tea Partiers who strangely seem unable to avoid racist outbreaks . And nevermind that the Birthers are still going strong, even on Fox. And seriously: Does O’Reilly believe that these nutcases continue to cling to their Birther beliefs, even after Obama has gotten out his long form too for them, simply because they hate Obama? And that their hatred of Obama has no basis in his race? And he expects the rest of us to be that naive? Really? He better rename his show’s motto “The New Spin Zone”.
Continue reading …The pastor who preached the Easter sermon that Barack Obama heard this past Sunday is not another Jeremiah Wright, Time's Amy Sullivan insists in an April 29 blog “Swampland” blog post entitled “Conservatives Go After Another Obama Pastor.” Sullivan was responding to the complaints of conservative talkers Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, who highlighted some controversial remarks Smith made to a college audience last year: What got these two conservative media giants atwitter was a speech Smith gave last year at Eastern University in Pennsylvania–the school where evangelical pastor and speaker Tony Campolo is based. He was asked to speak about racism and offered some thoughts that included the assertion that racism still exists in the United States. There were two important details about the speech: 1) It was taped; and 2) Smith singled out Fox News and Limbaugh by name.
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