7.31.2008

Farewell to Maureen, Dan, and (sort of) Devin

I'm going to keep this short so as not to step on the toes of Trevor's wonderfully revealing post about our elected officials, but I just wanted to note that 3 of our fabulous interns are leaving today. (Well, Devin is actually staying in the office, but will no longer be an intern). They will be missed, and I personally hope that they will be guest blogging about their exciting pursuits next year (South America? California? I want to hear more). Bon voyage to all, and we'll see you soon.

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Do you know what your Member of Congress is up to?

Mine wants to go hunting for wildebeests in Eastern Chad, and feed the game to refugees from neighboring Darfur. No joke. According to the Washington Post, Rep. Duncan Hunter's (R-CA) "staff contacted the embassy in N'Djamena, Chad last week to see whether Hunter could distribute food at a camp. Hunter also wanted to put together an outing to hunt wildebeest and distribute the meat to refugees. The embassy was decidedly lukewarm."

According to the Post, after the State Department said Rep. Hunter would not be able to hunt Wildebeests in Chad, "Hunter's office called State on Thursday and said he had decided not to go and that he was looking instead at commercial hunting expeditions in Kenya, Tanzania and Southern Africa."

I just don't know how to respond to this...

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7.30.2008

I need my books people

I just discovered that not only are the federal spending priorities out of whack, our municipal priorities here in the District of Columbia are as well. The DC public libraries might be forced to reduce hours because of budget troubles. I have keenly felt the absence of a university library (and interlibrary loan... oh the joy of worldcat! I loved looking up what libraries in Dubai have extensive archives of French newspapers) since I left school a year ago, but this is limit. I understand that a public library might not invest in obscure books about 20th century trends in historiography, or immediately purchase a book about the roles of blogs in the political process, but not making it easy for working people to get to the library?

How can our society continue to survive, thrive, or flourish if libraries are not readily available to people? With handguns now legal in DC, the libraries closing, and Metro losing out on funding, I'm about ready to move to Maryland. Or even worse, New York! Then, of course, I remember that I can walk to the National Gallery of Art and see classic Antonioni films for free on the big screen. I suppose it's a mixed bag. But seriously, DC needs to commit to its libraries, like Seattle, or even my old library system from central NJ.

PS- The fellow pictured above is called "ILL guy."

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7.29.2008

On the painful healing of forgiveness

Last weekend, I went to Ohio to represent FCNL at Wilmington Yearly Meeting. It was my first time at a yearly meeting and I found the whole experience wonderful. The people were incredibly welcoming and I learned a lot about Quaker theology, politics and history.

The theme of the yearly meeting was taken from John 5:6, "Do you want to be made well?" which was worked into nearly every aspect of the weekend. I came home reflecting on that quote and how it relates to the healing that comes from reconciliation.

As most of you probably know by now, on Sunday there was a shooting at a Unitarian Universalist church in Knoxville, TN. I'm not UU, but I spent a lot of time at UU churches, conferences and camps as a teenager, which is how I met my partner of five years, Alex. Alex is incredibly active in the denomination and works in the UUA's Washington Office of Advocacy. His parents attend a different UU church in Tennessee, and in the past few days we've both been struck by the many little personal connections we have to Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church that we were previously unaware of.

Lately, I've been reading a lot of prayers by Walter Brueggemann. I have always found his style of prayer-poems particularly moving. I love how he's willing to honestly look at anger and frustration with God without making excuses for it. In mourning for TVUUC, and with the theme of Wilmington Yearly Meeting still running around in my head, I decided to make my own small attempt at prayer-poem writing.

“Do you want to be made well?”

On days like these, your question seems to mock us.

We, who have been seeking your Wholeness all these years
In our homes
In our churches
In our selves

How could you even ask?

After all,
Fidelity to your vision
Seems to be what got us into this trouble in the first place
Seems to always be getting us into trouble

We would like a day off
A day of bereavement
From seeing the worth and dignity of every person

Yet, even now, when our children’s clothes are still stained with blood
Your words of comfort are mixed with the harsh commandment
Of reconciliation

And so we pray a reluctant litany
for them
And for us
And for them
And for us

Until there is no “them” but only an ever increasing number of “us”

“Forgive us our trespasses
As we forgive those who trespass against us”

And we curse
And we praise
The day you made us of one blood

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Caroline's summer reading list

Well, it's time for yet another summer reading list. This one is brought to you by our fabulous Caroline, who always posts so faithfully on the blog.

Summer Reading List 4

Caroline Anderson, Communications Program Assistant

Guests of the Sheik, by Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
What do we really know about Iraq, this country with which the United States is intimately involved? Written in 1965, this “Ethnography of an Iraqi Village” is a memoir, telling the story of Fernea, a young bride who accompanied her sociologist husband to live in an Iraqi village for two years. It is a picture of Iraq unaffected by Saddam Hussein or the United States army.

Salvador, by Joan Didion
In this short novel (only about 100 pages), Joan Didion focuses her shrewd commentary on 1982 El Salvador. She recounts a few weeks spent in the country on assignment for The New York Review of Books. Though the politics of El Salvador are largely ignored today, reading this book offers a good depiction of living with unrelenting terror on a daily basis.

The Plague (La Peste), by Albert Camus
A classic novel about what happens when a disease quarantines the city of Oran, Algeria. How does it relate to FCNL’s work? By raising questions about the role of civil society and what happens when it breaks down.

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7.25.2008

Food: In which I learn how to budget, shop, and eat sustainably


Lately, everyone's been talking at dinner parties. About what, you ask? (Or maybe, "what lame dinners parties did you go to in the past where no one talked?") Two things really: equally zealous discussions of the tastiness of the food we're eating and the implications of where it came from and how it was prepared. Questions of, how can we make what we consume healthy, environmentally friendly, and delicious all at the same time?

This is the first time in my life I've had a kitchen all my own (I had one in my host family's house in Paris, which was often mine alone thanks to divorce and business travel, but I never asked how to turn on the stovetop, and it seemed too late to after several months of "cooking for myself." I did get good at making crepes in the microwave…) and I've recently diversified my focus on food from simply an obsession with restaurants (ask my aunt about the 7 page restaurant guide she was emailed in return for her innocent request for tips on good places to eat in Philadelphia), to an increasingly robust interest in buying high quality ingredients and cooking them in interesting ways.

For young socially conscious Washingtonians, deciding what to eat is a careful balance. As with most people (those who I like to spend time with at least) we are concerned that what we eat is delicious, but are also on pretty tight budgets, and we've inevitably read The Omnivore's Dilemma and are worried about what the food we're putting in our bodies is doing to the environment, the people who harvest it, and the economy. Oh, and also we want to be mildly healthy. Personally, I'm still detoxing from my relatively good but smorgasbord-like college dining experience (My bff Colleen can attest to that aspect of it).

Over the past year, as my grocery shopping and cooking habits have formed, in concert with my boyfriend, who just refuses to go to a certain D.C. farmers' market where $4 heads of lettuce can be found (despite the delicious goat cheese that can also be found there), with those priorities (frugality, delectability, and sustainability) in mind. This is all much to the surprise of my mother, who, a couple of week ago asked me for confirmation that I disliked cooking. Once true mother, but not anymore. Now I sit at work fantasizing about how to achieve food shopping, cooking, and eating perfection.

Ok Caroline, enough with your editorial flourishes and personal anecdotes, what are your food habits? They developed slowly, beginning with learning to make a list before I go grocery shopping. I then decided to bring my own bags to the market instead of burying myself and the world under an ever-growing mound of plastic bags. Finally, after struggling for many months with my boyfriend over where to get our produce, and how to eat more healthfully and locally (how can we avoid the $4 head of lettuce farmers' market wonder down at the unnamed Circle?), we stumbled upon the Adams Morgan Farmers' market. Not only is it a 5 minutes walk from the apartment, it's also (at least one of the two stalls) dedicated to selling fresh, healthy food for reasonable prices, not serving as an expensive boutique to a yuppie clientele. What we'll do when it closes in December I don't know. Maybe we can stand the $4 lettuce place every other week, and only for cheese.

And how do I prepare all that food? I have to admit, getting used to planning my food consumption and meals has been the biggest (but most rewarding) challenge so far. I especially noticed this in the past week, as Geoff (boyfriend) and I were overcome by the bounty of produce at the market and bought a lot of it! (If anyone wants some of the beet soup I made, let me know… it's delicious and earthy, but I ate it three days in a row, and now I need a little break) I do, however, feel healthier being more deliberate about my food consumption, as well as indulging my cravings once in a while (yes, I am guilty of buying $9 imported mozzarella di bufala least week… but it was delicious, and I paired it with my locally grown tomatoes and cheap-o olive oil from the Safeway!)


So, what have others been doing? I have friends (they are also Friends actually) who started their own garden on the back porch and make their own pickles. I am extremely jealous of those who have the opportunity to garden, what with living on the second floor of a big apartment building. I also know that Dan (who appears on this blog as a contributor) and Julia (who appears in the comments) have given up all meat except "happy meat," ie, animals that were bred and raised humanely.

Well all? What are your food habits? Are you concerned with sustainable eating? Have you always been or did the slow food/omnivore's dilemma wave hit you recently? Or do you think it's all a load of hooey and get all of your food at the supermarket and fast food joints?

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7.22.2008

What is the cost of war?

One of my favorite radio programs is This American Life, which though sometimes its producers get distracted by their shiny television program, sometimes make a show that reaches me at jsut the right time to be deeply affecting. That happened this week, with their episode "Life After Death". I found the last story, "Soldier of Misfortune" particularly interesting and tragic. It asks the question, how does war affect those who have to fight it?


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7.21.2008

Nick's Summer Reading List

As Caroline has already written, Friday was Nick's last day in the office. Nick and I use to sit in the same office pod, and he'd be proud to know that everyone's already commenting on how "quiet," "boring," and "normal" the Field Pod is without his mischief. So, in honor of my dearly departed (to Alaska!) former officemate, here is his summer reading list:


Summer Reading List 3:
Nick Bauer, Campaigns Program Assistant

The Little Prince, by Antoine De Saint Exupery
The story of a downed fighter pilot who meets a little "alien" boy, this book is a beautiful and simple reminder of life's little truths that we tend to forget.

The Far Pavilions, by M.M. Kaye
Written in 1978, this book is an epic novel detailing the youth and coming of age of a British-Indian boy in colonized India. The protagonist's fascinating struggle to reconcile two vastly different cultures with his personal convictions underscores a unique examination of colonialism and its consequences.

Bon voyage, Nick! Have fun campaigning in sub-zero temperatures!

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Farewell to Nick and Danny!

It is time to bid farewell to some more delinquent bloggers. Nick and Danny have decided to blow this non-partisan popsicle-stand to work on campaigns -- Nick to Alaska and Danny to Pennsylvania. I have already started harassing Nick about telling us more about the bears and glaciers he encounters in the 49th state, and Danny will be back in November, so expect to hear from them in the future.

Happy canvassing boys! I have to admit, I'm a little jealous. I was excellent at canvassing money, signatures, and bathrooms alike.

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7.16.2008

Mad. Just... Mad.

At our staff meeting last Monday folks were understandably upset about some of the shenanigans Congress has gotten into lately. Some of the elder staffers were waxing nostalgic for protest movements set to folk tunes, and I could see visions of Bob Dylan and marches on Washington dancing in their heads.

I didn't want to seem flip about the need to oppose current disastrous policies promoted by Congress and the President, but I also wanted to say (in the most respectful way possible) - snap out of it!

How can we get the message to Congress that what they're doing isn't right? By using the methods of the past? Perhaps. But it's going to be awfully hard to find people who are willing to do it.

Who has the time to protest? Not professionals who are the responsible heads of organizations and companies. They can't be spared for enough time to trek to Washington, or devote hours and hours to protesting outside the district offices of their members of Congress. They simply don't have the time. It is instead the youth that must protest, must take the time to park themselves in front of offices and government buildings, and then follow up that demonstration of opinions by actually voting.

But for the large part, my generation doesn't seem to have the will to take time out of their lives and protest. Why? The country is in an even worse mess than we were in 1968, mired in a war and a slumping economy at the same time. And yet we sit at our desks, or go to class, not taking advantage of our right to assemble and protest this awfulness.

Is it that we don't have opinions on these issues?

No, but we have been taught over the past eight years (when most of us were learning about government and first exercising our right to vote) that what we think doesn't matter. That when we want something to change, it won't. That even when we protest, nothing will change. I was on one of the 6 buses that traveled down to Washington from Bryn Mawr in the spring of 2004 to join the March for Women's Lives. That march seemed full of hope and promise, and I felt that we were going to be listened to, to make a difference. And yet, in the years that followed, almost everything we were protesting against that day happened. It gets a girl a bit discouraged.

I remember that after the 2004 election one of the college freshwomen I was advising reported to me that she reacted to the results of the elections in this manner:

"Caroline, first I cried, then I threw up, and then I cried some more."

This is not the reaction of someone who is apathetic toward the issues. What it is is the reaction of someone who feels helpless, who feels that all she can do is cry and get sick, because her vote and her actions won't make any difference.

As we moved out of college and into the real world, the economy tanked. I think this pushed us even more firmly into offices and safe jobs and away from mass marches. If we turned our backs on employment and steady income to protest or organize we would fall behind, not find another job, be consumed by the tidal waves of the failing economy. The closest I ever came to organizing was canvassing for New Jersey PIRG and the Sierra Club, a job which I took and threw all my energy into for the paycheck as much as for the satisfaction of protecting the environment. We also know that we're pretty much on our own for retirement. We can't count on Social Security or a pension to protect us there.

We also feel deeply angry that the generation who caused global warming is not doing anything to stop it (We mean you President Bush, the House of Representative, and the Senate), leaving us with a problem that threatens our and our children's future.

Ultimately, we're mad as hell, but afraid to do anything about it. When the environment is failing, the military gets more money than education or healthcare and is still over extended, and there's little hope for the economy, the first instinct is to protect ourselves. And that's what we're doing.

Clearly I'm not presenting any solutions here, and my parents' might think that I'm whining about my situation. But darn it. How do you expect young people to work up the will to protest when we are mired in a malaise that seemingly has no end? Also, we can't afford the gas to come to Washington and the national train system is too slow and expensive to do the job.

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7.14.2008

Danny's Summer Reading List

I had every intention of posting another summer reading list on Thursday before I left the office to go represent FCNL at the Convention for the Common Good in Philadelphia, but it was not meant to be. Apologies, everyone! Here's one to make up for it.

This summer reading list was provided by Danny, who went on leave Friday and will be out of the office until November. We all miss him already, and hope he has a fantastic next few months.

Summer Reading List 2:
Danny Hosein, Legislative Program Assistant on Nuclear Nonproliferation

Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World, by Tracy Kidder
Kidder details the life of Dr. Paul Farmer. Farmer treats tuberculosis and other illnesses in Haiti, only to discover the deeper social roots of infectious diseases. Farmer's principled placement of patients over profits and his revolutionary delivery of services to the underserved has become a global model of healthcare.

Night Draws Near: Iraq's People in the Shadow of America's War, by Anthony Shadid
Shadid chronicles his experiences reporting on the run-up to the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the lives of Iraqis during the war, and the aftermath. Exceptionally well-written and engaging.

We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families: Stories from Rwanda, by Philip Gourevitch
Gourevitch recounts the harrowing details of the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He tells the story of Paul Rusesabagina, who heroically protects people from the slaughter.

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7.11.2008

Another Bit of News (Good this time)

I just saw that the Smithsonian plans to build a National Museum of African American History and Culture (about time). AND, according to dcist.com, it will be a green building. Tra la! The FCNL office, with its low energy costs and guilt-free conscience, will no longer be lonely in this part of town.

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I hate when people don't update their blogs regularly

And yet we interns are guilty of the same offense. I know I said I'd post something about the generation gap and protest two days ago, but as I sat down to write it, I became mired in the issue of how we can make our representatives listen, who should protest, and how to inspire action. I think it's going to take a few more days to work out the gnarls and clarify my point. In the meantime, the New York Times presents me with yet another reason I'd like to avoid airports. (Even though I love to travel).

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7.08.2008

More Scary Language on Iran...

... as reported in the New York Times.

Check out FCNL's website for more information and resources.

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7.07.2008

Congress got you down? Escape for a few hours to Canada

With Congress approving amounts of money for war so large that they could instead pay for every American's college education, and then giving some more to help foment war with Iran, I felt the need this week to indulge in a little escapism. I hope, if you will allow me, to take a moment away from the business of Washington and make a humble movie recommendation.

Yesterday I took off the flag pin someone made me wear, put away my fireworks, and went to see a movie about Canada. We are lucky enough in this city to have many outlets for watching unusual and obscure film, and this Sunday found me at the AFI theater in Silver Spring MD, viewing Guy Maddin's My Winnipeg. Maddin is from Winnipeg, and this film is an ode to the city, in the style of "docu-fantasia".

I hadn't really liked Maddin's The Saddest Music in the World (also set in Winnipeg), so I went into this movie with some trepidation. But what made that film tiresome (overly stylistic aesthetic, achieved with fresh footage made to look old) was tempered in this movie with a wonderful and hilarious sense of humor that grounded the whole endeavor. If in the older piece Maddin did not seem aware of the absurdity of his subject and method, in this one he acknowledged that absurdity and enjoyed it, allowing the audience to do so as well.

Bottom line -- it's freaking hilarious, and will resonate with anyone who has grown up, or loved sports, or felt a pang when their home town started to change. Oh, and if you've ever dabbled in the occult or enjoyed bathing beauty contests, there's something in there for you too.

Alright, back to reality. I've been thinking about protest, music, and youth, and I"ll let you all know what I've come up with tomorrow.

Happy viewing!

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7.03.2008

Christine's Summer Reading List

Summer has arrived and has brought with it iced tea, fireworks and an increased number of sandals around the office. Summer also means that Congress is winding down and the interns have a little extra time to curl up with a good book.

So, for the next few weeks we'll be posting some samples of what we've been reading lately. Feel free to comment and add to our summer reading lists!

Summer Reading List 1
Christine Haider, Field Program Assistant


The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen’s Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear
by Paul Rogat Loeb (Editor)
A collection of articles, short stories, and poems by world-famous peace activists that celebrates the sense of hope that keeps us working toward a better world. When you feel overwhelmed by all the work left to be done, a story from this book and a tall glass of lemonade can be just the thing to raise your spirits.

Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood
by Marjane Satrapi
A simple and beautiful graphic novel about Satrapi’s experience growing up during the Iranian Revolution. This book is impossible to not fall in love with.

Wall Tappings: Women's Prison Writings, 200 A.D. to the Present
by Judith A. Scheffler (Editor)
An incredibly diverse and moving collection that gives testament to both the dehumanizing nature of the prison system and the empowering nature of the written word.

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7.02.2008

Well Mr. Hersh, What Have You Left Me With?

You've probably heard about the article by Seymour Hersh in this week's New Yorker. It's on Iran, and is written in a surprisingly straightforward journalistic style not usually found in the magazine.

Hersh presents us with evidence that the Administration is operating "covert activities" in Iran. Even more than before in fact.

This article brought up more questions for me than it gave me answers. I am a long time New Yorker subscriber, and I have to admit that Hersh has never been my favorite writer. I find his style confusing, more wrapped up in his anonymous sources and insider access than in clear writing. Nevertheless, this is a huge revelation if it is accurate, which I'm inclined to think that it is. But again, it brought up many questions, among them:

Is Hersh being alarmist?

Skewed to the left? Right on?

Can we trust Hersch's sources?

Is it stuff we knew all along?

Does it surprise us?

What should we do?

Let me repeat this last one: What should we do? I'm not entirely sure. The most frightening thing about Hersh's attitude in this piece, which is echoed in this interview with Terry Gross, is that there's nothing we can do. This administration is hell bent on war, and they've got the tools to make it happen. Perhaps that's what bothers me about Seymour Hersh - he leaves me with a feeling of despair. All his inside information doesn't leave us with solutions.

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