Tag Archive for 'Politiku'

The Ground Zero Mosque Controversy & What is at Stake

Would the Anti Defamation League have opposed Park 51, the controversial Islamic cultural center and Mosque, had its founder, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, sought to develop the center in a building that was twelve as opposed to just two blocks away from Ground Zero?

Distance from the Epicenter

Questions about distance and radius are not unfamiliar to anyone who living in NY during and after the 9/11/01 terrorist attacks. The Red Cross and FEMA had their red zone maps. Trauma, a topic also discussed in my July 4th Fireworks Politiku, is very real to those who suffer in its aftermath. What 9/11 victims experienced, suffered from and in some cases are still suffering from, deserves all the support and respect one would expect from a socially conscious and sensitized civilization.

What I just don’t get about all this

Will having a Mosque and cultural center near ground Zero, truly deepen the suffering of a 9/11 survivor simply because it is there to serve a community of moderate Islamic practitioners?

Given the complex nature of trauma and how it manifests, I honestly don’t see how a 9/11 survivor’s response to Park 51 would be any easier to predict than other potential emotional triggers in that part of town.

As someone who was downtown the morning of the attacks, I go to that part of the city when I have to and co-exist with the discomfort as best I can. It’s constantly changing as are the different things that get to me about being there. Would an Islamic cultural center resonate with me as anything besides an Islamic cultural center? Probably not.

The Perceived Threat

I grew up in an educated, politically involved, middle-class Jewish family in Washington, D.C. and have chosen to reside in multicultural cities for most of my adult life because it is where I feel most at ease. I am not afraid of a moderate Islamic cultural center with an interfaith focus because, for me, ignorance, intolerance and extremism is the greater threat.

I do not agree with all of Imam Feisal Abdul Raufmight’s politics –but then– I disagree with a lot of my friend’s politics, as well.

Isn’t this what living and thriving in a multicultural urban metropolis is all about?

The Actual Threat

The actual threat, as I see it, is a potential anti-semitic backlash that the ADL’s intolerance could unintentionally end up causing.

Hopefully those following the issue will understand that the ADL’s extremist position does not represent all Jews. Hopefully…

Politiku Submission Call

politiku background

Please email Politiku submissions on this topic along with your first and last name and url (if you’d like us to link to it)  to Guest Assistant Editor, Rachel Levy by 9:00 p.m. EST on Tuesday, August 2nd.

Rachel’s email address is levy166 (at) gmail.com We hope the Politiku will represent a wide range of Jewish voices on this issue and will post the Politiku we select on Huffpo.

Need the run down or a refresher on what, exactly, Politiku is?  Visit the FAQ section of our Facebook Fan page and follow our tweets as well!

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July Fourth Politiku Update

Fireworks & Combat Trauma Politiku

Craig Newmark’s recent blogpost about National PTSD Awareness Day inspired me to draft a proposal for a series of Politiku workshops for U.S. Military Veterans dealing with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder due to combat trauma. Craig referred me to Lily Casura, author of the website HealingCombatTrauma.com for additional info on the topic.

4th of July Fireworks can be stressful, isolating, alienating and outright exhausting for vets suffering from PTSD. Moreover, they may not necessarily be in the mood to the political issues behind their most recent tours of duty with their civilian families who only know what the media tells them and, in all fairness, why should they? Why should one individual be singlehandedly responsible for setting the record straight, given how polarized the issue has become? Given the diversity of perspectives on this issue, how accurate would one individual’s perspective be, anyway?

Most of us –myself included– grew up associating Fourth of July fireworks with excitement. In Washington, DC, Dad, Mom my brother and me would all go to the Ellipse early to place a picnic blanket by the Reflecting Pool and twirl sparklers as the sun set while waiting till 9:30 when it was dark enough for rose shaped streaks to rip open the sky as we cheered. We would then ooo and ah as the twinklies descended on parachutes and then head home in a blissful fume of post grand finale haze. Though each and every family has their variation upon the theme, it seems to me most Americans still honor the 4th in some way involving family and fireworks. It’s an altogether awesome holiday — one of the few in this country that truly everyone can be a part of!

From Susannaspeier.com

For soldiers dealing with combat trauma, however, the explosive blasts can trigger a more visceral fight/flight response because of their similarities to the blasts and explosions experienced in Iraq and/or Afghanistan. Being surrounded by explicit and implicit displays of patriotism and anti-patriotism can further augment a shell shocked combat vet’s sense of displacement.

I want to be clear that Politiku is not therapy. A Politiku writing workshop for vets dealing with combat trauma might be of value to some because it is a journalistic and literary based technique would enable these individuals to condense their complicated, timely and multifaceted experiences into simple and accessible piece of poetry for them to choose to share with others or not.

This Politiku proposal is 21 slides; mostly images. Assuming you’re on vaca don’t wanna be bothered with anything too long and complicated, I assure you that the proposal (embedded below) is a fast, readable and generally un-confusing read and so check it out, okay? Speier July Politiku Pitch

A project like this would benefit the readers as much –if not more– than it would benefit the writers. Politiku written by combat Vets suffering from PTSD has the potential of helping those who might not otherwise be comfortable with this issue due to its complexity and seeming inpenetrability.

The samples in the Power Point proposal — provided by Yours Truly — are my attempt to give a reader a better sense of what a Politiku written by a vet might look like. Here is where the next request comes in:

Submission Call

If you would like to Politiku about vets with PTSD on July 4th and fireworks please post your Politiku in the comment section.

If you are a vet with PTSD and would still like to Politiku but prefer to remain anonymous, you can email your Politiku to to susanna (at) susannaspeier (dot) com and I will feature it anonymously. I will assume that any politiku received in my inbox is mean for anonymous posting.

Need more specifics on how to write Politiku or want to follow for updates and info on future posts? My Facebook fanpage has an FAQ. You can also go to my Huffpo column to read other Politiku posts if you want to get a better sense.

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Neuroeconomics Politiku

politiku background

The topic of the December Politiku was Neuroeconomics -or- the science of what happens to our brains when we shop.  I ended

If you’d like to read my Huffington Post Politiku Neuroeconomics for New Years click here.

What is Neuroeconomics?

To really get something of a sense of what this is about, I suggest you read what others have to say about it:

Tim Hartford’s Slate.com article on Neuroeconomics

Sharon Begley’s Newsweek article on Neuroeconomics

Elizabeth Eaves’ Forbes article on Neuroeconomics

Paul B. Farrell’s Market Watch article on Neuroeconomics

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H1N1 Politiku – call for submissions

politiku background

You Been Vaccinated for H1N1 yet?

At my friend, Rachel Levy’s suggestion, I am putting out a submission call for an H1N1 Politiku.

Are You a Scientist or a Heath Policy Expert?

If you’re an expert on this topic, I’d love to feature your Politiku along with a Tweet length bio, specifying your expertise to supplement.

Do You Have a Difficult Time Taking All of This Seriously?

Then there’s two of us.  Considering how many more people die every month from regular flu, once can’t help but wonder if its just an overhyped media thing.  At the same time, its so frustrating not being able to get a hold of the stupid shot.  But then, its not easy to get a good grasp on the rest of this, either.

Here’s my suggestion:

Read Rachel’s latest blog post on the topic because its thorough, its fair and Rachel is reliable and smart.  The post also gives a good overview of what a lot of different perspectives on this.

There Are Still No Vaccinations Available in Your State?

Wanna know who just got their entire company vaccinated? Watch Amy Poehler and Seth Meyer’s “Oh Really” sketch from the 11/7/09 SNL about this.  Btw, if you work for Goldman and are willing to Politiku on the topic, you are SO anonymously featured it isn’t even funny.  Well, okay.  It might be a little bit.

H1N1 Politiku Deadline November 15th 12:00p.m. PST

Please note that although the Western haiku movement has been deviating from 5-7-5, Politiku sticks to 5

-7-5. This topic was hotly debated with the Haiku Foundation and remains 5-7-5.

As the deadline is already passed submissions are closed.  Click here to read H1N1 Politiku on Huffington.

I look forward to reading your 17 syllables.

Ralph Dannheisser H1N1 Politiku
Swine flu? Bah, humbug!
H1N1? There’s no such…..
Oink! Oink! Oink! Kachoo!!!

Susanna Speier H1N1 Politiku
Don’t think about it.
Stay healthy and hit the gym.
Disinfected weights.

Stephen M. Wilson Politiku
If Frost only knew
neither fire nor ice, but
a new strain of flu

Anonymous Politiku
tired for days and days
could i finally be pregnant?
no, it’s the swine flu

Rachel Levy Politiku
The vax mayn’t be sure
But don’t defer to hucksters
Turn ears to reason

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Susanna Speier: Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize Politiku

Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize Politiku is up on Huffpost, thanks to all the writers who churned them out so quickly. Please click in:
Susanna Speier: Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize Politiku

Posted using ShareThis

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Nobel Peace Prize Politiku

On October 9, 2009, the Norwegian Nobel Committee made an surprising announcement.  Was it the fact that the news came only nine months into The President’s first term that made the news so shocking or was it the conceptual nature of the Nobel Committee’s kudos that caused so many waves to bristle?

From Blog Archive

Are Obama’s, “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples,” deserving of such a distinguished acknowledgment?

Submission deadline has already passed.  Click here if you’d like to read it on The Huffington Post and/or add commentary.

Want to submit for the November politiku post?  Click here to get the topic.

More context for how this decision was made -
Here’s the Nobel Committee’s announcement
Here’s the Reuters’ run down on what earned Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Jimmy Carter their Nobels.

Saturday Night Live’s Obama acceptance speech sketch
Read what Maureen Dowd, channeling Bill Clinton and W, has to say -or-
Check out my friend, Thomas Huynh’s Sun Tzu based commentary on the topic.


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Health Care Reform Politiku

The submission deadline for this archived Politiku Shout Out has already passed as the Health Care Politiku (formerly titled “Health Care Reform Politiku) has posted. The current Politiku Shout Out, however, is only a click away.

Health Care Reform is in the air which means time for a new Huffington Politiku. Please submit Politiku via the commentary section of this post or email me at susanna (at) susannaspeier (dot) com

From Blog Archive

Click here to read a deeply insightful op-ed on the topic by my fav NY Times columnist, Nick Kristof.

Still looking for inspiration?  Check out this viral You Tube video on Health Care.

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Memorial Day Politiku

Different sources make different claims regarding the origin of Memorial Day. Southern hymns, Union Generals and United States Presidents all claim to have officiated the holiday that my great-grandmother from Omaha used to insist on referring to as, “Decoration Day.” While I’m still not quite clear on whether “Decoration Day” was the predecessor to our contemporary “Memorial Day” or whether they both emerged simultaneously, post Civil War, the challenge of pinpointing an origin could easily keep a team of historians busy through Memorial Day 2010 at least.

Scrolling back through my personal associations with the holiday is considerably less daunting. I was born and raised a Beltway brat. This means that the memorials for honoring the people and events of the past were a routine fixture of my perpetual present. I was six years old when my parents first took me visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. Not only was it the first military ceremony I ever witnessed but it was the first time I ever saw real soldiers. The fact that they could stand so still and move so precisely, made the experience seem all the more supernatural. The clicks of the taps of the shoes of the round the clock guards was utterly miraculous.

Who was this soldier who remained “unknown?” No answers would satisfy me. The questions I bombarded my parents with were, in fact, almost exactly the same questions that I was recently bombarded with by eleven-year-old cousin, Max. “It’s many soldiers — not just one” I am now able to explain. “They’re from different wars and could belong to any family that lost someone.” Through the process of trying to explain I am reminded of the impossibility of defining, quantifying or comprehending a loss of this magnitude and this loss that will continue to remain.

Frankie Clogston’s Politku

All over the Mall.
Memorial City, this.
Crowded memories.

Don Bassman’s Politiku

bold untouchable
implacable impartial
honor code of Death

It’s Finality.
The whistle blows but no cheers
- must be a tie game.

The war was over.
A state of peace was declared
on the State of Mind.

Irene Gravina’s Politiku

West End hot brick walks
Hit your bare feet as you ran
Into the cool Charles

No sense to be made
Down on the grass by your grave
Green bug on my wrist

Thirteen red petals
Fallen like you and a plaque
BRONZE STAR KOREA

In the meeting house
People have space to gather
And speak openly

Tavern floor awash
With hard cider all night
At dawn dew splashed with blood

Gun across his knee
The metal cast Minuteman
Rests.  His job is done.

Our flags rim this Green
People wander in to see
Kids playing Frisbee

Musket to musket
Farmers met waves of Redcoats
As Americans

Peter Orvetti
‘s Politiku

Thousands of lost souls
Fallen soldiers, orphaned young
For rights we squander

Mathilde’s Politiku

On May 4th, ever
silence, two minutes
for ALL Dutch who died.

Richard Speier’s Politiku

Ten thousand troops killed.
Honor. One million plain folks
killed in crossfires. What?

(The soldiers who die in the service to their country
deserve honor. But, typically, a war results in 10 to 100 times as
many civilian deaths as soldier deaths. During and shortly after a
war, civilians perish from crossfires — and from the deliberate or
accidental targeting of populations, from genocide, from disease, and
from starvation. Why isn’t there a holiday to remember them?)

Susanna Speier’s Politiku

Tomb of the Unknown
shoes that shine, that tap, that click
Beltway kids, watching…

To view Memorial Day Politiku as a featured Huffington Post Living selection  click here.

For coverage on Obama’s visit to Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day Ceremony, click here.

TombOfTheUnknown

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Kudos for Politikus

Thanks to all the stellar contributions to the last round, the Politikus I posted on Huffpo got three write ups:

SmithMagazine

Allen County Democrats

Hollie Does Hollywood

The bulk of responses, of course, were not structured as blog entries or web pubs.  And a couple of responses actually arrived in 17 syllable format:

Loved your seder-ku.
Me too.  No matzoh prize claimed.

Kids grown in this crew.

- Jerome Coopersmith

Susanna’s method
to chart the current admin

and cut through the din
-Irving Gregory

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Obama’s First 100 Days in Office: Politiku Recap

This set of Politikus is cross posted on the Huffington Post along with a short explanation of Politiku.

J Holtham’s Politiku

One hundred days in
FOX News bellows from rafters
But history wins

Puppies, bank bailouts,
Handshakes, iPods, Specter flips,
Nothing breaks his stride

After eight dumb years,
One hundred days of smart is
Like a springtime morn

When I get worried about
The world, I think, “Obama,”
And it’s all okay.


Irene Cullen Gravina’s Politiku

When Obama won
The world held its breath–and now
Begins to exhale

Jason Rosenbaum’s Politiku

One hundred days in
President Obama is
In deep, but not down.

Arlen Spector Dem./
Veto-proof majority/
Obama pwns Reps!

Jerome Coopersmith’s Politiku

One hundred days crossed.
Now Rush, Sean, Dick, Bill, Annie -
Admit it, you lost!

Hollie Overton’s Politiku

No more Texas bull
Obama is stepping up
Gotta keep the faith

Money woes abound
Bailouts just keep on coming
Change is all we have

Ralph Dannheisser’s Politiku

A hundred days in,
Obama impresses with
his grasp of the job.

Cedar Reiner’s Politiku

The Onion Headline
Black Man Given Country’s Worst Job
Seems to get more true

As time passes by.
Bush opened Pandoras Box
Obama shut it.

Now clean up the mess
Left by Florida’s ballots
with more than just hope.

Dan Keefe’s Politiku

they have a dog now
Dulled pen concedes to the sword
they like to garden

Karen Goldner‘s Politiku

Not felt good in years
But Obama gives us
Adult in the room

A world in crisis
But somehow people have hope
It must be Barack.

Susanna Speier’s Politiku

Fly to Tokyo?
Seriously, the yen’s down!
Still can’t afford to

Logos wont fix this.
Will recovery dot gov?
Too early to tell

We bail their bonus.
A.I.G. is SO busted.
If they’re bust-a-ble…

Fed infuses more
One trillion is a large sum
Where does it come from?

Left handed batter
steps up to the plate. The pitch:
banks, pirates, swine flu…

The first hundred days
has flaws in its achievements
but no pants on fire

Elijah’s wine is
not yet in the arteries
brace for more job loss

Bitter herb recalls
when we were slaves in Egypt
chag sameach

PH2009041003434

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