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Category: Virginia Page 32 of 34

Salon’s Person of the Year: S.R. Sidarth

Not quite sure if it merits Man of the Year, but Salon makes a solid case for Virginia’s own:

It must be said that the young man, Shekar Ramanuja Sidarth, is not much of a cameraman. In the macaca footage, his hand shakes, though he manages to hold Allen in the frame as the senator points him out, an Indian-American in a crowd of whites. But in the weeks that follow, Sidarth does not shy from the spotlight that surrounds him. He undergoes a transformation of sorts, appearing on CNN and the network news, giving long interviews to the pen-and-paper press. He becomes a symbol of politics in the 21st century, a brave new world in which any video clip can be broadcast instantly everywhere and any 20-year-old with a camera can change the world. He builds a legacy out of happenstance.

Read the rest.

Virginia Outdoors Plan: Public Comments Due Friday

The public comment period for the Virginia Outdoors Plan (VOP) closes this Friday, December 15th. The VOP is

“the state’s official document regarding land conservation, outdoor recreation and open space planning. It helps all levels of government and the private sector meet needs pertaining to those issues. The plan provides guidance for the protection of lands through actions of the Virginia Land Conservation Foundation (VLCF), and the plan is required in order for Virginia to take part in the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) program.”

I encourage anyone who uses Virginia’s parks to take a few minutes to let the VA Department of Conservation and Recreation know what you think should be priorities in your area. Read the section for the area that you use (look toward the end of the linked page for a Table of Contents), and then send an email addressed to vop@dcr.virginia.gov. Include an simple explanation of where you’re from, what you use the parks for, and what you’d like to see them make a priority. At the end of the email make sure you include your name and address.

The Northern Virginia section of the plan is here (PDF). My own comments will expand on those proposed by the Mid-atlantic Off Road Enthusiasts (MORE – an active and effective mountain biking advocacy org). If you’re interested in those MTB-related suggestions for NoVA, see here. (MORE represents interests throughout the region, so let them know if you need help putting together comments related to MTB’ing in your area).

Arlington Sun Gazette: Profile in Ignorance

Once again, I open up the Arlington Sun Gazette – only to regret it moments later. The Sun Gazette is a local paper, mailed free of charge to households across Arlington. And while the easy line is that it is worth exactly what I paid for it, I am wondering if it has come time to start charging them for the privilege of sending it to me. Almost every time I read the editorials, I am brought to wonder – what in the hell did Arlington ever do to deserve this tripe? The latest, regarding the recently passed Marshall-Newman Amendment (prohibiting the benefits of marriage as against all unmarried couples):

For one thing, we wouldn’t expect the Virginia Supreme Court to do anything but uphold the constitutional amendment. And, by challenging it, gay-rights activists would come off looking as poor losers. They also would do exactly what proponents of this amendment predicted: Turn to the courts when public opinion has swung the other way.

Our rather sensible suggestion: Forget about the amendment, and either wait for public opinion to shift (it will), or, if that’s too much of a long-term commitment to handle, move someplace else.

That’s right. Ignorant bigotry has just been enshrined in the state constitution, but hey, if you want to actually do something about it, you’re just a sore loser. Suck it up or move.

What sort of troglodyte is in charge of this page? Does American Community Newspapers, owner of the Sun Gazette, confiscate the moral compasses of its editorial writers on their first day of work? And what in the world makes them think that this editorial voice is of any interest to Arlington – which, by their own reporting, was surpassed only by Charlottesville in voting against that abomination of an amendment? To have read their editorial page over the past year was a journey through the looking glass, replete with red is blue and up is down editorials. The Sun Gazette editorial page, at times, is not only out of step with Arlington, but reality.

To be fair, the failures of the Sun Gazette are generally limited to the editorial and Political Notes page – it appears to do a decent job of covering the usual community paper beats – school activities, local sports, and zoning disputes. See that, Sun Gazette? Deceny and fairness – something your editorial page has been lacking for years. Arlington deserves better.

Mary’s Baby

I was all prepared to go for the snark, and then Rawstory reminds me that Mary Cheney and her partner, Heather Poe, live in Virginia. It’s not so funny then, especially for the future child:

Virginia had already set up new Jim Crow laws targeting gays two years ago. Those laws may vitiate any legal agreement between the two, period, about anything. The law ensures that Mary’s partner has no legal rights whatsoever in their child, or in what happens to Mary (or vice versa), such as if one partner has to go the hospital, the other can’t visit. The law may even nullify any wills that Mary and Heather write regarding each other, and it may make it impossible for gay people to go to court to resolve any difference about anything – the courts can’t recognize gay unions, so they can’t make any decisions that would imply recognition (custody, hospital visitation, wills, etc.) It’s beyond ironic that Virginia’s new law, one of the most hateful, bigoted laws on the books, is now targeting the vice president’s own daughter and soon-to-be new grandchild.

I won’t be surprised if they find a nice house in Maryland, sometime soon.

Gov. Kaine Delays an Execution

The execution of Percy Walton has been stayed for 18 months, under an order from Gov. Tim Kaine, who explained that:

I am compelled to conclude that Walton is severely mentally impaired and meets the Supreme Court’s definition of mental incompetence. Because one cannot reasonably conclude that Walton is fully aware of the punishment he is about to suffer and why he is to suffer it, his execution cannot proceed at this time.

At the same time, it is within the realm of possibility – though unlikely – that Walton’s mental impairment is not permanent. Accordingly, a commutation of his sentence is not appropriate at this time. Rather, continued observation of Walton’s condition over a more extended period of time is the appropriate course of action.

As Vivian Paige rightly notes, pro-death penalty activists will probably slam Kaine for this. I think that Kaine ought to be commended for ignoring the usual public thirst for blood and taking a solid step towards determining whether or not Walton truly is capable of understanding his punishment. I, of course, would rather see the death sentence commuted (I am against the death penalty in all matters), but I think this is a good step, both in the moral and political senses.

For more on this case, and Virginia’s death penalty in general, see Virginians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty.

MLK, Jr. Memorial Groundbreaking – Part II

(This is the second part, which follows this. A word about the quotes in the body of the post – I have done my best to be accurate with these quotes, but please don’t take them as a certainty.  Where there has been a transcript to check them against, I’ve done so.  Where there has not, I’ve only used quote marks were I am quite sure, but cannot be certain.  Thanks.)


Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.

-Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Sen. Obama walked us through what he imagines the memorial will look like, with the mountain of despair at one end, and the at the other.  And then he took us to that moment that many of us can imagine – and want very much to get exactly right: one day, his daughter will ask, “Why is this here, daddy?  Who was this man?”  And he’ll have to answer.

I’ve not yet found a transcript of his speech, which is a shame, because his answer is one that we might all want to give.  He started out by saying that he’d have to point out that, unlike the other men honored on the Mall, King was no President.  No war hero.  In fact, while he was alive, he was reviled by at least as many, if not more than, those who praised him.   He would tell her that King was a man with flaws, sometimes filled with doubt.  But he would say that King is someone who answered his charge.  A man who carried his burden.  A man who – and this is the line that really stuck with me – “tried to love somebody.”

Imagine that.  A monument on the Mall to a man who simply tried to love somebody.

~

Byron Cage, well backed by Ft. Washington’s Ebenezer AME Church Choir, took the stage again.  After this performance, the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Mel Watt (D-NC) spoke briefly about his own experience meeting Dr. King, which started him down a path from that segregated high school to the halls of the U.S. Capitol building.   He also made a point of thanking Connie Morella (former representative from Maryland, and current ambassador to the OECD.  Ms. Morella is the kind of Republican we’d all like to see more of, I think.)  Finally, he introduced the King children.

The “King children.”  Hardly children anymore, but that’s what they’ve been for all of their lives.  While they’ve always lived in the shadow of their father (and mother, for some of them), they’ve still developed distinctive public personas, which were clearly on display this morning.  Yolanda King went first, and . . .well, her speech was set to music.  Really.   She then introduced her brother, Martin Luther King, III.  He, in his usual quiet and gracious way, invited Dr. King’s sister – Denise King Farris – and her children and grandchildren up to join them.

Martin spoke on the importance of justice to his father’s legacy.  He did what no one else, in over a dozen speakers by that point, had done -  he called for realizing Dr. King’s dream: peace.  The only speaker besides Clinton to explicitly mention nonviolence, he reminded us that it is “more than a tactic, it is a way of life.”  Nonviolence is “a means whose end is community.”  He asked (perhaps to a President who was no longer around to listen), “What war has ever resulted in lasting peace?”  It was a question I can only hope lodged itself in the minds of the politicians and officials that sat around me.

Rev. Bernice King then stepped up, proving that she is, indeed, her father’s daughter.  Turning the podium into a pulpit, she praised her father as a great pastor, not to just to his congregation, but to the nation and the world.  She reminded us of his telling those around him that hate is too great a burden to bear, a reminder that I, in all honesty, have needed of late.  I suspect I’m not the only one.   Like her brother, she did not shy away from her father’s politics – decrying the “triple evils of racism, poverty and militarism” which “are clogging our arteries more today, than they were in his.”  That is no small statement.

[Dexter wasn’t there, and no explanation was offered, though he was on the original program.]

Dr. Dorothy Height
then graced us with her presence.  Bringing her 94 years of perspective and context to the table, she talked about the importance of making sure that others honor Dr. King’s legacy with the perspective and context it deserves.  The memorial is still not fully funded, and she encouraged us to give – for the past, present, and future.  Give for all of us.

As she finished, Rep. Lewis took the stage again, telling us about his relationship with Dr. King – as a leader, a hero, a colleague, a friend.  He told us that, of the ten speakers on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial where Dr. King delivered his most famous speech, he is the only one left.  As he brought the stage ceremony to a close, he left us with these words:

“That is why I think it is so fitting, so appropriate that on this sacred and hallowed ground, a memorial will be built not only to an American citizen, but to a citizen of the world who gave his life trying to protect the dignity of and the worth of all humankind.

“I want to thank Alpha Phi Alpha for its vision and thank all of those contributors who supported this project, because this monument will inspire generations yet unborn to get in the way. It will help them see that one human being can make a difference.

“But above all, this monument will serve as a reminder to each of us that it is better to love and not to hate, it is better to reconcile and not divide, it is better to build and not tear down.

“It will remind all of us that the dream of Martin Luther King Jr. is not yet accomplished, and each of us must continue to do our part to help build the Beloved Community, a nation and a world at peace with itself.

The stage guests, along with much of the crowd, then moved to a spot closer to the edge of the Tidal Basin for the ceremonial groundbreaking.  Dr. Height, pushed by John Lewis, Andy Young, and Jesse Jackson, led the way.  Jack Kemp then spoke, calling on Congress and the President to honor King’s legacy by granting full voting rights to DC citizens.  He then gave way to two men who were with Dr. King at the Lorraine Motel the day he was murdered.

Jesse Jackson asked us to remember him by challenging power with truth.  To “disturb the comfortable, while comforting the disturbed.”  Both men spoke of their last hours with Dr. King.  Andrew Young’s recollection was the final, and the most powerful.  He said that King had chastised them that day for not doing enough to get the message out themselves, saying that “you all have left me out here alone.”  At this point, he stopped briefly – in tears – and I think a wave of sadness passed through the crowd.  After a few moments he continued, repeating King’s words to him:

“Don’t let me down.”

Don’t let him down.

MLK, Jr. Memorial Groundbreaking

“I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.”

-Martin Luther King, Jr. & Thomas Jefferson

Soon, the Tidal Basin will be home to memorials that honor both of the men who made this sentence – perhaps the greatest American quote of all time – possible. This morning, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Foundation broke ground on a project that has been decades in the making. First conceived at a Alpha Phi Alpha meeting in 1984, the Memorial should be complete in 2008. Situated on the northeast corner of the Tidal Basin, it will sit between the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials – a rare Mall monument to a man who was neither President nor war hero. Rather, it is a memorial for a man who reminded us that “everyone can be great, because everyone can serve.”

And serve Dr. King did. But you know that. Every American knows that. And if you don’t, well, I’ll leave that rich and amazing story to be told by someone better able than I. Instead, I’m just going to offer my own take on today – a very personal experience for me.

It was, to be sure, a very personal experience for almost everyone there. And that does not surprise me at all. Dr. King – even all these years later, even with people who weren’t even born when he was murdered – has an impact and reach that is almost impossible to describe. Today, Rep. John Lewis said, of hearing Dr. King’s voice on the radio when he was a 15 year old in Troy, Alabama, “when I heard his words: it felt like he was speaking directly to me. John Lewis, you can make a difference.” It is no less true for me, or – I suspect – anyone who has ever quietly listened to his words.

Depending on your age, or where you’re from, the civil rights struggle may seem less than personal for you. In my own case, circumstances of time and geography were such that I didn’t experience its most famous moments directly. I was fortunate, however, to have spent many of my formative years in the aura of many of its most significant actors. When I first moved to Atlanta, Andrew Young was its mayor. My first apartment was in the Vine City neighborhood, adjacent to Morris Brown and the rest of the Atlanta University Center (home to Morehouse, Spelman, Clark, and the Interdenominational Theological Center). For a while, at least, I shopped at the same West End grocery store as Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown). Later, I lived and worked at the intersection of Peachtree St. and (Sweet) Auburn, chatting with Rep. Lewis in our office building’s elevators, or waiting with Julian Bond for our cars. Early in my career, I was part of the effort to make the Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday a “day on, not a day off.” Through this, I frequently found myself in Mrs. King’s presence while working with Dexter King and other King Center staff. The list goes on and on. The point is, not only is the civil rights struggle itself very much alive, so are many of the people who did so much of the work early on. It isn’t history – it’s us. Here. Today.

Thus, it was the here and now that I thought about as I watched the dais assemble, and the speakers share their stories. Soledad O’Brien and Tavis Smiley were MC’ing the event, and I think that the entire crowd cringed when Soledad said, “I had a dream that it would not rain.” I hope we never fall so far as a society where that will ever be an acceptable punch line. Thankfully, Tavis quickly took over, setting the tone for the day by saying that he was proud to be a part of the day, as he would “rather have the living ideas of the dead, than the dead ideas of the living.”

Anthony Williams, outgoing mayor of DC, next welcomed the crowd. Williams, fairly or not, has never been thought of as a particularly powerful speaker, but he brought out great applause when he ended his speech with a call for District voting rights. The crowd itself was interesting. There were your expected politicians – right in front of me were Senators Arlen Specter and Paul Sarbanes, along with Reps. Bobby Scott and Sheila Jackson-Lee. There were also your unexpected – Larry Fishburne was quietly sitting nearby, and next to me were three young men who couldn’t have been older than 19 or 20 (as evidenced in no small part by their “Damn, this is *major*, yo.” when Smiley and O’Brien first came out – after, oh, John Lewis, Andy Young, and Maya Angelou had already come out. Major, indeed.). Andrew Young then took the stage, introducing Darryl Matthews (president of Alpha Phi Alpha, who pointed out that the memorial is still only 2/3rd of the way towards its fundraising goal) and Tommy Hilfiger (who’s purpose was lost on me, honestly). And then, well . . . Bill showed up.

President Clinton, as he always does, delivered a great speech. He looked both to the past and the future, with two things really standing out for me. Putting our moral present in the context of the past, Clinton recalled Jefferson’s saying that when he reflected on slavery, he trembled to think that God is just. For me, this brought home some of our own recent moral failures. But ever the optimist about human nature, he went on to say, of Dr. King, “If he were here, he would remind us that the time to do right remains.” Indeed, it does. And we should not waste a moment of it.
My brief moment of sharing that optimism was quickly brought back to earth, as Attorney General Alberto Gonzales scurried in late, taking a seat near by. I doubt he would have understood the words, even if he’d heard them. In fact, in the spirit of turning the other cheek, I’m simply going to say that, shortly after the next speech (Oprah’s, which was very good), President Bush arrived and gave his speech. My only observation is that Bush would know that there is no such place as “Sweet Auburn, Georgia,” if he’d visited Dr. King’s tomb more than once. More coverage of Bush’s speech here.)

After Bush’s departure, Diane Sawyer read us a letter from perhaps the only living person who can even begin to approach the moral leadership that King gave us – Nelson Mandela. Maya Angelou then asked us to “look where we’ve all come from.” After a pause, Tavis Smiley introduced the next speaker as “someone who has recently sold a few books, a United States Senator, and maybe just maybe . . . ,” cracking a knowing grin, “ahhh, nevermind.” And Barack Obama, of course, came to the podium. The welcome that greeted him was the biggest of the morning, greater than even President Clinton’s or Oprah’s.

[Part II forthcoming]

Without comment.

Over to you, Harry.

This appears to be such good news that I don’t even really want to look too much into the details, for fear of being disappointed. Apparently:

U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the incoming speaker of the House of Representatives, supports District voting rights and is a co-sponsor of legislation that would give Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) a full vote in the House, a spokeswoman said yesterday.

This is significant, as Rep. Tom Davis (R-VA) has been pushing this bill, too. I’ve been, since I moved to Washington, an adamant backer of DC voting rights. Virginia’s recent expression of its apparent inability to respect my basic human rights has given me serious reason to consider moving back into the West End. DC getting voting rights would cinch that. So, c’mon, Harry, get with it. Let’s see how serious Bush is about this whole democracy thing.

A minute of joy

Shaky in bits, but you’ll have to forgive the cameraman. He’d been working for this moment all year.

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