Wednesday, March 23, 2022

RIP Madeleine Albright




Madeleine Albright, he first woman Secretary of State (1997-2001), passed away today at the age of 84.


A refugee from Czechoslovakia*, she and her family arrived in America in 1948.

She worked as an aide to Senator Edmund Muskie before taking a position under Zbigniew Brzezinski on the National Security Council. She served in that position until 1981, when President Jimmy Carter left office.




In her book, Read My Pins, she revealed that she used jewelry as a diplomatic tool during her years with the Clinton administration.

"This all started when I was ambassador at the U.N. and Saddam Hussein called me a serpent," she tells Susan Stamberg. "I had this wonderful antique snake pin. So when we were dealing with Iraq, I wore the snake pin."




After that incident, Albright decided that it might be fun to speak through her pins. She went out and bought different costume jewelry.

"As it turned out, there were just a lot of occasions to either commemorate a particular event or to signal how I felt," she says.

There were balloons, butterflies and flowers to signify optimism and, when diplomatic talks were going slowly, crabs and turtles to indicate frustration.

After the Russians were caught tapping the State Department, Albright protested by wearing a pin with a giant bug on it. On days when Albright felt she had to do "a little stinging and deliver a tough message," she wore a wasp pin.


 
At one point, Russian leader Vladimir Putin told President Clinton that he knew what the mood of a meeting would be by looking at Albright's left shoulder. (Albright's pin with three monkeys, which she wore when discussing Chechnya, was meant to draw attention to the fact that Russia took a "hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil" stance toward the Chechen atrocities.)




The former secretary of state says that one of her own pins — an antique eagle pin with a complicated clasp — nearly sabotaged her at her swearing-in ceremony.

"I put it on, and there I was all of the sudden with one hand on the Bible and one hand in the air, and the pin was just swinging in the breeze. I had not fastened it properly," says Albright. "I was afraid that it would fall on the Bible."



Accidents aside, Albright says she loved expressing herself with her jewels. And, she adds, making fashion statements — and commenting on each other's attire — is not completely unheard of within a diplomatic setting:

"You think that the heads of state only have serious conversations, [but] they actually often begin really with the weather or, 'I really like your tie.' "

Excerpt: 'Read My Pins'
MADELEINE ALBRIGHT

The idea of using pins as a diplomatic tool is not found in any State Department manual or in any text chronicling American foreign policy. The truth is that it would never have happened if not for Saddam Hussein.

"During President Bill Clinton's first term (1993 1997), I served as America's ambassador to the United Nations. This was the period following the first Persian Gulf War, when a U.S.-led coalition rolled back Iraq's invasion of neighboring Kuwait. As part of the settlement, Iraq was required to accept UN inspections and to provide full disclosure about its nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons programs.

When Saddam Hussein refused to comply, I had the temerity to criticize him. The government-controlled Iraqi press responded by publishing a poem entitled "To Madeleine Albright, Without Greetings." The author, in the opening verse, establishes the mood: "Albright, Albright, all right, all right, you are the worst in this night." He then conjures up an arresting visual image: "Albright, no one can block the road to Jerusalem with a frigate, a ghost, or an elephant." Now thoroughly warmed up, the poet refers to me as an "unmatched clamor-maker" and an "unparalleled serpent."

In October 1994, soon after the poem was published, I was scheduled to meet with Iraqi officials. What to wear?

Years earlier, I had purchased a pin in the image of a serpent. I'm not sure why, because I loathe snakes. I shudder when I see one slithering through the grass on my farm in Virginia. Still, when I came across the serpent pin in a favorite shop in Washington, D.C., I couldn't resist. It's a small piece, showing the reptile coiled around a branch, a tiny diamond hanging from its mouth.


While preparing to meet the Iraqis, I remembered the pin and decided to wear it. I didn't consider the gesture a big deal and doubted that the Iraqis even made the connection. However, upon leaving the meeting, I encountered a member of the UN press corps who was familiar with the poem; she asked why I had chosen to wear that particular pin. As the television cameras zoomed in on the brooch, I smiled and said that it was just my way of sending a message.

A second pin, this of a blue bird, reinforced my approach. As with the snake pin, I had purchased it because of its intrinsic appeal, without any extraordinary use in mind. Until the twenty-fourth of February 1996, I wore the pin with the bird's head soaring upward. On the afternoon of that tragic day, Cuban fighter pilots shot down two unarmed civilian aircraft over international waters between Cuba and Florida. Three American citizens and one legal resident were killed. The Cubans knew they were attacking civilian planes yet gave no warning, and in the official transcripts they boasted about destroying the cojones of their victims.

At a press conference, I denounced both the crime and the perpetrators. I was especially angered by the macho celebration at the time of the killings. "This is not cojones," I said, "it is cowardice." To illustrate my feelings, I wore the bird pin with its head pointing down, in mourning for the free-spirited Cuban-American fliers.

Because my comment departed from the niceties of normal diplomatic discourse, it caused an uproar in New York and Washington; for the same reason, it was welcomed in Miami. As a rule, I prefer polite talk, but there are moments when only plain speaking will do.

This excerpt from Read My Pins by Madeleine Albright is used by permission of Harper Collins.


SOURCE: https://www.npr.org/2009/09/29/113278807/madeleine-albrights-jewelry-box-diplomacy

*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_of_the_Czech_Republic


Red Pickup Truck vs Tornado

 



Story from: https://www.kxan.com/news/local/bastrop-county/we-found-the-red-pickup-truck-that-flipped-over-in-elgin-tornado/


ELGIN, Texas (KXAN) — “He was in shock; he was crying,” said Ruben Briones, who said he helped the driver of the red pickup truck seen flipping over on Highway 290 in Elgin in a widely-circulated video.

“He told me it was scary,” said Briones, who added the driver is from Manor but is leaving the truck in Elgin near where the tornado touched down for the time being.

The video of the truck driving through the tornado has gone viral. Hundreds of thousands have seen it across the world.

That includes Elgin resident Keith Leschber. He also happens to drive a red pickup truck. It was parked safely at home when the tornado hit, but when his friends saw the video — they got worried.

“He sees me and runs up to me, and I’m like, ‘what’s up man?’ He said, ‘I just want to see if you’re alright. I saw that red truck, and I didn’t know if it was you,'” he said.



Below are images of what the truck looks like
 Now.
Red pickup truck after flipping over in Elgin tornado on March 21, 2022 (KXAN Photo/Brianna Hollis)

The windows are blown out. The side panels are dented and scraped. The rear view mirrors are gone.

Commander Crim said he spoke with the driver on the side of the road shortly after the tornado hit.

“I asked if he was okay, and he shook his head and didn’t really answer me,” he said. At that point, Crim had not seen the video yet.

“Now I understand why he had a blind stare. I’m sure he was scared to death,” he said. Crim said a woman who identified herself as an off-duty EMT had wrapped the driver’s arm in a bandage.

We’re still working to track down the driver himself. Police said they believe he’s in his late teens or 20s.

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Reggie Ford

 So, there's an artist in NOLA named Reggie Ford.  


After the tornado tonight, Reggie took it upon himself to redirect traffic

so that it wouldn't become bottlenecked after the storm did it's damage.  

Before emergency personnel made it to where Reggie was, he determined

what roads couldn't be used and found some traffic cones and closed off 

those streets.  Here's a video he made of  his kind deed.


Here's a link to his FB page for more videos
https://www.facebook.com/reggie.ford.3



Heartbroken

 Not sure of the strength of it, but a massive tornado struck Arabi and the Lower 9th tonight.

First reports are not good:  a lot of homes lost, cars thrown about.  It just happened about an hour ago, 

so I'm just posting what I've seen.


My heart breaks for the Lower 9th and the pictures from Arabi remind me of Katrina damage.  Please - if you pray - please pray for all who lost this fight with mother nature.

From #NOLATwitter, this video by Gabe LeBleu



Here's a picture from WDSU of the tornado in the 9th Ward  



This one is from Arabi by @reggieart on IG



TORNADO IN ST. BERNARD Viewer sends video of apparent tornado in St. Bernard Parish. Video: Kari Klotzbach


matthew burke took in chalmette on chinchilla st. you all have permission to use it! (tweet by Drew Burke)



Video of tornado taken by Chase Tomason, found on disclose.tv

This photo taken by John Snell earlier in the day gave a clue to what would be happening in a few hours

Taken from a tugboat captain on the Mississippi River, this cruise ship just passed everything by










Friday, March 18, 2022

Ukraine National Anthem




 

Ukrainian soldier plays national anthem on violin in symbol of hope in war against Russia


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Wednesday, March 16, 2022

WHAT will it take to stop Putin

 

Ukrainian President Zelenskyy showed this powerful video to Congress, depicting Ukraine before and during the invasion. NONE of the buildings destroyed were military targets. Hospitals were bombed. Children were murdered. The video ends with a familiar call for a no-fly zone: "Close the sky over Ukraine." Is there a way to close the sky without starting WWIII? I'm sure there is, but will Congress find a way? UKRAINE NEEDS HELP!

Wednesday, March 09, 2022

Gas Price Hike

 

The White House
. breaks down what 's Russian oil ban means for Americans, our strong domestic oil production under President Biden, and the steps we're taking to mitigate the pain American families feel at the pump.




The SCOTUS Women

Women of the Supreme Court just did what far too many elected officials have failed to do: they stood up to Trump’s MAGA regime and called b...