I follow Barack Obama on Twitter. Today I received this:
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Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’
In 50 years so much has changed… but the essential battles haven’t
Posted by Clare Curran on January 21st, 2011My dirty little secret
Posted by Grant Robertson on January 13th, 2011I have been carrying a secret this past year, in fact for the last couple of years, that I feel the need to reveal. I can’t go on without letting the world know.
My favourite band (and indeed the creators of my best album of 2010) is called The National. There I have said it. I considered writing to them to ask if for New Zealand release purposes they could call themselves The Labour. But they are going great under the other name, so might not work for them.
So great they are selling out everywhere, including three sold out shows in Auckland this week. If you are going, you are in for a great night. I have seen them a couple of times and its always an energetic show.
They have fans in high places, with their song Fake Empire used by Obama during his 2008 election campaign, and they have played at his rallies in recent times.
Anyway here is the first single off 2010’s High Violet, Bloodbuzz Ohio.
The National – “Bloodbuzz Ohio” (official video) from The National on Vimeo.
When the USA gets it right
Posted by Grant Robertson on December 28th, 2010There has been a fair bit of criticism of the USA following the release of the Wikileaks documents. Most of it deserved, and some of it I have even been part of. As I have said before on this blog, my view on the USA has changed a bit over the years. Before I lived there as a diplomat I had a pretty jaundiced view of the USA as a country. Living there made me realise that like all places it has some amazing people, places and ways of doing things and some bizarre and awful ones too. The Bush era certainly presented lots of the latter category. I still strongly oppose the war-mongering of that era and many of the actions taken in the name of the USA.
But there are times when the USA gets it right and when individuals stand up for ideals in important ways. One of those is the recent removal of the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy on gays in the military. This was a messy compromise from another era, which has now been rectifiied. I am certainly no supporter of all the actions of the US military, but this piece of discrimination had no place in the modern world.
Barack Obama’s speech at the signing of the legislation to remove the policy is one of his great speeches in my view.
Finally, I want to speak directly to the gay men and women currently serving in our military. For a long time your service has demanded a particular kind of sacrifice. You’ve been asked to carry the added burden of secrecy and isolation. And all the while, you’ve put your lives on the line for the freedoms and privileges of citizenship that are not fully granted to you.
You’re not the first to have carried this burden, for while today marks the end of a particular struggle that has lasted almost two decades, this is a moment more than two centuries in the making.
There will never be a full accounting of the heroism demonstrated by gay Americans in service to this country; their service has been obscured in history. It’s been lost to prejudices that have waned in our own lifetimes. But at every turn, every crossroads in our past, we know gay Americans fought just as hard, gave just as much to protect this nation and the ideals for which it stands.
The full speech is well worth a watch.
Obama’s open govt guru to talk at OpenLabourNZ public event
Posted by Clare Curran on August 2nd, 2010US President Barack Obama’s Deputy Chief Technology Officer Beth Noveck will be a key note speaker at a public event to provide input into Labour’s policy on open and transparent government.
Labour will hold a public event on 28 August in Wellington to bring together ideas generated over the last four months on how to deliver open and transparent government.
OpenLabourNZ was announced at the end of April on Red Alert as a new way of doing things; our first open policy process, inviting the public to participate in developing its policy on what an open, transparent government might look like.
OpenLabourNZ is an experiment in how Labour could engage with the community, seek their input, build support and use new technologies and methods to develop policy.
This is new territory for us and we want people to contribute by saying what they think a good policy on open and transparent government would look like.
To date OpenLabourNZ has attracted hundreds of responses by blogs, twitter and facebook and direct communication with the Party.
We are serious about being open and transparent. It’s a new initiative, but through it we hope to demonstrate that we mean business and will take the policy to the election and into government.
A bit of info about Beth Noveck
A fulltime law professor at New York Law School, her professional career has focused on developing technologies that increase participation in democracy. In the Obama administration, Noveck leads the open government initiative at the Technology Office at the White House focusings on incorporating more voices into policy planning. To do this, she has already created several online forums where readers can comment on White House proposals and add their own ideas.
She has been Deputy Chief Technology Officer at the White House since February 2009. She was a Volunteer Policy Advisor to Obama (2007 to 2008); Law Professor, New York Law School (since 2002); Bodies Electric, President and CEO (1999 to 2002).
Beth will appear at the Labour public event via video link. Further speakers and the venue will be announced shortly.
The public event is free and open to the public but has limited places. We will shortly be announcing the process to register for the event. It will be live streamed so that people in other centres can observe and participate.
Filed under: #OpenLabourNZ, Labour Party, comms & IT, democracy, digital, policy