Sunday, July 19, 2009

Want to go to College? Attitude is what counts


Preparing for the SAT is big business these days. Kids who can't afford the $1,000 plus are losing out because their scores aren't pushed up by these special classes.

Some colleges are wanting to raise their minimum for the SAT. Others want to lower it.

The truth is that SAT scores go higher if your family makes lots of money. If you are poor, your chances of making a really good score are pretty minimal.

To give you a professor's point of view (and this is just me, I'm not speaking for others or even for UH) it is attitude that counts. You don't have to be an Einstein to be a great student. I say you can be a great student if you really try, if you care, if you turn your work in on time, if you make a big effort, if you are engaged in class, do your assignments, follow directions, make it to all your classes* and take learning seriously.

----

Admissions group urges colleges to 'assume control' of debate on testing
Chronicle of Higher Education
By ERIC HOOVER

With just a few words, William R. Fitzsimmons could start a revolution. He is, after all, dean of admissions and financial aid at Harvard University.

Imagine if he announces one day that his office no longer requires applicants to submit standardized-test scores. Within weeks Harvard's competitors go test-optional, too. Soon less-selective institutions do the same. College admissions is transformed, and high-school students everywhere rejoice.

At least that's what happens in the daydream shared by some testing critics. Reality, however, looks a lot different. ACT and SAT exams support a complex ecosystem in which colleges' needs vary according to size, mission, and selectivity. Even Harvard cannot change that.

Still, people listen to what Mr. Fitzsimmons says. And this week, he plans to say a lot about tests.

Last year the National Association for College Admission Counseling asked Mr. Fitzsimmons to lead a panel that would examine testing issues and recommend how colleges might better use entrance exams. The dean and his fellow panelists were to present their findings this week at the association's annual conference, in Seattle.

Nacac gave The Chronicle an early look at the long-awaited report, which stops well short of condemning admissions tests. Nonetheless, it delivers the association's strongest statement to date on one of higher education's most controversial issues. It affirms that colleges and other interested parties have overinflated both the real and the perceived importance of the exams — and proposes how to let some of that air out.

The report urges colleges to regularly scrutinize their testing requirements, to stop using minimum scores for scholarships, and to ensure that admissions policies account for inequities among applicants, including access to test preparation. Moreover, it anticipates a future when admissions tests better reflect what students learn in high school.

"We want to get the word out more clearly than before that tests should not be used in a rigid way," Mr. Fitzsimmons says. "A couple decades ago, people associated testing results with so-called ability. We have come to a clearer understanding that those scores have more to do with opportunities."

'Center of Gravity'

Creating the 58-page report was a test itself. The 21-member panel, the Commission on the Use of Standardized Tests in Undergraduate Admission, included admissions deans from an array of institutions, such as Central Lakes College, in Minnesota; Georgetown University; and the University of Connecticut.

"The challenge was to find a center of gravity," says David A. Hawkins, Nacac's director of public policy and research. "We were looking to the collective wisdom of colleges, which have their own proprietary interests and are not always consistent."

High-school counselors, independent consultants, and education-policy experts rounded out the panel, which met four times and communicated frequently via e-mail. Mr. Hawkins had the unenviable task of synthesizing more than 20 hours of notes with the panelists' written contributions.

The commission crafted recommendations that echoed the association's big-tent spirit. "We were realistic," says Mr. Hawkins. "We weren't going to tell people to abolish tests or that they were the greatest thing since sliced bread."

The report does encourage more colleges to consider dropping their test requirement if they find that they can make appropriate admissions decisions without the ACT and SAT.

Each college, the report says, should use its own validity studies to judge whether the tests have enough predictive value to justify their use. Admissions offices should not rely only on national data compiled by testing companies — or on tradition.

The panel encourages Nacac to become an "unaffiliated clearinghouse" of testing information. It recommends that the association create a program to train admissions officials in the ethics and standards of testing. It also asks Nacac to create a way for colleges to share testing research, and to annually publish sample validity studies of the ACT and SAT.

Judgments of the value of such statistics, however, often divided the committee. All members agreed that test scores reliably predict freshman-year grades, but some said that did not justify requiring the tests.

Steven T. Syverson urged his fellow panelists to reach a broader definition of success in college. "We need to start paying better attention to our language," says Mr. Syverson, vice president for enrollment at Lawrence University, in Wisconsin, which does not require standardized-test scores. "Success isn't a grade-point average. I've got lots of students who get C's but who have a fabulous college experience. They develop social skills and leadership skills. Being a good citizen is a successful outcome."

Randall C. Deike agrees. Even so, he brought a more practical view of tests to the discussion.

Vice president for enrollment at Case Western Reserve University, Mr. Deike holds a Ph.D. in educational psychology. He believes that the ACT and SAT are solid tests that help admissions officials do their jobs, especially at large universities with waves of applicants. He repeatedly told the commission not to discount the statistical significance of the exams.

"Why," he recalls asking, "would you throw away good information?"

Mr. Fitzsimmons, the chairman, dubbed Mr. Deike "the canary in the coal mine." When panelists proposed language that struck him as too critical of tests, he would speak up and try to steer them to more-inclusive recommendations.

In the spirit of collaboration, Mr. Deike ended up writing a key passage in the report that encourages more colleges to at least explore the possibility of going test-optional. But he remains unconvinced that such a move is advisable for many. "Too often standardized testing is condemned," he says, "when it's really test misuse that's at issue."

Beyond Numbers

The report takes gentle swipes at several third parties for "possible misuses" of test scores. It urges the National Merit Scholarship Corporation to stop using minimum PSAT scores as a requirement for its awards. It questions why the College Board "appears to condone" that practice. The report also criticizes the use of test scores in U.S. News & World Report's college rankings as well as in college-bond ratings.

The booming test-preparation industry prompted a vigorous debate among panelists. Some participants say they had hoped that the report would dismiss test prep's value to students. Others, however, argued that the issue looms too large in students' lives to reduce to a short statement. They wanted the report to confront the complexity of what they see: that test prep benefits some applicants but not all.

"I'm not against preparing for tests, but there's now an obsessive compulsion to get the best scores you can," says Marybeth Kravets, a counselor at Deerfield High School, a public school in Illinois. "Therein lies the inequity — those who can afford it can better prepare themselves."

The commission concluded that while test prep is inevitable, its effects remain too mysterious. Could it add 30 points to a student's SAT score, or 100? What distinguishes good prep from bad?

Citing a dearth of independent research, the commission called for further study of the effects of coaching. Nacac has already commissioned a white paper on the topic.

Meanwhile, the report said colleges "have a unique responsibility to mitigate the inequitable effects of test preparation." Admissions staffs that compile applicants' grades and test scores into an "academic index" number, the report says, should remain flexible enough to consider those effects.

Notably, the report does not offer recommendations to the largest constituency of all — test takers. Students and parents, of course, have not been passive participants in the testing frenzy. Like politics, the ACT and SAT are things that Americans love to hate.

But in a world where grades are final, tests are seductive because they offer an apparent second (or third or fourth) chance to improve. That speaks to something larger than admissions policies.

"If you did away with the current tests, something would replace them," says Mr. Deike. "As human beings and as a society, we want to quantify everything."

'A Contextual Animal'

Among its recommendations, the panel also poses a philosophical challenge. Colleges, it says, must "assume control of the conversation" about tests.

Jeff Rickey believes colleges have relinquished that control to several players — test companies, test-preparation services, and the media. Like other panelists, he insists that test scores are not the ultimate determinants of admissions outcomes. "There's a lot of anxiety that comes from mischaracterizations of the importance of admissions testing," says Mr. Rickey, dean of admissions and financial aid at Earlham College, in Indiana. "We have, as a profession, neglected stewardship of this conversation."

When Mr. Rickey meets with parents and students, he gives them a number — 12.5 percent. That's how much an applicant's ACT or SAT score counts in Earlham's overall evaluation. Grades and the rigor of courses, the dean tells applicants, count for much more.

Transparency was one theme Mr. Rickey hoped the commission would embrace. In various places, it did. The report urges colleges "to think and communicate clearly, independently, and progressively" about how they use tests.

The trick, of course, is that not all colleges can quantify, or succinctly describe, the role that tests play in admissions. Evaluations may differ in significant ways.

"A test score is a contextual animal, not a line in the sand," says Philip A. Ballinger, director of admissions at the University of Washington, which replaced its academic index with an individualized review process in 2005.

Perhaps the greatest challenge the panel faced was nuance. Although testing is a high-voltage debate, few admissions officials believe that tests are entirely good or bad.

Mr. Ballinger exemplifies that ambiguity. Known as one of the most thoughtful practitioners in his field, he has described admissions tests, which disproportionately benefit wealthier applicants, as "an exclusionary engine." Yet he also believes they can help colleges serve their students.

Like many universities, Washington uses test scores to place students in courses and to connect them to tutoring. A first-generation student who earned A's and B's in her high-school literature classes, Mr. Ballinger says, may be well prepared for college. But a low score on the SAT's critical-reading section might indicate that she needs some extra help.

"I hoped we could recognize that test scores are not just a pinpoint of data but a symbolic tool, a tool of communication, a political tool, a public-relations tool," Mr. Ballinger says. "I think we've done that."

A Future Course?

Perhaps the last thing the sagging shelves of academe need is another report. Although comprehensive, the commission's report is not groundbreaking. It echoes previous findings, including several conclusions in "Myths & Tradeoffs: The Role of Tests in Undergraduate Admissions," a 1999 report by the National Research Council.

Yet Susan K. Tree is eager to see Nacac's new report, which she believes will make a long-overdue statement. Ms. Tree is director of college counseling at Westtown High School, a private school in Pennsylvania. She served as chairwoman of a previous Nacac commission on standardized tests, which issued a report in 1995. Her research convinced her that many admissions professionals knew too little about tests, such as what they do and do not measure. She suspects that is still the case on many campuses.

Over the years, Ms. Tree has asked why Harvard and other elite institutions, with more than enough high-scoring applicants, cling to the ACT and SAT. "The colleges that could best afford to do away with them," she says, "are obsessed with them."

In Harvard's admissions office, it rains valedictorians. Last year the middle 50 percent of its freshmen scored between 1400 and 1590 (out of a possible 1600) on the SAT's mathematics and critical-reading sections. On average, the nation's four-year colleges accept nearly 70 percent of their applicants. This spring Harvard accepted 7 percent.

Such numbers represent what Mr. Fitzsimmons, the Harvard dean, has called "the lunatic fringe," where there is little variance among the scores of competitive applicants.

Even so, he says, standardized-test scores help his staff evaluate students' transcripts. For one thing, they help ease concerns about grade inflation. "We want to give people as many opportunities as possible to show what they can do, particularly when we don't know everything about their high schools," he says.

Over the past year, Mr. Fitzsimmons has scribbled note after note to himself about testing. Many linear feet of folders — full of clippings, studies, and data — have piled up in his office. Fellow panelists say that the dean strove to put his Harvard hat aside, that he wanted the report to speak forcefully to all of higher education.

Mr. Fitzsimmons is not exactly neutral on tests, though. Unlike most colleges, Harvard requires a battery of exams: the ACT or SAT, and three College Board Subject Tests.

The latter better predict students' performance at Harvard than the ACT and SAT do. Mr. Fitzsimmons believes the Subject Tests also send a healthy signal to students. "The message is that students succeed by studying the material in their courses," he says, "not by spending an enormous amount of time trying to prepare for the ACT and SAT."

The commission's report concludes with an endorsement of achievement tests, which some panelists hope will one day supplant the ACT and SAT. By using state achievement tests, the College Board's Subject Tests, or International Baccalaureate exams, the report says, "colleges would create a powerful incentive for American high schools to improve their curricula and their teaching. They would lose little or none of the information they need to make good choices about entering classes."

Nicholas Lemann draws a similar conclusion in his book The Big Test: The Secret History of the American Meritocracy, which traces the history of the SAT (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1999). "In a perfect world, high-school curriculum standards would link up with college-admissions placement decisions," says Mr. Lemann, dean of Columbia University's journalism school and a member of Nacac's testing commission. "There needs to be a shift in tone from aptitude to achievement."

That idea contradicts the thinking of the late James Bryant Conant, who did much to popularize the SAT in the mid-20th century. He believed that traditional subject-based exams ill served students who lacked the means to attend boarding schools. He endorsed the SAT — which at the time was viewed as a pure measure of intelligence — as a way to level the field for applicants.

"Subject-matter examinations were of slight value," Mr. Conant wrote in My Several Lives: Memoirs of a Social Inventor (Harper & Row, 1970). "The aptitude, not the schooling, was what counted."

What gave him the authority to decide what counted? For one thing, he spent 20 years as president of Harvard.
http://chronicle.com
Section: Students
Volume 55, Issue 5, Page A1

*don't miss class so you can take your cat to the vet




Judge Sotomayor was one of those students who had the "attitude" -- she really tried, worked hard, and excelled. That is what counts

Tariq Ramadan: A Professor's Immigration Dilemma


We talked about this in my WCL 2351 class this past semester. Professor Ramadan is from Europe and has a family with small children. Notre Dame University offered him a position and the Ramadans were packed and ready to come to the U.S., but they were not allowed in the country...

Click here for a previous dreamacttexas post on Tariq Ramadan (it includes a video interview of him)
----------------
July 17, 2009
Chronicle of Higher Education


A federal appeals court ruled today that the U.S. government might have acted improperly in denying a visa to the the prominent European Muslim scholar Tariq Ramadan.

But while the ruling raised hopes that Mr. Ramadan will eventually be allowed into the United States to teach or attend academic conferences, it was hardly a major blow to the federal policy of “ideological exclusion,” the denial of visas to some applicants based on their views or associations.

The decision, rendered today by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, was narrowly focused, concentrating on the question of whether a U.S. consulate had given Mr. Ramadan sufficient opportunity to prove he did not know — and could not reasonably have known — that he had donated money to a Swiss-based charity that was a terrorist organization.

Overturning a U.S. District Court ruling that had upheld the government’s handling of Mr. Ramadan’s case, the appeals-court panel said the government had not established that the consular officers handling Mr. Ramadan’s visa application had given him sufficient opportunity to demonstrate his innocence. The appellate judges ordered the lower court to hold additional proceedings to ascertain whether the consulate had given him due process.

Mr. Ramadan, a Swiss citizen, was applying for a U.S. visa in 2005 when he acknowledged having given about $1,300 to the Association de Secours Palestinian from 1998 to 2002. The State Department had designated the association as a terrorist group in 2003 because of its financial support of Hamas, but Mr. Ramadan said he had no knowledge of the group’s terrorist ties when he donated money to it.

The American Academy of Religion, the American Association of University Professors, and the Pen American Center joined Mr. Ramadan in filing the lawsuit challenging his visa denial. Melissa A. Goodman, a staff lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project, which has helped represent Mr. Ramadan, said she was cheered by language in today’s decision holding that Mr. Ramadan’s case involved First Amendment issues and that scholars such as Mr. Ramadan have a right to contest visa denials.

She said she was hopeful today’s ruling might encourage President Obama’s administration to reconsider the visa policy put in place under President George W. Bush. So far, the Obama administration has not indicated a willingness to do so. —Peter Schmidt link to article

Saturday, July 18, 2009

WE'RE BACK!


After near silence for about a month, DREAM Act Texas is back.

I had been working on a book (part of my regular job), but now have a little time to keep up with dreamacttexas again.

On July 12, 2009 we completed 2 (!) years in existence, and have already well over 150,000 visitors! This is awesome since we don't advertise.

We thank everyone for their support - thanks for reading our posts!

photo by MTHdz - Vera Cruz, 2006

Saturday, July 11, 2009

For Those Who Think the Swine Flu is a Hoax



• Latest person to die was otherwise healthy – NHS
• Experts say virus has not necessarily mutated

* Sarah Boseley, health editor
* The London Guardian, Saturday 11 July 2009
The first death from swine flu of an otherwise healthy individual was announced last night by NHS authorities in Essex.

At the wishes of the family, no details were given of the patient who died at Basildon and Thurrock University hospital. But the case will cause widespread concern. Until now, every adult and child who has died has had serious underlying health problems that made them particularly vulnerable to infections.

But the chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, has warned that a few apparently healthy people have succumbed to swine flu and become seriously ill abroad. In one case last month, a healthy 15-year-old teenager called Matthew Davis from Buffalo in New York state, fell ill with swine flu and died, apparently because of co-infection with the superbug MRSA, which he may have contracted in the community rather than in hospital. link to complete article

Houston Greets Congressman Gutierrez with move on 287G

By SUSAN CARROLL
Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
July 11, 2009, 12:58AM

The Houston Police Department has been approved to participate in a controversial federal program that would train a cadre of city jailers to help detain suspected illegal immigrants, immigration officials announced Friday.

The announcement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials comes nearly four months after Mayor Bill White requested that federal officials expedite training for city jailers.

White made the request within days of the March 5 shooting of Houston police officer Rick Salter, who was critically injured by an illegal immigrant with a criminal record. Salter is recovering.

HPD and White have faced pressure for years to change the city’s policy for dealing with suspected illegal immigrants. Critics have called Houston a “Sanctuary City” — a label White has fought vehemently — because of a long-standing policy that prohibits HPD officers from questioning suspects on the streets about their citizenship.

Through the program, city jails would get special training that will allow them to question inmates about their immigration status and hold them for federal agents.

City spokesman Frank Michel said Friday that Houston police and the mayor’s office had yet to receive or sign the documents formalizing HPD’s participation in the program, known as 287(g) and could not comment.

Michel said the city intends to participate but wants to see more specifics on changes announced for the program nationally on Friday. link to complete article

Friday, July 10, 2009


from todays Houston Chronicle

By KAREN KAPLAN
Los Angeles Times
July 10, 2009, 7:09AM


For a country in which roughly 200 million people are overweight or obese, scientists have discouraging news: Even those who maintain a healthy weight probably should be eating less.

Evidence has been mounting that the practice of caloric restriction — essentially, going on a permanent diet — greatly reduces the risk of age-related diseases and even postpones death. It has been shown to extend the lives of yeast, worms, flies, spiders, fish, mice and rats.

Now, in a study funded by the National Institutes of Health and released Friday, many of the same benefits have been demonstrated in primates, the best evidence yet that caloric restriction would help people.

The findings, published in the journal Science, tracked rhesus monkeys that were on a reduced-calorie regimen for as long as 20 years. The animals’ risk of dying from cancer, heart disease and diabetes fell by more than two-thirds...

Wednesday, July 8, 2009


Congressman Gene Green’s
Family Unity Event
for Comprehensive Immigration Reform
with
Special guest: Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez
Saturday, July 11th

Families United
Achieving comprehensive immigration reform will not be easy, and it will
continue to require a bipartisan effort from Congress. However, by putting a
human face on the issue and addressing the harm that our broken
immigration system is causing to U.S. Citizens and
Legal Permanent Residents, we can begin the process of
changing the policies that are affecting so many of our families.

Please join us on
Saturday July 11, 2009 at
Alfa & Omega Church
5621 North Freeway
Houston, TX 77076
Doors open at 10:00 a.m.
Program starts at 10:30 a.m.


For more information please contact Congressman Gene Green’s office at
281-999-5879

Council on Foreign Relations Calls for Sweeping Immigration Reform


For Immediate Release
Council on Foreign Relations Calls for Sweeping Immigration Reform
July 8, 2009


Click here for summary and link to report


Washington, DC - Today, the Council on Foreign Relations, one of the oldest and most respected non-partisan foreign policy think tanks in America, issued a sweeping report on U.S. immigration policy. Developed by an independent task force comprised of bi-partisan leaders, including former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Former Clinton White House Chief of Staff Thomas "Mack" McLarty, the report finds that the passage of comprehensive immigration reform is vital to the national interests of the United States. The report offers a number of specific recommendations to reform current policy, but most notably insists that the time is now to pass comprehensive immigration reform. Failure to do so, argues the task force, "threatens to weaken America's economy, to jeopardize its diplomacy, and to imperil its national security."

The following is a statement by Mary Giovagnoli, Director of the Immigration Policy Center:
"That fact that the Council on Foreign Relation is examining U.S. immigration policy is a clear signal that immigration is now regarded as a matter of national security and international diplomacy, not only a domestic policy concern with broad economic implications. The Council on Foreign Relations' report states unequivocally that comprehensive immigration reform is not only good for America, but vital to our national interests. The report places the debate over comprehensive reform in a broader context, challenging Congress and the White House to move forward now on a sensible and thoughtful reform of our broken immigration system. The fact that a diverse group of leaders representing a range of political perspectives can reach consensus on immigration reform is not only a good sign, but an indication of just how critical immigration has become in efforts to maintain America's political, economic, and moral leadership in the world."


Monday, July 6, 2009

Announcing a NEW UH Newspaper!!! EL Gato


I am proud to announce that a number of University of Houston students have collaborated together to produce a new UH newspaper....



at the University of Houston

where lots of good things are happening

Friday, July 3, 2009

Walter Lara is saved by DREAMer Activism!

Washington, DC—Today, after 48 hours of intense activism by Congressional Leaders, bloggers, and thousands of grassroots activists who made calls and sent letters on Walter Lara’s behalf, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) moved to defer 23-year old Lara’s scheduled deportation back one year until July 3, 2010. In response to DHS’s deferment, Walter Lara issued the following statement:

“Today, words cannot express my gratitude to Secretary Janet Napolitano, Senator Bill Nelson, Representatives Corrine Brown, Lincoln Diaz-Balart, and the thousands of grassroots activists whose unified efforts have given me a second chance to live out my American Dream.
“As I look to celebrate Independence Day with family and friends this weekend, I have once again seen what makes America the best country in the world. Americans are fair, just, and kind. When we unite our strength to defend our shared values -opening rather than shutting the doors of opportunity - we can achieve anything. As I have said before, America is the only country I have known and I am an American. I have never been more proud to say that than I am today.

“But even as the dust settles on this tremendous personal victory, my sights are clearly set on the struggle ahead to build a long-term future for me and the more than 2 million like me whose lives may be cut short and dreams deferred.

“The action taken by the leaders in Congress and the Department of Homeland Security is an acknowledgment that our immigration laws are broken. The DREAM Act, if passed, would help people like myself, who came here through no fault of their own, stay in this country, be put on a path to citizenship and contribute to our nation.”

Click Here to read more about Walter Lara or visit http://www.firstfocus.net/pages/3608

Monday, June 22, 2009



…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.


…Days Before President Obama Holds Key Meeting on Immigration Reform

Hundreds of Immigrant Students from Across the Country to Hold "Dream" Graduation Ceremony at U.S. Capitol Steps

Mirroring Solidarity Events Across the U.S., Immigrant Students Clad in Caps and Gowns will be Joined by Key Legislators to Call for Swift Passage of the DREAM Act

(For PDF version, click here)

With the Capitol Dome behind them, hundreds of students/youth from all over the country, along with education, faith, business, immigrant and civil rights leaders and members of Congress will participate in a National DREAM Graduation ceremony, hosted by the United We Dream Coalition (UWD). Clad in caps and gowns, immigrant students from Texas, New York, California, Massachusetts, Florida, Illinois and beyond will call for swift passage of the DREAM Act-legislation that would correct a flaw in our immigration laws by providing a path to legal status for young people brought to this country at a young age.

Solidarity events are being held from coast to coast on the 23rd. A list of the events is available at http://www.dreamactivist.org/dream-graduations-coast-coast/

WHAT: DREAM Graduation Ceremony highlighting the achievements of our nation's undocumented youth and the vast support for passage of the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act.

WHEN: Tuesday, June 23, 2009; 12 p.m., ET

WHERE: Lower Senate Park
Louisiana Ave NW & D St NW, Washington, DC 20001

WHO: Youth, Education, Faith, Labor, Business, Immigrant and Civil Rights leader

VISUALS: Diverse group of immigrant youth in caps and gowns will hold an emotional ceremony steps away from the Capitol Dome.

CONTACT: Tolu Olubunmi 202-216-0261 ext.407(o); 240-505-5921(c)

Daniela Alulema (Spanish media) 646-472-9565 (c)

Sookyung Oh (Asian American and Pacific Islander media) 267-334-5918(c)

Additional Spanish-language, French-language, Korean-language and Mandarin-language spokespeople from around the country will be available for interviews at this event.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Immigration after WWII - Opening the records

Archives documenting immigration after World War II are going to be made available at a center in Kansas City, Missouri. It will be interesting to see what is in there...

Rush Limbaugh makes the Media Blue - the film Broadcast Blues


PRESS RELEASE
for immediate release

for more information, contact

Sue Wilson
209-245-6724 office
916-812-4931 mobile





The Movie the Media Does Not Want You to See!



Broadcast Blues blows the whistle on today's media madness, from the rise of Rush Limbaugh to the court ruling that news does not have to be true. This documentary is everything TV and Radio owners do not want you to know, so Common Cause and the Media Alliance are making sure you get a chance to see it, and find out what you can do about it.


Public Interest Pictures' Broadcast Blues features Danny Glover, Naomi Judd, Phil Donahue, Helen Thomas, Amy Goodman and many others. But it's stories of real people who have been damaged and even killed by reckless broadcasters that steal the show.


This special screening of Broadcast Blues will be held 4 PM Sunday, June 28, at San Francisco's Victoria Theater, 2961 16th Street, at the 16th St BART station. Tickets are $12 at the box office, or $10 in advance at www.commoncause.org/broadcastblues .


Directed by Emmy winner Sue Wilson.
"We the People are taking the media back."

Sunday, June 14, 2009

DREAM Act Texas Blog Approaching 150,000

Dear Readers

as dreamacttexas is approaching 150,000 after only 2 years of life, we are slowing down somewhat.

For the time being, there won't be as many posts because I have to finish a book this summer. Professors have to do that from time to time as part of our jobs, and boy does it take every minute of our existence.

As soon as I can I will start posting more frequently.

Thank you for your support -

MTH

Friday, June 12, 2009

Not just in Europe

Rumi
Persia, what is now Afghanistan
1207 – 1273
link to image



A few days ago the NYT had an article about how college courses on European based knowledge were becoming rare. It is an ongoing argument these days, even where I work (World Cultures and Literature).

Should all students be taught about the famous European thinkers? How do you include other forms of knowledge from different parts of the world? The guys in Europe were not the only ones to figure it out.

For those in NY, you have a chance to learn about knowledge from another place. At the Brooklyn Museum - "Light of the Sufis: the Mystical Arts of Islam," through September 9, 2009

see "The Many Voices of Enlightenment," New York Times, June 12, 2009






Rumi
I cannot stop asking.
If I could taste one sip of an answer,
I could break out of this prison for drunks.
I didn't come here of my own accord, and I can't leave that way.
Whoever brought me here, will have to take me home.

* Ch. 1 : The Tavern, p. 2

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Words Leading to Violence


Remember how some people were so upset during the last presidential campaign when Sarah Palin's audiences were chanting the word "kill?"  It was no overreaction.  

Recently, Fox News anchor Bill O'Reilly has been demonizing Dr. George Tiller, the doctor who was recently murdered by a Pro-Life killer.  O'Reilly didn't tell anyone to get rid of the doctor, but his negativity was enough to get someone on the edge of sanity to go overboard.

Be careful what you say.  The consequences can be tragic.

"Where the Angriest Words can Lead." Washington Post, June 6, 2009


Dr. George Tiller

DREAM Act Advocacy in NYC


Unfortunately, we didn't get the news about this event in time to advertise it.  However it is good to know these things are happening.

----
GlobeNewswire
June 3, 2009 Wednesday 1:22 PM EST


NEW YORK, June 3, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Over one hundred lively NYC high school students and their supporters will rally at City Hall Park tomorrow, June 4th, from 12 to 3 p.m. to advocate for student leadership and input in key decisions made by the Department of Education (DOE). The students, members of Global Kids -- the premiere non-profit organization in New York City that teaches underserved high school students about international issues and civic engagement -- will represent campaigns that they have been working on throughout the school year.

Student campaigns include:

  * Support The Dream Act, federal legislation that will give undocumented students who have graduated from a U.S. high school the chance to go on to college and embark upon a path toward citizenship.

  * Better Management of the "Phase Out" of Large High Schools...
   
  * Pass the Dignity For All Students Act (DASA)...

  * Student Voice and Input Needs to be Heard in Every High School
    and by the DOE...

  * Better Support for Junior High Schools...

The Global Kids, Inc. logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=4850

CONTACT:   Global Kids    Sofia Oviedo 212-226-0130
           sofia@globalkids.org
    
       Molly Delano 212-226-0130
              molly@globalkids.org

Caring for your computer


Some days I worry about our blog.  There is always a chance something could happen and everything we wrote would disappear.  That is why we are now backing up all our posts.

Now that I'm thinking of computer security, here is a post on hijacked email accounts:


by Brian Krebbs
Washington Post
April 29, 2009

A family member called last night, upset and embarrassed that his yahoo.com account was used to blast out spam to all of his contacts. A quick examination of the message headers indicated the spam was indeed sent through his yahoo.com account, and that someone had hijacked his Webmail account password.

Upon closer inspection, I noticed that whoever had sent the message had also done the following: deleted the last 30 days worth of messages in the "Sent" folder; added the same message they had spammed out to his e-mail signature, so that the message would be tacked onto each subsequent e-mail he sent; and the perpetrators even signed his first name at the bottom of the message.

An Internet search for the domain advertised in the spam -- easylifeing.com -- shows that spammers have advertised this site by hijacking accounts at other free Web mail providers as well, including Hotmail and Gmail.

The message read:

    Dear Friend,

    New shopping new life!

    How are u doing these days?Yesterday I found a web of a large trading company from china,which is an agent of all the well-known digital product factories,and facing to both wholesalers,retailsalers,and personal customer all over the world. They export all kinds of digital products and offer most competitive and reasonable price and high quality goods for our clients,so i think we you make a big profit if we do business with them.And they promise they will provide the best after-sales-service.In my opinion we can make a trial order to test that.

    Look forward to your early reply!
    [name omitted]

My relative's anti-virus program gave his PC a clean bill of health, but we're still in the process of scanning it with other tools. It's not clear how the attackers are hijacking these accounts, but there are a variety of ways passwords can be stolen.

The most likely explanation is that the victims logged into their accounts through a system that was compromised by some kind of data-stealing malicious software designed to swipe user names and passwords. In this particular instance, I'd rule out some kind of automated password cracking tool because my relative's password was fairly complex -- more than 10 characters, including numerals.

I've found dozens of Web sites advertised in these Webmail hijack scams. The domains themselves all appear to be for bargain-basement electronics and apparel stores based in China. All of the spammed sites I've reviewed so far were only recently registered and set up, suggesting that they may be nothing more than phantom stores designed to steal credit cards from unsuspecting buyers.

Anyone affected by this scam should immediately change their Webmail password, and check to make sure the same message hasn't been appended as a Webmail signature (usually, signatures are managed through the settings or options pages).

Finally, changing your password won't help much if the attackers still have malware on your system that can steal your new password, too. Assuming your system is equipped with up-to-date antivirus software, and that you've conducted a full system scan, you can get a second opinion by turning to one of my favorite diagnostic tools, Ultimate Boot CD.

This is basically a distribution of Linux that you can burn to a CD. Assuming your system is configured to boot from a CD (if not, you can try these suggestions), it will allow you to boot up into another operating system environment that lets you run a slew of diagnostic checks on the underlying hard drive and operating system, including virus scans from at least three different anti-malware vendors. It is generally safe to delete any suspect files found in these scans, but the scans themselves can take many hours to complete, depending on how many files you have on your system.

Update, 9:48 a.m.: A reader wrote in to remind me that there is a version of the Ultimate Boot CD -- appropriately named the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows - that boots into a virgin install of Windows, instead of a Linux operating system.

By Brian Krebs  |  April 29, 2009; 7:00 AM ET
Categories:  Fraud , Latest Warnings , Safety Tips  

click here and then scroll down to read the comments to this article

DREAMer Graduation in D.C. - June 23rd

A Film about DREAMers - Papers: The Movie -- coming in September



Click here for the link to Papers:  The Movie


"Papers the documentary is the story of undocumented youth and the challenges they face as they turn 18 without legal status."

Thanks to L.C. for sending this along.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Nice words in Egypt; Nasty Behavior in Washington


Why is Obama confusing us?  He says all (or most) of the right things.  He wants the world to come together and heal the illness that took us over during the Bush Administration.  

Yet he has not reigned in the Department of Homeland Security.  People are still getting detained, 287G is very alive, E-Verify is spreading its tentacles, and Sheriff Joe continues his pitiless task all the while smiling at the cameras.

The meetings and rallies around the country are encouraging.  But what we really need is some real sign from the White House.

"Hope and Worry on Immigration," New York Times, June 4, 2009

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Sanity about Handguns


Texas may want handguns in its colleges, but at the Federal Appeals Court in Chicago, they know better...

By MIKE ROBINSON Associated Press Writer © 2009 The Associated Press/Houston Chronicle
June 2, 2009, 7:54PM

CHICAGO — A federal appeals court Tuesday upheld ordinances barring the ownership of handguns in most cases in Chicago and suburban Oak Park, finding a Supreme Court ruling in a District of Columbia case doesn't apply.

Obama in the Middle East: "No civilisation can claim to have a monopoly on universal values"

There is something beautiful about this image.  I don't usually copy recent newspaper images, but this one was so striking.  Congrats to Stephen Crowley for being such a fine artist.

As for the issue of Israel and Palestine... the conversations continue.  Thank goodness we have a U.S. President who has finally taken a stand.


Action must follow Obama's words,  London Guardian, June 3, 2009
by Tariq Ramadan
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 3 June 2009 13.01 BST
         
Obama's speech to Muslims will mean little if its symbolism is not followed up by concrete measures to restore trust

...Barack Obama has this legacy to reverse. In talking to the Muslims, he should talk to the US and the west as well, for the scars of mistrust are deep. Obama has been very smart and cautious in delivering his political messages during the first months of his presidency. He repeatedly expressed his respect towards Islam and Muslims, announcing the closure of Guantanamo and cessation of torture and even becoming tougher towards the Israeli government regarding settlements. These are positive steps one should not deny.

Yet, symbolic acts and speeches are not enough. What we expect from the new president is effective and necessary action as well as a change in attitude. Humility is a key factor. In our global age, the United States might still be the most powerful nation in the world, but it does not have the monopoly on what is good and right. Being open to the world starts with being open to all civilisations and by acknowledging the potential positive contribution of every religion and culture. Islam is a great civilisation and Barack Obama should bring a message of true and deep respect by announcing that we all have to learn from each other and that he will commit himself to spreading knowledge of cultural and religious diversity in the United States itself. Humility means we all have to learn from one another and America should be ready to learn from Islam and Muslims as well as from the Hindus or the Buddhists. Paradoxically, how Obama intends to deal with education and religious diversity at home will be the true indicator of his real policy towards Islam and Muslims in the world.

No civilisation can claim to have a monopoly on universal values and no one can claim to be always faithful to his own values. President Obama must stress the ideal values and human rights the United States stands for but he has also to acknowledge mistakes, failures and contradictions when it comes to their implementation. Lack of consistency is a weakness shared by all nations. The best way for the president to be heard when he calls for human rights and democratisation and announces the start of a new era in relations with Muslims would be to start by being constructively self-critical and acknowledging that the US can and will do much better in respecting the values it stands for. It should do so by implementing just policies towards the Muslim world and poor countries. This humble attitude, based on the imperative duty of consistency, is not a position of weakness but the exact opposite: in this way, Obama can remind leaders as well as ordinary Muslims of their own inconsistencies and duties. Only a consistent and self-critical US president can remind Muslims that they have to act against corruption, extremism, dictatorships, lack of educational policies, discrimination towards women and poor people and be heard with a minimum of trust.

Muslims are waiting for action and they know from experience (with the US as well as with their own governments) that politicians are good at words. Barack Obama has a very special status today in the world and especially in the Muslim world. He is one of the only US presidents who has had both the background and the capacity to be more than simply a symbol spreading beautiful words. It would be sad to lose this historic opportunity and one must hope he has a vision and an efficient strategy for his country and the world. On domestic issues, when it comes to discrimination, security, immigration and equal opportunities, Barack Obama must help us to forget that he is African-American by promoting promote equal rights and justice. At the international level he should help us forget that his father was a Muslim by refusing to be shy or apologetic and respecting the rights of both individuals and populations in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. The message he is to send to Muslims should come from a president positioning himself beyond specific colour and religious belonging with humility, consistency and respect. While delivering his speech he should make it clear that after many years of deafness in Washington, he has begun to listen. for complete article

  

Obama to tell Israel: Form new peace policy by July
Haaretz - Israel, June 3, 2009

Obama made a surprise appearance on Tuesday at a meeting Defense Minister Ehud Barak was holding in Washington, shortly before the U.S. leader was set to leave on a five-day trip to the Middle East. 

Obama spoke for about 15 minutes with Barak, who was meeting with National Security Adviser General Jim Jones at the time. While Obama's official schedule did not include a meeting with Barak, he has in the past dropped into other officials' meetings with international figures. 

According to an official Israeli source, Obama wants to complete the formulation of a preliminary six-month plan for progress toward a Middle East peace agreement and to present it in July. link to complete article


Obama Plays Down Divide With Israel, New York Times, June 3, 2009