Showing posts with label Idi Amin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Idi Amin. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Reshma Saujani At The Huffington Post


WASHINGTON - MAY 06:  Arianna Huffington (C), ...Image by Getty Images via @daylife
Reshma Saujani At The Huffington Post
My parents, originally of Indian origin, barely escaped the brutal regime of Idi Amin in Uganda. Forced to flee during the government’s violent persecution of foreigners, my family lost everything. But amnesty in America gave them a chance to rebuild. A highly qualified mechanical engineer, my father found work in a machine shop. My mother was pregnant – arriving in a new country with little money, our family couldn’t afford medical treatment. My sister was born at a local hospital supported by Catholic Charities, and my father still describes the free care my family received as a miracle...... After the enactment of the Patriot Act, I volunteered with the New York Bar Association to offer free legal services to documented immigrants in Queens. I painfully witnessed innocent New Yorkers having their civil liberties being violated day after day. This experience emboldened me to build a national movement within the Democratic Party to encourage South Asian Americans to get involved in the political process. ...... my deep understanding of the financial industry ..... We need a bridge builder who can align the ambitions of Wall Street with the needs of Main Street to rebuild our economy. We need to reclaim the City of Aspiration, and create hope and opportunity for everyone – from the small business owner in Murray Hill, to the woman behind the counter at the bodega in Astoria, to the public school teacher in the East Village. I believe these times call for innovative policies and bold leadership to prepare the next generation for the new global economy.
Empire State of Security
The danger is that the US today risks losing the high tech race to India, China, Brazil, and other emerging economies. ........our economic competitiveness and our national security are increasingly not distinct issues, but two sides of the same coin...... The future of our national security is inextricably linked with our efforts to get our budgets back in the black, revitalize our economy, manage our borders, and reduce our dependence on foreign sources of energy. ....... We need more networked cooperation with foreign intelligence agencies to thwart terrorist plots. We need more spending on high tech port security to prevent smuggled nuclear material from landing on our shores in containers. That means reinstating the 28 percent drop in Transit Security Grant funding for New York this year. ..... . What we really need is to
rethink what national security means
, and how to achieve it. ......Increasingly, security means innovation. ..... I plan to work with President Obama to double the National Science Foundation's funding, make the Research and Experimentation tax credit permanent, and restore our national R&D investment to its previous level of 3 percent of GDP. .....as the city with the highest concentration of hospitals in the world, and the largest concentration of research facilities in the nation, New York can spearhead a new national biotech strategy. With eager investors and a rich talent pool, we're the ideal place to ramp-up a new National Innovation Fund that leverages private investment against national priorities, notably biotechnology research. ....... In 2009, for the first time, China topped the G-20 in clean energy investing, more then doubling what the US committed to this sector. ..... the President's proposal for 25 percent of our national energy portfolio to come from renewable, homegrown sources by 2025. ...... craft a comprehensive national security strategy (read: national innovation strategy) that will secure a prosperous and safe future for all Americans. ....New York can lead the way.
Comprehensive Immigration Reform to Create Jobs and Secure our Future
From 1995 to 2005, over 25 percent of technology companies started in the US had a key immigrant founder. These companies generated over $50 billion in sales and employed half a million Americans during that span. Immigrants are just 12 percent of our population but earn a staggering 47 percent of the nation's science and technology PhDs and file for 24 percent of US patents. Today, over 50 percent of the immigrants returning to India or China hold advanced degrees......We should lift the cap on H1-B and EB-5 work and investor visas and pass the "StartUp Visa" program ..... Creating a pathway towards legal status for the 12 million illegal immigrants in the US today would boost GDP by $1.5 trillion over the next 10 years. Implementing a guest worker program would add another $792 billion to GDP during the same period. ...... reframe the debate around cultural inclusion, economic competitiveness, and plain common sense ....... moving illegal immigrants from our under-the-table economy to our above-the-table economy is smart fiscal policy for the nation ......In 2010, New York's share of the Department of Homeland Security Transit Security Grant Program - which funds sensors and bomb detecting equipment - fell by 28 percent. This is unacceptable. ...... pass provisions for illegal immigrants who have critical witness information to come forward and help law enforcement personnel address street crimes and security threats .....3.1 million American children have at least one parent who is in the US illegally ...... the Uniting American Families Act, which would allow US citizens in same-sex couples to sponsor their partners for legal immigration status ..... 36,000 of these couples are at risk of being separated because one partner is not a citizen ...... I am the daughter of political refugees. My family was forced to flee the brutal regime of Idi Amin after he ordered the mass expulsion of Indians from Uganda. They lost almost everything, and sought asylum from many countries, but were only offered that opportunity in the United States.
On Women's Rights, Democrats Should Stand Up, Not Back Down
In times of political turmoil, when difficult decisions were required, Democrats stood their ground and fought hard for the Civil Rights Act, Social Security, Medicaid, Head Start, campaign finance reform, and other critical legislation....... As a leader of one of the most progressive districts in the nation, the representative of the 14th should always stand up and fight for core Democratic principles, such as reproductive choice. ...... Deal making is part of the political process. But a core Democratic principle like a woman's right to choose should have never been on the table for negotiation. ....... If there's one thing that separates the two parties, it's that Democrats are the party of principle. And when we stick to our principles, our party wins, and our nation wins. ....... (I spoke at event recently on the need to focus on job creation. Someone asked me if I was really a Republican. It's clear our party has lost its way when New York Democrats think job creation is the sole territory of the GOP.) ...... We need to stop "legislating in haste and repenting at leisure." We need to stop "voting against the bill before we vote for it."
Financial Reform From Soup to Nuts
.....Wall Street needs to stop obstructing reform in Washington...... Congress needs to stop demonizing Wall Street...... It's about eliminating the bad lending practices, encouraged by loose regulation, which together have conspired against the entire economy. It's about a new regulatory framework that empowers Wall Street to generate growth and jobs in New York City and across America. ...... I'm not making the case to engage the financial sector because it used to pay my rent. If the circus were the biggest employer in New York, I'd fight for every acrobat and ringmaster in the tri-state area. ..... We need to work with Wall Street to move high finance away from unsustainable short-term thinking, and toward long-term investments in clean-tech, biotech, nanotech, health-tech, and new media......
Generation Innovation: Creating Jobs and Growth in New York City
New York ... even managed to reach the highest point in the sky at the lowest moment of the depression." ..... New York City has always been a place of possibility, innovation, and imagination. That's why, in the wake of the Great Recession, our sustained economic crisis calls for an audacious economic vision. ....... The national retailer Macy's started in 1858 as a modest dry goods store on 6th Ave. and 14th Street. MetLife, one of the nation's largest insurers, began as a downtown startup during Reconstruction. ...... the world's most vibrant and diverse city, and also the world's most vibrant and diverse economy. ....... Since the 1970s, New York City's economy has been dominated by the financial services sector. ....... In 2007, an astounding 38 percent of the New York City's total payroll came from the financial sector. ....... New York must and will remain an epicenter for global finance. But we must also diversify our economy. ........ Bailouts have targeted mega-banks, and stimulus dollars have gone to construction contractors. These are necessary measures, but they're not sufficient to spark the kind of innovation we need to jumpstart economic growth in New York City. The Bloomberg Administration has certainly demonstrated progress in this area, doing what it can on a tight city budget - but there's a long way to go, and federal funding can help. ........some 47 New York venture capital firms funded startups to the tune of more than $2 billion in the first half of 2009. ..... growth industries such as clean-tech, high-speed rail, and broadband ...... investing in the dreamers and doers of tomorrow.

Morgenthau Withdraws, Cites City's 'Resentment' Of Him Huff Post Former Manhattan district attorney Robert Morgenthau withdrew on Tuesday from his role overseeing the city's efforts to improve the hiring of black and Hispanic firefighters, citing the city's "resentment" of him. ...... He said it appears the administration of Mayor Michael Bloomberg "has exhibited resentment against me." ...... arguing Morgenthau's "known distaste" for Bloomberg would make it impossible for him to be impartial. ..... his performance as district attorney had "not been to its liking." ...... There are about 350 black firefighters out of 11,500 firefighters working for the Fire Department of New York. Most city residents are minorities. 

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Saturday, May 29, 2010

Reshma Saujani, Carolyn Maloney

Reshma Saujani - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Saujani's parents lived in Uganda, prior to being expelled, along with other Indians, in the early 1970s by Idi Amin. The Saujanis settled in Chicago. ...... Saujani attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she graduated in 1997 with majors in Political Science and Speech Communications. She attended the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, where she received a Masters of Public Policy in 1999, and Yale Law School, where she received her Juris Doctorate in 2002. ..... She worked at the law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell, where she handled asylum cases pro bono..... Saujani founded "South Asians for Kerry" during the 2004 presidential election. ..... Saujani served on the National Finance Board for Hillary Clinton during Clinton's campaign for president in 2008. Following the primaries, she was named Vice-Chair of the New York delegation at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver. ...... Saujani has won the support of top entrepreneurs including Jack Dorsey, co-founder and chairman of Twitter; Randi Zuckerberg, director of market development for Facebook and sister of Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg; Alexis Maybank, co-founder of Gilt Groupe; and Chris Hughes, co-founder of Facebook........ Saujani has raised a considerable amount of money for a challenger in a congressional race, outraising Maloney by almost a 2-to-1 margin in the last quarter of 2009...... Her candidacy has received the backing of prominent Upper East Side political fundraisers, including Cathy Lasry and Maureen White.



Carolyn B. Maloney - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia the Congresswoman for New York's 14th congressional district since 1993. .... most of Manhattan's East Side; Astoria and Long Island City in Queens; and Roosevelt Island. ...... In 1970, she visited New York City and decided to stay. ..... In 1992, Maloney was elected to the House of Representatives, narrowly defeating a 15-year incumbent, liberal Republican Bill Green, in a victory considered an upset. She is the first woman to ever represent the district, and has been re-elected eight times ....... Following Maloney's win, Republicans continued to hold most of the State Senate, Assembly, and City Council seats on Manhattan's East Side for nearly another decade. Since 2002, the Democrats have dominated the area, and now hold all of the area's seats in the state legislature and City Council. ....... among the 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives, Maloney has the ninth-highest amount of investment in oil stocks. ........In the book, Maloney argues that progress for women has stalled and offers recommendations for resuming their advance toward full equality ...... In December 2008, Maloney hired a public relations firm to help bolster her efforts to be named by Governor David Paterson as Hillary Clinton's successor as a New York Senator. Maloney toured parts of the state, but was overshadowed by Caroline Kennedy's promotional tour for the same seat. Maloney interviewed with the governor for 55 minutes. Public opinion polls placed Maloney's support for the Senate seat in the single digits, trailing the front-runner ..... On July 20, 2009, Maloney apologized after using the word "nigger" in repeating a comment made by a third party about Gillibrand. ....... he married Clifton Maloney, an investment banker, in 1976.

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Better Know a District - New York's 14th - Carolyn Maloney
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorFox News

Carolyn Maloney has a longer resume, but it is because she is older, twice as old. I say her resume is not long enough.

Issues in women's rights like equal pay, and reproductive rights are like a ceiling to Maloney. She tried the best she could, but she has done the best she can. Those same issues are a floor to Reshma Saujani. She will fight for equal pay, she will fight harder for reproductive rights. And she will build on all that to do much more. Maloney belongs to a generation that imagined equality. Reshma Saujani belongs to a generation that wants to be able to take equality for granted.

Obama has done so much for race without even talking about it. Reshma Saujani's focus on technology and innovation and the next generation of jobs, companies and industries is something similar. She dreams of things that a leader - man or woman - would dream of. That kind of confidence comes from wanting to take equality for granted.

This is not about okay let's just undo the good work Maloney has done for women's rights. This is about she has not done enough, although she tried, and let's build upon whatever she has been able to do. And let's also touch upon leadership issues in general. Let's also talk about creating the next generation of jobs, companies and industries.


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Sunday, May 23, 2010

Reshma Saujani, Haiti Earthquake, Harvard Yale, And 2016

Voter Insurrection Turns Mainstream, Creating New Rules New York Times .... after this week’s primaries in Arkansas, Kentucky and Pennsylvania, 2010 seems destined to be one of those years...... an anti-incumbent tsunami is roaring ..... The old laws of politics have been losing their relevance as attitudes and technology evolve, creating a kind of endemic instability that probably is not going away just because housing prices rebound. ...... Voter insurrection has gone as mainstream as Miley Cyrus .... The first is that this age-old idea of “clearing the field” for a preferred candidate, so as to avoid divisive primaries, is now, much like the old party clubhouse, a historical relic. This should have been clear to everyone after 2008, when Barack Obama, shunned by most of his party’s major contributors and its Washington establishment, simply shrugged off endorsements and raised more than half a billion dollars from his own constituencies. ...... makes you wonder whether Mr. Obama and his aides really thought they could “clear the field” for Mr. Specter ........ A new generation of politicians has been raised with more consumer choice and less loyalty to institutions, and they are no more likely to take their orders from, say, party leaders like Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, than they are to drive a Malibu just because some car magazine tells them to. Nor, thanks to the Web, are they reliant any longer on the party structure to raise the necessary cash. ....... less affinity for parties makes incumbent politicians less safe, generally. That’s because when fewer people bother to engage in party politics, it takes a smaller group of ultra-motivated activists to overturn the traditional order of things. ...... the politics of issues, the stuff of which parties have most often crafted their core identities, has now been largely displaced by a politics of personal conviction. ....... we are living in the era of the upstart...... The intraparty rebellions now will be increasingly local, sufficiently financed and built around credible candidates — the kind of campaigns that made Barack Obama president and that may yet give us Senator Paul or Senator Sestak. My gosh, these people in Washington are in for it now.

If you were to read some of the news articles on Reshma Saujani, you would want to blame her for nothing less than the Great Recession. Most of the articles are objective, neutral, some are glowingly positive, but some are negative. And oh yes, you are going to learn she went to Harvard and Yale and how that is a bad thing.

If you are going to blame Reshma Saujani for the Great Recession, I am going to blame you for the earthquake in Haiti. And the thing about Harvard and Yale is she has an amazing personal story from when her parents were sent out of Uganda by Idi Amin. Reshma Saujani personifies the American dream in her story in this country of immigrants. That is part of what makes her such a compelling candidate. If she can do it, you can do it. She is an inspiration.

Last Saturday I went canvassing for Reshma Saujani in Long Island City - although I have a feeling I might have ended up in Astoria again; I was driven to my neck of the woods - and the Saturday before that I did 100 knocks and 10 talks on behalf of her with my fellow volunteer friend Arnab Majumdar, a Bengali who grew up in the tri-state area. A staffer called me "not a volunteer, but The Volunteer."

A few days back I emailed her saying if it makes you feel good, I want you to know, you are my favorite politician right now. You compete with Obama, a few politicians in Nepal, with John Liu. I love Obama as much as ever; all the guy needed to do for me was win in 2008, all the great work he has done since has been bonus. This blog is named after him. But I follow Reshma Saujani's campaign more than that of the career trajectory of any other politician right now. That favorite tag is measured in the sheer number of hours. A few days back the thought of going to work for Reshma Saujani For Congress full time for three and a half months flashed through my mind.

Just like Barack raised more money than Hillary the first two quarters, Reshma has raised more money than Maloney the first two quarters. Eight months after I had been supporting Barack, he was still 20 points down in the polls in Iowa, and I was firm in my thought that if he lost Iowa, he was history. He won Iowa and the race was still so close for months. I was right about Iowa.

If the election were to be held today, Maloney would win. And that is why Reshma Saujani is on a sprint to September 14.

I have asked the question, what if she lost? Barack Obama lost to Bobby Rush when he ran for Congress in 2000. Bill Clinton went to Arkansas from Yale and ran for Congress. He lost. But I don't see Reshma losing. She is going to hit the national headlines come September.

You are lucky this is a tough race, I emailed her a few days back, great things are going to happen to you at a rapid pace after November. Because this is a tough race in a district where Obama drops by to raise  money for his candidates across the country.

When I am thinking Reshma Saujani, I am thinking 2016. Here are a few scenarios that play in my mind.

After November she is going to vault into the national imagination. If her parents showed up with nothing except maybe a few small gold nuggets in toothpaste tubes, she is obviously self made. She is a woman. She was totally sold on the idea of the first woman president in the 2008 race. She is razor sharp. She is a quick study. She works hard, she works like crazy. She is a political animal. Either you have those instincts, or you don't. She has plenty. She is sufficiently aggressive.

Obama achieved JFK status as a candidate. He became FDR after health care reform got passed. I am confident he will see the passing of financial sector reform, even immigration reform. But all those big tasks are FDR level work. If the guy wants to compete with Lincoln in the greatness department, he is going to have to tackle the global trafficking of women. Will he go for it? I don't know. Not now.

2016 is going to be a gendered election. There is a lot of pent up emotion from 2008. Joe Biden is a great guy but he is not going to be president. He is going to do the Dick Cheney thing. 2016 is going to be the year for the first woman president. Reshma Saujani has a shot as much anyone out there. Noone else has even remotely compelling a personal story. Reshma also has an Africa story, it is different. She also has a Harvard story. Four years in Congress are going to be enough time. Obama needed only two. Because he realized it was not about him, it was about the country. He could wait, the country and the world could not.

Another thing going on for her is her "getting" tech. She is poised to ride the third wave nationally. The first has been firefighting, Obama doing the stimulus bill to make sure the economy does not go down under. The second wave will be the deficits and debt phase. I suspect this is going to be a major part of the Obama re-election effort. Some time during his second term Obama is going to have balanced the budget. The third wave is going to be about creating the next generation of jobs, companies and industries. That just so happens to be Reshma Saujani's number one strength.

Would you blame me that I want to play Chanakya to Reshma?

And, by the way, Reshma Saujani all along has been a strong advocate for financial sector reform. She is going to jump with joy when Obama signs the bill into law. And I asked around. A lot of people think having gone to Harvard and Yale is a good thing. Obama only went to Harvard. Clinton only went to Yale. Reshma Saujani went to both.

Reshma Saujani Goes on the Attack Against Carolyn Maloney in Upper East Side Congressional Race DNAinfo
Maloney V. Saujani: The Drill-Down New York Daily News (blog)
Newcomer Saujani challenging Maloney Queens Courier
The burdens of fundraising Politico (blog)
Maloney snubs Obama, Pelosi Examiner.com
Parsing Reshma's Words New York Observer
In New York, Wall Street Is on the Primary Ballot BusinessWeek
A Primary Challenger in Carolyn's Court New York Observer
Wake Up Call » New York Daily News (blog)
Desi Congressional Challenger Lines Up Backers Forbes
Congressional Candidates Share Their Perfect Upper East Side Afternoon DNAinfo
Pressuring Sestak, Raising the Cap and More in Capital Eye Opener: May 14 Center for Responsive Politics
Six 'desis' in race for the US Congress Express Buzz
Asian-American Heritage: Queens District Leader Maintains Political Prowess NY1
Fresh-Faced Reshma and the Assault on Fortress Maloney New York Observer
Square Brings Credit Card Swiping to the Mobile Masses, Starting Today Fast Company
Wall Street Runs for Congress Village Voice
NY-14: Oh Please, Reshma Swing State Project
Obama Raises $$ in NYC While Slamming Wall St. FOXNews
Upstarts Aim to Unseat Upper East Side Fixture Wall Street Journal
Republican Candidate for UES Congressional Seat Takes Progressive Approach to Campaign DNAinfo
Maloney Declines To Raise $25k To Host Obama On East Side City Hall
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