Posts Tagged ‘President’

Mark Zupan: Why We Admire Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln is the most revered president. This is especially striking in light of the fact that Lincoln presided over a period more challenging and economically destructive than any other in America’s history. The Civil War resulted in 635,000 soldier deaths (over 2 percent of our population versus only .2 percent of our citizen killed as soldiers during World War II, our next most relatively costly conflict); over 1,000,000 wounded soldiers; and an estimated economic cost of $13 billion in 1860 dollars (roughly 4 times as large as annual GDP in 1860).

In light of all the carnage through which his reputation could readily be tarred, why does Lincoln instead elicit such high esteem? Many factors have been advanced — his rise from lowly origins, humility, compassion, integrity, self-made character, ability to overcome adversity, and humor. Amazed, for example, by the sheer number of fellow citizens who would show up during calling hours to ask for some form of assistance once he became president, Lincoln quipped to his secretaries when he came down with a cold that now they could let in all of office/favor seekers because he “finally had something he wanted to give them.”

Perhaps the most important ingredient to Lincoln’s secret sauce, however, was his ability to build political coalitions that ultimately promoted the betterment of our Republic. In the presidential elections of 1856 and 1860, for example, he was integral to stitching together such disparate groups as abolitionists, the Temperance Movement, Free Soilers, Know Nothings (who were fiercely opposed to immigrants), Whigs, and disaffected Democrats. The platforms that he helped shape forged a working alliance between interests that could have easily ended up going their separate ways, propelled him to the presidency, and built a Republican party that endures to this day.

Dealing with slavery — the knottiest problem ever to confront our nation — tested Lincoln and ultimately show-cased his keen political acumen. He lacked the electoral support to make abolition a part of his platform in 1860. Doing so, likely would have kept him from being elected. Moreover, even if Lincoln had been elected on a platform that included abolition, the border states of Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware would have joined the Confederacy. Such a loss would have eliminated the ability to preserve Washington as our capital and arguably the capacity of the Union to suppress the secessionist movement.

Once in office and as the Civil War and its horrendous toll unfolded, Lincoln tested a libertarian/economic solution to slavery. In a March 1862 letter to Illinois Senator McDougall, Lincoln laid out an “emancipation with compensation” proposal. Lincoln estimated that buying the freedom of the estimated 432,622 slaves in Washington, D.C. and the four border states would cost $173 million, the equivalent of fielding the Northern Army for just three months during that year.

Lincoln correctly sensed that the proposed compensation idea would be a much less costly than a military solution. Indeed, the best present-day estimates indicate that it would have taken roughly $3 billion (in 1860 dollars) to compensate slave-owners for voluntary emancipation in contrast to the over $11 billion in destruction wrought by the War Between the States. Lincoln was unable to get his idea to take broader root, however, partly because Northerners underestimated the cost of suppressing the rebellion while Southerners had become wedded to their cause and the belief that it could be successfully defended.

In moving next to his Emancipation (without compensation) Proclamation, Lincoln had to thread the ultimate needle: waiting for a Union victory, Antietam in September 1862, so as to build optimism for final Northern military success; applying the provisions of the Proclamation exclusively to Confederate States, so as not to lose the border states; fostering support among the general citizenry of France and England so as to keep the elites in those foreign powers, who were upset about the North’s blockade of cotton shipments from the South, from recognizing the Confederacy; and dealing with the negative consequences in that fall’s congressional elections as well as insubordination at the Army of Potomac’s headquarters where most of the staff were Democrats, intensely loyal to its commander George McClellan, and talking of a military coup against Lincoln.

Effective leadership then as now involves developing and executing strategies that result in the whole of an organization being greater than the sum of the parts. Lincoln’s stature today reflects his ability to do so in the face of a task that was indeed greater than that which rested upon George Washington (as he noted in his farewell address to his neighbors in Springfield in 1861) or any other president since. The manner in which he rose to this challenge, led among other things to taking our nation closer to living the ideals spelled out in the Declaration of Independence. It also ensured that when people referred to “The United States of America” the “The” was taken to be singular whereas it had been plural prior to the Civil War.

Edwin Stanton, Lincoln’s Secretary of War, and someone who had sized him up as a country bumpkin when their paths first crossed during the 1850s, wept openly at his deathbed in April 1865. Having seen Lincoln’s leadership first-hand, Stanton so eloquently and aptly noted that that is why “Now he belongs to the ages.”

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-zupan/lincoln-presidents-day_b_1289398.html

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Apple: New Engineers Work On Fake Products … – Business Insider

Apple is so obsessed with secrecy, it sometimes puts new hires on fake products until they can be trusted.

Adam Lashinsky reported this tidbit in his new book “Inside Apple,” and a former Apple employee confirmed it when Lashinsky spoke at LinkedIn the other day.

Here’s what the engineer said:

A friend of mine who’s a senior engineer at Apple, he works on — or did work on — fake products I’m sure for the first part of his career, and interviewed for 9 months. It’s intense.

The employee also believes that Tim Cook has the charisma to be president. Not the president of Apple — the president of the United States.

The exchange was captured on video by Fortune’s Philip Elmer DeWitt, and pointed out by Jim Romenesko earlier today.?

Here it is:

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-puts-new-engineers-on-fake-products-until-it-can-trust-them-2012-1

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Obama, DNC raise $68M in final 3 months of 2011 (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama raked in more than $68 million combined for his re-election campaign and the Democratic Party during the final three months of 2011, gearing up for a formidable challenge against his Republican opponent later this year.

The large fundraising quarter helped Obama’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee surpass $220 million in 2011, bankrolling the president’s re-election campaign as Republicans settle on a nominee. Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney raised $56 million for the primary through Dec. 31, his campaign announced Wednesday, far outpacing his GOP opponents.

Obama campaign manager Jim Messina said Thursday in a video to supporters that the campaign collected more than $42 million for the quarter, with the DNC bringing in more than $24 million, along with $1 million for a joint fund to help state parties in key states. The amount helped the president’s team beat an internal goal of $60 million combined for the quarter.

Obama’s campaign collected $750 million in 2008, prompting speculation that it could top $1 billion this time. Messina said the lofty figures have created “a challenge that keeps coming up. Too many Obama supporters think we don’t need their money or they don’t need to give now.”

However, Messina said, “The billion-dollar number is completely untrue.”

Obama, facing no primary opponent, has stockpiled a large campaign bank account, but Democrats expect parity with Republicans once the party chooses a nominee. Romney has been a formidable fundraiser and most party leaders expect a large amount of money to flow into his campaign if he sews up the nomination. Republican-leaning Super PACs have also fared better than Democratic-backed outside groups, further offsetting the president’s fundraising.

Obama’s campaign has emphasized a large number of donors and small donations generated from online giving. Messina said the campaign and DNC had generated 1.3 million donors, with 583,000 people giving during the most recent quarter. More than 98 percent were for donations of $250 or less and the average donation was $55, Messina said.

The money will help build Obama’s organization and let his advisers prepare for the upcoming campaign, a point the president emphasized at a large Chicago fundraiser on Wednesday night.

“If you’re willing to work even harder in this election than you did in that last election, I promise you change will come,” Obama said. “If you stick with me, we’re going to finish what we started in 2008.”

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120112/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_fundraising

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Havel, hero of anti-communist revolution, dies

File – In this Oct. 15, 2009 file photo former Czech President Vaclav Havel is seen during a press conference on occasion of the 20th anniversary of the changes in Czechoslovakia and the fall of the Iron Curtain in Prague. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)

File – In this Oct. 15, 2009 file photo former Czech President Vaclav Havel is seen during a press conference on occasion of the 20th anniversary of the changes in Czechoslovakia and the fall of the Iron Curtain in Prague. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)

FILE – President Vaclav Havel and his wife Dagmar wave to the crowd of well-wishers from the balcony of Prague Castle after Havel was sworn in for the second term as president of the Czech Republic in this Feb. 2, 1998 file photo. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo/Tomas Turek,CTK)

FILE – U.S. President Barack Obama, left, meets former Czech President Vaclav Havel, during a summit between the United States and the 27-member European Union in Prague, Czech Republic, in this April 5, 2009 file photo. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky, File)

FILE – in this Dec. 10 2011 file photo Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, left, hands a present to Czech ex-president Vaclav Havel, right, during their meeting in Prague, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo,CTK/Katerina Sulova) SLOVAKIA OUT

FILE – President Bush embraces Vaclav Havel, former president of the Czech Republic, after presenting him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in the East Room of the White House in this July 23, 2003 file photo. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the highest civilian award of the U.S. government. Havel, the dissident playwright who wove theater into politics to peacefully bring down communism in Czechoslovakia and become a hero of the epic struggle that ended the Cold War, died Sunday Dec. 18, 2011 in Prague. He was 75. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

PRAGUE (AP) ? The end of Czechoslovakia’s totalitarian regime was called the Velvet Revolution because of how smooth the transition seemed: Communism dead in a matter of weeks, without a shot fired. But for Vaclav Havel, it was a moment he helped pay for with decades of suffering and struggle.

The dissident playwright spent years in jail but never lost his defiance, or his eloquence, and the government’s attempts to crush his will ended up expanding his influence. He became a source of inspiration to Czechs, and to all of Eastern Europe. He went from prisoner to president in 1989, the year the Berlin Wall fell and communism crumbled across the region.

Havel died Sunday morning at his weekend home in the northern Czech Republic. The 75-year-old former chain-smoker had a history of chronic respiratory problems dating back to his time in prison.

Shy and bookish, with a wispy mustache and unkempt hair, Havel helped draw the world’s attention to the anger and frustration spilling over behind the Iron Curtain. While he was president, the Czech Republic split from Slovakia, but it also made dramatic gains in economic might.

“His peaceful resistance shook the foundations of an empire, exposed the emptiness of a repressive ideology, and proved that moral leadership is more powerful than any weapon,” said President Barack Obama. “He also embodied the aspirations of half a continent that had been cut off by the Iron Curtain, and helped unleash tides of history that led to a united and democratic Europe.”

Mourners laid flowers and lit candles at Havel’s villa in Prague. A black flag of mourning flew over Prague Castle, the presidential seat, and Havel was also remembered at a monument to the revolution in the capital’s downtown. “Mr. President, thank you for democracy,” one note read.

Lech Walesa, former Polish president and the Nobel Peace Prize-winning founder of the country’s anti-communist Solidarity movement, called Havel “a great fighter for the freedom of nations and for democracy.”

“Amid the turbulence of modern Europe, his voice was the most consistent and compelling ? endlessly searching for the best in himself and in each of us,” said former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright, who is of Czech origin.

Havel was his country’s first democratically elected president, leading it through the early challenges of democracy and its peaceful 1993 breakup into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, though his image suffered as his people discovered the difficulties of transforming their society.

He was an avowed peacenik who was close friends with members of the Plastic People of the Universe, a nonconformist rock band banned by the communist regime, and whose heroes included rockers such as Frank Zappa. He never quite shed his flower-child past and often signed his name with a small heart as a flourish.

“Truth and love must prevail over lies and hatred,” Havel famously said. It became his revolutionary motto, which he said he always strove to live by.

“It’s interesting that I had an adventurous life, even though I am not an adventurer by nature. It was fate and history that caused my life to be adventurous rather than me as someone who seeks adventure,” he once told Czech radio.

Havel first made a name for himself after the 1968 Soviet-led invasion that crushed the Prague Spring reforms of Alexander Dubcek and other liberally minded communists in what was then Czechoslovakia.

Havel’s plays were banned as hard-liners installed by Moscow snuffed out every whiff of rebellion. But he continued to write, producing a series of underground essays that stand with the work of Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov as the most incisive and eloquent analyses of what communism did to society and the individual.

One of his best-known essays, “The Power of the Powerless,” was written in 1978. It borrowed slyly from the opening line of the mid-19th century Communist Manifesto, writing: “A specter is haunting eastern Europe: the specter of what in the West is called ‘dissent.’”

In the essay, he dissected what he called the “dictatorship of ritual” ? the ossified Soviet bloc system under Leonid Brezhnev ? and imagined what happens when an ordinary greengrocer stops displaying communist slogans and begins “living in truth,” rediscovering “his suppressed identity and dignity.”

Havel knew that suppression firsthand.

He was born Oct. 5, 1936, in Prague, the child of a wealthy family that lost extensive property to communist nationalization in 1948. Havel was denied a formal education, eventually earning a degree at night school and starting out in theater as a stagehand.

His political activism began in earnest in January 1977, when he co-authored the human rights manifesto Charter 77, and the cause drew widening attention in the West.

Havel was detained countless times and spent four years in communist jails. His letters from prison to his wife were among his best-known works. “Letters to Olga” blended deep philosophy with a stream of stern advice to the spouse he saw as his mentor and best friend, and who tolerated his reputed philandering and other foibles.

The events of August 1988 ? the 20th anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion ? first suggested that Havel and his friends might one day replace the apparatchiks who jailed them.

Thousands of mostly young people marched through central Prague, yelling Havel’s name and that of the playwright’s hero, Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, the philosopher who was Czechoslovakia’s first president after it was founded in 1918.

Havel’s arrest in January 1989 at another street protest and his subsequent trial generated anger at home and abroad. Pressure for change was so strong that the communists released him in May.

That fall, communism began to collapse across Eastern Europe, and in November the Berlin Wall fell. Eight days later, police brutally broke up a demonstration by thousands of Prague students.

It was the signal that Havel and his countrymen had awaited. Within 48 hours, a broad new opposition movement was founded, and a day later, hundreds of thousands of Czechs and Slovaks took to the streets.

In three heady weeks, communist rule was broken. Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones arrived just as the Soviet army was leaving. Posters in Prague proclaimed: “The tanks are rolling out ? the Stones are rolling in.”

On Dec. 29, 1989, Havel was elected Czechoslovakia’s president by the country’s still-communist parliament. Three days later, he told the nation in a televised New Year’s address: “Out of gifted and sovereign people, the regime made us little screws in a monstrously big, rattling and stinking machine.”

He continued to be regarded a moral voice as he decried the shortcomings of his society under democracy, but eventually bent to the dictates of convention and power. His watchwords ? “what the heart thinks, the tongue speaks” ? had to be modified for day-to-day politics.

In July 1992, it became clear that the Czechoslovak federation was heading for a split. He considered the breakup a personal failure, though years later he would conclude that it was for the best. Havel resigned as president, but he remained popular and was elected president of the new Czech Republic uncontested.

The job held great immense prestige but little power. The Czech Republic underwent major promarket reforms while Havel was president, but those have been credited mainly to his political archrival Vaclav Klaus, who was prime minister at the time and is the current president.

Havel’s attempts to reconcile rival politicians were considered by many as unconstitutional intrusions, and his pleas for political leaders to build a “civic society” based on respect, tolerance and individual responsibility went largely unanswered.

Media criticism, once unthinkable, became unrelenting. Serious newspapers questioned his political visions; tabloids focused mainly on his private life.

Havel left office in 2003, months before the Czech Republic and Slovakia joined the European Union. He was credited with laying the groundwork that brought his country in 2004 into what is now a 27-nation bloc, and was president when it joined NATO in 1999 ? a moment of pride for him.

“I can’t stop rejoicing that I live in this time and can participate in it,” Havel exulted.

Havel was small, but his presence and wit could fill a room. Even late in life, he retained a certain impishness and boyish grin, shifting easily from philosophy to jokes or plain old Prague gossip.

In December 1996, just 11 months after his first wife, Olga Havlova, died of cancer, he lost a third of his right lung during surgery to remove a malignant tumor.

He gave up smoking and married Dagmar Veskrnova, a dashing actress almost 20 years his junior. She, and a nun who had been caring for him the last few months of his life, were by his side when he died, his assistant Sabina Tancevova said.

Even out of office, Havel remained a world figure. Among his many honors were Sweden’s prestigious Olof Palme Prize and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian award, bestowed on him by President George W. Bush for being “one of liberty’s great heroes.”

Havel was nominated several times for the Nobel Peace Prize, and collected dozens of other accolades worldwide for his efforts as a global ambassador of conscience, defending the downtrodden from Darfur to Myanmar.

In recent years, Havel saw the global economic crisis as a warning not to abandon basic human values in the scramble to prosper.

“It’s a warning against the idea that we understand the world, that we know how everything works,” he told The Associated Press in his office in Prague in 2008. The cramped work space was packed with his books, plays and rock memorabilia.

By then Havel had returned to his first love: the stage. He published a new play, “Leaving,” about the struggles of a leader on his way out of office, and the work gained critical acclaim.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-18-EU-Czech-Obit-Havel/id-908599dcba794c83a9f1e6e8da129100

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Obama to send Clinton to Myanmar next month (AP)

BALI, Indonesia ? President Barack Obama says Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Myanmar (mee-an-MAWR’) as the U.S. looks to seize what could be an historic opportunity for progress in the repressed country.

Obama says after years of darkness, there have been “flickers of progress” in Myanmar in the last several weeks.

Clinton’s trip next month is the first such visit by a secretary of state in more than 50 years. The move is the most dramatic sign of a changing relationship between the United States and Myanmar, also known Burma.

Obama announced Clinton’s visit in Bali, where he is attending a summit of East Asian nations.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

In a breakthrough with a nation long shunned and sanctioned by the United States, President Barack Obama is sending Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to Myanmar next month, making her the first official in her position to visit that repressed country in more than 50 years.

Obama was to announce the news on Friday during his diplomatic mission to southeast Asia, a senior administration official told The Associated Press.

In deepening his engagement with Myanmar, also known as Burma, the president first sought assurances from democracy leader and Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. She spent 15 years on house arrest by the nation’s former military dictators but is now in talking with the new civilian government about reforming the country.

The two spoke by phone on Thursday night.

The administration sees Clinton’s visit as a sign of success for Obama’s policy on Myanmar, which was outlined in 2009 and focused on punishments and incentives to get the country’s former military rulers to improve dire human rights conditions. The U.S. imposed new sanctions on Myanmar but made clear it was open to better relations if the situation changed.

Still, Obama officials emphasized that Obama has deep concerns about Myanmar’s human rights record, treatment of ethnic minorities and closed nature of its society. Clinton’s mission is to explore what the United States can do to support progress on political reform, individual rights and national reconciliation, the official said.

Myanmar, a former breadbasket of Southeast Asia, has suffered not just repressive government but poor economic management during nearly 50 years of military rule.

It is subject to wide-ranging trade, economic and political sanctions from the U.S. and other Western nations, enforced in response to brutal crackdowns on pro-democracy protesters in 1988 and 2007 and its refusal to hand power to pro-democracy leader Suu Kyi’s party after the 1990 elections.

Now Myanmar’s nominally civilian government, which took power in March, has declared its intention to liberalize the hard-line policies of the junta that preceded it.

It has taken some fledgling steps, such as easing censorship, legalizing labor unions, suspending an unpopular, China-backed dam project and working with Suu Kyi.

Obama will see Burma’s president, Thein Sein, on Friday during a summit of Southeast Asian nations.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111118/ap_on_go_pr_wh/as_obama

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