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"U2: The Dream Of Ridiculous Men," NPR

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The last short story Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote is about being seriously ridiculous. In "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man," an intellectual prone to existentialist despair is saved from suicide when, in a vision, he discovers a parallel planet where humanity has never sinned. "It was like being in love with each other, but an all-embracing, universal feeling," he tells the reader. This contact with Eden reinvigorates him, but then, during a playful moment, he teaches the planet's innocents how to deceive each other — and this leads to a catastrophic, Biblical fall. By the time the man awakens, his Eden has become just like Earth, full of violence, crime and war. It's the world he once thought was meaningless. And still, the man finds himself redeemed. He stands on a corner, preaching the essential goodness of humanity, despite his knowledge of the equally omnipresent potential for corruption. He's a rube for being optimistic, and he knows it. But he declares at the story's end, "I shall go on and on!"
The serious ridiculousness expressed in that conclusion differs from the unthinking kind that entangles people every day. Ordinary ridiculousness comes from not being aware — from either simply not thinking about bad or excessive choices, or from embracing blind faith in the self, a God or a system. A seriously ridiculous person is clear-eyed. She knows that idealism is a fool's game to begin with, and that every conviction carries the risk of closed-mindedness. But she takes on belief as a practice, a way of being around others that seeks common ground. The ridiculous man or woman has found a way to connect things within life's inevitably broken landscape. It's an act of reaching out that can never be fully fulfilled, but which changes things in the moment, which is all we really have.
When Bono told a Time magazine reporter in 2002 that the right to be ridiculous was something he held dear, he was criticizing himself, talking about how his ego gets in the way of being open to change. By the time he turned it into a lyric in 2009, he'd changed "be" to "appear" (letting that ego convince him that, on some level, he was being reasonable) and put it into a verse about changing the world. But at its best, Bono's band, U2, achieves seriousness ridiculousness: the ability to lift its fans beyond the moment in which they're stuck, not because they're presenting something better, but by entering that moment, making music that captures its intense emotional shakiness and making a space there that feels like it has room. He should have stuck with "be," because what people love and hate about U2 is the band's insistence that listeners not just watch or listen, but enter into an experience with them.
Ridiculousness is a common stance among the religious and the otherwise radical. Showy rejections of social norms — rags worn, streetcorners stood upon, shouts directed at passersby — complement refusals to accept the political or philosophical status quo. Among artists, ridiculousness can be cultivated, but often it's unthinking: not a conscious attempt to balance socially challenging contradictions, but a product of self-indulgence and overblown ego. Rock and roll ridiculousness started out deep — Little Richard unsettling America's assumptions about race and gender, wailing beneath his magnificent pompadour — but ended up a joke — Spinal Tap's bassist stuffing a zucchini in his pants. Between those two extremes, one a genuinely defiant stance shot through with hope and humor and the other a disastrous manifestation of believing your own hype — anyone who believes that rock music can have impact on people's perspectives has to navigate a path.
From the first time a couple of friends at a Christian high school thought it would be cool to makeKraftwerk-influenced, guitar-driven art rock while calling themselves Bono and the Edge, U2 has been a ridiculous band. It wasn't fame or massive financial success that made it that way: To go on and on, like Dostoevsky's happy evangelist, was the group's original mission. "I think the first concept we had of value was that people who live ordinary lives had extraordinary things in their heads sometimes — most of the time, actually, and that people are extraordinary," Bono told the band's biographer, Neil McCormick, in 2006, going on to quote the Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh: "God creates nothing but geniuses."
This determination to dig for big meaning went against punk's direct assault. It was pretentious. And it manifested musically, not only in Bono's lyrics and vocals, which (in that same book) the Edge associated from the beginning with "speaking in tongues, maybe not divinely inspired but from your own inner jumbled-up psyche," but in the guitarist's love of disorienting effects, the drummer's scattershot intensity, the bass player's aggressiveness.
Songs of Innocence, the album U2 officially releases next week after sharing it with (many say foisting it upon) the world in digital form a month ago, is about becoming ridiculous and hoping to stay that way. Bono's lyrics recount events in his early life: the death of his mother, meeting his wife as a teen, falling for those punk bands that first persuaded him he could be a musician, exploring mild delinquency with friends in the days when U2 was forming. He's trying to figure out exactly when he decided to go all in, to put the energy people around him were devoting to religion or political rebellion into music. From the point, in the song "Raised By Wolves," where he voices a friend's cry of "I don't believe any more" after witnessing an IRA bombing, to the one in "Song For Someone" where Bono implores his future wife, Ali, "There is a light — don't let it go out," he's tracing the evolution of a stubborn optimism that would later make U2 the biggest band in the world, and the one most likely to be accused of overreaching. "It's hard to listen while you preach," Bono sings in "Every Breaking Wave." In these songs, he's also trying to determine if and when he stopped listening.
The music on Songs of Innocence also reaches backward to the sound of the recordings that brought the group to prominence, before the producer Brian Eno guided them toward wide-screen soundscapes. It's punchy, a little off the rails at times, though years of absorbing wider influences make its sound much thicker than what U2 did on October and War. The hit-making younger producers the band enlisted, including Ryan Tedder and Danger Mouse, grew up with U2 and reflect back the band's grandiosity within tighter, sharper, more 21st-century frames.
Songs of Innocence comes together thematically not only because its songs are autobiographical, but because they trace how that original attempt to say more operated in relationship to events in band members' lives, whether personal or, in several cases, political. Critics have scoffed at Bono for writing a song called "The Troubles" that's not about the Irish civil war he lived through as a kid. But the song does feel like the response of an inevitably narcissistic young artist (a teenager in a band, maybe) who decides that "taking on the shape of someone else's pain" doesn't call for protest, but empathy — an empathy that, because this teenager wants every statement to be huge, has to translate as non-specific and open-ended, there for different kinds of ordinary people to witness and emulate.
U2's ridiculous striving to track down something like universal significance worked for many people, maybe especially for listeners who were themselves turning away from specific systems of meaning (like a particular religion or home community) while trying to hang on to the comfort, the sense of being more than yourself, that those systems provided. U2 fans have always been ridiculous, too: like acolytes of the BossBon JoviMary J. Blige and Lana Del Rey, they prioritize emotional investment over critical judgment, loving what their favorite artist provides because of its feel, its overwhelming embrace, instead of its ability to satisfy particular tastes. U2 music can be "bad" by most critical assessments — overblown and meandering, or flailing, trying too hard — and still provide fans with the connection they crave. The insistence of the music is embedded in Edge's prodding guitar lines and in the declarative openness of Bono's singing (of that damned mouth!) Those elements push against a rhythm section that has worked to hold the mess together for decades, making sure that the sound also provides a conventional rock experience. The whole process is excessive (one of U2's original names was the Hype), but not decadent, because decadence is about endings — it's a condition of cultural or personal decline — and U2 always insists on beginning again. The band is like a lover always saying to its fans, "Please, now, let me take your hand."
It's reasonable to question the veracity of such a gesture from a band that's already enjoyed so much success. And in pop, older artists aren't supposed to want the spotlight, except when they're being officially celebrated by the new generation that's replaced them in the marketplace. Bono's insistence that he needs to remain in the middle of things particularly irritates people. But fans know that Bono beyond U2, a political person and a celebrity, is not Bono within U2, a voice still and always trying to find itself. His fame inevitably extends from his work in U2 and reflects back upon it, but every time the band has found renewed success, it's been despite whatever Bono's projected outside the music. From Achtung Baby to All That You Can't Leave Behindto "Vertigo," these renewals have worked only through the interplay of the band, which transforms his personal ridiculousness into that more resonant thing. There's a reason why the band's most enduring song is centered on the line, "We get to carry each other." The higher purpose of U2 as a band is a myth, in some ways; this is also a very profitable business with some questionable practices, and an edifice that must be very hard to contemplate dismantling. But myths are useful structures, able to both counter and distill the personal quirks of those who participate in their ritual.
Serious ridiculousness can devolve into the garden variety, of course, and U2 has taken that dive a few times: with the 1988 album and documentary Rattle & Hum, when the group tried to claim an African-American musical legacy they didn't really understand; and again in 1998, with the Popmart tour, when they became overly impressed with their own cultivated worldliness. Many music critics and other observers think that 2014 is another such moment for the band. Whatever Songs of Innocence sounds like, the way U2 first presented it — as a "gift" paid for by Apple and automatically placed into millions of iTunes user's libraries — alienated many semi- or non-fans who felt encroached upon, data-wise. There's something poignant about a band that's long invested music with powers of conversion — the most evangelical thing about U2, whose Christianity has always been the most secularized and widely interpretable variety — not realizing that for today's perpetually wired consumer, (data) conversion is primarily seen as something that takes up precious bandwidth. In cyberspace, things that arrive without warning or apparent cost are viruses or spam, not gifts.
Even if the mere omnipresence of Songs of Innocence hadn't provoked a fight-or-flight response in unbelievers (an omnipresence that might have been felt differently if a reclusive, controlling or confrontational artist, like PrinceBeyonce or Eminem, had provided the gift instead of an oversharing band), this is a challenging time for U2 to revel in its ridiculous ways. The practice only really works over time, not in the flat, non-linear atmosphere of our social-media dominated culture. The street-corner preacher must bother the ears of passersby for weeks before people start to realize that some wisdom might be embedded in his blathering. Coming through the radio, repetition can be a scourge, but it's also the force that beats a hater's sword into a fan's ploughshare. Hear something repeated enough, and you will form a relationship with it, even if it's ultimately negative. In social media space, however, people are focused on each other; art is more a conduit of conversation than a repository of feeling. That's not to say people don't still have private experiences of art that evolve over time, or that artists don't mean for their work to be received that way. But especially in the public space of the pop mainstream, judgment usually comes first; taste, not feeling, dominates. A band like U2, reliant on a belief in feeling, becomes an object of ridicule.
Can U2 transform this moment of ridicule into one in which they earn the right to be ridiculous? A reversal could take place, but it might require the band focusing on the final attribute that makes seriousness ridiculous sustainable: humility. When All That You Can't Leave Behind signaled its return to form in 2000, U2 actively courted its audience with small club gigs and television appearances. It presented itself as not presuming anything. It's difficult to know what such humble pie might look like in the Yelp age, but Adam Clayton has said that U2 has another album nearly ready, and another chance to be alert to its own contradictions and how they play out in the historical moment. Like Dostoevsky's redeemed man, they'll go on, taking their punches and believing.


Most Police Brutality Is Over Trivial Infractions... Or No Infraction

Nobel Literature Judge Disparages Western Writers As Coddled And Out Of Touch

62 Year Old Doug Seeger: "Homeless In Memphis; Huge In Sweden"

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"I was slapping myself in the face," singer Doug Seegers says of his recent success. "I kept saying, 'Am I dreaming? When am I going to wake up and go back to living under the bridge?'"

Audio File: http://www.npr.org/2014/10/09/354642327/homeless-in-nashville-huge-in-sweden

Homeless In Nashville, Huge In Sweden


Country music fans were introduced to a new face at last month's Americana Music Awards in Nashville, when 62-year-old Doug Seegers opened the show with a song from his debut album,Going Down to the River.
Seegers is originally from Long Island, N.Y., but says he wanted to be a country singer from Day One. He wrote his first song at 16, and, after finishing high school, joined a country band and moved to Austin, Texas, performing under the stage name Duke the Drifter.
"We were not drawing crowds into clubs," Seegers remembers. "I mean, we were playing clubs for $100 a night — that we had to split between the four of us, you know? It was hard. We were living real poor, playing music."
One day, Duke the Drifter just split.
"I didn't even say goodbye to anybody," Seegers says. "For Pete's sake. I just, like, hitchhiked down the road."
He headed back to New York, learned a trade and started a family — but the music bug never left him. Some 20 years later, Seegers said goodbye to his now-grown children and former wife, and headed for Nashville, Tenn., to play music. But again, his music career stalled.
"I didn't feel like I was good enough, to be honest," Seegers says. "When I got to hearing all these musicians and stuff I thought, 'Oh, man, I'm just going to lay back for a few years, and just maybe I'll eventually get up the courage to get out and do something."
Another 17 years passed — and after many years of unsteady work, Seegers ended up homeless, living under a bridge and busking for coins.
Then, last fall, something incredible happened. Jill Johnson, a Swedish singer with her own TV show, came through town. She was shooting footage for a segment about down-and-out musicians and visited a food pantry where Seegers hung out.
"He sat down very calmly and picked up his guitar and just played us this amazing tune, 'Going Down to the River,'" Johnson says, "which made us all just fall into tears. I'm speechless today, still. It was just overwhelming and so beautiful and so real and genuine."
YouTube
Before he knew it, Seegers was whisked off to a studio to record the song for the show. Days after it aired, the song went to No. 1 on Swedish iTunes.
"I was slapping myself in the face," Seegers says. "I kept saying, 'Am I dreaming? When am I going to wake up and go back to living under the bridge?'"
Sweden lacks for country music fans, but Johnson says something about Seegers seemed to moved people.
"I think it's the Cinderella story," she says. "They call him the Cinderella man."
People started sending money to help Seegers. A Swedish label offered him a record deal. A prominent record producer back in Nashville — along with a lot of big-deal session guys — signed on to make the record, and they finished it in three days.
For one track, someone called in a favor with one of Seegers' longtime heroes, Emmylou Harris. Harris recorded her tracks separately — but she was so moved by Seegers' voice that she called him to let him know.
"I pick up the phone and she says, 'Doug, this is Emmylou Harris,'" Seegers says. "And I immediately start crying. I couldn't even talk, I was crying so hard. It was a dream come true for me."
When it was released in Sweden, Seegers' album went to No. 1 and stayed in the top five for 10 weeks. Seegers toured the country, selling out 60 shows. Everywhere he went, he says, people would ask him how he was doing in the United States.
"I made them laugh," he says, "when I answered them by saying: 'They don't know me in America at all.'"
But they may soon. Going Down to the River comes out in U.S. this week.


"The Invisible Front": PTSD, Suicide And The Crippling Cowardice Of American Generals

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Jeff, Melanie, and Kevin at the Great Wall of China on New Year’s 2001. The three Graham children lived together at the University of Kentucky, a testament to the bond between them. This picture is one of the last Mark and Carol have of their children together.  - (Photo courtesy of Mark and Carol Graham)
Jeff, Melanie, and Kevin at the Great Wall of China on New Year’s 2001. The three Graham children lived together at the University of Kentucky, a testament to the bond between them. This picture is one of the last Mark and Carol have of their children together. (Photo courtesy of Mark and Carol Graham)

Yochi Dreazen: "The Invisible Front"

Love And War In An Era Of Endless War

Audio File: http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2014-10-09/yochi-dreazen-invisible-front


Suicides in the military have skyrocketed since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The military’s suicide rate jumped more than 80 percent between 2002 and 2009. One military family is trying to change that. The Grahams lost two sons: one in combat in Iraq and one to suicide. But the Grahams were astonished by the different reactions their deaths received from the Army. The one killed in combat was lauded as a hero, while the other’s death was met with silence. In a new book, Yochi Dreazen, the managing editor of Foreign Policy, shows how this family channeled their grief into working to transform the military’s approach to soldiers with mental illness.

Guests

Yochi Dreazen 
managing editor for news at Foreign Policy and author of the upcoming book "The Invisible Front."

Read An Excerpt

Reprinted from The Invisible Front Copyright © 2014 by Yochi Dreazen. Published by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House LLC.


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Diane Rehm Show: Using Psychedelic Drugs To Treat PTSD And Other Mental Disorders
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/10/diane-rehm-show-using-psychedelic-drugs.html

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Dear C,

Several years ago, I attended a dinner party where I chatted with a wealthy conservative who fought in Vietnam.

When I brought up the issue of PTSD, thinking he would provide "battle-tested" insight, he bellowed: "PTSD my ass! Bunch o' yellow-bellied cowards." (I do not remember the man's exact words but this was clearly his "gist.")

Recently, I saw George C. Scott's "Patton" and was struck by the general's quintessentially "conservative" contempt for soldiers who were not "perfectly" courageous. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_S._Patton_slapping_incidents

I think you will enjoy today's Diane Rehm interview with Yochi Dreazen who has written a book entitled "The Invisible Front: Love And Loss In An Era Of Endless War." http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-invisible-front-ptsd-suicide-and.html

One listener commented that the phrase PTSD is prejudicial and counterproductive since it saddles the sufferer with a "disorder" when, in fact, it is people who are exposed to the horrors of war -- and do NOT experience post-traumatic stress -- who are, generally speaking, the ones with a definable "disorder."

In future, I will speak of Post Traumatic Stress (PTS), a term commonly used by people in the military.

Pax vobiscum

The Doctors and Nurses Who Risk Everything to Fight Ebola in West Africa

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Pictures of three health care workers
Craig Kenzie, Junko Otaki, and Luca Zaliani are among the 57 international health care workers assisting with Ebola treatment at a Médecins Sans Frontières facility in Kailahun, Sierra Leone. 

"Doctors And Nurses Who Risk Everything To Fight Ebola In West Africa"
National Geographic

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Alan: Sadly, I cannot find an NPR Ebola report describing a recent groundswell of opinion in Liberia where citizens want to fire all hospital staff who have had the disease and recovered. 

One of the vermiform horrors roiling the carcass of modern "conservatism" is its evangelical fondness for "common sense," even though scientific knowledge routinely contradicts "common sense." 

"The Death of Epistemology"



As soon as peer-reviewed knowledge replaces fulminating opinion, uninformed blather is revealed for what it is: clear and present danger to political health and social well-being. 

In Liberia, a "common sense" assumption holds that hospital personnel who have suffered the disease - and subsequently recovered - are "sleeper cells" in whom Ebola is only lying dormant. 

In fact, nurses and doctors who have survived Ebola CAN NOT contract the disease again which makes them the very best caregivers for Ebola patients since they can treat them fearlessly, even taking risks if necessary. 

Since recovered doctors and nurses are immune to Ebola, contagion is impossible, which, by definition, means there is NO risk of infecting others and no possibility of contributing to a contagious cascade.

In theory, recovered healthcare workers can even provide "immune serum," by far the most effective treatment for the disease. 

Clearly, there is a great deal to be said for "common sense." 

But people who tout "common sense" have a moral obligation to "innoculate themselves against ignorance and stupidity" by quaffing the antidote of scientific knowledge

Similarly, societies and polities have an obligation to propagate scientific knowledge. 

Absent science, fear fills the void.

And when fear "takes the wheel" so-called "common sense" becomes quick justification for prejudice, oppression and, not infrequently, violence. 


"Armed Men Attack Liberia Ebola Clinic; "Free" Patients, Steal Infected Bedding"


"Rural Guineans Kill 8 Ebola Aid Workers, Stuff Bodies In Village Latrine"


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Afterthought: Although there are many admirable Christians (and other religiously committed people) who undertake the noble work of treating Ebola patients, Doctors Without Borders is a notably secular institution.

"Doctors Without Borders Works To Contain The Spread Of Ebola"
http://www.npr.org/2014/10/09/354754651/doctors-without-borders-works-to-contain-spread-of-ebola?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=world

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"Conservatives Scare More Easily Than Liberals"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/07/conservatives-scare-more-easily-than.html

"Shark Attacks Rise Worldwide: Risk Assessment and Aquinas' Criteria For Sin"

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/02/shark-attacks-rise-worldwide-risk.html


"Theological Implications Of Ebola: Praying For A Cure? Creating A Scientific Cure?"

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/08/theological-implications-of-ebola.html

"John Ford, John Wayne, Aquinas and Theosis (Christian Divinization)"

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/12/more-on-theosis.html


N.C. Police Pepper Spray Black Teen In His Own Home

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"Whites Think Discrimination Against Whites Is A Bigger Problem Than Bias Against Black"

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/10/whites-think-discrimination-against.html

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"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right"

N.C. police pepper spray black teen in his own home


RALEIGH, N.C. -- Police mistook a black teenager for a burglar and pepper-sprayed him inside the home of his white foster parents, authorities said Wednesday.
Responding to a neighbor's report of a break-in, police in the suburban Raleigh town of Fuquay-Varina said they used pepper spray Monday when 18-year-old DeShawn Currie "became profane, threatening and belligerent" and "refused to follow instructions" from officers.
Currie told ABC affiliate WTVD in Raleigh he became angry when three officers showed up inside the home and noted that he was not included in family photos on a mantle.
"They was like, 'Put your hands on the door,'" DeShawn told the television station. "I was like, 'For what? This is my house.' I was like, 'Why are y'all in here?'"
Currie's foster parents, Ricky and Stacy Tyler, said he has been with them for about a year. The Tylers, their three young children and Currie moved into their new home in July and don't know all their neighbors.
Police said there had spate of crimes in the area recently, but did not specifically say how many or what kind. Authorities said when they entered the house, Currie produced identification showing another address.
A police spokeswoman did not respond when asked specifically about what instructions Currie did not follow. Police also have not said how many officers entered the home, their length of service with the department or their race.
Currie said while he's felt supported by the family, he's not sure he can get over this.
"I'm feeling comfortable," explained DeShawn. "I had moved into my room, and I'm feeling like I'm loved. And then when they come in and they just profile me and say that I'm not who I am. And that I do not stay here because there was white kids on the wall, that really made me mad."
"Everything that we've worked so hard for in the past years was stripped away yesterday in just a matter of moments," said Ricky Tyler.
Currie was treated by medical personnel at the scene, police said. No charges were filed.

North Korean Government Reassures Citizens It Has Deep Bench Of Brutal Madmen

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PYONGYANG (The Borowitz Report) — As the mystery surrounding the absence of dictator Kim Jong-un deepens, the North Korean government on Wednesday issued an official statement reassuring its citizens that it had “a deep bench of brutal madmen.”
While it offered no comment about the status of Kim, the statement from the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) emphasized that “making North Korea an authoritarian horror-drome is not the achievement of one man; it has been and will always be a team effort.”

“There are at least twelve highly unbalanced people at the upper echelon of this government who, at a moment’s notice, can imprison an ex-lover, execute a relative, or threaten to incinerate the United States in a sea of fire,” the statement read. “No other government has a roster that strong.”
“As North Koreans, you’ve come to expect a level of mercurial brutality unrivalled by any other country on the planet,” the statement continued. “As your leaders, we promise that will never change.”
In a further effort to reassure the North Korean people, the statement concluded with a declaration of war against Mars.


Republican Party's "Relationship" With Hispanics Spotlights GOP's Delusional Thinking

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Herman's Cain's Proposal For A Lethal Electrified Fence At The Mexican Border
YouTube

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The future of GOP relations with Latinos, in one ad

 October 9, 2014  
When House Republicans killed immigration reform earlier this year, demographically non-delusional members of the party quietly told reporters that the GOP could always do immigration reform in 2015, and begin to repair relations with Latinos in time for the 2016 presidential election.
To judge how realistic this proposition is, take a look at the candidacy of Dan Patrick, the Republican vying to be Lieutenant Governor of Texas.
Patrick, a former radio host who is basing his run on remarkably lurid claims about the need to secure the border, is an important figure to watch to understand the GOP’s trajectory on immigration, and by extension, the party’s future relations with Latinos. Patrick is almost certain to win; he will be in a position of great influence in a state that is home to much of the border with Mexico — and well positioned to pull the party further right on the issue, particularly if another crisis flares up.
To see what this might look like, check out Patrick’s latest ad. It raises the specter of ISIS terrorists crossing the border to kill Americans, links that to his Democratic opponent’s opposition to sending the National Guard to the border and her support for in-state tuition for residents brought to this country illegally. “National security begins with border security — and that begins with the Texas Rangers and National Guard,” Patrick says. “Border security will be my top priority.”
As Ron Brownstein expains, this provides a hint as to the broader GOP radicalization that is underway on immigration, and what that will mean for the 2016 presidential race. It’s occurring in a state that’s home to a lot of Latinos and to Republicans that had previously been moderating on immigration — as evidenced by the fact that Governor Rick Perry signed the tuition policy that Patrick is attacking:
This dramatic shift, in the state that had previously built the most promising conservative model for attracting Hispanics, underscores how thoroughly immigration hard-liners have regained the advantage in the GOP….
President Obama’s pledge to use executive authority to provide some of those undocumented immigrants legal status, the surge of unaccompanied minors from Central America, and rising anxiety over global threats as diverse as ISIS and the Ebola virus have all combined to harden the GOP’s conservative tilt on these issues. Against that backdrop, Republican campaigns this fall are ringing with denunciations of “amnesty” for undocumented immigrants and warnings that terrorists might be surging across the Mexican border.
As Brownstein notes, unlike some Republicans Texas such as Perry and George W. Bush…
Texas Republicans today strike very different notes. Patrick, a state senator and talk-radio host, is the most inflammatory. He has described illegal immigration as an “invasion” and warned that undocumented immigrants “are bringing Third World diseases with them.”
Perhaps Patrick is a rhetorical outlier in the party. But consider the broad sweep of what we’ve seen lately. Arkansas Congressman and Senate candidate Tom Cotton, who is supposed to be a uniter of the Tea Party and GOP establishment, claims that ISIS terrorists are collaborating with Mexican drug gangs to infiltrate the border and kill people in Arkansas. This didn’t really register at all with the national press corps, as if this has now become par for the course. And it has: GOP Rep. Duncan Hunter went on national TV and casually claimed a bunch of ISIS fighters were detained at the border, citing a far right legal group as a source.
Meanwhile, even more “moderate” Republicans running for Senate in purple-ish states, such as Scott Brown and Terri Lynn Land, are flogging the migrant crisis to fear-monger about the border. As David Weigel has noted, Karl Rove’s outside group is running ads hitting Democrats over “amnesty,” even though Rove had previously urged the GOP to adopt immigration reform (which would include said “amnesty”) for the long-term good of the party. RNC chair Reince Priebus — who had alsopreviously urged the GOP to adopt reform, lest its appeal “shrink to its core constituencies only” — recently rolled out another rebrand that appeared to abandon reform as a goal.
House Republicans voted to end Obama’s program to defer deportations of people brought here illegally as children, and will mount another stand if Obama unilaterally expands that program, locking the GOP into a stance that calls for ever more deportations. One imagines Ted Cruz willdemagogue that to the hilt as part of his 2016 presidential run. Even Marco Rubio — the great Latino hope of the GOP — was recently spotted dressing down DREAMers as a crowd of South Carolina conservatives hooted and jeered, another signal of where this is all headed once the GOP primary heats up.
One supposes it’s possible Republicans could pass some species of immigration reform if they take the Senate, but it’s hard to imagine the party moderating on the issue to any meaningful extent at this point. Indeed, this is another argument for Obama to act ambitiously to defer deportations after the elections. Some liberals worry he will lose his nerve if Republicans take the Senate, and commentators have pointed out that Obama’s delay is now hurting Dems among Latinos. But, putting aside thelegal dimensions of the debate over deferring deportations, the raw political incentives favor acting. It could help restore the a dynamic in which Democrats continue establishing themselves as the pro-immigration party while Republicans solidify their image as hostile and unwelcoming to Latinos. As the new Patrick ad and other recent GOP moves suggest, Republicans may be happy to play along. 
Greg Sargent writes The Plum Line blog, a reported opinion blog with a liberal slant -- what you might call “opinionated reporting” from the left.

Why "The South" Is The Worst Place To Live In The U.S. - In 10 Charts

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Looking for a healthier lifestyle? You might want to move to Hawaii. More educated people? You should probably try Montana, Vermont, or Minnesota. Better job prospects? North Dakota. And if you want the best quality of living, pound for pound, the best place to live is New Hampshire.
But if you're trying to avoid places where all of the above are (well) below average, you'll want to stay clear of the South.
That's what data from a new report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) appears to suggest. The report ranked all 50 states (plus the District) according to nine different measures of well-being: health, safety, housing, access to broadband, civic engagement, education, jobs, environment, and income.
A new report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ranks all 50 states in nine different categories. Here are the top five best overall. (Sarah Parnass/The Washington Post)
The study assigned a value from zero to ten (ten being a perfect score, zero being an embarrassment) for each of the nine measures. While no state was perfect, New Hampshire, which scored 77.6, is easily the best anyone can do in the United States, followed by Minnesota (76.2), Vermont (74.8), Iowa (72.9); and North Dakota (72.4).
Meanwhile, there are a number of states — all of them in the South — you might want to avoid. Mississippi, which scored lower than any other state, barely broke 50. Arkansas and Alabama, which tied for second to last, each scored 51.3. West Virginia, which was fourth to last, scored 52.2. And Tennessee, which was fifth to last, scored 52.9.
The South, which performed the worst of any region in the country, is home to eight of the poorest performing states. Only Virginia was in the top 25. And just barely — it placed 22nd.
New Hampshire, as it happens, isn't merely the the best place to live when all nine of the indicators are considered together, as a package. The forested, often frigid, New England state performed better than any other in several subcategories, too.
Take safety, for instance, which the OECD gauged by using crime and homicide data. New Hampshire is the nation's safest state — its score of 9.2 (out of 10) is a full half point higher than that for any other. Vermont and Iowa, which each scored 8.7, were second. And Minnesota, which scored 8.2, was fourth.
Maryland, New Mexico, Louisiana, Mississippi, and the District of Columbia, meanwhile, earned a zero.
New Hampshire is also a great place to find a home — it's one of 15 states, along with Minnesota, Vermont, Iowa, North Dakota, Maine, Wyoming, South Dakota, Ohio, Montana, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Michigan, West Virginia, and Alabama, to receive a perfect 10 for housing, which the OECD measured by considering the number of rooms per person, "housing expenditures," and the number of "dwellings without basic facilities" in each state.
Hawaii, which received a 5.2, and California, which received a 5.6, scored the lowest by this metric.
And earn a living—New Hampshire is one of 14 states (and one district), along with Minnesota, North Dakota, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Virginia, Alaska, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Maryland, Illinois, California, the District of Columbia, to score a perfect ten for income, which the OECD measured by using household net adjusted disposable income and net financial wealth.
Idaho, Mississippi, and Arkansas, which scored 7.1, 7.2, and 7.2, respectively, were the three poorest performing states by this measure.
New Hampshire offers some of the best broadband connections, too. It's 8.9 score tied with Washington for the highest in the country.
But that's where New Hampshire's reign ends.
The healthiest state in the country (measured by life expectancy at birth and self-reported health status) is, far and away, Hawaii, which received a score of 8.8, a full point higher than that of any other. Minnesota, Connecticut, and California, each of which received a 7.8, tied for second, and New York, which managed a 7.5, was fifth.
Mississippi, Alabama, and West Virginia, meanwhile, each scored less than 2. The discrepancy is such that a person living in Hawaii can expect to live more than six years longer than one living in Mississippi, the report explains.
The state with the best job opportunities, as measured by employment rates, average annual earnings per employee, and job tenure, is North Dakota, which scored a 9.9. Next is Nebraska, which scored a 9.6, South Dakota, which scored a 9.4, and Vermont, which scored a 9.3.
Mississippi, California, and Nevada, meanwhile, scored 5.3, 5.4, and 5.4, respectively—the lowest of all 50 states.
The state with the cleanest environment, as measured by air and water quality, is Alaska, which scored a perfect 10. Hawaii, which scored 9.8, was second; Oregon, which scored 9.7, was third; and Washington, which scored 9.7, was fourth.
Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New York, which scored 5.3, 5.7, and 5.7, respectively were last. And the District of Columbia scored 4.5, lower than any of the 50 states.
The most educated states, according to educational attainment, students' cognitive skills, and years in education, are Vermont, Minnesota, and Montana, which each scored 9.7. The least are Texas, Mississippi, and California, which scored 8, 8.1, and 8.1, respectively.
And the most politically engaged is Mississippi, which scored 6.9 (after discounting the District of Columbia, which scored 7.2).
Overall, the regional picture that emerges is rather clear.
New England fares extremely well by just about every measure. At best, states in the region are among the highest in the country and at worst they're still above average. The Midwest scores fairly well as well, too. The Pacific Northwest is a good but not great place to live, by the OECD's measure. The Southwest is surprisingly underwhelming.And if OECD's rating system is to be taken seriously, everyone might be better off living somewhere other than the South.


Roberto A. Ferdman is a reporter for Wonkblog covering food, economics, immigration and other things. He was previously a staff writer at Quartz.

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A Surprising Tie Holds Hong Kong Protesters Together: Christian Faith

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A student prays in front of a temporary altar during a rally outside government headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 24.
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Many of the activists were educated at missionary schools, which informed their sense of social and political justice. It's sure to be noticed by Beijing, which sees religion as a threat to its rule.
Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of Hong Kong recently, demanding democracy and grabbing global attention.
Many threads have run through the protests, which began late last month, including one that might seem surprising: faith. Many of the leaders are Christian, and some cite faith as an inspiration.
When Hong Kong's Occupy Central group first announced last year it was planning pro-democracy demonstrations, it did so in a church in the city's Kowloon section. The group's full name is Occupy Central with Love and Peace, in the Christian spirit, and its top leaders include a minister and a law professor who is also Christian.
Many leaders of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement are Christians. Protesters erected this shrine to protect themselves from attack.
Frank Langfitt/NPR
"There are many Christians and Catholics among the pro-democracy leaders in Hong Kong, the older generation," says Joseph Cheng, who teaches political science at City University of Hong Kong.
Cheng, 65, is also a pro-democracy activist and a Christian himself. He says many of the movement's leaders were educated in Hong Kong's Christian missionary schools, which helped shape their beliefs.
"There is this Christian spirit," says Cheng, who wears a yellow ribbon pinned to his shirt pocket — a symbol of the movement. "You are more willing to suffer. Social justice means more to you."
Cheng says another reason Christians have been drawn to the democracy push in Hong Kong is the way they feel about the Communist Party in Beijing.
"Christians, all over the world, tend to be distrustful of the communist parties, naturally," says Cheng with a laugh. "If you are a Christian in China, if you are a Christian in Hong Kong, you know the Chinese Communist regime has been suppressing Christianity for many decades."
Officials in the east China province of Zhejiang have ordered crosses removed and the destruction of government-approved churches in what appears to be one of the toughest crackdowns on Christianity in many years.
David Zweig, a professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and a longtime political observer, says the Chinese Communist Party must be eyeing the Christian connection in Hong Kong warily.
"They see any religion that has an alternative explanation for the future, that has an organizational capacity as a threat," Zweig says.
Sing Ming, a pro-democracy activist, Christian and scholar, emphasizes that the pro-democracy movement is not faith-based and some Protestant churches oppose it.
"A number of pastors, they come out in a very high-profile manner, attacking the desirability of this entire movement," he says. "They have been extremely politically conservative in the past, so actually the local Protestant churches are quite divided."
Christianity isn't the only belief system that has a presence in the protest movement. In Mong Kok, a neighborhood known for gangsters and mainland shoppers, protesters have built on a bamboo and metal barricade a shrine to an ancient Chinese general some refer to as Guan Gong.
Protesters in Hong Kong's Mong Kok neighborhood erected a shrine to an ancient Chinese general to protect them from police, who fired tear gas at them last week, and gangsters, who beat them.
Frank Langfitt/NPR
"He's kind of a god for war and loyalty and brotherhood," says Kevin Tsang, a nurse and one of hundreds protesting in the neighborhood Thursday.
Tsang says both gangsters, known in Hong Kong as triads, as well as police worship the general for protection. Protesters have had trouble with gangsters, who they say attacked them last week — they believe on behalf of the government. They've also had trouble with cops, who fired tear gas at them.
Tsang says demonstrators built the shrine to the general to send a message to their antagonists: Guan Gong is on our side.
"We want this god to punish whoever tries to hurt unarmed citizens," says Tsang, 24, who wears a gray, cardigan-style sweater.
If that doesn't work, protesters have built another shrine at another barricade two blocks away, this one with a picture of Jesus and an open Bible.

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