Month: May 2004

  • DAN’S BOOK….80+ PAGES AND COUNTING!!!


    You’re gonna laugh, cry, and rethink the world we live in…


    Things are gonna change, college education is going to change, and this is the beginning…


    As a political liberal, here’s one more reason we need to change college, to encourage liberal college students to become active in politics…



    OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR


    For Conservatives, Mission Accomplished


    By JOHN MICKLETHWAIT and ADRIAN WOOLDRIDGE

    Published: May 18, 2004






















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    TIMES NEWS TRACKER

      Topics

    Alerts
    Republican Party


    American Conservative Union


    Micklethwait, John


    Wooldridge, Adrian




    Last week Washington was the site of the biggest birthday party you never heard of. The occasion was the 40th anniversary of the American Conservative Union, and the guest list included all the grandees of right-wing America, from Senator Mitch McConnell to Phyllis Schlafly to Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association to, of course, President Bush.


    In his speech, the President promised that “for our blessed land the best days lie ahead,” and was greeted with several foot-stomping ovations and cries of “Four more years!” But the real flavor of the event was captured by what the president called the “fine group of decent citizens” gathered at the tables in front of him — members of the N.R.A., the Heritage Foundation, the Family Research Foundation and countless other groups that make up Conservative America. One man wore a tie with the Ten Commandments; women carried handbags in the colors of the American flag; and when the narrator of a film about the conservative union used the phrase “right-wing nuts,” the room roared its approval.


    This is the type of partisan anniversary that only one side of America pays attention to — the side that watches Fox News Channel (the host for the evening was that network’s Tony Snow). Yet every Democratic politician in the land could have learned a great deal by attending. It would be going a little far to say that the A.C.U. ought to have celebrated under a banner labeled “Mission Accomplished,” but it is because of such groups that the right has out-organized, out-fought and out-thought liberal America over the past 40 years. And the left still shows no real sign of knowing how to fight back.


    To consider the ground that liberals have ceded, one must look back at the union’s founding in a cramped living-room in 1964, a few days after Lyndon B. Johnson had thrashed the first fully paid-up conservative presidential candidate, Barry Goldwater. Back then, the self-styled “Mr. Conservative” seemed to come from another planet. “When in all our history,” asked the political theorist Richard Hofstadter, “has anyone with ideas so bizarre, so archaic, so self-confounding, so remote from the basic American consensus got so far?”


    Fast forward to today. A Republican Party that is more conservative than Mr. Goldwater could have imagined controls the White House, Congress, many governors’ mansions and a majority of seats in state legislatures. Back in 1964, John Kenneth Galbraith smugly proclaimed: “These, without doubt, are the years of the liberal. Almost everyone now so describes himself.” Today, a Gallup poll tells us, twice as many Americans (41 percent) describe themselves as “conservative” than as “liberal” (19 percent).


    Democrats have come up with all sorts of excuses, from the evils of Richard Nixon’s “Southern strategy” to the “stolen” election of 2000. They usually ignore the fact that the right has simply been far better at producing agenda-setting ideas. From welfare reform in Wisconsin to policing in New York City, from the tax-cutting Proposition 13 in California to regime change in Baghdad, the intellectual impetus has, for better or worse, come from the right. As President Bush bragged at last week’s party, the right is “the dominant intellectual force in American politics.”


    Yet many Democrats insist this will change once Mr. Bush is ejected from the White House. This shows how little they have learned. First, the right has a history of advancing its agenda under Democratic executives (welfare reform came about under Bill Clinton). More important, it has organized itself for a much longer battle. Whenever it has been forced into retreat — as after Watergate — the flame has burned eternal at places like Heritage, the American Enterprise Institute and the Cato Institute, and at their smaller cousins in virtually every state.


    Brains are nothing without political brawn. That’s why the American Conservative Union disciplines Congressional Republicans by rating them according to their purity (the average rating for House Republicans has risen from 63 percent in 1972 to 91 percent in 2002). Yes, liberal environmental and abortion rights groups rate members of Congress too, but those figures are more effective as fodder for conservative attack ads than as a way to keep Democrats in line.


    There are other battalions of foot soldiers, too. Americans for Tax Reform, which had a table at the dinner, rigidly enforces the party’s pledge not to raise taxes. Focus on the Family (which has a campus in Colorado Springs so big that it has its own ZIP code) concentrates on promoting family values. Sometimes these groups feud — Cato libertarians have plenty of differences with Focus on the Family’s social conservatives — but as all the back-slapping at the party showed, they share a sense of movement.


    In theory, liberals have more than enough brain and brawn to match conservative America. The great liberal universities and foundations have infinitely more resources than the American Enterprise Institute and its allies. But the conservatives have always been more dogged. The Ford Foundation is as liberal as Heritage is conservative, but there is no doubt which is the more ruthless in its cause.


    Now, perhaps, a few liberals are waking up to the task that confronts them. Americans Come Together, a group backed by the billionaire George Soros, already has 20 offices and 450 employees in Ohio alone. John Podesta, a former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, has founded the Center for American Progress, which Democrats are calling “the liberal Heritage.” But it still seems that liberals are purely reactive. Barry Goldwater may have been strong meat, but at least he had ideas. By contrast, Americans Come Together’s entire raison d’être (like that of the John Kerry campaign) remains negative: to send Mr. Bush back to Texas.


    “There is no such thing as spontaneous public opinion,” Beatrice Webb, the great British leftist, once said. “It all has to be manufactured from a center of conviction and energy.” The American Conservative Union is just one of many such centers on the right; it’s a lesson that liberal America seems unable to learn.



    John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, writers for The Economist, are the authors of “The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America.”

  • ARSENAL, UNDEFEATED PREMIERSHIP CHAMPIONS


    Thierry Henry, Patrick Vieira and Arsene Wenger enjoy Arsenal's open-top bus ride


     


     


     


     


     


    Thierry Henry shows the Premiership trophy to the fans


    Sol Campbell holds the Premiership trophy aloft


    Highbury hosts a giant street party for the champions


    Players and their family enjoy the crowd's plaudits


    Freddie Ljungberg takes to the balcony to the cheers of the crowd


    Patrick Vieira and Arsene Wenger


    pitbull Tootsie


    2 YEARS AGO, I WAS IN LONDON TO CELEBRATE!!!  NOW, I CELBRATE IN SPIRIT FROM SOUTH AFRICA.  SOUTH AFRICA, BY THE WAY, JUST GOT THE BID FOR THE 2010 SOCCER WORLD CUP, GET YOUR TICKETS NOW, IT’S GONNA BE HISTORY IN AFRICA!!!

  • Topic: Cape Town


    While most of my writing has been about serious topics, I want to remind everyone where I am.  Cape Town, one of the most beautiful cities I’ve seen.  Today, I went for a hike w/ 2 Brits and my friend Matt from the hostel.  3,000ft. later, we were on top of Devil’s Peak.  Along the way, we had amazing views of both the Indian and Atlantic Oceans, the city, the suburbs, the rugby and cricket stadiums, the distant mountains that looked like they were floating, since their bases were covered in clouds.  Simply an amazing day.


    I’ve heard back from the NYT writer, more to come…
    I’ve heard back from the President of Outward bound, more to come…
    I’m planning a presentation about my book and ideas to give at the Outward Bound World Conference in Malaysia, more to come…

    And, my feet are really, really tired.  Also, I was too tired to cook dinner, so I had apple pie.  I enjoy cooking, i do.  But nothing beats good ol’ fashion laziness.


    -dan

  • Topic: Trying to make it happen


    Here’s an e-mail I just sent to this guy, Greg Winter, a writer for the New York Times, who wrote an article in Dec. about my school, Wash U., which is the basis of my book, which I’ve given a title to, “The Crises At Washington University: The First Step Towards Improving Higher Education” to be available this summer!!!






    Dear Greg Winter,
    I got your e-mail from Ann Lee. I found an interview
    on the internet of her and yourself for the National
    Society of Collegiate Scholars, and she helped me find
    your e-mail. I hope you don’t mind…
    I am currently writing a book titled, “The Crises at
    Washington University in St. Louis: The First Step
    Towards Improving Higher Education” I graduated from
    Wash U in May 2003, and despite its #9 ranking in the
    US News and World Reports, I have spoken to many
    students and have reflected on my own experience, and
    have concluded that while the school has risen in the
    rankings, it has a handful of problems that are long
    overdue for discussion.
    I am self-publishing and distributing my book around
    Wash U next fall semester in an attempt to make all
    students and faculty aware of what college has been
    lacking for some time, and offering some suggestions.
    My goal is to then get students and faculty to have
    seroius discussions about such realities as student
    apathy, cynicism, mental health problems related to
    school stress such as migraines and depression,
    alienation and loneliness, feelings of inadequacy, and
    several other effects of a system that has separated
    school from real life.
    I am informing you about my book becaues of an article
    you write, 12/22/03 titled, “A Mighty Fund Raising
    Effort Helps Lift A College’s Rankings.” The
    conclusion I drew from the article led me to write
    this unpublished letter to the times:

    “Washington University and its 6 figure price tag left
    much to be desired of my education, and left me
    questioning the value of a degree that required bare
    minimum qualifications to obtain. Shouldn’t the
    calliber of education be ahead of the caliber of its
    fundraising, for an institution that wants the title,
    “America’s Best University?”

    In the last 6 months, there has been no article to
    calm my concern about the status of higher education.
    A recent article just upset me more. The article is
    “How I Spent Summer Vacation: At Getting-Into-College
    Camp,” by Tamar Lewin, April, 18, 2004. Again, I sent
    a letter, which was again unpublished by the Times:

    “The college prep programs discussed in the article,
    “How I Spent Summer Vacation,” reflect a dangerous
    trend in all of education. Their message to parents
    and students is to value grades, resumes, and the
    status provided by a schools name, over learning and
    life experience. The money spent on these programs
    could be better used on truly enriching programs, such
    as those that send students abroad to explore other
    cultures. Also, the messsage that parents must not
    forget to tell their kids, is that what they do in
    college and after are much more important than the
    outcomes of the college admissions process.”

    I’m only 22, one year out of college. I’m currently
    in Cape Town, South Africa, writing my boook. I have
    been here 5 months now, spending 3 working as an
    outdoor education instructor for Outward Bound South
    Africa. I read the NYT online whenever I can, and
    reading the articles about higher educatoin over the
    last several months has left me confused as to why
    I’ve only seen the types of articles that praise
    college education and market schools as well. I’m
    starting to think maybe I’m the first to view typical
    student issues such as resenting grades and desiring
    to skip class in order to pursue other life
    experiences as not simply part of the college
    experience, but symptoms of a college crises! The
    system is having an ill effect on 1000s of college
    students, and these are the people who enter the real
    world in a stage of confusion, and comprise what is
    another issue, the 20-something depression/existential
    crises.

    When I read your article about Wash U, I thought to
    myself, “There’s no journalistic reason why the NYT
    couldn’t cover the other realities of college.” In
    fact, I felt it would be important that they did.

    I’m writing you because I’m an idealist with no
    connections. You’re writing for the biggest paper in
    America, and I’m sure you have many more connections
    than that, plus as a college grad yourself, I’m sure
    you can understand some of the things I’m writing
    about. You may have felt some frustrations with
    college yourself. I believe we all have.

    Please let me know if you can in some way help me get
    my word and ideas out. If you’re interested, I can
    help clear up some of what I’m writing about, since I
    probably haven’t done the best job at explaining it
    all to you in this e-mail. Thank you for your time.

    -Dan Lilienthal


     

  • Here is a comment by SHABOY left on my last post.  People are quick to comment on politics, and to criticize others.  Here is a chance to see what freedom of speech and deomcracy are about.  They’re about accountability.  SHABOY is demonstrating what it means to be truly American, to be patriotic.  Ask yourself, is this how we want America to be viewed?  We need to find common ground and work up, and try to tear each other down, use racist slurt like “towel heads,” not call each other “dicks.”   


    yeah towel heads are great people. they just released a video of the beheading of an american contractor but you’re right they’re the victims. I’d tell you to go suck a dick but then again you probably already are.


    Topic: America’s future


    Politicians have had their chance with the world.  The world is still an ugly place.  Everywhere we look, we see news, and we see politics, and we assume that the future of the world is determined by a few.  I don’t believe that.


    I believe the future is determined by a generation.  In college, we have tens of thousands of idealistic, energetic, individuals, who, if it were financially sound, would pursue careers where they were educating the young, and helping the disadvantage stand on their own feet.  They would be working as activists, and pursuing idealistic goals.


    Fortunately, there’s me.  I’m going to start to change everything.  I’m going to free students, first from traditional college, and in so doing. I will also be freeing them to become active in the future of America.  Democracy is the freedom of politics.  What this country needs is the financial freedom to pursue good, to pursue what is good for humanity, not simply shareholders and CEO’s.


    The next generation will be the first to be internet savvy.  The first to be financially and psychologically prepared to enter into careers where the purpose is improving humanity.  The next generation will be the first to have not only Vietnam as part of our history, but the deaths of American soldiers in Iraq as well.  The next generation will not tolerate another war.  You fall into a hole once, it’s a mistake, a second time, you’re just not being careful, a third time, and you’re just being damn stupid. 


    -Dan

  • HERE’S A PICTURE OF MY HOME, THE GREEN ELEPHANT…I SPEND A LOT OF TIME UP ON THAT BALCONY, ENJOYING THE COMPANY, PLAYING WITH THE DOG DIFA.  VERY LAKKER (if you don’t know what lakker means, you have to visit south africa)


    Is that a dog on the wall?


    MANDELA SLAMS US, UK!!!


    I don’t know if this was in anyone elses news, but yesturday, Nelson Mandela gave a speach to commemorate 10 years of S. African democracy. 


    “WE WATCH AS TWO OF THE LEADING DEMOCRACIES, TWO LEADING NATIONS OF THE FREE WORLD, GET INVOLVED IN A WAR THAT THE uNITED nATOINS DID NOT SANCTOIN; WE LOOK ON WITH HORROR AS REPORTS SURFACE OF TERRIBLE ABUSES AGAINST THE DIGNITY OF HUMAN BEINGS HELD CAPTIVE BY INVADING FORCES IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY.  WE SEE HOW THE POWERFUL COUNTRIES, ALL OF THEM SO-CALLED DEMOCRACIES, MANIPULATE MULTI-LATERAL BODIES TO THE GREAD DISADVANTAGE AND SUFFERING OF THE POORER DEVELOPING NATIONS.”


    “IN A CYNICAL WORLD, [SOUTH AFRICA] IS AN INSPIRATION TO MANY.”


    And…i love this opinion article in the Cape Times,


    “The US government rules the most powerful nation in the world, both economically and militarily.  Morally, however, it has little to teach and much to learn, and it is long overdue that it be disabused of the view that the US is the progenitor of democracy, or, indeed, that it is its latter-day flag-bearer.”


    The US has lost its way.  We’re like the 2000 NY Mets, we made  it to the World Series on guts and glory, but collapsed the next year.  The question is, does America have to undergo rebuilding years, or will they be like the NY Yankees and try to buy more championships?


    Actually…maybe we’re more like the Yankees in that we’ve spent our way to the top.  The best economy and military says it all.  But, at our roots, we’re a morally empty country in terms of our political leadership. 


    However, I am optimistic things will improve in the next decades.  The youth of America are the first generation to grow up with internet to connect with the world.  This generation is travelling more than our parents.  It is easier to get in touch with other cultures.  Bush, Kerry, and probably the presidential candidates for the next election are of an older generation.  A generation that grew up with whites being superior to blacks.  A generation where it was acceptable to never leave the country, as Bush never did.  I am optimistic.


    I am also realizing that South Africa, as Mandela said, will be a model nation.  Despite their social problems, there is a unique buzz about this place.  People are here from all over the world to help in some way.  They are in contention to get the soccer World Cup in 2010, which they’ll know by Sat.  Unlike America, which hosted a world cup that most people didn’t know about, for S. Africa it would be like landing a man on the moon.  Things are still exciting here.  Plus, I have had a chance to work with what I believe are 3 major programs that will assist in building a country with strong values, Outward Bound, Lovelife, and Chrysalis. 


    So much more to write…


    I’m still playing around w/ my xanga, finally got rid of the skin, so I now have found a way to change my heading and add some websites, although the links aren’t quite working yet.


    Everyday, I’m developing new ideas for my writing, and for what I’m doing with my life.  I realized I really want to travel America.  I realized that it’s ok to have a job where you fix stone on buildings.  I realized it’s ok to be 36 and not interested in “reading or books,” but to have traveled to every continent.  I realized that it’s ok to be overweight if you’re fun to hang out with.  I realized it’s ok to crack corny jokes and still be a genuine person.  I realized it’s ok to not speak to your parents for 3 years, and still be kind.  I’ve learned to judge nobody, to get past the initial facts, and find the good in everyone.  I’ve learned you can go to an Ivy league school, and still be a down-to-earth goofy person.  Traveling has brought me across all sorts of people, and has taught me many things.


     

  • I think I want to hitchike around america…

  • TOPIC: CALLING ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADS


    Ok…so, i’m working day and night to figure out the logistics of my book.  I just got free computer and internet access at my hostel, which also has a pool, jacuzzi, and now a pizza maker, so my last 3 weeks in Cape Town, South Africa, should be good ones.


    And I realized, the only reason that my ideas for improving college are so far-fetched, is that it’s all coming from my mouth.  I know that just about the majority agrees with what i’m saying, i can see the frustration of every student blog on Xanga. 


    The issue is getting all those voices into a format that will make professors cringe, will make administrators take pause, and will make the nation take notice.  Just think, if it weren’t for those photos of Iraqis being abused by American soldiers, people might still have nothing to really criticize about our country.  Now…that publicity might change everything.


    This idea i have might change everything.  By producing a book full of the writings and feelings of students, and getting it out there so it’s in every college bookstore, in dorms, cafeterias, all over campus, that’s how we do this.


    That’s how we return college education to the students.  There’s certainly enough frustrated students, who are literally wasting their time and effort for the sake of grades and degrees that will have no bearing on the rest of their lives.  Now, it’s just a matter of getting the voices together.


    -Dan

  • TOPIC: HAHA, I TOLD YOU SO


    Dan’s school exists!!!  My ideas for what college could be, are in fact a reality.  I just met an extremely interesting, normal, intelligent, passionate, down to earth girl who goes to this school called Johnston.  It’s like no college you’ve ever heard of.


    http://johnston.redlands.edu/learning/classes.php3


    Imagine a school with no grades, but course evaluations instead.
    A school where students helped design their own curriculums
    A school where all students study abroad
    A school where nobody fell in sleep during class out of boredom


    This is that school.  The question is, will it remain unknown, or will the likes of Traditional colleges change their ways?


    And…I got the go ahead from Outward Bound to give a presentation on my idea for improving college, at the OB International World Conference in Malaysia this Oct.  My hope is to inspire a way to merge OB values into college.  Get pumped people, get pumped, because I sure am!!!


    I’m talking online w/ some friends from college right now…there’s a weird feeling in my stomach of not being able to share my experience with them, and not being able to see how their lives are.  I’m realizing how keeping in touch is cool, but at some point you need to see these people.  I’m planning a huge bbq at my house when i’m home, hopefully see some faces, and a college reunion in the fall.  At the same time, i’m meeting people here to fill the void, but soon, those people too will vanish from my lives.  Life has so many of these passings and goings, it’s tough, but it’s life.


    My hostel, the Green Elephant, just got a pizza maker.  We christened it tonight, fresh dough, peppers, mushrooms, pineapple.  Amazing.


    Last night went to the Cape Town wine festival. Learned a bit, had some delicious woody flavored Chardonay’s, ate a lot of cheese, met some people, passed out at the end, and had some strangers drive me back to my hostel.  The world is a friendly place.  Just had a memory of me dancing with African street performers as well.  My African dance class is really coming in handy now!!!


    I’ve heard of people traveling around Africa w/ no money, so they had to rely on asking others for help.  Sounds like an amazing way to get to experience poverty, as well as to experience humanity.


    Met a guy from Jo’burg, 35, electrician and musician, but prefers music.  Spent time in Scotland picking mushrooms and selling them to restaurants.  That paid his rent.  Now, he’s trying to make the leap into becoming a full time musician.  Making a hobby into a profession takes a lot of guts and confidence in your work.  Hope this guy makes it.


    Met a guy, late 30′s from England.  Went on an Outward Bound course when he was 14.  Said he loved it.  Came to South Africa in ’95 for the Rugby World Cup, thought that elephants would be running round the streets.


    Just saw a commercial for South Africa’s bid for the 2010 World Cup.  You sense that there’s such a thing as things being “a big deal,” in South Africa.  I bet the average american has never heard of the soccer World Cup, let alone the fact that America hosted it in the ’90′s.


    This girl Casey, who studies at Johnston College, spent a day w/ some township kids.  The other American girls w/ her spent the whole time talking about their tans.  She can’t understand how people can come to South Africa and not be interested in anything going on here.  Then again, she can’t understand why every other college in America besides hers gives students grades rather than personal evaluations, or, why students don’t love school like students at hers.


    Chelsea got knocked out of the Champions league to Monaco.  After going up 2-0 on some amazing goals, they were tied 3-3 in aggregate goals, since they lost 3-1 in Monaco.  However, a late header at the half put Monaco up, and a second half goal sealed the deal.


    Writing…so much i want to write and say.  I think i’m more focussed now than ever, especially about the book.  Thinking of adding a wiffle ball componant to my book tour.  Visit schools, and organize home run derby’s.


     







  • Topic:


    I think i’m going to Malaysia in October, check out the outward bound world conference, then travel there and Thailand.  I’m gonna publish my book, but i’m not gonna push it so much anymore.  I’m having this whole questioning of meaning thing.  Whatever, I’m just gonna do what I enjoy doing, everyone else can figure out shit for themselves.  I’m not giving up, just relaxing.  From now on…no more rambling about education.  And I’ve realized, despite some people coming to my site, i don’t get any feedback, except dara, i love you dara.  and…well, that’s discouraging, not asking for feedback, it’s just, ugh…that’s how it feels.  It’s like i’m pouring my whole world out into this void, this vacuum. 


    Oh…and i’ve also decided, although this, like everything, is subject to change, that I’m sick of people being anti-things.  True…i’m being anti-something now, but that’s just to make a point.  My aim in life is to be 100%, 100% of the time, and being anti-anything means being pissed off.  Plus, people who are anti-something usually make giant assumptions about others.  For example, being anti-materialism usually brings in the assumption that, “these people aren’t really happy, they’re all into image,…etc. etc.” 


    But, I was thinking, everything is material.  Traveling is material, so is knowledge, and anything to do with entertainment and culture.  Everyone is equally materialistic.  It’s interesting that rich people don’t go on about the need to stop people from pursuing leisure, from watching tv, going on vacation.  People with money can be happy with their money, and happy with things that they buy.  But, people without money often aren’t as happy as they claim, because what we want to make us happy requires money.  I may bitch about some rich person who owns their own plane as being wasteful and materialistic, but in reality, i’m just friggin’ jealous that they’re rich and can own such things.  Plus…who am i to judge or mindread that they’re buying an image. 


    The hard thing to do, is to find happiness without money.  If you have no money, and you’re happy, then you don’t need to attack others for being materialistic.  Ideally…we can all live together.  We need rich people with fancy toys, because it allows us poor people to become friends with them and use their toys, and it allows rich people the satisfaction of sharing their toys with friends.  We’re all more materialistic than someone, so it’s nonesense to go on about anti-materialism this and that.  The world goes round, life goes on, and life is too short to be pissed off.


    My philosophy on writing has always been intended to be positive in town only.  It’s about discussing things we do, things that are good in the world, and pushing those things we like, not attacking things we don’t.  In true democratic and capitalistic form, the better ideas will win.  And just think…despite the many imperfections in civilization today, we’re still a mere 2004 years old or so.  We get so worked up about seeing perfection in our century or less of life.  My contribution to the cause is just being positive and promoting fun and laughs.  I think i’ve become a bit serious in my movement to change college.  I still want it to change, but, not by force, or by extremism, or screaming. 


    I’m gonna go grab a beer, read the paper, write, have a chicken pie for dinner, meet some foreign girls at the backpackers, play some pool, and have a goodnight.  That’s how i plan on changing the future.


    Peace out, mo fo’s. 









    Topic