Friday, January 17, 2014

Fox News: Right turn into irrelevancy

Bill O'Reilly serves up a favorite whipping-post story tailored to Fox News' conservative viewership. /Fox News image

A battle for the heart and soul of the Grand Old Party is about to rage in congressional districts across the country. Then in 2016, the Republicans will get a shot at an open seat in the White House.

There's a bitter irony ahead for FOX News chief Roger Ailes and other conservative Republican kingmakers. Fox News has been successful in energizing the far-right of American politics, but the candidates and policies generating the most passion in the Republican Party are now so extreme that winning a presidential election seems unlikely.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Benghazi, dead diplomats and scoring political points

The April 1983 U.S. Embassy bombing in Beirut, Lebanon, killed 63 people.

Politics can get ugly, but the partisan bluster over Benghazi is revolting.

U.S. embassies and consulates are among the most dangerous places on Earth ... easy and frequent targets for the enemies of America.

U.S. diplomatic missions have been flash points for assassination attempts and bombings for decades. The April 1983 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut is among the deadliest attacks, with 63 killed including 17 Americans. The Beirut embassy bombing was followed in October 1983 by suicide bomber attacks on U.S. Marine and French paratrooper barracks in Beirut, with 241 U.S. troops killed.

For those keeping track of the political points, Ronald Reagan was president in 1983.

In Benghazi, four Americans were killed at the U.S. consulate on Sept. 11, 2012.

It's a tragedy whenever lives are lost.

It's a farce to play politics with casualties at U.S. diplomatic missions.

American troops suffered heavy losses during the 1968 Tet Offensive in Vietnam, including a deadly attack on the U.S. Embassy in Saigon. /Image via historyimages.blogspot.com

U.S. consulate building in Benghazi, Libya, September 2012. /Image via amnesty.org

Al-Qaida-linked Egyptian Islamic Jihad bombed the US. Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, in August 1998. About 212 people were killed and more than 4,000 were wounded. /Image via www.newstimeafrica.com



Sunday, January 12, 2014

Racism New England-style: This is how we do it

The state of New Hampshire has meted out a slap on the wrist for a supervisory-level employee who walked around her office referring to Chocolate Babies as "Nigger Babies." After the supervisor was "investigated," she was promoted to a position of higher authority over more workers.

All three of the New England states where I have lived have a problem with race.

The economic disparity of American racism is on full display in Connecticut, my birthplace. The Constitution State has historically been the top per-capita income state in the country, with four of the nation's poorest cities, where the people of color live.

Boston has been dragged kicking and screaming into racial harmony, from Elijah "Pumpsie" Green to public school busing, to the ongoing slow pace of economic development in blighted minority neighborhoods.

There are some hardcore, KKK-like racists in New Hampshire. If you have lived here long enough, you have probably seen them. The classic sighting is two white guys in a pickup truck, with two big stars and bars flags flying from either side of the truck bed.

But most New Hampshire racists have prejudice based in ignorance. Just a sampling of quotes from working folk and professionals in my 3-plus years in the state prove the point:

  • "Yeah, some of the worst niggers I know are white." -white male, construction worker, commenting on lack of racial diversity in New Hampshire
  • "I don't know what you are, but you sure are beautiful." -white male, doctor, trying to put move on woman of color
  • "When we were little, do you know what we called these? Nigger babies." -white woman, state of New Hampshire supervisory-level employee, commenting in the workplace to several colleagues about Chocolate Baby candies
Earl Wilson, left, the first black Red Sox pitcher, and Elijah "Pumpsie" Green, the first black Red Sox fielder, hang out in the dugout on Aug. 30, 1959. A decade earlier, the Red Sox held tryouts for Jackie Robinson and Willie Mays, declining to sign both Hall of Famers. /Leslie Jones photo via Boston Public Library

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Journalism mission marches forward

New Year's Eve fireworks in Market Square, Portsmouth, N.H. /Seacoastonline.com photo by Ioanna Raptis

Nearly 18 years ago, I looked into a computer screen for the first time as a professional journalist and wrote:
By Christopher Cheney
Staff Writer

Later this month, I return to fast-paced writing as a journalist at HealthLeaders Media. Given the pressures in the journalism industry, it is humbling to continue working as a journalist. It also is a great honor to report on the U.S. health care industry at a key time in its evolution.

The change sweeping through U.S. health care is hard to underestimate and the stakes are astronomical. Innovation at the institutional and market level are in full swing, or rearing back to swing, across the country.

A hospital CEO recently told me: "We need to keep people out of the hospital." Clearly change is here.

I look forward to reporting on the reform efforts in the health care industry: working with professionals in the medical field to understand both fundamentals and emerging trends, then sharing stories with valuable information for those inside and outside the boardroom.

As Bullwork of Democracy closes in on 15,000 page views, I also look forward to producing more valuable journalism with this blog.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

9/11 scam: The death of shame in America

Firefighters help an injured comrade at the World Trade Center in New York City on Sept. 11, 2001. /Image via nationalgeographic.com

One of my best friends has a dire view of modern America: The only way you can get ahead is to do something illegal or unethical.

Is this how the American Dream ends?

More than 100 New York City police officers and firefighters have been accused of gaming the pension system for benefits linked to the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.

Have we truly no shame?

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Army tackling leadership's role in soldier suicides

Army Spec. Christopher Journeau died by suicide less than six months after his honorable discharge in 2010. He was 23. /Family photo

"We have met the enemy and he is us." - Pogo

In a heartening development in the U.S. Army's efforts to combat suicide in its ranks, steps are being taken to address "toxic" leaders who torment troubled subordinates.

While I found no evidence of toxic leadership playing a role in the 2010 suicide of retired Army Spec. Christopher Journeau, his parents are convinced that callous leadership contributed to his descent into isolation and desperation.

In early 2009, Journeau completed a nine-month deployment to Iraq that included many combat missions in Baghdad. When he returned to the United States, his Stryker unit was sent to Schofield Army Base in Hawaii.

"Apparently, that's when things started surfacing," his mother, Jo-Ann Clark, told me during an interview at her Stratham, N.H., home. "He was having a hard time with coming back."

Before receiving his honorable discharge and coming home to Stratham in January 2010, Journeau was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and was directed to attend counseling sessions. But his commanding officers were unsympathetic, Clark said.

"The chain of command wanted him on duty," she said. "They didn't want him to keep his counseling appointments."

In taking measured steps to examine how officers and other leaders may be contributing to suicides, the Army has made a leap forward in addressing problem. It will not be an easy or quick process, but this kind of self examination shows the Army is recognizing there are complexities involved in every suicide.

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