"The Greatest" Belongs in Kentucky's Capitol Rotunda

Please sign the petition below to remove the statue of Jefferson Davis currently in Kentucky’s Capitol Rotunda, and replace it with a tribute to Muhammad Ali, “the Louisville Lip” and “the Greatest of All Time.”

(If you need some convincing, read this piece, this piece and this piece from Kentucky Sports Radio.)

"The Greatest" Belongs in the Kentucky Capitol Rotunda

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787Adam OkuleyLouisville, KentuckyJun 10, 2020
786Kristen ClarkWalton, KYJun 10, 2020
785Stephi WolffLouisville, KYJun 10, 2020
784Angela DragooLexington, USJun 10, 2020
783Tommy GleasonLouisville, KYJun 09, 2020
782John StallardLexington, KYJun 09, 2020
781Nelson RodesLouisville, KYJun 09, 2020
780Ben LesouskyLouisville, KentuckyJun 09, 2020
779Vince LangFrankfort, KentuckyJun 09, 2020
778Joy BeckermanSeattle, WashingtonJun 09, 2020
777Eleanor SniderVersailles , KentuckyJun 09, 2020
776John HubbuchLovettsville, VAJun 08, 2020
775Elizabeth DiamondBaltimore , MDJun 08, 2020
774Joshua OysterLouisville, KYJun 08, 2020
773Chris kellyLexington , KentuckyJun 08, 2020
772Victoria BaileyAustin, TexasJun 08, 2020
771Ola LessardBellingham, WashingtonJun 08, 2020
770Alexis SchumannUnion, KentuckyJun 08, 2020
769Howard CareyAustin, TXJun 08, 2020
768Pat Fowler Scottsville , Kentucky Jun 08, 2020
767Joseph HernandezKYJun 08, 2020
766Katelyn WiardLexington, KYJun 08, 2020
765Morgan SteveLexington, KyJun 08, 2020
764Alan SteinLexington, KYJun 08, 2020
763Kathleen CarterParis, KentuckyJun 08, 2020
762Tanner NicholsLouisville, KYJun 08, 2020
761Sarah KatzenmaierLEXINGTON, KYJun 08, 2020
760Kendra Kinney07052, NJJun 08, 2020
759Shelby McMullanLouisville, KYJun 08, 2020
758David Goldsmith Harmony , Rhode IslandJun 08, 2020

UPDATE (Monday, December 1, 2014 at 12:01 PM)

I just heard from the Ali family: It is the Champ’s belief that Islam prohibits three-dimensional representations of living Muslims. Accordingly, I have adjusted the petition to call for a two-dimensional representation of Ali (a portrait, picture or mural) in lieu of a statue.

UPDATE (Tuesday, December 2, 2014)

In this interview with WHAS-TV’s Joe Arnold, Governor Steve Beshear endorses the idea of honoring Muhammad Ali in the State Capitol (although he disagrees with removing Davis).  Arnold explores the idea further on his weekly show, “The Powers that Be.”

Click here to check out WDRB-TV’s Lawrence Smith’s coverage of the story.

And here’s my op-ed in Ali’s hometown paper, the Louisville Courier-Journal.

UPDATE (Saturday, June 4, 2016)

In the wake of the 2015 Charlestown tragedy, in which a Confederate flag-waving murderer united the nation against racism, all of the most powerful Kentucky policymakers — U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell, Governor Matt Bevin, Senate President Robert Stivers and House Speaker Greg Stumbo — called for the removal of the Davis statue from the Rotunda. Today, as we commemorate last night’s passing of Muhammad Ali, there is no better moment to replace the symbol of Kentucky’s worst era with a tribute to The Greatest of All Time.

UPDATE (Wednesday, June 8, 2016):

Great piece by Lawrence Smith of WDRB-TV in Louisville on the petition drive to replace Jefferson Davis’ statue in the Capitol Rotunda with a tribute to Muhammad Ali.

UPDATE (Thursday, June 9, 2016):

Excellent piece on the petition drive by Jack Brammer that was featured on the front page of the Lexington Herald-Leader.

Highlight of the article:

Miller said he has received a few “angry comments” on his call to honor Ali.

“One of them encouraged me to kill myself,” he said. “You can quote me that I have decided not to take their advice.”

UPDATE (Friday, June 10, 2016)

The petition drives continues to show the Big Mo(hammed):  check out these stories from WKYU-FM public radio in Bowling Green and WKYT-TV, Channel 27 in Lexington:

UPDATE (Saturday, June 11, 2016):

Still not convinced?  Check out this excerpt from today’s New York Times:

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Matt Damon is Full of S#%t. Find out Why:

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John Y’s Musings from the Middle: My Kind of Rebel

My kind of rebel.

A friend was making his 8 hear old daughter attend the adult worship service which is an hour long and hard for a youngster to sit through without lots of restless squirming.

To cope the plucky little girl would stand and draw on the program. My friend got her to stop drawing where people could see what she was doing but couldn’t get her to sit without being firm.

jyb_musingsFinally, he sternly , teeth gritted, said emphatically “Sit down now, young lady!”

And she did.

But two minutes later whispered to her dad defiantly, “I am still standing up in my mind.”

I love that.

Lisa Borders: Stephanopolous Mentions No Labels; Arnold and Eva Endorse Us!

Wow – I’ve been doing this for a long time, and I can honestly say, I’ve never seen anything like this.

Last night, Twitter was blowing up. News outlets across the country were highlighting the success of our grassroots movement. Even Arnold Schwarzenegger and Eva Longoria were talking about No Labels:

 

One clip really stood out to me and I had to make sure you saw it. Click here to check it out.

Here’s the bottom line: When the president walked into the chamber last night, he had 45 No Labels problem solvers there to greet him. This was a truly unprecedented effort and the world took notice.

We broke through the noise and got noticed across the social media sphere.

We’ve turned a corner and with your help, there is no limit to what we can do.

Please join our growing army of hundreds of thousands of Democrats, Republicans and Independents, by clicking here.

Artur Davis: The House that Rove Built

Karl Rove has been spectacularly right about one big thing in his far-flung career: his calculation that Republicans in the late nineties and early 2000s needed to be rebranded as problem solvers, who had a formula to compete on Democratic terrain like education and health-care, outflanked Clintonian centrism when it was on the verge of realigning American politics. Rove was just as spectacularly wrong on another front, his blind spot on the risks of conservatism “going corporate” and turning into just another patchwork of special interests and powerbrokers.

It’s worth keeping the dual nature of Rove’s Bush era legacy in mind as he plots an ambitious effort to intervene in primary fights on behalf of Republicans who are…well, that part remains vague, but excludes at least candidates with a history of dabbling in witchcraft or who have a penchant for philosophizing on gynecology.

If Rove’s version of influence merely takes the form of injecting one more source of shadowy cash into races, then he has already misread recent campaign cycles. Deep-pocketed front-runners from Charlie Crist to Bill Bolling never made it past the starting gate, and it is the insurgents who have cleaned up in GOP state primaries who have been chronically under-funded. The missing element for the losers in these fights has not been a lack of cash to sustain ads or phone banks, but an inability to mobilize rank and file primary voters with either a policy vision or a rhetorical message beyond inside baseball about electability.

davis_artur-11In an era where the activists who dominate party primaries award no extra points based on time served in office, or chits from funneling checks to local party committees, the populist, anti-establishment wing of the party has filled a void. In blunt terms, their fears are not getting outflanked with swing voters, but getting trammeled by a government that serves every agenda but theirs. They distrust “reform” as a code for more mandates.  They are corrosively suspicious of political power because it seems too subject to being rented or bought by corporate power. And many of them have adopted a Manichaen view of politics that genuinely considers constitutional liberty and fiscal stability to be in some degree of jeopardy.

Read the rest of…
Artur Davis: The House that Rove Built

Lisa Miller: A Valentine to My Automatic Garage-Door Opener, and to Friendships

My friends, family, and students are used to my repeated profession of love for modern technology.  They laugh when I pledge adoration for my camera, washing machine, air travel, television, teleconferences, the iron lung (I just watched The Sessions with Helen Hunt and John Hawkes—great movie by the way), movies, my blender, power-point projectors, computers and the web, and, my iPhone!

This is an amazing time to be alive; I feel deeply, deeply, deeply fortunate to live in this part of the world today.  I have such gratitude for these intelligent inventions that make my life easier and bigger (consider the amount of time it used to take our great grand-mothers just to wash family laundry.  I don’t know about you but I don’t have time to beat my husband’s shirts and underwear against the rocks at the local stream).  And I love my automatic garage-door opener so much.

BUT, no matter how terrifically these things enhance, ease, and upgrade my life, they take up but a speck of space in my heart compared to what I feel for the essential celebration-worthy, beauty of interaction between human beings.

I’m talking about friendship here.  Today I profess my love and adoration for this.  It’s fitting for valentine week, too.

Lisa MillerThe typical starter in blooming friendship is life-commonality—resonating with the experiences, views, needs, interests, and dreams that others also hold dear.

“We know this, we know this—we’ve had friendships since kindergarden—they come and go, some last, there will be more where that came from.”  For many people the commonality of friendship has become so expected that its essential value to human happiness is enormously undervalued.

Have you ever observed the way that 10 year olds appreciate their new friends, or on the flip-side, teenagers who don’t have any?  What about Facebook—I know a lot of people who spend some good amount of time there, making friends and keeping them, in space, ahem.

From a human-development hierarchy-of-needs perspective, friendship is to the human spirit as manna was to the Hebrews.

Watch this terrific video about the blooming of friendship—it’s just 4 minutes and 53 seconds long—your heart will like it and you will observe human spirit in action as time and place seem to recede (and that’s not an easy set-up for grown-ups sittin in a ball-pit on a busy urban side-walk), and complete strangers become important and personal to one another:

(This video created by Soul Pancake by the way, a fabulous site that captures art, philosophy, science, spirituality and humor, and serves it up all warm and (ful)filling.)

Now I ask myself what it is that I look for in friendship today.  Have you deliberately thought about this lately? Me thinks this an important question.  As adults we’re no longer really limited in our choices for the most part—we’re out there in the world with options greater than who lives next door or who sits next to us in classroom alphabet seating.

I loved that the question from the ball-pit was “who inspires you?” not, who pisses you off that you want to complain and gossip about?  We absolutely have choice when it comes to whom we want to spend time with.  And time is definitely a “spending”—there’s no reason to waste it in depleting relationships with “friends” who remind us of our worst qualities.

So I’m making this a valentine week of heartfull thought about what I most appreciate about my loved-ones (you know who you are! Mu-ah!), all those I’ve loved in friendship but who are no longer in my life, and the type of friend I want to continue to grow into.

And finally, with this brilliant invention called YouTube, applaud with me here as I sit in awe as two of my favorite things come together in this video: the seeds of unexpected spontaneous friendship, and the technology that allows us a ringside seat at the beauty of it.

Watch for No Labels’ Problem Solvers Pins at the SOTU

No Labels Problem Solvers PinICYMI, Sen. Joe Manchin was all over the airwaves yesterday, talking about No Labels and sporting our new Problem Solvers’ pin:

“I’m wearing the [No Labels] pin… We’re not here to fight, we’re here to fix things. That’s what we do in West Virginia and that’s what I’ve found No Labels to be here in Washington,” he said.

The problem solvers’ pin says something about Sen. Manchin: that he will put his country first and reach across the aisle to face down the challenges that threaten our future.

Click here to watch the video, and sign the petition to tell the rest of Washington to join Sen. Manchin — and stop fighting, and start fixing.

Our problem solvers are thrilled to be part of this group — let’s make sure that everyone in Washington knows we want them to stop fighting, and start fixing. Click here to watch the video and add your name to the petition today.

Forty members of Congress will wear their problem solvers pin, like Sen. Manchin’s, at the State of the Union tonight — they’re showing their colleagues that they are committed to working across the aisle and building trust between parties. Sign the petition to show your support for these problem solvers.

Follow along with the State of the Union tonight and tweet your thoughts using the hashtag#FixNotFight.

 

 

Lauren Mayer: WE HAVE NOTHING TO FEAR BUT FEAR ITSELF (The debate over marriage equality)

We all have our own irrational fears, based on an emotional response rather than facts.  Kids are afraid of monsters in the closet, phobics are afraid of spiders or the color red, single men are afraid of commitment, I’m afraid of cheerleaders – none of these things actually pose a threat, and we eventually either grow up, learn to move past our fears, or in the case of my husband, realize that being married is way more fun than he’d thought.

So with the Supreme Court preparing to hear cases related to gay marriage, it’s time to apply that same standard of rationality to the objections raised by opponents.  Gay marriage has been legal in Massachusetts since 2004 (as well as in many progressive states and countries, and frankly, we in California should be ashamed of ourselves for being less progressive than Iowa and Canada!).  Therefore, instead of vague fears, we can look at the actual effects on society in those locations – and guess what, absolutely nothing bad has happened.  The predictions of societal catastrophe, public fornication, gender confusion, and children behaving terribly have not come true – in fact, the divorce rate has declined in Mass, and experts predict we’ll see the same effect in other states once more data is in.  So one could argue that gay marriage is GOOD for society as a whole, not just for all those committed couples who are denied the legal protections we take for granted.  (Note – the way I convinced my previously commitment-phobic husband that we needed ‘just a piece of paper’ was to point out that our gay friends have to spend thousands of dollars in legal fees to get a fraction of the protection we could get for $50 and a quick trip to City Hall.)  (Although now I let him think the whole thing was his idea!)

There are so many real things in this world of which to be afraid – financial collapse, global warming, more Kardashian reality shows – so I believe it’s time for opponents of gay marriage to recognize that there is nothing to fear, and to go find something that actually justifies worrying.  And to help them along, here’s a song examining the evidence.

John Y’s Musings from the Middle: Identity Management Tool

Identity management tool

I was asked by Apple iTunes a question to confirm my identity and allow me access to my account

The identity question ?

What was the first album you purchased?

I answered–after considerable thought –Puff the Magic Dragon. It was 45 years ago but I remember it well.

But I was told “no” that wasn’t the album.

jyb_musingsHow do they know?

Can I find out from Apple what the album was I first purchased?

May be they will say the Monkees….but that was my second album.

I will call tomorrow to protest this block to my account and I will have affidavits from my mom and two sisters that, indeed, it was Puff the Magic Dragon.

Nancy Slotnick: People Think I’m Crazy

“The only way you could meet my crazy was by doing something crazy yourself.”  –Bradley Cooper as Pat in Silver Linings Playbook

We all bring our crazy to a relationship.  Silver Linings does a beautiful job of writing a relationship where both participants are crazy but they take turns.  They meet each other where they’re at.  They end sentences with a preposition.  They scream and throw dishes in public.  They hug people whom they have a restraining order against or from.  They end sentences with a preposition again.  Did I mention that people call me crazy? They think I’m dreaming my life away, just like John Lennon wrote.

I struggle with how to let people into my life without letting them take over.  How to embrace my crazy without getting caught up in it.  How to recognize someone else’s crazy when they’re telling you it’s you.  And when it’s also you.  So complicated.

Spoiler alert- I’m going to talk about Silver Linings some more- I just loved it so much.   It is rare for a romantic comedy (nay, romantic comedy/drama) to get it right without being trite.  One of my favorite scenes was at the diner.  Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) opens up about herself and seems to be having a moment with Pat.  She offers to help her out and then he insults her by not wanting to be associated with her in the context of his ex-wife.

Nancy SlotnickRather than crying and running out of the restaurant (at first, at least), which I would have done, she balks. That’s the best word for her face.  She looks at him, condescendingly, and says; “You actually think I’m crazier than you.”  Not in the form of a question, but as a statement of disbelief.  It’s great.  I admire that.  I wish that in the midst of a heated argument I could have the composure to do that.  It was awesome.  And then she smashes all the dishes off the table in one fell swoop and runs out of the restaurant, crying.  I kind of wish I could do that too.   The dishes part.  The crying part I’m good at.

The beauty of it is that Pat realizes in that moment that he’s crossed a line and then he comes to the rescue on her crazy.  They go back and forth on this as their relationship blooms.  And that gives new meaning to the phrase the “dance of intimacy.”

Read the rest of…
Nancy Slotnick: People Think I’m Crazy

Jeff Smith Talks Political Scandal with Krystal Ball on The Cycle

Contributing RP and former Missouri State Sen. Jeff Smith talks about his political advice column, “Do As I Say,” which helps other politicians and professionals who find themselves in compromising positions:

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