Why I Heart Aly Raisman (W/Video)

The American gold medalist explains to the New York Post that her choice of “Hava Nagila” for her floor routine was in dedication to the Munich 11 who lost their lives at the 1972 Olympics and for whom a moment of silence was denied by the International Olympic Committee:

“I can only imagine how painful it must be for the families and close  personal friends of the victims.”

But by refusing to hit the pause button for a measly 60 seconds, Rogge and  other organizers have committed a sin nearly as grave as denying there was ever  a Holocaust.

Were it not for young Aly and her wedding dance/bat mitzvah accompaniment,  the Munich dead may have never gotten their due.

“I am Jewish, that’s why I wanted that floor music,’’ Raisman said.

“I wanted something the crowd could clap to, especially being here in  London.

“It makes it even much more if the audience is going through everything with  you. That was really cool and fun to hear the audience clapping.’’

Raisman’s eyes opened as wide as the gold medal she would win when the judges  announced her score of 15.600 points after her mistake-free routine.

Her top finish was the first by an American woman in the Olympic floor  exercise, and the win gave Raisman her second gold medal. Raisman admitted the  40th anniversary of the Munich Games made her “hora” gold even more special.

“That was the best floor performance I’ve ever done, and to do it for the  Olympics is like a dream,’’ Raisman said.

Raisman did not go to the Games with the star power of her teammate Gabrielle  Douglas or the résumé of world champion Jordyn Wieber,

But those who know her best said she works as hard as anyone, and, more  importantly, her heart is in the right place.

‘’I’m so happy for Aly,” Douglas, the first African-American to win the  all-around title, said after the floor competition. “She deserves to be up on  that podium.’’

“She is a focused person,” said Rabbi Keith Stern, spiritual leader of Temple  Beth Avodah in Newton Centre, Mass., where the Raisman family are members.

“She’s very proud and upfront about being Jewish. Neither she nor her family  explicitly sought to send a message. But it shows how very integrated her Jewish  heritage is in everything that she does.”

Stern said he remembers picking up young Aly from preschool, and never  imagined she’d be some sort of megastar.

He described the US team captain as a big sister-type who is a mother hen to  all her younger siblings.

“I can’t wait to have her at the temple to talk about her experience,” he  said.

“I know her sister’s bat mitzvah is coming up, so maybe I’ll catch up with  her then.”

Stern said that he, too, was stunned by the IOC’s refusal to hold a moment of  silence.

“I’m happy to hear any other explanation,” Stern said. “But short of some  racist grudge somebody is holding, I can’t figure out why it would be a terrible  thing to do.”

Stern said he watched the routine and was blown away. Even so, he said he is  more proud of Raisman’s gold mettle than he is of the new jewelry around her  neck.

“I have to say, the statement just warmed me to the very depths of my being,” Stern said.

He compared it to the iconic black-power, raised-fist protest made by track  stars John Carlos and Tommie Smith on the medal stand at the 1968 Mexico City  Games.

“They’re not going to forget that,” the rabbi said. “I certainly won’t.”

Here’s a snip of her routine:

John Y. Brown, III: KFC’s Rebuttal

A rebuttal on the Chick-Fil-A broohaha from John Y.s’ old friend, Colonel Harland Sanders:

Is This Any Way to Treat an American Hero?

Sally Ride’s domestic partner won’t get her government benefits. Is that any way to treat a hero?  [Time]

John Y’s Musings from the Middle: Impossible

 

 

Imagine for a moment what it would be like to have lived our lives up to this point truly believing in our hearts every day the words below spoken by a great Kentuckian:

“Impossible is just a big word thrown around by small men/women who find it easier to live in the world they’ve been given than to explore the power they have to change it. Impossible is not a fact. It’s an opinion. Impossible is not a declaration. It’s a dare. Impossible is potential. Impossible is temporary. Impossible is nothing.”

Now imagine what it would be like to live the rest of our lives truly believing in our hearts every day these same words….

Tired of imagining yet?

The owner of these words, of course, is Louisville native Muhammad Ali. Whose life is proof that these words can be true.

John Y’s Musings from the Middle: Chick-fil-A

Used to be if you were hungry for chicken and in a hurry–and against gay marriage–there wasn’t a clear fast food option.

Not anymore.

Chick-fil-A has finally articulated what most suspected. They want to dominate market share of the heterosexual chicken eating population by coming out against gay-marriage.

No surprises here. I mean, c’mon. “Chick” is in the name.

“I’ve loved Chik-fil-A from the first time I tried it. That’s got to count for something.”

I’ll be watching next month for the new Chick-fil-A “Hetero Combo” featuring a masculine looking sandwich with two chicken breasts and straight looking garnishments.

This creates a frenzy among the remaining fast food chicken chains to see who will try to appeal to the gay friendly chicken eating population.

Apparently rumors that Popeye’s is considering moving their headquarters to Fire Island, NY and that KFC is introducing the “Judy Garland Over the Rainbow” sandwich are false. However it does appear that Dairy Queen is working on playing both sides with the “Big Butch Chicken Basket”

John Y’s Musings from the Middle: iPhone — Week 2

Week two with the iPhone.
I like it.
If this were The Bachelor, the iPhone would get another rose. And proceed to week 3.
But not before showing some highlight clips from the prior week. And not flattering ones.
The time I was alone with my iPhone and asked if it had ever stayed charged long enough to see what dusk looked like.
The time I typed “i” inadvertently instead of “o” 5 times, said s…omething really loud. Just a single word, really. And then substituted another word that didn’t have an “i” or “o.”
And, finally, sarcastically joking with a friend about several mishaps —in front of the iPhone.
But then we rounded out the week with a sweet highlight where I called tech services and later took it into a local Verizon store complaining about the ringer sign being frozen on screen. Then the Verizon person showed me I had put the case on upside down.
We all had a nice laugh.
But I’m giving a rose because there’s something about this iPhone. It did not have me at hello. Or even at Siri’s first clever response. Just seems like the kind of phone you can be with for long periods of time and not need to say anything. And even though I get frustrated with it sometimes, I can’t stay mad at the iPhone. I just can’t!
And it helps that it’s kinda cool. I need that. We compliment each other well. I can’t decide if we are more like Claire and Phil Dunphy or Jay and Gloria from Modern Family.
Hard to say. The important thing, though, is that it just works.

The RP Turns 45…In Israel

It’s official:  The RP is a very, very, very old man.

To commemorate the 45th anniversary of the Six Day War (and his ignominious birthday milestone), The RP is traveling the Jewish State with Mrs. RP and an RPette.  The big birthday celebration will be held in Eilat, on a cruise boat in the Red Sea.  At the conclusion, The RP will part the Red Sea, a la Moses.

(Hey, it couldn’t be much more difficult than reaching a World Series of Poker final table!)

Above, The RP is enjoying four of his favorite things:  an RPette, his birthday hat, the State of Israel, and the country’s largest solar installation at Kibbutz Katura in the Negev desert in Southern Israel.

If you want to join in the commemoration of this dreadful day, please feel free to add your birthday wishes in the comments below.

Arguments Against Gay Marriage

Since The RP has been very outspoken on the subject of his support for marriage equality. we at The Recovering Politician, in the interests of fairness, hereby provide the counter-argument:

h/t Danielle MacDonald

Jeff Smith: Strongest Argument Against DOMA

Poignant stuff. Lovely slideshow: 83 yr-old woman’s court case may be strongest argument against DOMA: [Huffington Post]

John Y’s Musings from the Middle: Relationships

Relationships are hard and take work.

It was inevitable. No relationship that begins with love at first sight is able to remain in the “honeymoon” phase forever. There’s that initial irritation (maybe an offhand comment, the way they chew their food, a quirky habit not noticed before–but always something). And then there is the first disagreement (or fight).

Maybe you work through it; maybe you don’t. But there is disappointment. And then reality sets in and you move ahead with a more realistic assessment of expectations in the relationship.

That happened yesterday between me and my new iPhone, which I bought last week.
Several times last week (Thursday during a noon meeting and Friday for a 2pm conference call), at the peak of the work day, I went to my iPhone to find it lifeless. Dead.

I didn’t say anything at first. Just changed the subject and looked the other way while lovingly recharging.

But when it died again late afternoon Friday, I snapped and said some insulting things to my iPhone. “Come on! What is it with you? Do Apple people only work 4 hours a day and don’t make phones that last longer than that?” Ouch! I took that back. But later thought “You (my iPhone) remind me of that cute little Chihuahua that Paris Hilton carries in her purse —a cute but useless accoutrement.”

Fortunately, I didn’t say that out loud.

If was Friday night, so I let it go. And we had a good time. Took some pictures. Played with some apps. Watched a video clip of Modern Family.

But today I’m wondering if the iPhone and I are going to make it. Breaking up with the Blackberry wasn’t easy. And, yes, I’m on the rebound now and perhaps not thinking straight. But I was hoping for a second phone that was more like a solid second marriage….not a fun fling to get out of my system. I’m committed to making this work, if it can. And am buying a car charger for the iPhone this morning.

The initial thrill is wearing off and I worry about being stuck with a high maintenance smart phone. I’m not ready to explore legal options of breaking the two year service contract.

But I am starting to notice other phones.

The Recovering Politician Bookstore

     

The RP on The Daily Show