“We are true to our creed when a little girl born into the bleakest poverty knows that she has the same chance to succeed as anybody,” said Obama in his inaugural address on Martin Luther King’s holiday. The word “poverty” was scarcely uttered during the election. Candidates of both parties constantly claimed to be champions of the middle class, but […]
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Embracing a bolder vision for our economy
David Frum, who worked for George W. Bush and authored Why Romney Lost, tweeted that the “’real fiscal cliff story” is “how the entire American political class convinced itself that unemployment is no longer worth thinking about.” Indeed. Although unemployment remains stuck at 7.8% (a far larger percentage is underemployed), and most economists agree that unemployment and lack of purchasing […]
Building peace at the kitchen table
When Hillary Clinton visited Northern Ireland recently she told her hosts: “You are the ones who reminded the world that while a peace deal may be signed at a negotiating table, peace itself takes life at the kitchen table. It must be nurtured in the hearts of people, in the way they live their daily lives and treat their fellow […]
The need to be acknowledged, accepted, and respected
Steven Spielberg’s masterful film, Lincoln, comes at a timely moment for America. Daniel Day Lewis’ powerful and nuanced portrayal of the president’s combination of courage, compassion, realism, humor and faith is a challenge to Washington today. The narrative focuses on the struggle to pass the 13th amendment that ended slavery. Spielberg skillfully avoids stereotyping. He respects and challenges his audience […]
Needed: a few courageous men and women
We were sitting over dinner in our home with Rajmohan Gandhi (visiting Richmond to keynote our annual Metropolitan Richmond Day forum), two African American neighbors of thirty years, and several young IofC staffers. The conversation naturally turned to the presidential election. Some years ago our black neighbors chose to join a nearly all-white mainline church. They reasoned that since race […]
Notes to the occupant of the White House
By the time most of you read this the United States will have chosen the occupant of the White House for the next four years. Half the country will be pleased; the other half deeply disappointed. But everyone will be glad not to see another political ad for a long time!Whether Democrat or Republican, the president will be confronted with […]
Learning the language of others
“We can’t be friends with them because they don’t speak our language,” an Afghan soldier told a reporter in discussing tense relations with US troops. I was struck by this remark because it could be applied to the breakdown of public conversation in America today. Whatever the outcome of the presidential election, one thing is certain: the victor will be […]
Kosher Gospel in Richmond, Virginia
The Richmond Folk Festival gets better every year. On a crystal clear weekend, with the sun sparkling on the James River, about 200,000 people enjoyed an amazingly eclectic range of culture ranging from Ethiopian Azmari music and dance to Argentine tango and traditional New Orleans jazz, and from demonstrations of the Chinese jaw harp and the Iraqi oud, to Irish […]
Emancipation and the American Dream
One hundred and fifty years ago this month, Abraham Lincoln announced the Emancipation Proclamation. On September 22, 1862, he released a preliminary document promising to free slaves in any southern state still in rebellion on January 1, 1863. A few days earlier at the battle of Antietam 23,000 men had been killed or wounded in the bloodiest day of battle […]
Educating the head and the heart
By any measure, a good education is the surest path to a successful career and financial security. Yes, it’s true that countless people with university degrees are struggling in today’s depressed economy. But the latest employment figures again highlight the fact that those with minimal education have far more difficulty finding a job.The unemployment rate for someone who did not […]