Saturday, September 20, 2008

Where Have You Gone, Dorothea Lange? Our Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes To You

[x Wikipedia]
Dorothea Lange

Dorothea Lange (1895–1965) was an influential documentary photographer and photojournalist, best known for her Depression-era work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). Lange's photographs humanized the tragic consequences of the Great Depression and profoundly influenced the development of documentary photography. One of Lange's best known photographs was entitled" "Migrant Mother" (FSA, 1936). In 1960, Lange spoke about her experience taking the photograph:

I saw and approached the hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet. I do not remember how I explained my presence or my camera to her, but I do remember she asked me no questions. I made five exposures, working closer and closer from the same direction. I did not ask her name or her history. She told me her age, that she was thirty-two. She said that they had been living on frozen vegetables from the surrounding fields, and birds that the children killed. She had just sold the tires from her car to buy food. There she sat in that lean-to tent with her children huddled around her, and seemed to know that my pictures might help her, and so she helped me. There was a sort of equality about it.
Dorothea Lange would approve of John Sherffius' use of her iconic image. If this is (fair & balanced) irony, so be it.

[x Boulder (CO) Fishwrap]
"My Eyes Have Seen All This Before"
By John Sherffius

Click on image to enlarge.

[John Sherffius began drawing editorial cartoons for the Daily Bruin, the campus newspaper at UCLA. After two years of working as a freelance artist, after graduation, he was hired by the Ventura County Star in Southern California as a graphic artist and gradually worked his way into editorial cartooning for the paper. In 1998, he was hired by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch as the newspaper's editorial cartoonist, a job he held until 2003 when he quit the paper over editorial differences. Sherffius bridled at editorial insistence that he tone down cartoons attacking Republicans. Sherffius then went to work for the Boulder Daily Camera where his cartoons appear regularly and are syndicated nationally by the Copley News Service. Sherffius won the 2008 Herblock Prize for Editorial Cartooning.]

Copyright © 2008 Boulder Daily Camera/John Sherffius


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Today, The Krait Bites... Everyone!

Actually, the only candidate who escaped The Krait's bite was Jumpin' Joe. However, The Geezer wasn't the only candidate doin' the Mad Dog this week. Jumpin' Joe did his share of foamin' at the mouth. If this is (fair & balanced) froth, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
The Alpha Dogs Bark
By Gail Collins

These times are so perilous that George W. Bush emerged from his burrow on Friday to reassure the American people about the financial crisis.

Looking either grim or overmedicated, Bush spoke for several minutes — 1,260 words worth of reassurance. That was a far more ambitious effort than the day before, when, as Politico’s Roger Simon noted, our president devoted 100 fewer words to his public utterances on the collapsing economy than he did to toasting the president of Ghana at dinner.

Behind the-first-president-with-an-M.B.A.-and-a-lot-of-good-it-did-us stood the Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, who appears to be actually running the government. On Thursday night, Bernanke had called Congressional leaders together and terrified them into supporting a quadrillion-dollar rescue plan. Legend has it that there was a time when these sorts of gatherings took place at the White House, but it would probably have really cast a pall on the president of Ghana’s big night.

Anyway, by the time Bush got around to making his speech, or at least a speechlet, Bernanke had already made the plan public. The stock market had rallied, and if the president had just stayed inside practicing his pending welcome for the Boston Celtics, the world would have little noted nor long remembered.

“This is no time for partisanship,” Bush concluded.

Bipartisanship! That’s the ticket. There have been more vicious political eras in the nation’s history, but probably never one in which so much vitriol has been mixed with so many demands for reaching across the aisle in fellowship.

Down in Florida, Barack Obama was also endorsing a bipartisan approach to the rescue. For good measure, he also tacked on a call on both parties to join together in backing “an emergency economic plan” crafted out of a whole bunch of things that the Republicans are never going to support in a million years.

Obama declined to provide many specifics. The most notable thing about his performance this week — besides his really extraordinary skill in packing large numbers of economic advisers onto a stage — has been his calm. Even this late in the campaign, it’s hard to tell whether it’s the product of wise serenity or a low metabolism. But, under present circumstances, it was definitely soothing.

John McCain, on the other hand, was angry. Still. He had been angry Monday, when he blamed the financial crisis on greedy speculators, and on Tuesday, when he blamed it on people who didn’t respect the American worker. He was furious on Wednesday, when he blamed the crisis on C.E.O.’s with golden parachutes until it was pointed out that one of his highest-profile advisers, Carly Fiorina, had sailed out of Hewlitt-Packard with a 24-karat whopper. On Thursday, he was mad at the head of the Securities Exchange Commission.

On Friday, McCain looked steamed when he gave a new policy speech in Wisconsin with Sarah Palin at his side. The Republicans have discovered that McCain can’t draw a crowd without Palin, and the dangers of letting her float off by herself are apparent. So the two are manacled together these days like Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier in that old escape-from-a-chain-gang movie.

McCain’s proposals were pretty much in line with the emerging Washington consensus. The real theme of the speech was assignment of blame. Normally at times of great national trauma top politicians say they want to avoid finger-pointing. But the McCainian digit was ready for action, and its owner assured the audience that he had found “plenty of places to point.”

The main culprit, the finger’s final resting place, turned out to be — Obama! His opponent, McCain claimed, took campaign contributions from officials at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and had a couple of former C.E.O.’s of Fannie Mae as advisers. “In a McCain-Palin administration, there will be no seat for these people at the policy-making table,” he vowed.

Given the amount of time the campaigns have spent arguing about the misdeeds of advisers, I think we might all be better off if the term was eliminated completely. From now on, everybody who is invited to consult with a candidate should be referred to as “complete-stranger-who-dropped-by-to-talk” or perhaps “the person I thought was a FedEx deliverer.”

Actually McCain’s remarks were a bit more muted than on Thursday, when he helped restore the financial markets’ shattered confidence by accusing Obama of responding to the crisis with “the kind of me-first, country-second politics” that “sees an economic crisis as a political opportunity instead of a time to lead.”

Still, he managed to get himself pretty riled up, culminating in a claim that people like Obama were “too busy gaming the system” to fix things, and that the junior senator from Illinois, despite his brief career in Washington, was smack dab in the middle of a “culture of lobbying and influence-peddling” that created the whole financial crisis.

He ended with a call for bipartisanship.

[Gail Collins joined The New York Times in 1995 as a member of the editorial board and later as an op-ed columnist. In 2001 she became the first woman ever appointed editor of The Times editorial page. At the beginning of 2007, she stepped down and began a leave in order to finish a sequel to her book, America's Women: 400 Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates and Heroines. She returned to The Times as a columnist in July 2007. Collins has a degree in journalism from Marquette University and an M.A. in government from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Prior to The New York Times, Collins wrote for the New York Daily News, Newsday, Connecticut Business Journal, United Press International, and the Associated Press in New York City.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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