Posts by Laurie Fendrich
September 18, 2010, 09:30 AM ET
Lauriepedia on Poverty

The Census Bureau reported on Thursday that
14.3 percent of Americans now live in poverty—the highest level
of Americans living in poverty since 1994. One in five American
children now live in poverty (note: this frequently means going to
bed hungry). In addition, the number of residents without health
insurance is now 51 million, up 5 million since 2008 (this figure
includes working Americans; the number is expected to go down once
the new health care plan passed by Congress kicks in.) Puzzled that
there was no outcry about these new numbers from either Republicans
or Democrats, I turned to Lauriepedia to find out the
difference between the Republican and Democratic positions on
poverty. I’ve directly copied the Lauriepedia entry I
found here:
Republicans on poverty
The increased poverty in America can be laid directly at the feet
of the Obama administration. Obama’s economic policies...
September 14, 2010, 07:08 PM ET
'I’m Just Saying, Who Knows?'

The other day, during a class I was teaching on Leonardo da
Vinci, the subject of how we know what we know about the artist
came up. During the discussion, a student casually asserted,
without rancor or even a touch of political commentary, that he
thought it a “good possibility that Obama was a Muslim.” Another
student nodded in agreement. Might be true, might not, they seemed
to be saying. I got the distinct feeling that they thought that in
their openness to the “possibility” that Obama was a Muslim, they
were demonstrating their general openness to ideas—something I, as
their professor, would be pleased to see.
I was so nonplussed by their remarks that it took me several
moments to collect myself and ask them why they held that opinion.
I expected to hear something about how they'd heard it on the news
or read it on the Internet. Instead, they both simply answered that
they’d...
September 11, 2010, 12:05 PM ET
Nine Years Ago Today
This morning, on the ninth anniversary of the attacks on the
world Trade Center Towers, I stood at my open bedroom window,
looking out at the stunning blue sky toward the west and feeling
autumn in the air. It was exactly the same kind of day nine years
ago when, having just finished my morning run—along the Hudson down
to the World Trade Center and back—I heard a huge roar followed by
a sickening thud. It was a sound and a feel no one could mistake
for anything other than a catastrophic event, and it shook my old
loft building to its foundations. That was the moment when the
first plane hit the first Tower 10 blocks south of me.
Later that morning, before phone communications went down and our
neighborhood became enshrouded in ash and dust, Jean Tamarin, my
editor at The Chronicle Review called me. I’d gotten to
know Jean from writing essays for the Review, and she was
calling to make...
September 8, 2010, 09:36 AM ET
Waiting for Pastor Jones
What a strange world this is, where power erupts in the
tiniest of places and the smallest of men, disrupting events and
threatening world peace. Our moment, like no other, permits a
person with big but stupid ideas to instantaneously assume the role
of a lead actor on the world stage, actually vying with established
world leaders for the world’s attention. Forget Joe the Plumber,
competing with McCain and Obama. He’s small potatoes. Think instead
of
Terry Jones, the Gainesville, Fla., Christian pastor who
leads the tiniest of tiny Christian congregations—all told, maybe
30 or so souls. Everyone is watching with baited breath to see
whether or not Pastor Jones and his followers will go ahead and
publicly burn the Koran on September 11th on the front lawn of his
house. His thinking is that this will demonstrate to bad Muslim
radicals that they’re bad and that good Christians won’t take
it...
September 6, 2010, 06:06 PM ET
Vive la Carla!

After publishing an open letter in support of Sakineh Ashtiani (the Iranian woman sentenced to death by stoning for supposedly committing adultery), Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, the wife of French president Nicolas Sarkozy, was vilified in an Iranian newspaper as a “prostitute” who “deserves to die.” To Westerners, such a brazen insult to the wife of a head of state staggers the mind. To those traditionalist Iranians who believe a good society rests on men controlling women’s sexuality, however, it would make total sense. With her multiple affairs, a history of a modeling career that includes nudity, and her public declaration that she is “easily bored with monogamy,” Bruni-Sarkozy is the ultimate example of modern, free womanhood. Maybe something was lost in translation, but it seems that our clear distinction between Bruni-Sarkozy’s somewhat extreme form of liberated female...
Read MoreSeptember 3, 2010, 10:30 AM ET
Another Aggie Joke
My first thought on reading yesterday’s opening line to the Chronicle story on Texas A&M rating professors based on their individual “bottom-line value” was, “Oh look, how clever! The Chronicle is running an Onion story.” Not so. They ran a real story about Texas A&M’s plan to evaluate how much professors are worth based on their salaries, the research money they bring in, and the amount of money they “generate from teaching” (presumably tuition dollars brought by each individual student in a class) and then (can this really be true? Shouldn't it be the other way around?) "add the money generated by each professor and subtract that amount from his or her salary to get a bottom-line value for each." Any way you look at it, they're searching for profit and loss accounts for each individual professor. (All you non-profit-making Latin and fine arts professors, get ready to get lost.)
This...
Read MoreAugust 31, 2010, 08:21 AM ET
Art and Politics: Part 2, The Deafening Roar
In my previous post, I observed that whenever I blog on art,
there’s nary a peep. When I blog on politics, on the other hand,
there’s a cacophony of voices. Although facts are often tossed
around in discussions of art and politics, both subjects are
matters of opinion. How is it we’re so insecure about offering our
opinions about art in public, while so bold in expressing our
opinions about politics?
In my first post, I suggested that a lot of people hold back
offering opinions about art because they think they don’t know
enough about it to talk about it intelligently. Understandably,
then, even if they use a pseudonym, they’re reluctant to go on
record talking about art in a public forum like Brainstorm.
Educated people, in particular, don’t want to appear
unsophisticated, and when talking about art, it’s easy to end up
sounding either like a Philistine or a nincompoop. A few
readers...
August 26, 2010, 08:54 PM ET
Art and Politics, Part 1: The Deafening Silence
I’ve noticed during the nearly three years I’ve been blogging
for Brainstorm that whenever I blog on art, the reaction is
deafening silence. When I blog on politics, on the other hand,
people are at the ready with their opinions. Here’s the first of
two posts on the why these two very different subjects, both of
which are arenas in which people readily form opinions, cause such
different reactions when it comes to taking a public stand.
Unlike words, or mathematical formulae, or scientific studies, most
art automatically prompts one of three reactions: I like it, I
don’t like it, or I’m indifferent to it. While people concede to
art historians—and even artists—special knowledge about the who,
what, when, where and how of art, they don’t accord them special
privileges in the opinion area. Most people firmly believe
that art is a subjective matter, and that all opinions about it
are...
August 23, 2010, 10:34 AM ET
Painting, Weeding, and Vacuuming
Other painters wouldn’t put it quite this way, I’m sure, but
painting the kind of clean abstract paintings I paint (the neat
sort that are made up of clearly defined shapes) is a whole lot
like weeding and vacuuming. True, people generally weed and
vacuum out of necessity, whereas painters paint pictures out of
desire (ever since modernism, that is—things were significantly
different before the 19th century). Yet for all their differences,
painters, weeders, and vacuumers share a deep longing for
perfection.
Take weeding. “What a mess,” I always think, surveying the jumble
of weeds that have taken over my garden. Crawling on my hands
and knees among the flowers, I furiously rip out enormous clumps of
huge weeds (which are, of course, nothing more than plants human
beings have decided do not deserve to live in a certain place). I
note with satisfaction that the flowers, previously hidden...
August 18, 2010, 03:58 PM ET
Mosque Proposal Arouses America's Sinister, Ignorant Side
In returning to the subject of the proposed mosque and community center near Ground Zero (my original post is here) I’ve now learned that many Americans are not merely deeply irrational, but proud of it. It’s not enough to remind them of the obvious—that the proposed mosque is not at the "sacred site" of the former Trade Towers (what's actually closest to the site—literally across the street from it—is the hugely popular and bustling discount department store known as “Century 21," famous for European designer brands), or that the mosque is part of a community center open to all, with a stated purpose of bringing together people of all faiths, or that the people living in the immediate neighborhood (me included) support it. Nor is it enough to remind them that we either abide by our Constitution or we don’t.
Offering various excuses ranging from “emotions are still too raw,” to...
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