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Blog: LadyStar (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: dreams, dragons, books for free, princesses, adventures in fantasy, girl warriors, marching band, enchanted jewelry, magic spells, myths legends and fables, new best friend, Fury of the Venom Legion, Fury of the Venom Legion Comic, Warrior of the River, anime art, armor and weapons, beautiful lyrics, cute animals, fantasy sword, free online book, strong girls, tough girls, treasures, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: A-Featured, oupblog, Media, primary, faith, mccain, campaign—huckabee, huckabee, huckabee’s, romney, pulpit, mormonism, presidential, candidate, domke, coe, strategy, god, religion, Politics, Current Events, election, Media, A-Featured, faith, oupblog, romney, mormonism, domke, coe, huckabee, presidential, candidate, primary, mccain, huckabee’s, strategy, campaign—huckabee, pulpit, Add a tag
David Domke is Professor of Communication and Head of Journalism at the University of Washington. Kevin Coe is a doctoral candidate in Speech Communication at the University of Illinois. They are authors of the The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America. To learn more about the book check out their handy website here, to read more posts by them click here. In the post below they bid farewell to Mike Huckabee.
On Tuesday, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee finally gave up on his bid to win the GOP presidential nomination. Let us be among the first to say good riddance. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: history, Politics, American History, George, A-Featured, Washington, oupblog, Mark, McNeilly, leadership, election, president, america, primary, Add a tag
In honor of President’s Day we asked Mark McNeilly, author of George Washington and the Art of Business: Leadership Principles of America’s First Commander-in-Chief as well as Sun Tzu and the Art of Business: Six Strategic Principles for Managers, to reflect on what our original President would think of the current elections. The views he expresses are his alone and are not meant to represent those of any company or institution with which he is affiliated. Who do you think Washington would have voted for?
“The period for a new election of a citizen to administer the executive government of the United States being not far distant…” So began George Washington in his Farewell Address to the nation in September of 1796 as he prepared to finish his second term as President. Knowing he did not want to have a third term in office, Washington used his Farewell Address to provide advice to the citizens of the fledgling nation by offering “…some sentiments which are the result of much reflection, of no inconsiderable observation, and which appear to me all-important to the permanency of your felicity as a people.” Looking back at this and other writings of Washington, as well as his actions in history, we might surmise what he may have thought of the upcoming election. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Politics, Current Events, Media, A-Featured, Western Religion, domke, obama, god, religion, super, tuesday, Christianity, south, coe, primary, carolina, brownback, Add a tag
David Domke is Professor of Communication and Head of Journalism at the University of Washington. Kevin Coe is a doctoral candidate in Speech Communication at the University of Illinois. They are authors of the The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America. To learn more about the book check out their handy website here, to read more posts by them click here. In the post below they look at Obama’s success in South Carolina.
In winning the Iowa caucuses and the South Carolina primary, Democratic Party presidential candidate Barack Obama carried virtually every demographic group. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: polls, Politics, Current Events, oxford, Media, A-Featured, conservative, primary, Edwards, giuliani, republican, Mickey, mccain, “conservative”, voters, florida’s, party’s, oupblog, Add a tag
Former Republican Congressman, founding trustee of the Heritage Foundation, and national chairman of the American Conservative Union, Mickey Edwards is the author of Reclaiming Conservatism: How A Great American Political Movement Got Lost- and How It Can Find It Way Back. In the post below Edwards considers the Republican nominees and the voters who may elect them. Read Edwards other OUPblog posts here.
John McCain’s victory in Florida’s Republican presidential primary (or, more accurately, Mitt Romney’s loss and Mike Huckabee’s distant fourth-place finish) illustrate once again – as did Rudy Giuliani’s once dominant lead in earlier national polls – that many outside observers, including most of the nation’s most prominent political reporters, have no clue as to the party’s real electoral base. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: state, union, veto, earmarks, milbank, dana, legislative, branch, chief, goverment, liberal, line, law, constitution, the, Politics, Current Events, American History, voting, Media, A-Featured, of, captain, conservative, legal, presidents, primary, edwards, republican, mickey, democrat, Add a tag
Former Republican Congressman, founding trustee of the Heritage Foundation, and national chairman of the American Conservative Union, Mickey Edwards is the author of Reclaiming Conservatism: How A Great American Political Movement Got Lost- and How It Can Find It Way Back. He attended the State of the Union address Monday night and shared his reaction with us yesterday. Today Edwards wonders why the Republican members of Congress were so enthusiastic at the SOTU Monday. Read Edwards other OUPblog posts here.
For Republican members of Congress, the man who delivered a State of the Union speech Monday night was not merely a President of the United States – the head of one of the other branches of the federal government – but, more importantly, he was their team captain. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: applause, cheer, chamber, reclaiming, state, union, address, the, Politics, American History, Media, american, A-Featured, newt, Political, of, sustained, Movement, oupblog, conservatism, primary, edwards, republican, mickey, democrat, Add a tag
Former Republican Congressman, founding trustee of the Heritage Foundation, and national chairman of the American Conservative Union, Mickey Edwards is the author of Reclaiming Conservatism: How A Great American Political Movement Got Lost- and How It Can Find It Way Back. Last night, Edwards attended the State of The Union address and below he shares his reactions. Read Edwards other OUPblog posts here.
To hear White House spinners tell it, George W. Bush has no intention of drifting quietly into the night. Much to do. Still driven. That sort of thing. And perhaps I might have believed it if I had missed the President’s State of the Union speech Monday night. Sadly, I didn’t; I was, in fact, in the House chambers, where I have watched some 20 previous such speeches. Fortunately, there is a pattern to such events, a ritual that involves standing and cheering whenever anybody of note enters the chamber – members of the Senate (that House members cheer for them is proof of how ritualistic, and meaningless, the ovations really are), members of the Cabinet, members of the Diplomatic Corps, members of the Supreme Court, and . . . the President, for whom the tradition requires sustained applause at entry, sustained applause at podium arrival, sustained applause at the Speaker’s formal introduction of the visitor from the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: religion, Politics, Current Events, American History, color, election, president, legacy, king, Media, A-Featured, African American Studies, Western Religion, faith, martin, clinton, primary, mlk, obama, luther, jr, democratic, king’s, harnessing, Add a tag
David Domke is Professor of Communication and Head of Journalism at the University of Washington. Kevin Coe is a doctoral candidate in Speech Communication at the University of Illinois. They are authors of the The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America. To learn more about the book check out their handy website here, to read more posts by them click here. Below Domke and Coe look at the effects of MLK’s legacy on the Democratic primaries.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day has now come and gone, but King’s presence is still being felt in the Democratic primary. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: party, history, Politics, Current Events, American History, president, Media, A-Featured, america, oupblog, primaries, morton, keller, three, regimes, candidate, primary, convention, Add a tag
Morton Keller is the author of America’s Three Regimes: A New Political History, in which he argues that while most historians popularly categorize America’s history into short periods of time (most “eras” or “ages” lasting no longer than a decade) the truth is quite contrary. In the post below Keller, Spector Professor of History Emeritus at Brandeis University, puts the 2008 primary season in historical perspective.
As the 2008 election slowly proceeds, it gets curiouser and curiouser. (more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: caucus, primaried, corcas, caucusing, caucas, primarying, democrat, Politics, election, A-Featured, Lexicography, dictionary, word, origin, ben, Dictionaries, corpus, zimmer, From A To Zimmer, oupblog, primary, caucuses, republican, Add a tag
Now that U.S. voters are deeply enmeshed in the presidential primary season, I’ve been thinking a lot about the word primary. (Or maybe it was last week’s column on subprime that primed the pump.) Primary and its colleague caucus are distinctly American political terms for the processes by which a party’s candidates are selected, and tracing the usage of these words offers a fascinating glimpse into the evolution of the nation’s electoral process.
(more…)
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Do, Deborah, Cameron, History, The, Politics, Current Events, speaking, Myth, Media, A-Featured, public, hillary, of, and, clinton, primary, obama, barak, crying, orators, Mars, Venus, women, men, speak, languages, different, really, Add a tag
The Myth of Mars and Venus: Do men and women really speak different languages? by Deborah Cameron, Rupert Murdoch Professor of Language and Communication at Oxford University, argues that gender needs to be viewed in more complex ways than the prevailing myths and stereotypes allow. In the article below Cameron looks at historical stereotypes of female orators and reflects on Hillary Clinton’s primary run.
After Hillary Clinton lost to Barack Obama in Iowa, the London Times columnist David Aaronovitch suggested that part of Mrs. Clinton’s problem might lie in our contradictory attitudes to women’s public speech. If their style is assertive they are labeled “shrill” and “strident”; if it is softer and more conciliatory, that casts doubt on their ability to lead. However she speaks, it seems a woman cannot win. (more…)
Blog: Phenomenon Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: agents, presidential, primary, Add a tag
Not sure why, but I have been in to watching the Primary these days. I think it's wonderful that so many more people are coming out to vote.
Been up to my usual fare. E-mailing, phoning, subbing. In fact, most of our clients are in the waiting game right now. Have edits to do on a couple projects and a few new projects coming our way soon.
Some of you beasties are still submitting even though we're closed. We were sending everyone away until March sight unseen, but I've started peeking ( I love to peek). One thing that gets me every time is a writer who doesn't properly address the query (I am so not "Dear Sir or Madame," have never been addressed thus in my entire life).
Jury's still out on a few potential clients. 6 manuscripts, 2 slots, you do the math;)
Not too long, then I can submit a sale to Publisher's Lunch (yay!) and tell everyone a bit more about the project.
Stay literate;)
Blog: Saipan Writer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: contests, videos, Politics, primary, Presidential politics, New Hampshire primary, Presidential politics, primary, New Hampshire primary, Add a tag
I'm glad Hilary Clinton won in the New Hampshire Democratic primary. I like Barak Obama, but I like Hilary better. I think Obama is just as much an old-school politician as any of them, despite his youth. I like his oratory, and his personal success, and his ability to motivate young adults to get out and vote, but I have more confidence in Hilary's ability to judge issues and made important decisions. Hilary is smart, hard-working, capable, experienced, and I like her stand on issues.
So, either way--Clinton or Obama, I think the Democractic party stands a chance of doing a better job in the president's office than the Republicans. But hey, those New Hampshire voters did good on the Republican side, too--McCain isn't all bad. He's definitely got the personal grit to lead.
So now--here's a nifty contest for those who like to make movies or who just enjoy parody: NHPR parody video contest.
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: holidays, christmas, religion, oxford, david, oupblog, domke, coe, kevin, Politics, Current Events, American History, A-Featured, Western Religion, romney, huckabee, presidential, candidate, primary, Add a tag
David Domke is Professor of Communication and Head of Journalism at the University of Washington. Kevin Coe is a doctoral candidate in Speech Communication at the University of Illinois. They are authors of the The God Strategy: How Religion Became a Political Weapon in America. To learn more about the book check out their handy website here. In the article below Domke and Coe reflect on presidential religious politics.
Mike Huckabee feels our pain.
In his new campaign ad, Huckabee assures us that he too is tired of all the no-holds-barred politicking. He’d rather relax, don his red sweater, carefully position himself in front of a bookshelf that bears an uncanny resemblance to a glowing white cross, and focus on the real meaning of the holiday season: “the celebration of the birth of Christ.” No politics here, just old time religion. (more…)
I'm a die-hard liberal, but I actually used to have a fondness for McCain.
I was also a Hillary fan, until I really started paying attention to Obama and actually researched his voting record. He has generally made good decisions with regards to his congressional voting and hasn't simply "gone with the group". Hillary has on any number of instances. So, I changed my candidate.
I do think you're right with regards to either of them being better than what we've currently got. Which certainly isn't much. :)
Don't worry about a primary, just place an X under the donkey...Hillary, Obama, Edwards, and Gore are all tied in one important catagory...they are not Republicans. I wish Hillary and Obama would run as one ticket.