Mar
30
2009
Matt Andrus
Most Americans recognize San Francisco as one of the most progressive, free-thinking cities in the country. Some choose to lampoon this fact with seemingly innoccuous yet purposefully derogatory phrases like “San Francisco Values.” No matter on which side of the fence you reside, we can all agree that you will see and experience things in ”Baghdad by the Bay” that you won’t anywhere else.
For example, earlier this year I was boarding the Muni (SF’s local transist system) and in place of a typical bus-side advertisement for McDonald’s or the current movie blockbuster, I had a simply advertised question staring at me: Why Islam? Later in the day, another Muni drove by bearing an ad that read “Islam: Submission to God”. In addition to these messages, each of these traveling billboards included a phone number (1-877-WhyIslam) and a web site (WhyIslam.org).
Even in an open-minded (sometimes to the point of apathy), yet opinionated (sometimes to the point of arrogance) city like San Francisco, this ad campaign somehow caught me offguard. Perhaps I’m used to seeing only commercial messages pasted onto Muni vehicles and kiosks or maybe I have grown all too familiar with typical Western media portrayals of Islam, which is to say…that it is the religion of terrorists. And although I’m semi-worldly enough to recognize the fallacy in this widely-held view (believe it or not, not all Muslims are terrorists and not all terrorists are Muslim), seeing Islam publicized in a positive light was unusually shocking. Continue reading
2 comments | tags: 9/11, Al Qaeda, Five Pillars of Islam, Ghost Wars, ICNA, Islam, McDonald's, Osama bin Laden, Qur'an, San Francisco, Taliban, Terrorism | posted in International, Spirituality
Mar
19
2009
Matt Andrus
This week, President Obama confronted the nay-sayers of his progressive budget:
The American people don’t have the luxury of just focusing on Wall Street. They don’t have the luxury of choosing to pay their mortgage or their medical bills. They don’t get to pick between paying their kids’ college tuition or saving enough money for retirement.
They have to do all these things. They have to confront all these problems. And as a consequence, so do we.
Obama states the obvious that only focusing on the economy (and AIG) is impossible for a successful president, and he’s clearly inherited a bevy of domestic and international issues to address. He could try to handle them one-by-one, but since the World won’t wait, he should probably start fixing all of them…right…about…now:
9 comments | tags: 9/11, Afghanistan, Africa, Al Qaeda, Asif Ali Zardari, Bailout, Barack Obama, Benazir Bhutto, Budgets, Camp David, China, CIA, Darfur, David Addington, De-ba'athification, Dick Cheney, DOJ, Economic stimulus, Extremism, George W. Bush, Guantanamo, Hamas, Health care, Hillary Clinton, India, Iran, Iraq, ISI, Israel, John McCain, John Yoo, Kosovo, Leon Panetta, Middle East, Mortgage crisis, Nuclear, Osama bin Laden, Pakistan, Paul Brehmer, Pervez Musharraf, Robert Gates, Ronald Reagan, Shiite, Sudan, Sunni, Swat Valley, Taliban, Taxes, Terrorism, Unemployment, United Nations, War on Terror | posted in Economics, International, Politics