Advertisers:
advertise on this site


Steve Clemons interviews Eli Pariser

Former Executive Director of MoveOn.org, Eli Pariser discusses his new book "The Filter Bubble" and how the architecture of the internet is evolving to match our interests and filtering out information that might challenge our opinions.

Steve Clemons on Obama's Approach to Libya

Steve Clemons argues that in addittion to being ineffectual militarily, a no-fly zone will change the narrative of the Libyan uprising and shift the focus from the decisions of the Libyan rebels to the actions of Western nations.

Ian Bremmer On the War Between States and Corporations

Eurasia Group President Ian Bremmer discusses the political and economic impacts of the economic recession, as well as rising economic powers.

More videos are available on the Video Archives Page

The Washington Note is now a member of the Political Insiders advertising network:
Find out more...

VA Loan and VA Refinance
Information from VA Mortgage Center



ADVERTISE SEND FEEDBACK OR TIPS CONTACT DETAILS
Support The Washington Note

Using PayPal

Pointing into the Gallery

Share / Recommend - Comment - Print - Monday, Jan 28 2008, 6:16PM

The State of the Union address is a stuffy affair to watch -- unless one is lucky enough to be sitting in the gallery (which I did one year when Bill Clinton was President).

The President often tries to make a point by pointing up at the gallery at some hero, or foreign leader, or wife of some fallen person, or a businessman that deserves recognition for selflessness.

I've already commented on one person on the President's guest roster tonight, but here is the entire list of Presidential guests -- most all of them there to underscore a point in the President's priorities:

-- Jenna and Barbara Bush, the twin daughters of the president and the first lady.

-- Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney.

-- Lori Ball of Brookville, Ind., who has received help from the HOPE NOW alliance that helps people struggling to pay their mortgages.

-- James "Jim" Barnard, the chief financial officer of Barnard Manufacturing in St. John's, Mich., a small business that stands to benefit from an economic stimulus package that the Bush administration supports.

-- Staff Sgt. Craig Charloux of Bangor, Maine, who served in Iraq for 14 months and served as a leader of an Armored Reconnaissance Squadron. He was seriously wounded by two grenade blasts but was able to successfully complete the raid, in which eight al-Qaida operatives were killed.

-- Former Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Donna Shalala, who served as Health and Human Services Secretary under President Clinton. The two co-chaired the commission charged with helping wounded military veterans get better health care and return to civilian life.

-- Blanca Gonzalez, who lives in Miami, Fla. She is the mother of Normando Hernandez Gonzalez, a Cuban political prisoner arrested in He has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for reporting on the conditions of Cuba's state-run services and for criticizing the government's management.

-- Steve Hadley, President Bush's national security adviser.

-- Steve Hewitt, administrator of Greensburg, Kan., whose city was almost entirely destroyed by a tornado in May but has made progress in recovering.

-- 1st Lt. Andrew Kinard of the United States Marine Corps, who was deployed to Iraq and lost both legs when he was struck by an improvised explosive device. He is an outpatient at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

-- Dr. Bill Krissoff of the United States Navy Medical Corps. He applied to the Navy Medical Corps after his oldest son, Marine 1st Lt. Nathan Krissoff, was killed in combat in Iraq.

-- Tara Kunkel, an emergency room nurse in Indianapolis, Ind. One of her patients admitted herself to the hospital after reading an interview with Mrs. Bush in which the first lady described the signs and symptoms of hearts attacks in women.

-- Senior Airman Diane Lopes, who entered the U.S. Army in 1991 and joined the Air Force Reserves in January 2003. Lopes was wounded by a rocket attack in Iraq and is undergoing treatment at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

-- Irvin Mayfield, a jazz musician from New Orleans, who has helped aid the city's recovery from Hurricane Katrina.

-- Dan Meyer, assistant to President Bush for legislative affairs.

-- Petty Officer Willard "Wil" Milam of the United States Coast Guard, who rescued four people in the Bering Sea in February 2007 after locating a life raft from a boat that sunk an hour earlier. His military decorations total nearly 45 awards.

-- Alma Morales Riojas, president and CEO of MANA, the oldest national Latina membership organization in the United States.

-- Tara D. Morrison, the superintendent of the African Burial Ground National Monument in New York City.

-- Tatu Msangi, a 35-year-old single mother and registered nurse from Tanzania, and her 2-year-old daughter, Faith Mang'ehe. After discovering she was HIV-positive, Tatu enrolled in a program designed to prevent transmission from mother to child. She delivered a healthy daughter, Faith, who is HIV-free.

-- Staff Sgt. Andrew Nichols of the United States Marine Corps. He has served multiple tours in Iraq and was able to return recently to the United States when his unit was successfully replaced by a division of the Iraqi army.

-- Michelle Rhee, the new chancellor of the District of Columbia public school system.

-- Dr. Thomas "Tom" M. Stauffer, who is president, CEO and professor of management at the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul.

-- Kevin Sterne, a student at Virginia Tech, who was shot twice in the right leg during the massacre there last April. He was able to stop his own bleeding to help save his life, and he has since returned to Virginia Tech to pursue a master's degree.

-- Eric Whitaker, a team leader of a provincial reconstruction team in Baghdad, Iraq.



-- Steve Clemons



« Previous Article - Sneak Peak at State of the Union Highlights
» Next Article - Media Alert: Foreign Policy and the Elections with Terrence McNally

Leave a comment:


(required)
(required)
- only for verification, not for display or any other use.

(required)

Type the characters you see in the picture above.


The Washington Note - Steven ClemonsHome - About - Archives - Published - Recommended - Advertise - Contact
THIS SITE IS COPYRIGHT © 2010 THE WASHINGTON NOTE. ALL RIGHTS ARE RESERVED.
En ligne pas cher tadalafil 20mg acheter cialis sans ordonnance en France les informations relatives au mode d'action et les effets secondaires. Le jeu en ligne est devenu une industrie millions de dollars avec des joueurs de partout dans le monde des paris sur les jeux de casino en ligne. La gamme exclusive de jeux de casino soutenu par caractéristiques exceptionnelles et des avantages a surpassé le glamour de casinos terrestres. Même les gens qui n'ont jamais été à un casino sur terre, ou joué tout jeu de casino jamais, deviennent attirés par le monde exceptionnel de jeux en ligne. Vous pourriez vous demander ce qui rend le jeu en ligne si populaire, quand il n'y a pas de concessionnaire réel, pas de vraie foule, pas de serveuses glamour et pas de boissons gratuites. Ci-dessous sont cinq raisons fondamentales pour lesquelles un grand nombre de joueurs de casino se dirigent vers les casino en ligne aujourd'hui. Le Casino en ligne contient également un certain nombre de formateurs de jeu pour les jeux les plus populaires de casino en ligne! Vous pouvez jouer gratuitement ici sur le site et recevoir des conseils de stratégie de l'entraîneur sur le chemin. Notre dévotion au jeu en ligne nous met en mesure de vous proposer les meilleures affaires en bonus avec les meilleurs casinos en ligne. Cela signifie plus d'argent dans votre poche. Restez branchés pour les bonus de casino plus rentables et les promotions à venir.