Sunday, October 18, 2009

And the Winner is...

Nobel Peace Prize Winner: Barack Obama

The Nobel committee provoked surprise, delight, and indignation around the globe Friday by awarding its Peace Prize to President Barack Obama -- with the recipient himself calling it less a recognition of his accomplishments than a "call to action."

The Norwegian Nobel Committee cited the 48-year-old president's creation of a "new climate in international politics" and his work on nuclear disarmament. "His diplomacy is founded in the concept that those who are to lead the world must do so on the basis of values and attitudes that are shared by the majority of the world's population," the committee said.

The award to Mr. Obama just 37 weeks into his presidency stunned much of official Washington, and drew a range of reactions world-wide. "So soon? Too early," said former Polish President Lech Walesa, who won the peace prize in 1983. "He has no contribution so far. He is only beginning to act."

Said John Bolton, who served as ambassador to the United Nations under former President George W. Bush: "It is indicative of the politicization of the Nobel Peace Prize process. This just carries it to the n-th degree."

Supporters said the award affirmed the vision the president brought to office, one that is popular overseas. Former President Jimmy Carter, who won the 2002 Peace Prize, called it "a bold statement of international support for his vision and commitment."

The prize also inspired heated debate about whether it would give Mr. Obama a boost at a difficult political moment or be a liability for a president whom opponents have criticized for having more "star power" than substance. At home, the administration is grappling with challenges ranging from high unemployment to a soaring federal deficit, while public support for the president has dropped to nearly 50% in polls. Abroad, the White House is rethinking its military strategy in Afghanistan, including the prospect of a big troop increase, while trying to build support for action to stem Iran's nuclear program.

Obama aides said the White House had no time to discuss the ramifications of the prize, good or bad, or how it might alter his presidency or his standing. "There wasn't a lot of time to contemplate the magnitude of this," said senior White House adviser David Axelrod. Mr. Axelrod said he knew nothing of the president's candidacy; it wasn't clear Friday who had nominated him.

Speaking in the Rose Garden, Mr. Obama said he was "deeply humbled" and didn't feel he deserved to be among "so many of the transformative figures who've been honored" by the prize. But he would accept the prize, he said, "as an affirmation of American leadership."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs, who called Mr. Obama at around 6 a.m. to break the news, said the president never considered declining the award, as some critics -- on the left and the right -- began suggesting he do almost immediately.

White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said Mr. Obama had nothing to fear from raised expectations or possible attacks from critics that the prize outstrips his accomplishments, "because this is associated with the content of his work."

The commitee's decision made Mr. Obama the third sitting U.S. president to win the prize, after Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. It came 45 years after the prize went to Martin Luther King Jr., the last African-American to win.

The committee that chose President Obama is comprised of five Norwegians, mostly former lawmakers and politicians, who are elected to six-year terms by Norway's parliament. The committee received 205 nominations for the peace prize this year, more than ever before.

All nominations had to be submitted by Feb. 1, just 12 days after the president took office. Members of the committee selected him after holding seven meetings and eliminating nominated candidates at each one.

Agot Valle, a Norwegian politician and member of the committee, said in a phone interview that the choice of Mr. Obama was primarily related to his stance on nuclear disarmament. Ms. Valle said the committee last met on Oct. 5, and that the decision to choose him was unanimous. She said his recent work at the United Nations in late September to pass a resolution calling for a strengthened Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty helped his candidacy.

"There is a criticism about the war in Afghanistan, and I understand that," said Ms. Valle. "But this was primarily an award on his work on, and commitment to, nuclear disarmament -- and his dialogue. Of course there will be criticism, because he hasn't achieved his goals yet. It will take time, but this is a support."

It is possible Mr. Obama was nominated by the committee itself, or at least its Social Democrat members. The committee accepts nominations from former peace prize winners; current and former members; members of national governments and parliaments; professors of law, theology, social sciences, history and philosophy; leaders of peace research and foreign affairs institutes; and members of international courts of law.

Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland has been an enthusiastic Obama supporter in Norway. He was recently elected to the post of Secretary General of the Council of Europe, the continent's leading human-rights watchdog, and would like the Nobel committee to play a more political role.

In the handicapping before the announcement, there was no clear favorite, though Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai was seen as a potentially strong candidate. Other names included the Vietnamese Buddhist monk and democracy advocate Thich Quang Do.

Mr. Obama's win includes a cash award equal to $1.4 million. The White House said he plans to give the money to charity.

cite- Article

Comments:

I think Barack is getting his Nobel Peace Prize in advanced. I say that because he actually hasn't done that much politically YET, but he has brought more of the American people back into politics in particular the young adults. Me personally wasn't that into politics but after the past election it has made me more into what's going on. I like the quote former President Jimmy Carter said after he won the Peace Prize in 2002. "a bold statement of international support for his vision and commitment." I think that is true with President Obama's win, he hasn't done much yet, but he has the vision and the commitment to take America in the right direction and we the people are seeing what he sees. I don't think it was like that in past presidential campaigns.

Keem has SPOKEN!!!!!!!!!...........WHOOOOOOOP!!!

Monday, October 5, 2009

Observations of Internet in American life between race and ethnicity

Degrees of Access (May 2008 data)

1. 17% of cell phone owners who are involved in a political or community group have communicated with the group via text messaging on a cell phone or PDA.

2. 32% of internet users who are involved in a political or community group have communicated with the group using the group's website, and 10% have done so via instant messaging.

3. Some 37% of internet users aged 18-29 use blogs or social networking sites as a venue for political or civic involvement, compared to 17% of online 30-49 years old, 12% of 50-64 years olds and 10% of internet users over 65.

4. Those who use blogs or social networking sites politically are much more likely to be invested in other forms of civic and political activism.

5. 24% of online social network sites users who are involved in a political or community group have communicated with the group using a social networking site.


WHOOOOOOP!-whooop!


Monday, September 28, 2009

Venus V. Mars Internet Use...

6 Observations of Internet use between Genders

1) Men are first at trying new technologies

2) Men are slightly more intense internet users than women. Men log on more often, spend more time online, and are more likely to be broadband users.

3) Men make more online transactions than women, But women are on the up-rise.

4) Men are more avid consumers than women of online information. Men look for information on a wider variety of topics and issues than women do.

5) Men are more interested in technology then women and are more tech savvy.

6) The percentage of women using the internet still lags slightly behind the percentage of men. Women under 30 and black women outpace their male peers. However, older women trail dramatically behind older men.

After reading the observation, Men are more tech savvy, are into learning things online and are starting to flood the internet with online gaming. Women are more into the social networks, shopping and email/communications.


http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2005/How-Women-and-Men-Use-the-Internet.aspx



--Keem has spoken!!...WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOP--


FCC and this Little Problem with the Internet..

After reading the article with the FCC. I don't think people should have to pay for faster internet. Can we for once be on an equal playing field with something? People are always wanting to attach a dollar sign to something to make it "better". I think we should just leave the internet the way it is, once we start messing with it is when things happen. It's not broke, so don't try and fix it!

WHHHOOPPPP-WhOOOPPPP!!

Bridging and Bonding Sites...

Three Bridging Sites:

social networks that bring people together of different sorts.

eBay
Amazon
Craigslist

Three Bonding Sites:

Sites that brings people sharing similar backgrounds and beliefs.

Facebook
Myspace
Twitter



WHOOP-whoop!!

Monday, September 21, 2009

World Internet Stats - WHOOP!

Couple of Statistics that caught my EYE'

Recent searches in the last 90 days:

Michael Jackson - 2,100%
Harry Potter - 180%
Big Brother - 130%

Top 3 Internet Languages in America

English
Chinese
Spanish

Top 10 Countries with the highest population

China- 1,138,612,968
India- 1,156,897,776
United States- 307,212,123
Indonesia- 240,271,522
Brazil- 190,010,647
Pakistan- 174,578,558
Bangladesh- 156,050,883
Nigeria- 149,229,090
Russia- 140,041,247
Japan- 127,078,679

Asia's Top Internet Countries 2009

China
Japan
India
South Korea
Indonesia

World Internet Users

Asia - 42%
Europe - 24%
North America - 15%
Latin America - 10%
Africa - 4%
Middle East - 3%
Australia - 1%

WHOoP-wHoOp!!