Posts Tagged 2010 elections

Domenick Scudera: The Ombudsman Of My Dreams

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 February, 2012

I am a gay man, and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie is making my dreams come true. You see, I am not one of those sentimental homosexuals who dream of splashy, tacky, gay weddings. As if he could read my mind, Governor Christie vetoed same-sex marriage this past week and offered up the idea of creating an ombudsman for gay people instead. That is exactly what I have always wanted: my very own ombudsman! I do not want a groom; I want an ombudsman! If the legal system will not treat me equally, it would be nice to have someone who will fight for me to be equal anyway. Governor Christie seems to understand that I would never want to walk down the aisle and profess my love to some homosexual in front of friends and family. Who needs that? Why parade my same-sex perversion for everyone to see? Better to keep it illegal. We should not offend the sanctity of heterosexual coupling. Those straights obviously have a divine right to legal recognition in the United States, not I and my gay homosexual lover. When I was a boy, I always hoped that one day I would meet an ombudsman, someone who would stand up for me against all the bullies. I would daydream in school, drawing hearts and scribbling “Dom & Om 4EVA” in pink ink inside my notebooks. I fantasized that he would have a name that oozed with fairness and impartiality, something like Jack or Dennis or Chad. My pet name for him would be Buddy. He wouldn’t have to love me, and he wouldn’t necessarily have to be handsome (although that would be a plus); he would just have to see me as an equal under the law and be ready to fight for me when things got tough. I do not live in New Jersey, but I know that Governor Christie’s leadership on this issue is going to spread. I live in a state that borders New Jersey and already bars me from getting married, so, luckily, we will not have to deal with the hassle of taking away my rights. Maybe my Pennsylvania governor will be inspired by this daring New Jersey governor and will create an ombudsman position right here in my state! (By the way, I am also hopeful that Governor Corbett will follow Governor Christie’s lead and will have flags lowered for Whitney Houston in Pennsylvania, too. I am pretty sure that she stopped at a rest stop here once, so it is justifiable.) Thank you, Chris Christie. You are a true leader who sees a new, shining future for America’s homosexuals. Despite all the hoopla about same-sex marriage, the truth is that we gays really do not care about all that. The real reason that we have been complaining about getting equal treatment under the law is that we wanted our very own ombudsman. Hooray! Someone is finally listening and responding to our needs! See more here: Domenick Scudera: The Ombudsman Of My Dreams

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Domenick Scudera: The Ombudsman Of My Dreams


These Seniors Are Twice As Likely To Be In Poverty In Retirement

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 February, 2012

Black and Latino seniors in the U.S. are facing a tougher time in retirement: Elder poverty rates are twice as high among these groups compared to the U.S. population as a whole, according to a new study by the University of California, Berkeley. Some 19.4 percent of black and 19.0 percent of Latino seniors have incomes below the federal poverty line, compared to 9.4 percent for the senior population overall, according to the analysis, which is based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Population Survey and U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey. “Recent household surveys show that retirees of color, especially blacks and Latinos, rely more heavily on Social Security and have less access to other types of retirement income than their white counterparts,” researcher Nari Rhee of UC Berkeley’s Center for Labor Research and Education, said in a statement. Less than one-third of employed Latinos and less than half of black workers are covered by an employer-sponsored retirement plan, a key resource in ensuring adequate retirement income. As a result, they are disproportionately reliant on the limited income provided by Social Security, the report found. Among retirees age 60 and older, people of color are disproportionately likely to be low income: For 2007-2009, 31.6 percent of blacks and 46.5 percent of Latinos were in the bottom 25 percent income group. The “other” race category of the Census, which includes Asian/Pacific Islander and Native American populations, is also more likely to be low-income (38 percent), the report noted. “It is critical to improve both job access and job quality — in terms of wages and benefits, including pension benefits — to improve retirement prospects for current workers,” Rhee stated. Continue reading here: These Seniors Are Twice As Likely To Be In Poverty In Retirement

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These Seniors Are Twice As Likely To Be In Poverty In Retirement


Santorum Up 4 in Michigan on Strength of Tea Party Support

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 February, 2012

Rick Santorum The latest Rasmussen poll of likely voters shows Rick Santorum leading Mitt Romney by 4 percentage points in Romney’s home state of Michigan.

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Santorum Up 4 in Michigan on Strength of Tea Party Support


Virginia legislature signs off on bill to let agencies deny adoptions to gay parents

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 February, 2012

The “conscience clause” legislation that allows private agencies to reject placements of children on moral and religious grounds heads to Gov. Bob McDonnell, who says he will sign it. Here is the original post: Virginia legislature signs off on bill to let agencies deny adoptions to gay parents

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Virginia legislature signs off on bill to let agencies deny adoptions to gay parents


Community Colleges To Manufacturing’s Rescue

Posted by on Tuesday, 21 February, 2012

STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. — Fitzpatrick Manufacturing Co. is a high-tech job shop, crafting super-precise parts for machines used in everything from robotics to aerospace to oil exploration. Macomb Community College lies a few miles down the road in this Detroit suburb. Sometimes it’s hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. Fitzpatrick’s 93 employees are constantly in and out of Macomb, taking classes with a tuition reimbursement from the company. And so frequently are Macomb instructors at Fitzpatrick’s plant to offer lessons on the esoteric technology used there that the company built a classroom, now lined with about 250 diplomas and certificates employees have earned. Company president Kevin LaComb describes the school as concierge-style job training – exactly what his workers need to keep a quality advantage over lower-cost competitors overseas. “You tell them what you need, pretty much in a couple days, they have an instructor,” he said. “Other people say, `This is what we’re offering, but we can’t deviate from what we do.’ Macomb customizes just what we need.” Community colleges, long the under-loved stepchildren of American higher education, still don’t get the dollars of their four-year counterparts, but they’re standing very much in the spotlight these days. President Barack Obama made them the focus last week when he unveiled his proposed budget, which took place at a Northern Virginia community college he’s now visited four times. The president joked he’d been to campus so often that he’s only three credits shy of graduating. Why all the attention? One reason is that so-called “middle skill” jobs at places like Fitzpatrick – requiring more than high school but less than a full college degree_ look like the most promising source of fuel for quickly revving up an economic recovery. Federal data show they account for roughly half of all jobs, and even when unemployment was over 10 percent nationally last year, a survey conducted by the Manufacturing Institute found that two-thirds of manufacturing companies reported moderate-to-severe shortages of qualified workers to hire. That kind of training is the sweet spot for the country’s 1,167 community colleges. But the other big reason is speed and agility. Compared to more slow-to-respond sectors of higher education, community colleges have become more entrepreneurial, flexible and responsive. Here in the Detroit area and around the country, many have mastered the art of staying on top of rapidly churning technologies and quickly piecing together curricula in fields just being born. Most teachers aren’t tenured professors but professionals plucked from changing fields. If community colleges don’t have someone on staff to teach a class, they hire an adjunct. And they can move in weeks or sometimes days, earning a reputation as the only corner of higher education that really operates at private sector speeds. In Michigan, where unemployment peaked at 14.1 percent in 2009 but has since fallen to 9.3 percent, leaders hope the agility of community colleges will accelerate a manufacturing rebound. Money is tight, but one program offers free training for companies filling newly created jobs. In return, state income taxes generated by the new positions kick back to the school for two years, and then to the state. Organizers of the program, modeled on something similar in Iowa, say it’s supported 8,000 new jobs and easily pays for itself. They’re trying to get a $50 million cap lifted so they can move down the waiting list of companies that want to participate. Many Michigan students moving through such programs used to work at companies most Americans have heard of: Electrolux, Alcoa, Whirlpool, and of course the Big Three automakers and the companies that supported them. The companies where they’re now training for jobs are less well-known: BioDri (alternative energy), Trans-Matic (metal stampings), Oxus America (oxygen concentrators). Typically, such companies are younger and smaller and need tightly tailored training that applies only to themselves or a very narrow industry sector. “For small- and mid-size employers who actually generate a lot of the jobs in this economy, developing that kind of training for 5 or 10 employees that they’re going to hire, it’s not economically feasible,” said Rachel Unruh, associate director of the National Skills Coalition, a foundation-supported workforce development coalition. That’s where community colleges come in. On the factory floor at Fitzpatrick Manufacturing, $100,000 machines do work that used to be cranked by hand – but somebody has to know how to run the machines. Software evolves constantly, as do the machines customers are building with these parts. For some parts, the margin of error can be no more than .0004 inches – roughly one-tenth the width of a human hair. One typical “middle skill” is called “geometric dimensioning and tolerancing,” or GDT. Basically, it’s a language of symbols used in engineering blueprints. Customers used to give companies like Fitzpatrick blueprints with written words, but that left too much room for error. Now the field has shifted to GDT as a kind of lingua franca. On two recent Saturdays, Macomb instructors came by to help employees brush up on GDT. “To learn calculus that you would learn in an engineering curriculum is all well and good,” said Mike Fitzpatrick, whose family founded the company in 1952 and who sold it to LaComb and a partner last year but remains on staff. “But it has nothing to do with us.” Large companies are no less appreciative of rapid response times. When the big Dow Chemical plant in Midland, about two hours north of here, is ready to ramp up production in its chemical processing unit, it calls Patricia Graves at nearby Delta College, who in turn starts calling a list of interested students to ask, “When can you start?” Soon, another “Fast Start” customized training program in chemical process operations is up and running at Delta. Sixteen weeks later, virtually all graduates move on to work for Dow Chemical or one of the other major plants in the region. Some return to Delta after they start work for even more customized training. Delta has trained and placed eight such groups of roughly 20 people each. Now it offers versions serving other Dow operations in the area, including a six-week program for solar manufacturing and a 10-week program in batteries. When the call comes “we’d like six weeks” lead time to get a new class running, said Graves, Delta’s executive director of corporate services. “We can do it in four. We’ve actually done it in two.” Certainly community colleges have shortcomings and challenges, namely high failure rates for students who intend eventually to earn a degree. Community colleges say that’s to be expected given the wide mission they’re asked to perform, and the fact that they receive just 27 percent of total public dollars spent on public higher education but serve 43 percent of students, according to the American Association of Community Colleges. Enrollments have risen more than a quarter over the last decade, yet tuition has held relatively steady even as costs have soared at four-year colleges. For the average enrolled student, community college is basically free when you factor in grants and aid, according to the College Board. But criticisms about bureaucracy and lack of success in community colleges are usually directed at for-credit programs and degrees. Non-credit programs, which serve an estimated 5 million out of 13 million community college students nationally, often have a very different, more entrepreneurial feel. Such instruction doesn’t have to please curriculum committees and state boards, just local employers and employees. And often what they want is speed. “On the non-credit side, there’s much more flexibility,” said Mike Hansen, president of the Michigan Community College Association. “There’s much less of an approval process, and the structures of the colleges tend to be me much leaner.” In his budget unveiled last week, Obama asked Congress to create an $8 billion fund to help community colleges train up to 2 million workers for jobs in high-growth fields, and to award financial incentives to make sure trainees find permanent work. There were few other details about how the proposal might work, and it faces long odds in Congress. Thomas Bailey, director of the Community College Research Center at Teachers College, Columbia University, said he believes such targeted workforce programs can be successful if well-focused, but there’s been little hard research. One concern: If training is too narrowly tailored to particular companies, and doesn’t award credit, workers may be stuck with non-transferable skills if the employer goes under. Brian Gasiewski, a division leader on the factory floor at Fitzpatrick, doesn’t worry much about that. Skills like GDT, he said, are important across the industry. Gasiewski was previously enrolled in a degree program at Macomb but isn’t at the moment due to family and time constraints. He may return someday, but for now says focusing on training targeted to precisely what Fitzpatrick does is the best way to advance his career here. That looks like a better bet than it might have two years ago, when the company’s sales fell by half. In 2011, however, they rebounded to their second highest level ever. ____ Link: Community Colleges To Manufacturing’s Rescue

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Community Colleges To Manufacturing’s Rescue


Elizabeth Dowling Taylor: The Presidents Who Owned Slaves

Posted by on Monday, 20 February, 2012

Here it is again, the intersection of Presidents Day and Black History Month. Eight of our early presidents, beginning with George Washington, owned slaves during their tenure in the nation’s highest office. The two I am most familiar with, given my career at the historic sites of Monticello and Montpelier, and as the author of the recently published A Slave in the White House (Palgrave Macmillan, $28.00) are Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Jefferson and Madison owned over a hundred enslaved people at their Virginia plantations and took several slaves with them to the White House. Running the domestic side of the executive mansion was a private undertaking then, and the third and fourth president each assembled a household staff, headed by a French steward, of about ten: white and free black workers, slaves hired in the capital, as well as slaves from their plantation. Slavery was not a debate. It was a crime being perpetrated on real people in real time. Ten-year-old Paul Jennings was one of the home slaves selected by President James Madison for the White House household staff. As a footman Jennings set and served meals, assisted the coachman, and ran messages and other errands. Later he became Madison’s personal manservant or valet, and in freedom he authored the first White House memoir. One enslaved man, John Freeman, served as a White House footman during both Jefferson’s and Madison’s administrations. Jefferson purchased Freeman in 1804 with the understanding, set by his former master, that he was to be freed in sixteen years. In 1809, the year Madison’s first term began, the third president sold Freeman to his successor for $231.81 (calculated to the penny based on Freeman’s remaining time as a slave). This is the only recorded instance of the sale of human property between these two presidents, though Jefferson also sold a woman, Thenia Hemings, and her five young daughters, to another of our slave-owning presidents, James Monroe. It is easy to see the contradiction–some say hypocrisy–in the author of the Declaration of Independence and the father of the Constitution lording over plantations of more than one hundred slaves and presiding over a government devoted to upholding individual rights while being served by enslaved footmen in livery. Yet we tend to make excuses for the failure of our Founding Fathers to end slavery. They were men of their time, they had to put union first, they did not understand that we are all one biological race. We look back and see slavery less as a political issue, more as a moral offense. The truth is that Madison and Jefferson saw it that way, too. Madison acknowledged that slavery was an evil of great magnitude, a “moral, social and economical” failure. Jefferson called it an “abominable crime” and a “moral depravity” and allowed that should a violent contest between slaves and slave owners transpire, there was no doubt which side God would be on. Both men supported gradual emancipation if something could be done with the free blacks. It was the concept of colonization, the transport of free blacks to Africa that offered Madison relief from his despair over slavery. Maybe all slaves could be freed, he wrote, if the “double operation”–emancipation followed by colonization–was put in place. Thus in the end it was not slavery but race–racism–that was the sticking point. Jefferson and Madison thought that people of color should enjoy the same individual rights as white citizens. But not here. They averred that black and white could never live harmoniously in America together. Two centuries later (centuries!) we are still working on proving them wrong in their prediction, still working on realizing a truly pluralistic society that all Americans honor. Paul Jennings’s great grandson, Dr. C Herbert Marshall, who, along with his fellow black doctors, could not practice in all-white hospitals or even join the American Medical Association, wrote an “op-ed” in the Negro History Bulletin in February of 1960 that started off, ” I have every reason to be proud of being an American.” It concluded, “Today, we find ourselves on the threshold of a new era ushering in the type of freedom for all for which my fore-parents sacrificed so much.” If Dr. Marshall could offer that positive a sentiment in February 1960, then certainly we in February 2012 can take a sanguine view of the distance we have come since then. If we are not post-racial yet, we are getting there. No matter the sins of the Fathers, it is on us now. A sprint to the finish, anyone? Everyone? Continued here: Elizabeth Dowling Taylor: The Presidents Who Owned Slaves

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Elizabeth Dowling Taylor: The Presidents Who Owned Slaves


McCain: U.S. relationship with Egypt is changing, but must remain friendly

Posted by on Monday, 20 February, 2012

U.S. Sen. John McCain says the nature of America’s partnership with Egypt is changing a year after the ouster of Hosni Mubarak but stressed that the two countries “must remain friends.” See the original post here: McCain: U.S. relationship with Egypt is changing, but must remain friendly

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McCain: U.S. relationship with Egypt is changing, but must remain friendly


20-Feb-12 World View: Eurozone Finance Ministers Set to Approve Greece Bailout on Monday

Posted by on Monday, 20 February, 2012

This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com . North Korea’s new leader threatens South Korea over military exercises Egypt recalls ambassador to Syria over ongoing violence Detention of pro-democracy workers threatens U.S.-Egypt relationship Eurozone finance ministers set to approve Greece bailout on Monday North Korea’s new leader threatens South Korea over military exercises 23-Nov-2010: S. Koreans watch smoke rise from Yeonpyeong Island, the target of N. Korean artillery shells (JoongAng) South Korea’s military announced Sunday that it will hold “routine” live-fire drills early this week near the Yellow Sea border islands with North Korea. The drills near the five border islands are set for Monday. One of the South Korean islands, Yeonpyeong, was shelled by North Korea in November 2010, killing five South Koreans, and marking the first North Korean attack on South Korean territory since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War. The North’s military denounced the planned drills as a “premeditated military provocation” against the North and vowed to “promptly make merciless retaliatory strikes” if the South violates its territorial waters during the drills: “Once the group of traitors starts a reckless military provocation in those waters…and in case just a single column of water is observed in its territorial waters, the (North’s) Korean People’s Army will promptly make merciless retaliatory strikes. Yonhap (Seoul) Egypt recalls ambassador to Syria over ongoing violence Because of the ongoing violence in Syria, Egypt recalled its ambassador to Syria on Sunday. This comes two days after Egyptians and Syrians protested in front of the Syrian embassy in Cairo, demanding the recall of the ambassador, and a week after the Arab League called to halt diplomatic cooperation with Syria. In response, Syria withdrew its own ambassador to Egypt. Bikya Masr (Cairo) and Gulf News (UAE) Detention of pro-democracy workers threatens U.S.-Egypt relationship Egypt has set February 26 as the date on which trial will begin for 43 pro-democracy workergs, including 19 Americans, includ Sam LaHood, son of U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. They’ll be tried on charges of illegally operating and funding foreign nongovernmental organizations in an effort to create unrest in Egypt. A number of U.S. senators and representatives have reacted to the accusations by threatening to cut $1.3 billion in annual U.S. aid to the Egyptian military. Essam El-Erian, a senior member of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, and head of the foreign affairs committee in the People’s Assembly, said that cutting aid would abrogate the U.S. treaty would the Egypt, and would allow Egypt to review its peace treaty with Israel: “We (Egypt) are a party (to the treaty) and we will be harmed so it is our right to review the matter. The aid was one of the commitments of the parties that signed the peace agreement so if there is a breach from one side it gives the right of review to the parties.” The 1979 treaty made Egypt the first Arab state to forge peace with Israel and underpinned Washington’s relationship with Cairo during Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule, during which the Brotherhood was officially banned. LA Times and Al-Ahram (Cairo) Eurozone finance ministers set to approve Greece bailout on Monday The meeting is set for Monday at 3 pm, Brussels time. That’s when the Eurogroup – the eurozone finance ministers — will meet to decide whether to approve the next €130 billion bailout of Greece. And after weeks of dithering, finger-pointing and recriminations, it now appears that the desperate politicians in Europe will approve the bailout, even though nobody really believes that it will solve Greece’s problems, or that Greece will implement all the commitments it’s had to make to get the agreement. Each of the leading Greek politicians has signed a letter promising to continue meeting commitments if his party wins the April elections, but just to be sure, the Eurogroup is debating a proposal to turn the screws a little harder: Under the proposal, the bailout money will be placed into a special “escrow account.” The escrow account would give legal priority to debt and interest payments over paying for government services. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who has called Greece a “bottomless pit,” said: “There is agreement within the Eurogroup that there will be such a special account, or ‘escrow account’ in jargon, for the disbursement of the second aid package. The account ensures a priority for debt reduction.” Such a requirement would be an unprecedented intrusion into a sovereign state’s fiscal affairs and could ultimately see Greece force to pay interest on its debt rather than teachers, doctors or other government employees. AP Here is the original post: 20-Feb-12 World View: Eurozone Finance Ministers Set to Approve Greece Bailout on Monday

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20-Feb-12 World View: Eurozone Finance Ministers Set to Approve Greece Bailout on Monday


Obama Forcing Private Companies to Have Board Votes on Illegal Policy

Posted by on Monday, 20 February, 2012

Another day, another Barack Obama Administration totalitarian diktat. In other words, whatever Obama wants – by any means necessary. Behold Obama’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).  Which last week handed down from on-high a mandate that telecommunications companies AT&T, Verizon and Sprint MUST have Board votes on Network Neutrality . SEC to Telcos: Yes, Net Neutrality is a Significant Policy Issue The problem for Obama’s SEC is – Net Neutrality isn’t even a LEGAL policy issue.  Because Congress has never passed a law making Net Neutrality actual policy. The federal government – via the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) – first tried to unilaterally impose Net Neutrality in 2008.  And the D.C. Circuit Court in April 2010 unanimously threw the government out on its ear . Because the FCC “has failed to tie its assertion” of regulatory authority to an actual law enacted by Congress, the agency does not have the power to regulate an Internet provider’s network management practices, wrote Judge David Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Tuesday’s decision could doom one of the signature initiatives of FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, a Democrat. Last October, Genachowski announced plans to begin drafting a formal set of Net neutrality rules–even though Congress has not given the agency permission to do so. But it didn’t doom Genachowski and Obama’s illegal Net Neutrality intentions.  It didn’t even daunt them.  Just eight months after this stinging rebuke, Obama’s FCC went ahead and illegally jammed through Net Neutrality anyway . They did so despite the D.C. Circuit Court’s unanimous ruling.  And they did so despite the fact that more than 300 members of the then still-Democrat-Majority Congress – the body charged with giving the FCC Net Neutrality authority – were for months in advance telling them not to . —– Verizon , MetroPCS and Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli are all now suing to undo this particular Obama power grab.  In the same D.C. Circuit Court that threw out the FCC’s first illegal attempt. There are very few things judges and courts like less than summarily dispatching a case – and then again having to hear the same case.  So the FCC’s Illegal Attempt II will most likely suffer the exact same fate as Illegal Attempt I. The FCC has been all along hedging its Net Neutrality bet – by illegally jamming merging companies with Net Neutrality mandates as a condition of the government approving said mergers. Which – on the 2010 Comcast-NBCU merger – even the uber-Leftist Washington Post thought was a bad idea : FCC officials should resist calls by some merger opponents to impose “net neutrality” principles on Comcast’s Internet component. Obama’s FCC – shocker – did it anyway. (Why private companies that have reached mutually agreeable business arrangements must then seek government approval is one excellent question.  Why the government can then illegally make up laws out of whole cloth and stick these companies with them as approval conditions is another.) —– So what Obama’s SEC is now doing on Net Neutrality is just and yet another illegal power play by Obama’s Administration . Overrunning the private Board practices of private companies – and mandating they vote on something no government agency has any authority to impose. Uber-Leftist policy – by any means necessary. The Obama Way . Read the original here: Obama Forcing Private Companies to Have Board Votes on Illegal Policy

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Obama Forcing Private Companies to Have Board Votes on Illegal Policy


White House chef Kass dishes up plates and policy

Posted by on Monday, 20 February, 2012

Sam Kass has a to-die-for job as personal chef to the Obama family but whipping up their meals is probably the least important part of his portfolio. The rest is here: White House chef Kass dishes up plates and policy

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White House chef Kass dishes up plates and policy


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