Category Archives: J.E. Robertson
Working Together Makes Us Free: Inauguration 2013
The year is 2013. The world did not come to an end in the last […]
Extremely Vital and Incredibly Intimate
Watching the reading of the names, at the World Trade Center site, now sacred ground […]
The Creative Approach, the Other Evolving
The creative approach to language, the expressive urge, the impact of a whim to let […]
Let’s Elevate Teachers to Build a Better Future
Good teaching builds a healthy, vibrant future for our families, our communities, and our democracy […]
9/11 Should Be a Day of National Reflection & Reaffirmation
9/11 should, after this 10th anniversary, and in the aftermath of the deviation from and restoration of core values that we have undergone, become a national day of solemn recognition, collaborative restoration, and an affirmation of our civic space, in which citizenship is a sacred trust and human interest in the principal goal of our activity. It should be a day of national reflection and of the reaffirmation of the value of an open, democratic and voluntary civic space.
Post-2010 Redistricting Could Distort Political Landscape
The United States midterm Congressional elections, which include votes for state-level executive and legislative officials, […]
Stewart-Colbert Rally Draws Hundreds of Thousands to DC (video)
The Rally to Restore Sanity (and/or Fear), hosted by superstar comic news anchors Jon Stewart and Steven Colbert on the National Mall in Washington, DC, has drawn hundreds of thousands of people from across the country. Turnout was estimated at 300,000 beforehand, but images from the Mall show an edge-to-edge crowd filling the lawn from the stage at least as far back as the Washington Monument, meaning the total could well exceed 500,000 people.
Chuck Hagel Calls for Good-faith and Good-will in Public Service
Chuck Hagel, the former Republican senator from Nebraska, writes: “Every variation of public service, including elective office, should be anchored by one complete and overriding truth and objective—to make a better world,” as part of a powerful statement urging civility and good-will from all who seek to involve themselves in the work of public service. Hagel’s open letter to the political world comes at a time when many election observers say the campaign of 2010 is the most degenerate and ill-intentioned in memory, where lies are prevailing over evidence and the ability to commit to effective and relentless distortion has become the most sought-after weapon of campaigners.
E.J. Dionne Calls for Politics of Conscience in Villanova Speech
In a speech to a packed room at Villanova University, during the university’s three-day celebration of the legacy and work of St. Thomas of Villanova —a celebration that includes scholarly presentations, community gatherings, this keynote address and a day of service in which thousands fan out across the region to do charitable work—, E.J. Dionne called for a politics rooted in conscience and compassion for our fellow human beings. The acclaimed journalist, scholar and Washington Post columnist rooted his talk in Catholic Social Teaching and spoke of an historical drive, in the US, toward comprehensive social justice.
In Defense of the Book, in All its Forms
Today is the Day of the Book, in part spurred by the urge to recognize two of the great progenitors of modern literature, William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, who both died on 23 April 1616, at least according to the official history. Their work and the various arts that go into making books, as such, are celebrated around the world as staples of modern global civilization and the human element of culture. But the book is more than those sweeping historical energies; it is a concrete, observable register of intent and of meaning, which carries evidence of our humanity forward and informs and improves future worlds.
Writing & Naming: the Medicine of Acquiring Knowledge
Through the work of writing, I have learned first and foremost that nothing is what […]
Kindle DX: Beautiful, Focused, Comfortable, Imperfect, Inspired & Worth ‘Reading’
The Amazon Kindle DX is a beautiful device. Its design is user-friendly, intuitive and cohesive. It is clean-edged, minimal and thinner than many major magazines. Its format size is comfortable and makes tactile sense; it feels like something you hold in order to read, giving it a useful aesthetic kinship to books or magazines, a vast improvement on smaller e-reading devices. It is, in point of fact, far more comfortable than planting yourself in front of a computer monitor to read large amounts of text.