Thursday, May 26, 2011

the doll test today and other stories

Do you remember the psychological experiment that the supreme court justices referred to in the Brown v. Board decision? It has been conducted again. Here is a short video that one of you send me on this subject. It's a little troubling and strange (albeit 21 children makes for a very small panel and there seems to be no test panel with white children).




I also thought of you when I listened to this interview with the author of a book on a Comanche Indian born of a white mother and an Indian father. The woman was actually captured by the Native Americans in a raid. This is a story of violence and atrocities on both sides. It also offers interesting insights into the question of personnal identity ( can you stop being white? the consequences of being mixed race in the 19th century on the frontier...)
You can download this interview as a podcast on the NPR page or on i-tunes ( NPR: Fresh Air , 20 May 2011).

And finally, what does it mean to be Irish in America today? From the discrimation to McCartyism, JFK and Obama... Yet another quality podcast from Americana, a weekly BBC's programme on the US. I strongly recommend signing up to this podcast: a weekly 20 minute immersion in American life and politics.



I hope your exams went well,
AMZ

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Church and State in America

Do you know the very liberal Daily Show host Jon Stewart?
Sometimes he is led to discuss constitutional matters, notably on the popular issue of separation of Church and State. Are the power of the States limited by the Bill of Rights?



Part II :


To find out more about David Barton you can watch an interview with Jon Stewart ( in which he makes the case against separation of Church and State) or you may want to read this short article from the NYTimes.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Conseil Constitutionel vs Supreme Court

A fellow student has called my attention to this interesting video from LCP. Jean-Louis Debré and Stephen Breyer, a Supreme Court Justice appointed by Bill Clinton in 1994 discuss the role of the judicial branch in government.

Not only is this discussion and the comparison relevant to what we've studied in seminar 11 but it is also very much related to what you've been doing in French and American Law.

Enjoy!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

political ads 1950s-1960s

1. The first television commercial for an electoral campaign created by Roy Disney for candidate Dwight Eisenhower in 1952. His stature as a war hero and his appeal to both parties ( remember that the Democrats had asked him to run as President as well) and the well managed electoral campaign indeed got him in the White House. Note the three donkeys representing the Democratic party ( the donkey had become the symbol of the party under the Presidency of Grant).




2. The emotionally potent ad issued by the Johnson campaign for President in 1964. Although the ad was only aired once on television, it sent a shockwave through the country. It became a news item and was thus aired by the media as such, offering free air time to the Democratic ticket. This clip is famous for its suggestion that Barry Goldwater was not fit to be president because he was trigger happy and too likely to use nuclear weapons on foreign theaters of operation. However, when you listen carefully to the short speech that follows the explosion, I believe that the issues it raises are not germane to foreign policy tactics. Watch:



The terms "a world in which all God's children can live together"; "we must either love each other or die" suggests an allusion to something other than the Cold War and the nuclear threat. What do you think it might refer to?
(hint: consider why Barry Goldwater was gaining momentum at the time and who was supporting him)


For more ads of the 1964 campaign :
Lyndon B. Johnson : on nuclear testing, and on poverty. Note how the causes of poverty are reassessed in this ad, breaking away from the American tradition of portraying the poor as irresponsible and lazy). Finally, see how the legacy of JFK was used to bolster Johnson's Great Society platform. The tone of the campaing could turn quite sour and negative ads were aired.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Anniversary of the freedom rides : 1961

Here's an interesting and short article from NPR ( National Public Radio). The short article summarizes the life and shows how the fights of a civil rights activist evolved over time.


The 8 minute interview with James Farmer is very instructive on several accounts :

- strategy of filling the jails and legal implications of the strategy (to file an appeal, they needed to be freed, therefore to post bail before 40 days).
- treatment in prisons
- role of music and singing in jails : keeping the activists' morale high and breaking that of the guards.
- the education gap between the guards and the CRM activists ( the word "derogatory" means "showing no respect, demeaning").

There's also good interview with historian Raymond Arsenault who wrote a book about the freedom riders in 2006. He addresses the question of Kennedy's support of the freedom rides and more generally of his administration's committment to the movement.
- 'jail no bail' tactic of CORE (origin and impact).
- the origins of the desegregation of public transport ( 1944 case and 1947 first freedom rides)
- the Kennedy administration's policy on freedom rides

These two interviews can be listened to online, on downloaded to be listened to on the road.