LET’S HEAR IT FOR LAURA BUSH
From
the Huffington Post:
Former First Lady Laura Bush made a surprising tack away
from two of the most definitive social issues of her husband's presidency this
week, telling CNN's Larry King that she backs gay marriage and abortion
rights. .
. .
☞ Better late than never.
LET’S HEAR THE ORAL ARGUMENTS
You may recall that California passed civil marriage
equality . . . some 18,000 couples wed . . . the Mormon
chuch and the Catholic church and some others stepped in with a ballot
initiative – Prop 8 – to make sure same-sex couples couldn’t
have equal rights after all . . . and then Prop 8 was challenged in federal district court
proceedings that the U.S. Supreme Court (with its six Catholics)
ruled
could not be televised.
Well, now you can see those proceedings anyway. Sort of.
Thanks in large part to funding from my old pal and
Harvard Business School classmate, Michael Huffington, and the generosity of
actors like Josh Lucas and Marisa
Tomei, you can watch enactments.
Me, I’m going to wait for the movie with Spencer
Tracy (as Clarence Darrow), Frederic March (Matthew Harrison Brady) and Gene
Kelly (the cynical reporter) – or the modern day equivalent thereof.
Remember: we are only talking about civil marriage licenses,
Social Security benefits, and the like. Any church that wants to discriminate
against gay couples should always have the right to do so. It’s called
separation of church and state.
MEMORY STACK
George Berger:
“I use flashcarddb.com – very
similar to Anki, but a little bit simpler
(a little easier to use, but a little less powerful) and online (no need to
download and install, available everywhere, but you might not want to save your
credit card numbers on there). I’ve been using it to remember past
‘Spanish Word of the Day’ words, but I like Marc’s idea of
using it to remember things like phone numbers and spouses’ names (er,
colleagues’ spouses’ names). too.”
The third of Marc’s 12 Most Useful Things
Last week, I gave you the first and second (well,
Marc gave them to us). And at the end of this series, I’ll give you
the link to all 12 of them. But for now . . .
3. Read minds.
Read the three books below
to learn about body language and you will forever see the world with different
eyes (and the world will see you differently, too). It’s amazing how
much people reveal, usually inadvertently, through their bodies; you can
literally read their minds through their bodies. I’ve also become much
more aware of my own body language, and use it to get better at communicating
what I want to communicate. Being aware of your own body language also opens
up new ways of influencing your own state of mind because it works both ways:
what’s in our mind influences your body, and what your body does also
influences our mind. Unlock your arms, and become more approachable; smile, and
become happier. It works.
·
You
Say More Than You Think, by Janine Driver
·
The
Definitive Book of Body Language, by Allan and Barbara Pease
·
What
Every Body Is Saying, by Joe Navarro
BOLD POLICY
Chris Anderson: “Obama's commencement
speech as transcribed at the official site, reads: ‘It’s always
been a little less gentile during times of great change.’ I
assume this is a typo for ‘gentle’ or ‘genteel,’ not
that he meant our nation is more Jewish. I note your site has ‘gentle’
and that many sentences are bold or in larger font size – you have
to spend a lot of time emphasizing things this way. Is there a method, a key
to what each different size/font means vs. another? Or is it just random types
of emphasis to make certain phrases and ideas stand out equally?”
☞ Ah, “genteel” – even
better!
I bold things I hope might give the uber-busy reader the
gist – and hook the slightly less busy reader into actually reading the
whole thing. In my own case, I find long passages somewhat daunting (I am a
slow reader). But if I see some things to hang onto along the way, I am more
likely to dive in and start swimming.
The variable font size, meanwhile, is just some awful
Microsoft glitch. I don’t know what causes it. The html code I use has
all excerpts in brown 11-point Verdana.
Another mystery: refreshing the screen repeatedly will, in
various browsers, change the fonts. Why is that?