Justin Fung a.k.a. gershom's journal

20Jan/120

Pictorial: Three weeks in January

A selection of pics from the first three weeks of January. 2012 has gotten off to quite a start!

30Dec/100

2010 at the White House

Pete Souza, official White House photographer, just posted his picks for the photos of the year. Here are some of my faves (which may have been posted here before):

P012910PS-0033

P032310CK-0627

P040610PS-0095

P053110PS-0148

P080910PS-0356

P081510PS-0125

P101110PS-0991

P110310PS-0226

P120310PS-0751

P121010PS-0433

Check out the whole slideshow here.

27Aug/100

The President’s human side

A couple of favorites from the latest White House Flickr batch (both photos by Pete Souza):

Above: President Barack Obama jokingly puts his toe on the scale as Trip Director Marvin Nicholson, unaware to the President's action, weighs himself as the presidential entourage passed through the volleyball locker room at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas, Aug. 9, 2010.

Above: President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama’s hands rest on the railing of a boat during their tour of St. Andrews Bay in Panama City Beach, Fla., Sunday, Aug. 15, 2010.

18Apr/100

Eyjafjallajökull

Also known as the Icelandic volcano.

More here.

25Feb/100

Today’s Health Care Summit

So today's SEVEN hour health care summit is over. I had it on in the background for the first three hours. And then it was the lunch break. And I didn't come back. Coz I figured I could get a pretty good summary later on. (And I can. See  Politico, HuffPo's live-blog coverage, and the BBC. Chris Cilizza of the Washington Post listed his winners and losers. More importantly, ;) you can find White House pictures of the event here, and FactCheck.org's invaluable truth-telling here.)

From what I saw, far too many were trotting out tired old talking points, talking at each other rather than with each other, trying to score political points or to posture for their viewing audience. The President was at his community-organizer-best, trying to find common ground, trying to get people to cooperate and coordinate their efforts. But I have a feeling that, even though there is much in the present bill that Republicans agree upon, they've dug themselves into their positions to such an extent--both sides have, actually--that it's too difficult to climb out and work together. And that's one of the things that frustrates me about politics.

Anyway, it seems that the President has set an Easter deadline (or target, depending on how you want to look at it) for health care reform to pass. Which means we have four weeks to get this thing done. What happens if nothing gets passed? I dunno ... the millions of people without health insurance will continue to go without health insurance, insurance premiums will continue to go up, health care spending will continue to explode our deficit, and America will continue to be the only industrialized country where people can go bankrupt because they got sick.

That's all.