Instagram

Translate

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Q&A: Author Erica Jong on Powerful Men and Sex Scandals

- TIME
Best-selling author Erica Jong knows a thing or two about sexual politics. Her taboo-breaking 1973 novel, Fear of Flying, has sold 20 million copies in over 40 languages. Jong still has the magic touch when it comes to literature about women and eros: her new anthology of essays and short stories, Sugar in My Bowl: Real Women Write About Real Sex (Ecco) — featuring contributions from Anne Roiphe, Gail Collins, Jennifer Weiner and many others — is getting terrific early reviews. Jong spoke with TIME senior reporter Andrea Sachs from her Manhattan home about Anthony Weiner, Dominique Strauss-Kahn (DSK), Arnold Schwarzenegger and other powerful misbehaving men in the news.

What do you make of Anthony Weiner?
Obviously he has a compulsion, and I don't understand it. It's very sad in a way because he was an up-and-coming Democrat. I think this is going to really screw up his career. When you notice all of these powerful men doing things that we would consider stupid, you have to wonder whether they're aware, or whether when this compulsion hits them — do they go into a fugue state where the other parts of their life vanish and are not in their thought stream? It seems that way, doesn't it?

(See the top 10 Twitter controversies.)

It seems like the season of sex scandals lately. Why that might be the case?
I think that there have always been sex scandals. I think that now, people are reporting them more accurately than before. What strikes me about all these so-called scandals is how far we have not come since feminism. I mean, when you look at Anne Sinclair paying a fortune to take care of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, you wonder why on earth a woman with her own profession, with an inherited fortune, would be doing that for a man who's so obviously a sick puppy, and totally narcissistic. What does she get out of the relationship? Is she going to spend her fortune defending this man who everybody in France knew was like a chimpanzee in rut?

How could Strauss-Kahn operate at the top levels of society being like that?
I think that we cover for powerful men, all of us. Men cover for them and women cover for them. We have to stop doing that because [theirs] is very sick behavior. Also, it's incredibly classist behavior, in the sense that here is this poor maid who works for a living, and here is this extremely rich and powerful man. It never occurs to him that she might not want his advances.

What about Arnold Schwarzenegger? Many people have asked how Maria Shriver couldn't have known about his affair and love child for so many years.
Well, she didn't want to know about it. But I'm sure on some level she did know about it. The child traveled with them, looked just like him. People are saved by their own denial sometimes, and that's what seems to be the case here.

(See the best blogs of 2011.)

Representative Chris Lee lost his congressional seat for sending a woman a shirtless picture of himself. Wasn't that kind of severe?
I think people really want to reverse the trend of men getting away with this stuff. There are so many infantile and crazy men out there. And also, there are so many men that feel that women are there to do their bidding.

Should John Edwards be facing legal sanctions or was that just a private matter?
It's not a private matter if you're using your campaign funds. That is against the law. When you think of John Edwards being taken in by someone like Rielle Hunter, you think, what a child he must be, how infantile he must be! What we're really seeing [is] men unmasked in a sense.

What about Eliot Spitzer, another man who paid a really heavy price for what he did?
He's a very clever man. If you watch him on television, he's so articulate. He has such a command of what's going on in politics. So he had to be absolutely in denial. At the Mayflower Hotel for goodness sake! That is not exactly a secret place.

Do you think that men who are not as powerful would take the same risks if they could?
I think there are men who would not take these risks, whether they're powerful or not. I think this is a form of mental illness.

Some people are blaming the press for all of this, as if the press is forcing it upon the public.
Well it certainly sells magazines and newspapers, at least for a little while. People get really sick of it after a while, but [the media] can exploit it for a time, and why shouldn't they? People are interested.

(See photos from the Anthony Weiner scandal.)

Do you think these men should be given a chance for redemption, or do you think these acts are unforgiveable?

I think raping somebody, as DSK [allegedly] did, is a crime that should be punished. Because if we don't punish powerful men for rape, we have no law in our society.

What about Schwarzenegger? Should he face public scorn for the rest of his career?

He's had a very good run. You can't absolutely control what the public is going to think about it. People are going to think that he's a sleaze bag. But he's not going to be punished for this in any way other than loss of reputation. But he never had much of a reputation anyway. He's not being punished really.

You've written so much about women enjoying sex, but women don't get into these scandals. Why not?
Well, occasionally women get into sex scandals when you have teachers seducing students and things like that. But I don't think that women make the assumption that men make. The assumption that these men make is that their power will protect them. Women know they won't be protected and that they'll be exposed. And it has to do with how much power men have in society and how little women have. So they don't take these risks, which to men like DSK don't even seem like risks. They feel they will be protected by the establishment because they sit atop the establishment.


Switzerland: New Laws Proposed for Legal Prostitution

 - TIME
This post is in partnership with Worldcrunch, a new global news site that translates stories of note in foreign languages into English. The article below was originally published in the Tages-Anzeiger.

ZURICH — Local officials have decided that this city's expanding legal sex industry needs to be better organized. Zurich municipal authorities have proposed a series of changes to existing prostitution regulations that would allow prostitutes to continue plying their trade, but only in three specific zones — including one equipped with new booths to welcome their clients.

The proposed measures, which need the city council's approval, include forbidding street prostitution along the Sihlquai riverbank and in the busy Langstrasse area. In exchange, the activity will be allowed between Aargauerstrasse and Würzgrabenstrasse, outside the city center, where booths will be built to accommodate sex workers and their customers. (See pictures of South Korean prostitutes protesting the closing of brothels.)

Street prostitutes will still be allowed to work in the city's pedestrian nightlife area, the centrally located Niederdorf, and solicit vehicle-driving clients in Allmend Brunau. The Zurich city council expects the new laws will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2012.

Presenting the new measures to the media at a town-hall press conference on May 25 were three of Zurich's nine city councilors: Claudia Nielsen, Daniel Leupi and Martin Waser, who are responsible, respectively, for policies on health and environment, the police and social issues.

Leupi explained that the city council's goal in introducing the measures was to combat human trafficking, offer appropriate response to victims, minimize the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and protect both sex workers and the population at large from violence. (Does Mexico City need a red-light district?)

City councilor Waser explained that at peak hours, when up to 120 sex workers can operate at the same time, street solicitation can be a real disturbance to ordinary people — thus the need to channel the activity to designated areas.

According to Nielsen, the number of female sex workers in Zurich in 2010 had increased significantly over recent years, with many of the new workers arriving from Hungary. Nielsen said that the rise in the number of workers also increased pimping and human-trafficking risks. The new measures, she explained, were not so much antiprostitution as antitrafficking.

As sex workers often didn't have information about their rights, Nielsen added, the council was looking to advise prostitutes by establishing direct lines of communication. Once the new regulations are in place, sex workers — whether or not they work the streets — will also need to obtain licenses.

Introducing 'Sex Boxes'
Other developments include creating a special commission in which representatives of local NGOs will also sit and measures to insure that resources are allocated as effectively as possible.

The council initially plans to build 10 booths, popularly known as sex boxes, in Altstetten — more to be built if the amount of activity warrants it. Resources presently allocated to Sihlquai will be switched to the new area, so the only additional costs, anticipated at $2.8 million, will be those of constructing the boxes.

The new Altstetten prostitution area will be easy to monitor, control and protect, council members say. It will be operated and maintained by social services. Residents of the area have been informed of the plan. Plans for the design and construction of the sex boxes, scheduled to be ready by the spring of 2012, are already under way.


At Rotana media company, Saudi Women can choose what to wear

Saudi Women in Focus - Photo Essays - TIME

Position of Influence
Sultana al Rowaili, the head of human resources at Rotana, leads a meeting with her male colleagues. Many of the male applicants she interviews never get over the shock of seeing a woman in a position of authority over them. If they can't handle taking orders from a woman, they don't get the job.



Daneh Abuahmed, Rotana's head of information technology, conducts a meeting in her office. With the support and protection of Rotana's royal owner, Prince Alwaleed bin-Talal, female staff work side by side with men and can choose what to wear and whether to cover their heads and faces.


Western Attire
With the support of Prince Alwaleed bin-Talal, the female staff at Rotana, like these receptionists, can dress without covering their head or face. The vast majority of Saudi women don't have anything like that support. There are no laws protecting women from sexual harassment in the workplace, and a woman has to have permission from her husband or father to get a job.


Fatwa body bans mingling of sexes

- Arab News
By MUHAMMAD AL-SULAM

JEDDAH: The permanent committee for issuing religious edicts, chaired by Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh, has banned the mingling of men and women at offices and educational institutions.

“Women are not allowed to work with men. For example, they cannot work as secretaries for men or at receptions, production lines or accounting sections in a commercial center, pharmacy or restaurant where men are also present,” the ruling said.

The committee, which made this comment while answering a question from a Saudi, warned that the mingling of sexes would have a negative effect on the family and society.

“Women’s work and education should be done without mingling with men. They should work in women-only workplaces, as Islamic teachings ban the mingling of sexes,” the committee said, quoting a verse from the Holy Qur’an: When you ask them (wives of the Prophet) for any goods, ask them from behind a curtain. This is purer for your hearts and for theirs — verse 53, Chapter Al-Ahzab.

The committee said the verse applied to all Muslim women until the Day of Judgment.

The Prophet (peace be upon him) has said that it is better for women to pray at their homes than in mosques. However, in the same Hadith, the Prophet has urged Muslims not to prevent their women from praying at mosques. The committee urged all citizens and residents to fear God and follow His teachings in all their affairs and dealings.

The religious edict was signed by prominent clerics such as Sheikh Abdullah Al-Mutlaq, Sheikh Ahmed Mubaraki, Sheikh Saleh Al-Fowzan, Sheikh Abdul Kareem Al-Khodair, Sheikh Muhammad Al-Asheikh and Sheikh Abdullah bin Khonain.

Last year, the committee issued a similar edict banning women from working as cashiers at supermarkets.

Print
Email
Share

delicious
Digg
Facebook
Google
Yahoo! Buzz

Comments

Read all comments (55)



Atie Visser and Felix Gulje

96-year-old woman confesses to 1946 murder - Yahoo! News
AMSTERDAM – A murder mystery has been solved — 65 years later — with the confession of a 96-year-old woman.

The 1946 killing of Felix Gulje, the head of a construction company who at the time was being considered for a high political post, roiled the Netherlands, and the failure to find the assassin became a point of contention among political parties.

On Wednesday, the mayor of Leiden, Henri Lenferink, said a woman has confessed to the killing, saying it happened in the mistaken belief that Gulje had collaborated with the Nazis.

Lenferink said he received a letter from the woman, whom he identified as Atie Ridder-Visser, on Jan. 1. Two subsequent interviews with her and a review of the historical archives persuaded him that her story was true.

On the cold sleeting night of March 1, 1946, Atie Visser rang Gulje's doorbell in Leiden, and told his wife that she had a letter to give to her husband. When he came to the door she shot him in the chest. He died in the ambulance, the mayor said, reading a lengthy statement at a news conference.

Visser had been a member of the resistance during the 1940-1945 Nazi occupation. Rumors had been circulating that Gulje was working with the occupation authorities, and he had been targeted in the underground press. His company did regular business with the Germans, and several employees belonged to a pro-Nazi organization.

He was arrested after the war, but acquitted.

After his death it emerged that Gulje had sheltered some Jews and had given money to help hide others with other families. A banned Catholic association also held secret meetings in his home, Lenferink said.

Visser moved to Indonesia after the war, where she met and married Herman Ridder. Childless, they moved back to the Netherlands several years later, also spending a few years in Spain.

Lenferink said police never suspected the woman in the killing.

After disclosing her role, Ridder-Visser met two grandchildren of her victim last month to explain what happened and why she did it, the mayor said. He did not disclose details of that conversation.

Ridder-Visser will not be prosecuted, he said. Although the 18-year statute of limitations was lifted for serious crimes in 2006, prosecutors ruled that the change in law would not apply in this case.

"Even now, after 65 years, the murder should be strongly condemned," Lenferink said. "It is a case of vigilantism, and is unacceptable."

But he appealed to reporters to leave her alone. "Mrs. Ridder-Visser is a very old, very frail woman who hears poorly, is disabled and needs help," he said.



Norah AlFaiz tries to bring woman rignts in Saudi Arabia

New Rights, and Challenges, for Saudi Women - TIME

Like those of its competitors in New York or London, the sleek glass and steel offices of media company Rotana are filled with preening attitude and fashion-conscious staffers: assistants teeter in shoes that might have absorbed much of their monthly paycheck; executives parade the halls in power suits and pencil skirts. But Rotana isn't in New York or London; it's in Riyadh, capital of Saudi Arabia, a country in which women normally adhere to a strict dress code in public — a black cloak called an abaya, a headscarf and a veil, the niqab, which covers everything but their eyes.

There's another reason many Saudis would find Rotana shocking: men and women working side by side. The sight unnerves enough men who come looking for a job that human-resources manager Sultana al-Rowaili has developed a trick to see if a male applicant can handle working in a mixed-gender office. She arranges for a female colleague to interrupt the initial interview, and watches to see if the man loses concentration or stares too much. Sometimes even that isn't necessary. Many men are undone by the very idea of being interviewed by a woman. "They are in a state of shock to see a woman in a position of authority and to have to ask her for a job," al-Rowaili says. (See pictures of Saudi women.)

Saudi men may have to start getting used to such situations. True, Rotana remains an anomaly protected by the position and progressive ideals of its owner — global investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdulaziz al-Saud. And Saudi women still can't drive and legally can't even leave the house to shop, let alone get a job, without a male family member's permission. Yet under the guidance of a few members of the Saudi royal family — in particular the current King, Abdullah — the kingdom is slowly changing. Mixed-gender workplaces are becoming more common, especially in banks and good hospitals, where female doctors are not unusual. "People used to say, 'Why is she working? Why does she need the money?' Now they say, 'It takes a woman to solve a problem,'" says Norah al-Malhooq, an administrator at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Riyadh. (See pictures of Prince Alwaleed observing Ramadan.)

The government is expanding educational opportunities for women by building women's universities (as opposed to segregated campuses at male-dominated universities); last month it even launched the kingdom's first coeducational university. The state is trying to encourage women's entry into the workforce, and is sponsoring initiatives to protect women and children from domestic abuse. And it is pushing Saudis to discuss the notion of empowerment, formerly such a taboo subject that even the word was off-limits in newspapers. "The message is that women are coming," says Dr. Maha Almuneef, one of six women named earlier this year to the Shura council, a 156-person advisory body appointed by the King. "It's a good first step. The King and the political system are saying that the time has come. There are small steps now. There are giant steps coming. But most Saudis have been taught the traditional ways. You can't just change the social order all at once." (Read: "A Rapprochement Between Syria and Saudi Arabia?")

For the country's feminist and human-rights activists, and the many others who would like more freedom, the pace of change remains painfully slow. Why, they wonder, doesn't the King snap his fingers and remove some of the more obviously absurd obstacles to equality? For all the publicity about the new female members of the Shura Council, for instance, they still don't have the voting rights of their male colleagues. "This is tokenism, it's insulting," says Hatoon Ajwad al-Fassi, a columnist and assistant professor of women's history at King Saud University. "We are asking for full participation. All the doors that are closed for women should be open." Given government restrictions on the right to assemble and discuss political issues even in private homes, al-Fassi says it's impossible to know just how many Saudi women want change. "It's an exaggeration to call it a women's movement. But we are proud to say that something is going on in Saudi Arabia. We are not really free, but it is possible for women to express themselves as never before."

Change, and Its Limits
Saudi Arabia's western allies have been pushing it to reform its social and political arrangements since the attacks of September 11, 2001. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers on 9/11 came from Saudi Arabia, where a conservative version of Islam, high unemployment, limited democratic rights and archaic attitudes to women fed a mood of unchecked radicalism among some young men. Last February, Abdullah announced a sweeping reshuffle of posts in government to remove some of the more old-style figures, including a top judge who once ruled it would be legal to kill the owners of a television station that broadcast "immorality." Abdullah installed an Education Minister charged with ensuring that schools emphasize Islam's tradition of tolerance, and a woman, Norah al-Faiz, to be Deputy Minister in charge of girls' education, the first time a woman has held a Cabinet-level post. (See pictures of Osama Bin Laden.)

Though al-Faiz is well known and admired, her appointment also reveals the limits to the changes under way in Saudi Arabia. Al-Faiz meets with her male colleagues only by videophone, asks her minister for permission to appear on television, declined to be photographed for this story and vented her frustration to the press when what appeared to be an old passport-style photograph of her (without a niqab) appeared on the Internet. Al-Faiz told TIME that she brings no special mandate beyond improving education for girls. "I don't like quick action," she says. "I'll have to decide where the needs are and to rank them. I believe in teamwork."

Al-Faiz's caution is understandable. She's being watched by the whole country. "The pressure is huge, not to make a mistake," says Dr. Hanan al-Ahmady, a friend of al-Faiz, and her successor as head of the women's department at the Institute of Public Administration, a government school for civil servants. "You have to prove you are not giving away your religious principles. You have to prove that participating in public affairs and taking leadership positions doesn't jeopardize Islamic values and Saudi identity."



In Saudi Arabia, Lingerie Reveals All

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Casey Anthony killes her own daugther Caylee

more about Casey Anthony ..click this link
http://www.wftv.com/news/23080678/detail.html

Story - WFTV Orlando
Casey Anthony's attorney shocked a packed courtroom during opening statements Tuesday, telling the jury that Anthony's 2-year-old daughter Caylee was the victim of an accidental death and not a murder as the prosecutors contended.

Attorney Jose Baez's words reverberated through the courthouse. Florida police had said for nearly three years that Anthony had led them to believe her child had been kidnapped by her babysitter, leading to one of the biggest searches for a missing child in U.S. history. Now, the defense is saying that this mother was unable to tell the truth after years of abuse.

"How in the world can a mother wait 30 days before ever reporting her daughter missing?" Baez asked in open court. "It's insane. It's bizarre. Something's just not right about that .

"Well, the answer is relatively simple -- she never was missing. Caylee Anthony died on June 16, 2008, when she drowned in her family's swimming pool.


The Incognito Michelle Obama

By Lois Romano


Secret mall trips. Dining out incognito. Michelle Obama has constructed a life inside the bubble—and has her own sense of her 2012 role, Lois Romano reports in this week's Newsweek.


The most recognizable woman in the world routinely ducks reporters to have what she calls a "normal" life. Hiding beneath a baseball cap, the first lady of the United States has picked through sale racks in the frenetic Tysons Corner, Va., mall with girlfriends, bought supplies for her dog at Petco using her own credit card, and dined at some of D.C.'s hippest eateries largely unrecognized. So secretive are her outings that when Washington Capitals hockey superstar Alex Ovechkin tweeted a photo in April with his arm around her at a busy Washington restaurant, media organizations were convinced it was a fake.

Michelle Obama laid down her markers quickly and in a way that has set Washington back on its heels. The White House was not going to imprison her, the media were not going to own her, and she would not be driven by external expectations.


She was supposed to be a different kind of first lady—an Ivy League-educated, fashion-trendsetting professional who blew up the conventions of the job. No one could have imagined back in the heady days following the election that she'd declare that she would work only two or three days a week, choose a couple of politically comfortable issues, and stay out of the glare of the political spotlight. The result has been a low-key tenure that some have found to be disappointingly conventional.

Click image to see photos of Michelle Obama


AP/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File

But is it? What the chattering class has missed is that Michelle Obama, in an understated way, has in fact been transforming the jobâ€"but on her own terms. She may have disappointed the Georgetown salon set with a casual disregard for social convention and annoyed the old political-wives club by not indulging them. But she has also spent untold hours with the other Washington--consciously extending the reach of the White House into D.C.'s black community, mentoring students, and choking up when she reflects on her own success to offer hope and dreams. Later this month she will make an official trip to South Africa and Botswana to further expand her commitment to students and young leaders, education, and wellness.

In short, Michelle Obama has figured out ways to navigate the bubble while channeling her own passions and holding on to her life.

But her carefully crafted world at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is about to be challenged anew. Her husband is entering his reelection bid battling rough economic headwinds, against a GOP energized by the successes of the 2010 mid-terms. Barack Obama will need every ounce of his wife's considerable star power—she's polling 20 points ahead of her husband—to win reelection. Although the full-throttle campaign is still months away, Michelle is already traveling the country fundraising.

In This Week's Newsweek:
Walter Kirn: Mormons Rock!
Jacob Bernstein & Jesse Ellison: Hotel Confidential
Howard Kurtz: Roger Ailes Plays Nice

She must once again find her footing in the part of the job she hates the most—campaigning--but one she happens to excel at. "She has always been remarkably effective because no matter where you live or where you come from, you can relate to her," says White House official Stephanie Cutter, who worked closely with Michelle in 2008. "She conveys the same set of values and experiences families all over the country live by."

So reluctant has Michelle been to raise her profile that it's been easy to forget what a ferocious asset she was in the 2008 campaign. Toward the end, thousands of people were pushing into her rallies, shoving babies at her for photos, and mimicking her J.Crew clothes.

Coming off that huge success, Michelle startled the political establishment when she announced that she would limit her public appearances so she could tend to her family. (Her staff concedes that her initial declaration of working three days a week has been impossible to maintain.) The president's strategists say privately they would have liked her to do some heavier political lifting over the past two years, but that she's not someone who can be pushed. "She was always a reluctant campaigner," says a West Wing staffer who has witnessed some of the machinations to coax the first lady into making more political appearances. "She demands a level of thinking-through that can be taxing on the staff."

Ultimately, members of her staff say, she had no interest in lurching from crisis to crisis as presidential advisers see fit. "She wasn't going to be always doing some one-off trip because a congressman needed to be stroked," says someone close to her, requesting anonymity to speak candidly. -Michelle's hesitation to leverage her popularity for political gain apparently drove former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel crazy during last year's hectic legislative maneuvering and midterm elections.

"I think she's willing to do things, but she's not someone you send out with talking points as an adjunct spokesman for the government," says David Axelrod, the Obama strategist who recently left the White House to work on the campaign and who has known her for nine years.

Meanwhile, outside allies and advisers have encouraged Michelle's staff to push the envelope beyond her two signature issues—childhood obesity and helping military families—and raise her profile.

She is heeding some of that advice with her June 21 trip to Africa. Mindful of the negative publicity she generated last year with her luxury vacation to Spain, the staff has jampacked this excursion with cultural and historical significance, such as a keynote address to the Young African Leaders Forum and a visit to Robben Island, the prison where Nelson Mandela was kept in isolation for nearly three decades for opposing his country's harsh segregation policies. (A meeting with Mandela, 92, is uncertain given his fragile health.)

It is a move in the direction toward more substantive exposure, but still shy of embracing the traditional public role that some would like to see.

First ladies essentially step into these unpaid jobs with no official duties and work to carve out an agenda that at best dovetails with the president's—or at least doesn't get in his way. History shows that finding the right issues and tone can be a tricky effort. Nancy Reagan was viewed as a vapid California socialite until she latched onto her signature "Just Say No" campaign to discourage teenage drug use. By contrast, Hillary Clinton drew harsh criticism for leading her husband's failed drive to reform health care. Michelle has come across as neither the doe-eyed adoring wife nor the intense political adviser. But she has been fully engaged in shaping her own image and goals.

Michelle's staff of 22 knows not to cram her schedule with events that don't serve some larger strategic agenda. "What's the purpose?" she frequently demands of aides when presented with a proposal. "Am I value-added?" Once she settles on a schedule, her staff says she will spend hours and even days preparing for one appearance. For a major speech, like her address to West Point families at last month's commencement weekend, she will hand-edit multiple drafts. Staff will then drag a lectern into her office, where she will rehearse the speech with a teleprompter for days. "She demands a lot of herself," says Axelrod.

Despite her commitment to controlling her agenda, there still are plenty of traditional obligations that can't be avoided, and at times the first lady may have unwittingly conveyed ambivalence. Congressional wives were disappointed in how a series of luncheons was handled for the 500-plus spouses: the women were invited alphabetically, which, several said, showed no effort to create an interesting mix of guests. "I went with the Ks," said one wife of a Democratic congressman. "I barely said hello to her." This woman contrasted the lunch with a similar event hosted by Laura Bush, who obligingly took a group of the wives upstairs to see the Lincoln Bedroom--and then posed for pictures with each of them in the room. "I admire what Michelle is doing with all her public-service efforts," said the spouse, "but Laura was warm and made you feel like you were visiting her home."

Michelle's social life has largely revolved around her tight-knit group of girlfriends, such as Jocelyn Frye, who met her at Harvard Law School and now works in the White House; Angela Acree, a Princeton classmate; and Sharon Malone, a physician and the wife of Attorney General Eric Holder.

Malone, who has become a social friend of the first lady in the past two years, sees Michelle as simply trying to "create a little bit of space to keep herself sane."

"You know there's a playbook in Washington about what you're supposed to do—well, she's not following the playbook," says Malone. "She's doing it the way she wants to do it by being very involved in the community."

The first lady has made regular visits to schools in Anacostia, one of Washington's poorest, most difficult neighborhoods. She has initiated a high-octane mentoring program, linking White House aides with urban minority high-school students—and, NEWSWEEK has learned, she presses famous entertainers eager to perform for the president at tony events for a quid pro quo: an agreement to conduct a music workshop for selected students at the White House while they are in town. In late March, Motown greats Berry Gordy and Smokey Robinson worked with a couple of hundred musically gifted students from across the country. At an earlier workshop, music students found themselves jamming one afternoon with five members of the Marsalis family—New Orleans jazz royalty—under the sparkling chandeliers of the East Room.

Washington's A-listers may not have swarmed across the Obamas' threshold, but the first lady assured the middle-schoolers invited to the White House one day, "While we live here, we're your neighbors. And we want you to feel welcome at the White House."

During a recent visit to Anacostia's Ballou High School, she took questions for 30 minutes. Asked what she would tell a teen mom who hoped to go to college, Michelle said she would say, "Good for you." She advised the students to think about what kind of careers they would want. "College is no joke because it is so expensive," she said.

The visit was part of an ambitious mentoring program she has held for students in Washington, Detroit, and Denver since 2009. In D.C., she has brought together a diverse group of female high-voltage celebrities who fan out to public schools. Students are later invited back to the White House to mingle with stars such as Geena Davis, Hilary Swank, Alicia Keyes, and Michelle Kwan.

"Nothing in my life's path ever would have predicted that I would be standing here as the first African-American first lady," Michelle has often told inner-city students, her voice breaking with emotion. "I wasn't raised with wealth or resources or any social standing to speak of."

From the beginning, Michelle seemed intent to play down her career credentials. A Princeton and Harvard--educated lawyer who held a high-powered job at the University of Chicago Medical Center, she promptly referred to herself as the mom in chief after Barack was elected.

In staffing her office, she surrounded herself with friends and some politically inexperienced loyalists from the campaign or Chicago, which led to a rocky start and some drama.

She has been through three chiefs of staff, three social secretaries, and two communications directors. Her first chief of staff had little management experience and was gone after a few months, after she and social secretary Desiree Rogers locked horns. Rogers, a glamorous Chicago acquaintance, was eventually canned when her profile became higher than the first lady's--never a good idea.

Susan Sher, a friend and former boss in Chicago, stepped in as chief of staff to help at a critical time and was well respected but wanted to return to her husband in Chicago. In February another friend from Chicago, Democratic activist and attorney Tina Tchen, moved over from the West Wing, an appointment applauded by senior presidential aides.

On a personal level as well, Michelle has kept her Chicago ties close. She moved her mother to Washington to help care for daughters Sasha and Malia; Miriam Robinson rides to school with the girls daily in an unmarked SUV. Michelle also brought to Washington from Chicago her long-term personal trainer, Cornell McClellan (who now has a robust White House clientele), and the family's personal chef, Sam Kass.

Michelle's reluctance to expand her circle may stem from the awkward early days of the 2008 campaign when opponents portrayed her as unpatriotic, snobby, and a caricature of an angry black woman. The president's advisers now candidly admit that she was poorly served by the campaign. Conservative commentators, who carefully steered clear of racial references when it came to Barack, had no such reservations about stirring up racial stereotypes about his wife. Eventually, Axelrod hired Stephanie Cutter to bolster Michelle's image and help her shape her passions into an agenda. She parlayed her interest in childhood nutrition into Let's Move, a national campaign to deal with an obesity epidemic among young people.

Michelle's other signature issue--helping military families--first attracted her attention while she campaigned in Iowa. She found herself in small towns comforting wives whose husbands had been deployed to Iraq and mothers who had lost sons. Once in the White House, she spent months consulting with families and veterans about their needs.

"We believe that this is what you deserve from us," she told the 200 military wives and mothers at the White House for a Mother's Day tea, her voice quavering. "Thank you for your strength." For now, Michelle has made clear that along with her mentoring efforts, these two issues will keep her busy and fulfilled professionally for the foreseeable future.

But on a personal note, her closest aides confide that there is one place in D.C. that she has been desperate to visit for another taste of life outside the White House--but so far it has not been possible. "She really wants to go to Target," says one confidante. "We have to make that happen."

Lois Romano is a senior writer for Newsweek/Daily Beast based in Washington. She was a longtime political writer and columnist for The Washington Post, covering presidential campaigns and Washington powerbrokers.

Deja vu

just foud this picomail, a cool apps for my mobile. This is my first post using the apps.


Email powered by PicoMail -- free email for any Java or Symbian cellphone!

One night in a state without law

I am here noticing some drivers who just break law. Meanwhile the
police are behind them, doing nothing . I got shocked, so I soon post
this to my blog . Unbelieveable!

--
Dikirim dari perangkat seluler saya

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Salwa al Mutairi: it is ok for men to have sex with slaves as 8th century muslim leader Harun al-rashid did

I thinks this lady is sick..how come she can have such suggestion?
Men should be allowed sex slaves and female prisoners could do the job - and all this from a WOMAN politician from Kuwait | Mail Online
She gave the example of Haroun al-Rashid, an 8th century Muslim leader who ruled over an area covered by modern-day Iran, Iraq and Syria and was rumoured to have 2,000 concubines.
Mutairi recommended that offices could be opened to run the sex trade in the same way that recruitment agencies provide housemaids.

A Kuwaiti woman who once ran for parliament has called for sex slavery to be legalised - and suggested that non-Muslim prisoners from war-torn countries would make suitable concubines.

Salwa al Mutairi argued buying a sex-slave would protect decent, devout and 'virile' Kuwaiti men from adultery because buying an imported sex partner would be tantamount to marriage.

And she even had an idea of where to 'purchase' these sex-salves - browsing through female prisoners of war in other countries.

Outrageous ideas: Salwa al-Mutairi's suggestions have provoked anger and disbelief

Outrageous ideas: Salwa al-Mutairi's suggestions have provoked anger and disbelief

The political activist and TV host even suggested that it would be a better life for women in warring countries as the might die of starvation.

Mutairi claimed: 'There was no shame in it and it is not haram' (forbidden) under Islamic Sharia law.'

Example: Mutairi cited Haroun al-Rashid as a man who also had concubines




R.I.P Shrek the Sheep

NZ mourns death of Shrek the famously shaggy sheep - Yahoo! News
New Zealanders were mourning the loss of the country's most famous sheep Tuesday, a shaggy national icon named Shrek who was renowned for avoiding being shorn for years.

Shrek captured the public's imagination in 2004 after he evaded the annual shearing roundups for the previous seven years by hiding in caves on his farm on the South Island. When finally found, he was clad in an astonishing 60 pounds (27 kilograms) of wool.

That's about five times a typically annual shearing from Shrek's breed, the Merino sheep prized for some of the softest wool.

In a country where sheep outnumber people by nearly 10 to one, Shrek's story of stubbornness and guile appealed to many. After his capture, Shrek was shorn on live TV in a broadcast that was picked up around the world. His story inspired three books.

"He was quite an elderly statesman," said owner John Perriam. "He taught us a lot."

Until becoming sick three weeks ago, Shrek toured the country, commanding $16,000 for appearances and getting the star treatment wherever he went. In one appearance, Shrek was shorn atop a large iceberg that was floating near the South Island coast.

Shrek was one of about 17,000 sheep on the the 27,000-acre (11,000-hectare) Bendigo farm in the small town of Tarras. Perriam believes Shrek was able to survive the winters and avoid detection by moving about a series of sheltered caves and by munching on small native shrubs.

"It's bizarre that we missed him seven years in a row," Perriam said. "But from his point of view, it was the perfect environment."

After Shrek became a star, Perriam gave him his own barn and showroom. Shrek even had a personal caregiver look after him when he became sick, before the sheep was euthanized Monday at age 17.

Perriam said that as well as laying claim to being New Zealand's woolliest sheep, Shrek may also have been its oldest. Most sheep live for no more than six years before being slaughtered.

Since Shrek's death, tributes have been pouring in online, including on the Facebook page "R.I.P Shrek the Sheep."

Perriam is planning a funeral service and will ask a friend to scatter Shrek's ashes atop Mt. Cook, New Zealand's tallest mountain.


Global stocks fall

Global stocks, dollar fall as Bernanke fails to inspire - Yahoo! News
Asian stocks fell on Wednesday and the dollar wavered after uninspiring comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke added to worries about the slowing global economy.

European shares were also expected to fall, extending their losing streak to a sixth straight session, tracking weakness in Asia and on Wall Street. Financial spreadbetters expected Britain's FTSE 100 (.FTSE) and Germany's DAX (.GDAXI) to fall as much as 0.5 percent and France's CAC 40 (.FCHI) to open down as much as 0.6 percent.

Bernanke acknowledged an economic slowdown in the United States, but offered no suggestion of further stimulus to support growth, souring sentiment across equity markets and toward the dollar as investors expect U.S. interest rates to remain low for a longer period of time.

The dollar slipped to a one-month low under 80 yen as the Japanese currency was bought back broadly amid heightened risk-aversion reflecting the falls in Asian share prices.

The Nikkei average (.N225) ended about 0.1 percent higher, with gains in financials helping to temper weakness in other sectors.

MSCI's index of Asia-Pacific stocks (.MIAPJ0000PUS) outside Japan fell 0.7 percent and looked set for its fifth straight losing session. Consumer discretionary and resources shares continued to see the heaviest selling on fears of cooling demand.

"When you see the weaker U.S. dollar, people do get concerned about the global growth story," said Justin Gallagher, head of sales trading at RBS Australia in Melbourne.

Lorraine Tan, director of Asia equity research at S&P in Singapore, said the markets were in a "major semi-lull."

"We don't expect much in the near term without fresh developments," she said. "There is concern over what's going to be happening with global growth. Double-dip (recession) worries will come back."

The euro briefly rose to a one-month high of $1.4696 as the dollar floundered, but later slipped back to $1.4658, off around 0.1 percent.

Fears of a Greek debt default were expected to limit further advances for the single currency.

Greece needs substantial fresh aid from the euro zone to avoid the currency bloc's first state insolvency, a German newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.

"We are facing the real risk of the first uncoordinated state insolvency within the euro zone," die Welt newspaper quoted Schaeuble as writing in a letter to, amongst others, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet.

The paper said Schaeuble argued for a new bailout of Greece with a "substantial" expansion of European aid and with private creditor involvement

The euro also rose against the yen on Japanese institutional demand.

OIL EXTENDS SLIDE

Brent crude fell 0.4 percent to $116.34a barrel, after gaining $2.30 on Tuesday. Investors are trying to assess whether OPEC will raise production targets.

Gold slipped to $1,540 but analysts see plenty of room for its continued rise as investors retreat from riskier assets.

Gold is still well below a lifetime high around $1,575 touched in early May, but with the U.S. dollar under pressure, equities markets falling and the debt crisis in Europe far from over, bullion continues to be one of the chief beneficiaries of the latest bout of market volatility.

Tan said gold would be supported by fundamentals and sentiment over the weak U.S. dollar.

"We think it will stay relatively firm," she said.

U.S. stocks fell for a fifth day on Tuesday after Bernanke's comments. The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) fell nearly 0.2 percent, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) slipped 0.1 percent. (.N)


The Temper Trap Sweet Disposition

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

Who is Yingluck Shinawatra?


Apakah Dinasti Shinawatra masih akan berjaya pada pemilu 3 Juli 2011?

MENJELANG pemilu Thailand pada 3 Juli mendatang, perlawanan kelompok oposisi kaus merah terhadap pemerintah  semakin menguat. Mayoritas kaum anti-pemerintah itu tinggal di Thailand utara. Berdasarkan pengamatan jurnalis Reuters Jason Szep dan Ambika Ahuja, Selasa (7/6), tanda-tanda dukungan terhadap partai oposisi Puea Thai  itu terlihat
jelas di sejumlah provinsi di Thailand utara itu, seperti Udon Thani dan Khon Kaen yang terdiri dari 320 kelurahan itu. Semua warga di sana sudah mendeklarasikan kampung mereka masing-masing sebagai "Kampung Kaus Merah untuk Demokrasi". Di setiap kampung pun diberi tanda bertuliskan "Kampung Kaus Merah untuk Demokrasi". Selain itu, jalan-jalan setempat dihiasi sejumlah spanduk dan bendera merah yang menunjukkan kecintaan mereka terhadap partai Puea Thai yang kini dipimpin adik Thaksin Sinawatra itu. Yah, kelompok kaus merah memang dikenal sebagai loyalis Thaksin.  "Kami memang kalah pada pemilu lalu, tetapi ini bukan berarti kami menyerah, kami akan terus berjuang untuk menang," ujar salah seorang warga pro-kaus merah di Udon Thani.

Meski saat ini Thaksin Shinawatra berada di Dubai, dia selalu memantau perkembangan politik di negara asalnya.  Dukungan warga Thailand kepadanya tidak pernah surut.
Pasalnya, selama kepemimpinan Thaksin 2001-2006, miliuner Thailand itu dikenal dengan kebijakan yang pro-rakyat miskin, seperti biaya berobat yang sangat murah, yaitu sekitar 30 bath (Rp 9.000). Selain itu, dia juga membuat kebijakan pinjaman dengan bunga rendah. Warga Thailand utara yang mayoritas miskin itu melihat Thaksin sebagai pahlawan mereka bukan teroris seperti yang dituduhkan pemerintah. Secara reguler, dengan bantuan teknologi internet, Thaksin secara reguler berdialog  dengan para pendukungnya.

Thaksin cukup puas dengan masih kuatnya dukungan kepadanya. Apalagi, kini adiknya menjadi calon PM Thailand, yang akan melanjutkan kebijakannya. Thaksin bahagia saat adik bungsunya Yingluck dipilih menjadi pemimpin Partai Puea Thai pada 16 Mei lalu. Wanita yang dianggap telegenik itu, yang kini menjadi oposisi utama Partai Demokrat pimpinan PM  Abhisit Vejjajiva.

Sejak terpilih sebagai Ketua Partai Puea Thai yang kini jadi rival Partai Demokrat pimpinan Abhisit Vejjajiva, Yingluck Shinawatra sudah menegaskan, akan meneruskan kebijakan mantan PM Thailand  Thaksin yang juga kakak kandungnya itu.
Dalam hal ini, kebijakannya akan fokus pada pembangunan ekonomi warga miskin yang memang masih jadi mayoritas di Thailand. Salah satunya, menetapkan biaya berobat per orang sebesar 30 bath (Rp 9.000).  

Dukungan terhadap kelompok kaus merah dan Partai Puea Thai bukan semata-mata karena alasan ekonomi, tetapi keadilan. Warga pro-kaus merah menganggap pemerintah petahana telah berbuat lalim kepada aktivis kaus merah. Ratusan aktivis  kaus merah sampai kini masih ditahan dengan tuduhan berbuat
onar pada kerusuhan yang terjada di Bangkok tahun lalu. Namun, di sisi lain, pemerintah petahana tidak menangkapi seorang pun dari kaus kuning (pro-pemerintah) yang jelas-jelas saat itu melakukan blokade dua bandara udara di Thailand. "Ini bukan urusan perut, tetapi keadilan sosial," ujar salah seorang warga kaus merah.
*****
Kepiawaian pimpinan partai oposisi Thailand Puea Thai Yingluck Shinawatra dalam berkomunikasi serta penampilan yang menawan membuat banyak warga kaus merah jatuh cinta padanya. Bahkan, mereka dengan terang-terangan menyatakan akan memilih Yingluck sebagai PM Thailand mendatang. Apalagi, dalam kampanye politiknya, wanita lulusan S2 Ilmu Politik Universitas Kansas, Amerika itu, berjanji akan meneruskan  kebijakan Thaksin yang peduli dengan kebutuhan warga miskin itu.

Meski tidak berpengalaman secara politik, keluwesannya dalam bergaul dengan kalangan warga miskin menyebabkan dia populer di Thailand utara. Bahkan, seeprti dilaporkan Reuters, Selasa (7/6), dia juga begitu piawai menggunakan dialek setempat, sehingga warga lokal merasa memiliki koneksi emosional dengan wanita berusia 43 tahun itu.
Bahkan, dengan terang-terangan warga di Thailand selatan mengatakan, akan membela Yingluck mati-matian jika nanti pada pemilu mendatang adik Thaksin itu dikadali oleh partai petahana. "Jika Yingluck memang kalah suara dari Abhisit, kami secara demokratis, akan terima itu. Akan tetapi, kalau hasil pemilu nanti dicurangi sehingga Yingluck kalah, kami akan marah besar dan akan melakukan perlawanan," ujar salah seorang warga yang mengaku penggemar Thaksin itu, yang di rumahnya memajang foto Thaksin dalam ukuran
sangat besar. Jauh lebih besar dari ukuran foto Raja Thailand yang juga ditempel di dinding rumahnya itu.
****
Bagi pemimpin partai Puea Thai Yingluck Shinawatra dan juga pimpinan partai petahana Abhisit Vejjajiva, Thailand utara akan menjadi  basis perolehan suara terpenting  pada pemilu 3 Juli mendatang. Pasalnya, populasi di daerah ini adalah yang terpadat dibandingkan dengan wilayah lainnya. Mayoritas warga Thailand utara ini, selain berprofesi
sebagai petani, mereka adalah supir taksi (pria) dan pekerja hiburan (wanita). Pada 3 juli mendatang, mereka akan memilih untuk menentukan siapa pemimpin Thailand pasca-kekacauan politik yang terjadi sejak Thaksin dikudeta 2006 lalu.  Dalam hal ini,  Yingluck tampaknya punya kesempatan lebih besar untuk memenangkan suara warga setempat.
Pasalnya, sudah lebih dari 320 kelurahan di Udon Thani dan Khon Kaen mendeklarasikan sebagai loyalis Thaksin dan pendukung kaus merah.

Berdasarkan data terbaru seperti dilansir AP, Selasa (7/6), kesenjangan antara kaum kaya dan miskin di Thailand  masih cukup tinggi. Mayoritas kekayaan negara gajah putih itu masih  dikuasai kaum kaya. Dalam hal ini, 20 persen kelompok kaya Thailand menguasai lebih dari  55 persen total kekayaan negara gajah putih itu. Tidak heran, isu ekonomi dalam pemilu Thailand 3 Juli mendatang, bukan hanya bagi pemimpin partai oposisi Yingluck Shinawatra, tetapi juga partai petahana pimpinan  PM Abhisit Vejjajiva. (Huminca)****



Pemilu Thailand 3 Juli 2011 : Janji Politik Partai Puea Thai Pimpinan Yingluck Shinawatra

MENJELANG pemilu Thailand pada  3 Juli 2011mendatang, partai oposisi Puea Thai pimpinan Yingluck Shinawatra  menjanjikan akan membuat kebijakan yang
pro-rakyat miskin.
Seperti dikutip Reuters, Selasa (7/6), janji-janji politik partai pimpinan adik Thaksin Shinawatra  itu, diantaranya adalah:

- Menetapkan upah minimum harian secara universal, yaitu sebesar 300
bath (Rp 90.000)
-Menetapkan biaya pengobatan sebesar 30 bath (Rp 9.000) per orang
-Memberikan pinjaman lunak bagi petani dan akan membuat kebijakan yang
pro-petani dengan menjamin harga beras per ton-nya tidak kurang dari
15.000-20.000 (Rp 4,5-Rp 6 juta).
-Melakukan moratorium hutang sampai 500.000 bath (Rp 150 juta) selama
tiga tahun pertama bagi kelompok guru, petani, dan PNS
-Menetapkan gaji pertama sarjana yang baru lulus sebesar 15.000 bath
(Rp 4,5 juta), dan memberikan komputer gratis kepada  seluruh siswa di
seantoro Thailand.
-Memotong pajak sampai 23 persen dalam tahun pertama, dan pada tahun
kedua, 20 persen.
-Memotong pajak bagi pemebli rumah dan mobil pertama
-Menetapkan ongkos angkutan umum dengan harga sama, yaitu 20 bath (Rp
6.000) sekali jalan
-Membangun infraktuktur kereta supercepat di seluruh Thailand
-Memberikan tunjangan sosial sebesar 600 bath (Rp 180.000) bagi manula
di atas 60 tahun, dan akan  ditingkatkan menjadi 700  bath (Rp
210.000) bagi yang berusia 70 tahun, dan kembali meningkat menjadi 800
bath (Rp 240.000)  serta 1000 bath (Rp 300.000) bagi warga senior
berusia 80 dan 90 tahun
-Membebaskan koneksi internet Wi-Fi di tempat-tempat umum seluruh
Thailand serta memberikan setiap anak satu komputer tablet
-Menetapkan status pemerintahan khusus bagi warga muslim di selatan Thailand
-Membasmi peredaran obat terlarang
-Memberikan amnesti bagi semua tahanan politik yang saat ini dipenjara
akibat terlibat kudeta 2006 lalu. (Huminca)

Janji Politik PArtai Demokrat Pimpinan Abhisit Vejjajiva

MENJELANG pemilu 3 Juli mendatang, Partai Demokrat dengan sembohyannya
"Memajukan Thailand"  menjanjikan akan membuat kebijakan yang fokus
pada pembangunan ekonomi.  Seperti dikutip Reuters, Selasa (7/6),
janji-janji politik partai pimpinan PM Abhisit Vejjajiva itu,
diantaranya adalah:
- Memperbaiki kesejahteraan buruh dan meningkatkan upah minimum mereka
sampai 25 persen dalam dua tahun mendatang, yaitu sebesar 159-221 bath
(Rp 45.000-Rp 63.000).
-Membebaskan biaya pengobatan
-Membangun infrastruktur kereta api super cepat di wilayah  Thailand
utara, selatan, dan timur
- Meningkatkan subsidi BBM dan juga menggratiskan biay alistrik untuk
kaum  miskin
-Meningkatkan penghasilan petani sampai 25 persen melalui pemebrian
subsidi pupuk dan pinjaman berbunga rendah
-Membebaskan bunga kredit perumahan selama dua tahun pertama bagi
warga pembeli rumah pertama
-Menggratiskan biaya pendidikan dasar sampai menengah,  memberikan
pinjaman lunak bagi 250.000 mahasiswa
-Mereformasi pendidikan dengan biaya 12 miliar bath
-Meluaskan jaringan internet pita lebar ke seantero Thailand. (Huminca)

Penny offense: Man fined for paying fee in pennies

 | The Upshot Yahoo! News
No lucky pennies here: Police have charged Jason West, an aggrieved medical patient in Vernal, Utah, with disorderly conduct. His alleged crime? Attempting to pay a disputed medical bill of $25 entirely in pennies.

The story, reported in the Salt Lake City Deseret News, describes the "penny offense" this way: West, 38, did not believe he owed the medical clinic $25 but came in to pay the fee in person. He first asked the clinic staff if the facility accepted cash payments, and then dumped 2,500 pennies onto the counter and demanded that they be counted.

But West apparently hadn't counted on the clinic calling the police; the arresting officer contended that West's protest served "no legitimate purpose." The charge carries a fine that can go as high as $140--and there's no word as yet on what currency West will use to pay it.

West isn't alone in the ranks of penny protesters. A wise guy in Frederick, Maryland, showed up at the county clerk's office last summer with bags of cash to pay off his tax bill with $966.86 in change.

And a New Jersey school district a few years back punished 29 students who paid for their $2 school lunches in pennies--possibly as a prank--with two-day detentions. After parents protested, the students were pardoned. The school explained that the use of the small change slowed down the lunch line.



@SlimBert Indo politicians are also D-bags. Dump them all, too! # weiner

Indo politicians are also D-bags.I never vote for them! #weiner @SlimBert A politician that is a complete D-bag? What a surprise! These are "our" leaders? Wake up America! Dump them all!

Weiner admits lying about lewd photo, won't quit - Yahoo! News


By CHRIS CUOMO (@ChrisCuomo) , CHRIS VLASTO and DEVIN DWYER (@devindwyer)

Rep. Anthony Weiner of New York said today he has engaged in "several inappropriate" electronic relationships with six women over three years, and that he publicly lied about a photo of himself sent over Twitter to a college student in Seattle over a week ago.

Rep. Anthony Weiner: 'The Picture Was of Me and I Sent It'

"I take full responsibility for my actions," Weiner said. "The picture was of me, and I sent it."

The announcement came as ABC News prepared to release an interview with Meagan Broussard, a 26-year-old single mother from Texas who provided dozens of photos, emails, Facebook messages and cell phone call logs that she says chronicle a sexually-charged electronic relationship with Weiner that rapidly-evolved for more than a month, starting on April 20, 2011.

View an exclusive slideshow of images obtained by ABC News.