Biden to Europe / Not a “Facebook Revolution” / Rare Russian Stamps

Vice President Biden travels to Russia, Finland and Moldova. The events in the Arab world should not be termed a “Facebook Revolution,” a panel of media experts warns. And a rare collection of Russian stamps was recently uncovered at the Smithsonian.

Biden Visits Europe

Biden’s Europe Trip to Focus on U.S.-Russia “Reset”
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During a during a March trip to Europe, Vice President Biden plans to “take stock” of the reset in relations between the United States and Russia that began after President Obama’s January 2009 inauguration. He also will visit Finland and become the first U.S. vice president to visit Moldova during the trip.

Not a “Facebook Revolution”
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Though social media may have been an important tool for the political upheaval in the Arab world, many media experts say that discussion over its role should not divert attention from the courage being shown by people standing up for their rights. Speaking at a panel on this issue, Michael Nelson, a Georgetown University professor, said, “At the end of the day, the Internet is not causing this revolution, but it is enabling it.”

Photo Gallery: Russian Imperial Stamps
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One of the best collections of Russian stamps in the world was recently found in a storage vault at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Postal Museum. The collection, composed of more than 14,000 Russian stamps, is truly exceptional in terms of its quality and rarity. At right, a rare 1896 design that was rejected because it did not include an image of post horns. The post horn was used throughout Europe to sound the arrival and departure of mail coaches and became the international symbol of mail service. The design ultimately approved for this stamp included the Russian Imperial eagle with thunderbolts across post horns.

Vice President Honors First Peace Corps Director

R. Sargent Shriver – the first director of the Peace Corps and brother-in-law to President Kennedy – died last Tuesday after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Shriver is credited with ensuring President Kennedy’s idea of a league of Americans serving communities around the world (an idea he announced during his State of the Union speech 50 years ago) became a reality in the Peace Corps. The volunteer organization places Americans of all ages and backgrounds in countries around the world where they work with local communities in areas such as education and social and economic development. On March 1, 2011 the Peace Corps will celebrate 50 years of global service, during which time over 200,000 Americans have served in the program.

Vice President Joe Biden delivered a eulogy at Shriver’s memorial service on Saturday, calling Shriver, “a rare combination, of a rigorous and demanding mind.” Biden added:

“He had a heart that led him to see good things in all people and a heart full of wonder and curiosity, and a heart that was humble and devoted to others, totally devoid of selfish motivation and literally; one that overflowed with unbridled optimism.”

Vice President Biden Visits Troops in Iraq

After making a surprise visit to Afghanistan earlier this week, Vice President Biden rounded out his trip with a stop in Iraq, meeting with leaders of the newly formed Iraqi government and visiting with some of the remaining American troops stationed in the country.  Biden spoke about the work American troops are still doing in Iraq to train Iraqi forces and to help establish a strong foundation for Iraq’s infrastructure.  Continue reading

Vice President Biden Arrives in Afghanistan

Vice President Joe Biden made a surprise trip to Afghanistan today.  He arrived on Monday night Kabul time and is there to gather first-hand information on the situation in the country.   He is scheduled to participate in a number of high-level meetings, including with President Hamid Karzai, and will also visit an Afghan National Army Training Center.  Biden will also likely be looking to see if the Obama administration’s Afghanistan strategy is leading to progress in the nation.

President Obama made his own surprise visit to Afghanistan in early December 2010.

Biden on Iraq / African Stocks / Modifying Crops

In an op-ed, Vice President Joe Biden discusses what America must do for Iraq. North Korea issues provocative claims about its nuclear program. Visiting Arab journalists share their impressions of America. Africa is getting increased attention at the stock exchanges. And finally, advances in modified crops could help avert a global food crisis.

Biden on Iraq
In an op-ed by Vice President Joe Biden in The New York Times, he discusses “what we must do for Iraq now.” Biden, right, says, “The United States must also continue to do its part to reinforce Iraq’s progress. That is why we are not disengaging from Iraq — rather, the nature of our engagement is changing from a military to a civilian lead.”

North Korea’s Nuclear Claims
North Korea’s claims that it has centrifuges for the production of enriched uranium reinforce longstanding international concerns over its nuclear activities, U.S. officials say. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs says North Korea needs to “be serious about living up to their obligations” to the international community.

Arab Journalists Visit U.S.
150 emerging media leaders from around the world recently traveled to the United States through the State Department’s Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists. The journalists visited grass-roots programs, educational institutions, radio and television stations and newspapers.

African Stocks Heat Up
The NYSE Euronext – the home of the New York Stock Exchange – has seen a threefold increase in the trading of African stocks on its exchanges over the past five years.

The Need for Modified Crops
Advances in genetically modified crops could help avert a food crisis of massive proportions, agriculture experts say. Between now and 2050, food production must increase 70 percent to feed a rapidly growing population. This will require a dramatic overhaul of farming practices along with a new generation of superefficient and “climate-ready” crops. At right, farmers planting rice in the Philippines.

Obama’s daily schedule goes online

The world gets a sneak peek into the day-to-day schedule of President Obama in the latest move to make Obama’s presidency the most transparent ever.

Obama’s and Vice President Biden’s daily schedules went online Monday for your curiosity-driven, RSS-following, calendar-adding reading pleasure. The calendar, updated daily, lets you track Obama from his morning briefing in the Oval Office to an afternoon press statement in the Rose Garden to a nighttime fundraising dinner at a local hotel (and that’s just today in Washington).

What serves up tantalizing clues for the press reads like a reality show splurge for Obama fanatics. Already, I’m hooked. What do you think?

President signs health care bill into law

Barack Obama

President Obama was joined by Vice President Biden and dozens of others at the White House today for what many are calling a historic moment – the signing of the first major health care reform bill in decades.

“Today, after almost a century of trying; today, after over a year of debate; today, after all the votes have been tallied, health insurance reform becomes law in the United States of America,” President Obama said amidst applauds.

“The bill I’m signing will set in motion reforms that generations of Americans have fought for and marched for and hungered to see.”

It will take four years to implement all of the new pieces of legislation, the president said, adding that time was given to ensure that changes were implemented appropriately. But some changes, including tax credits for small business owners to purchase insurance for their employees and protection against insurance companies refusing to cover people with pre-existing medical conditions, will go into effect later this year.

You can watch a video of the bill’s signing on the White House Web site.

Obama congratulates athletes

“The Olympics represent one of the greatest traditions in sports — a place where legends are born and history is made,” President Obama said in a video message to Olympic athletes February 12, as the winter games got underway in Vancouver.

“Over the next two-and-a-half weeks, each of you will have the experience of a lifetime – the culmination of years of hard work and endless sacrifice; dogged perseverance and unyielding determination,” he said.

While the president does not plan to go to Vancouver, Vice President Biden attended the opening ceremonies. “I know you’ll all make America enormously proud,” the president said.

“The beer summit”

Obama, Biden and others at White House

Following last week’s arrest of an African-American professor in Boston, an incident President Obama referred to as “a teachable moment,” the professor and the police officer stopped by the White House, for a beer with Obama and Vice President Biden.

Dubbed “the beer summit” by many in the media, the two joined Obama and Biden for beers and snacks at a table on the White House lawn. Press were allowed to take photos from a distance but little information was released about the event.

The arrest had sparked a debate about the treatment of African Americans by police – this debate was not just in the United States, as evidence by the range of comments from different countries on this blog.

“I have always believed that what brings us together is stronger than what pulls us apart,” Obama said in a statement following the meeting. “I am confident that has happened here tonight, and I am hopeful that all of us are able to draw this positive lesson from this episode.”

Leaders mark July 4 holiday

Across the world, Americans celebrated the United States’ 233rd birthday. At the White House, the Obamas invited military families to watch the fireworks.

“Just imagine the extraordinary audacity it took, 233 years ago for a group of patriots to … put ideas to paper that were as simple as they were revolutionary: that we are equal; that we are free; that we can pursue our full measure of happiness and make of our lives what we will,” Obama said.

The Obamas had another birthday to celebrate July 4 – daughter Malia turned 11 that day.

Vice President Joe Biden spent the July 4 holiday with U.S. troops serving in Iraq, among those troops, 237 new U.S. citizens. Biden oversaw their swearing in ceremony. Biden also had the opportunity to see his son Beau, a member of the Delaware National Guard, currently serving in Iraq.