Sunday, November 27, 2016

NEWS - Barack Obama The World's First Social Media President Passes On Digital History

President Obama on his iPhone
whitehouse.gov
President Barack Obama 

It is a well known fact that President Barack Obama's social media savvy catapulted him into The White House. I recall writing a paper on how Obama's digital marketing campaign won the Democrats countless votes. Almost eight years already? As this remarkable world history making President prepares to exit The Oval Office, the following piece by Kori Schulman, Special Assistant to The President and Deputy Chief Digital Officer, gives us insight into the forthcoming digital transition courtesy of whitehouse.gov

The Digital Transition: How the Presidential Transition Works in the Social Media Age
OCTOBER 31, 2016 AT 4:00 PM ET BY KORI SCHULMAN

Summary: 
Take a look at how we plan to preserve and pass on the digital history of the Obama administration.

President Obama is the first “social media president”: the first to have @POTUS on Twitter, the first to go live on Facebook from the Oval Office, the first to answer questions from citizens on YouTube, the first to use a filter on Snapchat. Over the past eight years, the President, Vice President, First Lady, and the White House have used social media and technology to engage with people around the country and the world on the most important issues of our time (while having some fun along the way). 
Looking back over the past eight years, our digital footprint reflects some broader changes in the ways people consume news and information and engage with the world around them online. In 2009, in addition to rolling out a revamped WhiteHouse.gov featuring a blog, RSS, and an email list, we joined Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Vimeo, iTunes, and even MySpace. In 2011, we launchedWe the People, a platform for citizens to petition the White House. In 2013, the First Lady posted her first photo to Instagram. In 2015, President Obama sent his first tweet from @POTUS. In 2016, the White House debuted an official story on Snapchat for the State of the Union. This digital infrastructure is an asset not just for the next president but for all future presidents to build off of. The archive belongs to the American people.
From the very beginning, our mission has been to reach Americans and people around the world on the channels and platforms where they already spend their time. This work began on President Obama’s 2008 campaign and, over the course of this Administration, has increasingly meant meeting people where they are online, using technology to re-imagine traditional formats, and creating unique opportunities for people to interact with their government.
The past eight years have left us with tremendous optimism about how future administrations might use these tools to create even more pathways for meaningful civic participation. 
So after all this – nearly eight years of digital firsts, more than 470,000 We the Peoplepetitions, nearly 30,000 @WhiteHouse tweets, and thousands of hours of video footage – what happens when the next administration takes office? 
The President has made clear that a smooth transition between administrations is one of his top priorities, and digital is a key component of that effort. While much of the digital transition is unprecedented in the United States, the peaceful transition of power is not. There are some important principles we can work from. Accordingly, we have been working to ensure that our digital transition meets three key goals. First, we are preserving the material we’ve created with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). From tweets to snaps, all of the material we’ve published online will be preserved with NARA just as previous administrations have done with records ranging from handwritten notes to faxes to emails. Second, wherever possible, we are working to ensure these materials continue to be accessible on the platforms where they were created, allowing for real time access to the content we’ve developed. Finally, we are working to ensure that the next president and administration – regardless of party – can continue to use and develop the digital assets we have created to connect directly with the people they serve. 
Here is an overview of our plans for how this will work:

Social Media:

On Twitter, for example, the handle @POTUS will be made available to the 45th President of the United States on January 20, 2017. The account will retain its more than 11 million followers, but start with no tweets on the timeline. @POTUS44, a newly created handle maintained by NARA, will contain all of President Obama’s tweets and will be accessible to the public on Twitter as an archive of President Obama’s use of the account. In addition, President Obama’s tweets will also be archived at NARA, where they will be preserved and accessible in the same manner as all other Presidential records. This will also be the case for other Twitter handles, including @WhiteHouse, @FLOTUS, @PressSec, and @VP. Individual official accounts, like @KS44, will transition to NARA and continue to be accessible for the public to view as an archive of all tweets sent by White House staff. 
On Instagram and Facebook, the incoming White House will gain access to the White House username, URL, and retain the followers, but will start with no content on the timeline. An archive of White House content that was posted to the Obama White House Instagram and Facebook will continue to be accessible to the public at Instagram.com/ObamaWhiteHouse and Facebook.com/ObamaWhiteHouse. Facebook accounts for President Obama and the Vice President and the Instagram accounts belonging to the First Lady and Vice President will be moved to new “44” usernames and preserved by NARA. 
We’ll follow a similar approach with other official accounts on platforms including Medium, Tumblr, and YouTube. These presences will be made available to the 45th White House, including the “White House” username, /WhiteHouse URL, and the followers, but start with no content on the accounts. The Obama White House content will be preserved and accessible in the same manner as all other presidential records and continue to be available on the platform at a new URL. 

We the People:

Today, the White House’s We The People website has more than 12 million verified users that have created more than 470,000 petitions to their government on the issues they care the most about. The White House mobilizes government officials to respond to every petition that receives at least 100,000 signatures. Over the years, we’ve seen it become a powerful platform, with petitions reaching senior staff and the President’s desk and even shaping policy on topics including cell phone unlocking and net neutrality. The We the People code has been open-sourced and we’re taking every step possible to make it easy for future administrations to carry on this tradition. The petitions and our responses will also be archived with NARA.  

WhiteHouse.gov:

Similar to the Clinton and Bush White House websites, President Obama’s WhiteHouse.gov will be preserved on the web and frozen after January 20th and made available at ObamaWhiteHouse.gov. The incoming White House will receive the WhiteHouse.gov domain and all content that has been posted to WhiteHouse.gov during the Obama administration will be archived with NARA. 

Video and Photos:

Over the past eight years, we’ve racked up thousands of hours of video footage and millions of photos. That’s all being transferred to NARA, where it will be preserved and made available to the public pursuant to the Presidential Records Act. The photos that have been released on WhiteHouse.gov, Flickr, Instagram and the video content on YouTube, Vimeo, and other White House presences will continue to be available on these platforms with updated usernames and will also be maintained by NARA. Full resolution versions of all the photo and video content that has been posted online will also be archived with NARA. 

Opening Up the Data to the Public:

In addition to the steps that the White House and NARA are taking, we want to open up this process to the American people. Specifically, by the end of this Administration, we're committed to publicly sharing our social media content in an easily accessible and comprehensive way (e.g., zip files to download). In the interim, we're inviting the American public – from students and data engineers, to artists and researchers – to come up with creative ways to archive this content and make it both useful and available for years to come. From Twitter bots and art projects to printed books and query tools, we’re open to it all. The White House will make our social media data available early to people who are interested in building something for the public. For more information on how to submit an idea, click here.

Kori Schulman
Special Assistant To The President and Deputy Chief Digital Officer

SOURCE - whitehouse.gov
Retrieved by JuicyChitChats on Sunday, November 27th, 2016.

TAGS: JuicyChitChats-News. President Barack Obama. Barack Obama The First Social Media President. Barack Obama The First Digital President. Whitehouse Digital History. White House Presidential Transition 2016. Whitehouse Social Media Transition 2016. Kori Schulman. Special Assistant To The President. White House Deputy Chief Digital Officer.

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Thursday, November 24, 2016

GREETINGS - Happy Thanksgiving!

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christian-thanksgiving-wallpaper


Happy Thanksgiving!

God Bless You.


Wednesday, November 23, 2016

WATCH - The 2016 Presidential Medal of Freedom Ceremony

PresMedalFreedom.jpg
wikipedia.org
The Presidential Medal of Freedom 

President Barack Obama awarded The Presidential Medal of Freedom to the following 21 people.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Elouise Cobell (posthumously). Ellen DeGeneres. Robert De Niro. Richard Garwin. Melinda Gates. Bill Gates. Frank Gehry. Margaret H. Hamilton. Tom Hanks. Grace Hopper (posthumously). Michael Jordan. Maya Lin. Lorne Michaels. Newt Minow. Eduardo Padron. Robert Redford. Diana Ross. Vin Scully. Bruce Springsteen. Cecily Tyson.

The ceremony took place yesterday in the East Room at The White House.



(c) Youtube/Whitehouse.gov

President Obama Awards The Presidential Medal of Freedom

(c) JuicyChitChats 2016 [Wednesday November 23rd]

TAGS: Presidential Medal of Freedom. President Barack Obama. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Elouise Cobell. Ellen DeGeneres. Robert De Niro. Richard Garwin. Melinda Gates. Bill Gates. Frank Gehry. Margaret H. Hamilton. Tom Hanks. Grace Hopper. Michael Jordan. Maya Lin. Lorne Michaels. Newt Minow. Eduardo Padron. Robert Redford. Diana Ross. Vin Scully. Bruce Springsteen. Cecily Tyson. 
HASHTAGS: #PresidentialMedalOfFreedom #2016PresidentialMedalOfFreedom #PresidentObamasLastPresidentialMedalOfFreedomCeremony #PresidentBarackObama #KareemAbdulJabbar #ElouiseCobell #EllenDeGeneres #RobertDeNiro #RichardGarwin #MelindaGates #BillGates #FrankGehry #MargaretHHamilton #TomHanks #GraceHopper #MichaelJordan #MayaLin #LorneMichaels #NewtMinow #EduardoPadron #RobertRedford #DianaRoss #VinScully #BruceSpringsteen #CecilyTyson

PHOTOS - The 2016 Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients


Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom

Elouise Cobell: 1945-2011
Elouise Cobell Posthumously Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Ellen DeGeneres
Ellen DeGeneres Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Robert De Niro
Robert De Niro Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Richard Garwin
Richard Garwin Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom


Melinda and Bill Gates
Melinda and Bill Gates Receive Their Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Margaret H. Hamilton
Margaret H. Hamilton Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Tom Hanks 
Tom Hanks Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Image result for grace hopper
Grace Hopper: 1906-1992 
Grace Hopper Posthumously Receives Her Medal of Freedom


Michael Jordan
Michael Jordan Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Maya Lin
Maya Lin Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Lorne Michaels
Lorne Michaels Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Newt Minow
Newt Minow Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom  


Eduardo Padron
Eduardo Padron Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Robert Redford
Robert Redford Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Diana Ross 
Diana Ross Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 

Vin Scully
Vin Scully Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen Receives His Presidential Medal of Freedom 


Cecily Tyson
Cecily Tyson Receives Her Presidential Medal of Freedom 


All Photos Courtesy of Twitter

(c) JuicyChitChats 2016 [Wednesday November 23rd]

TAGS: Presidential Medal of Freedom. President Barack Obama. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Elouise Cobell. Ellen DeGeneres. Robert De Niro. Richard Garwin. Melinda Gates. Bill Gates. Frank Gehry. Margaret H. Hamilton. Tom Hanks. Grace Hopper. Michael Jordan. Maya Lin. Lorne Michaels. Newt Minow. Eduardo Padron. Robert Redford. Diana Ross. Vin Scully. Bruce Springsteen. Cecily Tyson. 
HASHTAGS: #PresidentialMedalOfFreedom #2016PresidentialMedalOfFreedom #PresidentObamasLastPresidentialMedalOfFreedomCeremony #PresidentBarackObama #KareemAbdulJabbar #ElouiseCobell #EllenDeGeneres #RobertDeNiro #RichardGarwin #MelindaGates #BillGates #FrankGehry #MargaretHHamilton #TomHanks #GraceHopper #MichaelJordan #MayaLin #LorneMichaels #NewtMinow #EduardoPadron #RobertRedford #DianaRoss #VinScully #BruceSpringsteen #CecilyTyson

NEWS - The 2016 Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients

PresMedalFreedom.jpg
wikipedia.org
Presidential Medal of Freedom

Yesterday, Tuesday November 22nd was President Barack Obama's last and eighth Presidential Medal of Freedom Ceremony. It was hosted in the East Room of The White House. 

The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the United States of America's highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.  

The 21 Recipients of The 2016 Presidential Medal of Freedom are:

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
(c) whitehouse.gov

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the National Basketball Association’s all-time leading scorer who helped lead the Los Angeles Lakers to five championships and the Milwaukee Bucks to another. During his career, Abdul-Jabbar was a six-time NBA Most Valuable Player and a 19-time NBA All-Star. Before joining the NBA, he was a star player at UCLA, leading the Bruins to three consecutive championships. In addition to his legendary basketball career, Abdul-Jabbar has been an outspoken advocate for social justice.

No Photo Available (Posthumous) 
Elouise Cobell was a Blackfeet Tribal community leader and an advocate for Native American self-determination and financial independence. She used her expertise in accounting to champion a lawsuit that resulted in a historic settlement, restoring tribal homelands to her beloved Blackfeet Nation and many other tribes, and in so doing, inspired a new generation of Native Americans to fight for the rights of others. Cobell helped found the Native American Bank, served as director of the Native American Community Development Corporation, and inspired Native American women to seek leadership roles in their communities.


Ellen DeGeneres
(c) whitehouse.gov
Ellen DeGeneres is an award-winning comedian who has hosted her popular daytime talk show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, since 2003 with her trademarked humor, humility, and optimism. In 2003 Ellen lent her voice to a forgetful but unforgettable little fish named Dory in Finding Nemo. She reprised her role again in 2016 with the hugely successful Finding Dory. Ellen also hosted the Academy Awards twice, in 2007 and 2014. In 1997, after coming out herself, DeGeneres made TV history when her character on Ellen revealed she was a lesbian. In her work and in her life, she has been a passionate advocate for equality and fairness.

Robert De Niro
(c) whitehouse.gov
Robert De Niro has brought to life some of the most memorable roles in American film during a career that spans five decades. His first major film roles were in the sports drama Bang the Drum Slowly and Martin Scorsese's crime film Mean Streets. He is a seven-time Academy Award nominee and two-time Oscar winner, and is also a Kennedy Center honoree.

Richard Garwin 
(c) whitehouse.gov
Richard Garwin is a polymath physicist who earned a Ph.D. under Enrico Fermi at age 21 and subsequently made pioneering contributions to U.S. defense and intelligence technologies, low-temperature and nuclear physics, detection of gravitational radiation, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computer systems, laser printing, and nuclear arms control and nonproliferation. He directed Applied Research at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center and taught at the University of Chicago, Columbia University, and Harvard University. The author of 500 technical papers and a winner of the National Medal of Science, Garwin holds 47 U.S. patents, and has advised numerous administrations.

Bill and Melinda Gates
(c) whitehouse.gov
Bill and Melinda Gates established the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in 2000 to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, the foundation focuses on improving people's health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, the mission is to ensure that all people—especially those with the fewest resources—have access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. The Gates Foundation has provided more than $36 billion in grants since its inception.

Frank Gehry
(c) whitehouse.gov
Frank Gehry is one of the world’s leading architects, whose works have helped define contemporary architecture. His best-known buildings include the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, the Dancing House in Prague, and the Guggenheim Museum building in Bilbao, Spain.

Margaret H. Hamilton
(c) whitehouse.gov
Margaret H. Hamilton led the team that created the on-board flight software for NASA's Apollo command modules and lunar modules. A mathematician and computer scientist who started her own software company, Hamilton contributed to concepts of asynchronous software, priority scheduling and priority displays, and human-in-the-loop decision capability, which set the foundation for modern, ultra-reliable software design and engineering.

Tom Hanks
(c) whitehouse.gov
Tom Hanks is one of the Nation’s finest actors and filmmakers. He has been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role five times, and received the award for his work in Philadelphia and Forrest Gump. Those roles and countless others, including in Apollo 13, Saving Private Ryan, and Cast Away, have left an indelible mark on American film. Off screen, as an advocate, Hanks has advocated for social and environmental justice, and for our veterans and their families.

Grace Hopper (Posthumous)
(c) whitehouse.gov
Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, known as "Amazing Grace" and "the first lady of software," was at the forefront of computers and programming development from the 1940s through the 1980s. Hopper’s work helped make coding languages more practical and accessible, and she created the first compiler, which translates source code from one language into another. She taught mathematics as an associate professor at Vassar College before joining the United States Naval Reserve as a lieutenant (junior grade) during World War II, where she became one of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark I computer and began her lifelong leadership role in the field of computer science.

Michael Jordan
(c) whitehouse.gov
Michael Jordan is one of the greatest athletes of all time. Jordan played 15 seasons in the NBA for the Chicago Bulls and Washington Wizards; he is currently a principal owner and chairman of the Charlotte Hornets. During his career, he won six championships, five Most Valuable Player awards, and appeared in 14 All-Star games.

Maya Lin
(c) whitehouse.gov
Maya Lin is an artist and designer who is known for her work in sculpture and landscape art. She designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C. and since then has pursued a celebrated career in both art and architecture. A committed environmentalist, Lin is currently working on a multi-sited artwork/memorial, What is Missing? bringing awareness to the planet's loss of habitat and biodiversity.

Lorne Michaels
(c) whitehouse.gov
Lorne Michaels is a producer and screenwriter, best known for creating and producing Saturday Night Live, which has run continuously for more than 40 years. In addition, Michaels has also produced The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, and 30 Rock, among other popular, award-winning shows. He has won 13 Emmy Awards over the course of his lengthy career.

Newt Minow
(c) whitehouse.gov
Newt Minow is an attorney with a long and distinguished career in public life. After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, Minow served as a Supreme Court clerk and counsel to the Governor of Illinois. In 1961, President Kennedy selected Minow, then 34, to serve as Chairman of the Federal Communications Committee (FCC), where he helped shape the future of American television and was a vigorous advocate for broadcasting that promoted the public interest. In the five decades since leaving the FCC, Minow has maintained a prominent private law practice while devoting himself to numerous public and charitable causes.

Eduardo Padron
(c) whitehouse.gov 
Eduardo Padrón is the President of Miami Dade College (MDC), one of the largest institutions of higher education in the United States. During his more than four decade career, President Padrón has been a national voice for access and inclusion. He has worked to ensure all students have access to high quality, affordable education. He has championed innovative teaching and learning strategies making MDC a national model of excellence.

Robert Redford
(c) whitehouse.gov
Robert Redford is an actor, director, producer, businessman, and environmentalist. In 1981, he founded the Sundance Institute to advance the work of independent filmmakers and storytellers throughout the world, including through its annual Sundance Film Festival. He has received an Academy Award for Best Director and for Lifetime Achievement. Redford has directed or starred in numerous motion pictures, including The Candidate, All the President's Men, Quiz Show, andA River Runs Through It.

Diana Ross
(c) whitehouse.gov
Diana Ross has had an iconic career spanning more than 50 years within the entertainment industry in music, film, television, theater, and fashion. Diana Ross is an Academy Award nominee, inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and recipient of the Grammy Awards highest honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award. Ross was a recipient of the 2007 Kennedy Center Honors. Diana Ross’s greatest legacy is her five wonderful children.

Vin Scully
(c) whitehouse.gov
Vin Scully is a broadcaster who, for 67 seasons, was the voice of the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers. In Southern California, where generations of fans have grown up listening to Dodger baseball, Scully's voice is known as the "soundtrack to summer." In 1988, he was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Scully's signature voice brought to life key moments in baseball history, including perfect games by Sandy Koufax and Don Larsen, Kirk Gibson's home run in the 1988 World Series, and Hank Aaron's record-breaking 715th home run.

Bruce Springsteen
(c) whitehouse.gov
Bruce Springsteen is a singer, songwriter, and bandleader. More than five decades ago, he bought a guitar and learned how to make it talk. Since then, the stories he has told, in lyrics and epic live concert performances, have helped shape American music and have challenged us to realize the American dream. Springsteen is a Kennedy Center honoree and he and the E Street Band he leads have each been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Cicely Tyson
(c) whitehouse.gov
Cicely Tyson has performed on the stage, on television, and on the silver screen. She has won two Emmy Awards and a Tony Award, and is known for her performances inSounder, The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, and The Help. In 2013, she returned to the stage with The Trip to the Bountiful, and was awarded the Tony Award for best leading actress. Tyson received the Kennedy Center Honors in 2015.

SOURCE - whitehouse.gov
(c) JuicyChitChats 2016 

Friday, November 11, 2016

OPINION - Grace From Obama, Clinton and Trump: A Silver Lining After Ugly Campaign Season

Image result for obama trump clinton
quoromcentre.com
Trump, Obama and Clinton

Here's an interesting piece from MIKE LUPICA  of The New York Daily News

A remarkable thing has happened over the past 48 hours, as remarkable as Donald Trump going from Trump Tower all the way to the White House: There has been a moment of grace in American politics, after the ugliest presidential campaign in the history of the country. And the only hope for the country, in this time of more great change, is that it is actually something on which to build for Donald Trump going forward, and for us all.
It began, of course, with Trump's own moment of grace, at the New York Hilton Midtown in the middle of the night, after it became official that he had defeated Hillary Clinton, and he spoke to the crowd about "a united people," after an election season as mean and divisive as it was long.
Trump also spoke to and about the people who really got him elected, an America that felt powerless and voiceless and constantly left behind.
"The forgotten people of our country will be forgotten no longer," he said.
This does not mean you un-ring all the bells he rang from the time he came down the escalator at Trump Tower in June 2015, something that feels as if it happened about four lifetimes ago, and a million Trump news cycles ago. It does not mean you give him a free pass because he won, a pass on walls or the Khan family or bans or Billy Bush. Still: That speech was a way for him and for us to start moving forward, unless we are supposed to keep prosecuting this campaign forever, or act as if this election is the end of everything.
But it was not only his victory speech, a few blocks away from where it began for him. It was Hillary Clinton's own speech the next day, the best of her public life. On this day, more than any she had on the campaign trail in 2008 or over this past year, Clinton showed the country her own best self, and perhaps even the greatness she might have brought with her back to the White House.
She spoke, honestly I believe, about how all Americans owed Donald Trump "an open mind and a chance to lead." And, really, if she can stand there and speak this way about being open-minded, after standing in there against him the way she did, why can't the rest of us do the same, whatever our beliefs and opinions about how we arrived at the reckoning of Tuesday night?
"I'm sorry that we did not win this election," she said, "for the values we share and the vision we hold for our country."
She fought back tears, as those in the crowd in front of her were unable to do the same. Then she left the stage, in all the big ways. Her husband's vice-president didn't get elected President, nor did she. She had gone up against a better candidate in Barack Obama eight years ago and now it has happened to her again.
Finally there was the meeting between President Obama and President-elect Trump in the White House on Thursday, the two men not only shaking hands after the way they had swung away at each other for years, but talking for an hour-and-a-half. Maybe it was nothing more than the ceremony of transition. It was still something to see even if we thought we'd never see anything like it in this world.
"I have been very encouraged by the interest in President-elect Trump's wanting to work with my team ... (on) many of the issues that this great country faces," Obama said. "I believe that it is important for all of us, regardless of party ... to come together."
"We are going to do everything we can to help you succeed," Obama said to Trump on a day neither one of them saw coming.
Donald Trump doesn't get a clean slate, not after this campaign. But what he does get is the chance to show everyone that maybe he can figure out how to be President the way he figured out how to be the presidential candidate who shocked the world.
You walked past Trump Tower in the morning on Thursday, with barriers everywhere and cops everywhere and television reporters, so many of them from other countries, doing standups on the west side of Fifth Ave. All around them the life of the city went on, the way the life of the country would later when Trump met with Obama.
There is no way of knowing how long this moment will last. But it has been one of grace, after such a graceless campaign. These past couple of days have been about our better selves. Maybe they really can be something on which to build. That may not be the way to bet. But it is the way to root. Anybody who wants the incoming President to fail is no better than those who wanted the exact same thing eight years ago for the guy he's about to replace. 
SOURCE - New York Daily News Updated: Thursday, November 10th, 2016. 6.37pm.
Retrieved by JuicyChitChats on Friday November 11th, 2016.