E-mail This Page To A Friend Print This Page

Tuesday, September 07, 1999

Subscribe to RIPPLE OF HOPE

Join the RIPPLE OF HOPE mailing list:
In case you're concerned that we'll sell your email to advertisers and you'll start getting spam, we give you our word that we will never, ever sell, rent, or in any way share any of the information you provide, including your email address. Constant Contact, the service we use to manage and communicate with our subscribers, is highly respected partly because it has a strict privacy policy that forbids anyone from such behavior, and we would risk them terminating our service without refund if we ever shared your information.

Click here to receive an email each day containing a summary of new posts to RIPPLE OF HOPE.

Sign up for a daily email summary of new posts to RIPPLE OF HOPE

By submitting your email below next to the RIPPLE OF HOPE section of your choice, you will create an account with Bloglet and receive an email each day containing a summary of new posts.

  • Bloglet will not send you more than one email per day, no matter how many sections of the site you sign up for.
  • To sign up for email summaries from more than one section of the site, return to this page and submit your email in the appropriate fields; you only need to sign up for each section once.
RIPPLE OF HOPE

U.N. Modernization Project

Action Ticker

Also, don't forget that you can subscribe to our XML feeds here.

You'll now receive a daily email summary of new posts!

You successfully created an account with Bloglet, which will send you an email each day containing a summary of new posts added to the relevant sections of RIPPLE OF HOPE. You should get a confirmation email from them shortly. (To sign up for summaries of other sections of the site, click here to return to the previous page.)

If you enjoy this site, we hope you'll also take a moment to join our mailing list:

In case you're concerned that we'll sell your email to advertisers and you'll start getting spam, we give you our word that we will never, ever sell, rent, or in any way share any of the information you provide, including your email address. Constant Contact, the service we use to manage and communicate with our subscribers, is highly respected partly because it has a strict privacy policy that forbids anyone from such behavior, and we would risk them terminating our service without refund if we ever shared your information.

Also, don't forget that you can subscribe to our XML feeds here.

Download XML Feeds

Download your XML feeds in RSS 2.0 format below. Use these feeds to read RIPPLE OF HOPE content through your RSS news reader or to add RIPPLE OF HOPE content to your web site. For an easy way to add news and other content to your site, RSS-to-JavaScript will convert any RSS feed into a short piece of code you can simply paste onto your page. (For more information about XML feeds and RSS, click here.)

RIPPLE OF HOPE

RIPPLE OF HOPE U.N. Modernization Project

RIPPLE OF HOPE
(optimized for handheld devices)

RIPPLE OF HOPE U.N. Modernization Project
(optimized for handheld devices)

XML Feeds •• Add RIPPLE OF HOPE content to your web site

The following XML feeds have been produced through FeedBurner and are presented in RSS 2.0 format. Use these feeds to read RIPPLE OF HOPE content through your RSS news reader or to add RIPPLE OF HOPE content to your web site. For an easy way to add news and other content to your site, RSS-to-JavaScript will convert any RSS feed into a short piece of code you can simply paste onto your page. (For more information about XML feeds and RSS, click here.)

Please provide your name and email (just so we know who's using our feeds) and check the feeds you want:

Name:
E-mail Address:
RIPPLE OF HOPE
U.N. Modernization Project
RIPPLE OF HOPE (for handheld)
U.N. Modernization Project (for handheld)

(Powered by Form-Mail.com.)

Contributing Writers

David L. Englin, Founding Editor
david@rippleofhope.net
Published Work

David L. Englin is a writer, consultant, and activist from Alexandria, Virginia. He is currently a candidate for the Virginia House of Delegates. Born and raised on American bases overseas during the Cold War, he is an Air Force veteran and a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy and Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. David launched the blog RIPPLE OF HOPE in July 2004 as an online home for his writing and activism. As readership grew, he invited this group of contributors to share their keen insight, incisive commentary, and strong progressive voices through RIPPLE OF HOPE.
Click here for David Englin's full biography.

Zach Carstensen
zach@rippleofhope.net

A Seattle attorney and native Iowan, Zach Carstensen has been active in politics since 1996. That year, he caucused for Republican Senator Phil Gramm. After identifying himself as a pro-choice Republican, the party he grew up with turned him out. That year he voted for Bill Clinton and became active in progressive politics and the Iowa Democratic Party. Zach has been active at all levels of the political and campaign process. In 2000, as a second year law student, he ran for State Representative. In 2001, he started a two year career as a lobbyist and worked for multiple real estate clients at the Iowa General Assembly and before municipal bodies. Since 2001, Zach has managed campaigns and provided consulting services to municipal, county, and state-wide candidates running for office in Iowa. Zach moved to Seattle in 2003 and spent a year as a volunteer community organizer before returning to the practice of law.

Tiziana Dearing
tiziana@rippleofhope.net

Tiziana Dearing has a decade of experience consulting to senior managers in nonprofits and corporations. In 1997, she started her own consultancy, working with nonprofits and specializing in strategy development and implementation, executive decision making and coaching, and large and small group facilitation. Prior to her work in consulting, Tiziana worked for a nonprofit organization doing microlending for women starting businesses in order to work their way out of poverty. A committed Catholic, she has been active both personally and professionally with Catholic social justice issues. Tiziana received a Masters in Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School in 2000 with concentrations in International Security Policy and Negotiation and Conflict Resolution. She received a Bachelor's in English in 1992 from the University of Michigan. Tiziana lives in Bedford, Mass., with her husband, a daughter, and another child on the way. She is currently the Executive Director of the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations at Harvard University, and publishes occasional opinion and commentary. (The views expressed by Tiziana Dearing do not necessarily reflect the views of Harvard University, the Kennedy School of Government, or the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations.)

Shayna Englin
shayna@rippleofhope.net

Shayna Englin is currently the Fundraising Practice Manager at Mindshare Interactive Campaigns, an interactive communications firm. She joined Mindshare from her consulting firm, Englin Inc., where she raised money and consulted on strategy for Democrats and progressive issue organizations.  Shayna got her start in progressive politics at Colorado NARAL, where she spent six years coordinating campaigns to increase pro-choice voter turnout for everything from local school board to statewide elections. At Colorado NARAL she developed a love of all things field and an appreciation of how well executed field campaigns can make the difference in tight elections. Shayna was born and raised in Denver, Colorado, and attended the University of Colorado at Denver. Shortly after graduation, Shayna married David Englin, and they moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts. Shayna did time at Mass. NARAL, the Kennedy School of Government’s Executive Programs, Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, and the John O’Connor for Congress campaign, before heading to the Kennedy School for a Masters in Public Policy.  Shayna lives in Alexandria, Virginia, with David and their wonderful son, Caleb.  She’s a runner and a gardener who will deny to the death that her scrapbooking phase proves she was a stay-at-home mom for just a little too long.

Glenn Gritzner
glenn@rippleofhope.net

Glenn Gritzner is Special Assistant to the Superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, former Colorado governor and Democratic National Committee chairman Roy Romer. As the superintendent's primary political and strategic advisor, Glenn oversaw campaigns for the two largest local school bonds in the nation’s history, raising over $7 billion for new schools as part of a construction and repair effort that is currently the nation’s largest public works project. Glenn was also instrumental in LAUSD’s recent effort to win approval for three new schools on the site of the former Ambassador Hotel, where Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1968. Glenn is President of the Los Angeles County Young Democrats, serves on the board of Heart of Los Angeles Youth, an after school educational enrichment program for at-risk youth, and is a City Council appointee to the Citizens Unit for Participation in Housing and Community Development. Glenn and his wife, Lisa, live with their two dogs and their cat in Silverlake, just outside of downtown Los Angeles.

Lisa Gritzner
lisa@rippleofhope.net

Lisa Gritzner is a Vice President at Cerrell Associates, Inc., a Los Angeles-based public affairs/government relations firm. Prior to that, she was the chief of staff to a Los Angeles City Councilmember, where she was instrumental in representing the City of Los Angeles on a wide range of issues. Lisa received a Bachelor of Arts degree in government from California State University Sacramento and was selected to participate in the Senior Executives in State and Local Government program at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. Lisa and her husband, Glenn, enjoy traveling the world seeking excellent food and exciting adventures. When she grows up, Lisa hopes to live in a world free of neocons, especially Paul Wolfowitz and that scary guy on CNN with the bow-tie whose parents must have been very, very mean to him.
Click here for Lisa Gritzner's full biography.

Paul Hernandez
paul@rippleofhope.net

Paul Hernandez has over ten years of experience working on critical policy issues. He currently is Manager of Public Affairs for The California Endowment, the state's largest nonprofit health foundation which to date has provided nearly $1.2 billion in grants to nonprofit organizations across California to address today's most pressing health issues. As The Endowment's primary liaison to government and civic leaders at the state and local level, Paul is responsible for building partnerships with the public and private sectors to address issues such as the uninsured and chronic disease prevention. He previously served as Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina's chief advisor on transportation and law enforcement issues. He has also managed a job training program for at-risk youth in San Francisco, and served as Executive Director of an advocacy group focused on improving ways to build public schools. When he gets a chance to pull away from the rubber chicken charity dinner circuit, Paul can be found trying to convince his wife Martha, why he needs to watch highlights of his beloved L.A. Lakers or U.C. Berkeley "Cal" Golden Bears on Sportscenter for the third time.

Jason Kearns
jason@rippleofhope.net

Jason Kearns is an international trade attorney currently working for the Office of the U.S Trade Representative. He was previously an associate at the firm Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, where he analyzed trade policy and represented a wide range of U.S. and international clients. His diverse legal background includes work for the World Trade Organization and a year in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, advising clients doing business in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. A graduate of Denver University and the University of Pennsylvania School of Law, he also holds a Masters in Public Policy from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. Jason lives with his wife, Lindy, and their daughter, Ellie, in Washington, D.C., where he pines for his native rural Colorado. (The views expressed by Jason Kearns do not necessarily reflect the views of the Office of the U.S Trade Representative or the United States Government.)

Terry Klein
terry@rippleofhope.net

Terry Klein is an attorney practicing in Boston, Massachusetts, where he lives with his wife Lindsay Sobel and their daughter Zoe. Before dedicating himself to the practice of law, he worked as a stock boy at a printing press, as a semiprofessional and minimally competent heavy metal guitar player, as a gopher in the endocrinology department at one of the top teaching hospitals in America, and as a political hack in North Carolina and Washington D.C. He still plays guitar and dabbles in politics. He still knows nothing about either endocrinology or printing.

Lucy Okumu
lucy@rippleofhope.net

Lucy Okumu is Legislative Advocate for the Los Angeles Unified School District and has extensive experience in education policy at the local and state level. Lucy previously served as executive director for New Schools Better Neighborhoods in Los Angeles, where she guided efforts to plan, design and build joint-use school facilities between school districts, local municipalities, and non-profit organizations. Lucy’s family immigrated to the United States from Uganda when she was six years old.  Lucy's personal and professional goals to pursue justice, equity, and democracy for all are grounded in her mother's tireless activism against an oppressive dictatorship. It was her mother's courage and boldness that led her to immigrate to the United States so her children were free to pursue their dreams. Lucy has a Bachelors Degree in International Relations from the University of California Davis, a Masters Degree in Public Policy from the University of Southern California, and has served on various boards, including the Los Angeles County Young Democrats and the Center for African Peace and Conflict Resolution. Lucy’s friends describe her as, among other things, “brutally honest but with enough good nature and charm that it somehow works for her,” and “honest with a wicked sense of humor."

Traci Parmenter
traci@rippleofhope.net

Traci Parmenter currently serves as the Program Director at Admission Possible, a non-profit organization devoted to helping talented, motivated low-income students gain admission to college. She's a former high school Spanish teacher and earned her Master’s Degree in education policy at Harvard'’s Kennedy School of Government. Traci has fed her inner political junkie by working on local, congressional, and presidential campaigns, and despite some heartbreaking losses, she still believes there's good to be found in the world. After ten years of wandering around the U.S., she has come back to her native Midwest, where she'’ll try to survive her first Minnesota winter. She'’s thankful to know that all those nights of debate in the Englins'’ living room are finally going to pay off with this lucrative blogging contract. Or not.

Tom Polger
tom@rippleofhope.net
Tom Polger's Web Site

Tom Polger is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Cincinnati. His work focuses on philosophy of mind and philosophy of science, especially understanding the nature of sensations. He is the author of many articles and reviews, and of Natural Minds (MIT Press, 2004). Before becoming a professor, he worked occasionally as a dishwasher, juggler, information systems consultant, and fire eater.

Angelo Williams
angelo@rippleofhope.net

Angelo Williams is the Education Policy and Economic Development Consultant to California State Senate Majority Leader Gloria Romero. Before working for the majority leader, Angelo severed as Director of Legislation and Press Deputy to California State Assemblyman Carl Washington, specifically in the fight to secure enterprise zones for the City of Compton and for areas of economic distress statewide. Angelo is a graduate of the University of Ghana, University of California, Crenshaw High School and Marie Fagan Pre-School. Angelo (aka Uncle Lo Lo) is a guest lecturer and published author of comparative history and social anthropology. His nieces and nephews think he’s the funniest man alive. And that, as Baldwin would say, is worth the price of the ticket. (The views expressed by Angelo Williams do not necessarily reflect the views of the Senator Majority Leader or the California State Senate and Legislature.)

Biography of Lisa Gritzner

Lisa Gritzner is a Vice President at Cerrell Associates, Inc. a Los Angeles-based public affairs/government relations firm. Lisa has extensive experience handling local public policy issues and has wide-ranging expertise in numerous areas including land use and transportation, especially airports and large-scale, mixed-use developments. In addition, she has worked on public-private land transactions to preserve open space and has considerable experience with a host of public agencies in California. She possesses significant knowledge of local government policies and procedures, and has experience working with and advising elected officials and staff at all levels of government.

Prior to abandoning the public sector for the private sector, Lisa served as chief of staff to Los Angeles City Councilmember Cindy Miscikowski. In that role, she was instrumental in representing the City of Los Angeles on issues as varied as the secession of the San Fernando Valley, Hollywood and the Harbor areas from the rest of the City of LA; the modernization of Los Angeles International Airport; and the development of the largest master-planned community in the city of Los Angeles. Lisa also served as the primary media liaison for the Councilmember and functioned as the senior advisor on a wide range of issues from local district-focused community relations to issues of citywide importance such as business tax reform, public safety, and the City of Los Angeles’ $5 billion annual budget.

Prior to her work in the city of Los Angeles, Lisa created a nationally recognized HUD-funded outreach program for the Community Development Department in the City of Cambridge, Massachusetts. She was responsible for legislation creating the state’s first Lead Paint Awareness week, and for the establishment of a national HUD advertising campaign. Lisa began her career working in the government relations department of First Interstate Bank of California in Sacramento where she tracked and analyzed state legislation of importance to the banking industry.

Lisa received a Bachelor of Arts degree in government from California State University Sacramento and was selected to participate in the Senior Executives in State and Local Government program at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. She serves as treasurer for the board of directors of the Los Angeles County Young Democrats and has served on other local community advisory boards. For fun, Lisa and her husband Glenn enjoy traveling the world seeking excellent food and exciting adventures. When she grows up, Lisa hopes to live in a world free of neocons, especially Paul Wolfowitz and that scary guy on CNN with the bow-tie whose parents must have been very, very mean to him.

Published Work by David L. Englin

"A history of tolerance," The Denver Post, Dec. 19, 2004

"Breaking Jesse's Silence: Why the ultimate independent voter has finally broken in favor of Kerry," The Gadflyer, Oct. 29, 2004

"Military Misconceptions: If Democrats want to lead today's military, they must drop the stereotypes about who serves," TomPaine.com, Oct. 22, 2004

"Results are a signal of hope for Democrats," Army Times, Navy Times, Marine Corps Times, Oct. 25, 2004; Air Force Times, Nov. 1, 2004

"Wrestling With The Reserves: On the real scandal about President George W. Bush and the National Guard," TomPaine.com, Oct. 4, 2004

"Band of Brothers: How Kerry's veterans could send 'Brother John' to the White House," The Gadflyer, Aug. 24, 2004

"Troop Movement: Bush's troop redeployment may make military sense. But it's a bad idea," The New Republic Online, Aug. 18, 2004

"Plan of Action: What would military intervention in Darfur look like? You might be surprised," The New Republic Online, Aug. 6, 2004

"Double Duty: Liberals should make the case for universal health care on national-security grounds," The American Prospect Online, Jan. 17, 2003

"High-Tech Hanukkah: Separated by military service, one Jewish family combined ancient tradition and modern technology to celebrate together," Beliefnet, Nov. 27, 2002

"Number Crunching: In Alabama, a judge posted the Ten Commandments in his courthouse. But did he even post the right 10?" The American Prospect Online, Nov. 21, 2002

"Cure for War Fever: Universal service would force America to use its military might with care," The American Prospect Online, Oct. 30, 2002

"Fighting School Prayer With the Shema: A father wonders how to best protect his son from too much religion in school -- and finds the answer in Judaism's central prayer," Beliefnet, Oct. 15, 2002

"Surrendering Rights: Access to abortion is a constitutional right--unless you happen to be a U.S. soldier overseas," The New Republic Online, Sept. 12, 2002

"Counting The Poor So It Counts: How To Measure Poverty In The Information Age," Moving Ideas Network, June 6, 2002 (with Traci L. Parmenter)

"The Progressive Imperative: National Security Concerns Can Fuel A Progressive Agenda," The American Prospect Online, Oct. 12, 2001

Biography of David Lawrence Englin

David Englin was born David English at the U.S. Army's 97th General Hospital in Frankfurt, Germany. His mother, Stephanie, was a Department of Defense elementary school teacher, and his father was a soldier stationed at Hanau Army Base. Just after David was born, Stephanie transferred to RAF Chicksands, a U.S. Air Force base in England, which is where David spent his early childhood. David's parents separated shortly after his brother, Michael, was born, and Stephanie raised her two sons as a single mother. A New York City native, Stephanie moved her family to the Bronx between 1984 and 1985 to return to school. The Defense Department then sent Stephanie and her sons back overseas to RAF Croughton, England.


While growing up on American bases during the Cold War, David traveled extensively throughout Europe and developed both an appreciation for other peoples and cultures and a deep commitment to serving America. He also developed a love of aviation and became a student pilot at RAF Upper Heyford, where his single-engine aero club plane shared the runway with F-111s from the 20th Tactical Fighter Wing. An Eagle Scout, varsity athlete, and Air Force Junior ROTC cadet, David graduated valedictorian from Croughton High School in 1992 and won an appointment to the U.S. Air Force Academy.


At the beginning of his junior year at the Air Force Academy, David met Shayna Wolin on the steps of the Cadet Chapel when she was visiting her brother, who was then a freshman cadet. David and Shayna were engaged shortly thereafter. In May 1996, Shayna graduated summa cum laude from the University of Colorado at Denver with majors in Political Science and Psychology, and David graduated with honors from the Air Force Academy with a major in History and a minor in Russian and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force. The following Sunday, David and Shayna were married, and they combined their last names, English and Wolin, to Englin.


The Air Force sent the Englins to Cambridge, Mass., where David spent two years as an Air Force-sponsored graduate student at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. During the summer between his two years at Harvard, David worked at the Pentagon in the Secretary of the Air Force Office of Public Affairs. In 1998, he graduated from the Kennedy School with a Masters in Public Policy degree with concentrations in press, politics, and public policy and media relations.

David's next Air Force assignment was 20 minutes up the road from Cambridge at Hanscom AFB, Mass., where he worked in community relations and crisis action planning in the Electronic Systems Center Office of Public Affairs. While David was serving at Hanscom, Shayna took her turn at Harvard in the same masters degree program, and their son, Caleb, was born a few days before Shayna began her second year of school.


In July 2000, shortly after Shayna's graduation, the Englins moved from Cambridge to Washington, D.C., where David was assigned to the Pentagon in the Secretary of the Air Force Office of Public Affairs. David served in a variety of positions during his four years at the Pentagon, including a year and a half in the Air Force's Public Communications Division, an overseas deployment to Operation Joint Forge / Joint Guardian as the Chief of Public Affairs for the 16th Air Expeditionary Wing, which was spread throughout the Balkans, and two years as the Deputy Director and Executive Officer of the Your Guardians of Freedom war on terrorism outreach program.

A lifelong Democrat, David's experiences at the Pentagon inspired him to speak out publicly about the direction of our country. As early as his cadet years, David advocated to his military peers that gays ought to be allowed to serve openly in the military and that all military jobs ought to be open to women. When the Bush Administration came into power, David argued with his military peers -- and even with some Bush political appointees -- the folly of Bush's acerbic, unilateralist approach to foreign policy. David was on duty at the Pentagon when it was attacked on Sept. 11, 2001. After doing what he could to aid the wounded, he was one of hundreds of people preparing to go into the building to recover remains. As they stood there, senior officers around him wondered out loud if this would be the excuse the Bush Administration had been looking for to attack Iraq. In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, David publicly implored his Pentagon colleagues to stand against the wave of anti-Muslim discrimination that seemed to be sweeping the country. At the request of a friend who was an editor at the American Prospect, David wrote the first of many public articles about the direction of our country, which for David has become an ongoing endeavor.


While David was stationed at the Pentagon, the Englins decided to settle permanently in Alexandria, Va., where they fell in love with the city's Del Ray neighborhood and immediately became active in Alexandria's civic affairs. The Alexandria City Council appointed David to the city's Affordable Housing Advisory Committee, and he became an active member of the Alexandria Democratic Committee and the Del Ray Citizens Association. The Englins also began attending Alexandria's Beth El Hebrew Congregation, where they are now members.


David separated from the Air Force with an honorable discharge in May 2004. In the weeks that followed, he was a delegate for John Kerry to the district and state Democratic conventions, a consultant to a congressional campaign, and teaching communications to the staff of a Maryland state senate reelection campaign. When he's not developing his post-military career as a campaign consultant, activist, writer, and policy entrepreneur, David spends his time before and after Caleb's school day as a stay-at-home Dad.