Friday, June 06, 2008

New Posts on Conscious Lifestyle

Check out my latest post about social responsibility at consciouslifestyle.org. It's on Iron Man, Gandhi, and Edward Said.

vI've decided to post once a week to clarify my vision for Conscious Lifestyle. This will include discussions on awareness, social responsibility, and social entrepreneurship.

Conscious Lifestyle is also giving grants for youth leaders. Visit the site to check it out.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Ex-Israeli Generals Denounce Checkpoints




By LAURIE COPANS
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 13, 2008; 9:55 AM

JERUSALEM -- A group of retired Israeli generals has launched a campaign urging the army to remove West Bank roadblocks, warning on Wednesday that the travel restrictions sow Palestinian hatred of Israel and stymie the peace process.

The 12 top former commanders say the hundreds of checkpoints dotting the West Bank are excessive and other military means can be used to prevent suicide bombings in Israel.

The Palestinians have long demanded that Israel remove the roadblocks as a way to build faith in recently renewed peace talks.

The generals have written a letter to Defense Minister Ehud Barak in an effort to persuade him to gradually remove the checkpoints, which severely restrict movement of the some 2 million Palestinians who live in the West Bank and have crippled their economy. Israel maintains the checkpoints are vital for its security.

"You have to understand that there is damage in having the Palestinian people with its back to the wall, not seeing a light at the end of the tunnel, unable to improve their economy, unable to move from place to place," Ilan Paz, a signatory of the letter and a former head of the army's administration of Palestinian civilian affairs, told Israel Radio. " This creates a reality that creates terror, and we have to remember that."

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Obama at Ebenezer Church 1/20



Check out more by Matt Werner at http://www.youtube.com/user/djmattwerner.

Montel Turns the Tables

Monday, January 21, 2008

A Picture's Wortha Thousand Words








US President George W. Bush (C) leans over to talk with a girl (R) after Bush participated in a lesson for young children on the importance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day during a tour of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library in Washington, DC, 21 January 2008. By Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

I wonder why these negotiations never work? Do you think that pro-Israeli bias may make the conditions unacceptable?


Friday, January 04, 2008

Get $1,000 for Your Socially Innovative Idea


Are you passionate about making the world a better place? Have an idea about how to make your fellow students and your school more socially responsible? Want to turn that idea into a reality?

Conscious Lifestyle is accepting applications for its 2008 venture program.

Submit an application for the chance to win:

* Up to $1,000 in start-up funding
* Web space on consciouslifestyle.org
* Monthly skill-building workshops
* Personalized support
* Access to a network of social entrepreneurs

To learn more and download an application, visit consciouslifestyle.org.

Application Deadline: February 15, 2008.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Are you serious? Giuliani is out of his mind!

Kanye and Thom York

Monday, December 10, 2007

Obama + Oprah = Unstoppable

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Italian Spiderman

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Your Tax-payer Money Hard at Work


Isn't this guy a tough, fear-nothing, cowboy?

Desmon Tutu: Realizing God's dream for the Holy Land

The Boston Globe
October 26, 2007

WHENEVER I am asked if I am optimistic about an end to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, I say that I am not. Optimism requires clear signs that things are changing - meaningful words and unambiguous actions that point to real progress. I do not yet hear enough meaningful words, nor do I yet see enough unambiguous deeds to justify optimism.

However, that does not mean I am without hope. I am a Christian. I am constrained by my faith to hope against hope, placing my trust in things as yet unseen. Hope persists in the face of evidence to the contrary, undeterred by setbacks and disappointment. Hoping against hope, then, I do believe that a resolution will be found. It will not be perfect, but it can be just; and if it is just, it will usher in a future of peace.

My hope for peace is not amorphous. It has a shape. It is not the shape of a particular political solution, although there are some political solutions that I believe to be more just than others.

Neither does my hope take the shape of a particular people, although I have pleaded tirelessly for international attention to be paid to the misery of Palestinians, and I have roundly condemned the injustices of certain Israeli policies that compound that misery. Thus I am often accused of siding with Palestinians against Israeli Jews, naively exonerating the one and unfairly demonizing the other.

Nevertheless, I insist that the hope in which I persist is not reducible to politics or identified with a people. It has a more encompassing shape. I like to call it "God's dream."

God has a dream for all his children. It is about a day when all people enjoy fundamental security and live free of fear. It is about a day when all people have a hospitable land in which to establish a future. More than anything else, God's dream is about a day when all people are accorded equal dignity because they are human beings. In God's beautiful dream, no other reason is required.

God's dream begins when we begin to know each other differently, as bearers of a common humanity, not as statistics to be counted, problems to be solved, enemies to be vanquished or animals to be caged. God's dream begins the moment one adversary looks another in the eye and sees himself reflected there.

All things become possible when hearts fixed in mutual contempt begin to grasp a transforming truth; namely, that this person I fear and despise is not an alien, something less than human. This person is very much like me, and enjoys and suffers, loves and fears, wonders, worries, and hopes. Just as I do, this person longs for well-being in a world of peace.

God's dream begins with this mutual recognition - we are not strangers, we are kin. It culminates in the defeat of oppression perpetrated in the name of security, and of violence inflicted in the name of liberation. God's dream routs the cynicism and despair that once cleared the path for hate to have its corrosive way with us, and for ravenous violence to devour everything in sight.

God's dream comes to flower when everyone who claims to be wholly innocent relinquishes that illusion, when everyone who places absolute blame on another renounces that lie, and when differing stories are told at last as one shared story of human aspiration. God's dream ends in healing and reconciliation. Its finest fruit is human wholeness flourishing in a moral universe.

In the meanwhile, between the root of human solidarity and the fruit of human wholeness, there is the hard work of telling the truth.

From my experience in South Africa I know that truth-telling is hard. It has grave consequences for one's life and reputation. It stretches one's faith, tests one's capacity to love, and pushes hope to the limit. At times, the difficulty of this work can make you wonder if people are right about you, that you are a fool.

No one takes up this work on a do-gooder's whim. It is not a choice. One feels compelled into it. Neither is it work for a little while, but rather for a lifetime - and for more than a lifetime. It is a project bigger than any one life. This long view is a source of encouragement and perseverance. The knowledge that the work preceded us and will go on after us is a fountain of deep gladness that no circumstance can alter.

Nothing, however, diminishes the fear and trembling that accompany speaking the truth to power in love. An acute awareness of fallibility is a constant companion in this task, but because nothing is more important in the current situation than to speak as truthfully as one can, there can be no shrinking from testifying to what one sees and hears.

What do I see and hear in the Holy Land? Some people cannot move freely from one place to another. A wall separates them from their families and from their incomes. They cannot tend to their gardens at home or to their lessons at school. They are arbitrarily demeaned at checkpoints and unnecessarily beleaguered by capricious applications of bureaucratic red tape. I grieve for the damage being done daily to people's souls and bodies. I have to tell the truth: I am reminded of the yoke of oppression that was once our burden in South Africa.

I see and hear that ancient olive trees are uprooted. Flocks are cut off from their pastures and shepherds. The homes of some people are bulldozed even as new homes for others are illegally constructed on other people's land. I grieve for the land that suffers such violence, the marring of its beauty, the loss of its comforts, the despoiling of its yield. I have to tell the truth: I am reminded of the bitter days of uprooting and despoiling in my own country.

I see and hear that young people believe that it is heroic and pious to kill others by killing themselves. They strap bombs to their torsos to achieve liberation. They do not know that liberation achieved by brutality will defraud in the end. I grieve the waste of their lives and of the lives they take, the loss of personal and communal security they cause, and the lust for revenge that follows their crimes, crowding out all reason and restraint. I have to tell the truth: I am reminded of the explosive anger that inflamed South Africa, too.

Some people are enraged by comparisons between the Israeli/Palestinian conflict and what happened in South Africa. There are differences between the two situations, but a comparison need not be exact in every feature to yield clarity about what is going on. Moreover, for those of us who lived through the dehumanizing horrors of the apartheid era, the comparison seems not only apt, it is also necessary. It is necessary if we are to persevere in our hope that things can change.

Indeed, because of what I experienced in South Africa, I harbor a vast, unreasoning hope for Israel and the Palestinian territories. South Africans, after all, had no reason to suppose that the evil system and the cycles of violence that were sapping the soul of our nation would ever change. There was nothing special or different about South Africans to deserve the appearance of the very thing for which we prayed and worked and suffered so long.

Most South Africans did not believe they would live to see a day of liberation. They did not believe that their children's children would see it. They did not believe that such a day even existed, except in fantasy. But we have seen it. We are living now in the day we longed for.

It is not a cloudless day. The divine arc that bends toward a truly just and whole society has not yet stretched fully across my country's sky like a rainbow of peace. It is not finished, it does not always live up to its promise, it is not perfect - but it is new. A brand new thing, like a dream of God, has come about to replace the old story of mutual hatred and oppression.

I have seen it and heard it, and so to this truth, too, I am compelled to testify - if it can happen in South Africa, it can happen with the Israelis and Palestinians. There is not much reason to be optimistic, but there is every reason to hope.

Desmond Tutu is the former archbishop of Cape Town, chairman of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

Movies You Should See



Remains of a Church in California


For more amazing photos, check out http://www.time.com/time/photoessays.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Umm, yeah. You probably won't see this on MTV

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Don't Touch

"Don’t touch—make war. Don’t touch—be abstract, about God and death and life and love. Don’t touch—make war at a distance. Don’t touch your enemy, except to destroy him. Don’t touch, because in the touch of hand to hand is Michelangelo’s electric moment of creation. Don’t touch, because law and order have so decreed, limiting the touch of man to man, to the touch of nightsticks upon flesh…"

-Daniel Berrigan

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Cheney '94: Invading Baghdad Would Create Quagmire C-SPAN

Give Peace A Chance - John Lennon

Homage to a genius. "War is over, if you want." -John Lennon

Friday, July 13, 2007

Elephant Safari

Took a quick rafting/safari trip. Highlight was being on top of these beast and seeing them tear their own path through the jungle, uprooting trees and stomping fallen branches like toothpicks. We also got to play with the elephant baby below. Yeah...there aren't many safety rules, haha.








Tata Trucks

Monday, July 09, 2007

Villages in Nepal






Sunday, July 08, 2007

Kids in Nepal



Thursday, July 05, 2007

Kathmandu





So the highlight of KTM was seeing the the Kumari Devi, which is a young girl in Nepal with too much make-up, silly rules like not being able to touch the groung, and the status of "living goddess." We randomely walked in her courtyard exactly at the time when she came to her window to wave awkwardly at a handful of people. This rare event supposedly brings on-lookers good fortune. The Kumari may not be as lucky, since her trip to the US (first in Kumari history) will most likely lead to her being deemed mortal again. I know people think America is morally loose, but going from God to regular human over night is pretty drastic. Anyways, the Kumaris is one of the many bazaar things in Nepal that have made this trip interesting. Read more on the Kumari at:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-nepal-living-goddess,1,2344839.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true

http://www.visitnepal.com/nepal_information/kumari.php

Western Nepal


So these are random pictures from my new home in Western Nepal. One of my favorites is the picture of me and my colleague in a minibus from one city to another. They packed 28 people into a 10 passenger van. One lady passed out on my shoulder while her baby was entrusted to perfect strangers like ourselves. When the vans get so packed that not another body can fit, they put a dozen people on the roof. If you can survive the ride without falling off when the driver breaks for a cow sleeping on the highway the roof is actually a great seat because the breeze brings the temperature down to the double digits. Then again, when the monsoon suddenly breaks, you're in trouble!

CES Welcome



When we arrived in Western Nepal we were welcomed by CES (Creation of an Equitable Society), which is the NGO that we have come to help. The welcome included having red tika put on our foreheads and greating long lines of people who would introduce themselves, hand us flowers, and say "namaste" with a small bow. It was an overwhelming welcome, partly because of the generosity, and partly because my bare feet were burning on the sun scorched cement.

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Welcome to Nepal



These pictures are from a cultural program that was put on for us in a Dalit village when we arrived. There was a lot of dancing, speech-making, eating, and saying "namaste" with overflowing handfuls of flowers. Highlights of the day included eating our first meal off of dishes made of leaves and being forced to dance Nepali style. Little did we know that a 1 hour television special was played on a local news channel about us! The next day we were stopped in the streets by people telling us how they watched us eat, dance, and make speeches for an hour.



Thursday, June 14, 2007

What the poor want

While interviewing the women's savings groups in the Tharu villages of Western Nepal I made a short list of what they want. Here are the top things:

-Literacy classes
-The ability to send their children to school
-A water pump so they don't have to walk to the river everyday
-Toilets
-Trainings on skills that will help them generate more revenue
-Access to medicine when they get sick
-Awareness about sanitation
-Book-keeping classes

...So pretty much they want education, health, compensation for their hard work, and technology that will make their days less burdensome. Sounds reasonable to me.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Vision and Strategy

The most important role for a CEO is conveying a strong sense of vision, and strategy formulation to achieve taht vision is the CEO's most important skill.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Barack Obama 2008

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Access to more than 50 percent of West Bank restricted for Palestinians: World Bank


Access to more than 50 percent of West Bank restricted for Palestinians: World Bank
The Associated Press
Tuesday, May 8, 2007

RAMALLAH, West Bank: A new World Bank report says the troubled Palestinian economy cannot recover unless Israel dismantles its web of physical and administrative obstacles to Palestinian movement in the West Bank. Here are some figures from the report.
____

Since Israel signed an agreement on improving movement and access for Palestinians in November 2005, restrictions have instead become tighter. Since the agreement, the number of physical obstacles in the West Bank increased by 44 percent, to 547.
____

Israel's permit system can be used to control the movement of Palestinian residents outside their immediate municipal area and to restrict access to more than 50 percent of the West Bank. In compiling that figure, the bank considered the West Bank and east Jerusalem as a single unit, in line with the international community's refusal to accept Israel's annexation of the eastern sector of the city.
___

Physical and administrative obstacles have divided the West Bank into 10 enclaves, and Palestinians have to move through checkpoints to get from one to the other.
___

About 250,000 Israelis live in 121 settlements in the West Bank, or roughly twice as many as the 126,900 who were present in the area at the time of 1994 interim peace deals between Israel and the Palestinians. Between 2001 and 2005, the settler population grew by 5.5 percent a year, while the population within Israel grew by 1.8 percent a year.
____

Built-up areas of Jewish settlements cover about 3 percent, and the settlements' municipal boundaries an additional six percent. The settlements' areas of "regional jurisdiction" are larger than the boundaries, and include agricultural and industrial areas and space for further expansion.
____

The Israeli settlement watchdog group Peace Now, citing official government figures, estimates that nearly one-third of land included in settlement jurisdictions is privately owned by Palestinians.
___

Israel's separation barrier slices off 8.5 percent of the West Bank. That area, declared "closed" by Israel and falling under a strict permit regime, is home to some 50,000 Palestinians in 38 villages and towns.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/05/09/africa/ME-GEN-Israel-World-Bank-Glance.php

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Sheryl Crow makes Karl Rove squirm


The "highlight" of the White House Correspondents Dinner had to be when we were introduced to Karl Rove. How excited were we to have our first opportunity ever to talk directly to the Bush Administration about global warming.

We asked Mr. Rove if he would consider taking a fresh look at the science of global warming. Much to our dismay, he immediately got combative. And it went downhill from there.

We reminded the senior White House advisor that the US leads the world in global warming pollution and we are doing the least about it. Anger flaring, Mr. Rove immediately regurgitated the official Administration position on global warming which is that the US spends more on researching the causes than any other country.

We felt compelled to remind him that the research is done and the results are in (www.IPCC.ch). Mr. Rove exploded with even more venom. Like a spoiled child throwing a tantrum, Mr. Rove launched into a series of illogical arguments regarding China not doing enough thus neither should we. (Since when do we follow China's lead?)

At some point during his ramblings, we became heartbroken to think that the President of the United States and his top advisers have partially built a career on global warming not being real. We have been telling college students across the country for the past two weeks that government does not change until people demand it... well, listen up folks, everyone had better get a lot louder because the message clearly is not getting through.

In his attempt to dismiss us, Mr. Rove turned to head toward his table, but as soon as he did so, Sheryl reached out to touch his arm. Karl swung around and spat, "Don't touch me." How hardened and removed from reality must a person be to refuse to be touched by Sheryl Crow? Unfazed, Sheryl abruptly responded, "You can't speak to us like that, you work for us." Karl then quipped, "I don't work for you, I work for the American people." To which Sheryl promptly reminded him, "We are the American people."

At that point Mr. Rove apparently decided he had had enough. Like a groundhog fearful of his own shadow, he scurried to his table in an attempt to hibernate for another year from his responsibility to address global warming. Drama aside, you would expect as an American citizen to be able to engage in a civil discussion with a public official. Instead, Mr. Rove was dismissive, condescending, and quite frankly a bully.

Ultimately, we were left wondering what on Earth Mr. Rove was talking about when he said "the American people." If more than 60% of American voters, the Supreme Court, over 400 cities, the US National Academy of Sciences, numerous major US corporations, and others don't constitute the American people, then what does? The truth is, if this administration cared one iota about the American people, they would have addressed this problem long ago, and the sad reality is that this problem has been left to us, all of us, since the current administration has abandoned this issue entirely. In the absence of true leadership, we must guide ourselves. We can solve this, but we had better act fast.
(Story from Huffington Post)
www.stopglobalwarming.org

Why Are Americans So Stupid?

We've all heard about how most Americans can't find Iraq on a map or tell you who Condi Rice is. Here's more bad news....72% of Americans don't know that plastics are made from petroleum. No wonder we're the reason human-caused planetary extinction is around the corner. Check out the results of this national survey on plastic-headed Americans.

Snapshot of Survey Results:

72% of respondents do not know that plastic is made out of oil/petroleum
On average, respondents estimated 38% of plastic is recycled (the reality is less than 6%, according to the EPA)
Nearly 40% (38.1%) of respondents said plastic will biodegrade underground, in home compost, in landfills, or in the ocean (plastic will not biodegrade in any of these environments).
After learning that plastic is made from oil and never biodegrades, half (50.1%) of respondents stated they would be likely or very likely to pay 5-10% more for a natural, biodegradable plastic. Only 24% were unlikely/very unlikely to pay this much more.
62% of respondents rate their own level of environmental knowledge as fair or poor, with only 5.6% rating it as excellent.

And these are the people who want to dictate how the rest of the world lives. Scary.

http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/070420/20070420005536.html?.v=1

Rep. Rohrabacher (R): "Torturing one innocent person is a fair price to pay for locking up 50 terrorists"

Rep. Rohrabacher: ‘I Hope It’s Your Families That Suffer’ From A Terrorist Attack

This is outrageous. How do these people get elected? He's still using the "these people will kill thousands because they HATE our way of life." It sounded stupidly simplistic when Bush said it 4 years ago. Now this guy is justifying torture, linking Islam with violence, and wishing death on American citizens.

He literally thinks American lives are worth more than non-American lives. What's that called again....oh yeah, racism, white/Christian/American supremacy, and jingoism. I wouldn't be surprised if this guy goes to church on Sunday. Typical Christian who thinks that loving is only necessary for the person he sees in the mirror. Someone should give him a hug, teach him to read, and tell him to stop hating.

Watch the video at: http://thinkprogress.org/2007/04/24/rohrabacher-terrorists/

Monday, April 23, 2007

In January, South America’s largest city officially banned outdoor advertising.

Forget culture jamming, let's just get rid of all outdoor advertising.

This is amazing!

Billboards, neon signs, bus-stop ads, even the Goodyear blimp - all were suddenly illegal. Folha de Sao Paulo reporter Vinicius Galvao describes seeing his city as though for the first time.

http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/2007/04/20/04

VINICIUS GALVAO:They uncovered a lot of problems the city had that we never realized. For example, there are some favelas, which are the shantytowns. I wrote a big story in my newspaper today that in a lot of parts of the city we never realized there was a big shantytown. People were shocked because they never saw that before, just because there were a lot of billboards covering the area.

BOB GARFIELD: No writer could have [LAUGHING] come up with a more vivid metaphor. What else has been discovered as the scales have fallen off of the city's eyes?

VINICIUS GALVAO: Sao Paulo's just like New York. It's a very international city. We have the Japanese neighborhood, we have the Korean neighborhood, we have the Italian neighborhood and in the Korean neighborhood, they have a lot of small manufacturers, these Korean businessmen. They hire illegal labor from Bolivian immigrants.

And there was a lot of billboards in front of these manufacturers' shops. And when they uncovered, we could see through the window a lot of Bolivian people like sleeping and working at the same place. They earn money, just enough for food. So it's a lot of social problem that was uncovered where the city was shocked at this news.

Friday, April 20, 2007

PBwiki is the greatest!

One problem that I had when I first started Conscious Lifestyle is that I had so much information, but no way to organize it or make it accessible to other people. For example, I had lists of companies to add scribbled on paper, saved on my own computer, or buried in my email inbox. When I wanted to tell someone about the companies I would have to send out individual emails, which then got buried in other people's inboxes. Finally, I found a solution, http://www.pbwiki.com.

PBwiki's tagline is: “Make a PBwiki as easily as a peanut butter sandwich”. If you don't have a wiki for your company, classroom, club or group of friends, you should get one. Setting up a PBwiki is free and takes only 10 seconds. The best thing about PBwiki is that they actually care about the people that use its product. They give you a lot of free stuff, and if you want to get fancy you can pay for extras.

So go ahead and check out the PBwiki tour.

Have fun!

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

R.I.P. ALL victims of violence


I rarely laugh out loud when I read the Wall Street Journal, but what I found at the top of the "What's News" section was so preposterous, that I couldn't help it.

"Bush urged Virginia Tech survivors to 'overcome evil with good.'"

How about overcoming evil with policies that prohibit mentally instable people from getting two semi-automatic handguns? How about overcoming the evil of poverty and the AIDS pandemic with living up to a sliver of the foreign aid that our government has promised? How about overcoming the evil of war and occupation by being honest and admitting that Iraq was a disastrous mistake?

It's interesting that Bush paraphrases a biblical mandate related to loving one's enemies. The killer at Virginia Tech was living by the paradigm that Bush's foreign policy perpeturates; that is, that you should NOT love your enemies, that you should kill them. Bush resents the Lord's notion that you should turn the other cheek. In fact, Bush has shown us that you should slap someone that may, or may not, slap you. Bush doesn't make a statement when 171 people die in Baghdad (for example, today). It begs the question, "What does Bush care about?"I genuinely hope that his confused-religious rhetoric turns into a sincere love for God and other people. If so, he'll repent for the blood on his hands, and perhaps then, there will be space for new life to grow.

Read the article here.

Project Management

Today I rewrote the phrasing for the advertisement of our Conscious Lifestyle Social Innovator program. A friend had to email me and let me know that what we had was not up to par. How did I miss this? We are 6 weeks into promotion and I'm just now bringing it to where we need it to be to attract applications. Why didn't I look at it earlier and ask, "is this the best it can be?" When didn't I survey people from our demographic?

I've become so convinced that there is power in a network of people that all use their strengths to work for the cause. Why did I even write the ad in the first place? Creative writing/marketing is not my gift. There are a million people that can do it better than I can. Why didn't I delegate the task to them? Someone could have crafted an ad that we can all be proud of.

Teamwork. Momentum. Strengths. Communication. Vision. Strategy.

I'm learning a lot.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Stewart, Colbert viewers best informed, Fox News viewers worst




Pew Survey Finds Most Knowledgeable Americans Watch 'Daily Show' and 'Colbert'-- and Visit Newspaper Sites
Published: April 15, 2007 11:30 PM ET

NEW YORK A new survey of 1,502 adults released Sunday by Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that despite the mass appeal of the Internet and cable news since a previous poll in 1989, Americans' knowledge of national affairs has slipped a little. For example, only 69% know that Dick Cheney is vice president, while 74% could identify Dan Quayle in that post in 1989.

Other details are equally eye-opening. Pew judged the levels of knowledgeability (correct answers) among those surveyed and found that those who scored the highest were regular watchers of Comedy Central's The Daily Show and Colbert Report. They tied with regular readers of major newspapers in the top spot -- with 54% of them getting 2 out of 3 questions correct. Watchers of the Lehrer News Hour on PBS followed just behind.

Virtually bringing up the rear were regular watchers of Fox News. Only 1 in 3 could answer 2 out of 3 questions correctly. Fox topped only network morning show viewers.

Told that Shia was one group of Muslims struggling in Iraq, only 32% of the total sample could name "Sunni" as the other key group.

The percentage of those who knew their state's governor dropped to 2 in 3. Almost half know that Rep. Nancy Pelosi is Speaker of the House and 2 in 3 know that Condi Rice is secretary of state. But just 29% can identify Scooter Libby, 21% know Robert Gates and 15% can name Sen. Harry Reid.

But nearly 9 in 10 knew about President Bush's troop escalation in Iraq.

Men scored higher than women, and older Americans did better than younger, on average. Democrats and Republicans were about equally represented in the most knowledgeable group but there were more Republicans in the least aware group.