STACY PARKER AAB chronicles stories for The Katrina Experience, an Oral History Project. She served as primary contributor to McSweeney's Voices from the Storm: The People of New Orleans on Hurricane Katrina and Its Aftermath. She served for five years in the Clinton White House, first as a long-time intern in George Stephanopoulos' office, and later as an assistant to Paul Begala. She also served as a Presidential advance person, preparing and staffing Presidential and First Lady trips abroad, including visits to Abuja , Ho Chi Minh City, Okinawa, New Delhi, Ankara, Cologne, Merida, London, Moscow, Tokyo, St. Petersburg, & Addis Ababa. In addition to The Katrina Experience, Stacy is currently working on a memoir project about what it was like to be young and female working in the White House, entitled Government Girl (Ecco/HarperCollins).

Blog Entries by Stacy Parker Aab

Bring the Nobel Peace Prize Home to New Orleans

Posted October 12, 2009 | 02:10 PM (EST)


Don't look back. Like some video star who walks away from explosions with nary a glance over her shoulder, my mother taught me that this was the way to deal with the traumas of life. She survived her youth with men who drowned their suffering in alcohol by moving forward,...

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The Radical Choice this Katrina Anniversary: Celebrate

Posted August 14, 2009 | 11:41 AM (EST)


The New Orleans Police Department chaplain knows suffering. Joe Cull spends his days, and many nights, on the porches and in the parlors of neighbors' homes as he listens to those who have experienced fresh trauma. He did so before and after Katrina. He does so today.

But observers...

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Healing the Body Politic, One Commission at a Time

Posted November 23, 2008 | 05:32 PM (EST)


Republicans aren't the only ones who push aside the Geneva conventions for political expediency. Democrats did so for the last two years, opting to wait out the Bush administration before engaging them on their crimes against humanity.

I held my breath, hoping that this bargain would be short-lived. Once...

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Eric Holder Is Change I Can Believe In

Posted November 19, 2008 | 10:56 AM (EST)


I hear a storyline hardening around Eric Holder's nomination. Instead of being celebrated for the accomplished and outstanding public servant that he is, Holder is being portrayed as more of the same Clinton-era politics that Obama was supposed to leave behind.

I disagree that Holder's nomination is just "more...

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The Unsung Heroes of Obama's Victory: The United States Secret Service

Posted November 5, 2008 | 05:46 PM (EST)


The glass. Did you see it? I'm referring to those two sheets that President-elect Barack Obama stood between as he spoke to us from Grant Park. Glass sheets so clear as to almost be unnoticeable, yet thick enough to protect the man in the event that someone in that crowd...

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On Tuesday, Forget Plan B

Posted November 3, 2008 | 03:11 PM (EST)


"I must steel myself for disappointment," says one friend. "I'm weighing Toronto vs Montreal," says another. "If McCain wins, Americans get what they deserve," adds one more.

Usually I would sympathize with such attempts at self-preservation. Many of us are emotionally invested in Tuesday's election in a way that's beyond...

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Danger and Hope on this Katrina Anniversary

Posted August 29, 2008 | 04:48 PM (EST)


"I've got an idea," said my friend Larry, "why don't you come down and ride out Gustav with me? Don't you want to experience a hurricane firsthand?" These plaintive questions were on my voicemail. I listened as I walked uphill on 145th in Harlem, laughing the entire length of the...

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Still Counting Katrina's Dead

Posted June 25, 2008 | 10:18 AM (EST)


The Katrina dead. Three years later and we can still see the drowned rooftops, the hospital staffs begging for evacuations, the lines of wheel-chaired sick fading before our eyes. Some of us remember this because we saw it on TV. Some of us remember this because we were there. No...

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Mrs. Clinton and the Dying of the Dream

Posted May 9, 2008 | 03:05 PM (EST)


She will mourn. She will need to take time off to recuperate from the crushing disappointment. At some point she will call Al Gore, the one person who will truly understand both her pain and the possibilities ahead. He is the one who can tell her from experience and by...

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Obama and the Greatest Salve of All: Truth

Posted March 18, 2008 | 04:08 PM (EST)


During the Clinton era, I lost hope in political life because I couldn't stand political language. I grew to despise how people in power used words only to dictate outcomes -- that the gap between experienced truth and the story spoken out loud seemed to grow into a chasm, dark...

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The Latest Obama Distortion: Cult Figure

Posted February 11, 2008 | 02:27 PM (EST)


In today's NYT, Paul Krugman writes about the "bitterness" of the Democratic nomination fight, writing that he feels that the most "venom" comes from the pro-Obama voices. He goes on to say that Obama supporters "want their hero or nobody" and that the "Obama campaign is seems dangerously close...

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Obama and the Rush of the Pendulum Swing

Posted February 4, 2008 | 10:20 PM (EST)


There's one law of physics I return to again and again when I wish to understand the world: for every action, there's an equal and opposite reaction.

Look at yourself: you are the sum of all that you've lived and learned up until this point. What we did yesterday, what...

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When Jail is the Price of Freedom: A Reality Check, Courtesy of MLK

Posted January 21, 2008 | 01:22 PM (EST)


I recently had a "what MLK means to me" moment, and I have to say, it took me by surprise. I suppose I was at an obvious place for it to happen--the National Civil Rights Museum, in Memphis--but there's something about the often department store, herd-them-through vibe of museums that...

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How Do You Heal a Broken Heart? Thoughts on Trusting Obama's Success

Posted January 8, 2008 | 03:58 PM (EST)


Yesterday at work, I snapped. OK, not postal. But I lost my "live and let live" attitude that I try to maintain with others when I'm at work or out socially.

I work for a university. One joy of doing so is being surrounded by smart, politically-engaged colleagues. The...

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The Quick Fix for Clinton that Might Actually Help

Posted January 6, 2008 | 08:18 PM (EST)


Mrs. Clinton: with your back smack against the wall, don't you think it might be time to do something so daring, so risktaking -- that yes, the whole world might just crumble around you if you do it, but at least you'll know you used every weapon in your arsenal...

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Obama and the Return of Late Night Jokes

Posted January 4, 2008 | 02:54 PM (EST)


So, the late-night comedians are back (or coming back). For many of us, there are warm places in our hearts and minds for Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. I think of the darkest times of the post-9/11 Bush years, and how I needed Jon Stewart and his writers to read...

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If We Can Pursue Truth in Baseball, How about Truth Post-Katrina?

Posted December 17, 2007 | 05:59 PM (EST)


Over the last year, many, including myself, have called for an 8/29 Commission to get to the bottom of what truly happened with the New Orleans levee-breaches and resultant floods. No one has spear-headed this call like New Orleans-based grassroots organization, Levees.org.

Recently, in collaboration with a...

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Obama, Clinton and the "Vision Thing"

Posted December 10, 2007 | 03:48 PM (EST)


After Oprah Winfrey's weekend with Barack Obama, there's much talk as to how much her support bolsters his cause. I don't know the answer to this. I do know that when I saw the two of them in the same photograph, I saw two people who were powerful in the...

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Vulnerability and the Female Campaign Worker

Posted December 2, 2007 | 07:45 PM (EST)


Nothing like a hostage crisis to remind a woman of just how vulnerable she can be in this society.

Female campaign workers could watch the news coverage of Clinton campaign office hostage situation and admonish themselves to be more security-conscious -- to perhaps, be more like their secret service...

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Obama, Race, and the Right Side of History

Posted November 30, 2007 | 04:43 PM (EST)


ABC News reports that Sen. Obama spoke to a "mostly black audience" last night at the world-famous Apollo Theatre in Harlem. Hmm. From where I sat in the mezzanine, the makeup of the audience was under whispered debate. 1 in 5? 1 in 4? Maybe. No. The guys behind...

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