Archive for the ‘obama08’ Category

perhaps the best post of the entire primary season

May 6, 2008

and no, if you luuuurve hillary you won’t like it.

Today marks the 47th and 48th primaries or caucuses for the Democratic presidential nomination. More than 90 percent of the delegates will have been chosen by tonight. By now, we all ought to know the drill.

The day begins with the Clinton campaign “leaking” something to the Drudge Report to set expectations for the day. That then gets repeated on political blogs and cable news, where Clinton surrogate Terry McAuliffe elaborates. Today’s “expectation”: That the Clinton campaign expects a “15 point” defeat in North Carolina. Clinton’s yapping puppies in the news media repeat the manufactured expectation all day long, in which the bar is supposedly now that if Clinton comes within 15 points in that state that she has somehow “won” with a 14 point (or 6 point) defeat.

go read the whole thing.

obama responds to clinton/mccain tag team

April 12, 2008

even the media seems to “get it” this time:

this is so much better than that lame-ass “raining mccain”

April 9, 2008

i dare you to watch this and not end up tapping your toes.

I’ve been waiting forty years

April 4, 2008

lovely:

I’ve been waiting forty years Hotlist
by Audio Guy [Subscribe]
Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 12:19:44 AM CDT

It’s hard for anyone who wasn’t there to understand what 1968 was like. Even harder, perhaps, to understand what it was like to come of age in the late 60’s. It was a time of enormous hope, unbelievable possibility, and crushing loss. I was seventeen the night Martin Luther King was assassinated, and I can still remember the pain of hearing that news. (And I was a white kid in the north, so my pain was as nothing compared to that of the folk who were really invested in him.) I remember where I was the morning I heard that Bobby Kennedy was assassinated. I remember the insanity of the 1968 democratic convention when Eugene McCarthy, the first politician to whom I gave my heart, was shoved aside so the machine could continue with Hubert Humphrey, a once great man who had been compromised by his loyalty to Lyndon Johnson, a once great man made insane by the trap of the Vietnam War.

I remember the hope, and I remember the loss. I remember the way dreams died at Kent State.

And my heart has been broken for forty years, mourning for the country that I love, and the dreams that I grew up with.

Let me make it clear. I’m a left wing radical who is wildly patriotic, in love with this country because of what I learned in church, the boy scouts, and my public school civics classes. (I know how to fold and care for a flag, which is more than I can say for the right wing assholes who claim to honor the flag but leave it hanging outside, faded and tattered, in all sorts of weather.) All I have ever wanted is for us to be be what I was taught we are: the home of hope and freedom.

Hell, it was believing what I was taught that made me a radical to begin with. I just wanted us to mean what we said.

As a result, I’ve spent forty years with a broken heart. And now – like the guy who has been dumped a dozen times, but is ready to give love one last chance – I’m filled with hope again. And it scares me. Because I don’t know if I can take having my heart broken one more time.

But this time it feels different. It really does.

This time it starts to feel like, after forty years (forty-five, if you mark the start of our long national nightmare with the assassination of John Kennedy) that we may be ready to come home to our own best selves.

I have wept buckets of tears over this campaign, but they are the best tears, the tears of joy, the tears of hope, the tears of “Yes we can.”

In Barack Obama,in the gathering that he has inspired of young and old; the gathering of black, white, Latino, Asian, and every other ethnic group imaginable; the gathering of straight and gay; the gathering of old line democrats and republicans ready for something new, I feel a kind of hope that was crushed forty years ago in the streets of Chicago, in the election of Richard Nixon, in the continuation of a crazed, immoral, and illegal war.

I fucking love this country, and I have been waiting forty years for it to come to its senses.

I’m willing to fall in love one more time.

It’s the scariest thing I’ve done in several decades.

alice walker

April 1, 2008

brilliant:

March 27, 2008

I HAVE COME home from a long stay in Mexico to find – because of the presidential campaign, and especially because of the Obama/Clinton race for the Democratic nomination – a new country existing alongside the old. On any given day we, collectively, become the Goddess of the Three Directions and can look back into the past, look at ourselves just where we are, and take a glance, as well, into the future. It is a space with which I am familiar.

When I was born in 1944 my parents lived on a middle Georgia plantation that was owned by a white distant relative, Miss May Montgomery. (During my childhood it was necessary to address all white girls as “Miss” when they reached the age of twelve.) She would never admit to this relationship, of course, except to mock it. Told by my parents that several of their children would not eat chicken skin she responded that of course they would not. No Montgomerys would.

My parents and older siblings did everything imaginable for Miss May. They planted and raised her cotton and corn, fed and killed and processed her cattle and hogs, painted her house, patched her roof, ran her dairy, and, among countless other duties and responsibilities my father was her chauffeur, taking her anywhere she wanted to go at any hour of the day or night. She lived in a large white house with green shutters and a green, luxuriant lawn: not quite as large as Tara of Gone With the Wind fame, but in the same style.

We lived in a shack without electricity or running water, under a rusty tin roof that let in wind and rain. Miss May went to school as a girl. The school my parents and their neighbors built for us was burned to the ground by local racists who wanted to keep ignorant their competitors in tenant farming. During the Depression, desperate to feed his hardworking family, my father asked for a raise from ten dollars a month to twelve. Miss May responded that she would not pay that amount to a white man and she certainly wouldn’t pay it to a nigger. That before she’d pay a nigger that much money she’d milk the dairy cows herself.

When I look back, this is part of what I see. I see the school bus carrying white children, boys and girls, right past me, and my brothers, as we trudge on foot five miles to school. Later, I see my parents struggling to build a school out of discarded army barracks while white students, girls and boys, enjoy a building made of brick. We had no books; we inherited the cast off books that “Jane” and “Dick” had previously used in the all-white school that we were not, as black children, permitted to enter.

The year I turned fifty, one of my relatives told me she had started reading my books for children in the library in my home town. I had had no idea – so kept from black people it had been – that such a place existed. To this day knowing my presence was not wanted in the public library when I was a child I am highly uncomfortable in libraries and will rarely, unless I am there to help build, repair, refurbish or raise money to keep them open, enter their doors.

When I joined the freedom movement in Mississippi in my early twenties it was to come to the aid of sharecroppers, like my parents, who had been thrown off the land they’d always known, the plantations, because they attempted to exercise their “democratic” right to vote. I wish I could say white women treated me and other black people a lot better than the men did, but I cannot. It seemed to me then and it seems to me now that white women have copied, all too often, the behavior of their fathers and their brothers, and in the South, especially in Mississippi, and before that, when I worked to register voters in Georgia, the broken bottles thrown at my head were gender free.

I made my first white women friends in college; they were women who loved me and were loyal to our friendship, but I understood, as they did, that they were white women and that whiteness mattered. That, for instance, at Sarah Lawrence, where I was speedily inducted into the Board of Trustees practically as soon as I graduated, I made my way to the campus for meetings by train, subway and foot, while the other trustees, women and men, all white, made their way by limo. Because, in our country, with its painful history of unspeakable inequality, this is part of what whiteness means. I loved my school for trying to make me feel I mattered to it, but because of my relative poverty I knew I could not.

I am a supporter of Obama because I believe he is the right person to lead the country at this time. He offers a rare opportunity for the country and the world to start over, and to do better. It is a deep sadness to me that many of my feminist white women friends cannot see him. Cannot see what he carries in his being. Cannot hear the fresh choices toward Movement he offers. That they can believe that millions of Americans –black, white, yellow, red and brown – choose Obama over Clinton only because he is a man, and black, feels tragic to me.

When I have supported white people, men and women, it was because I thought them the best possible people to do whatever the job required. Nothing else would have occurred to me. If Obama were in any sense mediocre, he would be forgotten by now. He is, in fact, a remarkable human being, not perfect but humanly stunning, like King was and like Mandela is. We look at him, as we looked at them, and are glad to be of our species. He is the change America has been trying desperately and for centuries to hide, ignore, kill. The change America must have if we are to convince the rest of the world that we care about people other than our (white) selves.

True to my inner Goddess of the Three Directions however, this does not mean I agree with everything Obama stands for. We differ on important points probably because I am older than he is, I am a woman and person of three colors, (African, Native American, European), I was born and raised in the American South, and when I look at the earth’s people, after sixty-four years of life, there is not one person I wish to see suffer, no matter what they have done to me or to anyone else; though I understand quite well the place of suffering, often, in human growth.

I want a grown-up attitude toward Cuba, for instance, a country and a people I love; I want an end to the embargo that has harmed my friends and their children, children who, when I visit Cuba, trustingly turn their faces up for me to kiss. I agree with a teacher of mine, Howard Zinn, that war is as objectionable as cannibalism and slavery; it is beyond obsolete as a means of improving life. I want an end to the on-going war immediately and I want the soldiers to be encouraged to destroy their weapons and to drive themselves out of Iraq.

I want the Israeli government to be made accountable for its behavior towards the Palestinians, and I want the people of the United States to cease acting like they don’t understand what is going on. All colonization, all occupation, all repression basically looks the same, whoever is doing it. Here our heads cannot remain stuck in the sand; our future depends of our ability to study, to learn, to understand what is in the records and what is before our eyes. But most of all I want someone with the self-confidence to talk to anyone, “enemy” or “friend,” and this Obama has shown he can do. It is difficult to understand how one could vote for a person who is afraid to sit and talk to another human being. When you vote you are making someone a proxy for yourself; they are to speak when, and in places, you cannot. But if they find talking to someone else, who looks just like them, human, impossible, then what good is your vote?

It is hard to relate what it feels like to see Mrs. Clinton (I wish she felt self-assured enough to use her own name) referred to as “a woman” while Barack Obama is always referred to as “a black man.” One would think she is just any woman, colorless, race-less, past-less, but she is not. She carries all the history of white womanhood in America in her person; it would be a miracle if we, and the world, did not react to this fact. How dishonest it is, to attempt to make her innocent of her racial inheritance.

I can easily imagine Obama sitting down and talking, person to person, with any leader, woman, man, child or common person, in the world, with no baggage of past servitude or race supremacy to mar their talks. I cannot see the same scenario with Mrs. Clinton who would drag into Twenty-First Century American leadership the same image of white privilege and distance from the reality of others’ lives that has so marred our country’s contacts with the rest of the world.

And yes, I would adore having a woman president of the United States. My choice would be Representative Barbara Lee, who alone voted in Congress five years ago not to make war on Iraq. That to me is leadership, morality, and courage; if she had been white I would have cheered just as hard. But she is not running for the highest office in the land, Mrs. Clinton is. And because Mrs. Clinton is a woman and because she may be very good at what she does, many people, including some younger women in my own family, originally favored her over Obama. I understand this, almost. It is because, in my own nieces’ case, there is little memory, apparently, of the foundational inequities that still plague people of color and poor whites in this country. Why, even though our family has been here longer than most North American families – and only partly due to the fact that we have Native American genes – we very recently, in my lifetime, secured the right to vote, and only after numbers of people suffered and died for it.

When I offered the word “Womanism” many years ago, it was to give us a tool to use, as feminist women of color, in times like these. These are the moments we can see clearly, and must honor devotedly, our singular path as women of color in the United States. We are not white women and this truth has been ground into us for centuries, often in brutal ways. But neither are we inclined to follow a black person, man or woman, unless they demonstrate considerable courage, intelligence, compassion and substance. I am delighted that so many women of color support Barack Obama -and genuinely proud of the many young and old white women and men who do.

Imagine, if he wins the presidency we will have not one but three black women in the White House; one tall, two somewhat shorter; none of them carrying the washing in and out of the back door. The bottom line for most of us is: With whom do we have a better chance of surviving the madness and fear we are presently enduring, and with whom do we wish to set off on a journey of new possibility? In other words, as the Hopi elders would say: Who do we want in the boat with us as we head for the rapids? Who is likely to know how best to share the meager garden produce and water? We are advised by the Hopi elders to celebrate this time, whatever its adversities.

We have come a long way, Sisters, and we are up to the challenges of our time. One of which is to build alliances based not on race, ethnicity, color, nationality, sexual preference or gender, but on Truth. Celebrate our journey. Enjoy the miracle we are witnessing. Do not stress over its outcome. Even if Obama becomes president, our country is in such ruin it may well be beyond his power to lead us toward rehabilitation. If he is elected however, we must, individually and collectively, as citizens of the planet, insist on helping him do the best job that can be done; more, we must insist that he demand this of us. It is a blessing that our mothers taught us not to fear hard work. Know, as the Hopi elders declare: The river has its destination. And remember, as poet June Jordan and Sweet Honey in the Rock never tired of telling us: We are the ones we have been waiting for.

Namaste;

And with all my love,

Alice Walker

damn you barack obama

March 28, 2008

full text of obama iraq speech

March 19, 2008

click beneath the fold. it’s too long for the front page.

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watching obama with strangers

March 19, 2008

via socratic at the big orange. this guy’s about my age, so i totally relate.

Watching Obama with Strangers
by socratic [Subscribe]
Tue Mar 18, 2008 at 08:09:19 PM CDT

I haven’t had that many “standing around with strangers watching events unfold” moments in my life. In roughly chronological order, the Challenger explosion, the OJ verdict, 9/11, the Red Sox winning the World Series. Maybe one or two others scattered through my 33 years. But not many. Most events are, I suppose, not big enough, not loud enough, not important enough to make people stop and just watch. Today was another one of those days.

My morning started uneventfully. I left my house later than I intended to take my car to a Jeep dealership for some service. I changed my mind about the route I was going to take, which caused me to backtrack a bit to hop on I-20 towards downtown Atlanta. At the intersection with I-75/I-85 (the “Midtown Connector”), traffic slowed to a halt, and I saw the damage to Atlanta’s buildings from Friday’s tornado for the first time. It was jarring and far worse than I’d expected. Massive numbers of windows were just gone. I found myself thinking of all that flying glass (or plastic) and all those basketball fans if the tournament game at Phillips Arena hadn’t gone into overtime. For all the damage, it could have been a lot worse.

But that’s not what this diary is about.

I drove up the Midtown Connector and stayed on I-75 into the suburbs, just beyond the Perimeter, I-285, what folks in other cities might call the Beltway or the Loop. Things change out there. The area inside the Perimeter, or “ITP”, is diverse, racially and otherwise. There are folks with Obama stickers, Clinton stickers, houses with “Anti-Bellum House” on the white picket fence, Carter Centers and MLK Monuments, Coca-Cola and the Braves, Falcons, Thrashers, and Hawks. Aside from its remarkable lack of public transportation and bloody-minded sprawl, the area immediately surrounding Downtown and Midtown is easy to call home. Lots of good folks of all types. Lots of quirky neighbors. Few gated communities.

Outside the Perimeter, “OTP”, is a different thing indeed. Racially, religiously, and politically almost homogeneous. Passing the Perimeter is like passing into a different world. Suddenly streets look different, signs look different, Bradford Pears are everywhere. Lots more W stickers, yellow ribbons, and megachurches. I’ve lived a lot of places, and I haven’t seen many geographic/cultural divisions quite so stark.

I pulled up to my dealership, just down the street from an Air National Guard base, near the Lockheed plant that builds C-130s and F-22s for the Air Force. The guy who took my car was friendly. The salesman inside who showed me a diesel Jeep was friendly. Everyone’s real friendly in the suburbs. But I kept thinking that I was in the suburbs, not friendly territory for my “Brite Blue Dot” and Obama stickers.

I’d planned to wait for my car to be worked on, because it was only a minor brake job. No big deal. An hour in and out, and the dealership has wifi. I could work from where I was. So I sat down in the waiting room.

My backtracking after deciding to take a different route. The slow traffic through Downtown. A few minutes spent with a salesman talking about the diesel Jeep. The strange sums of seconds spent here and there through the morning caused me to sit down almost at the moment Barack Obama walked up to the podium to begin his speech.

Now, I’m not going to talk about the speech itself. Plenty of folks have done that. I’ll just say that I was watching intently, pleased with what I was hearing. When, after about 5 minutes, the guy who was working on my car came by to tell me that the car wouldn’t be ready until the afternoon, I thanked him and stayed right where I was to watch the rest of the speech. But something curious happened. I was snapped out of the moment of the speech by the mechanic’s visit, which was fine because Obama was, in a very real sense, giving the speech about race in America that I’ve wanted to hear my entire life: genuine, personal, intelligent, and direct. I’ve watched the speech again since this morning, and it didn’t disappoint, but just at that moment I stopped watching it …

… and started watching the people around me. The young black man. The elderly white couple. The two white women, one college-aged, one in her late-20s. One middle-aged white woman. Two white men, one college-aged, one in his late-30s. One Asian couple. All of them were watching the speech. Rapt. Nodding.

Gradually, the twentysomething white woman went back to her laptop, but kept smiling when Obama would say something important. The elderly white couple whispered in their Southern accented way: “He’s really good… He’s saying good things… He’s a good young man…” The young black man chuckled when Obama said that Sunday morning was the most segregated hour in America, but was otherwise simply watching. And at one point, the middle-aged white woman asked one of the dealership folks, in another thick, thick Southern accent if she wouldn’t mind turning up the volume, because she really wanted to hear this speech.

She, this white Southern woman from the suburbs, wanted to hear this speech, delivered by a Black man with a funny name running for President. And she was nodding.

But she wasn’t the only one. Folks from the dealership, passing through on their way to and from whatever they do (most of them for not a lot of money) stopped and watch for 3 or 4 minutes. A young mechanic of ambiguous ethnicity stopped by at least a half-dozen times (hours later he stopped me as I was walking to the cashier to pay and said “That was some speech,” then paused awkwardly, and said, hushed, “It’s good that folks our age are getting involved, I think, right?”). Two salesmen, white, mid-40s, Southern as sweet tea, stopped and watched. And nodded. And I wasn’t the only one to stick around to watch the speech after my business at the dealership was done.

Never seen anything like that. I bet a lot of folks in that dealership were Republicans. Most, based on snippets of conversation I heard, were Southerners. Almost all were white. And they watched, listened, and agreed with what Barack Obama was saying about race in America.

I decided today that there are a lot of good people in the world. I decided that after all the slogans, after all the bumper stickers, and after all the excruciating hours of listening to Bill O’Reilly divide us, most folks don’t hate most other folks. And when someone stands up, and explains the situation clearly, concisely, and directly, they can see that, yeah, we have issues to work through and that, yeah, we need to do something.

Today’s speech wasn’t about right or left, black or white, man or woman. Today Barack Obama gave a speech about basic human dignity, dignity that all of us deserve. And my brothers and sisters from OTP, many of them folks I would’ve considered culturally very, very different from me just yesterday, watched, listened, and saw with their hearts and minds what Barack Obama was saying.

The Challenger, OJ, 9/11, the Red Sox. Three difficult days and one frivolous but happy one. And today, difficult but incredibly happy. Today. Thank God for today.

video of obama speech

March 18, 2008

text of obama’s speech on race which begins shortly

March 18, 2008

for those who cannot stream at work, please click beneath the fold for the full transcript.

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