Archive for the 'Barack Obama' Category

05
Nov

history lessons

I called my daughters earlier today to make sure they had both voted.  “Yes, mom.”   “Did anyone cancel me out?”  “No, mom.”

In the years to come my wonderful daughters, their sons and daughters, my sons in law — all of us will be telling the story of the day that the paradigm shifted in the United States.  The day that the color barrier was broken for the most important office in the land, in the world.  The day that we elected the best man for the job.  The day we begin to heal our land from many wounds. 

This has been such a long and painful campaign.  Although I know that the next few months will be filled with nearly as much confusion and anger as the last two years, I will wait and simply enjoy the moment here. 

05
Nov

The promise land

President Barack Obama!  My heart is beating out of my chest.  I am so very proud of my country right at this moment. 

19
Oct

joe the bigot

My partner has worked for many years doing public relations for various singer/songwriters, both well-known and unknown.  One of the fantastic talents she has become acquainted with over those years is the incomparable Janis Ian.  This is a woman who was breaking barriers and making social waves before she was in high school.  “Society’s Child”. “At 17″.  Today she lives in the Nashville area with her wife, Patricia Snyder.

This afternoon we received an email from Janis regarding “Joe the Bigot.”

It was a nice, big sign.

When we got up this morning, it was gone.  Worse yet, last night someone or someones had gone up and down the street next to ours, tearing down Obama signs and writing “nigger-lover” and other obscenities on people’s homes and cars. Admittedly, they defaced one McCain sign, but the rest were Obama.  My assumption is that these hooligans are so stupid they actually thought “Hey let’s tear down a McCain sign - they’ll think it’s just vandalism then!”

Not surprising that it comes from the Bible Belt area.  I was born to and raised by Eastern Kentuckians, and I lived for 20 years in South Central Kentucky,  just a few hours from Nashville.  The staggering beauty of the mountains and valleys would almost make one forget the dark underbelly of the past.  Then you pick up the faint whiff of something old and moldy… the musty smell of something that’s been around too long without enough exposure to the sunlight.  It sometimes makes it hard to breathe.  This history making election year is exposing some of that mold and mildew to the daylight.  And it isn’t a pretty thing.   But it requires the dark.  It can’t live long once it has been laid bare in the light.

07
Oct

The Nashville debate

Obama has been more forceful and direct this evening, more comfortable and less stiff than I have seen him in other debates (primaries included).  He’s confident.  He’s sure.  McCain knows he’s the underdog and it shows.  He’s striking blindly.  The thing that struck me so strongly in this debate is the strength of the delivery from Obama.  He was on point this night.  IMO, the debate went to Obama hands down. 

10:22  Both agree that energy is key to our dealings with Russia. 

10:11  Just saying…McCain seems  more testy as the evening goes on.  His insistance that he “knows” how to get Bin-Laden, how to handle Iran, how to… comes off as a fake.  He requires “experience” that he doesn’t think Obama has, but he’s willing to put Palin in as Veep?  Right. Obama is hanging in there, however.  He “will” get al-Qaeda, “will” get bin-Laden.  Strong words.

10:02 What would they do regarding humanitarian needs in the world where our national security is not at stake:  Obama – we may not have a national security issue at stake but we have a moral responsibility in the world to help where we can.  McCain we have to help where we can but tempered with knowledge of our ability to positively impact.  Seems they agree somewhat on this one.  But Obama seems on the mark about our standing in the world and our dearth of alliances.

Continue reading ‘The Nashville debate’

06
Oct

our future or our past

07
Jun

I endorse him and and throw my full support behind him

t1home_1248_clinton_cnn.jpg 

Today Hillary works to bring her supporters together with the Obama camp.  We need to be united to rout the Republicans out of the White House in the fall.  W can do it.  We WILL do it.  Yes we can.

26
Apr

Bitter Bad/Bitter Blue

 Let’s be blunt. Bitter? You bet I’m bitter

By Robyn E. Blumner, Times Columnist
Published Friday, April 18, 2008 12:46 AM

Barack Obama may have been a little too blunt in his now infamous quip about  how the economic insecurities gripping small-town America manifest themselves, but the word “bitter” perfectly sums up my feelings these days.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched my country get hijacked by a group of self-serving incompetents who have little conscience about sending young men and women to die in an unnecessary war, while putting the bill on a credit card for the next generation.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve seen some of the greatest moral handiwork of modern civilization — the Geneva Conventions — get treated as if it were the naive ramblings of out-of-touch do-gooders. I’ve watched the founding principles of our nation — the inalienable right of due process of law and the checks and balances of three co-equal branches of government — treated as a copse to be mowed down en route to the unitary executive.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve stood by as the wealth of our nation has been concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite while the middle class struggles to financially tread water. I’ve seen our tax policies shift to benefit this small group, starving our national treasury of needed resources and making it far less possible to prepare for the future by investing in infrastructure, education and shoring up Social Security and Medicare.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched a macabre health care system become even more dysfunctional, so that a single accident or illness can destroy the economic security of a family. I’ve seen Big Pharma use its lobbying muscle to keep Medicare from negotiating better drug prices. I’ve observed as health insurance companies with their inflated middle-man profits add immeasurably to the cost of care while trying to deny coverage and services to their customers. I’ve heard our leaders whine about “socialized medicine” any time a comprehensive fix is suggested.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve seen industry insiders put in charge of regulatory agencies so that worker safety and environmental protection are eroded in the name of increased profits. I’ve watched as science is subverted to ideology. Where facts on global climate change are ignored or manipulated to fit a politically driven script. I’ve seen the Department of Justice transform into the legal arm of the Republican Party.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched the dismantling of the wall of separation between church and state, allowing billions of tax dollars to flow to religiously affiliated groups that peddle their own brand of faith as part of the government-funded service. I’ve seen Christian fundamentalism defeat funding for international family planning and constrain the distribution of condoms in places where HIV/AIDS has decimated the population.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve stood by as the national debt nearly doubled in the last seven years due to irresponsible tax cuts and spending on such folly as an endless pre-emptive war that may end up costing three trillion dollars. I’ve observed the privatization of core government functions, such as the handling of security assignments in Iraq by the unaccountable Blackwater. I’ve seen billions of dollars in Iraq reconstruction money wasted and lost to a system of endemic corruption.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched our nation get less secure thanks to the counterproductive policies of the neocons in charge. I’ve seen the populations of otherwise friendly nations turn against the United States, seeing us as the world’s biggest bully and hypocrite rather than its greatest beacon of liberty, justice and opportunity. I’ve observed that our willingness to abuse prisoners has become a recruiting tool for our enemies, making us masters of our own demise.

You bet I’m bitter.

And when more than 80 percent of Americans think we’re on the wrong track, I’m not the only one. Obama chose the right word. The only question is, how long this bad taste will last and how to get rid of it?

06
Feb

Yes, we can

The most powerful and moving video I’ve seen in a very long time. I’d been teetering on the precipice of a decision about supporting Clinton or Obama.  Obama’s speech following the New Hampshire primary gave me the push I needed to jump.  I am for Obama.  He is the most impressive and hopeful thing to happen to this nation in my adult memory.  The healing can begin, with a hope, with a vote.   We can make that happen.  Yes, we can.

23
Oct

romney for jackass

This guy is just not for real.  I wish.  Unfortunately, Romney is real.

Actually, just look at what Osam, uh, Barack Obama, said just yesterday. Barack Obama calling on radicals, jihadists of all different types, to come together in Iraq. That is the battlefield. That is the central place, he said. Come join us under one banner.

What a classless jackass.  

04
Sep

ghosts of elections past

I moved to Florida in 1999.  I love the state — the teeming flora and eclectic fauna,  the sultry gulf breezes and the shadowy demarcation of seasons’ change. 

The political events that have occurred during these past several years, however, have made me afraid for my state — and, by extension, for my country.  The election debacle of 2000. The stolen presidency.  The election debacle of 2004.   Another stolen presidency.  It felt as if a coup had occurred, and in not too broad a sense, it had.   And the leadership of this nation  hinged in both of those pirated campaigns on the great state of Florida. 

We are there again.  But this time, instead of having the election stolen from us,  the dems in power seem eager to truss it up like a holiday turkey and hand it over to the republicans on a platter.  We are in a primary mess.  Karen Thurman is blaming the DNC Rules and By-Laws Committee.  The DNC is blaming Karen Thurman and the democratic legislators for allowing the reassignment of the primary date.  The leading democratic candidates are blaming the need for adhering to some esoteric protocol and in the doing are imposing some harshly punitive measures on the citizens of Florida.   

I don’t know who is more to blame for this THIRD election travesty.  I do know that none of the culprits are guilt free.  The DNC and Howard Dean, the FDP and Karen Thurman, Clinton, Obama, Edwards, Richardson…each and every one has their own share of blame in this game.  The ones who are the victims here are the citizens of Florida — being disenfranchised yet again.  

We deserve better than this.  Why are our votes less important than ones in Iowa?  Than ones in Nevada?  If there was ever a state that needed to be heard, this is the one! 

We won’t be ignored again. 

Our votes will count — one way or another. 






Categories



Archives





If I had some ham, I'd have some ham and eggs...if I had some eggs. -- Elhanan Ritchie


Fairness for ALL Families