Posts filed under ‘US News’
The super power and the race problem
Obama speech confronts America’s racial divide
For many immigrants like me, who have never experienced the race problem outside the US, coming to the US and living in the US has provided one with an opportunity to see and to experience the best of the country as well as contribute the utmost of one’s imagination and efforts. If there’s anything that stands out about US society that one might call a veritable cancer, which an immigrant might not feel as deeply as other Americans (whether “black” or “white”) whose families have been here for centuries, it’s been the problem of race. Many had prayed at the onset of the primaries that the elections would provide a forum where one could finally see the willingness of the country to move beyond its racial divisions and to embrace a more positive and hopeful future for its children. But it’s not been so as the desperate from many quarters, whether from the pulpit, or the lectern, whether in inter-personal discussions, or in campaign forums, whether in the press or in online commentaries, have sought to cast the issue of race again and again at the peril of the common good and a shared and harmonious future… For may immigrants and foreigners watching the elections, the drama is that of a superpower whose citizens have all it takes to make a great nation, but who prefer to constantly fall short of the ideals of a non-racial society, who can’t overcome the enduring cancer of race to see the rich kaleidoscope that’s God’s creation, our creation… It’s a contradiction in terms.
Tears flow down the face of supporter Marty Nesbitt as Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., speaks about race during a news conference in Philadelphia, Tuesday, March 18, 2008. Associated Press photo by Alex Brandon
Add comment March 19, 2008
‘Scrutinizing’ Obama’s Record…
It’s not about going ‘native’ – but the how the subject came about: the intent, and the insinuations behind the first published photo…
Add comment February 26, 2008
Can the border hold the crumbling act?
Reading Dana Milibank’s “Teetering on the border” brings to mind some of the best lines from a visionary Irish poet, whose poem could be said to epitomize the scenario that Milibank draws in his article: “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold”.
The last but one paragraph to the article is particularly striking in its sequences:
<<<It was a brief speech but insufficiently inspiring. After she got to the part about health care (“I’m not going to leave anyone out; Senator Obama leaves out at least 15 million”), the mariachi band walked off the arena floor in single file and headed for the exit. After she passed the part about “alternative renewable energy” and announced her pleasure at having “the endorsement of the United Farmworkers Union,” there was a steady flow of people from the arena floor and out the exit below Section 120.>>>
Yet, the last sentence that closes the article is quite revealing in what it purports to say of the campaign:
“There’s nothing wrong with America that cannot be fixed once we have new leadership,” Clinton called after them. “I will work my heart out for you and your families.”
A frank yet desperate cry that will hardly fail to move the heart of any, except for the most hardened. The end, however, was in sight, the article seems to say, “the falcon could no longer hear the falconer”.
Is the article too early an epitaph on the Clinton campaign? Definitely, yes. Hillary is a tough and passionate fighter capable of bringing herself together, galvanizing her long standing connections in Texas and Ohio, the women and blue collar workers and staging a come back.
“If she wins in Texas and Ohio, I think she’ll be the nominee,” former President Clinton said Wednesday in the course of a speech to Hillary’s supporters in the town of Beaumont, Texas. “If you don’t deliver for her, I don’t think she can be.”
Given the strength of her campaign team in Texas particularly, it is too early to rule out a turnabout victory as in New Hampshire last January.
In the end, however, the ultimate selection of the candidate to be nominated lies in the hands of superdelegates, of which her husband is one. So all is not lost: the center hasn’t fallen apart completely.
“Unlike pledged delegates won through a primary or a caucus, superdelegates can vote for whomever they choose, and they are not beholden to vote for the candidate they endorse”, Tom Raum (AP) reports.
“I don’t think it’s going to come down to the president’s vote, but as he has said many times, he would be supporting her even if they weren’t married,” The AP reports Clinton spokesman Matt McKenna as saying in a written statement
Teetering On the Border
By Dana Milbank, Washington Post
Thursday, February 21, 2008; Page A02
Add comment February 21, 2008
Obama’s Unilateral Attack Option On Alqaeda Confirmed as a ‘Model’
OBAMA WAS RIGHT: “U.S. strikes within Pakistan — without notice;Unilateral attack on al-Qaeda commander called a model for operations”
Following the Washington Post article (Adviser Defends Obama on Foreign Policy) By Jonathan Weisman, Barack Obama’s campaign did not have to show reticence in responding to John McCain’s attacks early yesterday morning, when the latter singled out a statement Obama made last year suggesting he would take unilateral military action against al-Qaeda figures in Pakistan if Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf was not willing to.
Rice repeated that, but said Obama was referring to action only after he had “actionable intelligence” on “high value terrorist targets. .
All the Obama’s campaign had to do was to follow details of the strike on senior al-Qaeda command, Abu Laith al-Libi, widely reported in the press, but only expanded on by MSNBC News (U.S. strikes within Pakistan without notice: Unilateral attack on al-Qaeda commander called a model for operations) .
As usual the press reported on the attack (or killing or whatever) but left the details to the winds, due to the pressing need to cover the primaries. The successful operation indicates that Obama’s proposal was and remains is far more realistic to the charge of naivety credited him by his adversaries.
The success of the operation and the fact that it falls in line with Obama’s prior proposal indicates his solid understanding of what it takes to accomplish certain tasks or goals. Most importantly, it shows his trust in what US forces are capable of achieving under insightful leadership.
The charge that Obama’s foreign policy experience is slim is nothing but rhetoric. His purported “lack of experience” does not trump his understanding, intelligence, and analytical skills or his ability to manage and benefit from a think-tank that would deduce models of operation capable of blunting the war on terror. He himself has largely questioned the experience that led to the disastrous expedition in Iraq, a perspective that must be kept in sight even beyond the presidential elections.
When not backed by actionable intelligence, insight, and an understanding of the facts on the ground, acting on the basis of experience alone particularly in these modern times, often ends in failure. The difference Obama offers perhaps is that between incisive intelligence, surgical strikes, putting he pressure on the terrorist front and simultaneously engaging a broad-based global diplomacy at the official level as well as re-energizing the Peace Corps, Fulbright and other educational and humanitarian missions around the world, to both reclaim and redefine the role of the US in a fast changing and often hostile world.
Ultimately in relation to the Commander-in-Chief question, one has not heard the other side of the equation, that is, the opinion of the body that is to be commanded. That would be of course difficult to determine as they are supposed to stay out of politics. However, my guess is that given the propositions of the candidates, Obama would be most likely to win the favor of a cross section, given his intellect and ability for both horizontal and vertical organization understandings.
In fact, his “bottom-up” or grassroots approach is far more likely to enable him achieve better results and bring about positive change through generating enthusiasm and a need of dynamic engagement – just as he did in the challenged neighborhoods Chicago before becoming a senator.
Add comment February 21, 2008
Humor On the Public Financing Question…
Comment from ‘four legs good’:
<<<Here’s my take on the Obama “pledge” or whatever – he’d be crazy to go to this coming gun fight with anything less that a full fleet of destroyers, a box of bazookas, some sharks with laser beams in their eyeballs and a couple of spare nukes.
Besides, as someone says above, his money is coming from small donations, which is completely within the spirit of McCain-Feingold.>>>
From: Karen Tumulty “The Public Financing Question”
Time-Blog.Com, Swampland
FEBRUARY 20, 2008 1:17
Add comment February 21, 2008
Humor and Straight Talk: McCain and the 100-Year Thing…
<<<Last month, at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire, a crowd member asked McCain about a Bush statement that troops could stay in Iraq for 50 years.
“Maybe 100,” McCain replied.
“As long as Americans are not being injured or harmed or wounded or killed, it’s fine with me and I hope it would be fine with you if we maintain a presence in a very volatile part of the world where al Qaeda is training, recruiting, equipping and motivating people every single day.”
The remaining Democratic contenders for the White House seized on the statement.>>>
Add comment February 20, 2008
On the Obama Plagiarism Charge: “Much Ado About Nothing”
Is the “war of words” and the claims of “rhetoric pilfering piling up on Obama”, “war over Obama’s speeches”, “Quote-gate II”, “Twice-Tod Tales, and Nine in a Row”, and ecetera, ecetera a “fair attack” or “not a big deal”? Just to pick a few responses:
<<<< Bruce Cain, a political-science professor and founder of the Travers Program in Ethics and Accountability in Government at the University of California at Berkeley, pointed out that Mr. Obama isn’t “all the way over at Biden.”
Yet the Republican National Committee was quick to follow up with a laundry list of remarks made first by Mr. Patrick, then by Mr. Obama.
Gerald Nelms, an associate professor of rhetoric and composition at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, points to the world of “ghostwritten” speeches and says borrowing language is commonplace in politics. Dr. Nelms called the attacks on Mr. Obama “much ado about nothing.”
“That’s Shakespeare,” he added.>>>
1 comment February 20, 2008
“Plagiarism” Charge Gets a New Twist
Just when we thought this plagiarism issue was dying out, it seems to have taken a new twist with Hillary Clinton attributing the blame for the charge on the media and the Associated Press rebutting the charge.
Clinton Fingerprints on Plagiarism Flap By Beth Fouhy CLEVELAND (AP)
She made the claim Tuesday despite the fact her campaign posted video clips on YouTube illustrating similarities in the speeches and has suggested in several instances that the shared lines amount to plagiarism.
THE SPIN: “It’s not us making this charge, it’s the media,” Clinton told Honolulu television station KITV Tuesday. “The media is finally examining my opponent which I think is important. We’re trying to pick a president, someone for the toughest job in the world.”
She added: “I think the media is going to be putting forth whatever facts and information it has for voters to assess on their own.”
In an interview with another Honolulu station, KGMB, Clinton noted that Obama and Patrick share a strategist, David Axelrod, “who is apparently putting words in both of their mouths.”
She added: “I think that’s a serious concern.”
FACT CHECK: Any suggestion that the story had a life of its own, apart from the Clinton campaign, is disingenuous.
Add comment February 20, 2008
Cutting Musharraf to Size: The Pakistani Electorate Vents its Anger
Reactions to the results of Pakistani Parliamentary elections carried essentially by the Pakistan People’s Party of late Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan Muslim League-N of Nawaz Sharif were quite dramatic:
“All the King’s Men, Gone!”, the Daily Times of Pakistan blared in a headline.
“Heavyweights knocked out!”, the Dawn newspaper scorned.
Must be a good day for Sharif, and one more turn (this time a victorious one) in his twisted and poisonous romance with “the General”:
“He has closed his eyes. He has said before that he would go when the people want him to do so and now the people have given their verdict”.
But for the sympathizers of the late Benazir Bhutto, and for Sharif himself, Musharraf’s defeat might not be enough.
“Whoever is the prime minister, I will work with that person in a reconciliatory mode,” the former general, who seized power in a 1999 coup, told reporters. “We should end the confrontationist politics. Let’s enter into a conciliatory politics.
“Conciliatory politics?”
Not likely in Pakistan that is used to extremism. According to the Associated Press should either of two main opposition parties win a two-thirds majority in parliament, they could take steps to impeach Musharraf. That also could happen if the opposition parties together capture two-thirds of the seats in parliament and then form a coalition.
One fact many Pakistanis and the international community will likely overlook is to congratulate “the Fox” for the safe conduct of the elections, for accepting defeat, and for asking for reconciliation, though no one knows as yet what might be up his sleeves. Pakistan remains a country given over to military coups succeeding democratically elected and corrupt governments. We can only hope that the government turns out to be strong against corruption and that Musharraf will not biding time to stick the guns into the sides of a feeble democracy.
By sparing the world the kind of crisis Kenya now faces, he has however shown a sense of dignity that is rare in other parts of the globe where parties and populations have to haggle over electoral results, and with grave consequences. In this sense, the parliamentary elections in Pakistan constitute a progressive step towards democracy. It remains to see how they will handle the presidential elections without recourse to fighting, as well as deal with the urgent problems of poverty, literacy, religious and political zealotry and the spawning of global terror from the subcontinent.
Add comment February 19, 2008
Obama and the primary of an underdog…
“I don’t think anyone is ‘clamoring’ for debates. We’ve had what, 18?. . . I am sure we will accept at least one.” Obama (Tuesday, 5 February).
“I’m always the underdog… Sen. Clinton remains the favorite because of the enormous familiarity people have with her and the institutional support and the political insiders who lined up early behind her candidacy before they had a sense of how strong I might be.” Obama at the Four Points Hotel near Midway Airport.
“I’m never disingenuous. Here’s a fair way to put it: I think we’re less of an underdog than we were two weeks ago. . . . I think two weeks ago we were a big underdog. Now we’re a slight underdog.”
“We’ve still got at least a month and a half of contests… We’ve seen how quickly things can change. What’s amazing is it’s only a month since Iowa. We’ve had more twists and turns since then. . . . A month and a half is an eternity in politics. . . . It’s way too early to think this is going to be dragging on into the convention.” Obama, Wed. 6th Feb
Culled from: I’m still the underdog, Obama insists WHO’S AHEAD? | Delegate count so close, even media tallies disagree February 7, 2008 BY ABDON M. PALLASCH Political Reporter apallasch@suntimes.com
Add comment February 7, 2008
| Previous Posts |
