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Saturday, June 21, 2008

Mrs. Michelle Obama

Mrs. Obama is fabulously sexy - I'd just love to have a hug with her (and dance a tango). Her demeanor reveals a thoughtful, self-confident, kind person. She is both deep and child-like in the same time. And then she is also beautiful. Her walk is, well, quite inspiring. What an attractive combination! How about Michelle Obama to represent the US, a new US in the world! Yes!

Too bad that the Pres and the VP can not, by law, be from the same state. (take a look)

Friday, June 13, 2008

To Sen McCain

According to CNN:

"I think people in the media and observers will make a decision as to whether these people, individuals, should be part of Sen. Obama's campaign," McCain said in Boston, Massachusetts, on Thursday [June 12, 2008].

Thank you Sen McCain for being deligent about finding things out about other people, finding the truth, but, your conclusion above is preposterous. "Media and observers" should be the last in line of decision makers regarding the matter.

The sad part is that those in the media and those observers do seem to feel called upon to indeed make the decisions mentioned.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

I still can't figure him out

Sen Barack Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee for the Pres of the USA, gave a speech to the campaign staff in Chicago, Feb 6, 2008. It was nice to see him talk to those who work behind the scene to keep that train moving.



But, I am still not sure I know who he really is under his skin. I hope we get to know him better in the months to come.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Obama and political progress

What does Obama's nomination and potential presidency mean for the evolutionary progress in the political life of the US and the world? If you listen to him carefully, you will quickly realize that he is no progressive beyond his rhetoric and even there he slips. Take his speech to the AIPAC Conference June 4, for example, where he said, among other things:

"Let me be clear. Israel's security is sacrosanct. It is non-negotiable. The Palestinians need a state that is contiguous and cohesive, and that allows them to prosper – but any agreement with the Palestinian people must preserve Israel's identity as a Jewish state, with secure, recognized and defensible borders. Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain undivided. " (read).

First off, why does he feel called upon to have an opinion on the state of State of Israel and that of Jerusalem? It seems to me that a progressive thinking would direct one to favour those affected, those who live in the affected region, to have a safe way of deciding for themselves what it is exactly they want and how they want to organize their lives. The best a world power can and perhaps should do is support a process which would yield a just solution whose architects would be those affected by it -- a process called self-determination.

Second, even his statement itself carries a contradiction. Unless Obama favours undivided Jerusalem to be a capital of both a Jewish and a Palestinian state (not an impossibility), how can he argue for a "contiguous and cohesive" Palestinian state which excludes Jerusalem?

Another example. On many occasions, he felt a need to declare that he was not a Muslim (I wish that his pronunciation of the word "Muslim" was more in agreement with that that I heard many Muslims prefer). I was hoping that at least once he would take an opportunity to point out that nothing would be wrong with him being a Muslim, anyway. Or, is that not the case?

Those examples point out that even his much-trumpeted speeches leave out much to be desired. So, where are the opportunities for true progress?

Just like Jesse Jackson's presidential campaign did in 1988, Obama's campaign attracted many new voices and included them into the political process. And herein lies an opportunity. This mass of grassroots volunteers can be transformed into a formidable movement which could provide a progressive alternative to a status quo. But, the initiative can not be expected to come from Barack Obama for a number of reasons. If it were to materialize at all, this new, progressive, alternative movement must remain genuine, it must grow from the bottom -- it must self-organize.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Why Obama?

What makes it marginally of interest for me to support Sen. Obama's presidential campaign has nothing to do with his proposed and/or supported policies (he often manages to make me think twice about supporting his campaign with his extremist pronouncements like "I will keep embargo on Cuba"), but rather the perceived effect the campaign has had on the grassroots organizing.

The organizing momentum of the campaign may result in a genuine and sustained grassroots movement for a positive change, regardless of how unprogressive Sen. or Pres. Obama may end up being, which may really live on as a bottom-up sort of phenomenon, the only one that can work for the masses.

Keep up the pressure.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

McClellan

Watching all the hoopla surrounding the "revelations" contained in McClellan's What Happened book from the sidelines, one has to wonder about the Washington DC-center US media. Many are exhibiting an astonishment about those revelations, some go as far as asking "should people look at everything coming out of the White House with a gain of salt?" (Anderson Cooper interviewing Scott McClellan).

Dah! That is your job, the media person! You must question everything anybody says to ensure that you are presenting the whole picture or risk being taken as an extension of the office providing you with the talking points. Is it not obvious that the essence of politics is to try to convince others in the correctness of your point of view and get them to support you in the efforts to implement your ides? I mean, that is politics 101. Every spokesperson is not only disseminating the facts but is definitely coloring them so that the public sees those facts through the politician's eyes.

Why now such an outcry at someone actually admitting what should have been known all along? Perhaps it is because Scott McClellan is stirring up trouble for the news media persons around DC (and elsewhere, I suppose) and causing some of them a discomfort for now having to work harder to get the whole picture, because we, the public, are now told that many things we are offered as news are really the spin.

Interesting times unless the messenger is killed because those affected did not like the message.