The Obama Revolution

obama6.GIF

The 2008 Presidential Elections’ headline should simply read, “Obama”. Obama, whether or not he wins the Democratic primaries or the general elections thereafter, has single-handedly defined this election year and transformed it into the most exciting, energizing and most participative one in recent memory.

Notice how Hillary with her claim of superior experience and ready-for-day-one sound bite has been continuously re-locating her own voice to sound more like Obama’s. Even the Republican candidates have each claimed to be the one who would bring an Obama-like change to the White House. I even get the feeling from George Will’s recent columns that he has secretly become an Obama supporter.

Just look at that the numbers and you’ll see that what Obama has done is astonishing. Continue reading

9 Comments

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

The Republicans’ Tortuous Destruction of Life

water torture.GIF

I am often astonished by how when Republicans talk about the sanctity of human life they are only referring to the sanctity of unborn lives. For example, yesterday I heard a speech by Governor Huckabee saying that he defended the sanctity of human life (meaning he was in favor of prohibiting abortion), the theoretical Second Amendment’s right to bear arms, and hetero-sexual-only marriages.

Why do these God fearing Christianofascists (like most fundamentalist radicals) want to legislate the prohibition of sin in any form and impose some sort of in-this-lifetime and after-this-lifetime double jeorpardy. In this Christianofascist judgment fest, you can first be tried for the sin/crime by a judge and put in prison and then be judged a second time  (for the same action) by God and thrown into hell. Why don’t they just make honest, faithful belief a legal requirement. If the law were to prohibit all sinning, then the Christians would see it get very competitive at the gates to heaven.

But seriously, think about it. How can you be in favor of life and at the same time prohibit restricting gun possession? How can you want to protect life and be in favor of the state taking life? How can you be in favor of life and be so overtly destructive to the environment? And same sex marriage? Who cares? Are you that afraid of your latent homosexuality that you need guns and a death penalty to protect you from gay temptation?

Talk about deathly sickening and synical, the CIA, the Republican president’s CIA, has admitted to using the mideavil torture technique of waterboarding on three occasions since 9/11. As you may know, waterboarding is considered an illegal torture method by the U.S. and the international community. The U.S. has frequently criticized and sited other nations as human rights violators for using the very technique is has been using since 9/11. The U.S. even prosecuted a Japanese military officer for using the practice against Americans during World War II and sentenced him to 15 years of prison. Continue reading

6 Comments

Filed under Essays

Super Tuesday, Spin Wednesday

Super Tuesday Washington Post.JPG

On Super Tuesday, the campaigners were already preparing for Spin Wednesday, the day after when they spin the results to make it look like they’re in the strategic lead, regardless of what the (Washington Post) diagram above and calendar may say. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

There’s Got to Be a Better Way!

yes we can.jpg

It’s Super Tuesday, and I am not going to know anything until I wake up tomorrow morning (there’s a 9 hour time difference between Madrid and California). I know there’s a Democrats Abroad event tonight in Madrid where people will be following the elections. But you wouldn’t catch me dead labeling myself a Democrat (or a Republican for that matter) or wanting to spend a long evening with a mass of people who did.

By the looks of things, Hillary will win but her lead will have been drastically reduced. It’s hard to measure the reality of things from what the press is saying because the press, like any other business, is trying to sell its “product” by creating suspense and drama and therefore hoping for a long drawn out campaign. Let’s just hope Obama will hold his own, and get important delegates to keep the hope alive. Sure, we can continue to live under the status quo. We can go back to the Clintons and the Bushs, but wouldn’t it be nice to mix it up a little. There’s got to be a better way.

2 Comments

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

The Girl from the Golden Horn

Golden Horn.GIF

This weekend I finally finished reading The Girl from the Golden Horn by Kurban Said (or Essad Bey / Lev Nussimbaum as exposed in Tom Reiss’ The Orientalist). In short, if you’re interested in reading something by Kurban Said, read Ali and Nino and don’t waste your time with The Girl.

When I started reading The Girl, I began doubting Tom Reiss’ conclusion that Kurban Said was in fact just Lev Nussimbaum. I don’t mean that I doubted that Nussimbaum had written Ali and Nino, but I considered that the author of Ali and Nino and The Girl were actually two different people. By the end of the book, though, I was convinced Lev Nussimbaum had written both stories, even though the quality of the two differ enormously. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Essays, Literature

Hillary’s Baggage

Bill and Donors.jpg

Over the course of the past few months as I have been following the elections (and ultimately given my support to the Obama campaign), I have found Eugene Robinson’s op-ed pieces in the Washington Post to be very insightful and on point. In his latest piece for called “The Baggage Hillary Bears“, Robinson raises the critically important questions that need to be answered about Bill Clinton’s role in a potential Hillary White House. For example,

Why won’t the Clintons speed up the release of White House papers that would let us see what kind of authority Hillary Clinton enjoyed? Who donated how much to the Clinton presidential library, and might those donors expect anything from a Hillary Clinton administration? What business tycoons have snuggled up to the former president, and what — other than the chance to bask in the radiance of his wit — did they hope to get out of the exercise?

Would Bill return to his foundation and its high-profile international projects? If so, would that work be coordinated with Hillary’s foreign policy? Could donors be sure that the foundation’s priorities were still being set independently, in accord with what they were told when they wrote the check?

Just the other day a New York Times article revealed a shady Kazakh uranium deal, possible political favors, an unknown shell company suddenly becoming one of the world’s largest uranium companies, and ultimately a large donation to Clinton’s foundation. According the New York Times’ investigation:

Just months after the Kazakh pact was finalized, Mr. Clinton’s charitable foundation received its own windfall: a $31.3 million donation from Mr. Giustra that had remained a secret until he acknowledged it last month. The gift, combined with Mr. Giustra’s more recent and public pledge to give the William J. Clinton Foundation an additional $100 million, secured Mr. Giustra a place in Mr. Clinton’s inner circle, an exclusive club of wealthy entrepreneurs in which friendship with the former president has its privileges.

Richard Cohen of the Washington Post also has an excellent piece on why, in a similar vain, he is endorsing Obama over Hillary. Kudos to the Washington Post! In any event, here is Robinson’s entire story about the questions we should be asking: Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

One Common Ancestor

Life Picasso.JPG

A recent scientific study finds that peopole with blue eyes can trace their ancestry to one person 6,000 to 10,000 years ago. The first case of blue eyes would have been the genetic mutation in a single person, probably somewhere in the Caucasus, and that mutation would have been passed on to the rest of us who have blue eyes. Thus, a person from Denmark, Jordan, or the U.S. with blue eyes all share a common ancestor.

According to John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, “The question really is, ‘Why did we go from having nobody on Earth with blue eyes 10,000 years ago to having 20 or 40 percent of Europeans having blue eyes now? . . . This gene does something good for people. It makes them have more kids.”

6 Comments

Filed under Essays

Bubba’s Fallen Ex Presidency

Bill.jpg

I have already discussed how Bill Clinton crossed the line of appropriate ex presidential behavior in acting more like James Carville than an elder statesman. For the good of the Hillary campaign, he tried to stay quiet for about a week, but then he just couldn’t control himself in Arizona.

Frustrated because the Democratic Party is turning against him with key endorsements, Bill went back to sounding like Bubba and trashed Ted Kennedy. The problem was that Bubba’s attack was so absurd because, by doing so, he was actually also criticizing Hillary’s policies and endorsing Obama’s judgment. In his most Bubba I-condescend-to-thee voice, Bill gave the good people of Arizona a lesson:

I want you to think about this, and I have to say, this was a train wreck that was not intended. No Child Left Behind was supported by George Bush and Sen. Ted Kennedy and everybody in between. Why? Because they didn’t talk to enough teachers before they did that.

Who is everybody in between? Hillary, of course. She voted alongside Ted Kennedy on Bush’s No Child Left Behind initiative. Obama was a critic of the law.

James Carville can go around the country all he wants, yelling and screaming, speaking in funking accents. He can stretch the truth, play with numbers, and distort the facts. The ex president of the United States, a representative of the American people, should not. This is just another example of how Bubba is destroying his ex presidency.

1 Comment

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

Yes We Can

I am not one hundred percent comfortable with videos of this type. They can seem a little too “Go Team Go” or populistic. They also may create too great of a burden on a presidential elect. I am also not much of a fan of listening to celebrities’ unqualified endorsements (unlike my own supremely informed one), as if what Barbara Streisand thinks about the election should somehow affect how I vote (it would probably actually have the opposite effect).

Nonetheless, I think that the momentum and postive energy that Obama supporters have shown this year is remarkable. We even have an enormous sector of those past Bill Clinton supporters turning to Obama. Almost every day we’re seeing another big Obama endorsement, for example, yesterday the L.A. Times and now London’s The Times. Were we to have a few more days, I think that Obama would definitely clinch this thing.

Thanks to Teo for the “heads up“.

Leave a comment

Filed under Essays, Obama 08

Comprehensive Immigration Reform?

ellis-island-1907.jpg

In last week’s debate, the issue of immigration came up, and Hillary argued that her policy differed from Obama’s because she was for something called “comprehensive immigration reform”. Can anyone tell me what comprehensive immigration reform means? It would be nice to know exactly how she would like to reform things, as opposed to just saying that the present system needs to be reformed comprehensively. Could we get a little specificity please?

1 Comment

Filed under Essays, Obama 08