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Obama 2008 Table

 

 

Books by Barack Obama

Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance  / The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream

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Overview

Barack Obama was born in Hawaii on August 4th, 1961. His father, Barack Obama Sr., was born and raised in a small village in Kenya, where he grew up herding goats with his own father, who was a domestic servant to the British.

Barack's mother, Ann Dunham, grew up in small-town Kansas. Her father worked on oil rigs during the Depression, and then signed up for World War II after Pearl Harbor, where he marched across Europe in Patton's army. Her mother went to work on a bomber assembly line, and after the war, they studied on the G.I. Bill, bought a house through the Federal Housing Program, and moved west to Hawaii.

It was there, at the University of Hawaii, where Barack's parents met. His mother was a student there, and his father had won a scholarship that allowed him to leave Kenya and pursue his dreams in America.

Barack's father eventually returned to Kenya, and Barack grew up with his mother in Hawaii, and for a few years in Indonesia. Later, he moved to New York, where he graduated from Columbia University in 1983. More

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It Still Felt Good the Morning After—The actual real America is everywhere. It is the America that has been in shell shock since the aftermath of 9/11, when our government wielded a brutal attack by terrorists as a club to ratchet up our fears, betray our deepest constitutional values and turn Americans against one another in the name of “patriotism.”

What we started to remember the morning after Election Day was what we had forgotten over the past eight years, as our abusive relationship with the Bush administration and its press enablers dragged on: That’s not who we are.

So even as we celebrated our first black president, we looked around and rediscovered the nation that had elected him.

“We are the ones we’ve been waiting for,” Obama said in February, and indeed millions of such Americans were here all along, waiting for a leader. This was the week that they reclaimed their countryNYTimes  Obama and the War on Brains

Roland Martin:  Election Night Coverage (Kam Williams Interview) / Election Night Speech (Obama)

America, We Cannot Turn Back (Text of Barack Obama Acceptance Speech) / Obama Roasts John McCain

BaracK Obama: The Time Interview/ Obama 2008 Table   Yes We Can (video)  Speeches & Sermons Table

Why White America Perhaps Fears Michelle More Than Barack  / Obligation to Fight for the World as It Should Be (Michele Obama)  /

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A More Perfect Union Barack Obama Speech on Race  / Barack Obama: On My Faith and My Church   

 

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Obama Newspaper EndorsementsThe Obama-Biden ticket maintains its strong lead in the race for daily newspaper endorsements, by 112 to 39, more than a 3-1 margin, picking up 70 or more papers in the past three days, including (see separate stories), the Detroit Free Press, Buffalo News, Cleveland's Plain Dealer, Palm Beach (Fla.) Post, New York's Daily News, Miami Herald, Philadelphia Inquirer, Portland's The Oregonian, Denver Post, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Salt Lake Tribune, Kansas City Star, and Chicago Sun-Times. EditorandPublisher

Table

Post Election Files

 

Election Night Speech

The People are the Change

Responses to Barack Obama Winning

Single Payer Health Care and Auto Industry

Wilson's Obama Poem

 

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Pre-Election Files

 

Alice Walker Endorses Barack Obama (Video)

Al Sharpton and Barack Obama  (DNC 2004)

America We Cannot Turn Back

The Ancestral Spirits Are Watching  (Jeannette Drake)

The Audacity of Hope (book review)

Barack Obama Speaks at Dr. King's Church  

Barack Obama: The Death of White Supremacy? (Discussion)

Baraka: Act Like We Know

Bill Richardson Endorses Obama (video)

Black Enterprise Endorses Obama for President

A Brief for Whitey  (Pat Buchanan)

Character is the real issue (Maxwell)

Clinton and Obama Legislative Records

Clinton and Obama on Darfur (Morse)

Colin Powell Endorses Obama

Confronting an Economic Crisis (Colorado speech)

Cynthia McKinney Deserves Your Support, Obama Does Not (Ford)

Down with the Clintons (Hayes)

Flagrant Racism: Democratic Party Crisis (ChickenBones editorial)

Forward Is Where We Have to Go (Baraka)

Give Peace a Chance  (Drake)

The Handwriting is On the Wall: It's a Clinton-Obama Ticket in ‘08

Hillary Clinton as Walking Eagle

Hillary Clinton Revisited and Reviled (Williams)

Hillary! Stop the attacks! Love, Obama Girl (video)

History in the Making  (Tananarive Due)

Human Rights and Women's Rights (Discussion)

Hunger for a Black President  (Lewis)

In Kenya, Obama's relatives 'pray' for victory (CNN)

Is Obama Black Enough  (Boggs)

It's a Clinton-Obama Ticket in ‘08  (Dixon)

Jackson's Not Down for the Count

Meditation for Obama (Jeannette Drake)

Middle Passage  (Jeannette Drake)

Native Americans say NO to Hilarary Clinton (Carter Camp, Ponca Nation)

The Need for a Democratic Electoral Sweep (Lewis)

New Yorker Cover Depicts the Obamas as Terrorists (Willliams)

Nomination (Mary Weems)

Obama in Berlin Speaking (Grossman)

Obama Is African American Enough for Me if  (Johnson-Redd)

Obama 3 and Other Poems (Bomani)

Obama and Bitterness (Moses)

Obama and the Hunger for a Black President (Lewis)

Obama and the Israeli Lobby   (Uri Avnery)

Obama Declares Victory (speech)

Obama Insults Half a Race

Obama Photogallery

Obama Prayer  (Jeannette Drake)

Obligation to Fight for the World as It Should Be (Michele Obama)

Of Obama and Oakland  (Norris)

On My Faith and My Church

An Open Letter to Barack Obama (Tom Hayden, et al)

Palin Is "Racist, Sexist, Vindictive. and Mean" (Charley James)

The Parade of Anti Obama Rascals (Baraka)

Plato on Obama Drama (Marvin X)

Portrait of Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm

Playing the Race Game in South Carolina (Gray)

Putting the Country First  

Radical in Pursuit of Peace and Justice (McKinney)

Reaching Racial Heights (ChickenBones editorial)

Reconciling Faith and Politics (video)

Robert Reich Endorses Obama

Running to the Right: Barack Obama (Dixon)

Seeing The Real Clintons (Stanton)

Seize This Opportunity for Change (Gore)

Setting Record Straight with New York Times (Wright)

Sexual Morality and Black Male Abandonment (Lewis)

Shelby Steele: The Why Obama Can't Win

Speeches (Obama website)

Straying from official orthodoxy (ChickenBones editorial)

The Three Faces of Republican Change  (Lewis)

Time to Take Back the Country We Love (Hillary Clinton)

Toni Morrison's Endorsement Letter to Barack Obama

Unforgivable! New Yorker Cover Depicts the Obamas as Terrorists (Williams)

Victory Speech in South Carolina  (video)

Vote Fraud Costs Obama (Williams)

War in Iraq Has Burdened American Working Families (Obama video)

We’re Seeing the Real Clintons (Junious Ricardo Stanton)

White America Fears Michele Obama (Jack and Jill)

Why South Sudan Wants Obama to Lose (Badru Mulumba)

Your Whiteness is Showing (Tim Wise)

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Related files

A Case for Condoleezza Rice 

Cynthia McKinney Confronts Corporate Media 

Hillary Clinton as Walking Eagle

Hillary Clinton Revisited and Reviled

Hillary Turns on the Demo Light

Juneteenth and the Emancipation of Whom: Niggers or Enslaved Africans?

Just Another Dead Nigger! 

Killens and the Black Man's Burden 

Market for Ni$$as (video)

The Origin of Violence in Virginia: A Brief History

Psychology of Black Oppression

Speeches and Sermons Table

Staying Alive for the New Struggle 

Time To Impeach Bush   

 Village Cry

Will George Bush Be Impeached  

Time To Impeach Bush  

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America, We Cannot Turn Back

Text of Barack Obama Acceptance Speech

Obama Roasts John McCain   YouTube

Obama 2008 Table   Yes We Can (video)  Speeches & Sermons Table

17 Newspapers Endorse Obama, 2 for McCain—Barack Obama picked up at least 17 newspaper endorsements this weekend, including six in swing states Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio, North Carolina and Missouri. John McCain, as far as we know, gained just two.

The Wisconsin State Journal and The Sun of San Bernardino had backed Bush in 2004. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch called Obama's opponent, John McCain, "the incredible shrinking man" who had made a horrific pick for his running mate.

Backing Obama: In Ohio, The Blade in Toledo and the Dayton Daily News; the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, St. Louis Post-Dispatch,

The Tennessean of Nashville, the Wisconsin State Journal. the Asheville (N.C.) Citizen-Times, and in California the Fresno Bee, Sacramento Bee, Contra Costa Times, The Herald of Monterey, The Satna Cruz Journal and The Sun of San Bernardino (which had picked Bush over Kerry), plus the New Bedford Standrd-Times in Massachusetts.

Joining the Obama team in battleground states were the Muskegon (Mich.) Chronicle, the Lehigh Valley (Pa.) Express-Times and Springfield (Ohio) News.McCain registered two pick ups: The Wheeling News-Register in West Virginia and the Napa Valley Register in California.—EditorandPublisher

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I'm pretty sure that his White grandmother is still living, and is eagerly following his election from her home in Hawaii (I heard it on CNN), although both of his parents are dead. His American-Indonesian sister, who's 8 years younger, is in Hawaii campaigning for him; apparently they are very close, and he took her under his wing when they were growing up. I think what first impressed me about him is that he really cares about his family and writes so lovingly of them in his autobiography. He brought his Kenyan half sister, Auna, to the U.S. on numerous occasions and has reached out to many of his Kenyan relatives. His mother and grandparents really have to be credited with bringing him up with such wholesome values. He strikes me as a man who is so comfortable in his own skin. In spite of the campaign, he flew home to take his kids trick or treating, went to buy the family Xmas tree, took his wife out on their anniversary in Jan. and took her out to dinner on Valentine's day. He really has his (human) priorities in place.Miriam

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Mighty Sparrow: Barack the Magnificent (video) / Maya Soetoro-Ng, Barack's Half Sister

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A national mood swing˜We can end a war.—We can save the planet.—We can change the world.'—All of a sudden, Democrats are on the offensive. 'Change' isn't just this year's most ubiquitous campaign slogan, it seems to be something that's already happening out there in the real world, in small towns, on college campuses and yes, even at Super Bowl parties. Who knows just what caused the shift in mood? Iraq? Katrina? Global warming? Rising income inequality? Disgust with Bush and Cheney? Whatever the causes, Americans seem eager to reclaim a spirit of idealism that many thought ended with the 1960s, to embrace a heritage that acknowledges conflict and struggle but also hope and progress. Obama's Super Bowl ad represented a gamble: a bet that the symbolism of past social movements is now more likely to give Americans a thrill than a chill. And the matter-of-factness with which his ad was greeted - and Obama's electoral success so far - suggest that his campaign correctly read the national mood. LATimes

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Who Is Michelle Obama?—Princeton undergrad, Harvard Law School alum, corporate vice president and mother of two young girls—Michelle Obama's professional and personal résumé already is impressive. And since she could be the next First Lady, let's take a look at her. To her friends, Michelle Obama seems to manage public and private pressures with effortless poise. She is intimately involved with her husband's work, reading drafts of his major speeches and tweaking his big ideas and little punctuation choices alike, reports Newsweek. She has been his link to African America, its civil-rights movement and its power elite. Diversity Inc.

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 Victory Speech in South Carolina  (video)   /  Shelby Steele on Obama (video) /    Obama's Grandmother (video) / Obama in New Orleans (video)

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Blackness and Obama—Well, I think everybody should be aware of their heritage. See, blackness is a powerful, powerful symbol in America. Because we were taught to be ashamed of being black. And in a society in which you are taught to be ashamed of it, then to overcome that, you have to affirm it. So, you shouldn't be bashful about talking about it. Because to be bashful about talking about it is to, in some sense, to be ashamed of it, at least from the perspective of those who are black and who don't have the kind of position that Condoleezza Rice or Barack Obama would have. So, all they want is to say, you know, express some identity with our history and our culture. It's okay to identify with the larger culture. Because we are one community. But that should not entitle one to just forget about one's own particular culture of blackness. . . . Because the more you express identity with the community from which you come from if you're black, the more fear white people have. Now, that's not true for Italians. That's not true for Germans. That's not true for any other group, hardly, except us. Because there-- it's because we haven't been talking about that lynching tree. We haven't been talking about slavery, the ugly side of that.

So, if Barack Obama comes out and says, "I'm black and I'm proud of it,"  well, whites would get nervous. And they would be careful about whether they would vote for him. So, he has a narrow, a narrow-- road in which to walk. Because he won't be elected if he doesn't get the white vote. It's hard to get the white vote if you express a kind of affirmative identity with black people. So, you get caught between a rock and a hard place. And that's where he's caught. . . . That's why it's hard for Barack Obama or Condoleezza Rice to talk about blackness; 'cause it's-- if they talked about blackness in the real, true sense, it would be uncomfortable. But America can't be what America ought to be until-- America can look at itself, the good, the bad, so that we can work on making ourselves what we oughta be. —James Cone  Bill Moyers Interviews James Cone

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Obama Wins Iowa --A record outpouring of Democratic voters gave Obama a victory last night with 38 percent support, while John Edwards, with 29.8 percent, barely edged out Clinton, who finished third at 29.5 percent.  Obama's Iowa Win Bolsters Bid for New Hampshire

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Obama: What's in It for Us?—A poll this fall by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a black think tank, shows the wide disparity of support for Mr. Obama among blacks. While 75% of blacks who went to college had a favorable or very favorable view of the candidate—rising to 88% among blacks who went to graduate or professional school—support dipped to 62% among those with just a high-school degree and to 42% among blacks who haven't finished high school. A similar pattern shows up as income levels fall among blacks. And while 83% of blacks employed full time had a favorable view of Mr. Obama, just 55% of unemployed blacks did. . . . . A CNN poll released last week showed Mr. Obama with almost 60% support among black voters across the U.S., compared with 31% for Mrs. Clinton. Here in South Carolina, several polls have shown Mr. Obama leading Mrs. Clinton by about 8% overall with wide leads among black voters.Obama's Bid Turns Focus On Class Split Among Blacks

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Obama Supporter, Derrick, Responds to the Video and Explains Emotional View

Rudy, I had seen this interview that the young man did and I just had a chance to listen to his (Derrick's) follow up. If you haven't heard this young man, check out his interview and monologue. He's terrific--an immigrant from Ghana who's just been able to vote since coming to the U. S.—and he makes a passionate explanation of his reason for supporting Obama. There is hope for the country with young people like that.—Miriam

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Obama Close Second in New HampshireWith 91 percent of the electoral precincts reporting, Mrs. Clinton had 39 percent of the vote, Mr. Obama 36 percent, and John Edwards 17 percent. On the Republican side, Mr. McCain had 37 percent, Mr. Romney 32 percent and Mike Huckabee 11 percent. NYTimes

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Barack Obama claims big win in South Carolina—With 95 percent of precincts reporting, Obama had 55 percent of the vote. Clinton was second with 27 percent, followed by Edwards, with 18 percent. Obama's likely victory capped a heated contest in South Carolina, the first Democratic primary in the South and the first with a largely African-American electorate. CNN // “Tonight, the cynics that said what began in the snows of Iowa was just an illusion were told a different story by the good people of South Carolina,” Mr. Obama said . . .“After four great contests in every corner of this country, we have the most votes, the most delegates and the most diverse coalition of Americans we’ve seen in a long, long time.” NYTimes

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Obama Wins Super Tuesday: Wins Most States, Wins Most DelegatesObama won majority of delegates (908 to 884,  Time Delegate Count) and majority of states (Alabama, Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, North Dakota, and Utah), and tied in New Mexico. "It's a choice between going into this election with Republicans and independents already united against us, or going against their nominee with a campaign that has united Americans of all parties, from all backgrounds, from all races, from all religions, around a common purpose," he said. "It's a choice between having a debate with the other party about who has the most experience in Washington, or having one about who is most likely to change Washington, because that's a debate that we can win." WashingtonPost  

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Obama Defeats Clinton in 3-State SweepSenator Barack Obama won the primary in Louisiana (53 % to 39 %) and the caucuses in Nebraska (68% to 32%) and Washington (68% to 31%) on Saturday, defeating his rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, as the two scrambled for delegates in their fiercely contested battle for the Democratic nomination. "We won in Louisiana, we won in Nebraska, we won in Washington State," he said. "We won north, we won south, we won in between, and I believe we can win Virginia on Tuesday if you're ready to stand for change." Before today, Clinton held a slight edge over Obama in the delegate count—1,055 to 998—with 2,025 delegates needed to claim the Democratic nomination. . . . Obama stood to pick up as many as 170 delegates tonight. Washington Post

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Three More Primaries in the Bag—Senator Barack Obama rolled to victory by big margins in Virginia (64 to 35%), Maryland (60 to36%) and the District of Columbia (75 to 24%) on Tuesday, extending his winning streak over Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton to eight Democratic nominating contests since Saturday. Mr. Obama’s victories gave him a lead over Mrs. Clinton among pledged delegates . . .Obama aides calculate that he also leads in delegate counts that include so-called superdelegates, the party officers and elected officials who control 20 percent of the total delegates to the Democratic convention. . . . An exultant Mr. Obama told a rally in Madison, Wis.: “This movement wont stop until there’s change in Washington. Tonight, we’re on our way.” . . . . Mrs. Clinton . . . signaled that she would not vigorously contest two Democratic races next week, a primary in Wisconsin and a caucus in Hawaii . . . If she loses in those two states, she will be 0 for 10 in nominating contests from Feb. 5 to March 4, when Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont hold primaries.NYTimes

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Facing Zero Degrees Wisconsin Gives Obama Win Over Clinton— Senator Barack Obama (56%) won the Wisconsin primary on Tuesday by a comfortable margin, extending his victory streak to nine contests and forcing Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (43%) into a must-win scenario on March 4 as the nominating fight heads to the crucial states of Ohio and Texas. The victory reinforces Mr. Obama’s position as the front-runner in the Democratic race, even as the Clinton campaign hopes [for] a comeback next month when a large haul of delegates are up for grabs in Ohio and Texas. . . . “The change we seek is still months and miles away and we need the good people of Texas to help us get there,” Mr. Obama said in a speech in Houston. “We’re here because we believe that change is possible and that we have never needed it more than we do right now!” Almost two-thirds said Mr. Obama would be more likely to unite the country and about 55 percent considered him more likely to improve foreign relations. Democratic voters were evenly divided on whether Mrs. Clinton or Mr. Obama was most qualified to be commander-in-chief . . . NYTimes

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Vermont gives Obama 12th straight win—Barack Obama drew strong support across the board in Vermont on Tuesday from white women, working-class voters and other groups that have backed Hillary Clinton in earlier presidential contests, according to preliminary data from exit polls of voters. The Illinois senator had the backing of about six in 10 white women, a group that has been a crucial source of strength for his rival this year. In 22 previous competitive Democratic primaries, Obama has prevailed among that group only in New Mexico and his home state of Illinois. Clinton has had a cumulative 21-percentage-point margin among white women in the prior contests. Obama was easily ahead among both men and women overall in the largely white, liberal state, the early data showed. He was getting about six in 10 votes of people over age 65, self-described Democrats and voters without college degrees. He also was winning the votes of two-thirds of those earning less than $50,000 annually. Guardian

 

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Obama win WyomingBarack Obama’s campaign reclaimed lost momentum Saturday [9 March], beating Hillary Clinton by double digits in the Wyoming caucuses . . . With all precincts reporting, Obama had 61 percent to Clinton’s 38 percent. . . . The caucuses only offered 12 total delegates [Obama 7 delegates Clinton 5], . .  . . drew rare attention to the state as well as historic turnout. . . .  The candidates were already shifting their attention toward the Mississippi primary Tuesday, which offers 33 delegates. . . the next big contest for them is Pennsylvania, which votes April 22 and offers 158 delegates. It is the biggest prize remaining on the election calendar, and polls show Clinton ahead in the state.  .  .   Obama still holds a comfortable lead in delegates. After Saturday’s caucuses, the count stood at 1,578 for Obama and 1,468 for Clinton. It takes 2,025 to win.  FoxNews

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Obama coasts to victory in Mississippi PrimaryReturns from 92 percent of Mississippi's precincts showed Obama gaining 59 percent, to 39 percent for Clinton. Obama picked up at least 17 of Mississippi's 33 delegates to the Democratic National Convention, with five more to be awarded. He hoped for a win sizable enough to erase most if not all of  Clinton's 11-delegate gain from last week, when she won three primaries. The Illinois senator had 1,596 delegates to 1,484 for Clinton. It takes 2,025 to win the nomination. Neither of the two rivals appears able to win enough delegates through primaries and caucuses to prevail in their historic race for the nomination, a development that has elevated the importance of nearly 800 elected officials and party leaders who will attend next summer's national convention as unelected superdelegates. . . . After losing 12 straight primaries and caucuses, Clinton rebounded smartly last week with primary victories in Ohio, Texas and Rhode Island. Obama won the Vermont primary, led in the Texas caucuses, and suffered a loss of only 11 delegates. . . . Pennsylvania, Indiana, North Carolina, West Virginia, Kentucky, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Montana and South Dakota have primaries remaining. Yahoo

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Obama increases lead in delegate count—The Illinois Democrat won handily in the Mississippi Democratic primary Tuesday. Obama beat Clinton 61 percent to 37 percent with 99 percent of the precincts reporting. With the victory, Obama added 17 delegates to his total while Clinton picked up 11, CNN estimates. The Mississippi win was Obama's second win in a row, having won the Wyoming caucuses Saturday. . . . Clinton beat Obama 51 percent to 47 percent in the Texas primary that was also held on March 4, but Obama was expected to win a majority of the 228 Texas delegates due to his caucus win. Two-thirds of the state's 193 delegates were at stake at the primary, while the remaining third were decided by the caucuses. With the wins in Mississippi and Texas, Obama now leads Clinton 1,611 to 1,480 in the total delegate count, CNN estimates. Neither candidate is expected to obtain the 2,025 delegates needed to win the nomination outright before the national convention in August. CNN                                                                               Barack Obama inspired Bronx high school students (video)

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Senator Barack Obama won a commanding victory in the North Carolina primary on Tuesday [6 May 2008] and lost narrowly to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in Indiana, an outcome that injected a boost of momentum to Mr. Obama’s candidacy as the Democratic nominating contest entered its final month.

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Which Womanhood?"For too long the history of women has been a history of silence," Clinton told the World Conference then. But almost exactly a year later, she supported her husband's signing of the so-called Personal Responsibility Act, which successfully shifted responsibility for poverty in an affluent society off that society and onto the backs of poor mothers. Those moms barely got to say a word, while DC pols slandered and steamrollered them. Clinton writes in her autobiography Living History  that she would have opposed her husband over welfare reform if she thought it would hurt young children. (One wonders what she thinks happens to kids in poor working and over-working families.) On the campaign trail, she recalls her dedication to Marian Wright Edelman's Children's Defense Fund. But I can't forget Peter Edelman's resignation from the Department of Health and Human Services in protest. In 1996, welfare "reform" cut almost 800,000 legal immigrants off aid entirely and even denied them food stamps, but no one denies that it helped get Bill Clinton re-elected. "Welfare reform became a success for Bill" writes Hillary in Living History. It was all about politics, not poor people, said Edelman. The Nation    Hear Bill 'Blacken' Obama

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Clinton’s Hispanic edge—The ethnic gap jumped out at pollsters who surveyed Nevada caucus-goers. Clinton won the backing of white voters by 18 points and Hispanics by a more than 2-1 ratio over Obama, while Obama won 83 percent of the African-American voters. Clinton also was preferred by 55 percent of Hispanic Democratic voters, compared with 6 percent for Obama and less than 5 percent for Edwards and Richardson in a recent survey of Latino voters in the top five Hispanic states — California, Texas, Florida, New York and Illinois. . . . The notion of an undercurrent of political tension between African-Americans and Hispanics flows from the fact that blacks led the civil rights struggles that also benefit the faster-growing Latino population. Opponents of expanded immigration rights also have openly played to the rift by arguing that Latino immigrants are driving down wages or taking jobs that blacks could hold. While black voters express those concerns in polls, the immigration issue is not a deciding factor in their votes. Nor do those issues have anything to do with whether Latinos will vote for African-American candidates, according to political analysts. Politico

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Hillary: The Wrong ExperienceObama has advocated easing the Bush-imposed ban on Cuban-Americans visiting the island and sending money to their relatives. He makes a broader case for a new Cuba policy, arguing that capitalism, trade and travel will help break the regime's stranglehold on the country and help open things up. Clinton immediately disagreed, firmly supporting the current policy. This places her in the strange position of arguing, in effect, that her husband's Cuba policy was not hard-line enough. But this is really not the best way to understand Clinton's position. In all probability, she actually agrees with Obama's stand. She is just calculating that it would anger Cuban-Americans in Florida and New Jersey. This is the problem with Hillary Clinton. . . . The Clintons' careers have been shaped by the belief that for a Democrat to succeed, he or she had to work within this conservative ideological framework. Otherwise one would be pilloried for being weak on national security, partial to taxes and big government and out of touch with Middle America's social values. CubaWatch

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  Cynthia Mckinney Accepts Green Party Nomination‏  (video)  / Cynthia McKinney Deserves Your Support, Obama Does Not (Ford)

Hillary Wins Michigan and FloridaHillary celebrated a "victory" (No delegates won) in Florida that is not a victory. She campaigned after a promise not to campaign. . Many see it as a sign of desperation after the 2 to 1 defeat in South Carolina. . . . We are less than a week away from the 20-state-primary of February 5. . . . Since Iowa we have put considerable emotional energy into the primary process. Super Tuesday will probably be the decider of who will be the DNC nominee. Many progressives feel it is all for nought as far as the state of America affairs. But I for one won't ignore or denigrate Obama's charisma and oratory. Nor will I deny his growing national influence, and its symbolical representation of the need of Americans to feel better about their lives in a world filled with so much murder and mayhem? The innocence, the enthusiasm, and idealism  of the young are a balm for the soul. One cannot but admire the growing ranks of Obama girls and boys. Such full commitments always lead to a lost of innocence. Politics indeed makes us all a bit sordid and makes all a bit mad like hearing the songs of Sirens. —Rudy

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Unstoppable ObamaClinton can put forth all the policy proposals she likes – and many of them are admirable ones – but anyone can see that she’s of the same generation and even one of the same families that got us into this checkmate situation in the first place. True, some people miss Bill, although the nostalgia was severely undercut by his anti-Obama rhetoric in South Carolina, or maybe they just miss the internet bubble he happened to preside over. But even more people find dynastic successions distasteful, especially when it’s a dynasty that produced so little by way of concrete improvements in our lives. Whatever she does, the semiotics of her campaign boils down to two words – “same old.”

Obama is different, really different, and that in itself represents “change.” A Kenyan-Kansan with roots in Indonesia and multiracial Hawaii, he seems to be the perfect answer to the bumper sticker that says, “I love you America, but isn’t it time to start seeing other people?” As conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan has written, Obama’s election could mean the re-branding of America. An anti-war black president with an Arab-sounding name: See, we’re not so bad after all, world!

So yes, there’s a powerful emotional component to Obama-mania, and not just because he’s a far more inspiring speaker than his rival. We, perhaps white people especially, look to him for atonement and redemption. All of us, of whatever race, want a fresh start. That’s what “change” means right now: Get us out of here!Ehrenreich Blog

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Jill Nelson's NYTimes "Identity Politics" review of Randall Kennedy. Sellout: The Politics of Racial Betrayal. 228 pp. and Shelby Steele. A Bound Man: Why We Are Excited About Obama and Why He Can't Win  is worthy of a read. She seems to nail them to their underlying self exposure. A few excerpts:

Perhaps most troubling about both Steele and Kennedy is the virtual absence of any acknowledgment of the ways in which white racism, and the more subtle and prevalent white privilege, influence black identity and necessitate, for some, a strong collective identity as a defense against white power. “Obviously, black responsibility is the greatest — if not the only — transformative power available to blacks,” Steele says. But this is simply not true. Ditto for Kennedy’s assertion that “open expression of racial prejudice is politically and socially suicidal.” Tell that to Trent Lott, Jesse Helms, Strom Thurmond and Don Imus, to name but a few. Lott and Imus were finally taken to task for their racist comments, but after what has become an American ritual of denial, apology and a brief stay in the woodshed, they were back.

Steele and Kennedy say they have been attacked as a result of ideas that go against a black orthodoxy. It’s difficult to be sympathetic. Both men have been mightily rewarded. The irony is that the criticism these authors evoke increases their visibility. Kennedy knows this. “Supporters have praised me for being ‘brave.’ The fact is, however, that I have not felt threatened by any ideological enemies. At no point have I felt that I was putting myself into serious jeopardy.”

In truth, black orthodoxy, as embodied both by the traditional entrenched black (male) political leadership and by the more recently emerged black (male) academics and public intellectuals, is passing into oblivion. These books have a Rip Van Winkle feel to them, as if the writers fell asleep at a crucial moment and missed a seismic shift. Both books, especially Steele’s, tell us more about what has been than what lies ahead.NYTimes

[Jill Nelson is the author of Volunteer Slavery: My Authentic Negro Experience and, most recently, Finding Martha'sVineyard ]

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Colin Powell Endorses Obama

Drops the Hammer on McCain and Palin

Runoko in Papua New Guinea

Travel Writing by Runoko Rashidi

 

Letter Demanding Bailout Conditions

A Call for Common Sense

Obama Notes

Glen Ford and Rudy Lewis

Dear Rudy,

It aggravates me to no end that folks do not understand that Obama is playing the same game as Randall Kennedy - addressing the racial anxieties of white men by as thoroughly de-racializing the discourse (itself a blatant race game) as Kennedy did in giving the OK for whites to use the word "nigger." Obama is a hustler of Kennedy's own kind, only on a much larger scale: world power. Everything he says is at Black people's expense, but Blacks are euphoric that "one of us" has a podium to say it.

Why can't we take Obama's statements on war, Katrina, Jena, etc. at face value? White folks do. That's why they are voting for him: because of his implicit and often explicit promises to take race off the table. That means "us" off the table!

I'm tired of all this phony academic and fake literary exploration of our collective navels that serves as diversion from what is right in front of our faces. Obama wins because he has courted white folks, especially males - the most backward demographic in the nation. He makes promises to them, to betray us. And we love it.

I don't anticipate, at this point, changing you or anybody else's minds about joining the Obama-bration, and calling it a "movement." In fact, it is a capitulation, and history will prove it so, much sooner than you might think.

I say this with all love and respect. Sincerely, Glen

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Glen, I have no problem whatsoever with your criticism of Obama. Yours is fairly gentle and fully rational compared to that of Pinkney's at Black Commentator. We need persons to keep the heat under Obama's feet and wherever one might apply it.

I am not into an "Obama-bration." Nor am I part of an Obama movement. Someone has to be the Democratic nominee. I prefer it to be Obama than Clinton, for reasons other than Obama's world power politics. That is the long and short of it. And I think that is where most black people are at this point.

My only concern with some of the black radical Obama critics is that they as it often occurs are too far out in front of the people that they end up castigating the majority of black voters, that is to say, they have no respect for what these voters see and where they are. I think there is a political danger in those kinds of "I know better than you" attitudes.

Of course, few if any of the masses read either Kennedy or Steele. Their audience is primarily liberal and conservative whites and some educated blacks. I do not align myself with them. I am interested in a rhetoric that counters or shoots holes in their oiled up arguments. Thus I admire what Jill Nelson has accomplished in her reviews of their books. Hers is in great contrast to that of many black reviewers who soft pedal in order to get their reviews published.—Rudy

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More News Excerpts

Transforming our politics + the “Asian vote” in CA—Name recognition played a huge role in what had happened. But there is a clear difference between Obama and Clinton. The New York Magazine recently described Obama’s campaign as a “white boy campaign“. Despite the usual spin on race and ethnicity from mainstream media, I find that this article’s analysis is incredibly off. Obama’s campaign is a break from the old way of politics. His campaign is about movement building, not name recognition. What electrifies me about Obama is that he is talking about transforming our politics and ourselves, not giving out quick, token favors to our leaders and figureheads. . . . Remember, it was the media that asked if Obama can “transcend race” — Obama never spoke these words himself because his message is not about colorblindness at all.

I’m confident the numbers will change and that more Asian Americans will change support for Obama’s campaign. In some weays, our “loss” in California is very positive because it is continuing the contest between Obama and Clinton, giving us an important moment to talk to our community, peers, friends and family members. We can really highlight what sets Obama apart from Clinton. I don’t think we are last minute at all — Transformation is very different from identity and coalition politics, which is what Clinton is solely relying upon. We’ve seen the upsurge in the last two weeks, where folks went to the poll en masse to change their vote for Obama. Let’s keep building and reaching our communities.Softheart WordPress

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On the California Primary: The Future is Now—The Obama campaign is about transcending the “minority politics” mentality that carves us all up into “interest groups” and pushes the hot buttons that reinforce our sense of victimization and vilify the other side. Mainstream observers focus on Obama’s invocation of “hope” as a rhetorical device, which appeals to the common decency in all of us to both transcend partisanship and support an agenda driven by the discourse of change. No doubt this is part of the appeal he is making, especially as he seeks to fashion himself as someone who can unite voters in both “blue” and “red” states and also “change the way Washington does business.”

But I sense there is something much deeper to both Obama as an individual and his campaign, which has the potential to develop into a movement. Obama has a deep respect for what historian Charles Payne (in I’ve Got the Light of Freedom) has called the “organizing tradition” that sustained the Black freedom struggle in the South. He recognizes the debt we owe the likes of Martin Luther King, Ella Baker, and Rosa Parks, but more importantly the lessons we must learn from their struggles. If you are just a “minority leader,” then you’re not really a leader at all. If you are only fighting for your “fair share” of the riches controlled by those in power, you’ll never address the root causes of oppression. Above all is the sense that none of us can be free in America until we change the whole country. Obama speaks in poetry and he is writing a song of redemption.Scott Kurashige WordPress

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SEIU MEMBERS ENDORSE SEN. BARACK OBAMA (February 15, 2008)—Washington, DC—Nurses, childcare workers, janitors and other service workers endorsed Sen. Barack Obama for president today, calling him the candidate with the best vision, best plan and best strategy to lead the country to a new American Dream. . . . Members of the Service Employees International Union endorsed Obama to achieve economic justice, quality, affordable healthcare for every American, the freedom for workers to unite in unions, and an end to the Iraq war. . . . “This is about more than one election. It’s about building for the next generation of America," said SEIU President Andy Stern. “Barack Obama is creating the broadest and deepest coalition of voters we’ve ever seen.”  . . . . With 1.9 million members, SEIU is the fastest-growing union in North America. Focused on uniting workers in three sectors to improve their lives and the services they provide, SEIU is the largest health care union, including hospitals, nursing homes, and home care; the largest property services union, including building cleaning and security; and the second largest public employee union.—SEIU

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BARACK & BARAKA—In a Harlem Church, locals debate the Obama message with famed poet Amiri Baraka.—The quiet thickened. Whatever Obama meant; whatever energy he represented, seemed far away. Amiri Baraka got in. He eased behind the microphone and spoke with beat poet rhythms, sending ripples of laughter through the audience. “We got to move beyond this is-he-black-enough question. He’s blacker than Hillary. Hell, he’s at least hooked up to the Motherland. Most African-Americans are African indirectly.” His foot bounced on beat as he gripped the microphone. “We can’t stay on the sidelines calling names; we got to use the energy of this campaign to mobilize the black community. We are not going to have a revolution. The most we can do is create a people’s democracy.” Baraka pulled the audience out of its sullenness, but Dr. Tony Monteiro from Temple University in Philadelphia stepped into the echo of Baraka, and flashed history. “I’d like to use a historical analogy,” Monteiro began. “W.E.B. Du Bois said of Booker T. Washington that he filled a particular psychological need that whites had. They wanted to take race off the table. They wanted to build empire and move past the guilt of slavery. Booker fit that role. Does Obama fit that role today?”—NYPress

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The Grand Old White Party Confronts Obama—Whatever the potency of his political skills and message, Mr. Obama is also riding a demographic wave. The authors of the new book “Millennial Makeover,” Morley Winograd and Michael D. Hais, point out that the so-called millennial generation (dating from 1982) is the largest in American history, boomers included, and that roughly 40 percent of it is African-American, Latino, Asian or racially mixed. One in five millennials has an immigrant parent. It’s this generation that is fueling the excitement and some of the record turnout of the Democratic primary campaign, and not just for Mr. Obama.

Even by the low standards of his party, Mr. McCain has underperformed at reaching millennials in the thriving culture where they live. His campaign’s effort to create a MySpace-like Web site flopped. His most-viewed appearances on YouTube are not viral videos extolling him or replaying his best speeches but are instead sendups of his most reckless foreign-policy improvisations — his threat to stay in Iraq for 100 years and his jokey warning (sung to the tune of the Beach Boys’ version of “Barbara Ann”) that he will bomb Iran. In the vast arena of the Internet he has been shrunk to Grumpy Old White Guy, the G.O.P. brand incarnate.

The theory of the McCain candidacy is that his “maverick” image will bring independents (approaching a third of all voters) to the rescue. But a New York Times-CBS News poll last month found that independents have even a lower opinion of Mr. Bush, the war, the surge and the economy than the total electorate and skew slightly younger. Though the independents in this survey went 44 percent to 32 percent for Mr. Bush over John Kerry in 2004, they now prefer a Democratic presidential candidate over a Republican by 44 percent to 27 percent.

Mr. McCain could get lucky, especially if Mrs. Clinton gets the Democratic nomination and unites the G.O.P., and definitely if she tosses her party into civil war by grabbing ghost delegates from Michigan and Florida. But those odds are dwindling. More likely, the Republican Party will face Mr. Obama with a candidate who reeks even more of the past and less of change than Mrs. Clinton does.NYTimes

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Transformation time—Texas voters have two remarkable candidates from which to choose in the March 4 Democratic presidential primary. Regardless of the outcome of this state's vote and those across the nation, history will be made. Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama represent change, but in decidedly different ways. . . . On an international stage, his face representing the United States of America would speak volumes to a world community that has turned away from assisting this great nation.

The expectation and pressure on him to deliver change on a worldwide scale will be tremendous. If he continues to deliver the kind of turnout at the polls that he has shown so far, he would move onto that stage with a commanding mandate from the American people. The historic turnouts in the Democratic primaries and caucuses thus far can't all be credited to Obama. Clinton is a worthy and experienced opponent who has drawn her share of new voters. But Obama is smart and experienced in working directly with low- and middle-class Americans to better their lives, and he brings a message of hope that the country needs in this moment. Yes, we know, hope is not a strategy. But it can get people working together to find one.

The Star-Telegram recommends Barack Obama in the Democratic primary for president. Star-Telegram

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For Obama: The Chronicle endorses the senator from Illinois for the Democratic presidential nomination.—The presidency of the United States is a powerful bully pulpit. The occupant of the White House must not only issue orders, but also inspire and advocate for all Americans. Of the two finalists for the Democratic presidential nomination, the Chronicle believes Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois is best-qualified by life experience, skill and temperament to be the standard bearer for his party. In a conference call, Obama told the Chronicle editorial board that "more than any other candidate, I can bridge some of the partisan as well as racial and religious divides that have developed in this country that prevent us from getting things done." . . . The 46-year-old Obama has expanded his base of support, winning new legions of supporters. The more people see and hear him, the more they like him. As the Hawaiian-born son of a Muslim Kenyan father and an Anglo Midwesterner, the devoutly Christian Obama transcends race and religion. His life has been one of involvement with disadvantaged Chicago residents, excellence at Harvard Law School and eight years as an Illinois state senator. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2004, only the third African-American to serve there since Reconstruction. Obama is both the epitome of the American Dream and well-positioned to reach out to an international community alienated by recent U.S. go-it-alone policies.

The passion and excitement that Obama has brought to the race can only stimulate more citizens to participate in the electoral process. The Chronicle urges Texas Democrats to cast what could be decisive ballots for his presidential nomination.Houston Chronicle

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Mr. McCain says . . . “Americans are not deceived by an eloquent but empty call for change,” . . . “promises no more than a holiday from history.”. . .  Mr. McCain says: “I’m not the youngest candidate, but I am the most experienced.” . . .  Mr. McCain ends with, “I don’t seek the office out of a sense of entitlement. I owe America more than she has ever owed me. I have been an imperfect servant of my country for many years. I have never lived a day, in good times or bad, that I haven’t been proud of the privilege.” Transcript

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Clinton's campaign outflanked by Obama's ground troops—Obama is inspirational, of course, but in a particular way: His message has been constant since his boffo Nov. 10 speech at an Iowa Democratic dinner. He is less specific about policies than he is in describing the frustrations voters feel—with Bush, with Washington, with divisiveness, with partisanship. His consistent promise is not to pass a detailed program, but to change the mood and style of politics. Clinton has offered experience and some well-thought-out policies. That might be enough in a different year. But when it comes to a larger theme, her campaign has been all over the lot. You can tell a campaign has difficulty establishing a message when its slogans keep changing. In recent weeks, the Clinton campaign has featured one banner after another: "Big Challenges, Real Solutions," "Working for Change, Working for You," "Ready for Change, Ready to Lead" and "Solutions for America." Obama has stuck confidently with the slogan "Change You Can Believe In." Clinton must either get voters to stop believing in the change Obama promises, or make them an alternative Big Offer that they can believe in more. Seattle Times

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Clinton Sharpens Attack Against Obama“It is time to get real,” Mrs. Clinton, of New York, said. “To get real about how we actually win this election and get real about the challenges facing America. It’s time we moved from good words to good works, from sound bites to sound solutions.” It is a familiar theme, but Mrs. Clinton delivered it with fresh intensity after the crushing defeats in Wisconsin and Hawaii on Tuesday. . . “Today, Senator Clinton told us that there was a choice in this race and you know, I couldn’t agree with her more,” Mr. Obama said. “But contrary to what she’s been saying, it’s not a  choice between speeches and solutions, it’s a choice between a politics that offers more of the same divisions and distractions that didn’t work in South Carolina and didn’t work in Wisconsin and will not work in Texas.” . .

One day after victories in Wisconsin and Hawaii, Mr. Obama drew about 17,000 people to a rally at the Reunion Arena in downtown Dallas. While the primary is on March 4, early voting began on Tuesday and Mr. Obama encouraged his supporters to cast their ballots soon. “As this movement continues, as this campaign builds strength, there are those who will tell you not to believe,” Mr. Obama said. “There are those who will tell you it can’t be done.” Saying he offered voters a chance to break from the policies of the past years, including the war in Iraq and the current economic situation, Mr. Obama said the race was a choice “that is not just about turning a page on the politics of the past but of turning the page on the policies of the past.”

David Plouffe, the campaign manager for Mr. Obama, said that Mr. Obama had amassed a 159-delegate lead over Mrs. Clinton, based on his campaign tally. Following a win in Wisconsin by 17 percentage points, Mr. Plouffe said Mrs. Clinton would need to win in Texas and Ohio by double-digits to gain an edge in the fight for delegates. “We have opened up a big and meaningful delegate lead,” Mr. Plouffe said, speaking in a conference call with reporters. “They are going to have to win landslides to reverse it.” NYTimes

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Dear Friend,

Voters in places like Atlanta, Brooklyn, St. Louis, and Inglewood have made clear their choice for president: Barack Obama. So why are some members of the Congressional Black Caucus threatening to use their power as "superdelegates" to undermine those votes and nominate Hillary Clinton? Voters should decide elections--not politicians. And members of the Congressional Black Caucus should amplify the political voice of their constituents, not silence it. I've joined ColorOfChange.org in demanding that the CBC to listen to the voters; let's tell them to vote with the people, not against us: http://www.colorofchange.org/superd/?id=2325-521384. Thanks. Cassandra Wells, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Marketing, Morehouse College, 404-681-2800 x2565

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Obama wins Democrats Abroad primaryBarack Obama won the Democrats Abroad global primary in results announced Thursday, giving him 11 straight victories in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. The Illinois senator won the primary in which Democrats living in other countries voted by Internet, mail and in person, according to results released by the Democrats Abroad, an