Saturday night a bunch of us on Twitter watched the C-SPAN broadcast of the Democratic Party dinner in Milwaukee where both Clinton and Obama spoke.
Clinton was unusually good, but as Frank Rich says in an excellent NY Times column, "It's hara-kiri for a politician to step into the shadow of even a mediocre speech by Barack Obama."
Obama was far from mediocre Saturday night. His speech was of such high caliber, so motivational, even in anger Obama is the man, he keeps getting better and now he's in league with the best American political oratory. The man is only 46.
The speech is archived on the C-SPAN site. We're having trouble with it on Macs but it's reported to work well on Windows.
So many of us want to get on board the Obama Express. This is the America we want. This is the leadership we've been lacking. You have to go back to Kennedy's "Ask Not" plea to find a leader as inspiring as Obama.
And inspiration matters -- totally.
How else are we going to get past the wedge issue politics of the last N years. We need some good strong glue to connect us again.
The last eight years have been so terrible. The US government did more to help Iraqis than it did to help Americans. 49 percent of the electorate was held in contempt and then after the election the other 51 percent was held in contempt as well. No one but the cronies of the Bush family were given access to power. Iraqi politicians had more influence on our government than Democrats.
Yesterday I heard that 5 percent of the homes in Detroit are in some form of foreclosure. It's almost as bad in parts of the sunbelt, California, Arizona, Florida. And the mortgage crisis isn't over. There are more cliffs in the coming months, more junk mortgages whose payments balloon in the summer and fall, so there will be more foreclosures, more families going bankrupt. Those who think the government will bail them out should think about how effective government help has been in Louisiana and Mississippi, American states that are still economically under water, almost three years after Katrina.
New York venture capitalist/blogger Fred Wilson is concerned about the superdelegates thwarting the will of the electorate and ratifying the wrong candidate for president. I'm not worried. Read the Frank Rich article I linked to above. Obama is a freight train. The superdelegates aren't stupid, they can see, better than you and I, where the power is flowing. They want to be on the right side of history. And Obama is not naive, he's running a campaign on them now, just as he ran campaigns in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, etc.
Obama will sweep the remaining primaries, and by March 4 it will be apparent to everyone but perhaps Bill and Hillary that it's over. The superdelegates will adjust to get in line with reality.
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"The superdelegates aren't stupid, they can see, better than you and I, where the power is flowing."
I hate these kinds of hearts-and-flowers tributes to the academy of superdelegates -- who are, after all, nothing but pols and hacks.
Let's try this: "The superdelegates aren't stupid, they can see, better than you and I, where the MONEY is flowing."
Obama has contributed $698,200, Clinton $205,500 (Capital Eye, http://www.capitaleye.org/inside.asp?ID=336) And if I were Clinton, I'd ask for the return of the $10K I donated to Kennedy's coffers -- she could probably get a better return in cattle futures.
train wreck
I've noticed how people are dwelling on a few points like how Obama borrowed a few useful phrases from a friend to use in his speeches (kind of like how I might borrow a riff or two from my favorite musicians when I'm doing my job). They've also pointed out that he knows a few people in the Chicago area (of all places) that don't have sterling reputations.
You know what I call that? Desperate flailing by the media, his opponents, and anyone looking for some reason to shoot him down. Is that the best you can do?
i've noticed the media, the gop and the clintons are stepping up their attacks on him. on observation alone, it's remarkable to see how unexpected this has been: clinton went from presumptive (nee "inevitable") nominee to "desperate" candidate; while obama went from "good speaker" to "inspirational leader." as an obama supporter, i'm hoping all this negative "gotcha" political stuff will end soon. it's not making the party, nor the other candidates, look good.
nice article! http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/The_Obama_Express
"by March 4 it will be apparent to everyone but perhaps Bill and Hillary that it's over."
Its over right now. Its just that the Clinton are in denial.
America wants positive, transformational change, and that doesn't mean Hillary.
America wants positive, tranformational change so badly it's actually willing to believe that's what Obama offers!
I'll let you be in my dream if I can be in yours. Bob Dylan said that. Let's all wake up before its too late. I said that.
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