- BIG NEWS:
- Sarah Palin
- |
- John McCain
- |
- Future Fuel
- |
- Rick Perry
- |
It's over. The long primary season and the fight for the presidency are finished. Everything crystallized on the night of November 4th when Barack Obama took the stage with his wife and two young daughters. The scene felt like a contemporary version of 1960, when John F. Kennedy captured the imagination of the country. The nation was swept with a tide of idealism, and the belief that every individual could make a difference.
Now that excitement and euphoria have given way to quiet thoughts about the way that
history works. There is the understanding that monumental events -- a turning
point, revelation, or even the life's blood of some -- becomes the stuff of textbooks for
others.
Each person has a different reference point for the election of Barack Obama.
A stream of consciousness went through my head. One of the thoughts included
Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner - the three civil rights workers who went to Mississippi
in 1964 to register black voters -- and ended up being brutally murdered.
In an e-mail to my 14-year-old son, a Pennsylvania acquaintance he met on a trip wrote that if Obama were elected president, African-Americans would "have it so easy." Disturbed by the remark he wrote back, "Obama is going to be the president for all Americans. I think your comment and the way you phrased it was racist." It reminded me of how far we still have yet to go.
But it is a new dawn. The rest of the world is seeing America differently. We are seeing ourselves differently. That is a powerful start.
WASHINGTON — Republicans lined up Sunday in opposition...
WASHINGTON — Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said she's not...
Long before $150,000-gate, Sarah Palin seemed to...
The Obamas dropped by the Vatican on Friday, with daughters...
Hermione herself, Emma Watson, charmed David Letterman and...
"What's for dinner?" A lot of us ask that question right...
I'm pleased to announce the launch today of...
"The earliest documented performance with an...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The former fiance of Gov. Sarah Palin's...
Think Progress flags David Brooks telling...
Cher's son Chaz Bono made his first public appearance since announcing...
The Daily Show's John Oliver is unhappy with mainstream journalism, and even drearier...
For this week's installment of their "Lunch with the FT" feature the...
Al Franken's been anointed as Minnesota's junior senator, but how did the...
VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI stressed the church's opposition to abortion and stem cell...
In case you haven't gotten enough behind-the-scenes industrial food production footage...
What are your greatest strengths? I am...
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
I believe it was a deeply reflective day for America.
Here is my tribute to the President and his family.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f5QigRkg9G8
Enjoy!
I was around in 1960. Yes, it was quite remarkable then, but this is monumental, a true moment in history.
Don't screw it up, America. You have just managed to redeem yourselves in the eyes of the world. However, it's only the beginning. Now you have to prove that you really are the best country on the planet.
You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in or