Humble or Bumble? Obama's New Diplomacy
Next thing you know, Obama will be apologizing for us speaking English. Bad enough he keeps sticking foreign words into his foreign speeches just to show them he "gets it" or something.
Next thing you know, Obama will be apologizing for us speaking English. Bad enough he keeps sticking foreign words into his foreign speeches just to show them he "gets it" or something.
Aaron Zelinsky | Posted 03.27.2009 | Politics
Here are the ten sources behind the most memorable lines of Obama's address.
Kit Gallant | Posted 02.19.2009 | Politics
King argued that it was the distorted state of the most fundamental conception of American political and social economy that was, in and of itself, responsible for social and economic injustice.
Amb. Alexandros P. Mallias | Posted 12.15.2008 | Politics
The Greek classics are no longer simply food for ivory tower intellectuals, but are entering the mainstream of society and politics, as food for thought, as the tools for living "an examined life."
Joseph Romm | Posted 10.24.2008 | Politics
Debates are won by the candidate who presents the most compelling and persuasive character. If I can convince you I'm an honest, straight talker, you'll believe what else I say. If I can't, you won't.
Joseph Romm | Posted 09.07.2008 | Politics
You can't debunk a myth by verbally repeating it. This is actually very basic stuff, so it is surprising that neither Obama nor his team understand it.
Jerry Weissman | Posted 08.12.2008 | Politics
Everyone now is focused sharply on Obama's rhetoric, specifically having to do with verbal focus: Self- or other-directed, exclusive or inclusive, "I" or "you"?
Stefan Sirucek | Posted 08.03.2008 | Politics
The speech is a brisk, affecting affair. There are big cheers when Obama talks about nuclear disarmament and dealing with climate change, but the crowd's response to "defeating terror" is noticeably muted.
William Fisher | Posted 08.03.2008 | Politics
There's one wall that Barack wants to pull down that I think needs to be affirmatively left in place, or, to be more precise, reconstructed: the one between church and state.
Carol Felsenthal | Posted 08.02.2008 | Politics
Is the McCain campaign borrowing from Hillary Clinton? Consider the similarity between her remark from last March and a McCain spokesman's response to Obama's speech in Berlin.
Jerry Weissman | Posted 07.30.2008 | Politics
The association of Obama with Kennedy was due, in large part, to their shared oratorical talents. This week's Berlin speech makes that association even more pertinent.
Joe Cutbirth | Posted 07.16.2008 | Politics
We're seven weeks from the biggest speech in a generation by any figure in American politics. If you can be there in person, go. Take your children. It's an event you'll remember the rest of your lives.
Chicago Tribune | Christi Parsons and John McCormick | Posted 03.28.2008 | Politics
As Barack Obama's town hall meeting stretched into its second hour, it was clear the candidate wasn't anywhere close to finishing. Obama had given an...
Peter Dreier | Posted 03.28.2008 | Home
The Clinton campaign message was transparent: they are trying to pigeonhole Obama as the "black" candidate -- not simply as a matter of pigmentation but as a matter of voter appeal.
Rick Horowitz | Posted 05.14.2009 | World