Obama: The Change Candidate Abroad, Too
Obama's candidacy has generated effective grassroots initiatives in the States and it might well do the same on this side of the Atlantic, which would be a major change in many European states.
Obama's candidacy has generated effective grassroots initiatives in the States and it might well do the same on this side of the Atlantic, which would be a major change in many European states.
Susan Neiman | Posted 07.31.2008 | Politics
In Berlin, Obama gave his hearers hope, not hysteria -- the hope for an America that could not only work with European nations, but even be a model for them.
Logan Nakyanzi Pollard | Posted 07.30.2008 | Politics
What I'm really saying is Americans are unconscious. You can see it in the verbs. This isn't a value judgment, I am just intrigued by what gets in and...
Steve Posner | Posted 07.27.2008 | Politics
Why was Obama waxing patriotic during his foreign trip instead of touting a universal spirituality that removes the need to make cultural and political distinctions?
David Mixner | Posted 07.27.2008 | Politics
As I recounted in my initial thoughts about the Obama Berlin speech, I recalled that Gandhi said we have to value our words as much as our actions. Obama understands that, and our history has shown it to be true.
Frank Schaeffer | Posted 07.26.2008 | Politics
Presidential contests are all about comparisons. What is different this year is that there has been a total role reversal -- the new candidate looks seasoned and the old hand looks inexperienced.
Steve Clemons | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
Chris Weigant | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
Be careful what you wish for, John. That seems to be the message of the week for Senator John McCain. He took some campaign consultant's idea a few w...
William Bradley | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
Here are six reasons McCain is very fortunate he ended up at Schmidt's Sausage Haus in Ohio Friday, rather than on a pitching oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico.
Marc Kusnetz | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
Each time Obama steps on a new stage, the press criticizes his rhetoric as high-falutin' but devoid of content. Do they think Berlin was the perfect time to announce a new initiative for the earned income tax credit?
John Tomasic | Posted 07.25.2008 | Home
For anyone who hasn't surfed over yet, PrezVid has a great three-part line up of videos, a series of what what you could call "the American Freedom Sp...
Amb. Marc Ginsberg | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
From Kabul to Baghdad to Jerusalem, in Berlin and now in Paris, Obama's conduct abroad has earned him the right to be considered a respected presumptive commander-in-chief.
Jerry Weissman | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
If I could forecast stock performance as I do rhetoric, I could be the King of Wall Street. In my post of July 22, "What Will Barack Say in Berlin?" I...
Jackson Williams | Posted 07.25.2008 | Politics
The final piece to the puzzle may well be adding Clinton's populist economic message to Obama's call for "change we can believe in."
Steve Clemons | Posted 07.24.2008 | Politics
Obama's speech had high points and deserves applause -- but it's ultimately forgettable because he failed to deliver the most important lines where they most mattered.
Lea Lane | Posted 07.24.2008 | Politics
To avoid stress, and especially since Bush's re-election, I've avoided mentioning that I'm American, and have even resorted to saying that I'm from Ottawa, a lovely capital city I know a bit about.
The Huffington Post | Dan Duray/Katharine Zaleski | Posted 07.24.2008 | Politics
Major news organizations are drawing comparisons between Barack Obama's speech in Berlin today and those of John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan. (They w...
Abbie Tingstad | Posted 07.24.2008 | Home
The equivalent of the dramatic Kennedy or Reagan speeches would have had to take place elsewhere. Sprinkling a speech on freedom with Farsi or Pashto in Afghanistan would have sent a message.
Frank Schaeffer | Posted 07.24.2008 | Politics
Tens of thousands of people who have been highly critical of our country gather to hear an American political figure. They wait, as we do, for the new day.
Jacob Heilbrunn | Posted 07.21.2008 | Politics
Usually, William Kristol deploys his New York Times column to try and provide John McCain with some extra intellectual firepower. But today he leaps into the breach to assist Obama. Or so he would have it.
Reuters | Posted 07.05.2008 | Business
A man tore the head from a controversial waxwork figure of Adolf Hitler on the opening day of Berlin's Madame Tussauds museum on Saturday, police said...
Bennet Kelley | Posted 11.18.2007 | Politics
It is striking how the Democrats have gone from the party that stood at the Berlin Wall and expressed American resolve by declaring "ich bin ein Berliner" to the party of "ich bin ein Girlie Man."
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Paul Hunt | Posted 08.13.2008 | Home