So I Hear Obama’s Black

I also hear he is going to fix everything in the entire world that is wrong.

I didn’t vote for the dude because he’s black.  In fact, for nearly the entire campaign, no one wanted to breathe about his skin colour.  Was it important to everyone?  I don’t know.  I don’t think it was to those of us who love him for his policies and the optimistic attitude that he embodies — okay, or, at least I didn’t think about his skin colour.

I thought about how his policies would impact my life & my family’s.  I thought about what I wanted American citizenship to represent to — AND ABOUT — my daughter.

Now, I can understand how blacks (I hate the term “African-American” — unless you were born in another country, we’re all just Americans) see something more messianic and representative about the triumph of civil rights in Obama’s inauguration.  I don’t.

Civil rights are not just one skin colour versus another.  The nation is writing discrimination against people based on their sexual preference into law; that is just an immense (and disgusting, and unacceptable) gap in the ‘civil rights’ movement.  Discrimination doesn’t start and end with black and white.

Now, yes, I do have faith in Obama to have a successful, inspiring, and vibrant presidency.  But I think a huge part of that happening lies on the shoulders of those who voted him into office.  Part of his platform was based on service to your fellow man.  If his success inspires more people to get involved in their communities through volunteer work or even just being more active in their local political scene, then he’s accomplished a great deal.  I hate that so many of his supporters just want him to fix everything.  He can’t.  He is a single man, the face of an entire political system, and his word is not the law.  If he thought it was, we wouldn’t have voted for him.

The media coverage of all this is sickening.  I had to turn off the television the other day when CNN was covering Obama’s train ride from Philly (?) to DC.  The newscasters have no bloody idea how to report relevant information.  In between waxing rhapsodic about how Obama appeared at the back of the train to wave to people, Anderson Cooper managed to squeeze out a casual statement about a unilateral ceasefire being reached in Gaza.  A moment later they were right back onto the entire BUT OBAMA IS ON A TRAIN JUST LIKE LINCOLN RODE ON A TRAIN!! topic.

A unilateral ceasefire?  A step towards peace, maybe, or at least more humane treatment of the Palestinian people?  Well shit, that doesn’t hold a candle to Obama on a train!

Gahhh… too bad I have no interest in actually participating in television media.

Screencaps.

History we can believe in:

barackobama

bloomberg

chicagotribune

cnn

foxnews

guardiancouk

huffingtonpost

nytimes

politico

Oh and mommy?  That $20 you sent me?

election-night-019a

I spent a lot of time looking down at my bump at Obama’s face over Maia, and smiling.  My baby girl may be growing up in Canada, but I am honoured that she will be an American, too.

Canada Votes Obama

Canada Votes Obama is holding an election watch party at Wayne Gretzky’s Restaurant in downtown Toronto tonight, so that’s where we’ll be!  I am totally stoked.  A friend offered to come as my designated drinker (haha) which I thought was very generous of him, and I haven’t seen him since the start of September, so that’ll be cool.  Hopefully some of our other boys can make it out, too.  It’ll be great to watch the results coming in with a totally supportive crowd — and of course my baby girl!

Obama’s TV Address

I missed it on television, but it was fortunately posted almost immediately to youtube:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtREqAmLsoA]

In case you missed it & are interested :]  I love this man.

Late night politics

You wanna push us, McCain? You wanna attack our man’s character with your lies, sic your snotty little pitbull on him for a tenuous association nowhere as in depth as you wish it were, and pray that maybe selling your soul will work out for you?

http://www.keatingeconomics.com/

Let’s show our fellow Americans just how much you take your money, and ours, for granted.

EDIT: I realized I should say something positive about my candidate once in awhile rather than always bashing the easy targets. I won’t lie, social issues are the most important to me; I’m fairly fatalistic about the economy and whatnot — I believe those things will work themselves out in time, because they’re widely regarded as too important not to and no one in America wants to be poor. But it’s easier to overlook the “small” things that make a huge difference in people’s lives, and there are too many challenges unique to women that go unrecognized, or circumstances under which women are not regarded as equals to men, which infuriates me. Obama/Biden stances on women’s rights here: http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/womenissues.

Because it’s the one right everyone can agree on…

… the right to vote.  So use it.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/v/olpCyDA4kYA&hl=en&fs=1]

Thanks to Scary Mommy for posting this originally!

Still My Favourite

Love this image:

And in case you don’t know his economic policies as to exactly how he’s got it, check this post out.

Deepak Chopra on Palin

Having just turned off the TV because Dr. Phil was too busy calling Sarah Palin a “single mother” to check his facts (“Oh, sure, she has a husband now…”), I found it to be a delightful juxtaposition to stumble across a link to the following post on Chopra’s page:

She is the reverse of Barack Obama, in essence his shadow, deriding his idealism and turning negativity into a cause for pride. In psychological terms the shadow is that part of the psyche that hides out of sight, countering our aspirations, virtue, and vision with qualities we are ashamed to face: anger, fear, revenge, violence, selfishness, and suspicion of “the other.” For millions of Americans, Obama triggers those feelings, but they don’t want to express them. He is calling for us to reach for our higher selves, and frankly, that stirs up hidden reactions of an unsavory kind. (Just to be perfectly clear, I am not making a verbal play out of the fact that Sen. Obama is black. The shadow is a metaphor widely in use before his arrival on the scene.) I recognize that psychological analysis of politics is usually not welcome by the public, but I believe such a perspective can be helpful here to understand Palin’s message.

Click here for the full text. It’s intriguing to read about politics from that angle for once.

Here’s some sex-ed for you, McCain:

Go. Fuck. Yourself.

You are a slimeball. Period. Good job on running that clean, honourable campaign you promised us all during the primaries.

Not four more years… four more months.

Asshole.

Barack Obama 01

Let me make it clear: I love this man, and I hope with both of the hearts beating in me that he becomes President.  It’s been a long time since I’ve been able to say I’m proud to be an American without a twinge of sarcasm (along with deep, abiding guilt, which I’ll touch on later), and I think that he will restore my love in a country that is deeply wounded.

So tonight, Chris and I were snuggled on the couch watching CNN’s Candidates Revealed series, since we missed the first broadcast, and every once in awhile Chris would mutter, “Fucking elitist.”  Then we’d both laugh.  How can anyone in the American public earnestly put the ‘elitist’ label on this man?  A mixed race man born to a single mother, raised in a community without strong role models of his father’s race, one who lost his way as so many of us did on the way to becoming an adult?  We learned that for his first job out of college (which was not, btw, Harvard), he bought a junky car just so he could get around and be a community organizer.  We learned about him helping a development where asbestos lingered in the homes — but the government only planned to remove it from the manager’s office, and not even inform anyone else; Obama helped these people organize and have their homes made safe.  How can you label someone like that elitist?  I’m pretty sure that under any other circumstances, people would applaud selflessness and courage.  In fact, some might even toss around that overplayed ‘hero’ title that has so saturated our media over the past seven years.

My child will be born in Canada, but will have dual citizenship with the US.  I am a first-generation American and feel a great deal of guilt that I am not more grateful for this fact; my grandfather legally brought his wife, his son, and his 4 year old daughter to the shores of the US back in 1965, via a boat ride that was months long. Though none of them spoke English, my grandfather found a job and worked his ass off so his family could prosper.  They all learned English.  His children went to American schools, and his daughter grew up to be my mother.  Because of her family’s old-world values, she was not close to her father growing up, but these days, he plays a huge, loving role in her life and in the life of all his grandchildren.  He and his son, my uncle, are the strong male role models in my life, the ones I look up to as ideals of what a father and husband should be. It cuts me to the core to think of telling my grandfather, who worked so hard to establish his family here because life would be better, that I am glad to have moved out of the US.  That I feel his first great grandchild would be better off living in Canada, because at least here “liberal” isn’t a smear.

Barack Obama is just a man.  But his ideals, the ones I share and need the Supreme Court to share, fill me with pride.  When I know that America is on the path to a brighter future, where the citizens are its most treasured possession and are no longer the butt of jokes world-wide, then I will honestly be able to say that yes, I am PROUD to be an American.

Until then, this Canadian flag pin will stay lonely on my wallet.

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