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There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who was a lot like Barack Obama

by "Gandalf Grey" <valinor20@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 15, 2008 at 09:42 AM

Barack and Bobby: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime
who was a lot like Barack Obama

By Jack Lessenberry

Created May 14 2008 - 10:39am


They'd been punching Barack Obama with everything they had for weeks,
starting with the nutty sayings of his former pastor. They said Obama was
an
elitist, that he couldn't relate to white working-class voters. Now that
he'd been bloodied, the excitement was fading, they said. The inspired
were
becoming disillusioned. "They," of course, were the media talking heads.
Some clearly wanted him to fail. The 24-hour news cycle means a constant
need for new twists in the plot. The young challenger had arisen, made a
splash, shocked the establishment.

Well, now it was time for him to fall. He'd lost in Ohio; lost in
Pennsylvania. They were saying he didn't have it anymore. Hillary Clinton
was suddenly a woman of the people, drinking shots with the working class.
Never mind that Obama grew up on food stamps. Never mind that the
Clintons,
impoverished Ivy League lawyers that they are, made $109 million in the
last
eight years.

Now she was the populist. Last week they were setting us up for the return
of Hillary Clinton as the comeback 60-year-old. She was pulling away in
Indiana! She had closed to single digits in North Carolina, and might even
have a chance of an upset there!

Frankly, I was worried. I had forgotten that most people have lives, and
do
not listen to the chattering class as much as I do. Many even have common
sense. Then the votes came in last Tuesday night. And it was effectively
over.

Not only did Obama win North Carolina by a landslide, he came within one
point in Indiana. (The final vote was 644,544 to 630,399). In fact, he may
have won a majority of Democrats; Rush Limbaugh's call to dittoheads to
run
and vote for Hillary may have put her across.

But that wasn't the really startling thing. Primary elections never draw
anywhere near as many voters as general elections. Until now. Four years
ago, John Kerry got 969,011 votes in Indiana - in November. Some 300,000
more people voted in the Democratic primary last week. I watched Obama
speak
afterward. He wasn't gloating; he was moving on to November. Hillary was
whirling and spitting and deceiving, mainly herself, and talking about
white
voters.

Obama was way too smart to respond. She was spiraling down now, and he
needed to proceed on toward the target, and leave her campaign to die with
whatever dignity it can muster.

How smart is he? Last week, fresh from the embalmers, McCain tried a
little
smearing of his own by charging that the terrorist group Hamas wanted
Barack
Obama to be elected president. That was a baffling and cheap shot,
unworthy
of McCain. But realize that - despite whatever disinformation the GOP is
spreading - McCain really wanted to run against Clinton. They think they
know how to beat her. Now, he knows that isn't going to happen.
Frustrated,
he lashed out. Obama smashed it over the net, saying it was an example of
McCain "losing his bearings."

Then the McCainiacs really blew it. "How dare he!" they squawked! "How
dare
he raise the question of our man's age!" said an outraged McCain
functionary - thereby reminding everyone that John McCain would be the
oldest man ever elected president.

Meanwhile, the cameras showed pictures of a tired- and frail-looking,
white-haired McCain, who, it was noted, will be 72 well before the general
election. (And a cancer survivor who still has failed to release his
complete medical records.)

Soon, nobody was talking about the terrorists "favoring" Obama. Instead,
it
was all about whether we should be worried whether McCain really was
losing
his bearings.

Yes, Obama can give just as good as he gets.

"Have you ever seen anything like this?" she asked me, with a note of awe.
This was a woman in her 30s, with enough perspective to be stunned that
America is on the verge of very possibly electing an African-American
president.

Well, no, of course not. But there has been one - only one - candidate in
my
lifetime who was a lot like him. Someone who could have changed the
country
and the world for the better. He too was a young first-term senator and
everyone said he wasn't ready to run for president yet. But he ran anyway.
He didn't want to, but he knew he had to.

The country was being torn apart by a stupid and impossible war we had
been
lied into. People were hungry for change, for someone who didn't think in
the old ways, with the old hardened attitudes. Some said he wasn't tough
enough. They didn't know him. He challenged people to be better than they
were. He appealed to constituencies nobody else bothered with. He
attracted
voting groups who loathed each other, but who adored him.

He surprised them with how well he did in Indiana, and in other states
Democrats never won. According to Thurston Clarke's new book, the famous
columnist Jimmy Breslin once asked a guy from Newsweek if Kennedy had the
right stuff.

"Yes, of course," the guy said. "But he's not going to go all the way. The
reason is that somebody is going to shoot him ... and I don't think we'll
have a country after that."

That was Bobby Kennedy, of course, who still matters. (If you don't know
why, you owe it to yourself to find out.) I was pleasantly surprised to
see
his face on the cover of Vanity Fair.

We're getting another chance this year, after 40 years in the wilderness.
One of the very few things I feel sure about is that RFK would have been
absolutely delighted by what's happening. He once said this: "But suppose
God is black? What if we go to Heaven and we, all our lives, have treated
the Negro as an inferior, and God is there, and we look up, and He is not
white?"

You just know Bobby would be loving all this.

Oakland County smackdown: Brenda Lawrence, the sensible and progressive
mayor of Southfield, is going to take on L. Brooks Patterson, who has been
Oakland County executive, and before that county prosecutor, since about
1875. You could hear the sneering from the corners of conventional wisdom.
The audacity of the girl! How dare she!

True, this will be Patterson's first real challenge since first elected in
1992, when the plucky Betty Howe, a former member of Gov. Jim Blanchard's
cabinet, held him to 57 percent of the vote.

True, the county is changing, demographically and otherwise. Once solidly
Republican, it voted for Al Gore and John Kerry. And sure, Patterson
wor****ps urban sprawl, and appears not to know that gas is no longer 29.9
cents a gallon. Sure, he is almost 70, and there have been drinking
problems, and that car he ruined by driving it on the railroad tracks. Yet
how could anyone even think Oakland voters would ever elect someone else?
He
has the money and the name recognition. What a fool Brenda Lawrence is!

Why, what she is doing is as crazy as if Obama had challenged Hillary
Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination.



-- 
NOTICE: This post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not
always been authorized by the copyright owner. I am making such material
available to advance understanding of
political, human rights, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.
I
believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107

"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles.  It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt.  But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an op****tunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are
at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson
 




 6 Posts in Topic:
There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who was
"Gandalf Grey"   2008-05-15 09:42:30 
Re: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who
"William Flax"   2008-05-15 12:56:45 
Re: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who
"Lamont Cranston&quo  2008-05-15 12:47:08 
Re: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who
Kevin Cunningham <smsk  2008-05-15 11:48:34 
Re: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who
John Black <jblack@[EM  2008-05-16 10:50:05 
Re: There has been one - only one - candidate in my lifetime who
"Lamont Cranston&quo  2008-05-16 11:17:36 

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tan12V112 Thu Jul 24 1:22:44 CDT 2008.