Obama’s Ultimate Test: The Sequel

Candidates for the Presidency of the United States raise hundreds of millions of dollars and compete in primaries and caucuses in state after state in order to win convention delegates.  They engage in a series of nationally televised debates, appear on political programs like Meet the Press and Hardball, and strive to demonstrate to America and the world in the early months of presidential election years that they are ready to take their campaigns to the next level.  

Obama’s campaign strategists knew all of these campaign events were relatively important, but realized they were just preliminaries to the supreme test of leadership that awaited him.  They knew by early April that the time had come to get serious, that the time had come to launch the most crucial phase of Obama’s presidential campaign, that the time had come for Obama to go where the votes are, to go to the only place he could go in all of America to face that supreme test of leadership.  

Grand Forks, North Dakota.  

I knew that too, so I went here:

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My brother Craig, a lifelong Republican, joined me as I waited in line.  That line kept getting longer, and longer, and longer . . .

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17,000 Americans came from small towns all across North Dakota and Minnesota to see the next President of the United States.  They came from farms throughout the Red River Valley, they came from the colleges and universities of the Upper Midwest, they came from Native American reservations, from the Grand Forks Air Force Base, from the VA Hospital in Fargo, from homes and schools and churches in this country’s heartland, where Americans still believe in decency and justice and democracy.  

These men and women and children who came to see and hear Barack Obama, who stood in line for hours on this spring day in this eighth year of BushCo fascism don’t want to see less jobs and more wars.  They’re sick and tired of less jobs and more wars, of lies and torture and Katrinas, of Enrons and Bear Stearns and Deciders, of endless coverups and endless betrayal.  They want to believe in America again, they want to be heard in Washington D.C. again, they want their country back, and it looked to me like they are damn well ready to take it back.        

         

This Grand Forks Herald Photo Gallery has some good photos of Obama’s speech and related events on April 4th. I also took some photos and apologize for their less than professional quality.  

Once Craig and I made it inside, most of the crowd was directed towards bleacher seating, but we happened to be in part of the line that got sent to a seating section on the arena floor only 60 feet from the stage.

That was a tough break.        

Senator Conrad introduced Obama:

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Conrad endorsed Obama not long after he announced his candidacy, only Obama’s fellow senator from Illinois, Dick Durbin, had endorsed Obama at that point.  So when Conrad asked Obama if he could give the keynote address at the North Dakota State Democratic Convention on April 4th, Obama said “Yes I can!”

Did he give a good keynote address?

Yes he did.

Did I manage to take any good photos of it?

No I didn’t.

So here it is on YouTube:

I know Obama hasn’t spoken out for Impeachment, I know he hasn’t taken a stand for all of the progressive principles we believe in, but I also know he is going to be smeared like no Democrat has ever been smeared before.  He is going to be slandered day in and day out, from now until November, because he’s a Democrat, because he’s black, because the corporate war machine and it’s bought and paid for hack politicians and media thugs are not going to tolerate even the slightest challenge to their power.

They don’t give a damn about people like us:

If they take Obama down, it’s over.  For all of us.  For keeps.  

Progressives who aren’t satisfied with Obama should think about that.   They should think about what it must feel like to know a shit storm of slander is coming his way, to know one “lone nut” could end his life at any time, to know the truth about his death would be covered up just like John Kennedy’s assassination was, like Martin Luther King’s assassination was, like Robert Kennedy’s assassination was, like the S&L scandal was, like Iran-Contra was, like Florida 2000 was, like 9/11 was, like the targeting of Iraq was, like Ohio 2004 was, like every other corporate government crime has been for the last fifty years.

Obama isn’t defending American democracy from a keyboard like we are, he’s putting his life on the line for it every day.  This one man has done more in a few short months to restore democracy in this country than the entire progressive blogosphere has in all its years of existence.  So maybe it’s time for the dissatisfied democracy defenders among us, who look down on Obama with such disdain, to climb down from their progressive pedestals long enough to cut him some slack.                          

Or would that be too much to ask?

This my brother Craig:

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He’s a lifelong Republican, but he’s willing to give Obama a chance, he wants a president who will at least try to unite this country, heal its divisions, and restore decency and integrity to government before its too late. I’d like to see some unity and healing too, right after Impeachment and war crimes trials, but neither Obama nor Democrats in Congress have the power yet to confront the corporate criminal masters of this country.

An election landslide mandate would give them that power.  The most decisive electoral mandate in American history is within reach.  Obama is reaching for it, and if we all reach for it too it’s going to happen.  There’s nothing BushCo and their corporate criminal masters fear more than that, there’s nothing their Bush Dogs fear more than that, it would destroy their control of the government for a generation, it would render them vulnerable at long last to the Constitution and the laws of this country.        

I think Obama knows what needs to be done with that mandate.  I think he will do what needs to be done once he is in that White House and has the power.  I’ve seen him, I’ve seen with my own eyes the effect he has on people.  It’s not hype, it’s not superficial, the power he has within him to inspire everyone who sees him and hears him is real, it is a force multiplier, it is a source of energy and confidence and determination we can summon strength from in the coming months and years as we help him change this country and the world.  

This is the stage a few minutes after Obama’s speech, he was on the arena floor talking to people in the crowd at the far end of the stage, one American to another, because that’s what American democracy is supposed to be about:

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On January 20, 2009, I hope Obama will be on that Inaugural podium in Washington D.C., talking on behalf of every American to everyone in the world, one human being to another, because that’s what this world is supposed to be about.

Help Him Get There  

Obama

41 comments

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  1. We can do it.

  2. a little double entandre (sp?) for you

  3. was quite specific about about the Bilderburg agenda when Obama wins.  All I can say is that Americans are terminally stupid, brought up planted firmly in front of a TV for several generations now.  The net effect must be cumulative.

    As much as I loathe the Bush administration the “post 911” mentality has won over.  It is not fundamentalist Muslims though, it is the suits of globo-corp.  The CEO of the world sees a greater profit margin available in 6 billion easily exploitable souls over the ingrained entitlement delusions of a mere 300 million.

    I don’t enjoy snuffing hope out of millions of delusionals but the galactic let down of 2006 is just like yesterday.

  4. This is a poor way to win progressives to Obama’s side:

    So maybe it’s time for the dissatisfied democracy defenders among us, who look down on Obama with such disdain, to climb down from their progressive pedestals long enough to cut him some slack.

     

    The man is a democrat, that does not mean he’s a progressive.  Is he better than McCain?  You bet!  Can he beat him?  Probably not.  

    He will be slandered for sure and the questions I have are (a) how many more skeletons are we going to see? and (b) will he respond effectively, or will he call McCain names or arrogantly dismiss the slander?

    Obama supporters should get off their “rock star” pedestal and start dealing with the slander–not asking people to “cut him some slack”.  Grow a spine and stop whining. If you can’t take the heat, or the questions about how far to the right Obama is going to run, then get out of the kitchen.

    • Alma on April 7, 2008 at 01:41

    In the first essay, I thought maybe he was an alien and had disappeared when you took the picture.  Is he J’s dad?(real name not used to protect the youngun)

  5. this performance, but I think it pretty much explains my feelings about Obama.

    • Sylv on April 7, 2008 at 19:19

    Rusty,

    It’s nice to “see” you again!

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