Uncommon Sense


Is It True About Obama?
May 29, 2008, 11:16 pm
Filed under: Democratic Nomination 2008, Election 2008

Debunking the rumors…



Young Hillary Clinton
May 29, 2008, 1:20 pm
Filed under: Democratic Nomination 2008, Media

 

(H/T Andrew)



Barack Obama is Not A Muslim
May 26, 2008, 2:09 am
Filed under: Democratic Nomination 2008

He’s not.

Send this to others.



“there is nothing naive about your impulse to change the world”
May 25, 2008, 5:11 pm
Filed under: Life, U.S. Politics

Maybe helping out in this election and becoming one of those “crazy” latte-sipping Barack Obama supporters has changed me more than I think.

His speech today at Wesleyan really hit home towards what I expect to do when I graduate from college.

I bring this up because today, you are about to enter a world that makes it easy to get caught up in the notion that there are actually two different stories at work in our lives.

The first is the story of our everyday cares and concerns – the responsibilities we have to our jobs and our families – the bustle and busyness of what happens in our own life. And the second is the story of what happens in the life of our country – of what happens in the wider world. It’s the story you see when you catch a glimpse of the day’s headlines or turn on the news at night – a story of big challenges like war and recession; hunger and climate change; injustice and inequality. It’s a story that can sometimes seem distant and separate from our own – a destiny to be shaped by forces beyond our control.

And yet, the history of this nation tells us this isn’t so. It tells us that we are a people whose destiny has never been written for us, but by us – by generations of men and women, young and old, who have always believed that their story and the American story are not separate, but shared. And for more than two centuries, they have served this country in ways that have forever enriched both.

I say this to you as someone who couldn’t be standing here today if not for the service of others, and wouldn’t be standing here today if not for the purpose that service gave my own life.

….

Each of you will have the chance to make your own discovery in the years to come. And I say “chance” because you won’t have to take it. There’s no community service requirement in the real world; no one forcing you to care. You can take your diploma, walk off this stage, and chase only after the big house and the nice suits and all the other things that our money culture says you should by. You can choose to narrow your concerns and live your life in a way that tries to keep your story separate from America’s.

But I hope you don’t. Not because you have an obligation to those who are less fortunate, though you do have that obligation. Not because you have a debt to all those who helped you get here, though you do have that debt.

It’s because you have an obligation to yourself. Because our individual salvation depends on collective salvation. Because thinking only about yourself, fulfilling your immediate wants and needs, betrays a poverty of ambition. Because it’s only when you hitch your wagon to something larger than yourself that you realize your true potential and discover the role you’ll play in writing the next great chapter in America’s story

There are so many ways to serve and so much need at this defining moment in our history. You don’t have to be a community organizer or do something crazy like run for President. Right here at Wesleyan, many of you have already volunteered at local schools, contributed to United Way, and even started a program that brings fresh produce to needy families in the area. One hundred and sixty-four graduates of this school have joined the Peace Corps since 2001, and I’m especially proud that two of you are about to leave for my father’s homeland of Kenya to bring alternative sources of energy to impoverished areas.

I ask you to seek these opportunities when you leave here, because the future of this country – your future – depends on it. At a time when our security and moral standing depend on winning hearts and minds in the forgotten corners of this world, we need more of you to serve abroad. As President, I intend to grow the Foreign Service, double the Peace Corps over the next few years, and engage the young people of other nations in similar programs, so that we work side by side to take on the common challenges that confront all humanity.

At a time when our ice caps are melting and our oceans are rising, we need you to help lead a green revolution. We still have time to avoid the catastrophic consequences of climate change if we get serious about investing in renewable sources of energy, and if we get a generation of volunteers to work on renewable energy projects, and teach folks about conservation, and help clean up polluted areas; if we send talented engineers and scientists abroad to help developing countries promote clean energy.

At a time when a child in Boston must compete with children in Beijing and Bangalore, we need an army of you to become teachers and principals in schools that this nation cannot afford to give up on. I will pay our educators what they deserve, and give them more support, but I will also ask more of them to be mentors to other teachers, and serve in high-need schools and high-need subject areas like math and science.

At a time when there are children in the city of New Orleans who still spend each night in a lonely trailer, we need more of you to take a weekend or a week off from work, and head down South, and help rebuild. If you can’t get the time, volunteer at the local homeless shelter or soup kitchen in your own community. Find an organization that’s fighting poverty, or a candidate who promotes policies you believe in, and find a way to help them.

At a time of war, we need you to work for peace. At a time of inequality, we need you to work for opportunity. At a time of so much cynicism and so much doubt, we need you to make us believe again.

Now understand this – believing that change is possible is not the same as being naïve. Go into service with your eyes wide open, for change will not come easily. On the big issues that our nation faces, difficult choices await. We’ll have to face some hard truths, and some sacrifice will be required – not only from you individually, but from the nation as a whole.

There is no magic bullet to our energy problems, for example; no perfect energy source – so all of us will have to use the energy sources we have more wisely. Deep-rooted poverty will not be reversed overnight, and will require both money and reform at a time when our federal and state budgets are strapped and Washington is skeptical that reform is possible. Transforming our education system will require not only bold government action, but a change in attitudes among parents and students. Bringing an end to the slaughter in Darfur will involve navigating extremely difficult realities on the ground, even for those with the best of intentions.

And so, should you take the path of service, should you choose to take up one of these causes as your own, know that you’ll experience frustrations and failures. Even your successes will be marked by imperfections and unintended consequences. I guarantee you, there will certainly be times when friends or family urge you to pursue more sensible endeavors with more tangible rewards. And there will be times when you are tempted to take their advice.

But I hope you’ll remember, during those times of doubt and frustration, that there is nothing naïve about your impulse to change this world. Because all it takes is one act of service – one blow against injustice – to send forth that tiny ripple of hope that Robert Kennedy spoke of.

You know, Ted Kennedy often tells a story about the fifth anniversary celebration of the Peace Corps. He was there, and he asked one of the young Americans why he had chosen to volunteer. And the man replied, “Because it was the first time someone asked me to do something for my country.”

I don’t know how many of you have been asked that question, but after today, you have no excuses. I am asking you, and if I should have the honor of serving this nation as President, I will be asking again in the coming years. We may disagree on certain issues and positions, but I believe we can be unified in service to a greater good. I intend to make it a cause of my presidency, and I believe with all my heart that this generation is ready, and eager, and up to the challenge.

We will face our share of cynics and doubters. But we always have. I can still remember a conversation I had with an older man all those years ago just before I left for Chicago. He said, “Barack, I’ll give you a bit of advice. Forget this community organizing business and do something that’s gonna make you some money. You can’t change the world, and people won’t appreciate you trying. But you’ve got a nice voice, so you should think about going into television broadcasting. I’m telling you, you’ve got a future.”

Now, he may have been right about the TV thing, but he was wrong about everything else. For that old man has not seen what I have seen. He has not seen the faces of ordinary people the first time they clear a vacant lot or build a new playground or force an unresponsive leader to provide services to their community. He has not seen the face of a child brighten because of an inspiring teacher or mentor. He has not seen scores of young people educate their parents on issues like Darfur, or mobilize the conscience of a nation around the challenge of climate change. He has not seen lines of men and women that wrap around schools and churches, that stretch block after block just so they could make their voices heard, many for the very first time.

And that old man who didn’t believe the world could change – who didn’t think one person could make a difference – well he certainly didn’t know much about the life of Joseph Kennedy’s youngest son.

It is rare in this country of ours that a person exists who has touched the lives of nearly every single American without many of us even realizing it….

But surely, if one man can achieve so much and make such a difference in the lives of so many, then each of us can do our part. Surely, if his service and his story can forever shape America’s story, then our collective service can shape the destiny of this generation. At the very least, his living example calls each of us to try. That is all I ask of you on this joyous day of new beginnings; that is what Senator Kennedy asks of you as well, and that is how we will keep so much needed work going, and the cause of justice everlasting, and the dream alive for generations to come. Thank you so much to the class of 2008, and congratulations on your graduation.



Obama in CT
May 25, 2008, 4:59 pm
Filed under: Democratic Nomination 2008

His commencement speech at Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT today:



VP Webb
May 22, 2008, 10:21 am
Filed under: Democratic Nomination 2008

It’s a possibility and all the blogs are chatting about it…

Check out this MSNBC clip:



Majority of Pledged Delegates
May 21, 2008, 6:24 pm
Filed under: Campaigning, Democratic Nomination 2008

CNN called it last night after the Kentucky results were in- Obama has a majority of the pledged delegates needed to get the Democratic nomination.

According to MSNBC here are the totals: 

Barack Obama- total: 1,655, superdelegates: 306, needed: 65

Hillary Clinton- total: 1,502, superdelegates: 282, needed: 242

What this means for the Clinton campaign (via Andrew):

For the Clintons to regain power in the Democratic party, they now have to persuade the super-delegates to reverse the decision of the delegates selected by primaries and caucuses under the rules agreed to by all parties in advance. Of course, we know that rules don’t apply to Clintons.



$31 Million
May 21, 2008, 6:16 pm
Filed under: Campaigning, Democratic Nomination 2008

$31 million.  No, it’s not a negative number.  That’s the amount of money that the Obama campaign raised in April.

This number is important not only in its size, as relative to what McCain or Clinton are pulling in, but really in the fact that 94% of these millions came from donations under $200.  That’s every day, normal people- the people who are moving the Obama campaign along both financially, vote-wise, and grassroots organizationally.

Barack Obama is truly changing the face of politics today.  It is time that some other politicians and the rest of America realize what’s going on here.

Oh and if you want to draw a contrast between Obama’s money and Clinton’s- he has $9.2 million on hand.  Um yeah, beat that debtor!



$21 Million
May 21, 2008, 6:09 pm
Filed under: Campaigning, Democratic Nomination 2008

I know I’m only in college and probably have a very limited view on all of what money means, considering I earn very little of it.

Well, as a college student, I also know a lot about debt.  I know about having to save my money to pay for future rent.  I know about spending money on food with my friends one night and then staying in the next in order to not spend all that I earn.  I know about taking out loans for college and knowing that I will only have to take out more as grad school approaches.

Now, adults seemingly should know a lot more about debt.

Hillary Clinton does not.  Her campaign is in $21 million worth of debt- some of it is her own personal loans and rest is money that she owes people.  Wow, $21 million is a lot of zeros.  I think her campaign’s credit score must be pretty bad.



Ted Kennedy
May 21, 2008, 6:02 pm
Filed under: U.S. Politics

Yesterday, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) was diagnosed with a malignant glioma in his brain.  We are all hoping that Senator Kennedy gets better soon and is back to his normal self in no time.

However, upon talking to my mother about this, I realized just how serious it was.  Senator Kennedy was diagnosed with the same type of cancer that my neighbor’s grandmother was.  The way my mom put it to me (and yes, we have been around a lot of cancer over the past 2 1/2 years), he probably has 1 year to 5 years left to live.

Senator Kennedy has had a long and prosperous life, both in Congress and with his family.  Since I am too young to know or even comprehend all that Ted Kennedy has done, I’m going to turn it over to Alex (via Ezra), my more intelligent Gen-X counterpart (and someone who’s opinion I value above many others):

Kennedy has been a player in literally every major progressive accomplishment of my life, usually a major player, quite often the leading player: the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act, Medicare, Medicaid, Head Start, Legal Services, the War on Poverty, environmental legislation, OSHA, bringing down Richard Nixon on the Watergate investigations, ending the Vietnam War, stopping military aid to the Contras in Central America, the Martin Luther King holiday, stopping Robert Bork, the increases in the minimum wage, Family and Medical Leave, National Service, Motor Voter Act, S-CHIP. His fingerprints are on all of that legislation, and more. And even where he failed, on universal health care and labor law reform and stopping the Iraq war and other battles, he fought the good fight with passion and heart and courage. I hope like hell his fight is not ending, that he does not go gentle into that good night, because we need his passion and heart and courage in these cautious, careful times all the more.




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