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ELECTION
2008
Barack Obama
strives to give America "Reason to Believe"
By
Thom White
January 27, 2008 -- According to the electronic
voting machines used for the South Carolina Democratic primary on
Saturday, Sen. Barack Obama stomped Sen. Hillary Clinton in the
state with 55% of the vote. Lady Clinton earned 27%, while Ex-Sen.
John Edwards picked up 18%.
In celebration, Barack Obama gave a victory speech
before an excited crowd in Columbia, S.C., where at one point, he
advocated for a "politics of common sense, of innovation. A
politics of shared sacrifice and shared prosperity."
Sen. Obama's campaign slogan is, "Change you
can believe in." His message does not operate in a vacuum,
but is clearly tailored toward the voter who is against everything
the U.S. government has been doing since 2001.
"Change" can be a vague term. "Change"
(as this writer understands it) should be a means to an end. In
Sen. Obama's campaign, "Change" is now the end in itself.
But shouldn't "Change" be more clearly defined for voters,
so we know what we're really getting into?
Barack Obama has given some hints about what his
"Change" will be like for us. Some of the modest rewards
that will result from "Change"? "Health care, good
schools, decent wages." And regarding the U.S. occupation of
Iraq (where big change is overdue), Sen. Obama aims to "put
an end to a war that should never have been authorized and should
never have been waged."
An emerging sub-theme in Barack Obama's heralded
"Change" message is that we Americans are going to have
to sacrifice -- a lot.
In a somewhat mournful tone, Sen. Obama said, "The
Change we seek has always required great struggle and great sacrifice
The Change will not be easy. Change will take time. There
will be setbacks, and false starts. And sometimes, we'll make mistakes
"
During his victory speech, Sen. Obama made an oblique
reference to critics of Barack, critics of "Change." "There
are those who will continue to tell us that we can't do this; that
we can't have what we're looking for; that we can't have what we
want
that we're peddling false hopes
. Don't tell us
Change can't happen! Yes, we can Change!"
Many of the details of Barack Obama's life remain
a mystery, and unfortunately, much of his political program appears
to be just as fuzzy. I still have the "audacity to hope"
Barack Obama would make a better president than Lady Clinton, but
before I cast my vote, I hope to see a more detailed summary of
the particular "sacrifices" that Sen. Obama has in store
for us to effect this much-vaunted "Change."
Contact Thom White @ CITIZINE@CITIZINEmag.com
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