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Michelle Obama Adds New Role to Balancing Act </font>

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<font face="arial" size="2" color="#0000FF"><b>
Michelle Obama has thrown herself into her husband's campaign and become one of its roving ambassadors</b></font>

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May 18, 2007

By JODI KANTOR and JEFF ZELENY
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It was a triumphant moment for Barack Obama: He was walking through the Capitol for the very first time as a United States senator in January 2005, trailed by photographers, hangers-on, and finally, his amused wife. Rolling her eyes as she pulled a reporter aside, Michelle Obama said, “Maybe one day, he will do something to warrant all this attention.”

Two years and one presidential announcement later, the sarcasm is gone, and a woman who has said she dislikes politics is assuming a starring role in her husband’s campaign for the White House.

Last week, in Windham, N.H., Mrs. Obama charmed a houseful of Democratic voters, speaking of her romance with the candidate and kneeling next to two little boys and their sister to inquire, “Which one of you is the troublemaker?”

She was still a bit irreverent: “I’m sure this guy is weird,” she said, describing her initial reaction to her husband’s name. But she turned earnest when talking of the presidency. “I know Barack is something special,” she said. “If I didn’t, I wouldn’t be here.”

Mrs. Obama’s is the trickiest of political performances. She is a black woman in a campaign in which no one knows quite what role race or gender will play. She has a propensity for bluntness and a fierce competitive drive. (“She’s a little meaner than I am,” her husband jokes.)

Her counterparts include Bill Clinton, the former president and consummate campaigner hoping to become the First Gent; and Elizabeth Edwards, who has been praised across the political spectrum for her tenacity in dealing with incurable cancer.

Even successful first lady auditions can be remembered as political don’ts: take Nancy Reagan (regarded as too adoring of her husband) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (too eager to share his job), to say nothing of spouses of losing candidates, like Judith Steinberg Dean (too absent) and Teresa Heinz Kerry (too outspoken).

Faced with those discouraging precedents, Mrs. Obama, 43, is trying a fresh approach: running as everywoman, a wife, professional, mother, volunteer.

While her husband’s story is singular — how many other Hawaiian-Indonesian-African-Midwestern sensations are there? — Mrs. Obama is his more down-to-earth counterpart, drawing parallels between the voters’ daily balancing acts and her own. The role suits her natural frankness — she has gone so far as to talk about how she had to cope with an overflowing toilet — and yet confines it safely to the domestic sphere.

In an interview, Mrs. Obama said that she is still unprepared to take on the role for which she is trying out.

“My God, who can sit here and say, ‘I’m ready to be president and first lady?’ ” she asked. But like her husband, she is running on biography, suggesting that her most important qualifications are her life experiences. Daughter of a Chicago city pump operator who had multiple sclerosis, she graduated from Princeton and Harvard and juggles her job as a hospital executive with motherhood and civic work.

Mrs. Obama dislikes politics, friends and family confirmed, but not as much as she dislikes losing. Craig Robinson, her brother and the Brown University men’s basketball coach, said his sister did not enjoy organized sports when she was younger because she so hated defeat and even now pouts when a board game does not go her way. His sister is brainy and warm, he said, but also a force to be reckoned with.

“Everyone in the family is afraid of her,” he said with a smile. Asked if Mr. Obama used a nicotine patch to quit smoking, Mr. Robinson cracked up. “Michelle Obama!” he said. “That’s one hell of a patch right there!”

Accordingly, she threw herself into her husband’s campaign from the start, asking to meet with aides running every aspect of it. Friends says she is decisive and pragmatic, perhaps more so than the candidate.

At a meeting last October, when some advisers were impressing upon Mr. Obama the importance of discipline and telling him he could not rely on oratorical talents alone in a national campaign, he began offering explanations. One participant recalled that Mrs. Obama cut him off, saying, “We’re talking about you right now.” He did not say another word.

Now she is traveling as much as three days a week, headlining events and becoming an attraction in her own right. Aides say that she will not make policy speeches or attack other candidates, and Mrs. Obama says that she makes a sharp distinction between her role and that of the campaign staff.

For instance, after the first Democratic presidential debate in South Carolina in April, she walked on stage and gave her husband a big hug. But she did not offer a critique of his performance because, she said, she wants to keep her marriage “sort of stress-free, free of the discussion, free of the analysis, free of the assessment.”

Instead, she serves as roaming ambassador. For African-American audiences, Mrs. Obama is one of their own, with a more familiar background than that of her husband. At a black church in Cincinnati last week, the audience mmm-hmmm-ed approval throughout her speech.

To female audiences, Mrs. Obama emphasizes her struggle to balance travel, work meetings and homework detail. Last Monday, for instance, Mrs. Obama zoomed out of bed, to the airport, onto a flight to New Hampshire, through two campaign events and a McDonald’s drive-through, then back to the Midwest and into her two daughters’ waiting arms.

“I wake up every morning wondering how on the earth I am going to pull off that next minor miracle of getting through the day,” she said at a “Women for Obama” event last month in Chicago.

Most politicians draw a curtain of privacy around their families. Mrs. Obama takes voters into daily life in her Chicago kitchen (where Mr. Obama sometimes fails to put the butter away, she says), and even, with an anecdote about an overflowing toilet, her bathroom.

Such patter draws a contrast with the lives of other presidential contenders, including those of John Edwards, who lives in a 28,000-square-foot mansion; Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former New York mayor whose remarriage has strained his relations with his children; and Mrs. Clinton, with her past marital trials.

“I think that that sort of statement is all about the Clintons, and it’s also designed to resonate with middle-income Americans who have quote unquote normal marriages in which the spouse at home calls the other and asks to bring home a bag of salad,” said Nancy Beck Young, a history professor who has made a study of first ladies and will teach at the University of Houston this fall.

Mrs. Obama is learning political wife speak: She claims, for example, she has not thought very much about what kind of first lady Mrs. Clinton was. She still shows flashes of frankness, especially about the cost of Mr. Obama’s political career.

The couple once pledged to give their daughters — Malia, now 8, and Sasha, 5 — the kind of dinner-together-every-night childhood that Mrs. Obama had growing up in Chicago. Now, the senator is mostly on the road or in Washington.

Although Mrs. Obama describes her husband as a loving father, she worries about the actual amount of fathering he is doing. Mr. Obama has acknowledged in his book that his absences caused tensions when the girls were younger. And his wife initially resisted his presidential ambitions, fearing the impact on their family life.

“Barack and Michelle thought long and hard about this decision before they made it,” said Valerie Jarrett, a family friend.

Even before the presidential race, life was a whirl of how-does-she-do-it multitasking for Mrs. Obama, with 4:30 a.m. treadmill sessions and meals prepared at lightning speed. “She’s kind of low on the Martha Stewart scale,” said Verna Williams, a longtime friend, “more like Rachael Ray, get it done in 30 minutes.” To help out, Mrs. Obama’s mother will retire this summer from her job as a bank secretary and care for the girls more frequently.

The Obamas began their careers as equals, and Mr. Obama is fond of saying that his wife has the skills, if not the experience or patience, to run for office. But now she is ceding her career to his, reducing her time at the hospital to a 20 percent commitment (and her paycheck to $42,436 from $212,180), though she remains on the board of TreeHouse Foods, a supplier of Wal-Mart.

She expresses no regret about scaling down her job at the hospital, where colleagues say she excels at tackling thorny problems. But this winter, after spotting a book on the Obamas’ coffee table celebrating Mr. Obama’s Senate victory, her staff created a matching volume of her accomplishments. Mrs. Obama wept when she saw it.

At campaign appearances, Mrs. Obama gets approving reviews. “People do judge a candidate by his wife — or her husband,” said Lynne Snierson, a marketing executive who has watched countless candidates trudge through New Hampshire.

When Mrs. Obama mentioned her daughters at an event in New Hampshire, one woman cooed about “bringing laughter back to the White House,” while two retirees whispered that she was the picture of “everyday elegance” in her red sweater set and smooth flip of a hairstyle.

It was the same perfectly calibrated look reflected in a recent cover of Ebony magazine. Seeking to make the couple look as presidential as possible, Harriette Cole, the magazine’s creative director, said stylists at the photo shoot offered Mrs. Obama a strand of West Wing-appropriate pearls.

She had already brought her own.
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BoyJupiter

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

Behind every strong man....damn. In the beginning, I wasn't even certain that Obama would get the dem election, but things are looking so ridiculously positive. Even still, his campaign run alone will shift paradigms.
 

destrehan

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

yo my dude i hate to disappoint you but when are you going to realize that american politics is a sham? obama is just an actor my friend. the only change that takes place in america is what the hidden elite allow, until we go to war about ours again america will only get worse.
 
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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

destrehan,

You might want to live a little closer to reality. Not that you're totally wrong; but, you are far from being right. You've simply conceded a large segment of the game -- which is within your power to affect.

QueEx
 

Paul1970

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

destrehan said:
yo my dude i hate to disappoint you but when are you going to realize that american politics is a sham? obama is just an actor my friend. the only change that takes place in america is what the hidden elite allow, until we go to war about ours again america will only get worse.


Thanks for all your positivity... :rolleyes: :hmm:
 

destrehan

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

QueEx said:
destrehan,

You might want to live a little closer to reality. Not that you're totally wrong; but, you are far from being right. You've simply conceded a large segment of the game -- which is within your power to affect.

QueEx
closer to reality? you might want to explain that further? as far as concessions, the only thing i've conceded is the fact that the so-called powers that be got us in the headlock right now and nothing less than a hostile overthrow of this corrupt system will cause change.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

When did you last vote; and in what jurisdiction?
 

destrehan

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

QueEx said:
When did you last vote; and in what jurisdiction?
i voted in the last local elections in my county. i voted in 2000 and 2004 presidentials. whats the relevance? i told you already that the voting system is rigged as needed.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

And you voted in what you described as a hopelessly rigged system ... in the 00 and 04 presidential electons and probably many more local elections? Did you do it because it was useless (I doubt you would waste your time in that regard) or did you do it because you thought it might mean something ???

QueEx
 

destrehan

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

QueEx said:
And you voted in what you described as a hopelessly rigged system ... in the 00 and 04 presidential electons and probably many more local elections? Did you do it because it was useless (I doubt you would waste your time in that regard) or did you do it because you thought it might mean something ???

QueEx
i obviously thought it meant something but the fraud in 2000 enlightened me so my 2004 vote was just a penny in a wishing well. it's quite apparent there will never be another honest presidential election unless some drastic shit happens. you're asking me questions in a setup manner. just come out with whatever you have to say you're annoying me.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

I'm not setting you up, your logic is. Nobody gets took (at least think they got took) and goes back to get took again unless they really thought they had a chance.

QueEx
 

destrehan

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

QueEx said:
I'm not setting you up, your logic is. Nobody gets took (at least think they got took) and goes back to get took again unless they really thought they had a chance.

QueEx
well seeing as how i had nothing to lose i don't look at it as being taken. we all have been taken, no use in dwelling on how it happened we need to figure out how to get out of it.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

I agree that there is no use, at this point, dwelling on how it happened, but, you already know how to get out of it; the same way we got into it: people, especially, our people, have got to get out and do it, more abundantly.

QueEx
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

<font size="5"><center>Michelle Obama: I have a big mouth<font size></center>


abc_gma_obamam_070520_ms.jpg


ABC News
May 22, 2007

No shrinking violet, Michelle Obama, the 43-year-old wife of presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., told "Good Morning America" that she is a strong, professional woman and that her husband's ability to deal with her is one of the reasons Americans should elect him president.

Called Obama's closest adviser and his daily reality check, Michelle was raised on the south side of Chicago and is a graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law school. Today she juggles a career, duties as a wife and mother of two little girls and the role of campaigner.

"I don't want to paint some unrealistic picture of who we are so that in the end, when it falls apart and if we haven't lived up to this unrealistic expectation, people feel let down in some way," Obama told anchor Robin Roberts. "This is who we are. I've got a loud mouth. I tease my husband. He is incredibly smart, and he is very able to deal with a strong woman, which is one of the reasons why he can be president, because he can deal with me."

With the landmark run of both Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and Obama for the 2008 presidential bid, many wonder who has a better shot at making history as either the first female or first black president. Michelle believes that regardless of race, American voters are looking for connection to a candidate.

"I think that the American people… are ready to have somebody that they can believe in and that they can connect to," Obama said in a two-part interview that began Tuesday. "And I think that if Barack does what he's supposed to do and this campaign is… run well, and he can be clear and articulate in his message… he'll be the next president of the United States and… we will be swearing him in '08."

Obama said that the media has presented distorted images of the black community in America.

"As we've all said in the black community, we don't see all of who we are in, in the media. We see snippets… of our community and distortions of our community," she said. "So the world has this perspective that somehow Barack and Michelle Obama are different, that we're unique. And we're not. You just haven't seen us before."

Now Obama is stepping out from behind the scenes and onto the campaign trail. For the first time, the country is hearing her strong views on the war in Iraq, health care and family values.

"We have spent the last decade talking a good game about family values, but I haven't seen much evidence that we value women or family values," she said recently in South Carolina.

She said the reason she hasn't seen more respect for family values is because the country's resources are all tied up in the war.

"All of our emotional and financial resources… as a country have been totally put into the war. We haven't talked about the domestic issue in about 10 years," she said. "There are no serious conversations about health care or education, or child care, or minimum wage. I mean, these are the basic issues that eat away at the family structure. So you can't just tell, you know, a family of four to suck it up and make it work."

When pressed, however, she declined to point fingers.

"I think that we as a country have been a little lax in… our concern for these issues," she said. "We've been nullified by the fear mongers, you know? It's almost as if people have voted against their best personal issue interests because they've been so afraid of what could happen. You know, the terrorists are gonna get us."

"[Terrorism is] an incredibly important concern, but where is the balance, you know… is really the question -- where is the balance?" she continued. "You have to be a respected player. You have to do a little bit of both. So that nonideological, a nonfear-based approach is really what we need now as a country."

In 2003, Barack Obama was an Illinois state senator, and he was one of very few voices speaking out against war with Iraq.

"You can't do the 'I told you so.' We're in a war. We have young men and women over there fighting right now, and we have to think pragmatically about bringing this to an end. That's the conversation now. That was then. This is now," Obama said of her husband's position. "We have to deal with Iraq today… is what he has been saying. And, again, you can't take a rash approach. You can't just pull folks out. You can't just cut off funding completely. You've got to unravel this thing in a… common sense way. So, that's how I, I would say he'd answer the question."

Although Obama is one of her husband's closest advisers, she said they both do their jobs independently.

"Barack and I have always been professionally independent, and I like it like that," she said. "I don't want to do my husband's job, and I don't want him to do mine. So… we're focused on our day-to-day life and existence and making sure that we stay whole. And I would say that in that respect, that's where I'm his biggest adviser."

When asked whether she would be more like Laura Bush or like Clinton as first lady, Michelle Obama said she tried to avoid comparisons.

"I say that because it is so hard to project out realistically what life will be like for me as a woman, for me as a mother when Barack… becomes president. It's hard to know," she said. "What I do know is that given the many skills that I have on so many different levels, I will be what I have to be at the time. And it really will depend on what the country needs, what my family needs, what Barack needs. So I want to remain flexible enough so whatever is needed of me, that's what I will do."


http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Story?id=3199620&page=1
 
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blackIpod

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

Everything is sweet and nice in the Liberal press when it comes to the Obamas.
It's a sweet love affair not a lot about policy, but all about looks and likeability.

BULLSHIT BULLSHIT BULLSHIT

Lets get this guy on the record about what his administrations policies will be if he was elected..

Foreign Policy

Afghanistan

Iraq

Israel

Middle East [beside Iraq]

Iran

North Korea

China

The EU

Russia

South America

NAFTA

Kyoto Protocol

The UN

Darfur

Debt Relief for the Third World

..........Et cetera

Domestic Policy.

Healthcare

Energy

Taxes

Education

Illegal immigration

Boarder and port safety

The war on Drugs

Deficit Reduction

Social Security & Medicare, Medicaid

Food Safety

Crime

Homeland Defense

..........Et cetera

I'm waiting for the press to start telling America just how far left on the Ideological scale Barack Obama is coming from.

I want to see the reactions of so called moderate and conservative Democrats.

Lets see how far to the right Obama will sell his soul to sit in the white house, because i bet America will not "buy" it.

Beside his looks and opposition to the war in Iraq what is Barack Obama about?
His already showed himself to be a Hillary clone. If she farts he farts, same noise same smell, wrong timing.
The man has becomes Hilary's twin she votes no he votes no. She wants the mac & cheese he wants the mac & cheese.

Where is your leadership Barack?

It's clear with Iraq in the headlines daily, Hillary and Obama can run, without that issue they would be dead in the political waters.
.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Forward

blackIpod said:
Lets get this guy on the record about what his administrations policies will be if he was elected..

Iran

"U.S. Senate candidate Barack Obama suggested Friday [September 25, 2004] that the United States one day might have to launch surgical missile strikes into Iran and Pakistan to keep extremists from getting control of nuclear bombs."

See, How Would Obama handle Iran ???http://198.65.131.81/board/showthread.php?t=157755&highlight=obama+iran


blackIpod said:
I'm waiting for the press to start telling America just how far left on the Ideological scale Barack Obama is coming from.

Lets see how far to the right Obama will sell his soul to sit in the white house, because i bet America will not "buy" it.
Well, since you've damned him for being left and damned him for being be right; I guess he just can't win the ideological test ??? My guess is he's more towards the center, where most Americans reside.

QueEx
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size=" 5"><center>Michelle Obama Steps In To Counter Bill Clinton</font size></center>

bilde


GreenvilleOnline.com
By Ben Szobody
January 24, 2008 12:08 PM

Michelle Obama countered increasingly fierce criticism from Hillary Clinton�s campaign on Wednesday in an impassioned speech at a Greenville restaurant, defending Barack Obama�s votes in the Illinois Senate, his experience and his ability to stand tough to Republicans.

"The one thing that is clear is that when power is confronted with real change, they will say anything," she said.

She also told nearly 100 local women at The Lazy Goat that when it comes to the difficulties they face balancing work and family, her husband is "one of the few people who gets it," in part because of her own dilemmas as a "regular person."

Michelle Obama never mentioned the Clintons by name, and she told The Greenville News afterward that despite the involvement of former president Bill Clinton in his wife�s campaign, her role will remain "that of spouse," and that she�s "not a politician."

Referring to criticism -- renewed by Hillary Clinton this week -- of her husband�s more than 100 "present" votes in the Illinois Senate, Michelle Obama highlighted his work passing ethics reform, expanding child care, gaining tax credits for the working poor and dealing with racial profiling and the death penalty.

"So let me tell you, when people talk about Barack�s voting record in the state Senate, they will not talk to you about that because that would be too much information for you, wouldn�t it?" she said. "It�s much easier to focus on a few �present� votes," instead of his work for "regular people" that "no other front-runner in this race can claim at all."

She described his decision after college to do community work instead of going to Wall Street to "make millions," then his decision after Harvard Law School to take on civil rights work and the state legislature. She said his books are the only reason they recently got out of debt.

"It would seem to me that before anyone would open their mouth to even claim to want to be president of the United States they would have to show that kind of commitment to regular folks," she said.

She said the candidates with Washington experience chose to support the Iraq war while her husband opposed it during a primary race he wasn�t supposed to win.

She also referred to detailed policy discussions in the presidential campaign, a trait Hillary Clinton casts as a strength.

"People always want to know the intricacies of candidates� policies," she said, "but the truth is a lot of this stuff isn�t rocket science. We know what we need to do with public education because there are thousands of excellent public schools all over this country. We know what they look like, we know what they cost. Our problem is that they only exist for the fortunate few."

To the question of whether Obama is "tough enough" to run against the Republican nominee, Michelle Obama said, "Do you know where we live? Chicago politics. Illinois politics. Mean, tough politics."


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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

<font size="5"><center>Michelle Obama takes on Hill & Bill</font size></center>


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Reuters
by Adam Tanner
January 24th, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO - After hearing former U.S. President Bill Clinton criticize her husband, Sen. Barack Obama’s wife cried foul in the increasingly heated battle for the Democratic presidential nomination.

“We knew getting into this race that Barack would be competing with Senator (Hillary) Clinton and President Clinton at the same time,” Michelle Obama said in a fund-raising e-mail.

“What we didn’t expect, at least not from our fellow Democrats, are the win-at-all-costs tactics we’ve seen recently. We didn’t expect misleading accusations that willfully distort Barack’s record.”

Bill Clinton, 61, the U.S. president from 1993-2001, has taken an increasingly aggressive role in campaigning for his wife, a New York senator who is in a tight fight with Obama for the Democratic nomination.

Clinton is well-known for his talents on the campaign trail and is popular among many Democrats, even though he was impeached in 1998 by the House following his affair with a White House intern.

Michelle Obama, 44, has a law degree from Harvard and worked at the University of Chicago Medical Center before her husband, a first-term senator from Illinois, decided to run for president.

She now gives speeches for the campaign, sometimes introducing Obama, other times appearing with politicians such as Sen. John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate.

“While Senator Clinton has a former president in her corner, I’ll put my faith in a movement of a whole lot of people who are ready for change,” Michelle Obama said in her letter that sought online contributions of $50.

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage.

- Photo credit: Reuters/Rick Wilking (Michelle Obama during a campaign stop in Las Vegas last week.)

http://blogs.reuters.com/trail08/2008/01/24/michelle-obama-takes-on-hill-bill/
 

gigantopithecus

Potential Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

i have to say i never really hated the Clintons. But they are really pushing it with their attacks on Obama. i dont know whether to admire the genius of her campaign or to be appauled by the ruthlessness...:lol:
 

freakshowjojo

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

She is doing the right thing defending her husband but Obama threw the first punch and every so often he hits under the belt
and now that Bill has gotten involved now the Obamas are acting like they are the victims, Buck up
 

rappermcj

Potential Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

:angry:
She is doing the right thing defending her husband but Obama threw the first punch and every so often he hits under the belt
and now that Bill has gotten involved now the Obamas are acting like they are the victims, Buck up




Shut the fuck up!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The Clinton's started this shit asshole.
 

redemption

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

She is doing the right thing defending her husband but Obama threw the first punch and every so often he hits under the belt
and now that Bill has gotten involved now the Obamas are acting like they are the victims, Buck up

Honestly Obama HAS made his criticisms in the past and took a couple shots here and there.. BUT I dont recall him distorting the truth to mislead those he was speaking to. The shit Bill and Hill are doing is in most cases, willingly making inaccurate statements in order to confuse people on Baracks record. In other words, they are FUCKING LYING to get votes.

That alone got me to despise the Clintons. I have always been an Obama supporter, but I still had my respect for Hill & Bill. That shit went out the window over the last few weeks. :smh:
 

camron46

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A New Voice For America

A New Voice For America

Michelle Obama

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http://camron46.blogspot.com/
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.</font size></center>

Washington Post
By Sophia A. Nelson
Sunday, July 20, 2008; Page B01

There she is -- no, not Miss America, but the Angela-Davis-Afro-wearing, machine-gun-toting, angry, unpatriotic Michelle Obama, greeting her husband with a fist bump instead of a kiss on the cheek.

It was supposed to be satire, but the caricature of Barack Obama and his wife that appeared on the cover of the New Yorker last week rightly caused a major flap. And among black professional women like me and many of my sisters in the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, who happened to be gathered last week in Washington for our 100th anniversary celebration, the mischaracterization of Michelle hit the rawest of nerves.

Welcome to our world.

We've watched with a mixture of pride and trepidation as the wife of the first serious African American presidential contender has weathered recent campaign travails -- being called unpatriotic for a single offhand remark, dubbed a black radical because of something she wrote more than 20 years ago and plastered with the crowning stereotype: "angry black woman." And then being forced to undergo a politically mandated "makeover" to soften her image and make her more palatable to mainstream America.

Sad to say, but what Obama has undergone, though it's on a national stage and on a much more prominent scale, is nothing new to professional African American women. We endure this type of labeling all the time. We're endlessly familiar with the problem Michelle Obama is confronting -- being looked at, as black women, through a different lens from our white counterparts, who are portrayed as kinder, gentler souls who somehow deserve to be loved and valued more than we do. So many of us are hoping that Michelle -- as an elegant and elusive combination of successful career woman, supportive wife and loving mother -- can change that.

"Ain't I a woman?" Sojourner Truth famously asked 157 years ago. Her ringing question, demanding why black women weren't accorded the same privileges as their white counterparts, still sums up the African American woman's dilemma today: How are we viewed as women, and where do we fit into American life?

"Thanks to the hip-hop industry," one prominent black female journalist recently said to me, all black women are "deemed 'sexually promiscuous video vixens' not worthy of consideration. If other black women speak up, we're considered angry black women who complain. This society can't even see a woman like Michelle Obama. All it sees is a black woman and attaches stereotypes."

Black women have been mischaracterized and stereotyped since the days of slavery and minstrel shows. In more recent times, they've been portrayed onscreen and in popular culture as either sexually available bed wenches in such shows as the 2000 docudrama "Sally Hemings: An American Scandal," ignorant and foolish servants such as Prissy from "Gone With the Wind" or ever-smiling housekeepers, workhorses who never complain and never tire, like the popular figure of Aunt Jemima.

Even in the 21st century, black women are still bombarded with media and Internet images that portray us as loud, aggressive, violent and often grossly obese and unattractive. Think of the movies "Norbit" or "Big Momma's House," or of the only two black female characters in "Enchanted," an overweight, aggressive traffic cop and an angry divorcée amid all the white princesses.

On the other hand, when was the last time you saw a smart, accomplished black professional woman portrayed on mainstream television or in the movies? If Claire Huxtable on "The Cosby Show" comes to mind, remember that she left the scene 16 years ago.

The reality is that in just a generation, many black women -- who were mostly domestics, schoolteachers or nurses in the post-slavery Jim Crow era -- have become astronauts, corporate executives, doctors, lawyers, engineers and PhDs. You name it, and black women have achieved it. The most popular woman on daytime television is Oprah Winfrey. Condoleezza Rice is secretary of state.

And yet my generation of African American women -- we're called, in fact, the Claire Huxtable generation -- hasn't managed to become successfully integrated into American popular culture. We're still looking for respect in the workplace, where, more than anything else, black women feel invisible. It's a term that comes up again and again. "In my profession, white men mentor young whites on how to succeed," a financial executive told me, but "they're either indifferent to or dogmatically document the mistakes black women make. Their indifference is the worst, because it means we're invisible."


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy.../07/18/AR2008071802557.html?hpid=opinionsbox1
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.

<font size="4">
Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.
Part Two

</font size>


As someone who recently left a large law firm to work in the corporate sector, I have to agree. I liked my firm, but I always felt that I had to sink or swim on my own. I didn't get the kind of mentoring that I saw white colleagues, male and female, getting all around me. The firm was actually one of the better ones when it came to diversity, and yet of 600 partners, only five were black women.

A 2007 American Bar Association report titled "Visible Invisibility" describes how black women in the legal profession face the "double burden" of being both black and female, meaning that they enjoy none of the advantages that black men gain from being male, or that white women gain from being white.

Invisibility isn't the only problem. I run an organization dedicated to supporting African American professional women and often run empowerment workshops at various conferences. At a recent such workshop, I asked the participants to list some words that would describe how they believe they're viewed in the workplace and the culture at large. These are the kinds of words that came back: "loud," "angry," "intimidating," "mean," "opinionated," "aggressive," "hard." All painful words. Yet asked to describe themselves, the same women offered gentler terms: "strong," "loving," "dependable," "compassionate."

Where does the disconnect come from? Possibly from the way black women have been forced into roles of strength for decades. "Black women are the original multitaskers of necessity," says one nonprofit executive. "We've perfected it because we've been doing it for so long. But people don't appreciate the skill it requires, and they don't recognize the toll it takes on us as human beings."

For all our success in the professional world, we have paid a significant price in our private and emotional lives. A life of preordained singleness (by chance, not by choice) is fast becoming the plight of alarming numbers of professional black women in America. The fact is that the more money and education a black woman has, the less likely she is to marry and have a family.

Consider these stunning statistics: As of 2007, according to the New York Times, 70 percent of professional black women were unmarried. Black women are five times more likely than white women to be single at age 40. In 2003, Newsweek reported that there are more black women than black men (24 percent to 17 percent) in the professional-managerial class. According to Department of Education statistics cited by the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, black women earn 67 percent of all bachelor's degrees awarded to blacks, as well as 71 percent of all master's degrees and 65 percent of all doctoral degrees.

With all the challenges facing professional black women today, we hope that Michelle Obama will defy the negative stereotypes about us. And that, now that a strong professional black woman is center stage, she'll bring to light what we already know: that an accomplished black woman can be a loyal and supportive wife and a good mother and still fulfill her own dreams. The fact that her husband clearly adores Michelle is both refreshing and reassuring to many of us who long to find a good man who will love and appreciate us.

Recently, a friend who's a married professional mother of three girls wrote to me: "I think one of the most interesting things about Michelle Obama is that what she and her husband are doing is pretty revolutionary these days -- and I don't mean running for president. For a black man and woman in the U.S. to be happily married, with children, and working as partners to build a life -- let alone a life of service to others -- all while rearing their children together is downright revolutionary."

It's how so many black professional women feel. And our hope is that if Michelle Obama becomes first lady, the revolution will come to us at last.


snelson@iaskinc.org


Sophia A. Nelson is a corporate attorney and president of iask, Inc., an organization for African American professional women.


 

jucurious

agent of change
BGOL Investor
Re: Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.

great read

I worry sometimes that Michelle will be made a token black in her own right BUT at the same time, I'm glad to see her in the lime light.

I hope that the multifaceted nature of black women is made more visible in the media but I wont hold my breath.

I made a similar thread about black women and their struggle on SOL, and it quickly turned into a workplace conversation and how we should just be happy we can find jobs..and how it is so much easier for us to do so...some people are really not aware of the double burden.

I look forward to conversations, imagery, and the like about black women that go beyond the mammy-jezebel dichotomy

and I ABSOLUTELY LOVE the healthy image being portrayed by the Obama's of the black family but again, there is some tokenism in that also. I guess it just has to be that way until similar family situations are publicized, discussed, encouraged and actually take place more (there are happy married black families out there)

the next four years are going to be VERY interesting
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Black. Female. Accomplished. Attacked.

great read

I worry sometimes that Michelle will be made a token black in her own right BUT at the same time, I'm glad to see her in the lime light.

I hope that the multifaceted nature of black women is made more visible in the media but I wont hold my breath.

I made a similar thread about black women and their struggle on SOL, and it quickly turned into a workplace conversation and how we should just be happy we can find jobs..and how it is so much easier for us to do so...some people are really not aware of the double burden.

I look forward to conversations, imagery, and the like about black women that go beyond the mammy-jezebel dichotomy

and I ABSOLUTELY LOVE the healthy image being portrayed by the Obama's of the black family but again, there is some tokenism in that also. I guess it just has to be that way until similar family situations are publicized, discussed, encouraged and actually take place more (there are happy married black families out there)

the next four years are going to be VERY interesting
I think it will be hard for anyone to make Michelle a mere token. Its not in her demeanor and her training as a lawyer. It takes not only a certain aptitude to be a successful lawyer but a certain attitude, as well. That attitude knows its place but will never allow anyone to put or keep her in a place.

I agree with you that we need more positive images of the Black family to be publicized -- and there are thousands and thousands of stories, just waiting to be told. If nothing else comes of Barack's candidacy, it is exposing sides of us that most don't know or see.

QueEx
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Michelle Obama makes the best-dressed list
at 'Vanity Fair;' not Cindy McCain</font size></center>


USA TODAY
By: Mark Memmott and Jill Lawrence
July 30, 2008

Conservatives don't seem to have made the cut for the 69th annual International Best Dressed List unveiled this morning by Vanity Fair.

But Michelle Obama, wife of Democratic presidential hopeful Barack, is on it. Why? "Because she's our commander in sheath," VF says. Cindy McCain, wife of GOP contender John, isn't on the list.

Here is what the two potential first ladies wore on the nights their husbands clinched their parties' nominations:

obamas_2.jpg
mccains_2.jpg


`

http://blogs.usatoday.com/onpolitics/2008/07/michelle-obama.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama; Best Dressed List

<font size="5">

The International Best-Dressed List </font size>



<font size="4">The ballots are in, and it’s Obama, by a thread! That’s Michelle Obama, who joins fellow political wife (and cover subject) Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, and—better late than never—James Bond, in the 69th annual style poll, published in Vanity Fair. </font size>

stsl02_bdl0809.jpg


  • MICHELLE OBAMA Because she’s our commander in sheath.
  • Residence: Chicago.
  • Occupation: Vice president for community and external affairs, University of Chicago Hospitals, on leave.
  • Age: 44.
  • Notable ensembles of 2008: Maria Pinto purple sheath, with a black Azzedine Alaïa belt, worn when her husband claimed the Democratic presidential nomination; Donna Ricco black-and-white print dress on The View.
  • Causes: “Youth leadership programs, education, talking with women about work/family life balance.” By Marcel Thomas/FilmMagic.


Slideshow complete List: http://www.vanityfair.com/style/features/2008/09/bestdressed_slideshow200809?slide=2#globalNav

`
 

dbluesun

Rising Star
Platinum Member
article about Michelle Obama,,,,long read

Why white America perhaps fears Michelle more than Barack.
Excerpts from a 'Jack & Jill politics' newsletter:
...as hard as it is to accept a black president, it's even harder to accept a
black first lady. First Lady has always held a beloved sentimental mother/wife
of the nation symbolism. Conservatives are not ready to have to look at this
very BLACK woman with her degrees and her fierceness and see her as the
epitome of the American mother/wife.
This will be a first for white people. They do not want this black woman in the
Whitehouse as their first lady. That New Yorker cartoon was [actually] about
Michelle - she was its focal point...look closely... she is the leader, the one
starting the 'revolution' they want you to imagine....
MSNBC's Chris Matthews said, in the course of covering the Obama candidacy, 'He
(Barack Obama) brings none of the ' bad stuff, you know?' By 'Bad Stuff', he
meant the legacy of [whites] enslaving Africans in this country, keeping them
as second-class citizens until 1965, a mere 11 years before this country
celebrated its 200th anniversary. You know, 'the original sin', or ' the birth
defect', as Condi Rice called it. Barack escapes this 'bad stuff' only because
his mother was white and may have had ancestors involved in the slave trade; and
also because Barack's father was not African American. He was full blooded
African and therefore Barack had no ancestors enslaved by America - and so the
white guilt factor is missing when they think of
him. HOWEVER, NO SUCH LUCK WITH MICHELLE!
Michelle Obama is a direct threat and lightening bolt against White
Superiority. Because, she's Black. VISIBLY BLACK. But it's important to note,
she does not, in any way, shape, or form, contour to the acceptable Black
Pathologies that enable White Supremacy to sigh with relief. [welfare mother,
fatherless child, druggie, etc.] Michelle was raised in a neighborhood. In a
home. With TWO parents. No child revolving in and out of jail.
Raised by a Black man who not only provided for his family, but did so, WITH A
DISABILITY. Her mother had a working class job - secretary- but it was taken
ONLY after she had seen her youngest child settle into HIGH SCHOOL.
Michelle Obama's poise, her confidence, her aura - that was created by that
humble Black man, who by all accounts, adored her. He told her that she is
worthy, and so, when you have that told to you by the first man who loves and
protects you, you seek that validation of that in your choice of mate, you'll
settle for nothing less, and Michelle hasn't.
Michelle Obama, doesn't fit any of the acceptable Black pathologies. And when
you don't fit the acceptable Black pathologies, then you must be destroyed.
Michelle Obama has become the face of the Black America whose existence is
routinely denied by this country. Think about it.
In ONE generation, the face of this 'Invisible America' has gone from living on
the top floor of a bungalow, to the possibility of living in The White House.
And yet, Michelle Obama, refuses to say ' I' m special', in order to give white
America its usual security blanket [that she is one of the exceptions rather
than the rule], So what should be done?
Beat her down into submission.
Michelle Obama represents everything we black women want our daughters to be.
When we stand up for her we stand up for ourselves. No other women in the world
are more neglected and abused as African women period. Michelle looks like [our]
daughters, her daughters look like us. We love the way Barack looks at her we
adore the way he looks at his daughters. The Obamas represent the hope that we
can be loved by our men and they will support us in whatever we do. Little
African American girls need a vision and dream of what it is like to be loved by a
man who looks just like them.
Is America ready for a First Lady who looks like her? A regular black woman? Not
a passable biracial curly haired girl that they call black, but a regular black
woman from the south side of Chicago? With dark skin?
Is she going to be the face of The Woman on the largest pedestal in the country?
A self-confessed 'loud-mouth' black woman? If the Obamas succeed, it turns white
supremacy upside down. And not because a black man is in the White House; but,
because a black woman will be there who didn't have to come in the back door to
lie in bed with the president.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: article about Michelle Obama,,,,long read

<font size="6">
Michelle's focus group:</font size>


081020_michelleobama_brown.jpg

Taking up the cause of military families could
define Michelle Obama's agenda as first lady.​

<font size="6">Military families</font size>


P O L I T I C O
By CARRIE BUDOFF BROWN
October 20, 2008


FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. – Once portrayed as unpatriotic, Michelle Obama has quietly carved a niche on the campaign trail as a sounding board for military families, taking up a cause that could define her agenda as first lady.

Every few weeks, Obama meets with military spouses in swing states, where she presents herself as a kindred spirit and Barack Obama as the best choice for their families. She attended the two debates with military family members. And at the Democratic National Convention, she led a day of service on behalf of Blue Star Families for Obama, a two-month old group with the tagline: “Pro-Military, Pro-Obama.”

Obama aides say her work with military families has nothing to do with the controversy created by her February comment suggesting that the presidential campaign made her proud of the United States for the first time. But the effort could be viewed as an exercise in counterprogramming, serving as a rebuttal to criticism from Cindy McCain and others for a comment that Michelle Obama insists was misinterpreted – and the notion that her husband, a Democrat with no military service, cannot peel off voters from John McCain, an ex-Navy pilot and war hero.

“Barack and I know that too often it feels like you are alone, on your own,” Obama told military spouses last month in Santa Fe, N.M. “I know you become everything. In a small way, I have experienced that over the course of this campaign, but in no way does it compare to what you are going through.”

Michelle Obama's focus on military families puts her at the leading edge of the Democratic nominee's campaign to reclaim some of the military vote from Republicans – an effort that brought Barack Obama here Sunday for a rally near Fort Bragg, where a military wife introduced him and he touted his endorsement from Colin Powell, the retired four-star general and President George W. Bush's first Secretary of State.

Since the start of the campaign, Michelle Obama says she has focused on three things: keeping life normal for her young daughters, electing her husband, and discussing the work-life balance with women around the country. The spouses of service members captured her attention during a roundtable with working mothers, and she later hosted her first military-focused event in Fayetteville in May, a day before the North Carolina primary.

She will hold her seventh military spouses meeting Tuesday in Pensacola, Fla., following similar events in recent months in states heavily impacted by deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, including Virginia, New Mexico and Pennsylvania.

At each roundtable, she sits on stage with several spouses, delivers prepared remarks and opens a discussion. The roundtables draws local media coverage, and she answers questions about her involvement when asked by national reporters, as she did during an interview with CNN at the Democratic convention.

“Mostly I am here to listen and to do a lot of learning and then to transfer that information into the heart and mind of my husband as he moves forth,” Michelle Obama said in Norfolk, Va., in August. “The commander in chief doesn’t just need to know how to lead the military, he needs to understand what war does to military families.”

Her work in this area offers a hint at what could dominate her time in the White House.

“If she becomes first lady, this will be her cause,” said Amanda McBreen, 47, a Marine wife who participated in the Norfolk roundtable and helps coordinate 24 state chapters of Blue Star Families for Obama.

Michelle Obama pledged to do so in the Oct. 27 issue of U.S. News and World Report, when she explained what she would do if her husband became president: “I would work daily on the issues closest to my heart: helping working women and families, particularly military families. … I'd continue these conversations with working women and military spouses, and I'd take their stories back to Washington to make sure that the people who run our country know how their policies touch their constituents' lives.”

But Kathy Roth-Douquet, a founder of Blue Star Families and a Marine spouse who supported Hillary Rodham Clinton in the primary, said she wishes more voters knew about Michelle Obama’s work.

“She is probably the most motivating figure in the military family community,” Roth-Douquet, 44, said. “We like Obama, but we love her. She gets what we are getting.”

Campaign aides are “very sensitive,” Roth-Douquet said. “They are trying not to exploit the issue. I appreciate their lack of exploitation. I just wish more people knew about it. I wish that when people thought about which candidates were looking out for military families, they didn’t automatically think about John McCain.”

It can be frustrating, she added, because she has never seen a potential first couple pay “this kind of attention to military families.”

But she conceded that the job falls to Blue Star Families – the product of poolside kibitzing this spring among a circle of Marine wives in Parris Island, S.C. – to promote the Obamas. The women reached out to the Obama campaign in April, and learned that their interests were coverging with Michelle Obama, who had begun to tune into the burdens facing military spouses. Obama helped launch the project formally in August.

The storyline is a counterweight to the portrayal of Michelle Obama as unpatriotic on some blogs and by Republican critics, an image cemented when she told an audience during the primary that “for the first time in my adult lifetime I am really proud of my country.” She later qualified the remark, insisting she meant that she has never been as proud as she is now.

But it hasn't completely gone away. Cindy McCain recently reprised a line she used months ago, telling an audience last week, “I have always been proud of my country.” Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), appearing Friday on MSNBC’s Hardball, said Michelle Obama held “very anti-American views.”

Although her foes continue to hammer her with it, Michelle Obama hasn’t stumbled in a significant way since then.

As part of attempts to soften her image, Obama took well-received turns on ABC’s “The View” and at Democratic National Convention, where she delivered a primetime speech to 17 million viewers that cast her, in the campaign’s parlance, as “one of us.” Each night, cameras featured her tearing up at some speeches and cheering on others.

“Things changed instantly when she had the platform really to introduce herself,” Obama chief strategist David Axelrod said, citing public and internal campaign polls that showed an improvement in her approval ratings after her speech.

Michelle Obama has spent recent months traveling to almost two dozen states, headlining more than 50 events and quietly charting out a potential post-Election Day roadmap.

“She has had a great education into what we do on a regular basis that most people don’t really know,” McBreen said. “I have friends and family members who don’t have any clue what my life is like. My own family and closest friends don’t understand my life like she does now.”


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14733.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: article about Michelle Obama,,,,long read

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/did_michelle_obama_spend_450_on_room.html" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/did_michelle_obama_spend_450_on_room.html">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: article about Michelle Obama,,,,long read

<font size="5"><center>
Michelle Obama has her own
transition to work out</font size></center>



ALeqM5i1JpAw6INh-cdaY7qiS1rz8JuKvw

President-elect Obama, right, and Michelle Obama walk
out of Spiaggia restaurant after having dinner in Chicago,
Saturday, Nov. 8, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)



Associated Press
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
November 10, 2008


WASHINGTON (AP) — This is the transition you don't hear so much about: Michelle Obama is getting ready for a new life as first lady, giving plenty of thought to what kind of profile she will carve out for herself in the White House.

She has plenty of role models in the last few women who have lived their lives in the limelight that'll soon shine on her. One thing is not in any doubt, however: she'll be the new president's close confidant and adviser — hewing to a tradition that transcends presidencies and political parties.

She's been compared to Jacqueline Kennedy, is every bit as high-powered as Hillary Rodham Clinton was and has praised Laura Bush's calm and rational approach to issues.

But while it's too soon to know just what kind of first lady Mrs. Obama will be, she doubtlessly will be the kind of first lady this country hasn't seen in decades: the mother of young children.

Barack Obama has portrayed his wife as the family's "rock" — and told Newsweek magazine she had "veto power" over his decision to run for president.

Aides say publicly she is not interested in shaping policy or reserving a seat for herself at her husband's decision-making table. She prefers, at least for now, to focus on easing the transition for Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7 — getting them in new schools, settled and comfortable with a new way of life.

The girls are her priority, she has said often, the last thing she thinks about before falling asleep at night and the first thing on her mind when she wakes up in the morning.

During the campaign, she set her schedule so she would be home to tuck them into bed and see them off to school.

Not since 1977, when 9-year-old Amy Carter moved in, will there be such young children at the White House.

"My first job in all honesty is going to continue to be mom-in-chief," she told Ebony magazine, "making sure that in this transition, which will be even more of a transition for the girls ... that they are settled and that they know they will continue to be the center of our universe."

Michelle Obama was a high-level administrator at the University of Chicago Medical Center before taking a leave to help her husband. She knows about the juggling act working mothers perform and wants to work on the issue as first lady.

"How to make sure our policies are structured in a way that supports that balance, whether it's more work/family leave, whether it's better health care. There are a lot of policies that go along with allowing women that freedom," she said.

Valerie Jarrett, a longtime family friend who is helping lead the president-elect transition team, said in a broadcast interview Sunday: "Having a seat at .... the table and being co-president is not something she's interested in doing."

First ladies often start out slow, then pick up the pace as they become more comfortable in their roles.

An Ivy League-educated lawyer, Michelle Obama was criticized during the campaign and Jarrett's comments could be taken as the beginning of an effort to lower her profile, de-emphasize her adviser role and present a more traditional, first lady persona, possibly to avoid repeating the mistake the Clintons made.

Though Barack Obama said no such thing, Bill Clinton joked during the 1992 campaign that the country would get two for one if he was elected.

A high-powered lawyer and children's advocate before he became president, Hillary Clinton accepted an assignment from him early in his administration to overhaul the nation's health care system. She failed, damaging herself and her husband's administration in the process.

Laura Bush took things slow, but grew increasingly comfortable during the past eight years with her public platform and ability to draw attention to issues. She championed the rights of women in Afghanistan, delivered some her husband's weekly radio addresses and spoke out against the crackdown on pro-democracy activists in the southeast Asian nation of Myanmar. She also has traveled through Europe, the Middle East and Africa on her own.

She even presided over a news conference in the White House briefing room earlier this year, rare for a first lady, that was called to criticize Myanmar's military leaders for ineptness after a killer cyclone struck the country.

So, back to the question of what kind of first lady Michelle Obama will be.

There are some clues, including from her.

Comparisons to Jacqueline Kennedy have centered on style and fashion. Watch for Michelle Obama to become a trendsetter, possibly a reluctant one. A sleeveless, off-the-rack, black-and-white dress she wore during an appearance on "The View" quickly sold out. And she recently told comedian Jay Leno that the ensemble she wore on his show came from J. Crew.

Her approach to issues? Perhaps calm and rational, like her husband — and Laura Bush.

The first lady defended Michelle Obama this year after Republicans criticized her for saying that for the first time in her adult life she was proud of her country. Laura Bush said comments made during the heat of a campaign are closely watched and misconstrued.

Michelle Obama said on "The View" that she was touched by the comments and had sent Laura Bush a note.

"And that's what I like about Laura Bush. You know, just calm, rational approach to these issues. And you know, I'm taking some cues. I mean, there's a balance. There's a reason why people like her. It's because she doesn't, sort of, you know, fuel the fire."

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gF6i4iEHstfMbiVDziPEgI7m6pFAD94C20HO1
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: article about Michelle Obama,,,,long read

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.newsweek.com/id/170383" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.newsweek.com/id/170383">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
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