The Democratic National Convention

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="6"><center>
All About Hillary</font size><font size="5">
Obama Needs Her Votes and More</font size></center>


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New York Post
By Rich Lowry
August 25, 2008


DENVER - IT'S Hillary's convention. Not in the way she imagined it when the primary battle began - she's not the nominee making history and bidding to end the dread Bush years. That role has been usurped by Barack Obama.

But the convention narrative revolves around her in important ways.

It's not just because so much drama attaches to the question of how she and embittered husband Bill regard Obama, and not just because she and Bill are getting so much air time. Obama has two major challenges this week - and both are Hillary-centric.

First, Obama has to win over Hillary's voters from the primaries, only 52 percent of whom are now supporting him, according to the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll.

Second, he has to occupy the space on the political spectrum that Hillary carved out in the primaries - identifying himself with mainstream American values, demonstrating a toughness on foreign affairs and connecting with the working class with his economic policies. (If he's at a loss how to do any of it, perhaps Hillary can explain it over a shot and beer chaser.)

That Obama is still performing so poorly among Hillary voters makes the prominence he's given the Clintons look less like an abject capitulation and more like a strategic necessity. If the Clintons can deliver Hillary's voters, every minute devoted to them will have been worth it.

The Clintons, of course, are profoundly conflicted. They've long thought Obama will lose, but they can't betray that belief lest - should Obama actually fail in the fall - they get blamed, engendering the bitterness of half the party.

Yet, no matter how enthusiastic they are (or seem), there's only so much the Clintons can do to deliver Hillary's voters. Some of these people are simply angry that she lost, and can be placated by seeing her treated well. But others were attracted by her characteristics - that she was tougher and more experienced than Obama. That group will be harder to reach.

Obama's pick of Joe Biden as his running mate is an attempt to play for these voters. Problem is, Biden's experience isn't transferable. It doesn't matter that Biden has spent 35 years in the Senate; Obama still has spent less than four.

The Georgia crisis helped tip Obama toward foreign-policy maven Biden as his VP choice. But, as Saturday's rally rolling out the ticket showed, Biden's value is as much his working-class roots as his work on arms control or Iraq (most of which has been terribly misconceived).

Obama portrayed Biden as a politician who came from the working class and never left it - the champion of, as Mark Penn put it in one of his campaign memos for Hillary, the "invisible Americans." Here, too, Biden's utility is probably limited. Most voters will look at him and not see the scrappy kid from Scranton, Pa., but a senator whose love affair with hearing himself talk is ardent even by the self-exalting standards of the breed.

So neither the Clintons nor Biden will be able to make the sale for Obama: He'll have to make it himself - and the convention is one of his best chances to do it.

He'll need to express sympathy with the morés of the middle of the country and blunt the sharp edges of his party's social liberalism, something Clinton did during the primaries in emphasizing her Midwestern roots and with her caution when addressing hot-button social issues. He'll have to sound tougher on foreign affairs, something Hillary did with some well-placed bluster about "obliterating" Iran.

And he'll have to make the connection between his domestic policies - from taxes to health care to energy policy - and the interests of the middle class, a centerpiece of Hillary's campaign.

Assailing John McCain, which will be a favored sport here, doesn't substitute for any of this. In the end, the election is essentially about Obama, and whether he can connect with average voters and meet the standard of commander-in-chief. And the way Obama should go about it is all about Hillary.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/08252008/postopinion/opedcolumnists/all_about_hillary_125970.htm
 
Re: All About Hillary

<font size="5"><center>Poll: More than half of Clinton backers </font size><font size="6">
still not sold on Obama</font size></center>



USA TODAY
By Susan Page

DENVER — Fewer than half of Hillary Rodham Clinton's supporters in the presidential primaries say they definitely will vote for Barack Obama in November, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, evidence of a formidable challenge facing Democrats as their national convention opens here today.
In the survey, taken Thursday through Saturday, 47% of Clinton supporters say they are solidly behind Obama, and 23% say they support him but may change their minds before the election.

Thirty percent say they will vote for Republican John McCain, someone else or no one at all.

The findings spotlight the stakes for Clinton when she addresses the convention Tuesday and when her name is placed in nomination.

"I know a lot of hardened Clinton delegates who are going to be OK, they're going to wind up supporting Sen. Obama," Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, a Clinton supporter, told USA TODAY. "But they want to cast their votes for her. … I think that'll make it easier for there to be closure."



The presidential race remains close and fluid.

Obama holds a 47%-43% edge over McCain among registered voters and a 48%-45% edge among likely voters. Both leads are within the margin of error of +/—4 percentage points.

In the USA TODAY/Gallup Poll a month ago, Obama led McCain by 3 percentage points, but McCain held a 4-point lead among likely voters.

Most of the telephone survey of 1,023 adults was taken before Obama announced Delaware Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate Saturday.


Among the findings:

  • Obama has not eased concerns about his depth of experience: 57% worry he lacks the experience to be an effective president, and 44% question whether he could handle the responsibilities of commander in chief. He is preferred by double digits over McCain on handling the economy, but a GOP drumbeat on taxes seems to be working: A majority of those surveyed predict Obama will raise their federal income taxes if elected.

  • McCain is credited as a strong and decisive leader, but he has lost ground since earlier this year on handling the economy, the electorate's top issue. A majority say his policies as president would mostly benefit the wealthy. Four in 10 worry McCain is too old to be president — he'll turn 72 on Friday — and 66% say they're concerned he'll pursue President Bush's course. That includes 64% of independents and 35% of Republicans.

McCain also gets more blame for the campaign's negative tone. Nearly half of respondents, 48%, say McCain has attacked Obama unfairly, compared with 30% who say Obama has unfairly attacked McCain.

The electorate remains deeply pessimistic. Eight in 10 say they are dissatisfied with the way things are going in the USA, and even more rate the economy as "only fair" or poor. Seven in 10 say it's getting worse.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/election2008/2008-08-24-campaignpoll_N.htm
 
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August 25, 2008

<font size="4">Michelle Obama Bio Video</font size>

Tonight in Denver, this biography was played as part
of the introduction to Michelle Obama's speech.




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August 25, 2008

<font size="4">Michelle Obama's Address to the DNC
</font size>


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<font size="6"><center>Tuesday, August 26, 2008</font size></center>



Millions of Americans are struggling to get by. The failed policies of the last eight years have betrayed the country’s values and left an economy out of balance. Barack Obama believes a strong economy is unattainable with a weak middle class. Tuesday’s Convention program will feature the voices of Americans who share Barack’s concerns and strongly support his detailed economic plan to grow the economy, create jobs, restore fairness, and expand opportunity.

Senator Hillary Clinton will be the headline prime-time speaker and former Virginia Governor Mark Warner will deliver the keynote address on Tuesday night. Pay Equity pioneer Lilly Ledbetter will also address the Convention on Tuesday.

Other Tuesday speakers will include:
Governor Brian Schweitzer of Montana; Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts; Governor Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas; Governor Janet Napolitano of Arizona; Governor Joe Manchin of West Virginia; Governor Jim Doyle of Wisconsin; Governor Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania; Governor Ted Strickland of Ohio; Governor David Paterson of New York; Governor Chet Culver of Iowa; Senator Bob Casey, Jr., of Pennsylvania; Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont; former Secretary of Energy and Transportation Federico Peña; House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer; House Democratic Caucus Chair Rahm Emanuel; Representative Xavier Becerra (D-CA), Assistant to the Speaker of the House; and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) Chair Chris Van Hollen, who will use his time to showcase his top candidates for change.

Representatives Nydia Velazquez (D-NY), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Mike Honda (D-CA), California Controller John Chiang, Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards, Change To Win’s Anna Burger, and AFL-CIO President John Sweeney will also speak.

http://www.demconvention.com/schedule/
 
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<A HREF="http://www.demconvention.com/tuesday-schedule/">link</A>

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WTF is up with Bill Clinton, NOW ???

`

WTF is Bill Clinton up to on the afternoon before his wife is to take the podium to unify the Democrats behind Barack Obama; and one day before he too is scheduled to take the podium (presumably) to help unify the party behind Mr. Obama ???

Speaking in Denver today Bill Clinton asked the audience, the following:

  • On the one hand: you have a candidate whom you agree with on most things; but, he can’t deliver; and

  • On the other hand, you have a candidate that you agree with less but, who CAN deliver.

  • Which one do you go for ???

Disclaimer: Bill says he was not talking about the present election (or the primary between his wife and Barack Obama).

Funny thing: He can maintain plausible denial all he wants; you decide whether his comments sound like he is still miffed at the outcome between Obama and Hillary and whether he is still trying to find a way to get even.

PLEASE NOTE: During the Democratic Primaries, Hillary Clinton said she was the candidate That Could Deliver :puke:

QueEx
 
Re: WTF is up with Bill Clinton, NOW ???

<font size="5"><center>
Another sneak attack by Bill Clinton?</font size></center>


Market Watch
August 26th, 2008


Did Bill Clinton make another sneak attack on Sen. Barack Obama’s ability to deliver on his promise of change? Clinton says no.

Speaking in Denver on Tuesday at a conference of former heads of state, former President Bill Clinton said the biggest question for political leaders in the next decade will be how to make democracy deliver the goods for the people. How can inequality be reduced? How can national security be enhanced? How can global climate change be averted?

Clinton posed a hypothetical question, which he insisted didn’t have anything to do with the current political campaign in the United States. Suppose, he said, you had one candidate that you agreed with 100% on the issues, but you knew couldn’t get anything done. And you had another candidate that you agreed with only half the time, but felt would deliver on the other half.

“Who would you vote for?” Clinton said, making it pretty clear that he’d vote for results, not good intentions.

“It’s hard to turn good intentions into positive change,” Clinton said Tuesday.

The question mirrored the criticism Clinton levied at Obama throughout this spring’s primary campaign against Clinton’s wife, Hillary: Who has the experience to deliver the political promises?

Hillary Clinton will speak at the Democratic National Convention this evening, where she’s expected to enthusiastically endorse Barack Obama. Bill Clinton is slated to speak to the delegates Wednesday night, just before a speech by Sen. Joseph Biden, the vice presidential choice.

– Rex Nutting, MarketWatch

http://blogs.marketwatch.com/election/2008/08/26/another-sneak-attack-by-bill-clinton/
 
Obama Nomination Speech Prediction

this maybe wishful thinking but I think that Obama will call for the impeachment of George Bush on Thursday. I know it is farfetched but I have been thinking about the methodical nature of the campaign and its perceived pacifism. I have said before that OBama has to not be stereotyped as an angry Black man in order for him to win the
White House. This would explain his demeanor throughout this campaign. However if he were to become more confrontational now there is no way that he could be labeled as the angry Black man because the running narrative of the media is that he has no backbone.

At this point there is seems to be nothing that he could do to really break out of except for something as extreme as calling for the impeachment of Bush. I also think that the nature of this convention has been a bit positive in nature something that would seem to contradict the mood of the country. PEople need something to rally against. THe things that need to be rallied against are so numerous but in all they boil down to one thing : George Bush. Therefore I think Obama will hit America with the zinger of impeachment and in one swoop unite a significant number of Democrats that show he has spine and is ready to lead.

Finally my other reason is because George Bush is probably the most impeachable president in history but the Democrats have kept it off the table. I have believed for a long time they are doing this to use it at an opportune moment to their advantage. Using it at this point would destroy a fatal blow to the Republican party gauranteeing the likelihood of Democratic dominance for at least 2 decades. And since impeachment would focus around the drumbeating that led to the Iraq War, McCain's image could be severely tarnished since he CALLED FOR THE INVASION OF IRAQ BEFORE BUSH ON NATIONAL TV!
 
Re: Obama Nomination Speech Prediction

Everything so far is going good; I don't think now is the time for BO to talk about impeachment..

I think he wants to get his point across that he's the man to lead, and not McCain..

Hopefully if he does win the presidency, then maybe he'll see that Bush & his peoples are brought up on charges...
 
<font size="4">
Bill Clinton just finished; did he redeem
himself, on the Barack Obama question ???

QueEx

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<font size="4">
Bill Clinton just finished; did he redeem
himself, on the Barack Obama question ???

QueEx

</font size>
 
<font size="4">
Bill Clinton just finished; did he redeem
himself, on the Barack Obama question ???

QueEx

</font size>
 
Bill Clinton Speech @ 2008 DNC 8/27/2008
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<font size="6"><center>
Obama Wins Nomination; </font size><font size="5">
Biden and Bill Clinton Rally Party </font size></center>



28demsday-600.jpg

Brendan Smialowski for The New York Times
Senator Barack Obama joined Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. on stage on Wednesday.


The New York Times
By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Published: August 28, 2008

DENVER — Barack Hussein Obama, a freshman senator who defeated the first family of Democratic Party politics with a call for a fundamentally new course in politics, was nominated by his party on Wednesday to be the 44th president of the United States.

The unanimous vote made Mr. Obama the first African-American to become a major party nominee for president. It brought to an end an often-bitter two-year political struggle for the nomination with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, who, standing on a packed convention floor electric with anticipation, moved to halt the roll call in progress so that the convention could nominate Mr. Obama by acclamation. That it did with a succession of loud roars, followed by a swirl of dancing, embracing, high-fiving and chants of “Yes, we can.”

In an effort to fully ease the lingering animosity from the primary season, former President Bill Clinton, in a speech that had been anxiously awaited by Mr. Obama’s aides given the uncomfortable relations between the two men, offered an enthusiastic and unstinting endorsement of Mr. Obama’s credentials to be president. Mr. Clinton’s message, like the messenger, was greeted rapturously in the hall.

“Last night Hillary told us in no uncertain terms that she is going to do everything she can to elect Barack Obama,” Mr. Clinton said. “That makes two of us.”

Mr. Clinton proceeded to do precisely what Mr. Obama’s campaign was looking for him to do: attest to Mr. Obama’s readiness to be president, after a campaign largely based on Mrs. Clinton’s contention that he was not.

“I say to you: Barack Obama is ready to lead America and restore American leadership in the world,” Mr. Clinton said. “Barack Obama is ready to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. Barack Obama is ready to be president of the United States.”

Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware, Mr. Obama’s choice for vice president, accepted the nomination with a speech in which he spoke frequently, and earnestly, of his blue-collar background, in effect offering himself as a validator for Mr. Obama among some voters who have been reluctant to embrace the Democratic presidential nominee.

He then turned to Senator John McCain, the likely Republican nominee, signaling how he would go after him in the campaign ahead. He referred to Mr. McCain as a friend — “I know you hear that phrase a lot in politics; I mean it,” he said — and then proceeded to offer a long and systematic case about why Mr. McCain should not be president.

“The choice in this election is clear,” Mr. Biden said. “These times require more than a good soldier. Tthey require a wise leader,” he said, a leader who can deliver “the change that everybody knows we need.”

His 21-minute address completed, Mr. Biden was joined on stage by his wife, Jill, who told the crowd they were about to be joined by an unscheduled guest. The crowd exploded as Mr. Obama walked around the corner.

“If I’m not mistaken, Hillary Clinton rocked the house last night,” he said, gazing up at where Mr. and Mrs. Clinton were watching the proceedings and leading the crowd in applause. “And President Clinton reminded us of what it’s like when you have a president who actually puts people first. Thank you.”

The historic nature of the moment quickly gave way to the political imperatives confronting Mr. Obama, who arrived here on Wednesday afternoon and is to accept the nomination Thursday night before a crowd of 75,000 people in a football stadium. After days in which the convention often seemed less about Mr. Obama than about the two families that have dominated Democratic politics for nearly a half-century, the Kennedys and the Clintons, he needed to convince voters that he has solutions to their economic anxieties and to rally his party against the reinvigorated candidacy of Mr. McCain.

The roll-call vote took place in the late afternoon Wednesday — the first time in at least 50 years that Democrats have not scheduled their roll call on prime-time television — as Democrats sought to avoid drawing attention to the lingering resentments between Clinton and Obama delegates. Yet the significance of the vote escaped no one, and sent a charge through the Pepsi Center as a procession of state delegations cast their votes and the hall, slightly empty at the beginning of the vote, became shoulder-to-shoulder with Democrats eager to witness this moment.

“With eyes firmly fixed on the future in the spirit of unity, with the goal of victory, with faith in our party and country, let’s declare together in one voice, right here and right now, that Barack Obama is our candidate and he will be our president,” Mrs. Clinton said.

“I move that Senator Barack Obama of Illinois be selected by this convention by acclamation as the nominee of the Democratic Party for president of the United States,” she said.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California, standing at the lectern, asked for a second and was greeted by a roar of voices. A louder roar came from the crowd when she asked for support of the motion.

When the voting was cut off, Mr. Obama had received 1,549 votes, compared with 231 for Mrs. Clinton.

The hall pulsed when Mr. Clinton strode onto the stage for a performance that became a reminder of why Democrats had considered him a politician with once-in-a-generation skills — and suggested that for Democrats in this hall at least, Mr. Clinton may have survived a primary in which he was repeatedly criticized for the sharp tone he often used against Mr. Obama. Again and again, Mr. Clinton tried to quiet the crowd. Again and again, they ignored him.

“You all sit down, we have to get on with the show,” he said.

Mr. Clinton arguably did a better job than Mrs. Clinton the night before in making the case for Mr. Obama, and pumped up a crowd at a convention that has often seemed listless. He even managed, amid all his praise, to slip in a reference to the reservations he voiced about Mr. Obama back when he was campaigning against him, suggesting that Mr. Biden was just what Mr. Obama needed.

“With Joe Biden’s experience and wisdom, supporting Barack Obama’s proven understanding, instincts and insight, America will have the national security leadership we need,” he said.

And without mentioning Mr. McCain by name, he offered a sharp denunciation of him and the Republicans.

“The Republicans will nominate a good man who served our country heroically and suffered terribly in Vietnam,” he said, “He loves our country every bit as much as we all do. As a senator, he has shown his independence on several issues. But on the two great questions of this election, how to rebuild the American Dream and how to restore America’s leadership in the world, he still embraces the extreme philosophy which has defined his party for more than 25 years.”

“They actually want us to reward them for the last eight years by giving them four more,” he said. “Let’s send them a message that will echo from the Rockies all across America: Thanks, but no thanks.”

For all the good Mr. Clinton might have done for Mr. Obama on Wednesday night it marked the second night in a row that the Clintons had been the face of what was supposed to be Mr. Obama’s convention. But when Mr. Obama walked out from backstage at the end of the night — “Hello, Democrats!” — he left little doubt about who was now the face of the Democratic party.

For Mr. Obama, the nomination — seized from Mrs. Clinton, who just one year ago was viewed as the obvious favorite to win the nomination especially against an opponent with a scant political résumé — was a remarkable achievement in what has been a remarkable ascendance. It was less than four years ago that Mr. Obama, coming off of serving seven years as an Illinois state senator, became a member of the United States Senate. He is 47 years old, the son of a white mother from Kansas and a black father from Kenya.

Mr. Obama’s nomination came 120 years after Frederick Douglass became the first African-American to have his name entered in nomination at a major party convention. Douglass received one vote at the Republican convention in Chicago in 1888.

Making the moment even more striking was the historical nature of Mrs. Clinton’s candidacy. She was the third woman whose name has been entered as a candidate for president at a major party convention. As she moved to end the roll-call vote, some women in the hall could be seen wiping tears from their eyes.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/28/us/politics/28DEMSDAY.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
 
<font size="5"><center>
Obama reaches next milestone </font size><font size="4">
on symbolic anniversary of MLK's I Have A Dream</font size></center>



art.obama.gi.jpg

Sen. Barack Obama will make history Thursday
as he officially accepts his party's nomination.


CNN
August 28, 2009

(CNN) -- Standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on August 28,1963, Martin Luther King Jr. shared his vision for a new America:
"I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal,' " he said before a crowd of hundreds of thousands.​
King's dream for a land where his children would "not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character" would be repeated, meditated upon and memorized for generations to come.[/indent]


On the 45th anniversary of King's call

On the 45th anniversary of King's rousing call, Sen. Barack Obama will accept the Democratic nomination at INVESCO Field in Denver, Colorado. In what represents at least a partial actualization of King's dream, Obama will officially become the first African-American to lead a major party's ticket for president of the United States.

Obama has billed himself as the candidate of change since day one of his White House run.

The Illinois senator preached a similar message when he delivered the keynote address at the Democratic convention four years ago.

In a speech that helped catapult him from a fresh-faced politician to a recognizable name, Obama told his personal story -- one that his since been heard by the millions who have followed him on the presidential trail.

He spoke of his humble upbringing -- he was the son of a white woman from Kansas and a father from a small village in Kenya. Obama, whose first name means "blessed," grew up with big dreams that rested in faith in a tolerant nation.

"No other country on earth is my story even possible," he said. "That is the true genius of America, a faith in the simple dreams of its people, the insistence on small miracles," he said.

What Obama saw as the true genius of America would also become the foundation of his presidential campaign.

When he first announced his candidacy in February 2007, Obama told a crowd in Springfield, Illinois, that "few obstacles can withstand the power of millions of voices calling for change."

"Together, starting today, let us finish the work that needs to be done, and usher in a new birth of freedom on this Earth," he said.

Obama -- the third African-American since Reconstruction to be elected to the U.S. Senate -- said he knew some might see a certain "presumptuousness" and "audacity" to his announcement, considering the odds against him.

He said he believed there was enough hope for change to conquer the obstacles before him: He was up against Hillary Clinton, a well-known figure with decades of political experience. He was a relative newcomer to the political scene. And he was black.

But less than a year later, after a shocking win in the first nominating contest in Iowa, a confident Obama told a roaring crowd, "You have done what the cynics said we couldn't do.

"You came together as Democrats, Republicans and independents to stand up and say that we are one nation; we are one people; and our time for change has come."

Obama's perceived lack of experience became the line of attack used by Clinton and Republican rival John McCain. Clinton touted her 35 years of experience and said she was in the "solutions business," while her opponent was in the "promises business." As McCain slammed Obama on foreign policy, Obama pushed hard on his message of change.

While some questioned the substance of his words, no one doubted their power.

As pundits continued to ask -- Can Obama really beat the Clintons? Can a junior senator, who decided to run for president with just three years of national experience really become the country's commander in chief? Seemingly unfazed by the skeptics, Obama and his supporters responded with what would become a familiar chant at his campaign events: "Yes, we can."

His campaign became more like a movement. His success rested largely on the shoulders of his ground troops. The 47-year-old won almost all of the Democratic caucuses, where grassroots efforts were more likely to have greater influence.

Month after month, a campaign fueled by small online donations continued to break fundraising records and knock out every obstacle that stood in its way.

After a protracted and bitter battle, Obama came out on top, clinching his party's nomination in early June.

When he became the presumptive nominee, many African-Americans cried because they said they never thought they would live to see such a day. Vendors soon started selling T-shirts of Obama's portrait pasted alongside King in Walgreens stores and at online stores.

But as Obama approached and crossed the historic milestone, doubts remained about the Democratic nominee: There were the headline-making comments from the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who accused Obama of talking down to African Americans, as well as criticism from the outspoken Al Sharpton. There was the controversy over remarks made by his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah White. There were suggestions that Obama was too black, or not black enough.

Each incident served as a reminder of the ever-present racial tension.

"You have to look at American culture and the fact that it's been 400 years for these kind of racial attitudes to develop, racial behaviors to materialize. And you're certainly not going to wipe that out with just someone being elected to any office in the United States," said Ron Walters, director of the African American Leadership Center.

Before he clinched the nomination, Obama made it clear that while his candidacy marks a step forward on the path to racial reconciliation, the country still has a long way to go.

"I have never been so naive as to believe that we can get beyond our racial divisions in a single election cycle, or with a single candidacy -- particularly a candidacy as imperfect as my own," he said.

CNN contributor David Gergen said even though Obama's success won't change things overnight, people should not downplay its importance.

"History-making events do change history," he said. "When we passed civil rights bills in '64 and '65 and under Lyndon Johnson, racial attitudes didn't change for a long time. But over time, as a result of those bills, they changed dramatically. And in the same way, Martin Luther King didn't change people's attitudes immediately, but over time he had an enormous impact."



http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/08/28/obama.thursday/index.html
 
ABC news reporter arrested at DNC

- yall cats can keep it up with this whole "republican/democrat faux news!" B.S. all you like, they are ALL corrupt and twisted...anybody wanna talk about civil liberties now?

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ABC Reporter Arrested in Denver Taking Pictures of Senators, Big Donors
Asa Eslocker Was Investigating the Role of Lobbyists and Top Donors at the Convention

By BRIAN ROSS

Aug. 27, 2008—

DENVER -- Police in Denver arrested an ABC News producer today as he and a camera crew were attempting to take pictures on a public sidewalk of Democratic senators and VIP donors leaving a private meeting at the Brown Palace Hotel.

Police on the scene refused to tell ABC lawyers the charges against the producer, Asa Eslocker, who works with the ABC News investigative unit.

(Click here to watch video of the arrest.)

A cigar-smoking Denver police sergeant, accompanied by a team of five other officers, first put his hands on Eslocker's neck, then twisted the producer's arm behind him to put on handcuffs.

A police official later told lawyers for ABC News that Eslocker is being charged with trespass, interference, and failure to follow a lawful order. He also said the arrest followed a signed complaint from the Brown Palace Hotel.

Eslocker was put in handcuffs and loaded in the back of a police van which headed for a nearby police station.

Video taken at the scene shows a man, wearing the uniform of a Boulder County sheriff, ordering Eslocker off the sidewalk in front of the hotel, to the side of the entrance.

The sheriff's officer is seen telling Eslocker the sidewalk is owned by the hotel. Later, he is seen pushing Eslocker off the sidewalk into oncoming traffic, forcing him to the other side of the street.

It was two hours later when Denver police arrived to place Eslocker under arrest, apparently based on a complaint from the Brown Palace Hotel, a central location for Democratic officials.

During the arrest, one of the officers can be heard saying to Eslocker, "You're lucky I didn't knock the f..k out of you."

Eslocker was released late today after posting $500 bond.

Eslocker and his ABC News colleagues are spending the week investigating the role of corporate lobbyists and wealthy donors at the convention for a series of Money Trail reports on ABC's "World News with Charles Gibson."

Click Here for the Investigative Homepage.

Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures
 
Re: ABC news reporter arrested at DNC

I saw the report on how the democratic senators and congressman were schmoozing it up with the lobbyist on ABC News last night. I hope all of you are taking note of your representatives if you saw them there so you can vote them out!
 
Re: ABC news reporter arrested at DNC

^^^^ You're gonna see the same lobbyists in a few weeks at the Republican convention.
 
Re: ABC news reporter arrested at DNC

land of the free home of the brave
freedom of the press

:hmm:
 
Obama Hit Em Hard With "Specifics"

<font size="6"><center>Back to Earth</font size><font size="5">
Obama sacrificed lofty rhetoric for substance
— and it worked —</font size>
</center>


080828_Pol_ObamaEX.jpg

Barack Obama during his nomination acceptance speech in Denver.


Slate
By John Dickerson
Friday, Aug. 29, 2008

For a speech before 80,000 people and Doric columns in a football stadium, Barack Obama might have been expected to summon winged chariots, F-14s, and maybe a marching band. When he finished, hats would be cast into the air, and rent shirts would litter the floor.

Obama didn't deliver that speech. By the Obama standard, his convention speech was conventional—but that's as he intended. "Let me spell out exactly what change would mean if I am president," he said midway through the speech, then proceeded to launch into a list of dozens of specifics about tax policy, health care plans, and his foreign-policy perspective. He was even specific about his vision of bipartisanship, calling for the middle ground on abortion, gun laws, same-sex marriage, and immigration. For a time, the speech felt downright dull, as if his newfound reconciliation with Bill Clinton was so thorough that he'd taken on the former president's passion for laundry-list speeches.

Obama was addressing the complaint that has dogged his campaign since the beginning: that it lacks specifics. Part of the answer to that charge meant showing that he understood what voters were going through. He told the stories of voters he'd met who were suffering and took it a step further by becoming a warrior for them, challenging Phil Gramm's claim that America was "a nation of whiners." This is the transaction he needs to complete with undecided voters—and it's the one that Hillary Clinton was able to transmit effortlessly: that he will fight for them.

Obama may also have found himself a new slogan: "Enough." "Change vs. more of the same" is the phrase we hear all the time, but a better, more forceful pitch came early in the speech. After one of several passages in which he described the troubles of everyday people, he said, "Tonight I say to the American people, to Democrats and Republicans and independents across this great land—enough!"

It was the single most emphatic word of his address. Change is all well and good, but when Dad says, "Enough," the kids stop fooling around. It conveys an urgency and determination that talk of change simply does not. You could see that single word printed on placards for future rallies.

The speech was also full of "you" and "we," and so even in talking about himself he tried to weave it into the collective. He talked about his grandmother, who fought gender discrimination. He said he saw the face of his grandfather in the Iraq veterans. He recognized his mother in those who are on food stamps, as she was. He then challenged McCain directly. "I don't know what kind of lives John McCain thinks that celebrities lead, but this has been mine. These are my heroes. Theirs are the stories that shaped me. And it is on their behalf that I intend to win this election."

As passionate as Obama was on behalf of other people, he was equally as passionate in confronting John McCain. He challenged him on several fronts, from his vision of national security to McCain's suggestion that Obama has not put his country first. "Even my jaw hurt," one conservative wrote me. His most powerful attack, though, was when he suggested, more in sorrow than in anger, that McCain was out of touch. "Now, I don't believe that Senator McCain doesn't care what's going on in the lives of Americans," he said. "I just think he doesn't know."

As Obama spoke, the flashbulbs went off the way they do for touchdowns in nighttime football games—except they never stopped. If one of Obama's convention tasks was to unify and energize his party, he could hardly have done a better job. When he finished speaking, I looked at the faces around me. From an older African-American woman to a young father to a middle-aged woman, the tears were either in their eyes or rolling down their cheeks. A couple nearby kissed when the speech was over. Even when Barack Obama deliberately tries to tone it down, he can send an audience over the moon.


http://www.slate.com/id/2198848/?from=rss
 
The Audacity of Denver: Inspiring Pictures from the 2008 DNC

Hat tip to CT's Finest who posted these in the main forum.

Worth checking out. Here's a few from there.

<embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" src="http://w9.photobucket.com/pbwidget.swf?pbwurl=http://w9.photobucket.com/albums/a81/kos102/2008/Obama/Day 4/Stadium/09ba7803.pbw" height="480" width="640">

stage-1.jpg

stadium-9.jpg

biden-20.jpg

<embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" src="http://w9.photobucket.com/pbwidget.swf?pbwurl=http://w9.photobucket.com/albums/a81/kos102/2008/Obama/Day 4/Family/62c8967a.pbw" height="480" width="640">
<embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" src="http://w9.photobucket.com/pbwidget.swf?pbwurl=http://w9.photobucket.com/albums/a81/kos102/2008/Obama/Day 4/Scene/facc9b40.pbw" height="480" width="640">
<embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" src="http://w9.photobucket.com/pbwidget.swf?pbwurl=http://w9.photobucket.com/albums/a81/kos102/2008/Obama/Day 4/Parties/6fb60615.pbw" height="480" width="640">
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/8/29/21040/3558/576/577074
 
Re: The Audacity of Denver: Inspiring Pictures from the 2008 DNC

Great photos K; thanks.

QueEx
 
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