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The Road to November

Started by bluecaravan521, January 14, 2008, 10:35:24 PM

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tet

wow, amazing story.  i can't imagine the immense pride she felt casting that ballot... 

+K for sharing!
"We want you to be happy"
-Phish

rowjimmy

I can't wait to go vote tomorrow.

I've been having trouble sleeping thinking about this thing. Nov. 5 cannot come soon enough.

Hicks

Quote from: rowjimmy on October 31, 2008, 10:01:15 PM
I can't wait to go vote tomorrow.

I've been having trouble sleeping thinking about this thing. Nov. 5 cannot come soon enough.

Indeed it's been a long one. 

But I have "hope" along with a lot of other people, that's pretty cool. 
Quote from: Trey Anastasio
But, I don't think our fans do happily lap it up, I think they go online and talk about how it was a bad show.

rowjimmy

Wait'll you guys see the pics of my friends' Obama pumpkin.
:-o

Guyute

Good decisions come from experience;
Experience comes from bad decisions.

About to open a bottle of Macallan.  There's my foreign policy; I support Scotland.

mattstick


The newest McCain robocall....

"Hello. I'm calling for John McCain and the RNC because you need to know that Barack Obama has not accepted Joe the Plumber's friend request on Facebook. We know he's logged on, because we saw he changed his status on Monday. On Tuesday, he joined the group Art Historians Are Saucy. But he still won't accept Joe the Plumber's friend request. He knows it's Joe. Joe uses the screen shot of the two of them together as his profile picture. That's not a uniter. That's the same old liberal-elite politics as usual."

gah

Oh, and I forgot, another cool thing about the rally from the other day, there was a couple with their daughter there from Scotland, who had been here in Virginia for the last 2 weeks volunteering for Obama. And this rally was the last thing they were doing, then heading back. That was how they choose to spend their vacation time. Volunteering for a man in a country they are not even citizens of. Amazing.
Sometimes we live no particular way but our own.

rowjimmy

Quote from: rowjimmy on October 31, 2008, 10:15:20 PM
Wait'll you guys see the pics of my friends' Obama pumpkin.
:-o

Hicks

Quote from: Trey Anastasio
But, I don't think our fans do happily lap it up, I think they go online and talk about how it was a bad show.

mattstick


Weird story.

The Chairman of the American Nazi Party, among other self-proclaimed racists, is voting for Obama.

http://www.esquire.com/the-side/feature/racists-support-obama-061308


mattstick

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1103/p09s02-coop.html

My wife made me canvas for Obama; here's what I learned
This election is not about major policies. It's about hope.

By Jonathan Curley

from the November 3, 2008 edition

Charlotte, N.C. - There has been a lot of speculation that Barack Obama might win the election due to his better "ground game" and superior campaign organization.

I had the chance to view that organization up close this month when I canvassed for him. I'm not sure I learned much about his chances, but I learned a lot about myself and about this election.

Let me make it clear: I'm pretty conservative. I grew up in the suburbs. I voted for George H.W. Bush twice, and his son once. I was disappointed when Bill Clinton won, and disappointed he couldn't run again.

I encouraged my son to join the military. I was proud of him in Afghanistan, and happy when he came home, and angry when he was recalled because of the invasion of Iraq. I'm white, 55, I live in the South and I'm definitely going to get a bigger tax bill if Obama wins.

I am the dreaded swing voter.

So you can imagine my surprise when my wife suggested we spend a Saturday morning canvassing for Obama. I have never canvassed for any candidate. But I did, of course, what most middle-aged married men do: what I was told.

At the Obama headquarters, we stood in a group to receive our instructions. I wasn't the oldest, but close, and the youngest was maybe in high school. I watched a campaign organizer match up a young black man who looked to be college age with a white guy about my age to canvas together. It should not have been a big thing, but the beauty of the image did not escape me.

Instead of walking the tree-lined streets near our home, my wife and I were instructed to canvass a housing project. A middle-aged white couple with clipboards could not look more out of place in this predominantly black neighborhood.

We knocked on doors and voices from behind carefully locked doors shouted, "Who is it?"

"We're from the Obama campaign," we'd answer. And just like that doors opened and folks with wide smiles came out on the porch to talk.

Grandmothers kept one hand on their grandchildren and made sure they had all the information they needed for their son or daughter to vote for the first time.

Young people came to the door rubbing sleep from their eyes to find out where they could vote early, to make sure their vote got counted.

We knocked on every door we could find and checked off every name on our list. We did our job, but Obama may not have been the one who got the most out of the day's work.

I learned in just those three hours that this election is not about what we think of as the "big things."

It's not about taxes. I'm pretty sure mine are going to go up no matter who is elected.

It's not about foreign policy. I think we'll figure out a way to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan no matter which party controls the White House, mostly because the people who live there don't want us there anymore.

I don't see either of the candidates as having all the answers.

I've learned that this election is about the heart of America. It's about the young people who are losing hope and the old people who have been forgotten. It's about those who have worked all their lives and never fully realized the promise of America, but see that promise for their grandchildren in Barack Obama. The poor see a chance, when they often have few. I saw hope in the eyes and faces in those doorways.

My wife and I went out last weekend to knock on more doors. But this time, not because it was her idea. I don't know what it's going to do for the Obama campaign, but it's doing a lot for me.

Jonathan Curley is a banker. He voted for George H.W. Bush twice and George W. Bush once.


tet

"We want you to be happy"
-Phish

gah

Sometimes we live no particular way but our own.

mattstick


Wow, Obama's grandmother dies on the eve of the election.

Tragic stuff.

gah

Wow, thats tough stuff. And it looks like he went forward with all today's scheduled appearances too.
Sometimes we live no particular way but our own.