Showing posts with label Presidential Campaigns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Presidential Campaigns. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Never Mind the Polls

The polls aren't necessarily right, said John the
Candidate, he who likes to campaign with Joe the
Plumber. No matter that even the Fox News poll
shows Obama winning, he says he's going to turn
this race around: "I'm a fighter!"

He's only echoing some of the news stories: It
ain't over til its over, and so forth. Some are
hinting, some simply stating, that many who say
they're voting for Barack Obama will chicken
out once they're in the privacy of the polling
booth. They're afraid they'll be called racist if
they tell the truth: They won't vote for a Black
man.

I'm sure this will be true in some cases. So
many questions about the accuracy of the polls
made me uneasy, too, until I read a comment on
one of the forums: ask the bookies! When it
concerns their pocketbooks, they'll try very hard
to get it right.

Although online gambling is illegal in the U.S., sites
based in other countries offer odds to anyone who
wants to bet, and the odds against a McCain win
are very long- 7 to 1 and up, with the numbers
reversed for Obama. A couple of the sites no longer
offer bets on Obama.

I wish I could be in Grant Park Tuesday night. I
was there 40 years ago when Chicago's finest
clubbed and gassed anti-Vietnam War protesters.
We were trying to get a message to the Democratic
Party hacks secluded further down the shoreline,
blind and deaf, nominating Hubert Humphrey, paving
the way for Nixon to win.

I don't think Obama will always hear us either, or
that he will end the war in Iraq as swiftly as he
indicated when he first began to run. But I voted
for him, and I wish I could be in Grant Park again,
this time with a more valid hope for peace.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Missing Signs

The candidates' signs sprouted and bloomed in
yards, vacant lots, on street corners, beside
public buildings, or any other place where they
can be viewed from the road. They were planted
before the April primary, and some still flourish,
those touting the losers having withered and fallen.

But driving through Chattooga County and on up into
Walker, I've seen no signs for Obama, nor any for
Obama-Biden.

I went by the Chattooga County Democratic Party
headquarters, newly opened in a storefront less than
a month ago in Summerville, the county seat, to get
a sign for my yard.

There were stacks of signs for the party's other
candidates: Coker for state senator, Reece for state
representative, Winters for county commissioner, but
none for their candidate for the country's top office. I
was told they had run out of Obama signs but would
be getting some in shortly, "and some buttons, too."

A couple hours later I was at the gym to work out.
There I talked to a weight lifter who had an "Obama-
'08" bumper sticker on his car. He said he'd been
trying to get the Obama signs, too, said he was at the
Democratic Party office two weeks before and had
been told they had run out of the signs but would be
getting some more "shortly".

"Same thing I was told today," I said.

"I even left my phone number," he said, "asked them
to call when they got the signs in. They never called."

"I haven't seen any signs out," I said.

He said there are some. "Drive down Highland
Avenue, there's plenty through there, and all around
that area."

Yes. Well. That is where Blacks settled when the
city was totally segregated, and the area is still
mostly Black (and the cities are still segregated,
albeit in more subtle ways).

Does the color of the presidential candidate mean
that the signs promoting him are also segregated?

Couple days later an article in the local newspaper
quoted the Democratic Party chairman as saying that
Obama signs are being stolen and McCain signs are
being placed in front of those that are left in place.

But why are there no yard signs along the highways
and the major streets? Surely some of the houses are
occupied by Democratic Party members who could
quickly replace any stolen signs.

The majority of the local Democrats voted for Hilary
Clinton in the primary. And some stated they could
vote for neither Clinton nor Obama. I will not be
surprised if they vote for McCain in Novemember.

I also vote for candidates, not parties. I'm not happy
with the way Obama has waffled and changed
positions, but I will vote for him in November. I
certainly will not vote for a lying warmonger so
intent on seizing power for his cronies that he will
do and say anything in order to get elected. I know
of several who traditionally vote either Democrat or
Republican, but now say they will vote for indepen-
dents or third party candidates.

I would like to join them. I would like to vote for
Cynthia McKinney, the Green Party candidate. But
with the war abroad and the war at home against
working people and families, the situation is too
serious in this tight race to throw a vote away.
Actually, protest votes can only help McCain.

Come to think of it, I haven't seen many McCain/
Palin signs, either.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Two Women

They stood near the cleaning products in the Dollar Store,
the day before Super Tuesday, discussing the candidates.

"Not a woman," the older one was saying, "women don't
belong in a place like that. It ain't right!" She looked to be
about 60, but could have been younger, her face care-worn
beneath dyed black hair. "And that's not just me saying it,
that's what God says," and she rolled out the word "God" in a
loud, commanding voice.

"But the other one.." the younger woman began, lifting her
hands from her shopping cart to spread them in a helpless
gesture. She was about half the other woman's age, short
and overweight, her slacks bunched around her heavy
thighs, but her face attractive under skillfully applied makeup.

The older woman interrupted, her voice trembling with
emotion: "Oh, I pray to God he don't get in!"

Then they were speaking with lowered voices so I
couldn't hear the words, but I guessed they were
discussing the dilemma of race and gender, but possibly
in less kindly terms. Their mission was the same as mine,
to stretch their few dollars by buying some basic supplies
where prices are a bit lower than those in the
supermarkets.

Maybe they voted for Mike Huckaby, he carried our
county and won the state of Georgia. A lot of voters
found him comfortable, non-threatening. But Hilary
Clinton captured the county for the Democrats;
Obama won the state.

A woman and a Black man running for the highest
office in the land, and both getting a large number
of votes. Unthinkable only a few years ago. Obama
rings out the message of a need for change- our world
has already changed and is changing. The winds of
change have been more like a hurricane, blowing those
who refuse to accept change into the corners of life and
eventually into the dustbins of history.

Friday, April 25, 2008

About Obama's White Grandmother

It has been called "the greatest speech about race in
America in a generation," described as "Eloquent",
"Historic"; The New York Times compared the speech
by Barack Obama to those of Abraham Lincoln, Franklin
D. Roosevelt, and John F. Kennedy.

Yet, soon after the last words had been uttered, reactionary
critics swarmed upon it like so many vultures picking out bits
of it to toss about. The Reverend Jeremiah Wright, the pastor
Obama has refused to sever from his life, has become the
Willie Horton of this presidential campaign.

But the most vicious remarks have been made about Obama's
remarks about his white grandmother, Madelyn Dunham, who
helped raise him. Some have gone so far as to accuse him of
denying his white ancestory, of locking his grandmother away
and forbidding her to participate in his campaign. She is 84,
her back painful from osteoporosis, and has refused to make
any statements when reporters try to contact her by phone.

Others say he insulted her by stating she had been afraid
of Black strangers and had made stereotypical comments.
These critics, hardly any of whom can speak of Obama as
a candidate without refering to his race, cannot acknowledge
how it is almost impossible for a white person who has lived
in the United States for four or five decades to be totally free
of racial prejudice. Those who proclaim themselves without
prejudice are usually unaware of how they give themselves
away in remarks they make.

Their attitude toward the Rev. Wright's anger is similar to
that of a local newspaper which, when referring to an
incident of racial injustice, stated: "but that was before Civil
Rights," as if the valiant struggles for the right to vote, ride
buses, and eat at lunch counters, ended with the slate wiped
clean. It's as if to say, "It's bad, but that was yesterday".

Ah, but we old people grew up during those yesterdays,
daily we saw peoples of color denied good jobs and decent
housing, even if we didn't believe the prevailing myths, that
"they" were living where they wanted to live, with "their own
kind". We were inundated with racist media. Racism and
separatism was as much a part of our lives as the air we
breathed. Many of us were aware of the injustices and
regretted the way things were, but most of us couldn't
spend a great deal of time questioning because of our
own struggles to survive.

The younger folks of all colors are not burdened with the old
baggage their grandparents carried. They see Blacks with
good jobs, Black elected officials, policemen, firemen,
university professors, and so forth. Which is not to say that
prejudice has been wiped out. Far from it: there are still
ghettoes in most cities, there are unwritten laws that
prevent Blacks from choosing just where they wish to live,
and there are young people who have absorbed the
prejudices of their elders.

Just recently I heard of a white high school girl thrown out
of her California home for dating a young Black man. The
difference now is that they will not be ostracized by all of
society- a white classmate's family took her in- and they
can remain friends. Furthermore, that young white woman
who has grown up seeing Black students and teachers at
school, Blacks working at every kind of job, and in elected
positions, will remain more free of prejudice than her parents
and grandparents who have experienced different social
conditions.

But it doesn't matter much whether Obama's critics believe
all this or not. Most were already against him because of his
Black skin. Their outrage over his remarks about his
grandmother and about his pastor's diatribes will simply give
them another reason to cast a vote against him, as they had
already planned to do.