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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: coug who wrote (98939)2/10/2007 11:38:06 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362423
 
Message 23271566

-s2@ThisWorldNeedsSomeMoreOpenMinds.com



To: coug who wrote (98939)2/10/2007 2:29:36 PM
From: Ron  Respond to of 362423
 
National Boycott To Impeach for Peace and Justice

wearenotbuyingit.org

Interesting approach.....



To: coug who wrote (98939)2/10/2007 3:32:58 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362423
 
Obama's wife his secret weapon

theage.com.au

By Toby Harnden

February 10, 2007

Her admirers believe she combines the poise of Jackie Kennedy with the brain of Hillary Clinton and the uncomplicated charm of Laura Bush. Many Democrats believe she will be a powerful asset to her husband's presidential campaign.

Michelle Obama, educated at Princeton and Harvard Law School, is described by friends as Senator Barack Obama's "true north". Her salary is twice his and she still spends most of her week looking after the couple's daughters Malia, 8, and Sasha, 5, at their Chicago home.

The Obama campaign is preparing to introduce the woman who could become America's first black first lady to the nation as soon as her husband formally announces his candidacy at a rally in Illinois this weekend. Some advisers view Mrs Obama as the campaign's secret weapon.

Whereas the tortuous and sometimes tawdry history of Mrs Clinton's marriage could hamper her attempt to return to the White House as president, Mr Obama's wholesome and stable marriage is likely to boost his already highly favourable image among voters.

With her high cheekbones and elegant, 1.8-metre frame, Mrs Obama, 43, is already one half of what Ebony magazine declared the hottest of America's "10 Hottest Couples". In this month's edition, they adorn the cover, along with the headline: "America's Next First Couple?"

She vets her husband's speeches and lets him bounce policy ideas off her. She occasionally chides him for neglecting his fatherly duties and insists that whenever he is home he reads Harry Potter to his children, makes the bed and takes out the rubbish. When he was elected a senator two years ago, Mr Obama, 45, publicly hailed the former Michelle LaVaughn Robinson as "the love of my life" and "the biggest star in the Obama family".

He has praised her for running the family home with "a general's efficiency" while he is the "dreamer". She brings in a $378,000 salary as vice-president for external relations at the University of Chicago Hospitals. On weekdays, she rises at 4.30am to run on the treadmill before making breakfast.

Mrs Obama is adept at keeping her husband's feet on the ground and has been crucial to her husband's career. A native of Chicago's South Side, she introduced Mr Obama, born of a white mother from Kansas and a black father from Kenya and brought up in Hawaii and Indonesia, to mainstream African-American life.

Her late father was a water pump operator and her mother, a former secretary, still lives in the humble one-bedroom flat the family moved to when Michelle was one. The couple met when she was a lawyer at the Chicago firm Sidley & Austin and she was assigned to look after the intern, then studying at Harvard Law School, from which she had already graduated. They were the only two black people at the firm and she at first thought it would be "tacky" and "predictable" for them to date.

Mr Obama currently spends four days a week in Washington, while his wife and daughters remain in Chicago. It was a difficult decision. His wife now jokes that "he's come to understand the wisdom of my plan".

He told Ebony that his wife demanded exacting standards.

"I still forget stuff. As Michelle likes to say: 'You are a good man, but you are still a man.' I leave my socks around. I'll hang my pants on the door. I leave newspapers laying around. But she lets me know when I'm not acting right. After 14 years, she's trained me reasonably well."

The couple have appeared on the Oprah show together and Mrs Obama has been delighted to meet Stevie Wonder, a childhood idol, and Spike Lee as what she calls her husband's "star power" has grown.



To: coug who wrote (98939)2/10/2007 6:10:58 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362423
 
Obama pledges to 'transform' politics

msnbc.msn.com

By Andrew Ward in Springfield, Illinois
The Financial Times
02/10/07

Barack Obama, the brightest rising star of US politics, on Saturday officially announced he was running for the White House in 2008, vowing to emulate Abraham Lincoln by unifying a divided nation and building "a more hopeful America".

The Democratic senator, bidding to become the first black US president, made his declaration to thousands of cheering supporters on a bitterly cold morning in Springfield, Illinois, where both he and President Lincoln started their political careers as state senators.

Mr Obama said it was in Springfield, a small city of 115,000 people 200 miles south of Chicago, that he learned about the "essential decency" of the American people.

"That is why, in the shadow of the Old State Capitol, where Lincoln once called on a house divided to stand together, where common hopes and common dreams still live, I stand before you today to announce my candidacy for president of the United States of America," he said.

The 45 year-old, considered chief rival to Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination, admitted there was a "certain presumptuousness" about his announcement, considering he is yet to complete his first term as a senator.

"I know I haven't spent a lot of time learning the ways of Washington," he said. "But I've been there long enough to know that the ways of Washington must change."

The choice of location invited parallels between Mr Obama and President Lincoln, who also served only two years in Congress before seeking the presidency. Both men spent eight years in the Illinois legislature before entering national politics.

"The life of a tall, gangly Springfield lawyer tells us that a different future is possible," said Mr Obama, referring to President Lincoln. "He tells us that there is power in words. He tells us that there is power in conviction. That beneath all the differences of race and region, faith and station, we are one people."

Mr Obama, known for his uplifting oratory and powerful charisma, sought to portray his youth and relative inexperience as a virtue, promising to bring fresh vision and optimism to a political process soured by partisanship and cynicism.

US voters had been betrayed by "the smallness of our politics", he said, pointing to the "ease with which we're distracted by the petty and the trivial, our chronic avoidance of tough decisions [and] our preference for scoring cheap political points instead of building a working consensus." He vowed to banish the "cynics, lobbyists and special interests" that have "turned politics into a game only they can afford to play".

"They think they own this government but we're here today to take it back," he said, to chants of "Obama! Obama!" from the crowd.

Supporters began to gather at 7:30am, more than two hours before the speech, wrapped in multiple layers of thick winter clothes to withstand temperatures that were well below freezing.

Queues of people trying to join the crowd stretched around several downtown blocks and side streets were jammed with buses that had brought supporters from Chicago and elsewhere across the state.

Pairs of police spotters stood monitoring the crowd from every tall building surrounding the Old Capitol, while hundreds of television cameras and journalists from as far away as China and the Philippines jostled for position on two packed media gantries.

After a stirring rendition of America the Beautiful by a local gospel choir, Mr Obama arrived at the podium with his wife and daughter to the sound of a U2 anthem, City of Blinding Lights, blaring from banks of large speakers.

In the heady atmosphere, it was easy to believe that Springfield was experiencing its most significant political event since President Lincoln made his famous "house divided" speech calling for the abolition of slavery nearly 150 years.

What seemed certain was that never before has such a large campaign rally taken place so long before a presidential election.

Kate Gilligan, a 20 year-old student from Champagne, Illinois, left home at 6am to see the event. "He was amazing," she said afterwards, reflecting the intense enthusiasm among his supporters. "I can't feel my fingers or toes because of the cold. But it was worth it. Hillary should be worried."

Jeannette Long, a 45 year-old training supervisor with the state government, was locked out of the Old Capital grounds but listened from nearby on a portable radio. "He was impressive but we already knew that," she said.

Sara Ghadiri, a 17 year-old high school student, had traveled with four friends from Chicago to attend the event, explaining that Mr Obama was the closest that US politics had to a "rock star". "We're first time voters and he's the only candidate that we are excited about," she said.

Mr Obama gave few specific policy details during his 20-minute speech, except for a commitment to bring combat troops home from Iraq by March 2008 and a pledge to introduce universal healthcare by the end of his first term.

He highlighted his consistent opposition to the war dating back to before the invasion – something his main rivals for the Democratic nomination cannot do – and vowed to "rebuild alliances" with international partners.


"It is time to admit that no amount of American lives can resolve the political disagreements that lie at the heart of someone else's civil war," he said. "Letting the Iraqis know that we will not be there forever is our last best hope to pressure the Sunnis and Shia to come to the table and find peace."

Other pledges included action to reduce dependence on foreign oil and cap greenhouse gas emissions, increased investment in scientific research and measures to end poverty, protect employee benefits and make college more affordable.

Copyright The Financial Times Ltd.