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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (29142)5/28/2008 6:05:26 AM
From: tonto  Respond to of 224749
 
The democrats do not care, that has been a part of their history forever...

Rezko, 52, a major fundraiser for Sen. Barack Obama and Gov. Rod Blagojevich, is charged with fraud, attempted extortion, money laundering and aiding and abetting bribery.



To: TideGlider who wrote (29142)5/28/2008 11:01:55 AM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 224749
 
Details of Obama's Family Ties from Byron York at nationalreview.com

I think it's a mistake for Obama to make so many references to his family, as he did with his maternal grandfather's military service over the Memorial Day weekend and as he will reportedly do again, with the same grandfather, in a trip to Punchbowl National Cemetery sometime in the future. It's a mistake because it invites this question: How come he talks about his family a lot, but only one side? And then mostly just his grandparents on that side?

Before his marriage, Obama's mother's parents were his only real familial link to the sort of life experience that most Americans would recognize. His mother was basically an expatriate, and his father was a visitor from Kenya. (Although Obama has at times portrayed his father as drawn to the United States by the immigrant dream, he in fact came to the U.S. for school and went back home.) That leaves Toot and Gramps, the maternal grandparents who raised Obama as an adolescent in Hawaii while his mother was in Indonesia and his father had abandoned the family for Africa. Since Gramps was a World War II veteran, Obama has focused on him to show patriotic bona fides.

As for the other side of the family, in coming months we'll likely see stories along the lines of Nicholas Kristof's column a few months ago in the New York Times in which Kristof visited Obama's family in Kogelo, Kenya:

A barefoot old woman in a ripped dress is sitting on a log in front of her tin-roof bungalow in this remote village in western Kenya, jovially greeting visitors.

Mama Sarah, as she is known around here, lives without electricity or running water. She is illiterate and doesn't know when she was born. Yet she may have a seat of honor at the next presidential inauguration in Washington — depending on what happens to her stepgrandson, Barack Obama.

Mama Sarah cannot communicate with Obama, who calls her his grandmother, because she speaks only her Luo tribal language and a little Swahili.

Mr. Obama's late grandfather is said to have been the first person in the area to wear Western clothes rather than just a loincloth.

He converted to Islam, taking four wives. Senator Obama's father was also polygamous in keeping with local custom, taking an informal Kenyan wife who preceded Mr. Obama's mother but remained a consort, according to accounts by local people and the senator himself.

Toward the end of the column, Kristof wrote, "Frankly, I worry that enemies of Senator Obama will seize upon details like his grandfather's Islamic faith or his father's polygamy to portray him as an alien or a threat to American values." I think it's going too far to say he will be portrayed as a "threat," but I do think there will be portrayals of Obama's family background as somewhat alien, based on reporting like Kristof's.

I think there might be another side to the story, as well. If Obama keeps talking about his mother's family, some commentators are going to ask, bluntly: "How come he talks mostly about the white side of his family?" My guess is those questions will come from the black community, which will be torn between wanting Obama to be proud and open about his African side and also wanting to cut him some slack if he feels he has to de-emphasize that to win the White House. I'm not sure how Obama will answer them. In any event, he is hastening the discussion by making high-profile references to his family.