My thoughts on the Obama speech:
As I am an avid reader, the offensive remarks of the religious right have not escaped me. Naively, I was surprised that what Wright (Obamas’s pastor) had said made news, when comments from the religious right, new buddies of McCain, had not. Would I have phrased my dissent in the same way? No, although I certainly understand the truth behind it, and like Obama discussed, context is everything.
Racism in this country is very relevant in many people’s lives. To deny that the ghosts of slavery or segregation no longer haunt us has only to look at academic achievement, neighborhoods that contain high proportions of minorities, politics and our prison system (to name a few). It is time to discuss race, to put it in the context of both the majority and the minority and to be honest about its effects (bitterness, anger, hopelessness, and ignorance). And I think Obama did that marvelously.
He took a difficult subject and honestly addressed it. I think that his ability to articulate such an issue as well as he did shows the type of president he could be. He did not reject his pastor completely, but his words instead. If the Religious Right is so insistent on getting Christian morals into the White House, I suggest they embrace this man instead of their hate filled republicans ( Sally Kern comes to mind) Then again, I think we all know that’s not what they really want.
I have said before that I don’t believe that any one person can solve all the problems this country has. And I don’t pretend that Obama is without faults and weaknesses, after all, he’s human. But Id much rather have a man like Obama attempting it.
And because it can always be said better by someone elesWatch it:
WOW
Obama 2008
I promise Ill write something a more articulate soon
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