The greatest nation on earth is pleased with itself

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Wilf Day
The greatest nation on earth is pleased with itself

 

Wilf Day

[url=http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/11/05/UPI_NewsTrack_TopNews/UPI-5976122... Bush:[/url]

quote:

"I know Senator Obama's beloved mother and grandparents would've been thrilled to watch the child they raised ascend the steps of the Capitol and take his oath to uphold the Constitution of the greatest nation on the face of the earth."

[url=http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/10/07/presidential.debate.transcript/]P... debate:[/url]

quote:

McCain: America is the greatest force for good in the history of the world. My friends, we have gone to all four corners of the Earth and shed American blood in defense, usually, of somebody else's freedom and our own.

Obama: Sen. McCain and I do agree, this is the greatest nation on earth. We are a force of good in the world. But there has never been a nation in the history of the world that saw its economy decline and maintained its military superiority.

And the strains that have been placed on our alliances around the world and the respect that's been diminished over the last eight years has constrained us being able to act on something like the genocide in Darfur, because we don't have the resources or the allies to do everything that we should be doing.

That's going to change when I'm president. . .

We cannot allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon. It would be a game-changer in the region. Not only would it threaten Israel, our strongest ally in the region and one of our strongest allies in the world, but it would also create a possibility of nuclear weapons falling into the hands of terrorists.

And so it's unacceptable. And I will do everything that's required to prevent it.

And we will never take military options off the table. And it is important that we don't provide veto power to the United Nations or anyone else in acting in our interests. . . We've got to try to have talks, understanding that we're not taking military options off the table.


[url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1083152/Bush-hails-Oba... McCain:[/url]

quote:

'Let there be no reason now for any American to fail to cherish their citizenship in this, the greatest nation on earth.'

[url=http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23582467-details/'A+new+dawn+of+American+leadership+is+at+hand'/article.do]Barack Obama:[/url]

quote:

a new dawn of American leadership is at hand.

Well, I'm not sure how the other 95.4% of the world feel about a new dawn of American military superiority. I guess we are supposed to cheer.

[ 05 November 2008: Message edited by: Wilf Day ]

kropotkin1951

It is that attitude that always scares me about both democrats and republicans. It is why Clinton started wars.

It also seems to me that in this time of economic downturn in the American economy Obama will have no desire to cut back on the military industrial complex because that is perhaps the largest single part of their domestic economy.

What I would like to see is Obama start to close overseas bases to cut costs. Now that would be a good sign for the world and something to crow about as far as leadership on/of the planet is concerned.

Slumberjack

quote:


Originally posted by Wilf Day:
[b]Well, I'm not sure how the other 95.4% of the world feel about a new dawn of American military superiority. I guess we are supposed to cheer.[/b]

Wasn't this how the Frankenstein was conjured up in the first place, by a group of peasants who were riled up with stories of being downtrodden by callous leaders who were indifferent to their suffering? Something or another about taxation without representation I believe it was. Since they insist on leading us around around without our asking, the thought of creating our own monster in response would seem the appropriate reaction, if the Chinese didn't already hold the patent for it's construction.

[ 05 November 2008: Message edited by: Slumberjack ]

kropotkin1951

Sorry Slumberjack but I must disagree with your reading of the first American civil war. The Boston merchants incited the mobs not the other way around. It was a merchants revolt which is why I never like referring to it as a revolution.

Prior to the civil war the masses had the same democratic power as they did after the new constitution was drafted. Some nicer words but absolutely nothing that changed the power of the merchant class in the 13 colonies. The American business class has always controlled that country and they use the constitution to do it.

Slumberjack

quote:


Originally posted by kropotkin1951:
[b]Sorry Slumberjack but I must disagree with your reading of the first American civil war. The Boston merchants incited the mobs not the other way around.[/b]

Which is why I said the peasants were riled up. Not that their rage at that particular time came from within themselves, as it often does nowadays.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Pleased with itself, indeed, but what do the [b]skeptics[/b] of Amerika have to say?

quote:

Heroically, [Obama] represents a significant extension of the scope of American democracy. His election reminds us that the United States really is the universal society on this planet and reconfirms America’s identity as a truly (if not yet perfectly) multiracial, multi-ethnic, multicultural nation. Bravo!

The United States is the first major country founded under the ideals of the Enlightenment, committed to the secular values of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” America is a land of opportunity and individual achievement; its civic faith in progress, education, science, humanism, and democratic values is well justified.


This was in an e-mail from the editors of [i]Free Inquiry[/i] magazine, published by the skeptical humanist Center for Inquiry.

With skeptics like these, who needs cheerleaders?

Slumberjack

They're having their own moment I suspect, not unlike many others. Everyone will be as they were, once it passes.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Amerika is just having one of its "spells".

West Coast Greeny

I'm willing give the Americans credit. Its very hard to elect any visible minority candidate in any nation. I can't think of any precident in Canada, GBR, Germany, France.....

The United States really IS a multi-ethnic country. They've made significant social progress over the years.

I could still do without all the hubris though.

kropotkin1951

In Canada though we have elected various women to head our political parties. I predict that the first breakthrough into the PM's role will be a Canadian of Chinese descent. That will be in two or three elections from now. Because as our history shows our elite always trys to back the dominant world power. it used to be that our elite were Britain's staunchest supporters and then they were America's strongest and closest allies. If China becomes a dominant power our elite will become the best friends of the Chinese.

martin dufresne

The Pits: Georgia's GOP Swipes the Peach State
by Greg Palast
for [url=http://SuicideGirls.com]http://SuicideGirls.com[/url] - November 5, 2008

The evil little &*%$'s are doing it again.

Even as they drown in the anger of platoons of pissed-off voters, Republican operatives are swiping ballots with both hands.

Ground zero is Georgia. It's here where the sick little vulture named Saxby Chambliss won the US Senate seat six years ago by calling his Democratic opponent, a guy who'd lost three limbs in Vietnam, a friend of Osama bin Laden.

There's no way in hell that Chambliss can slime his way back into the Senate in the face of over half a million newly registered voters (Black and young - 69% for Obama) without jacking them out of their votes. That's what the Republicans are up to. Right now. As we speak.

Over 50,000 the new voters in Georgia have been blocked from voting by using a nasty little new law, the Help America Vote Act signed by George Bush. (Bush is helping us vote - look out!)

I just got this from Christina Rush in the Peach Pit state:
"They really have stolen my vote and I don't know what to do about it at this late stage. I just found out 2 days ago that I do not exist on the voters rolls in Georgia. I have disappeared. After calling 866-OUR VOTE and the Secretary of State (for GA), it has been determined that the last vote I was accounted for was the 1996 General Election. That's awfully strange to me, considering that I voted in the recent Primaries and that last two General Elections (2000 and 2004)."

"Everyone is 'very sorry' this is happening, but no one can tell what I can do to make my vote count for THIS election. The only advice I've been given is to fill out a new voters registration form and I'll be eligible for any future elections, just not THIS one."

"So, what can I do except tell anyone and everyone who will listen?"

And no one is going to listen to you or the other 50,000 dumped voters in Georgia.

But here's the good news: it won't save them. The GOP is toast. Paint the White House black and blue and Congress the same hue.

But the steal in Senate races may allow the GOP to savage, obstruct, sabotage President Obama's ability to repair the damage of eight years of looting by the unelected junta of the Bush regime. They begin with the theft of the Georgia Senate seat, now heading into a run-off.

* * *

I've been studying the purge of voters and the blockade of new registrants all year with my co-investigator, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Here's what we know is happening: While Obama is brushing his tux for his Inaugural, several million votes are getting disappeared. We're awaiting the count on provisional ballots, those bouncing baloney ballots they give to the purge, The raw data is ill-making. We predicted a six-million vote heist and we're looking grimly accurate. Visit our site, [url=http://www.GregPalast.com,]www.GregPalast.com,[/url] to get the full report as the numbers come in - the totals of the UNcounted you won't see on the CNN website.

***********

remind remind's picture

Tim Robbins was on the TV last night and they had disappeared his name from the registration too. And yet the Rethugs are crying foul against Obama and are busy telling the world how pure and wonderful they are!

Of course while advocating the murdering of all "liberals" especially those in the media!

Wilf Day

quote:


Originally posted by M. Spector:
[b]With skeptics like these, who needs cheerleaders?[/b]

Indeed. The disconnect with reality would be especially obvious to any citizen of China, who knows in his or her bones that China has been the centre of civilization, the central land, since 221 BCE, as well as the largest nation. I wish we had a poster from China on this board this month. But then again, I expect they would only smile politely at the pretentions of this ignorant young pup, and say nothing.

Tommy_Paine

quote:


With skeptics like these, who needs cheerleaders?

Reading the works of sceptics over the last decade or more, I've noticed a general reluctance to wade into politics in fears of appearing partizan.

Along with a good many others, I think leading sceptics in the States hid themselves away at critical times during the Bush administration.

I think in the years to come, sceptics will look upon this time with something less than pride, and will have to recognize that when it came time they could have provided real, practicle value to their country, they ran away.

Like anything else, politics is open to sceptical analysis. And we'd all be better off for it if sceptics would wade into this arena.

As far as being cheerleaders, people all over American and the world are projecting their own hopes on Obama. Including sceptics who should know better.

It's okay to be a little giddy for a few days, but people in the States better realize that they better find ways to force Obama to do the things Obama says he wants to do, and that attracted them to his candidacy.

For those who expect a more progressive government, they better not be sitting back and just expecting it to happen.

[ 06 November 2008: Message edited by: Tommy_Paine ]

martin dufresne

As good as a place to post as any: Judith Butler on what she calls our [url=http://angrywhitekid.blogs.com/weblog/2008/11/uncritical-exuberance-judi... exuberance?[/url] about Barack Obama:

quote:

Very few of us are immune to the exhilaration of this time. My friends on the left write to me that they feel something akin to "redemption" or that "the country has been returned to us" or that "we finally have one of us in the White House." Of course, like them, I discover myself feeling overwhelmed with disbelief and excitement throughout the day, since the thought of having the regime of George W. Bush over and gone is an enormous relief. And the thought of Obama, a thoughtful and progressive black candidate, shifts the historical ground, and we feel that cataclysm as it produces a new terrain. But let us try to think carefully about the shifted terrain, although we cannot fully know its contours at this time. The election of Barack Obama is historically significant in ways that are yet to be gauged, but it is not, and cannot be, a redemption, and if we subscribe to the heightened modes of identification that he proposes ("we are all united") or that we propose ("he is one of us"), we risk believing that this political moment can overcome the antagonisms that are constitutive of political life, especially political life in these times. There have always been good reasons not to embrace "national unity" as an ideal, and to nurse suspicions toward absolute and seamless identification with any political leader. After all, fascism relied in part on that seamless identification with the leader, and Republicans engage this same effort to organize political affect when, for instance, Elizabeth Dole looks out on her audience and says, "I love each and every one of you."(...)

[url=http://angrywhitekid.blogs.com/weblog/2008/11/uncritical-exuberance-judi... exuberance?[/url]

From the same thinker, in [url=http://]Libйration[/url]:

quote:

L’йlection prodigieuse
Judith Butler Philosophe, fйministe amйricaine.

Je ne suis pas sыre de pouvoir adresser mes rйflexions «а Obama», mais il me paraоt significatif que nous soyons invitйs а nous adresser а lui comme si nous le connaissions personnellement. C’est peut-кtre lа une des caractйristiques d’un responsable charismatique : les йlecteurs ont l’impression de le connaоtre personnellement et ils ont envie d’кtre connus de lui. (...)


[ 06 November 2008: Message edited by: martin dufresne ]

al-Qa'bong

The tone of most of the articles on commondreams.org today (Naomi Klein is one exception) is so full of the sunbeam dreams of the new morning in America as to make one gag.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Commondreams has been drooling over Obama for months, much to the scorn of its largely left-liberal readers. It got so nasty that the website had to start hiding the comments section under each article, until you click on a link to open it.

Slumberjack

People may have gotten themselves wrapped around the whole thing about it being the successful culmination of the entire civil rights movement, and there has been much talk of that on the networks. In isolation from anything else, they would be correct. On the other hand, they've taken that success and superimposed it over the all the obvious problems, even over the shortcomings of the candidate himself.

Wilf Day

[url=http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=58&aid=153770]America's dirty secret: whites voted for McCain.[/url]

quote:

Obama won 43 percent of the white vote.

But somehow this becomes good news:

quote:

Obama won 95 percent of the black vote, 67 percent of the Hispanic vote and 62 percent of the Asian vote, according to exit poll data published on The New York Times' Web site. The performance of Democratic presidential candidates in the past seven elections reveals the multi-ethnic strength of Obama's win: Only Clinton (1996) and Michael Dukakis (1988) fared better with Hispanic voters. No other candidate has done better than Obama did in attracting black and Asian voters (the data for Asians only goes back to 1992).

wage zombie

Obama won more of the white vote than Kerry at least.

The reason it's good news that Obama is winning Hispanics (did Bush win Hispanics) is that they're one of the fastest growing demographics.

al-Qa'bong

All together now:

[url=http://www.commondreams.org/view/2008/11/05-7]"O beautiful for spacious skies, For amber waves of grain; For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain! America! America! ..."
[/url]

quote:

It's tempting to be swept up in the emotion. It was only 50 years ago that black people were being regularly lynched to the glee of terrorist mobs. Folks like my grandfather — one of the lucky ones — endured the humiliation of having fellow Navy men look for his "monkey tail" in the shower.

In what other nation has a member of a historically-oppressed minority risen to the highest elected office in the land?


Gee, I dunno, why not give Nelson Mandela a call to find out?

[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIzptExMRcA]"Asimbonanga
Asimbonang' uMandela thina
Laph'ekhona
Laph'ehleli khona" [/url]

[ 08 November 2008: Message edited by: al-Qa'bong ]

Jingles

Or Kim Campbell?

America! Fuck Yeah!

Boom Boom Boom Boom's picture

Don't know where else to put this...

Cops Nab 5-Year-Old for Wearing Wrong Color Shoes to School

excerpt:

In Mississippi, if kindergarteners violate the dress code or act out in class, they may end up in the back of a police car.

A story about one five-year-old particularly stands out. The little boy was required to wear black shoes to school. Because he didn’t have black shoes, his mom used a marker to cover up his white and red sneakers. A bit of red and white were still noticeable, so the child was taken home by the cops.

The child was escorted out of school so he and his mother would be taught a lesson.

Ridiculous? Perhaps. But incidents such as this are happening across Mississippi. A new report, “Handcuffs on Success: The Extreme School Discipline Crisis in Mississippi Public Schools,” exposes just how bad it’s become.

- snip -

This isn’t something new in Mississippi. Last October, the U.S. Justice Department filed a lawsuit against officials in Meridian, Miss., for operating a school-to-prison pipeline

Unionist

Aw c'mon, Boom Boom, it isn't all bad down there. Progress may be slow, but look how far they came in 2012:

[url=http://www.takepart.com/article/2012/08/08/louisiana-school-forces-any-s... School Will No Longer Force Students 'Suspected' of Being Pregnant to Take a Pregnancy Test[/url]

Who knows, after this breakthrough, they may allow pregnant students to keep on attending class too!

 

Boom Boom Boom Boom's picture

Wow. Frown

Ken Burch

Y'know, it's unfair to assume that people who were happy that Obama got re-elected think that the U.S. is now Utopia.  We don't ALL think and sound like Beltway pundits. 

A lot of us were relieved that Romney didn't get in and make things massively worse(contrary to Green hasbara, it WOULD have been a big difference for the grimmer and it would also have been much harder to work for any form of social change if a large third-party vote had elected Romney, which was all a large third-party vote can ever do in the U.S. presidentially), yet STILL work on a daily basis against racism, exploitation and police brutality(including little kids being arrested for having the wrong color shoes). 

As long as you guys have Harper in power, you're not entitled to be that smug about what happens on OUR side of the border.  OK?

 

 

 

Unionist

Ken Burch wrote:

 

As long as you guys have Harper in power, you're not entitled to be that smug about what happens on OUR side of the border.  OK?

 

He's got a point.

 

Boom Boom Boom Boom's picture

Indeed! But I have friends in the USA who see Obama as their Messiah. I'm constantly debunking them of their beliefs.

NDPP

Fabulous Shit  -  by Arthur Silber

http://powerofnarrative.blogspot.ca/2013/02/fabulous-shit.html

"I'm watching the Senate hearing on Brennan's nomination. Tough questioning.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Best laugh I've had for years..."

(there's a part 2, return to home)

Ken Burch

Boom Boom wrote:

Indeed! But I have friends in the USA who see Obama as their Messiah. I'm constantly debunking them of their beliefs.

Nobody here ever actually thought Obama was "the Messiah"...that accusation was made simply because, in 2008, he was one of the few politicians on the scene in the U.S. who actually inspired personal enthusiam(not entirely deserved, but it was there).

What you are probably hearing is simply that these people see Obama as a more progressive president than any they've seen in their lifetimes...granted, in my country, that's NOT setting the bar too high. though.

Boom Boom Boom Boom's picture

We should probably start a thread with actual examples of progressive things Obama has done.

Anyone up for that?

It'd be a short thread, I predict.

It'd be far easier to list all the regressive and neanderthal things the man has done.

NDPP

what they see bears no relation to reality. Obama has bested the worst at being worse in almost everything but spin. They must awaken from their hallucinations. Many have already. More need to. It's brainwashing at its finest. A contrick.

kropotkin1951

Ken Burch wrote:

As long as you guys have Harper in power, you're not entitled to be that smug about what happens on OUR side of the border.  OK?

Harper is a sycophant to the largest empire the planet has ever seen so indeed there is no reason to be smug. 

However the difference between Obama and Harper is that Obama is a leader of a foreign power but claims to be the leader of the "free world" and thus the killing of people is to defend us in Canada as well.  I got to vote for someone other than Harper but I did not get a say in who is the President of the nation that claims to murder in the name of my protection.

Your nation has no right to claim it speaks on my behalf but it does. I don't think our asshole Harper claims to speak for you does he?