Regardless of whether you’re a staunch Republican or Democrat, the one thing that can’t be denied is that this coming election promises to be unlike any election we have experienced in our history. Barack Obama, in spite of his so-called lack of experience and knowledge has not only succeeded in becoming a Presidential candidate, he has also become a cultural phenomenon, not because of his race or the fact that he is the first black candidate, but because of his ability to generate a message that resonates with what people are actually experiencing and feeling. Certainly, the speech he gave in Berlin the other day attests to that:
That is why I’m here. And you are here because you too know that yearning.
This city, of all cities, knows the dream of freedom. And you know that
the only reason we stand here tonight is because men and women from
both of our nations came together to work, and struggle, and sacrifice
for that better life.
Obama, as he said earlier in his speech, spoke to them “not as a candidate for President, but as a citizen—a proud citizen of the United States, and a fellow citizen of the world.”
And as a fellow citizen, he reminded Berliners of the wall that once divided them, and how Germans and Americans were able to unite together and bring about the eventual collapse of East Berlin. He spoke of duty that people and countries have toward one another, and that only by working together, will people be able to solve the major problems we are faced with today.
This September 11th will mark the seventh anniversary of the attack on the World Trade Center. Although President Bush’s quick and decisive response to the attack gave the impression we were a country not to be messed with, his unilateralist polices that have framed our response to terror have had questionable results and consequences. Our attack on Afghanistan at the time seemed to be an appropriate response to the madness that was unleashed on us by Al Qaida. On the other hand, our invasion of Iraq seemed less certain in its rationale.








Article comments
1 - Arch Conservative
There's nothing really that great about Obama.
He's capitalizing on anti Bush/GOP sentiment and the fact that Mccain is a horrible candidate running a horrible campaign.
The fact Obama's only up a few points in the major polls shows that he's not the great uniter, messiah his cultists claim him to be.
If he loses in the fall are the moonbats on the left going to invent all inds of conspiracy theories again about how the election was stolen? They're already garenteeing Obama's victory much the same way they garenteed Kerry's in 2004.
It's my belief that if Mccain can get his shit together and picks a candidate that can help him (Romney) he will win in Nov. if Mccain continues to look like the bumbling old fool, we're headed for the People's Republic of Amerika led by premeire Obama.
2 - Condor
"The word charisma (from the Greek word χάρισμα (kharisma), "gift" or "divine favor," from kharizesthai, "to favor," from kharis, "favor": see also charism, Charis) refers to a rare trait found in certain human personalities usually including extreme charm and a 'magnetic' quality of personality and/or appearance along with innate and powerfully sophisticated personal communicability and persuasiveness." Wikipedia 2008
Where in that definition (mirroring Websters and others) does is say anything about brains? It doesn't. Confidence men have charisma. Charles Manson has charisma, so did Adolf (I won't envoke Godwin's law this early in the discussion). People are easily swayed; and as P.T. Barnum stated a "fool is born every minute."
I could care less about charisma... Charisma is for suicidal moths attracted to illumination... and fire, which they burn their wings and auger into the flames and are consumed thereof.
Followers of charismatic people are something akin to lemmings.
3 - S L Cunningham
Yes, and that is one of the reasons why I'm concerned.
4 - Arch Conservative
We all remembered what happened the last time a very charismatic man gave speeches to thousands of motivated, adoring Germans in Deutschland now don't we?
5 - Jordan Richardson
Yeah, we sure do, Ben Stein.
6 - zingzing
yes, archie, i can see it now... come january 2009, we will start rounding up the conservatives and putting them into death camps, where we will boil them into petroleum jellies to fuel our conquest of the world!
bwhahaha.
you're silly.
7 - zingzing
oh! oh! better yet, we should put them all in ghettos first! so they can see how the other half lives. and we will take their country homes and defile them! yes....
8 - Arch Conservative
That was a joke. Maybe I should have prefaced it by saying "the following is a joke."
It was actually a joke I stole from Jon Stewart who said the very same thing on the Daily show.
Jon Stewart is one of the very few liberals with a sense of humor.
Jon Stewart is one of the very few liberals that makes me laugh.
Jon Stewart shall not be placed in a concentration camp when Mccain is elected.
9 - Arch Conservative
I didn't know all Democrats and liberals lived in ghettos bliffle. Thanks for the tip.
10 - Dr Dreadful
Tcchh. Bliffle gets responses without even having to post comments. Perhaps he and Archie have a telepathic link...
...or are sitting in the same room!
11 - bliffle
Just another of Archies errors.
12 - Baronius
Arch, I find Stewart's impersonation of a dim liberal more realistic than Colbert's shallow conservative routine. Neither of them are very funny though.