Thursday, August 28, 2008

Democratic Convention Mini-Posts: Day Four

This election cycle, the Democratic Party's National Convention aligns with the beginning of my semester. While I wish I could write more extensive pieces, I suspect I will have to limit myself to shorter reactions and impressions of what I see and hear.

It has been said that actions speak louder than words. It is difficult to imagine a more powerful statement than holding an acceptance speech before not a crowded convention center but a full stadium.

It says more about Obama, who wants to involve as many people as possible, and the people, who are hungry for change, than I can.

Enjoy Stevie Wonder and the speech.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Democratic Convention Mini-Posts: Day Three

This election cycle, the Democratic Party's National Convention aligns with the beginning of my semester. While I wish I could write more extensive pieces, I suspect I will have to limit myself to shorter reactions and impressions of what I see and hear.

Last night, I was impressed by Senator Clinton's speech -- more than impressed. I won't claim I wasn't worried part way through. After all, it began to appear that she was beginning to give her usual campaign speech. Indeed, she did -- with one exception. She reminded us of why she ran. Then, she reminded her followers that the reason for any campaign is not (and must not) be about the candidate as a person. It must be about the vision that the candidate espouses.

This afternoon, she landed her second hit by moving that Obama be nominated by acclimation. There were only brief flickers when the political mask cracked and it was possible to see how much it cost her to make that movement towards unity.

It was, nevertheless, a historic moment. We now have the first serious African American candidate being pushed over the top by the first serious woman candidate.

Now, we will see if the next big one-two punch lands. Tonight, Senator Biden and President Clinton speak -- two men known for speaking their minds and being able to reach their audiences. In addition to the future of the race for the presidency, the present and future legacies of these men are on the line.

While Biden's speech, given that he is the man who will soon be one heartbeat away from the presidency, may be the more important of the two, President Clinton's speech may be more significant.

There are few men who are more capable than President Clinton of rising to such an occasion. I'm sure if you are reading this, you are going to watch (or have already watched) his speech and are looking forward to seeing it as much as I am.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Democratic Convention Mini-Posts: Day Two

This election cycle, the Democratic Party's National Convention aligns with the beginning of my semester. While I wish I could write more extensive pieces, I suspect I will have to limit myseff to shorter reactions and impressions of what I see and hear.

Today is an important anniversary. It is Women's Equality Day. Today, we honor and celebrate women finally winning the right to vote in national elections in 1920. The winning of that right, too long withheld, was no small achievement. It was done in the face of stiff opposition by those who believed that women were physically and mentally beneath men. Women were considered children.

Tonight, we will see one of two things: With the exception of Nancy Pelosi, the most important woman in the Democratic Party is giving the big speech at the Democratic National Convention. She will either inspire our party or wound our party. 

The challenge before her is, like that of the women who won the right to vote, is to show that she is not a child and that she can accept her defeat with the dignity and and poise that she has shown time and again in the past.

This will be no small achievement. Like her, I have lost elections and had to stand in public and be mature in front of the press when part of me wanted to hide or lash out. When I had to face that challenge, it was only in front of a local audience. People in Monroe, Union County, and throughout the greater Charlotte area watched my name flash up on their televisions -- in last place. Nevertheless, they universally said how proud they were and how much in awe they were that I got out there and ran.

Now she will have to do the same thing with the world watching.

Please don't misunderstand me. I am, like those people who spoke to me, in awe of what Senator Clinton did in her campaign. I watched her, clearly tired, keep moving and reaching out to those who were considering voting for her. I watched her make her pitch that she was the best candidate for the job. I am sure, in her heart of hearts, she still believes that.

If she wishes to remain merely a politician, she can damn Obama with faint praise or praise him well but drag her feet once the campaign leaves Denver. If she wishes to become the exemplar of something new on the American political scene -- the stateswoman -- is the real question tonight.

I have no doubt that she can do it. I desperately hope she will do it.

I must admit to a certain bias in this hope. It is not because of my preference for Obama. I believe she would be a fine president and, if she won, would have been proud to cast my vote for her.

The reason I want her to prove herself a stateswoman is because there is a good chance that my one year old daughter will be in the room when she speaks -- much like I was when the Apollo astronauts landed on the moon. I desperately want to be able to tell her that she was there and watching when Clinton gave the speech that inspired a new generation of women -- her generation of women -- to reach higher than they ever have before and believe that there is no job, no office, and no dream to great for them.

Senator Hillary Clinton has the opportunity tonight to prove that the American Dream is equally accessible to both halves of the country. I am looking forward to watching her do it.


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Monday, August 25, 2008

Democratic Convention Mini-Posts: Day One

This election cycle, the Democratic Party's National Convention perfectly aligns with the beginning of my semester. While I wish I could write more extensive pieces, I suspect I will have to limit myself to shorter reactions and impressions of what I see and hear.

One of the themes of the Obama campaign has been hope. I suspect the only word you are more likely to hear or see at one of his rallies, meetings, and appearances is change. Listening to tonight's presentations, I think I learned something important about hope. Hope is not an unachievable dream or delusion based on denial. Hope requires and acceptance of the reality of the situation without being so dominated by that situation that you cannot imagine it changing for the better. That acceptance of a reality that can be changed echoed through all of the speeches. 

You could hear it in Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr.'s references to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. Dr. King knew he might have to pay with his life to help bring about a better future for his children and his friends' children. I am sure he would have been more than proud to see his friend's son serve his country in the House of Representatives and continue that legacy of hope when he spoke at the convention of the party that forced through the Civil Rights Acts of the 1960s.

You could hear it in President Carter's video presentation as he discussed the failures of our government in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. Yet based on his work with Habitat for Humanity and in working with people around the world, he could still believe that it was possible for those failures to be overcome.

You could hear it in Senator Ted Kennedy's speech. He knows he is dying. Nevertheless, he has not given into despair and believes that he may yet live to see his life's goal -- the establishment of health care as a fundamental right rather than a privilege of the elite. With a nod to the premature deaths of his brothers, however, he bravely and selflessly reminded us all that the most powerful hopes and dreams outlive those who hope and dream -- even if they pass before they become reality.

Finally, you could hear it in Michelle Obama's speech as she remembered her husband looking into his rear view mirror at the greatest expression of hope any of us can ever see -- his child -- and committing himself to giving her more than he had.

What you could not hear but could clearly see in the eyes of the delegates was the audacity to hope that their candidate could undo the tragic results of eight years of incompetence and mismanagement and rebuild American prestige and dignity at home and abroad.

For the first time in a long time, they once more can dare to believe in that most resilient of things: the American Dream.

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