Immigration, explained

29 04 2010

Immigration is never about today, always about tomorrow, an exercise in that thing some native-born Americans seem to have lost the knack for: deferred gratification.

Immigration is not so much a choice but an irreplaceable sacrifice. The move is too abrupt and final, and the new life is not only foreign, but painful. The new identity is an unwelcoming smack to the self-esteem, an irrevocable violation of basic human dignity. This is the immigrant identity, the one that is not American.

The melting pot is a myth. You never really melt. Instead, you raise American daughters and sons who grow up in your house but don’t share your idea of where home is.

Immigrants are the meanest, kindest, craziest and smartest people; the immigrant experience brings out the best but not before the worst in us.

Immigrant lives don’t reveal the love we have for one another despite tough times. On the contrary, they more often than not reveal the desperation we hold within us and the devastating consequence of us attacking and hurting each other to ease our own pain.

How does a father go home to love his child when he’s been handcuffed, held down, and humiliated in public for driving past a rich neighborhood and not speaking any English to explain why he’s there in the first place?

How does a mother go home to love her child when she’s been treated like a second-class citizen working under maniac bosses who don’t really think she deserves respect or attention?

And how does a child go home to love his parents when he doesn’t really know what life is all about but must navigate his life by himself and must help his parents navigate life’s most important milestones – immigration visit, court visit, social security visit, driver’s license visit, doctor visit, buying a meal, fixing a car, calling customer support, writing an email, understanding a letter, and arguing a dispute.

There is no security (translation: constant, never-ending fear) and no one to blame (translation: it must be our fault that we are in so much pain right now). But despite hardships, deep down there is love, love strong enough to die for, but the love is not easy, and not always expressed. We are too busy trying to survive.

Why do we immigrate? I couldn’t tell you.





Successful old people should stop being selfish and retire

28 05 2009

Old people with money and power should give others a chance at success: please, just retire!

In the past, transition of power in any industry has happened naturally: as one generation of youngsters enter the work force, another generation over 65 has gracefully exited into the sunset of Florida. 

The transition of power and opportunities has not only been important, but poignantly necessary for industries to shake things up, for equality to progress forward, for conventional methodologies to revolutionize, and perhaps most importantly, for young people to have opportunities to do something amazing. 

This natural transtion has all but died. People are not retiring at the age of 65, partially because they couldn’t afford to anymore. But even those who have obtained success and have savings stacked up despite this recession, they are not retiring either. 

65 is hardly old anymore. We have CEOs, editors, senators and professors who are 70 and 80 years old and still working. I have no problem with people keeping their lives busy because a retirement of not doing anything can be cruel. But please – quit those posts you have been occupying for decades and do something else, give that young person a chance to shine the way you had your chance back then.

We now have youngsters who can’t find jobs not only because this recession sucks, but also because old people are choosing not to retire. They are not retiring because this new generation of “old people” think they will never die due to modern advances in medicine. They are ambitious workaholics who are also too selfish and egocentric to step aside and believe that a younger person could do just a good of a job, if not a better one. They are the first generation who have received so much: peace, propsperity, and technology.

And now: they don’t want to give it all up after squandering away our environment and screwing up our market. So next time when you can’t find a job, don’t blame the minority for filling some quota (that is extremely rarely the reason why you don’t get hired), just go ahead and blame the people at the top.  

This is why I love Anna Quindlen.  She is retiring from Newsweek. I first fell in love with her column the Last Word when I was 15 years old. She showed me a world of ideas and perspectives I didn’t know existed. Her writings on immigration are some of the most eloquently observant and intimately relevant I have ever read. For 9 years she has been at the forefront of discussion on subjects from oppression to fairness. She is a role model, an inspiration for young people and a woman I still aspire to become. But the time is right for her to leave, and she too agrees, because there are too many amazing journalists out there with too many stories to tell, and after 9 years, she’s had her time. 

I urge others to follow her choice, because there are too many young people with too many dreams who are too hungry to take this world into a whole new era. And they cannot wait.





Obama’s Advice to 20-Somethings

17 05 2009

Barack Obama’s Commencement speech at Notre Dame’s 2009 Graduation Ceremony.

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Thank you, Father Jenkins for that generous introduction. You are doing an outstanding job as president of this fine institution, and your continued and courageous commitment to honest, thoughtful dialogue is an inspiration to us all.

Good afternoon Father Hesburgh, Notre Dame trustees, faculty, family, friends, and the class of 2009. I am honored to be here today, and grateful to all of you for allowing me to be part of your graduation.

I want to thank you for this honorary degree. I know it has not been without controversy. I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but these honorary degrees are apparently pretty hard to come by. So far I’m only 1 for 2 as President. Father Hesburgh is 150 for 150. I guess that’s better. Father Ted, after the ceremony, maybe you can give me some pointers on how to boost my average.

I also want to congratulate the class of 2009 for all your accomplishments. And since this is Notre Dame, I mean both in the classroom and in the competitive arena. We all know about this university’s proud and storied football team, but I also hear that Notre Dame holds the largest outdoor 5-on-5 basketball tournament in the world – Bookstore Basketball.

Now this excites me. I want to congratulate the winners of this year’s tournament, a team by the name of “Hallelujah Holla Back.” Well done. Though I have to say, I am personally disappointed that the “Barack O’Ballers” didn’t pull it out. Next year, if you need a 6’2″ forward with a decent jumper, you know where I live.

Every one of you should be proud of what you have achieved at this institution. One hundred and sixty three classes of Notre Dame graduates have sat where you are today. Some were here during years that simply rolled into the next without much notice or fanfare – periods of relative peace and prosperity that required little by way of sacrifice or struggle.

You, however, are not getting off that easy. Your class has come of age at a moment of great consequence for our nation and the world – a rare inflection point in history where the size and scope of the challenges before us require that we remake our world to renew its promise; that we align our deepest values and commitments to the demands of a new age. It is a privilege and a responsibility afforded to few generations – and a task that you are now called to fulfill.

This is the generation that must find a path back to prosperity and decide how we respond to a global economy that left millions behind even before this crisis hit – an economy where greed and short-term thinking were too often rewarded at the expense of fairness, and diligence, and an honest day’s work.

We must decide how to save God’s creation from a changing climate that threatens to destroy it. We must seek peace at a time when there are those who will stop at nothing to do us harm, and when weapons in the hands of a few can destroy the many. And we must find a way to reconcile our ever-shrinking world with its ever-growing diversity – diversity of thought, of culture, and of belief.

In short, we must find a way to live together as one human family.

It is this last challenge that I’d like to talk about today. For the major threats we face in the 21st century – whether it’s global recession or violent extremism; the spread of nuclear weapons or pandemic disease – do not discriminate. They do not recognize borders. They do not see color. They do not target specific ethnic groups.

Moreover, no one person, or religion, or nation can meet these challenges alone. Our very survival has never required greater cooperation and understanding among all people from all places than at this moment in history.

Unfortunately, finding that common ground – recognizing that our fates are tied up, as Dr. King said, in a “single garment of destiny” – is not easy. Part of the problem, of course, lies in the imperfections of man – our selfishness, our pride, our stubbornness, our acquisitiveness, our insecurities, our egos; all the cruelties large and small that those of us in the Christian tradition understand to be rooted in original sin. We too often seek advantage over others. We cling to outworn prejudice and fear those who are unfamiliar. Too many of us view life only through the lens of immediate self-interest and crass materialism; in which the world is necessarily a zero-sum game. The strong too often dominate the weak, and too many of those with wealth and with power find all manner of justification for their own privilege in the face of poverty and injustice. And so, for all our technology and scientific advances, we see around the globe violence and want and strife that would seem sadly familiar to those in ancient times.

We know these things; and hopefully one of the benefits of the wonderful education you have received is that you have had time to consider these wrongs in the world, and grown determined, each in your own way, to right them. And yet, one of the vexing things for those of us interested in promoting greater understanding and cooperation among people is the discovery that even bringing together persons of good will, men and women of principle and purpose, can be difficult.

The soldier and the lawyer may both love this country with equal passion, and yet reach very different conclusions on the specific steps needed to protect us from harm. The gay activist and the evangelical pastor may both deplore the ravages of HIV/AIDS, but find themselves unable to bridge the cultural divide that might unite their efforts. Those who speak out against stem cell research may be rooted in admirable conviction about the sacredness of life, but so are the parents of a child with juvenile diabetes who are convinced that their son’s or daughter’s hardships can be relieved.

The question, then, is how do we work through these conflicts? Is it possible for us to join hands in common effort? As citizens of a vibrant and varied democracy, how do we engage in vigorous debate? How does each of us remain firm in our principles, and fight for what we consider right, without demonizing those with just as strongly held convictions on the other side?

Nowhere do these questions come up more powerfully than on the issue of abortion.

As I considered the controversy surrounding my visit here, I was reminded of an encounter I had during my Senate campaign, one that I describe in a book I wrote called The Audacity of Hope. A few days after I won the Democratic nomination, I received an email from a doctor who told me that while he voted for me in the primary, he had a serious concern that might prevent him from voting for me in the general election. He described himself as a Christian who was strongly pro-life, but that’s not what was preventing him from voting for me.

What bothered the doctor was an entry that my campaign staff had posted on my website – an entry that said I would fight “right-wing ideologues who want to take away a woman’s right to choose.” The doctor said that he had assumed I was a reasonable person, but that if I truly believed that every pro-life individual was simply an ideologue who wanted to inflict suffering on women, then I was not very reasonable. He wrote, “I do not ask at this point that you oppose abortion, only that you speak about this issue in fair-minded words.”

Fair-minded words.

After I read the doctor’s letter, I wrote back to him and thanked him. I didn’t change my position, but I did tell my staff to change the words on my website. And I said a prayer that night that I might extend the same presumption of good faith to others that the doctor had extended to me. Because when we do that – when we open our hearts and our minds to those who may not think like we do or believe what we do – that’s when we discover at least the possibility of common ground.

That’s when we begin to say, “Maybe we won’t agree on abortion, but we can still agree that this is a heart-wrenching decision for any woman to make, with both moral and spiritual dimensions.

So let’s work together to reduce the number of women seeking abortions by reducing unintended pregnancies, and making adoption more available, and providing care and support for women who do carry their child to term. Let’s honor the conscience of those who disagree with abortion, and draft a sensible conscience clause, and make sure that all of our health care policies are grounded in clear ethics and sound science, as well as respect for the equality of women.”

Understand – I do not suggest that the debate surrounding abortion can or should go away. No matter how much we may want to fudge it – indeed, while we know that the views of most Americans on the subject are complex and even contradictory – the fact is that at some level, the views of the two camps are irreconcilable. Each side will continue to make its case to the public with passion and conviction. But surely we can do so without reducing those with differing views to caricature.

Open hearts. Open minds. Fair-minded words.

It’s a way of life that has always been the Notre Dame tradition. Father Hesburgh has long spoken of this institution as both a lighthouse and a crossroads. The lighthouse that stands apart, shining with the wisdom of the Catholic tradition, while the crossroads is where “…differences of culture and religion and conviction can co-exist with friendship, civility, hospitality, and especially love.” And I want to join him and Father Jenkins in saying how inspired I am by the maturity and responsibility with which this class has approached the debate surrounding today’s ceremony.

This tradition of cooperation and understanding is one that I learned in my own life many years ago – also with the help of the Catholic Church.

I was not raised in a particularly religious household, but my mother instilled in me a sense of service and empathy that eventually led me to become a community organizer after I graduated college. A group of Catholic churches in Chicago helped fund an organization known as the Developing Communities Project, and we worked to lift up South Side neighborhoods that had been devastated when the local steel plant closed.

It was quite an eclectic crew. Catholic and Protestant churches. Jewish and African-American organizers. Working-class black and white and Hispanic residents. All of us with different experiences. All of us with different beliefs. But all of us learned to work side by side because all of us saw in these neighborhoods other human beings who needed our help – to find jobs and improve schools. We were bound together in the service of others.

And something else happened during the time I spent in those neighborhoods. Perhaps because the church folks I worked with were so welcoming and understanding; perhaps because they invited me to their services and sang with me from their hymnals; perhaps because I witnessed all of the good works their faith inspired them to perform, I found myself drawn – not just to work with the church, but to be in the church. It was through this service that I was brought to Christ.

At the time, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin was the Archbishop of Chicago. For those of you too young to have known him, he was a kind and good and wise man. A saintly man. I can still remember him speaking at one of the first organizing meetings I attended on the South Side. He stood as both a lighthouse and a crossroads – unafraid to speak his mind on moral issues ranging from poverty, AIDS, and abortion to the death penalty and nuclear war. And yet, he was congenial and gentle in his persuasion, always trying to bring people together; always trying to find common ground. Just before he died, a reporter asked Cardinal Bernardin about this approach to his ministry. And he said, “You can’t really get on with preaching the Gospel until you’ve touched minds and hearts.”

My heart and mind were touched by the words and deeds of the men and women I worked alongside with in Chicago. And I’d like to think that we touched the hearts and minds of the neighborhood families whose lives we helped change. For this, I believe, is our highest calling.

You are about to enter the next phase of your life at a time of great uncertainty. You will be called upon to help restore a free market that is also fair to all who are willing to work; to seek new sources of energy that can save our planet; to give future generations the same chance that you had to receive an extraordinary education. And whether as a person drawn to public service, or someone who simply insists on being an active citizen, you will be exposed to more opinions and ideas broadcast through more means of communications than have ever existed before. You will hear talking heads scream on cable, read blogs that claim definitive knowledge, and watch politicians pretend to know what they’re talking about. Occasionally, you may also have the great fortune of seeing important issues debated by well-intentioned, brilliant minds. In fact, I suspect that many of you will be among those bright stars.

In this world of competing claims about what is right and what is true, have confidence in the values with which you’ve been raised and educated. Be unafraid to speak your mind when those values are at stake. Hold firm to your faith and allow it to guide you on your journey. Stand as a lighthouse.

But remember too that the ultimate irony of faith is that it necessarily admits doubt. It is the belief in things not seen. It is beyond our capacity as human beings to know with certainty what God has planned for us or what He asks of us, and those of us who believe must trust that His wisdom is greater than our own.

This doubt should not push us away from our faith. But it should humble us. It should temper our passions, and cause us to be wary of self-righteousness. It should compel us to remain open, and curious, and eager to continue the moral and spiritual debate that began for so many of you within the walls of Notre Dame. And within our vast democracy, this doubt should remind us to persuade through reason, through an appeal whenever we can to universal rather than parochial principles, and most of all through an abiding example of good works, charity, kindness, and service that moves hearts and minds.

For if there is one law that we can be most certain of, it is the law that binds people of all faiths and no faith together. It is no coincidence that it exists in Christianity and Judaism; in Islam and Hinduism; in Buddhism and humanism. It is, of course, the Golden Rule – the call to treat one another as we wish to be treated. The call to love. To serve. To do what we can to make a difference in the lives of those with whom we share the same brief moment on this Earth.

So many of you at Notre Dame – by the last count, upwards of 80% — have lived this law of love through the service you’ve performed at schools and hospitals; international relief agencies and local charities. That is incredibly impressive, and a powerful testament to this institution. Now you must carry the tradition forward. Make it a way of life. Because when you serve, it doesn’t just improve your community, it makes you a part of your community. It breaks down walls. It fosters cooperation. And when that happens – when people set aside their differences to work in common effort toward a common good; when they struggle together, and sacrifice together, and learn from one another – all things are possible.

After all, I stand here today, as President and as an African-American, on the 55th anniversary of the day that the Supreme Court handed down the decision in Brown v. the Board of Education. Brown was of course the first major step in dismantling the “separate but equal” doctrine, but it would take a number of years and a nationwide movement to fully realize the dream of civil rights for all of God’s children. There were freedom rides and lunch counters and Billy clubs, and there was also a Civil Rights Commission appointed by President Eisenhower. It was the twelve resolutions recommended by this commission that would ultimately become law in the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

There were six members of the commission. It included five whites and one African-American; Democrats and Republicans; two Southern governors, the dean of a Southern law school, a Midwestern university president, and your own Father Ted Hesburgh, President of Notre Dame. They worked for two years, and at times, President Eisenhower had to intervene personally since no hotel or restaurant in the South would serve the black and white members of the commission together. Finally, when they reached an impasse in Louisiana, Father Ted flew them all to Notre Dame’s retreat in Land O’Lakes, Wisconsin, where they eventually overcame their differences and hammered out a final deal.

Years later, President Eisenhower asked Father Ted how on Earth he was able to broker an agreement between men of such different backgrounds and beliefs. And Father Ted simply said that during their first dinner in Wisconsin, they discovered that they were all fishermen. And so he quickly readied a boat for a twilight trip out on the lake. They fished, and they talked, and they changed the course of history.

I will not pretend that the challenges we face will be easy, or that the answers will come quickly, or that all our differences and divisions will fade happily away. Life is not that simple. It never has been.

But as you leave here today, remember the lessons of Cardinal Bernardin, of Father Hesburgh, of movements for change both large and small. Remember that each of us, endowed with the dignity possessed by all children of God, has the grace to recognize ourselves in one another; to understand that we all seek the same love of family and the same fulfillment of a life well-lived. Remember that in the end, we are all fishermen.

If nothing else, that knowledge should give us faith that through our collective labor, and God’s providence, and our willingness to shoulder each other’s burdens, America will continue on its precious journey towards that more perfect union. Congratulations on your graduation, may God Bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.





The Worst Inauguration of My Life

20 01 2009

I HATE this Inauguration!

It was extremely disorganized with no accountability and communication between the DC Police and the Secret Service. I have tickets into the Inauguration Ceremony and have been waiting in line since 5am in the morning. Now I am back home after being turned away at noon, after 7 hours of waiting in line.

In fact, the best moments of this experience occurred between 6am-9am, when I stood in line among people of all creed and backgrounds, patiently with no complaints. Then 9am came and 10am went by, and our gigantic line was still not moving, that’s when we realized something might be up.

It turns out -nobody knew what went wrong. No one apologized, no one gave us any reasons, in fact, the DC Chief of Police lied on TV around 11:45am that everyone with a ticket got in. This is such BS – politics as usual.

We’ve asked about 5 Police that went by us, nobody knows what is going on. Not only that, their attitude is arrogant and defensive, claiming that they are only here to give directions, not to help.

At least 30,000 people in the purple section were turned away – there was no organization, no procedure.

I don’t understand. They knew how many tickets were passed out, this suppose to be the easiest planning part.

I waited in a huge tunnel with tens of thousands of people. At one point between 9am – 11 am, there was not a single police officer in sight. I mean, talking about tight security measures, you’ve got a huge tunnel packed with people and absolutely no one there watching… how is that safe? I am amazed that the crowd controlled ourselves and walked away after 6 hours of waiting, with no clear anger.

Really – I am angry because this huge disappointment will be my memory. This anger that I followed the rules but was rejected with absolutely no apologies or reasonings. This feeling of injustice, I feel kind of like I am still in the Bush Time, and wasn’t this suppose to be Obama Time, Change?

Think I’m the only pissed-off one, you are wrong:

Purple Tunnel of Doom

Washington Post Article on People Being Turned Away

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Every single one of us here has a purple ticket, over 30,000 of us, we were all barred from the Purple Gate that never opened. There was not a single Police in sight, I am so surprised the crowd staid under control given our deep disappointmentThe endless tunnel where people of all creed lined up since 3am in the morning. Then line NEVER moved. Useless DC Police never gave any explanation

The endless tunnel where people of all creed lined up since 3am in the morning. Then line NEVER moved. DC Police never gave any explanation, but in fact became very defensive and somewhat arrogant, stating numerous times that they have no idea what is going on - nobody knew why this failure happened.





Inauguration of a Lifetime, Part 1

14 01 2009

This is the beginning of a 3-part series to document my journey to DC – witnessing history!

I have been a huge supporter of Barack Obama since his Junior Senate days at Illinois.  On the day he announced his candidacy for the President of the United States, I plastered ads on my facebook and signed up as a volunteer on his now famously open website.

I am proud to say that I was one of his earliest supporters, donating to his campaign and heavily campaigning for him to practically anyone I ever knew in life, from Michigan to Texas to New York, at a time when Hillary seemed unbeatable.

In some ways I am still in shock at how far we have come, but in other ways I am not at all surprised; I always knew this man understood deeply the basic principles I care about and is not afraid to change the status quot; now I know the world also sees that.  He is the right person at the right time; I guess that is how history gets made.

Thus, with great pride and unbelievable luck, I received 2 tickets to Obama’s Inauguration from my House of Representative, a rare Republican who beat a Democractic  in the past Nov election. Note One: Although I currently reside in New York… for all intents and purposes, my permanent home is the 22nd District of Texas where my parents still reside. Note Two: My district in Texas had been occupied for many years by then House Majority Leader and now Infamous Crook Tom Delay. To receive inauguration tickets from one of the most conservative regions in the United States is rather bittersweet.

Unfortunately, I am leaving DC for work right after Inauguration, so no balls and parties for me!

I will be busing my way to DC on Saturday. Like everyone else, I wonder about the nightmare traffic. I’m picking up my inauguration tickets on Monday at the Cannon House Office Building, thanking my House of Rep for his generous gift. I wonder if I should buy him some flowers as a thank you gesture. I will also be celebrating MLK day, now that I finally work for a company that recognizes the significance of Civil Rights by giving us a day off.

I am excited, more to come!





What would you do with $3.1 billion?

20 11 2008

The University of Michigan got $3.1 billion dollar since 2000 due to a major fundraising campaign called the “Michigan Difference.”

I want to add that as an alumni from the University of Michigan, I love that school and it forever changed my view on the world in a positive way that I probably will never receive anywhere else.  But I also know from first hand experience that Michigan gives very limited financial aids to students – and we’ll see in light of this especially vast amount of money they’ve just received – how are they going to justify consistently raising tuition.

Most of student aids come in the form of loans.

This is especially true for students who are out of state – Michigan has the highest tuition rate of any public University in the US but gives the least amount of money compared to not only private Universities, but other comparable Public Universities such as Berkeley.  That, unfortunately, is also the Michigan Difference.

There is an non-existing support system for students who are not #1 or #2 in their class but still are working hard and achieving great grades. One can count the # of substantial scholarships they give to Michigan students on two hands. The examples they use to say “so and so received a full scholarship thanks to your generous donation” applies to only a handful out of thousands.  This is not aid.

My parents make a combined income of $60,000 a year and I was labeled “middle class” and received no scholarships and about only 10% in the form of financial grants, compared to 80% I received from Boston University and 100% from my in-state college.   My family had to pay over $1400 a month, a huge burden that I don’t know if I should go through had the chance to do it again, despite this great education.

One year my dad’s monthly payment was late because the check got rebounded, the University disenrolled me within that same week and would not enroll me in any class and threatened to kick me out of my dorm if I don’t send in a check within the same week.  By the time the check came in, all the classes I wanted to take have been filled and books were sold out.

Given the fact that this University claims to be a nonprofit organization that receives money tax-free and are supposedly serving students’ interests first, I see these messages as hypocritical to reality.  The reality is that this University is being run like any other cold-blooded businesses – they put money first before anything else “sympathy” or “humane” exceptions are not allowed under this structure.

Therefore, when they do get this $3.1 billion dollars, I can guarantee you that the vast majority of that money is going toward a better building for the administrators, for research facilities that really don’t serve the student body directly (such as the UM Hospital), a private dining room for athletes, for Mary Sue Coleman to travel to Africa, and for professors to conduct more research.

This money , however, is NOT going to go toward lowering the already ridiculous tuition and other fees they charge (tuition has been raising at an average of 10% per year for 5 consecutive years), it is not going to upgrade the crappy career center that doesn’t get students jobs, it is NOT going to give more scholarships to those that wish to travel abroad for a summer but can’t afford to, and it is NOT going to lower your books or decrease your expensive housing cost either.

So yes, Michigan received $3.1 billion, but like all companies, it is going to serve its own interests first, and its constituents, the students, probably NEVER.

Mary Sue Coleman - President of Michigan

“As the president of the University of Michigan, I don’t care if you can’t pay for your tuition, I only care about the bottom 0.5% of the poorest and top 0.5% of the smartest, that way Michigan an be called both prestigious and diverse – when in fact it may be neither.  Oh, and I’m definitely going to continue sleeping in 5-star hotels when I travel around the world promoting Michigan, whatever that means because there is really no oversight on whether or not these trips actually help promote Michigan, and I may or may not be required there, but oh well, I just loves to travel too much.  Screw biochemistry, I am a Politician!”





Obama

28 10 2008

I support Barack Obama because he genuinely understands race relations, identity crisis, being poor in the world’s richest country and the struggles of immigrants.  These topics define America, uglifies America, and shapes America.  I have never heard a Politician talk about these topics the way Obama does: showing he not only understands the nuances and complexities, but has personally gone through these experiences and knows how you feel about them.

The truth is scary and at work in the school or on a public podium, we are pressured to say what is expected.  Obama’s courage and oratory skills, however, has allowed him to tell the truth without appearing radical, to crash the conventional wisdom of only speaking about the clique.

There needs to be change: because the upper class has enjoyed socialism for too long and the middle and lower class have been unfairly taxed in capitalism.  It is unfair that I get taxed 34% for my income when my boss, who makes AT LEAST 10 times as much as me (not even including bonus,) gets taxed the same?  True: the very poor don’t get taxed at all, but do you HONESTLY think the government should take doolars out of a person who can barely survive on minimum wage?  We are not taxing the rich because they get away from all kinds of loopholes.  Of course they worked hard for their money, but people below them worked hard as well, and got less.  That is the unfair part.

Obama’s plausible Presidency is substance and symbol wrapped in one.  He is not only the candidate with the best ideas, but his Presidency will symbolitically heal the pain of so many.  Not only for African Americans, but also for Latinos, Asians, Gays, Immigrants and Native Americans: a Obama presidency means that the discrimination, humiliation, and struggles these people have gone through somehow had all meant for something, that progress is not just a dream.





Powell endorses Obama!

20 10 2008
Be a democrate.

Be a democrate.

A Black man of steel in brains and body, from the south Bronx born to Jamaican immigrants -Colin Powell represents the American Dream.  He is, however also the guy who sold us Iraq.

People make mistakes – Colin Powell realized he screwed up as Bush’s Secretary of State.  Call it coercion or not, Powell help to create this mess – I don’t think he’s comfortable living with this mistake.

He is now trying to save his reputation – endorsing Barack Obama is a step.  There is something beautiful about a black man endorsing another, but more importantly, a Republican endorsing a Democrat.

Powell showed us that Bush is not just republican or conservative, he is WACKO NEOCONSERVATIVE – ignorant and screwed up in ways his little brain cannot even comprehend.  I wish Laura Bush would stop supporting her inapt husband and smack him in the face – Bush listens to nobody these days but her.





the Jackie O of Multicultural America

10 10 2008

Michelle Obama – where do I even begin to describe my delight seeing her on the world stage?

 

Does she realize how difficult it is to find a good man of color these days?

Does she realize how difficult it is to find a good man of color these days?

 

She is pieces of many women of color, in our own skin.  She is authentic; she’s been through the anger and oppression of being female and being colored.  Unlike Condi Rice who turns a blind eye to oblivion every time the race subject omes up, Michelle Obama understands that race is entrenched in our social perceptions, and she is open to address this issue.

 

But Michelle Obama is no longer angry – her acknowledgement of our struggles is followed by a transcendence of her uniqueness into a positive force, a belief that this nation is changing for the better.  She is quite tactful at dealing with complex issues.

 

But what us women of color all envy Michelle Obama, more than anything else, is the fact that she married an amazing guy, who is (1) not white (not that it matters, but, it kind of does) (2) praises (not suppresses) Michelle’s independence (3) shares Michelle’s passion to change this world.  I mean, I don’t think her marriage (or anyone’s for that matter) is as perfect as it seems from the outside, but they do look like they are very in love, after fifteen years!  Barack Obama better not cheat on our princess!

 

I cannot wait to see the changes this woman will bring to the concept of beauty in America.





Sarah Palin is Ridiculous

3 10 2008

Sarah Palin knows how to flirt.  That’s a trait I personally need to develop further.

she wants your soul

she wants your soul

She eye-fucked the camera with winks, did a shout-out to third graders, and concluded the debate with if we don’t blah blah, we’re going to have to tell our children about a time in America when men and women were free.  Talk about fear mongering.

I’m not even a Hillary Clinton supporter, and I miss her oh-so-mcuh!








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