Standing near the Old Capitol Building in Springfield, Illinois, last Saturday—in single-digit weather, no less—I couldn’t help feeling I was a part of something special. Scores of politicians have hosted rallies in town squares over the years, and Presidential candidates have come and gone like failed sitcoms. But when Senator Barack Obama stepped up to the mike to share his vision for the nation, I felt I was witnessing the beginning of an important chapter in our history—the political and even spiritual reunification of our country.
I think most observers, from all points on the American political spectrum, recognize Senator Obama’s tremendous potential. But there is no guarantee he will live up to it. Just think of the accomplishments which could have come from a staggeringly talented Bill Clinton. And even though George Bush is not a dynamic political thinker—and doesn’t possess the unifying political philosophy necessary for true greatness—it pains one to think of the missed opportunities for national unity and international relations in the years following the terrorist attacks on our country.
But people seem to believe Senator Obama could meet that potential. Somebody does, once or twice a century. And he is the best chance we have seen in a generation.
This week, I called a lifelong friend—and a staunch Republican— in Iowa. He told me that he can’t stand most of the Democrats, especially Clinton and Edwards. But he just can’t bring himself to hate Obama. He can tell the guy knows what he’s talking about, and truly wants to heal this country.
I told my step mom to watch Oprah the day Barack was on. She called me later in the afternoon and told me she was ready to support him, all the way, no matter what. She could tell, she told me, that he truly wanted to find real solutions, and that he just might know how to do it.
My sister—the usually cynical, always sarcastic, borderline Republican—told me this week she is a proud member of the online group “Teachers for Obama.” The page turned for her when she had her students research the presidential candidates, using the newspapers and the candidates’ websites. The kids couldn’t for the life of them figure out where Hillary Clinton or John McCain stood on anything. But Obama was clear as crystal, and obviously telling the truth.
It all reminds me of what my uncle told me after the 2004 Presidential election. He said that all of his friends from work—no nonsense, blue-collar types—had voted for Bush, because they just didn’t think Kerry was genuine. Every single one of them said they would have voted for Howard Dean, had he been the nominee. Why? He said what he believed, and he meant what he said.
Senator Obama has that. He’s nothing if not genuine, and that is the only type of leader who can pull this country back together. I think people of all political stripes sense this is a person who could fundamentally change the public debate forever. The odds are against him, of course. The smart money would say that he won’t unseat juggernauts like McCain and Clinton, or conventional politicians like John Edwards and Mitt Romney.
I think most observers, from all points on the American political spectrum, recognize Senator Obama’s tremendous potential. But there is no guarantee he will live up to it. Just think of the accomplishments which could have come from a staggeringly talented Bill Clinton. And even though George Bush is not a dynamic political thinker—and doesn’t possess the unifying political philosophy necessary for true greatness—it pains one to think of the missed opportunities for national unity and international relations in the years following the terrorist attacks on our country.
But people seem to believe Senator Obama could meet that potential. Somebody does, once or twice a century. And he is the best chance we have seen in a generation.
This week, I called a lifelong friend—and a staunch Republican— in Iowa. He told me that he can’t stand most of the Democrats, especially Clinton and Edwards. But he just can’t bring himself to hate Obama. He can tell the guy knows what he’s talking about, and truly wants to heal this country.
I told my step mom to watch Oprah the day Barack was on. She called me later in the afternoon and told me she was ready to support him, all the way, no matter what. She could tell, she told me, that he truly wanted to find real solutions, and that he just might know how to do it.
My sister—the usually cynical, always sarcastic, borderline Republican—told me this week she is a proud member of the online group “Teachers for Obama.” The page turned for her when she had her students research the presidential candidates, using the newspapers and the candidates’ websites. The kids couldn’t for the life of them figure out where Hillary Clinton or John McCain stood on anything. But Obama was clear as crystal, and obviously telling the truth.
It all reminds me of what my uncle told me after the 2004 Presidential election. He said that all of his friends from work—no nonsense, blue-collar types—had voted for Bush, because they just didn’t think Kerry was genuine. Every single one of them said they would have voted for Howard Dean, had he been the nominee. Why? He said what he believed, and he meant what he said.
Senator Obama has that. He’s nothing if not genuine, and that is the only type of leader who can pull this country back together. I think people of all political stripes sense this is a person who could fundamentally change the public debate forever. The odds are against him, of course. The smart money would say that he won’t unseat juggernauts like McCain and Clinton, or conventional politicians like John Edwards and Mitt Romney.
But what if he does? What if he goes all the way? What if the country buys into the idea that that which unites us is greater than that which divides us? If it all comes to pass, then I will be able to tell my grandkids that I was there when it all started. That will make me proud. It already does.
1 comment:
Many times it is well worth being at the beginning of something special.
One crystal clear memory of my childhood was seeing Truman come through town on the back of an open train car. Some of us went to watch the first draft card burning in Iowa. Some of us sat on the floor at an afternoon tea to enable more people to see and hear Barbara Jordan. Children used to be taken out of school and transported by bus whenever a national figurehead (whether elected or campaigning) came near. So we saw Eisenhower, Goldwater, and others.
When that was no longer done, some of us encouraged our own children to skip school to see the President. And then those children have taken their own sons and daughters to see one of the leading politicians of today, Obama.
There is something to be said for building political responsibility early through the intense visual and emotional excitement through "being there."
Today, as an aging senior citizen, I get a thrill from meeting governors, senators, and representatives. Recently, I had the pleasure of introducing a sitting governor to the sister of a much former governor.
While I did not become an avid politician, seeing real life politicos engendered in me a sense of the importance of living history; personally to go to events; to go to see political leaders, and to feel the magic of personally wittnessing history.
When, if, Obama comes to the area where I live, I intend to go to see and hear him. His potential and his moment might not come in the immediate years, but I believe he will prevail. He is on my list of people to meet before I have the opportunity to meet Hoover, Lincoln, and the rest. Obama WILL be a man of this time.
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