DISQUS

Jack and Jill Politics: February 10, 2007 -When It All Began

  • Dermar 2.0 · 1 year ago
    Read this foolishness from a black congressman from my state of florida..


    http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2008/05/hastings-boycot.html
  • RhondaCoca · 1 year ago
    I was happy. I was one of the first to really support him the way others began supporting him after Iowa.


    I will admit though, I have Obama fatigue. It has been a long year and a half. Wake me up in November honestly=) Exhausted.
  • TruthSeeker · 1 year ago
    Great, thanks! This is my favourite picture of the Obama family.
  • Webb · 1 year ago
    I was with him from the night he gave the keynote at the Democratic Convention 2004.


    Before that night, it was "Obama who?"



    After that night, it was obvious--he would be President someday...it was only a matter of time.
  • Chica Dificil · 1 year ago
    I made him my #1 friend on My Space!!!!
    I didn't think he really had a chanced but I hopelessly hoped!!!! That's what kept it alive!!



    Dificil~
  • justice58 · 1 year ago
    I remember hearing Iowa being called for Barack Obama & I stood in the middle of my living room stunned with amazement! When I could finally pick my jaw from the floor, I said...Iowa!


    Oh My God!
  • Kat · 1 year ago
    I remember seeing the crowd in IL, and hearing him speak, and loving that he was running.


    I thought Hillary would clean his clock, but that he would get some good experience for a later run for the WH.



    Hee!
  • Shannon Clark · 1 year ago
    I perhaps had an unfair advantage in that I was a Chicagoan when he ran for Senate.


    In that campaign at the primary level I was a supporter of a competitor of his (who in my defense was also a neighbor of mine and who I knew from a cafe we both frequented across from my house - so I supported the candidate I knew personally).



    However when Obama won the Dem primary and then went on to clean the clock of the Republicans I was quite proud and happy to vote for him. And as he gave the speech at the Democratic Convention that year I was fairly sure he would one day run and win the Presidency.



    So when he announced I was pretty sure he would win, even in the face of the Clinton juggernaut.



    [and just for the record I'm a white, Jewish male]
  • justice58 · 1 year ago
    Kat,


    You made me laugh out loud!
  • kathy · 1 year ago
    I first read about Barack Obama in a book called "Who's Afraid of a Large Black Man?". I then read Obama's first book, and I knew I wanted him to be our President. I remember seeing the first headlines when he won his first primary, and my face lit up in a huge smile.
  • TruthSeeker · 1 year ago
    I became fully conscious of Barack from his New Hamshire loss. The "Yes We Can" speech..the most extraordinary thing I'd ever seen. Such determination despite losing!


    I got chills from that speech and so many times afterward when I heard him speak. For me, chills are a sign of emotional resonance.
  • TruthSeeker · 1 year ago
    CNN reporting Obama needs 7 delegates.
  • Ms.Martin · 1 year ago
    I've been onboard since 04.


    I believe he will be the president.
  • Jeff L. · 1 year ago
    I live in Illinois and saw enough to appreciate that Barack Obama was scary smart and more importantly wise. I knew he had a chance and have held a private notion that he really is destined.


    I heard his anti-invasion speech in person in Oct. 2002 and have supported him ever since. After watching, reading news and reading his first book I knew this was the kind of candidate I and many people like me have been waiting for - for decades.
  • Angela · 1 year ago
    I thought the Clintons were going to succeed in trashing Sen. Obamawas until Ted Kennedy stepped out to endors and Caroline Kennedy wrote that wonderful editorial within a day of each other.


    I have been getting choked up all day. I love it.
  • RhondaCoca · 1 year ago
    Yea, I have been captivated with him since his 2004 speech at the Democratic Convention. He just shun!


    I later met my future roomate who I became best friends with. She attended Trinity United Church of Christ. She told me wonderful things about Obama. She campaigned for him when he was running for the senate. She isn't the most enthusiatic right now but she will be fine in a month or so.



    I read both Dreams From My Father and Audacity of Hope.



    I always felt that he had a chance despite everyone else doubting it. I spent the past year March 2007-April 2008 campaigning for him!



    Its been a long year...My God. I will resume probably in late July or Early August=)
  • Roger · 1 year ago
    I didn't think he had a snowball's chance on a hot oven. I even said, "I'll vote for Hillary--Obama needs another term in the Senate and maybe he could run in '12 or '16." I even thought that I'd vote for him, but knew that Clinton would win the nomination.


    And then there was Obama's New Hampshire speech. I was converted. And then he came to South Carolina and I heard him speak. I read his policy positions, and the more I heard from him, I knew I had to change my vote.



    And then came the Hanky Heads, and Bill's Big Racist Mouth...and I knew that I had made the right decision.
  • blksista · 1 year ago
    I thought...no way.


    I was an Edwards supporter because of what he tried to do with New Orleans and with poverty.



    I liked Edwards' wife, too.



    Then Edwards faded in the Obama juggernaut, and I had to respect brother man and to really look at him.



    Then I knew he was for real when Bill started whining about how dis colored boy outta no place done spoiled mah fun on Charlie Rose. The race-baiting started at that moment.



    I wasn't even thinking of switching to Billary then. I didn't even like the idea of voting for her. I was even iffy about Obama after reading a few articles on Black Agenda Report and reading this piece called "Barack Obama, Inc." in The Atlantic, I think. But that pathetic performance on Rose after Iowa tore it for me. I thought then, oh, no you ain't, b*tch. Not while I live am I going to vote for your ass again.



    Then the "Yes we can" video came out...and I kept playing it over and over, and sending it to friends, and he kept winning and winning. Confounding everyone.



    I'm reading his books soon, just to get a bead on him. I wish him well, and I'm praying for him to stay alive. I know his nomination and elevation to the presidency is going to be largely symbolic for us; he's going to make some mistakes. But he is ours; I never thought that he was less black or not black enough. Just too unknown...



    And now everyone knows him.
  • markg8 · 1 year ago
    I lived in NJ in 2004 and when I saw him give the keynote speech at the convention I wished he was the candidate then.


    On that Saturday morning in February I was wishing I hadn't worn my steeltoed boots. I didn't know if we could pull this off but I was determined to work my butt off trying. As soon as my feet thawed out.



    I am so happy for the brothers and sisters here. I wish I could see those black nurses who helped take care of my dad last November, who told me Hillary would win, "Barack is just a baby" they said. It's not their fault. They didn't know, they didn't believe, Hillary had a 57-37% lead in SC at the time. Why should they get their hearts broken cuz some white guy with a sick dad says so? But I bet by the time the primary rolled around they did.



    But I'm not just happy for black folks. I'm happy for all the white people I talk to when I'm phonebanking. A lot of them Repubs who say they're voting for him in the fall. I spoke to one guy last night, a Repub in his 60s, while making calls separating the wheat from the chaff for our Dems in DuPage. When I asked him if he thought he'd vote for Scott Harper (IL-13) our Dem House candidate, he said with more wonder in his voice than anything else, "hey, I'm voting for Barack, so yeah sure" as if to say "I never thought I'd ever say something like that out loud but I've been thinking it for months and yeah there I said it, I am, and it feels good."
  • Brandon | Fortyoneacres · 1 year ago
    When I heard that Obama was running I was overcome with emotion. I was so proud becasue he's such an inspiration and he's completely what this country needed. And then I thought about the racism...and I thought he would get shot if he did well.


    16 months later he stands as the Democratic Nominee for President. 18 months ago I stood on stage with this man. He inspired me then and he continues to inspire me and a generation and country of others. He IS what this country needs...
  • Drew M. · 1 year ago
    I remember it clearly: "For the first time, I get to vote FOR a candidate." I've just been enjoying the ride since.
  • Nichelle · 1 year ago
    The 2004 DNC speech didn't do it for me because I felt that it was not unusual to see an extremely intelligent, well-spoken black man. I felt that people were over-hyping him and I avoided all of the breathless articles on him.


    Until Hurricane Katrina.



    When Obama went to the Superdome, that caught my attention and that's when I decided to investigate him by reading his book, Dreams From My Father. I blogged about it at the time (I wanted to hear more about his mother)



    http://anovelista.blogspot.com/2005/12/baracking-world.html



    As far as his presidential run, After reading Dreams From My Father and reading every article (pro and con) I could find, my attitude was as long as he is in it, I am for him



    He is also the first (and probably the last) politician that I have ever volunteered for and donated money to.
  • BlackLiterature · 1 year ago
    I was excited, but yes, hoonestly, I questioned if he had a real chance to win the nomination. This was prior to Elizabeth Edwards' announcement that her cancer had returned. Initially, I thought he might have a btter chance as someone' running mate. About 6 months later in the fall of 2007, I started to believe he had a real chance. Winter 07 I was sure of it and Jan 08 was the clincher.
  • Adam F. · 1 year ago
    I'm a 38 yr old white guy from Australia. I started listening to his podcasts early 2006, before the mid term elections. Before the thought of him running for Pres.


    I honestly thought he had a real shot at it. Having heard him speak, he was just that awesome, just so damn good. I hadn't even listened to his convention speech back then. Oprah said it best "he's BRILLIANT". He's got a better voice than Morgan Freeman and as much grace. Best Political Leader I've seen in my lifetime.



    I really thought he had a shot, those crowds were not for any normal poly, he's in his own league.



    HE WILL WIN IN NOVEMBER.



    I can't wait for his inaugreation (spell) speech.
  • Caribbean Lionesse · 1 year ago
    I'd heard of all the Obamamania and the arguments over 'articulate' and is he black enough and so on. So he was on my radar and when he announced his candidacy, I thought 'oh that's nice'. And I supported him tentatively because his candidacy is an important thing for black people all over the world.


    But I didn't think he had a chance. I figured Hillary would beat him convincingly and if she didn't Edwards might because he had already run in 04 and he was a vice-presidential nominee and he was the white guy and that is how Americans are (or seem to the rest of the world).
  • PTCruiser · 1 year ago
    I always thought that Obama could pull it off. The time seemed right and the Clintonians and their acolytes were too complacent and arrogant.