Tuesday, November 11, 2008

A funny thing

Sure, the world sucks.

But for some reason I really don't feel that bad.

I wonder why.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Rahm Emmanuel in a nutshell

Rahm Emmanuel is Barack Obama's Luca Brasi.

Without the mafia ties of course.

Though he does have his own awkward relation ship with fish.

Joe must go

Joe Lieberman must go, you know why. In this helpful video from last June Josh Marshall explains how:



My letter to Senator Boxer:


Dear Senator Boxer,

After his disgraceful behavior during this election cycle Senator Lieberman has no place in the Democratic caucus, and certainly has no place as a committee chair.

As my Senator, and as a member of the Democratic steering and outreach committee I am counting on you to do the right thing.

President-elect Obama has said that we need to reach out and listen to those who disagree with us, and I wholeheartedly agree.

That does not mean, however, that we need to reward them with committee chairmanships.

Sincerely,

Steven Kang
www.stevekangsblog.blogspot.com


If your Senator is on this committee please take a moment to write.

What's right about being wrong

Ok.

So I've given myself a day to just walk around smiling and reading as many newspapers I could get my hands on.

Time, I suppose, to ever so gently start looking forward.

One very preliminary thought inspired by TPM's David Kurtz is this, never have I ever been so glad to be so frequently wrong.

I'm not going through the full litany of lefty second guessings that Obama proved wrong, Kurtz does a fine job of that.

But, just to point out the obvious, in every case, Cool Hand Barack's choices were consistently superior to the lefty blogosphere's recommendations (including my own).

Turns out Barack Obama is smarter than the rest of us.

Go figure.

So does that mean that in the future I'll stop second-guessing the new administration?

Surely (Shirley) you jest.

It just means that I expect to find myself frequently, happily, wrong.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

President Barack Hussein Obama

In 2004 I heard about a speech given at the Democratic National Convention. After watching it my first thought was: my God, this man has a future in this party.

My second thought was: why does he have to be named Barack Hussein Obama?

But after today's historic events I understand.

America has, for the past eight years, worked to destroy itself, its place in the world as a leader, not only militarily and finacially, but as a beacon of reason and sanity.

Perhaps we could be forgiven the first four years of a Bush administration transformed by the disaster of 9/11 from merely blandly incompetent to actively evil.

But then came 2004.

We re-elected him.

To the world, and to ourselves, that was a nearly unpardonable sin.

And make no mistake, the blame then lay not only on the shoulders of Bush's supporters and voters, but on those of us on the left as well who failed to defeat him.

Which is why it is so important that a black man named Barack Hussein Obama is now President-Elect.

Because we on the left had to work that much harder to get him there. Because it forced the saner of Bush's former supporters to realize that they had to choose between the reason and sanity Obama represents, and the madness represented by their rabid far-right wing.

Which is why I'm also (now) thankful for Sarah Palin who made the choice even more stark.

And (while I'm feeling magnanimous) let me express my thought that we have done John McCain a great service by rejecting his presidential bid.

The McCain I saw tonight reminded be of the McCain I admired not so many years ago, like his soul had been held prisoner to the worst elements of the GOP campaign machine, but had suddenly been released.

So now the beginning is ended. Tomorrow (after sleeping late) we begin to face the many challenges that confront us, individually and as a nation. But now, as I never have before, I truly believe that we are up to the task.

We can do it together.

Yes, we can.

Monday, November 03, 2008

VOTE FOR HISTORY!


[I]n no other country on earth, is my story even possible.
- Barack Obama, 2004 keynote speech to the Democratic National Convention.