Sunday, June 22, 2008

The Battle of St. Paul?

Here's a conundrum: 50,00 to 100,000 protesters are expected to descend on St. Paul for the RNC convention. To put than in perspective, that is almost a third of the entire population of the city of Saint Paul! Some organizers of the march openly express their desire to disrupt the convention. Yet, the protest organizers are indicating that any plan to keep them away from the convention sight is trampling on their free speech rights.

I will write more on this sad hypocrisy later.

Right now, I implore you to pray for this city!

Fear of a Multicultural State

It seems that Obama's candidacy has caused a small up tick in web traffic on white supremacist websites. Here's the story in the Washington Post.

Actual quotes from the article:

"White people wake up!"

"White people have always seen this government as being for them."

"(Don) Black has enlisted the help of 40 moderators and his 19 year old son to help run (his white supremacist website)"

This is the politics of fear at its worst. This is what happens when one group of people feel that their own well being can only come at the cost of others.

I have to remind myself that these fearful souls are far outnumbered by those who have embraced the idea of a future where anyone can lead our nation and people really are judged by the content of their character.

What scares me is that it only takes one fearful soul to fire a well aimed rifle.

My hope? "Perfect love casts out all fear."

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Baracknapohobia

So, leave it to John Stewert of The Daily Show to break it down. See for yourself!

Thank you John Stewert...thank you for letting us laugh about it....

It's Stuff Like This, Man....



So, I am reading through my usual line-up of political blogs when I come across this gem. By "gem" I mean disgusting dingelberry of rancid right wing racism. I knew that people were going to get racial about Barack Obama's candidacy, but I am still taken aback by the sheer volume of it. Whether it's Fox news using the term "baby's mama" to describe Michelle Obama or calling the fist pound between Michelle and Barack a "terrorist fist jab", the who thing is just getting more ridiculous by the day.

Now, when I first heard read the story linked above, I had a fantasy about posting a profanity-laden screed about the racism of the right. But, after taking some time and reading that the Texas GOP itself was not sell this button, but rather a vendor at the state convention, I began to cool off a little bit. I am still mad, but more of a simmering volcano mad versus the exploding volcano I was earlier.

More than anything, stuff like this just makes me sad. There is such an ugly spirit of racism that still exists in this country. Sen. Obama's candidacy is almost having the effect of an exorcism on this country. If you ever saw the movie The Exorcist, you know that the harder the priest fought against the demon possessing the little girl, the more visible and unchained the demon inside the girl became. In the same vane, I sense that the closer we get to November, the more unfiltered the hate will become. The question then is two-fold: Just how ugly will things get (Re: Attempted assasination ugly?) and is America ready to undergo an exorcism of the demonic forces that are at the root of its original sin?

Sunday, June 15, 2008

J.C. Watts? Maybe Not So Much.....

So in my last post I jokingly alluded to the idea that, if I am hired as a volunteer to to the Republican National Convention, those in attendance might mistake me for a young aspiring J.C. Watts, a African-American former congressman from Oklahoma who rose to the number 3 spot in House of Reps when the GOP were in control. Well, come to find out Obama's candidacy is creating a crisis of conscience in some black conservatives.

Black conservative: this is a term, I am sad to admit, I have long kept in the category of oxymoron. I mean, correct me if I am wrong, but it was the ideals of conservatism, such as the exultation of the free market as the greatest force known to man and limited government, that embodied the philosophy of those who lead the Southern states to secede from the Union over slavery. I mean, I may be wrong, but wasn't that the argument? That the federal government was encroaching on the states rights to maintain a genocidal but extremely lucrative institution that, in my opinion, to this day remains America's worst and original sin.

So, if I am an educated black man or woman, what in the HELL makes me think that these same ideals are the silver bullet that will lift the black community to greater heights? I mean, is not unreasonable to question a political philosophy that lead to the enslavement and mass killing of one's ancestors and led the oppressors of that time to tear apart the fabric of their own mighty nation and kill their own brothers and sisters in defense of this philosophy. Yeah, damn right black conservatives are having a crisis of conscience when they see a liberal black man dethrone one of the most powerful political dynasties in modern politics.

So, in the fallout of this coup de grace, even J.C. Watts, former foot soldier and number three man in the Newt Gingrich revolution, has to admit that he feels torn about who to vote for this fall and agrees that the Republican party has largely ignored the issues that are of central importance to the African American (Re: inner city) community.

Change is in the wind, y'all. Change is in the wind.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

I Wonder What They're Like Up Close...

Today I filled out an application to volunteer for the Republican National Convention that will be held in Saint Paul this coming September. Mind you, though I generally try to be "post-partisan" when it comes to politics, most people who know me would probably peg as more liberal than conservative. So needless to say, it was not necessarily with a sense of glee and unbridled anticipation that I have decided to volunteer. Why then did I do it?

  1. I take pride in my adopted home of Minneapolis/St. Paul and this an opportunity to show it off to people across the country.
  2. It's a once in a life time event. It's not everyday a big political convention is held where you happen to live.
  3. I figure it'll be good for the Republicans to see a black person helping out with their big show even if I have scant evidence indicating that Republicans trip over themselves to help out with the NAACP National Convention, the Urban League National Convention, or the State of the Black Union. I wonder if they'll think I am the next J.C. Watts....
  4. Sheer (morbid?) curiosity.
  5. I want to think to myself, "Barack Obama drinks your milkshake!" as I reflect on the glorious events of June 3rd.

Honestly, though, if I am to be a reconciler, I figure I must be willing to move into spaces where there may be people who disagree with me. I think this will be a great way to humbly serve my city and my friends across the aisle. Political reconciliation begins with us, THE PEOPLE!

Will I propbably have to hold my tongue a great deal? More than I even care to think about!

Will I lean a lot? Yeah

Will I blog about what is sure to be one of the most challenging reconciliation experiences of my life? Oh yeah

Want to join me on this twisted adventure. Click Here.

Also, post your thoughts on this or other blog entries in the comments section!

Thursday, June 5, 2008

They Said This Would Never Come...









It is somewhat of an indescribable thing to find ones self swept up in the midst of a historical event. Reflecting on the times I have volunteered for Obama events or attended a speech by the candidate, I realize that it is the little things that make Obama's campaign feel so epic and historical. It's not just the "props" such as the american flags and campaign signs. Every campaign has that. With Obama, it's the diversity of the crowds that really hits me. I have seen the man speak three times now and at every event it's the same beautiful cross section of the American fabric. I've seen an old white couple standing next to an african american father and who's brought his young son. Not too far away will be a group of young, white professional twenty-somethings next to an old Ethiopian man who himself is not too far from a nice looking east-indian family. Incredible. And almost all of them have the same look in their eye, a gleam of inspiration and awe at the candidate they have come to hear speak. But maybe too it is awe at themselves and the show of unity in the gathering of which they are all apart.

Tuesday, June 3rd was no different. The lines? Staggering in length. The crowd? As wide ranging as ever. However, this event at the Xcel center, the culmination of so much strife and struggle, was the most epic of all I had seen. First, there was the location. For those who don't know, the Xcel Center is site of the Republican National Convention, the event where John McCain will formally claim the nomination and make his case to the American people. I would call Obama's choice to use their venue as the stage on which he proclaims victory over HRC a declaration that Minnesota is Obama country. It's a not to subtle way of saying to McCain, "I drink your milkshake!" (see this link for background on reference: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWuGWmM2PAI)
So, given the locale and the circumstance, the crowd was fired up.

There were protesters against the war with large banners bearing sayings such as "Not Another 100 Years." There were media and from all over the world. There were vendors of selling shirts and buttons and hats, yelling to draw attention to their goods. One lady entreprenuer stood on a corner, shirt in hand, announcing "Obama, Obama, OBAMA, OBAMA!!!" like she was selling hot dogs or scalped tickets. It was then when I turned to my roommate Katie and declared, "Congratulations, Obama. You're officially a brand!"

Oh, and there were helicoptors; multiple media helicoptors. A true sign of an epic event. You see, at its longest the line to get into the Xcel spanned almost 2 miles. For those counting, that's almost 20 city blocks. My roommate Emily, who also attended the event but arrived seperately, indicated that she witnessed the line grow at a rate of about a new block every 10 minutes.

Once through airport style security and inside the arena, I saw that the place had been turned into Obamaland! The Obama logo was everywhere! Even on the megatron!

I and my friends were able to obtain access to the arena floor, mere feet from the podium! The seats slowly filled until there was a capacity crowd. Signs were passed out and I passed the time, waiting away the hours for the moment to arrive. I read news updates on my blackberry. Watched parts of a movie on my friend Wilt's ipod. Chatted with strangers and new acquaintances Gregor and Fiona about the election up until now. Waited some more.

Then, an old face from my past emerged onto the stage. Professor Severson, my communications instructor from business school, took the podium and gave a rousing introduction for the man of the hour. And with that, the place went crazy. I lost myself in a sea of signs and screams as Obama declared himself the victor in the long fought race against the most formidable woman in US political history!