Posted by draabe on 24 July, 2008
The visuals were phenomenal: Senator Barack Obama, the Brandenburg Gate, over 200,000 people listening attentively, cheering for an American leader as they used to. But what did he say?
Andrea Mitchell, Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent for NBC, said the speech was heavy on rhetoric. But Chuck Todd, Political Director and Analyst for NBC News and MSNBC, said that the McCain campaign should have “ceded the week” to Obama. As Senator John Kerry noted, it was good to see Europeans cheering an American leader [for a change].
The Speech was more than presidential, it was globally unifying – something both Europeans and Americans need to hear. Invoking the history of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Obama called upon people of Berlin – and people of the world – to remake the world. He said that he knows America’s actions haven’t always lived up to her intentions, but that for more than two centuries we have strived to form a more perfect union and a more hopeful world. He said America has no allegiance to a particular land or region; every point of view is expressed in our public squares. What drew his father to the shores of America was a set of ideals that speak to aspirations shared by all people. The shared aspirations of all nations are bigger than anything that drives us apart. Obama said it is “because of these shared aspirations that the airlift began and that all people everywhere became citizens of Berlin.”
Obama said “this is the moment when all nations must summon the spirit that led to the airlift.” Here near the Brandenburg Gate, he continued, “we must insist that we never forget our common humanity and that history proved that there is no challenge too great for a world that stands as one…Sixty years after the airlift, we are called upon again…when the German people tore down that wall, walls came tumbling down around the world…and the doors of democracy were opened.”
Read more…
Posted in POLITICS | Tagged: Barack Obama, Berlin, Brandenburg Gate, McCain, NEWS, obama, Obama speech, POLITICS | 1 Comment »
Posted by draabe on 24 July, 2008
The Minnesota DFL has now filed formal complaints against the Coalititon for a Democratic Workplace (“CDW”) and Minnesotans for Employee Freedom (“MEF”). The complaints charge the groups with violating Minnesota election law, which prohibits false political and campaign material, and is based on ads produced by the groups regarding The Employee Free Choice Act. The ads clearly paint U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken as anti-union, not to mention in league with the mafia, and specifically state that Franken says “eliminate the secret ballot for workers.” Additionally, the ads, which continue to run at the time of this writing, depict U.S. Senate candidate (and incumbent) Norm Coleman as pro-union, pro-employee and pro-privacy in general.
Earlier this month, I wrote that the EFCA does not, in fact, eliminate the secret ballot and in a WCCO Reality Check, Pat Kessler reported:
“While it seems as if the ad supports unions, it’s actually produced by a coalition of national business groups called the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, who are lobbying to kill the bill.”
The AFL-CIO writes that “Coleman Doesn’t Get It” on their newsblog, and Brian Melendez, Chairman of the Minnesota DFL party stated:
“…In Minnesota, we don’t tolerate intentionally false statements in paid political advertising; in fact, such statements are a crime, and rightly so. We are therefore holding legally accountable the two groups that have knowingly and intentionally spread these false statements in Minnesota. A judge will hold those groups accountable. And Minnesota voters will hold Norm Coleman accountable.”
Posted in Franken v. Coleman, POLITICS | Tagged: Al Franken, DFL, EFCA, Franken v. Coleman, Minnesota, Norm Coleman | 3 Comments »