From Bush to Obama: What a difference from 2000
By Jackson Thoreau
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 6, 2008, 00:15
What a difference we showed to the world on Nov. 4, 2008,
from eight years ago. This is the United States we have been fighting for since
Dec. 2000, one that is much more united now than then.
I remember eight years ago hearing from people who wanted
to, or did, move to Canada or another country after Bush-Cheney took the White
House in late 2000. I said I understood their sentiments, but my choice was to
stay and fight for what I believed in. I moved from Texas to the Washington,
D.C., area in 2003 partly to battle against the selfish Bush-Cheney
administration more directly. Most of us stayed and fought for what we believed
in, and on Nov. 4, 2008, we were rewarded.
How sweet it is.
Barack Obama showed us a better way than what eight years of
Bush-Cheney gave us. With his overwhelming presidential victory, he gives us
hope that we can get out of Bush-Cheney�s endless war and deep recession, while
doing more to address climate change, discrimination, unfair taxation, millions
of Americans without health care, and other issues. He has a Democratic
Congress to work with on his agenda.
But of course, now begins the tougher work of following
through on Obama�s vision. There is much more work to do.
Deepak Chopra is right when he said that Sarah Palin, who
could still end up in Washington as she eyes a Senate race in Alaska, is �the
reverse of Barack Obama, deriding his idealism and exhorting people to obey
their worst impulses.� We can be proud that American voters, in overwhelming
numbers, chose Obama�s idealism over Palin�s cynicism.
Today, some Republicans are openly praying for the health of
Scalia, Thomas and other Republican Supreme Court justices so they can hold on
to the third branch of government, and telling young conservatives not to join
the military but the police force so they can �hold onto their guns.� But John
McCain and Obama gave gracious speeches that should go far to heal election
bitterness. Whether that will result in a stronger, healthier country remains
to be seen. But, it�s a start, one that we were robbed of eight years ago.
To paraphrase what Michelle Obama once said, I�m really
proud of my country, and proud for the world, today. I�ve been proud before,
but today I�m really proud.
Jackson Thoreau is a Washington, D.C.-based
journalist and writer who has written about the Bush administration for ezines
such as OpedNews, Alternet, and Online Journal since 2000. He is the author of
the book, �Born to Cheat: How Bush, Cheney, Rove & Co. Broke the Rules -
From the Sandlot to the White House,� published in 2007.
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