Obama the llama
Jun. 4th, 2008 05:15 pmI may be tired, slightly irritable (well, you try having your parents stay for a week and you sleeping in the living room on the sofa with one of their friends) but for some reason, I can't stop dwelling on the notion that Barrack Obama may have won the Democratic nomination.
Simply because I cannot believe
- a nation that managed to vote for Dubya *twice*, is ever going to elect Obama as President. Which basically means the most powerful man in the world could well end up being a 73-year-old military veteran. Which is not good news.
- which basically means the Democrats have basically handed over the Presidency to yet another warmonger. Obama may be the right candidate, but he's not going to be the one who wins
- surely everyone who's voted in the primaries is already a Democrat nominee. So why is the UK press so keen on splashing the fact that members of a foreign political party have chosen their next presidential candidate ...
- what on earth does Obama stand for? What are his policies? I am reminded of the character in a Stephen King novel who came to power vaguely promising great change, and then promptly starting a war... (then again, I guess the same can be said for Clinton. All political rhetoric and inspirational self-selling speeches as opposed to policies)
-why am I more interested in US domestic politics than UK domestic politics (again!)?
More importantly, thanks to my sister getting married, I seem to have missed the chance to be part of the last Circle Line pub crawl on the London Underground. and more importantly, the chance to cameo on the Daily Show.
Simply because I cannot believe
- a nation that managed to vote for Dubya *twice*, is ever going to elect Obama as President. Which basically means the most powerful man in the world could well end up being a 73-year-old military veteran. Which is not good news.
- which basically means the Democrats have basically handed over the Presidency to yet another warmonger. Obama may be the right candidate, but he's not going to be the one who wins
- surely everyone who's voted in the primaries is already a Democrat nominee. So why is the UK press so keen on splashing the fact that members of a foreign political party have chosen their next presidential candidate ...
- what on earth does Obama stand for? What are his policies? I am reminded of the character in a Stephen King novel who came to power vaguely promising great change, and then promptly starting a war... (then again, I guess the same can be said for Clinton. All political rhetoric and inspirational self-selling speeches as opposed to policies)
-why am I more interested in US domestic politics than UK domestic politics (again!)?
More importantly, thanks to my sister getting married, I seem to have missed the chance to be part of the last Circle Line pub crawl on the London Underground. and more importantly, the chance to cameo on the Daily Show.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-04 10:49 pm (UTC)Obama seems to have some good views. Overall, he appears to stand for Truth, Justice, and the American Way... however, he is an American politician, and we know they are ALL blowing smoke out their asses. If he truly means what he says, I think he could do well, but deep down inside I just don't know. I can't stand Hillary or McCain, so he's about all I have to root for at the moment.
Most people seem to be afraid of the fact that he's black. Not so much for racist reasons, but because they are afraid he will be assassinated. I think that is also a load of horse-shit, just another excuse. (What is funny is the plotline you described from the King novel is exactly what I first began expressing as my fears regarding Obama as soon as he began running!)
no subject
Date: 2008-06-04 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-04 11:14 pm (UTC)