Barack Obama is a tragedy in the Greekest of sense.
I can't help but cringe at the awful irony that on the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr. speaking these words:
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.that Barack
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I've rolled this over for a long time now, wondering what his appeal was. His appeal is that he's not like the other candidates, and I don't mean skin color. He's inexperienced, he's fairly liberal, he carries a good deal of optimism and talks about overturning the Bush years.
That's his appeal, not his skin color.
Where he fails to win me, however, is that his ideas are vague, impossible without Congressional support (which he will not get), or they're impractical. Or several of the above.
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The point I am making is that his blackness is being promoted by the media and there is no way that he gets the promotion as (at best) half black if he doesn't also look.
One could just as easily argue that Obama is in fact just one more white male running for President in a long line of white males and it would have as much validity as him being black except that he has dark skin and more African American features.
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But if you want to look at it that way, I still think it's a pretty significant step in that direction that Obama has gotten where he has right now.
That being said, I support him, but it's not because of the color of his skin or any other aspect of his physical appearance, racial or otherwise. He wasn't my first choice before candidates started dropping out- Richardson has that honor- but he was number three (right after Edwards- this was, of course, pre-scandal...). When those two were gone, my support fell to him, but not as a 'least bad' option- I generally approved of him, just not quite as much as the other two. His color never entered into it for me, any more than my support of him over Clinton had anything to do with either candidate's gender.
And maybe that's why I don't see this as a tragedy in the slightest. Because to me anyway, race didn't matter at all.
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Uhm, see right there I was conceding that he looks black. I certainly wasn't implying that he isn't of Kenyan decent.
I still would argue he chooses to identify himself with the African-American community rather than growing up in that community (Hawaii had an African American population of only 1.8% in 2000 which is almost a tenth of the national average of about 15%).
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