beyond obama

What Would Molly Think?

AUSTIN, Texas -- The question I have been asked most often during the last two years is, "What would Molly think about this?" Molly Ivins would have loved this election. She would have loved the beautiful sight of "We the People" finally stepping up to become the real deciders.  She would have loved the drama, the comedy and the characters.

We miss her regular twice-weekly comments and insights, and want to hear her dissect, slice and dice, and make fun of the events and revelations of the week. No one could do it like she did.

Keeping Hope Out of The Closet

It was a march on Washington of a whole different sort, wasn't it?

The overhead shot of the Mall on O-day: people to the horizon. A sea of humanity, indeed.

A nation afloat on a high tide of hope, even as the undertow of financial collapse gnaws at the underpinnings of many lives.

I don't remember neighborhood inauguration parties before, champagne at noon. Did we do this for Clinton's first one? He was a hopeful, charismatic president for a while. No, it wasn't like this.

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'Organizing for America' Means Fighting for Human Rights Worldwide

So now we know the fate of Team Obama's thirteen-million strong e-mail list, that unprecedented netroots force that used social networking and new media technologies to put a one-time community organizer in the White House. President Obama is banking on the continuing support of his online constituency through the creation of "Organizing for America."

'I Saw My People'

Three hours before Barack Hussein Obama took the oath of office to become the nation's first African-American president, the crowd already looked impossible. Gazing west from the Capitol, you could see them: an incomprehensible mass of peaceful citizens, overwhelming every monument, impediment and security banner that had been put up to contain them. The sight was so arresting that when the senators marched out onto the rostrum, Patrick Leahy and Orrin Hatch stopped to snap photos.

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The Gulf Between Hope and Change

A confession: I occasionally cry during romantic movies and History Channel documentaries.

Another confession: I often pretend that I'm coughing or clearing my throat in order to obscure crying from friends and family.

But watching the presidential inauguration, I — like millions of Americans — lost the ability to hide a public case of ocular Niagara Falls.

History undoubtedly spurred some of our national outpouring this week. A black man being sworn in to lead a country built on slavery, segregation and persistent racism is an unfathomable landmark.

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Push Obama to Follow Through on Peace Vows

It started with a train ride. Barack Obama rode to Washington, D.C., for his presidential inauguration on a whistle-stop tour. "To the children who hear the whistle of the train and dream of a better life -- that's who we're fighting for," Obama said along the tour, which was compared to the train ride taken by Abraham Lincoln from Springfield, Ill., to Washington, D.C., in February 1861, en route to his first inauguration.

Childish Things

No matter how much celebrity they try to infuse him with, Barack Obama remains, somehow, as unassuming - so it appears - as that picture of him, which made the rounds on the Internet a few months ago, wiping his own table at a fast-food restaurant.

Is it all a dream? Has "change" really come to America, and the world, or has business as usual merely shape-shifted?

Time To Get To Work

So, let's now heed the words of our new president and set aside childish things. Presumably that includes the $450 worth of designer Obama T-shirts that I got in return for a campaign contribution made two days before the election in a sudden panic that he yet might lose.

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How Audacious Will Obama Choose to Be?

President Barack Obama takes office at a time defined by hope and fear in equal measure. To confront this nation's many challenges he will need to act swiftly, show that he is on the side of people whose homes are being foreclosed and jobs lost and invest political capital--along with trillions of dollars--in a sustained recovery program. While many caution our new President to tread carefully, the reality is that half-steps will not lay the groundwork for a new economy that is more just and fair.

After the Party, Obama Has One Long To-Do List

Kenneth Roth, executive director of HRW said, \"Barack Obama must seize back the US leadership in global human rights squandered by outgoing President George Bush in Guantanamo Bay and other scandals.\"(AFP/File/Mandel Ngan)

NEW YORK - As an estimated two million celebrants converge on the U.S. capital for the inauguration festivities of President-elect Barack Obama Tuesday, the mood among human rights groups and some religious leaders is somewhat more sombre.

They are calling on Obama to use his first hundred days in office to close the military prison at Guantanamo Bay and repudiate the policies of President George W. Bush on an array of issues ranging from detainee torture and rendition to warrantless wiretapping and signing statements.

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