Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
America’s Choosing Day
America wakes tomorrow to a landscape created by its people. It is a landscape that has been tended over the days, hours and minutes of the last two years by the door-knockers, phone-callers and canvassers, the cake-bakers, the sandwich makers, the lemonade sellers. It is a landscape awash with the work of women and children and men. Out of the ashes of self-loathing and despair that characterized this last decade, despite the obvious drawbacks of his full name, and his dogged determination to claim every part of his personal heritage, from American to Kenya to Indonesia, Barack Hussein Obama built a ground operation that is unparalleled in the history of this country. Never has there been a campaign run so evenly at the top while its foundation, the people who constitute its base, was allowed to, in short, go forth and multiply.
They are mostly small stories, but they were almost always stories of sacrifice, the kind that hurt the individual, the ordinary person, but that, taken together, create the glittering threads out of which history is spun. They are the stories of the ordinary people out of whose lives and actions, citizenship is defined. Sixty workers in Indiana gave up a days pay and risked losing their minimum-wage jobs rather than make incendiary calls about Obama. Taxi drivers in Maine donated their cars to take voters to the polls. A babysitting service in one of Philadelphia's low-income neighborhoods donated their care to help families get through election day.
As I stepped out this afternoon, I met a man ambling along my street, clipboard and leaflets in hand, systematically going up to house, checking the resident off his list, hanging his flyer on their door knob. This was after polling had begun. My neighbor was on hand to watch the polls as a legal authority. The Obama office on Main Street, close by, was filled even yesterday with calm, soft spoken volunteers bringing in food for other volunteers, checking each other in, picking up their lists of phone numbers and sitting down to make calls either on their own cell phones or on borrowed ones, or gathering up sheafs of leaflets and clipboards and heading out into the streets. That office was opened just a week ago, at a time when a different sort of candidate would be beginning to shut things down. Obama has consistently refused to take anything for granted. Certainly not his supporters. This evening, at 5:50pm, there was an email reminding me that polls had not yet closed in Virginia and could I please make a few more calls? I, like hundreds of thousands of other volunteers, did. I clicked a button, was given my list and began making my calls and recording the responses, counting down the time left until that particular person could vote, and telling them exactly where they needed to go to do so.
There was a script, as there was at the campaign office downtown, but it was simply a guideline. The words were mine. They were ours. They were the words of African Americans for Obama, Mothers for Obama, Pennsylvanians for Obama, Writers for Obama, Kids for Obama, yes, also, Sri Lankans for Obama. They were the words of people who had decided to speak up and speak out, loud against the usual American nicety of keeping politics to ourselves. Not this time.
Today, my daughters dressed with particular care as they got ready to accompany me to the polls. They walked into the polling station with me, signed in with me, and huddled behind the curtain with me. They watched me select Barack Obama/Joe Biden for President and Vice President of the United States. They, aged 12, 7 and 5, took turns selecting some of the rest of the candidates for State legislators. Then we walked back home, hailing everybody we knew, checking in, asking if people had voted. Every person, every check out counter clerk, every banker, every meat slicer, every teacher, every doughnut bagger, answered with an enthusiastic affirmative.
Nearly a hundred years ago, the American people's poet, Walt Whitman, wrote these words in honor of the political process of his country:
"If I should need to name, O Western World, your powerfulest scene and show,
'Twould not be you, Niagara--nor you, ye limitless prairies--nor
your huge rifts of canyons, Colorado,
Nor you, Yosemite--nor Yellowstone, with all its spasmic
geyser-loops ascending to the skies, appearing and disappearing,
Nor Oregon's white cones--nor Huron's belt of mighty lakes--nor
Mississippi's stream:
--This seething hemisphere's humanity, as now, I'd name--the still
small voice vibrating--America's choosing day..."
Today, Barack Obama and the passionate engagement he drew from the people he will now lead, gave proof to those words. Yes we did.
- Posted in



4 Comments so far
Show AllI was more interested in how much support third parties would draw in this election, then who the ultimate winner would be.
From the outside looking in it seemed to me that this the ideal time for Americans to explore something other then the duopoly of power.
Looking at the totals less then one percent of votes went to parties other then the Republicans or Democrats. This suggests to me that a third party is impossible in America for the forseeable future.
The people are not ready and I do not see that coming any time soon.
Sioux Rose
GW NORTH: There have been statistics demonstrating that once the labels are dispensed with, MOST Americans want what we progressives term progressive values... like universal health care, and a conclusion to the occupation/war of Iraq. The two reasons why Nader and other 3rd parties did not get more than 1% are FEAR... Goddess help us if McCain/Palin actually get THE controls; and lack of mainstream media coverage of the ideas and platforms of anything but the 2 pre-selected candidates. As we know the system (lobbies, electoral college, control of media, elite behind the scenes agenda-makers) is broken. IF Obama actually began to take progressive ACTION, the 3rd party necessity would die down. If not, the same ground swell that projected its want and hope for change onto this charismatic individual, will still be seeking viable conduits for its passionate necessity/ies.
I just think the American electorate have enchained themselves by refusing to consider the alternatives. I also think we that post here on Commondreams might have a false perspective of how truly progressive American Society is.
In my opinion no matter what vocal support they might give to a policy as individuals, one can not be truly progressive unless those ideals become policy.
In Countries that I consider "Progressive" the people help to make it happen. They do not discuss it for 30 years then go into a voting booth and vote the same as they did the pat 30 years, that being for a party that also wishes to promote the Status quo.
(Americans have supported Universal health care from nearly 40 years by a great margin in polls yet still do not have it)
In reading these boards and others like it I got the impression that third parties would draw more support based upon the prepondernace of posts in that regard. It is now clear to me that the progressive community is in reality much smaller in reality and that the majority of Americans for whatever reasons (such as fear) are really afraid of change.
Now I certainly helped to delude myself in that these are the types of boards I tend to frequent. It seems to me if I want a better perspective of what Americans really want, I need to spend more time on freerepublic or listening to Rush Limbaugh.
Let us hope that Obama is the catylyst that will spark the transformation that is needed.
pk
GwNorth: "Looking at the totals less than one percent of votes went to parties other then the Republicans or Democrats."
Quite an anticlimax to the fierce verbal battles on this site between pro-Democlast and pro-third-party advocates.
Now the Democlastic Party Apologists won't have Nader to kick around. In fact, having striven so heroically to get Americans to vote for Obama, they will own Obama's presidency. That will be a bitter pill for them to swallow.