You might not like Barack Obama.
You might snub America's two party system.
You might think this is just the first sign of the Apocalypse.
But here's the deal. Its history and its real. Say what you will about Barack Obama, but he is a different candidate. He wasn't handed everything on a silver platter. He was involved in the community and half of his ancestory would/was kept as slaves in this country. And now he is president. And I know that you can't vote for the lesser of two evils and we have no idea how he is going to do as president - which some would say is a curse not a gift.
There are a lot of things I can say about my life, but few things that I would probably ever want to share with my children. And I finally have something. I knew exactly where I was when the election was called. Standing on the corner of Jackson and Congress in Grant Park with a random pile of people. Some of whom I had never met and some of whom I love very much. I know what I was wearing (black north face, jeans, grey tee shirt, navy tank and a "hot women vote Obama" button).
I remember the people standing on top of the portapotties and the giant Obama poster being carried around and looking into the faces of all these excited people who really hope that a change is on the way.
And you might not care, or you might hate him but you have to appreciate the fact that people cared. People were there. And that. Is powerful.
1 comment:
There's too much of this for it to not be creepy.
This is disturbing as well.
I'm really happy that now I can say to my kids, "Barack Obama didn't skip his social studies class," and that they run around cheering, "My president is black!" but booger, I'm real uneasy.
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