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Saturday, October 11, 2008

What a Year for a Political Junky

Barak, whom I have phoned for and done without ice cream to donate to, is about to nail it. If all holds current, those two little girls will grow up in the White House. It is just too heady a prospect. He'll think after a few years of office that McCain was gentle and kind compared to what he'll be facing from people and pundits alike.
In this time of turmoil, I have a great anecdote from Nina in Stonington, Maine. She said that since nobody was buying lobsters, the town's money crop, and since the middlemen had shut down and were'nt transporting to market, and since the lobster fishermen only had a few months to make their yearly money, the town was sponsoring a lobsterfest at the town dock where the left-over crustaceans would be sold for a pittance and all 1800 (+) townies would eat like royaland ty for pennies. WONDERFUL.
But I digress. Obama has a rough, rough road when he's elected. Korea. Georgia, Iran, Darfur, Iraq, Afghanistan, regulations, bail outs, that's just a bit of it. What heartens me is what I wrote last year in the primaries: he's not afraid of excellence. He won't shy away from kknowledgeable, accomplished, and talented thinkers. That will be a real change in Washington. McCain, like Hillary, likes cronies. Barak has built an organization from the ground up that will support him and hold him accountable. I'm oneof those 300,000+ voters and I pledge here and now to do my part!
What do they mean in the editoriall columns and on Fox news that he hasn't done anything much? He's built a worldwide organization that has toppled the Clinton buzzsaw and looks like it's overcoming (chorus of we shall overcome, anyone) the nastiest, dirtiest street fighters who have stolen the last four election for the republicans. That's not very much? Baby, it's everything.

vote on Nov 4, Grandma Letty