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These People Will Fix Your Money

Posted by tenyardfede on November 8, 2008

These are the men and women Barack Obama assembled today to advise him on how best to fix the cratering economy. They are a largely respected group, and though they ain’t perfect—so many CEOs and so much Larry “Women Be Unable to Learn Math” Summers!—they are certainly more reassuring than the ideologues and incompetents our last guy surrounded himself with. We’ve identified them for your benefit and their brief bios are below.

  • Roel Campos (former Securities and Exchange commissioner)
  • Eric Schmidt (chairman and CEO of Google)
  • Antonio Villaraigosa (mayor of Los Angeles)
  • William Donaldson (chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission from 2003 to 2005)
  • Laura Tyson (professor at Haas School of Business of University of California at Berkeley; chairman of the National Economic Council from 1995 to 1996; chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1993 to 1995)
  • David Bonior (member of the House of Representatives from 1977 to 2003)
  • Robert Rubin (chairman and director of the Citigroup executive committee; secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department from 1995 to 1999)
  • Jennifer Granholm (governor of Michigan)
  • Paul Volcker (chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1979 to 1987)
  • Richard Parsons (chairman of Time Warner)
  • Anne Mulcahy (chairman and CEO of Xerox)
  • Roger Ferguson (president and CEO of TIAA-CREF; former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve board of governors)
  • Lawrence Summers (professor at Harvard University; managing director of DE Shaw; secretary of the U.S. Treasury from 1999 to 2001)
  • Roger Ferguson (former Fed Vice Chairman, CEO of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association – College Retirement Equities Fund)
  • Penny Pritzker (CEO of Classic Residence by Hyatt)
  • Robert Reich (professor at University of California at Berkeley; secretary of the U.S. Department of Labor from 1993 to 1997)
  • William Daley (Midwest chairman for JPMorgan Chase; secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce from 1997 to 2000)

By gawker.com

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change.gov – new obama website

Posted by tenyardfede on November 7, 2008

The new Obama’s government website launches today!

http://www.change.gov/

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Obama Headlines

Posted by tenyardfede on November 7, 2008

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Suddenly, it may be cool to be an American again

Posted by tenyardfede on November 7, 2008

VIENNA, Austria – She was a stranger, and she kissed me. Just for being an American.

It happened on the bus on my way to work Wednesday morning, a few hours after compatriots clamoring for change swept Barack Obama to his historic victory. I was on the phone, and the 20-something Austrian woman seated in front of me overheard me speaking English.

Without a word, she turned, pecked me on the cheek and stepped off at the next stop.

Nothing was said, but the message was clear: Today, we are all Americans.

For longtime U.S. expatriates like me — someone far more accustomed to being targeted over unpopular policies, for having my very Americanness publicly assailed — it feels like an extraordinary turnabout.

Like a long journey over a very bumpy road has abruptly come to an end.

And it’s not just me.

An American colleague in Egypt says several people came up to her on the streets of Cairo and said: “America, hooray!” Others, including strangers, expressed congratulations with a smile and a hand over their hearts.

Another colleague, in Amman, says Jordanians stopped her on the street and that several women described how they wept with joy.

When you’re an American abroad, you can quickly become a whipping post. Regardless of your political affiliation, if you happen to be living and working overseas at a time when the United States has antagonized much of the world, you get a lot of grief.

You can find yourself pressed to be some kind of apologist for Washington. And you can wind up feeling ashamed and alone.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Berlusconi, prima gaffe su Obama “E’ giovane, bello e abbronzato”

Posted by tenyardfede on November 6, 2008

MOSCA – “Barack Obama? Giovane, bello e abbronzato”. Parola di Silvio Berlusconi. Ieri, rivendicando la sua “anzianità”, aveva annunciato di “volergli dare consigli”. E oggi, puntuale, è arrivata la prima clamorosa gaffe. Che rischia di oscurare perfino il tristemente celebre Kapo’ rivolto a Strasburgo all’eurodeputato tedesco Schulz.

Il capo del governo da Mosca, durante l’incontro con il presidente russo Medvedev, torna a parlare del neo-presidente Usa e non resiste al gusto della battuta. E’ l’ennesima del Cavaliere, che però stavolta non esercita il suo humour sui suoi abituali cavalli di battaglia (donne, sesso o gli odiati “comunisti”). Stavolta è il colore della pelle a scatenare la tentazione irresistibile. Poi definita “un grande complimento, una carineria assoluta nei suoi confronti”.

“Complimento” che il premier rivendica con fermezza anche dopo un’ora, quando rientrando in albergo sbotta con i cronisti che lo interrogano sulle prevedibili polemiche: “Se non hanno il sense of humour allora vuol dire che gli imbecilli sono scesi in campo, che se ne vadano a…”.

Il presidente del Consiglio, grande amico di Bush tanto da far cadere un leggio (VIDEO) per – sono parole sue – “troppo amore”, è riuscito insomma laddove nemmeno 21 mesi di durissima campagna elettorale erano potuti arrivare. E vedremo come la boutade sarà presa negli States, dove mai la questione razziale è stata oggetto di scontri o battute pubbliche. Dove è inimmaginabile, anche pensandoci e posteriori, immaginare un McCain che definisce “abbronzato” il suo rivale di colore nella corsa alla Casa Bianca.

Le reazioni. L’opposizione attacca il premier, ed è il Pd il primo a chiedere che “il capo del governo chieda subito scusa”. “La migliore delle ipotesi – dice Franceschini – è che Berlusconi non riesca più a controllarsi. Dimentica che le sue parole coinvolgono l’immagine del nostro Paese nel mondo. Dire che il presidente degli Stati Uniti è ‘giovane, bello e anche abbronzato’ suonerà alle orecchie di tutto il mondo come una offesa carica di pericolose ambiguità”. Parla anche il leader del partito, Veltroni, secondo il quale le si tratta di parole “che colpiscono e feriscono la dignità dell’Italia”. E che la danneggiano, perché un uomo di Stato non può permettersi continuamente battute da cabaret”.

A seguire, l’Italia dei Valori, che con Donadi sostiene che Berlusconi, con le sue parole, scredita l’Italia sul piano internazionale”.

Dall’altra parte si avverte a caldo un certo sconcerto. Basti pensare alla reazione del ministro Ronchi (An), che informato dai giornalisti a margine del Consiglio dei ministri appare prima incredulo, poi si dilegua alla svelta senza commentare: “Arrivederci…”.

Poi scatta la chiamata a raccolta e arriva puntuale la nota di Capezzone, portavoce di Forza Italia, che parla di “sinistra desolante, che non sa più a cosa attaccarsi per colpire Berlusconi. A seguire, la minimizzaone del leghista Calderoli: “Solo una battuta”. E poi, ancora, la originale spiegazione del ministro Rotondi, secondo il quale le parole del Cavaliere “si spiegano con una teoria psicologica per cui fondamento del razzismo è l’invidia dei bianchi per un colore più gradevole”.
Da questo momento in poi, mentre la frase di Berlusconi fa il giro del mondo – dall’ inglese Herald Tribune all’americano Drudgereport, dal turco Daily allo spagnolo Heraldo – da destra è tutto un fiorire di sorrisi e spallucce e attacchi alla “sinistra tetra”. Quella sinistra che, come dice Gasparri, “non sa capire che Berlusconi ha lanciato una operazione simpatia”. Forse la medesima “operazione simpatia” che proprio Gasparri aveva lanciato ieri commentando l’elezione di Barack: “Al Qaeda sarà contenta”.

By repubblica.it

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Barack Obama Acceptance Speech

Posted by tenyardfede on November 5, 2008

Barack Obama Acceptance Speech

Sen. Barack Obama’s Full Speech to the DNC

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Return of the Jedi

Posted by tenyardfede on November 5, 2008

The hour of national redemption we’ve been waiting for is at hand, and President-Elect Barack Obama is about to lead our nation to a new city on that hill. Inspiration, gratification, and a desire to guaranty his success runs deep through my veins as I watch the hundreds of thousands in Chicago’s Grant Park waiting for the man from Illinois to complete the national challenge of emancipation that his predecessor president from Illinois began nearly two centuries ago.

We all deserve to believe again in the greatness that is America and to look forward to the day tomorrow when Americans stand a little taller, believe a little deeper, and enjoy the great moment that has been bequeathed to us by a man who convinced us change is at hand. I rejoice in the celebration of those who marched in Selma who now have the wonderous satisfaction to relish and cherish the moment that arrived at 11pm EST when the networks finally called the election. I imagine how my ex-boss, an ailing Ted Kennedy must feel tonight, knowing that many, many months ago he exclaimed to the nation that he could feel change in the air. He understood before so many of us did that change was indeed in the air.

Let the cynics sleep. Let them discount the magnitude of the moment. Let them deny the righteousness of the cause. It does not matter. They are small in mind, and do not deserve to share in it if they do not succumb to it.

David Axelrod and David Plouffe have steered the ship of state to a new, more secure safe harbor. They and the wonderfully gifted campaign team they assembled are indeed a true liberation army. They deserve to march down the Champs Elysee to an adoring national crowd.

In the wee hours of our morning, as dawn rises across the world, millions will look at the news and exclaim that America is back…the America they yearned for, and the America they deserve to believe in again.

To the cynical Republican cabal that only wrought so much wickedness and pain on a vast swath of the American electorate, yes you Karl Rove, Tom DeLay, Dick Cheney and ultimately George Bush and the divide and disdain bunch around them, the nation finally found its voice and seized its ballot to repudiate all you inflicted on us. The electoral sweep is as much the people’s voices reflected in a referendum of rejection and indictment of the Bush presidency as it is a vote of trust and confidence in Barack Obama.

I am proud to be alive at this moment. I am proud my kids could join me in this hour of deliverance. Change has finally arrived in wave after cleansing wave. Yes, America, tomorrow, there will be two wars, a terrible financial crisis, threats from abroad, and challenges at home, but there will be a President Elect Obama, and that alone will make those challenges seem just a bit less daunting, a bit less formidable, and a bit more manageable.

The death star has indeed been destroyed!

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Obama Wins: Why All Americans Have a Reason to Celebrate

Posted by tenyardfede on November 5, 2008

Even if your candidate didn’t win tonight, you have reason to celebrate. We all do.

Ten months ago, when Obama won in Iowa, we had a glimpse of what was possible and what became real tonight. What I wrote then about one state is now true for the whole country:

Barack Obama’s impressive victory says a lot about America, and also about the current mindset of the American voter.

Because tonight voters decided that they didn’t want to look back. They wanted to step into the future — as if a country exhausted by the last seven-plus years wanted to recapture its youth.

And they turned out in unprecedented numbers today to make sure that no amount of scrubbed rolls, malfunctioning machines, endless lines, or polling places running out of ballots would block the way.

The history of America is studded with great breakthroughs — propelled by leaders such as Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, and Martin Luther King – followed by decades of consolidation and occasional regression.

The Bush years have clearly been in a period of regression. The repudiation of those years is now almost universal. Even conservatives are admitting it; over the course of today, I’ve received numerous emails from conservatives ending with some variation on “Go Obama!”

In America’s journey toward a more just and truly democratic society, tonight is another milestone. And not just because the son of a Kenyan father and a mother from Kansas is now President-Elect. But also because tonight’s outcome is a declaration that we are once again a nation more driven by hope and promise than a nation driven by fear.

Bush’s re-election in 2004 was a monument to the power of fear. And McCain, his staff stocked with Karl Rove disciples, followed the Bush blueprint and played the fear card again and again.

Be afraid of Obama, the GOP warned us. Be afraid of something new, something different. He would meet with our enemies. His middle name is Hussein. He “pals around with terrorists,” consorts with the radicals at Acorn (which is “destroying the fabric of democracy”), and doesn’t see America “like you and I see America.” A vote for Obama would be “dangerous” and “too risky for America.”

The people of America listened, but chose to take the risk. So even if you voted for John McCain; even if you love Sarah Palin, who is still in search of the “pro-American areas of this great nation”; even if are Joe the Plumber – or, hell, even if you are Michele Bachmann – tonight is a night to be proud of America.

Obama’s victory holds up a mirror, reflecting the country we are. And it turns out to be the kind of country we’ve always imagined ourselves being — even if in the last seven-plus years we fell horribly short: a young country, an optimistic country, a forward-looking country, a country not afraid to take risks or to dream big.

Of course, it will take more than big dreams to help America dig out from the many crises we face. From the global economic crisis to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the day of reckoning is upon us.

But these challenging times also will provide the new president with the opportunity to really transform America. As Gary Hart points out, “Great presidents do not emerge form quiet times; they arise in times of chaos and crisis.”

This is an idea that has animated Obama’s candidacy from the beginning. As he put it on the stump many times last week:

We began this journey in the depths of winter nearly two years ago, on the steps of the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Illinois. Back then, we didn’t have much money or many endorsements. We weren’t given much of a chance by the polls or the pundits, and we knew how steep our climb would be. But I also knew this. I knew that the size of our challenges had outgrown the smallness of our politics.

Since that time, the size of our challenges has grown even bigger — and the smallness of our politics has even downsized McCain from a noble hero to a hack fearmonger.

But over the course of this long and arduous campaign, Obama has repeatedly demonstrated the ability to inspire us to tap into the better angels of our nature — to stir the American people to expect more of themselves than they otherwise would.

It’s a theme Michelle Obama touched on many times on the campaign trail. “Barack Obama will require that you work,” she said at a rally on the eve of Super Tuesday. “He is going to demand that you shed your cynicism; that you put down your divisions; that you come out of your isolation; that you move out of your comfort zones; that you push yourself to be better; and that you engage.”

This call echoed something that historian and presidential biographer David McCullough had once said about JFK. “The great thing about Kennedy,” he told me, “is that he didn’t say I’m going to make it easier for you. He said it’s going to be harder. And he wasn’t pandering to the less noble side of human nature. He was calling on us to give our best.”

And when Bobby Kennedy was agonizing over whether or not to run in 1968, he told one of his advisors: “People are selfish. But they can also be compassionate and generous, and they care about the country. But not when they feel threatened. That’s why this is such a crucial time. We can go in either direction. But if we don’t make a choice soon, it will be too late to turn things around. I think people are willing to make the right choice. But they need leadership. They’re hungry for leadership.” Forty years later, we are starving for it. Real leadership. Leadership geared to transforming the country.

Tonight is a night to celebrate the victory of a candidate who seized his moment in history and reminded America of its youth and the optimism it longs to recapture. Let’s savor it.

The dark years of the Bush regression are almost done. It’s time for another American breakthrough.

By Arianna Huffington

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Obama Wins Presidential Election: Yes We Did!!

Posted by tenyardfede on November 5, 2008

t 11:00 p.m. (Eastern Time), NBC News made its official projection that Senator Barack Obama will be the 44th President of the United States of America.  Obama won 338 electoral votes, to McCain’s 156 electoral votes.  In an amazing moment in American history, the ultimate color line has been broken. The last few days have challenged Obama’s sense of calm like never before, his election-day stress amplified by the fatigue of an 18-month campaign and the death of his grandmother just yesterday.

A sense of history stalked Obama everywhere on election day. At this moment, hundreds of thousands of Chicagoans are already celebrating in Chicago’s Grant Park, where the crowd is anticipated to reach 1,000,000 people or more.   President-elect Obama is scheduled to appear to make his victory remarks before the huge crowd in Grant Park at around 11:00 p.m. (Central Time).

We are all so privileged to have witnessed this historic event tonight.

By disembedded.wordpress.com

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Obama’s Acceptance Speech

Posted by tenyardfede on November 5, 2008

Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, in a speech accepting the Party's nomination in Denver, Thursday night. (AP Photo)
Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, in a speech accepting the Party’s nomination in Denver, Thursday night. (AP Photo)

To Chairman Dean and my great friend Dick Durbin; and to all my fellow citizens of this great nation; with profound gratitude and great humility, I accept your nomination for the presidency of the United States.

Let me express my thanks to the historic slate of candidates who accompanied me on this journey, and especially the one who traveled the farthest, a champion for working Americans and an inspiration to my daughters and to yours, Hillary Rodham Clinton. To President Clinton, who last night made the case for change as only he can make it; to Ted Kennedy, who embodies the spirit of service; and to the next Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden, I thank you. I am grateful to finish this journey with one of the finest statesmen of our time, a man at ease with everyone from world leaders to the conductors on the Amtrak train he still takes home every night.

To the love of my life, our next First Lady, Michelle Obama, and to Sasha and Malia, I love you so much, and I’m so proud of all of you.

Four years ago, I stood before you and told you my story, of the brief union between a young man from Kenya and a young woman from Kansas who weren’t well-off or well-known, but shared a belief that in America, their son could achieve whatever he put his mind to.

It is that promise that has always set this country apart, that through hard work and sacrifice, each of us can pursue our individual dreams but still come together as one American family, to ensure that the next generation can pursue their dreams as well.

That’s why I stand here tonight. Because for two hundred and thirty two years, at each moment when that promise was in jeopardy, ordinary men and women, students and soldiers, farmers and teachers, nurses and janitors, found the courage to keep it alive.

We meet at one of those defining moments, a moment when our nation is at war, our economy is in turmoil, and the American promise has been threatened once more.

Tonight, more Americans are out of work and more are working harder for less. More of you have lost your homes and even more are watching your home values plummet. More of you have cars you can’t afford to drive, credit card bills you can’t afford to pay, and tuition that’s beyond your reach.

These challenges are not all of government’s making. But the failure to respond is a direct result of a broken politics in Washington and the failed policies of George W. Bush.
America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country than this.

This country is more decent than one where a woman in Ohio, on the brink of retirement, finds herself one illness away from disaster after a lifetime of hard work.

This country is more generous than one where a man in Indiana has to pack up the equipment he’s worked on for twenty years and watch it shipped off to China, and then chokes up as he explains how he felt like a failure when he went home to tell his family the news.

We are more compassionate than a government that lets veterans sleep on our streets and families slide into poverty; that sits on its hands while a major American city drowns before our eyes.

Tonight, I say to the American people, to Democrats and Republicans and Independents across this great land, enough! This moment, this election, is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive.

Because next week, in Minnesota, the same party that brought you two terms of George Bush and Dick Cheney will ask this country for a third. And we are here because we love this country too much to let the next four years look like the last eight. On November 4th, we must stand up and say: “Eight is enough.” Read the rest of this entry »

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