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Martin Burcharth

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Hillary ødelægger Obamas aften

Endeligt. Endeligt.

Man havde en følelse af at føle historiens vingesus, da Barack og Michelle Obama dukkede op på scenen i St. Pauls convention hall i Minnesota og blev modtaget med en glæderus af 17.000 ellevilde begejstrede tilhængere - der var 15.000 udenfor bygningen, som vil huse Republikanernes partikongres første uge i september.

Dette var Obamas dag. Den første afro-amerikanere til at blive sit partis præsidentkandidat. Men vinderen talte ikke om historie, ej heller om sig selv. Han talte om "the promise of America" og han roste sine Demokratiske konkurrenter - især Hillary Clinton. Det var graciøst og generøst ud over, hvad man kan forvente af en politiker.

En storslået tale. Tv-stationerne - der altid prøver at balancere på en knivsæg - magtede simpelthen ikke holde deres entusiasme og beundring for Obama tilbage.

Personligt havde jeg ikke forventet, at Obama kunne tilføre nogle nye overraskende elementer til sin sædvanlige valgtale - at han kunne få tilskuere og seere tændt så meget, som han plejede at gøre i begyndelsen af valgkampen. Men jeg tog grundigt fejl. Hans fair kritik af McCain sad lige i øjet - ikke mindst efter McCains næsten pinlige tale 1 time tidligere fra New Orleans, hvor 2-300 tilhængere dukkede op.

Men aftenens største overraskelse - hvormed jeg mener skuffelse - var Hillary Clinton. Jeg har aldrig oplevet CNN så kritisk over for hende. Alle kommentatorer, undtagen Clinton-væbneren James Carville, fór i flint over Clintons tale, der primært handlede om hende selv og hendes 18 mio. vælgere. I begyndelsen af sin tale fik hun kort og skyndsomst lykønsket Obama og hans vælgere med en god valgkamp. Men ikke et ord om den ubestridelige kendsgerning, at alle tv-stationerne havde udråbt ham til vinder en time tidligere - at hun rent faktisk har tabt dysten. I stedet skulle vi igen lytte til hendes bevisligt falske påstand, at hun vandt flere stemmer end Obama (se min tidligere blog) i de 54 partivalg. Ikke et ord om, at Amerika bør være stolt over, at det ene politiske parti har kåret en afro-amerikanske præsidentkandidat (hvorimod Obama i sin tale roste hende for at have brudt barrierer for kvinder).

Så spørgsmålet må være: Hvorfor skal det hele handle om Hillary Clinton, når hun rent faktisk har tabt? Jeffrey Toobin turde gå så langt, at han kaldte hende og Bill "deranged narcissists" og man fristes til at give ham ret. Jeg har fulgt amerikansk valgpolitik siden 1984 og aldrig oplevet noget lignende. Når en kandidat taber, er der tradition for, at han/hun stiller sig op, erkender sit nederlag og trækker sig fra scenen (undtagelsen er Ted Kennedy mod Jimmy Carter i 1980), således at vinderen kan få frie hænder til at forberede sig på præsidentvalget i efteråret.

Men Clinton-familien opererer efter andre regler. Og de har masser af vælgere, som er villige til at følge dem.

Efter mit bedste skøn vil der ikke gå lang tid, førend Clinton indkalder pressen og trækker sig. Prominente partileder, som har støttet hendes kampagne, vil fra onsdag morgen presse hende til at tage sin afsked.

Det er svært at vurdere, om det er egentligt er sivet ind hos Hillary og Bill, at de har tabt. Måske de ikke forstår det endnu. De har i hvert fald ikke accepteret det. Hun behøvede ikke indstille sin kampagne tirsdag aften. Hun kunne blot have indikeret, at hun har forstået, hvad der er sket og været bare lidt generøs over for Obama.

Den alternative forklaring er (jeg henviser til min blog tidligere i dag), at Clinton går efter vicepræsidentkandidaturet og tror, at den bedste strategi er at presse Obama op i et hjørne i stedet for at flirte med ham om at få posten. Jeg ved ikke, om den tolkning holder stik. Det giver i hvert fald ikke mening, fordi det eneste hun foreløbig har opnået med sin utaknemmelige tale tirsdag aften er at fremmedgøre Obama-kampagnen og hans vælgere - folk, der allerede er oprørt over Clinton-familiens angreb under bæltestedet på deres kandidat i de sidste 3-4 måneder.


Trods denne negative attitude synes Obama ikke at tage det personligt. Som sagt: Hans tale handlede om alt andet end ham selv. Det kan man kun beundre. Han er lavet af noget helt specielt stof, den mand.


Så inden vi går i seng herovre er der grund til at være foruroliget. Hvad agter Clinton-parret at gøre nu? Vil det hele handle om deres politiske fremtid eller vil det hele handle om partiet og landet? Kan det være, at deres kritikere har ret, når de hævder, at Hillary allerede fokuserer på præsidentvalget i 2012. At hun ikke kan få sig selv til at tro, at Obama vinder i november, så hvorfor skulle hun gøre alt for at hjælpe ham med at vinde ... Bortset fra altså, hvis han tilbyder hende vicepræsidentposten. Så kan hun stille op i 2016 i en alder af 68 - 4 år yngre end McCain er i dag.

FørstObamas tale, dernæst Hillarys:
 



Remarks of Senator Barack Obama


Final Primary Night


Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008


St. Paul, Minnesota


 


As Prepared for Delivery


 


Tonight, after fifty-four hard-fought contests, our primary season has finally come to an end. 


 


Sixteen months have passed since we first stood together on the steps of the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Illinois.  Thousands of miles have been traveled.  Millions of voices have been heard.  And because of what you said – because you decided that change must come to Washington; because you believed that this year must be different than all the rest; because you chose to listen not to your doubts or your fears but to your greatest hopes and highest aspirations, tonight we mark the end of one historic journey with the beginning of another – a journey that will bring a new and better day to America.  Tonight, I can stand before you and say that I will be the Democratic nominee for President of the United States


 


I want to thank every American who stood with us over the course of this campaign – through the good days and the bad; from the snows of Cedar Rapids to the sunshine of Sioux Falls.  And tonight I also want to thank the men and woman who took this journey with me as fellow candidates for President. 


 


At this defining moment for our nation, we should be proud that our party put forth one of the most talented, qualified field of individuals ever to run for this office.  I have not just competed with them as rivals, I have learned from them as friends, as public servants, and as patriots who love America and are willing to work tirelessly to make this country better.  They are leaders of this party, and leaders that America will turn to for years to come.


 


That is particularly true for the candidate who has traveled further on this journey than anyone else.  Senator Hillary Clinton has made history in this campaign not just because she’s a woman who has done what no woman has done before, but because she’s a leader who inspires millions of Americans with her strength, her courage, and her commitment to the causes that brought us here tonight. 


 


We’ve certainly had our differences over the last sixteen months.  But as someone who’s shared a stage with her many times, I can tell you that what gets Hillary Clinton up in the morning – even in the face of tough odds – is exactly what sent her and Bill Clinton to sign up for their first campaign in Texas all those years ago; what sent her to work at the Children’s Defense Fund and made her fight for health care as First Lady; what led her to the United States Senate and fueled her barrier-breaking campaign for the presidency – an unyielding desire to improve the lives of ordinary Americans, no matter how difficult the fight may be.  And you can rest assured that when we finally win the battle for universal health care in this country, she will be central to that victory.  When we transform our energy policy and lift our children out of poverty, it will be because she worked to help make it happen.  Our party and our country are better off because of her, and I am a better candidate for having had the honor to compete with Hillary Rodham Clinton. 


 


There are those who say that this primary has somehow left us weaker and more divided.  Well I say that because of this primary, there are millions of Americans who have cast their ballot for the very first time.  There are Independents and Republicans who understand that this election isn’t just about the party in charge of Washington, it’s about the need to change Washington.   There are young people, and African-Americans, and Latinos, and women of all ages who have voted in numbers that have broken records and inspired a nation. 


 


All of you chose to support a candidate you believe in deeply.  But at the end of the day, we aren’t the reason you came out and waited in lines that stretched block after block to make your voice heard.  You didn’t do that because of me or Senator Clinton or anyone else.  You did it because you know in your hearts that at this moment – a moment that will define a generation – we cannot afford to keep doing what we’ve been doing.  We owe our children a better future.  We owe our country a better future.  And for all those who dream of that future tonight, I say – let us begin the work together.  Let us unite in common effort to chart a new course for America.


 


In just a few short months, the Republican Party will arrive in St. Paul with a very different agenda.  They will come here to nominate John McCain, a man who has served this country heroically.  I honor that service, and I respect his many accomplishments, even if he chooses to deny mine.  My differences with him are not personal; they are with the policies he has proposed in this campaign.


 


Because while John McCain can legitimately tout moments of independence from his party in the past, such independence has not been the hallmark of his presidential campaign.


 


It’s not change when John McCain decided to stand with George Bush ninety-five percent of the time, as he did in the Senate last year.


 


It’s not change when he offers four more years of Bush economic policies that have failed to create well-paying jobs, or insure our workers, or help Americans afford the skyrocketing cost of college – policies that have lowered the real incomes of the average American family, widened the gap between Wall Street and Main Street, and left our children with a mountain of debt.    


 


And it’s not change when he promises to continue a policy in Iraq that asks everything of our brave men and women in uniform and nothing of Iraqi politicians – a policy where all we look for are reasons to stay in Iraq, while we spend billions of dollars a month on a war that isn’t making the American people any safer. 


 


So I’ll say this – there are many words to describe John McCain’s attempt to pass off his embrace of George Bush’s policies as bipartisan and new.  But change is not one of them. 


 


Change is a foreign policy that doesn’t begin and end with a war that should’ve never been authorized and never been waged.  I won’t stand here and pretend that there are many good options left in Iraq, but what’s not an option is leaving our troops in that country for the next hundred years – especially at a time when our military is overstretched, our nation is isolated, and nearly every other threat to America is being ignored. 


 


We must be as careful getting out of Iraq as we were careless getting in - but start leaving we must.  It’s time for Iraqis to take responsibility for their future.  It’s time to rebuild our military and give our veterans the care they need and the benefits they deserve when they come home.  It’s time to refocus our efforts on al Qaeda’s leadership and Afghanistan, and rally the world against the common threats of the 21st century – terrorism and nuclear weapons; climate change and poverty; genocide and disease.  That’s what change is.   


 


Change is realizing that meeting today’s threats requires not just our firepower, but the power of our diplomacy – tough, direct diplomacy where the President of the United States isn’t afraid to let any petty dictator know where America stands and what we stand for.  We must once again have the courage and conviction to lead the free world. That is the legacy of Roosevelt, and Truman, and Kennedy.  That’s what the American people want.  That’s what change is. 


 


Change is building an economy that rewards not just wealth, but the work and workers who created it.  It’s understanding that the struggles facing working families can’t be solved by spending billions of dollars on more tax breaks for big corporations and wealthy CEOs, but by giving a the middle-class a tax break, and investing in our crumbling infrastructure, and transforming how we use energy, and improving our schools, and renewing our commitment to science and innovation.  It’s understanding that fiscal responsibility and shared prosperity can go hand-in-hand, as they did when Bill Clinton was President.    


 


John McCain has spent a lot of time talking about trips to Iraq in the last few weeks, but maybe if he spent some time taking trips to the cities and towns that have been hardest hit by this economy – cities in Michigan, and Ohio, and right here in Minnesota – he’d understand the kind of change that people are looking for. 


 


Maybe if he went to Iowa and met the student who works the night shift after a full day of class and still can’t pay the medical bills for a sister who’s ill, he’d understand that she can’t afford four more years of a health care plan that only takes care of the healthy and wealthy.  She needs us to pass health care plan that guarantees insurance to every American who wants it and brings down premiums for every family who needs it.  That’s the change we need. 


 


Maybe if he went to Pennsylvania and met the man who lost his job but can’t even afford the gas to drive around and look for a new one, he’d understand that we can’t afford four more years of our addiction to oil from dictators.  That man needs us to pass an energy policy that works with automakers to raise fuel standards, and makes corporations pay for their pollution, and oil companies invest their record profits in a clean energy future – an energy policy that will create millions of new jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced.  That’s the change we need.


 


And maybe if he spent some time in the schools of South Carolina or St. Paul or where he spoke tonight in New Orleans, he’d understand that we can’t afford to leave the money behind for No Child Left Behind; that we owe it to our children to invest in early childhood education; to recruit an army of new teachers and give them better pay and more support; to finally decide that in this global economy, the chance to get a college education should not be a privilege for the wealthy few, but the birthright of every American.  That’s the change we need in America.  That’s why I’m running for President. 


 


The other side will come here in September and offer a very different set of policies and positions, and that is a debate I look forward to.  It is a debate the American people deserve.  But what you don’t deserve is another election that’s governed by fear, and innuendo, and division.  What you won’t hear from this campaign or this party is the kind of politics that uses religion as a wedge, and patriotism as a bludgeon – that sees our opponents not as competitors to challenge, but enemies to demonize.  Because we may call ourselves Democrats and Republicans, but we are Americans first.  We are always Americans first. 


 


Despite what the good Senator from Arizona said tonight, I have seen people of differing views and opinions find common cause many times during my two decades in public life, and I have brought many together myself.  I’ve walked arm-in-arm with community leaders on the South Side of Chicago and watched tensions fade as black, white, and Latino fought together for good jobs and good schools.  I’ve sat across the table from law enforcement and civil rights advocates to reform a criminal justice system that sent thirteen innocent people to death row.  And I’ve worked with friends in the other party to provide more children with health insurance and more working families with a tax break; to curb the spread of nuclear weapons and ensure that the American people know where their tax dollars are being spent; and to reduce the influence of lobbyists who have all too often set the agenda in Washington. 


 


In our country, I have found that this cooperation happens not because we agree on everything, but because behind all the labels and false divisions and categories that define us; beyond all the petty bickering and point-scoring in Washington, Americans are a decent, generous, compassionate people, united by common challenges and common hopes.  And every so often, there are moments which call on that fundamental goodness to make this country great again. 


 


So it was for that band of patriots who declared in a Philadelphia hall the formation of a more perfect union; and for all those who gave on the fields of Gettysburg and Antietam their last full measure of devotion to save that same union.


 


So it was for the Greatest Generation that conquered fear itself, and liberated a continent from tyranny, and made this country home to untold opportunity and prosperity. 


 


So it was for the workers who stood out on the picket lines; the women who shattered glass ceilings; the children who braved a Selma bridge for freedom’s cause. 


 


So it has been for every generation that faced down the greatest challenges and the most improbable odds to leave their children a world that’s better, and kinder, and more just.


 


And so it must be for us.  


 


America, this is our moment.  This is our time.  Our time to turn the page on the policies of the past.  Our time to bring new energy and new ideas to the challenges we face.  Our time to offer a new direction for the country we love.


 


The journey will be difficult.  The road will be long.  I face this challenge with profound humility, and knowledge of my own limitations.  But I also face it with limitless faith in the capacity of the American people.  Because if we are willing to work for it, and fight for it, and believe in it, then I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal; this was the moment when we ended a war and secured our nation and restored our image as the last, best hope on Earth.  This was the moment – this was the time – when we came together to remake this great nation so that it may always reflect our very best selves, and our highest ideals.  Thank you, God Bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America


 


Transcript: Hillary Clinton Delivers Remarks at New York, NY Election Night Event


 


 


Hillary Clinton delivered the following remarks at an election night event  in New York, NY tonight:


 


Thank you all so much. Thank you and thanks so much to South Dakota. You had the last word in this primary season, and it was worth the wait.


 


I want to start tonight by congratulating Senator Obama and his supporters on the extraordinary race that they have run. Senator Obama has inspired so many Americans to care about politics and empowered so many more to get involved, and our party and our democracy is stronger and more vibrant as a result. So, we are grateful, and it has been an honor to contest these primaries with him, just as it is an honor to call him my friend. And tonight, I would like all of us to take a moment to recognize him and his supporters for all they have accomplished.


 


Now, sixteen months ago, you and I began a journey to make history and to remake America . And from the hills of New Hampshire to the hollows of West Virginia and Kentucky, from the fields of California to the factories of Ohio, from the Alleghenies to the Ozarks to the Everglades, to right here in the great state of New York, we saw millions of Americans registering to vote for the first time, raising money for the first time, knocking on doors, making calls, talking to their friends and neighbors, mothers and fathers lifting their little girls and their little boys on to their shoulders and whispering, “See, you can be anything you want to be.”


 


I think, too, of all of those wonderful women in their nineties who came out to see me because they were born before women could vote, and they wanted to be part of making history. And the people who drove for miles, who waved their handmade signs, who went to all the events that we held, who came to hillaryclinton.com and showed the tangible support that they felt in their hearts. And I am just enormously grateful, because in the millions of quiet moments, in thousands of places, you asked yourself a simple question: Who will be the strongest candidate and the strongest president?


 


Who will be ready to take back the White House and take charge as Commander-in-Chief and lead our country to better tomorrows? People in all fifty states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the territories, all had a chance to make your voices heard and on Election Day after Election Day, you came out in record numbers to cast your ballots. Nearly eighteen million of you cast your votes for our campaign, carrying the popular vote with more votes than any primary candidate in history. Even when the pundits and the naysayers proclaimed week after week that this race was over, you kept on voting.


 


You are the nurse on the second shift, the worker on the line, the waitress on her feet, the small business owner, the farmer, the teacher, the miner, the trucker, the soldier, the veteran, the student, the hard working men and women who don't always make the headlines but have always written America’s story. You have voted because you wanted to take back the White House, and because of you, we won together the swing states necessary to get to 270 electoral votes.


 


In all of the states you voted because you wanted a leader who will stand up for the deepest values of our party. A party that believes everyone should have a fair shot at the American Dream. A party that cherishes every child, values every family, and counts every single vote.


I often felt that each of your votes was a prayer for our nation, a declaration of your dreams for your children, a reflection of your desire to chart a new course in this new century and in the end, while this primary was long, I am so proud we stayed the course together because we stood our ground, it meant that every single United States citizen had a chance to make his or her voice heard.


 


A record thirty-five million people voted in this primary, from every state, red, blue, purple, people of every age, faith, color and walk of life. And we have brought so many people into the Democratic Party and created enthusiasm among those we seek to serve. And I am committed to uniting our Party, so we move forward, stronger and more ready than ever to take back the White house this November.


 


For the past seven years, so many people in this country have felt invisible, like your president didn't even really see you. I have seen the shuttered factories, the jobs shipped overseas, the families struggling to afford gas and groceries, but I’ve also seen unions retraining workers to build energy efficient buildings, innovators designing cars that run on fuel cells and bio-fuels and electricity, cars that get more miles per gallon than ever before, cars that will cut the cost of driving, reduce our reliance on foreign oil and fight global warming.


 


I have met too many people without health care, just a diagnosis away from financial ruin, but I have also seen the scientists and researchers solving the medical mysteries and finding the treatments and cures that are transforming lives. I have seen the struggling schools with the crumbling classrooms and the unfair burdens imposed by No Child Left Behind, but I have also met dedicated and caring teachers who use their own savings to buy supplies, and students passionately engaged in the issues of our time, from ending the genocide in Darfur to once again making the environment a central issue of our day.


 


None of you is invisible to me. You never have been. I see you, and I know how hardworking you are. I’ve been fighting for you my whole adult life, and I will keep standing for you and working for you every single day because in your courage and character, your energy and ingenuity, your compassion and faith, I see the promise of America every day. The challenges we face are great, but our determination is greater.


 


You know, I understand that a lot of people are asking, what does Hillary want? What does she want? Well, I want what I have always fought for in this whole campaign. I want to end the war in Iraq . I want to turn this economy around. I want health care for every American. I want every child to live up to his or her God-given potential, and I want the nearly 18 million Americans who voted for me to be respected, to be heard and no longer to be invisible.


 


You see, I have an old-fashioned notion, one that's been the basis of my candidacy and my life's work, that public service is about helping people solve their problems and live their own dreams. This nation has given me every opportunity, and that's what I want for every single American.


 


That’s why I want universal health care. It is wrong that Americans pay 50% more for health care than the people of any other wealthy nation, with costs doubling this decade and nearly 50 million people without any health insurance at all. It is wrong for parents to have to choose between care for themselves or their children, to be stuck in dead-end jobs just to keep their insurance or to give up working altogether so their kids will qualify for Medicaid. I have been working on this issue not just for the past 16 months, but for 16 years. And it is a fight I will continue until every single American has health insurance. No exceptions and no excuses.


 


I want an economy that works for all families. That’s why I have been fighting to create millions of new jobs in clean energy and rebuilding our infrastructure, jobs to come to all of our states and urban and rural areas and suburban communities and small towns. That’s why I sounded the alarm on the home mortgage crisis well over a year ago, because these are the issues that will determine whether we will once again grow together as a nation or continue to grow apart. And I want to restore America ’s leadership in the world. I want us to be led once again by the power of our values, to have a foreign policy that is both strong and smart, to join with our allies and confront our shared challenges from poverty and genocide to global terrorism and global warming.


 


These are the issues that brought me into this race. They are the life blood of my campaign, and they have been and will continue to be the causes of my life. And your spirit has inspired me every day in this race.


 


While I traveled our country talking about how I wanted to help you, time and again, you reached out to help me, to grab my hand or grip my arm, to look into my eyes and tell me, don't quit, keep fighting, stay in this race for us.


 


Now there were days when I had the strength enough to fight for all of us, and on the days that I didn't, I leaned on you, the soldier on his third tour of duty in Iraq who told his wife, an Iraqi veteran herself, to take his spending money and donate it to our campaign instead. The 11-year-old boy in Kentucky who sold his bike and video games to raise money for our campaign. The woman who came to a rally hours early, waited and waited to give me a rosary. And all those who whispered to me, simply to say I am praying for you.


 


So many people said this race was over five months ago in Iowa, but we had faith in each other and you brought me back in New Hampshire and on Super Tuesday and in Ohio and in Pennsylvania and Texas and Indiana, West Virginia, Kentucky, Puerto Rico and South Dakota. I will carry your stories and your dreams with me every day for the rest of my life. I will carry your stories and your dreams with me every day for the rest of my life.


 


Now the question is, where do we go from here, and given how far we've come and where we need to go as a party, it's a question I don't take lightly. This has been a long campaign, and I will be making no decisions tonight. But this has always been your campaign, so to the 18 million people who voted for me and to our many other supporters out there of all ages, I want to hear from you. I hope you'll go to my website at HillaryClinton.com and share your thoughts with me and help in any way that you can.


 


In the coming days, I’ll be consulting with supporters and party leaders to determine how to move forward with the best interests of our party and our country guiding my way. And I want to conclude tonight by saying thank you. Thank you to the people across America for welcoming me and my family into your homes and your hearts. Thanks to all of you in every corner of this country who cast your votes for our campaign. I am honored and humbled by your support and your trust. Thanks to my staff and volunteers for all those long hours and late nights, and I thank your families and your loved ones as well, because your sacrifice was theirs. And I especially want to thank all of the leadership of my campaign. Our chairman, Terry McAuliffe and everyone who worked so hard. And, of course, my family for their incredible love, support and work. Bill and Chelsea, Hugh and Maria, Tony and Megan, Zach and Fiona and my mother who turns 89 tomorrow. And, finally, I want to thank all of the people who had the courage to share your stories with me out on the campaign trail.


 


Tonight, I am thinking of a woman I met just yesterday in Rapid City, South Dakota . We were outside Talley’s Restaurant. There was a crowd there as I was walking into the restaurant. And she was standing right up against the barrier. She grabbed my hand and she said, “What are you going to do to make sure I have health care?” And as she was talking, she began to cry. She told me she works three jobs. She has suffered from seizures since childhood. She hasn't been able to afford insurance ever since she left her parents' home. It is shameful that anyone in this country could tell that story to me. And whatever path I travel next, I promise I will keep faith with her and with everyone I met across this great and good country.


 


You know, tonight we stand just a few miles from the Statue of Liberty. And from the site where the Twin Towers fell and where America rose again. Lady Liberty's presence and the towers' absence are a constant reminder that here in America, we are resilient, we are courageous, we embrace all of our people and that when we face our challenges together, there is no barrier we can't overcome, no dream we can't realize, nothing we can't do if we just start acting like Americans again.


 


Thank you all very much. God bless you and God bless America.


 


 


 


 


 



 

4 kommentarer seneste af Polybios d. y.
Skrevet af Willy Johannsen

Jeg tror, de fleste mænd vil sige: Typisk kvinde, om Hillary Clintons reaktion. Damen er ganske enkelt smæk fornærmet.
Har man fulgt hende gennem årene, er det ret tydeligt, at hendes mest fremherskende egenskaber er dem, som får ægtemænd til at tage til fodbold eller på fisketur. Selv om det øsregner.
Men nu er der tilstrækkeligt mange kvinder, som er indrettet præcis som hende, og for dem er denne adfærd helt naturlig. I ordets bogstavelige forstand. Og de kan hverken se eller forstå, at det kan eller skal være anderledes, nu da de er enige om, at selvfølgelig skal Hillary Clinton være præsident. Og hvis du spørger hvorfor: Det skal hun bare. Du har sikkert selv oplevet denne reaktion i utallige variationer i tidens løb.
Evnen til storsind over et nederlag, at kunne sige pyt, så lad os få det bedste ud af det, og mere af den slags, er bare ikke kodet ind i det feminine genom. Og det er nu engang her at al adfærd udspringer.
Nu er damen jo ikke uintelligent, og før eller siden siver det selvfølgelig ind, at det her går ikke. At hun ender med at tage sig temmelig latterlig ud. Men selvfølgelig kunne hun da ikke drømme om at lytte til gode råd, så længe der er kvinder nok, som bekræfter hende i hendes egne forestillinger. Og de kommer sig ikke over det her sådan lige med det samme. Det kan enhver ægtemand tale med om...
Og selv i politik på højt plan er virkeligheden stadigvæk den samme. Og den kommer man ikke sådan lige udenom...

Skrevet af Signe

Jeg synes overskriften til Burchardts blogindlæg "Hvorfor skal det hele handle om Hillary Clinton når hun rent faktisk har tabt" er ret misvisende, og dog alligevel ret typisk for Burchardt.

For det første: hvornår har det nogensinde handlet om Hillary Clinton i de danske medier i løbet af primærvalgkampen og for det andet: Burchardt er især en af dem der helt ensidigt har dyrket(sagde nogen idoldyrkelse?)Barack Obama.

Sandheden er, at majoriteten af danske medier fuldstændig har ignoreret Clinton for i stedet at dyrke Obama i sådan en grad, at man kan frygte for hvor mange af de reportager derovre fra, har været helt upartiske. Har der endelig været fokus på Clinton, har det været på hendes fejltrin og hendes negative sider.

Nuvel, jeg er ikke naiv og forlader mig ikke til næsegrus beundring af hende, men jeg hælder til at mene, at dækningen af den demokratiske primærvalgkamp har været alt for ensidig og i dén grad partisk. Det er upassende, uanstændigt, dårlig journalistik, og havde dette været en dansk valgkamp, ville det have været anset for udemokratisk.

Skrevet af Esben Heick

Til Signes kommentar må tilføjes at der allerede fra start af var en massiv slagside til demokraternes side. At der har været slagside til den der har haft flest stemmer i mine øjne ikke underligt, det er hvad det er, men Mccain og hans republikanere har givet vis heller ikke været så interessant herovre - Selvom han har haft sine egne problemer i egne rækker. Det bliver spændende at se hvordan virkeligheden ser ud "over there", når valget kommer.

Skrevet af Polybios d. y.

Obama har kun vundet på papiret, og Clinton har jo allerede gentagne gange varslet at hun fortsætter fordi hun regner med at han vil lide samme skæbne som Robert Kennedy i 1968. (Ved valgkampen i 1992 udtalte hun på en fest for sin mands sejr sin tilslutning til en journalists forslag om at Ralph Nader burde slås ihjel.)

For Clinton er og forbliver Obama en "nigger", altså en sort mand som umulig kan træde ind i de stratosfæriske kredse og embeder hun nedlader sig til at efterstræbe. Hendes holdning til ham oser af, at hans fejl er at træde uden for det gebet, hvor hans plads er: nede ved den anden bordende sammen med det øvrige tyende.

Jeg så her i eftermiddag først Obama og så Hillary Clinton tale til AIPAC, "The American-Israeli Public Affairs Comittee", den mægtigste åbne udenrigspolitiske lobbyorganisation historien har set.

Det er symptomatisk, at det første sted, begge kandidaterne i den demokratiske nominationskamp taler når den er færdig, er til AIPAC. Det er ligesom eleverne skal op til eksamen i udenrigspolitik og/eller aflægge ed ved alteret i denne helligdom, før de får lov til at blive kåret til vinder og føre valgkamp mod republikanerne.
Talerne var en slags bekendelsesprædikener, hvori den syndefulde unge mand og hans skinhellige tante forsikrede pavestolen om deres faste beslutning om at forblive i den rette tro. Det kunne også minde om det ydmyge tonefald, hvori den indsatte Bresjnev-bande i Tsjekkoslovakiet, efter at reformkommunismen blev kvalt i 1968, forsikrede om sin ubrydelige trofasthed mod Sovjetunionens kommunistiske regime.
Men hvor Obama egentlig tilkendegav en slags logrende appeasement-politik overfor Bushbandens nyimperialistiske regime i USA/Israel, var Hillary Clinton en regimerepresentant og fremstod nærmest som ypperstepræst i forsamlingen, eller snarere betydelig mere end det. Hele hendes fremtoning er ekstrem: hun er nok den mest ekstremt overklasseprægede politiker jeg nogen sinde har set. Måden hun taler eller præker på og ustandselig på kunstlet og utrolig snobbet maner smager på ord som "distinguished" oser i den grad af fisefornem arrogance, at jeg ikke kan huske at have set noget lignende. Måden hvorpå hun smager på sine tørre frontstillede gebistænder i overmunden sammen meden monoton raslen med lange perlekæder af selvfejrende opstyltede dogmegloser, modsvares kun af den hvorpå hun samtidig lader sit geddeblik vandre mekanisk fra side til side mens hun afsøger horisonten for spiselige småfisk og andet.

Hillary Clinton lyser af magtens galskab, og i dag kulminerede dette (i de to minutter jeg orkede at høre før jeg faldt i søvn af den indholdstomme frasemonotoni) med en passage, hvor hun i sin uendelig lange opremsning af "distinguished" overklassemedlemmer af guds to udvalgte folk, kom frem til en eller anden som hendes nåde havde velsignet med den ufattelige gunstbevisning "to walk with me for Israel" (de havde åbenbart deltaget i en eller anden overklassemarkering). Dette sidste blev udtalt med en betoning som man ville vente at høre fra dronning Victoria optrædende i rollen som Moses ved Det Røde Hav ved en lukket teaterforestilling på Buckingham Palace anno 1890.

(At personer som "Signe" ikke kan begribe dette, men i stedet indbilder sig at den voldsomme Clintonfokusering i de fleste medier er en fokusering af Obama, er lige så selvfølgeligt som at Danmarks Kommunistiske Parti i en menneskealder hyldede Josef Stalin og hetzede enhver kritiker af ham, og det har eksakt den samme årsag.)

Egentlig hører Clinton osv. med sin ekstreme kristelige skinhellighed hjemme i selskab med kristeligt-evangeliserende som pastor Hagee:

"The Lobby's crime is not just that it puts Israel first. Worse, it represents the more unreasonable factions of that government, or possible future governments – the Likud-rejectionist wing that opposes any settlement of the Palestinian question except by expelling the whole lot of them to Jordan.

That its power is now being effectively challenged by the J Street organization shows just how politically isolated are the traditional Zionist groups, which have long dominated the debate over U.S. policy in the Middle East. The Lobby's main base of support is not in the Jewish community, but in the dispensationalist wing of the "born again" Christian evangelical movement, epitomized by the Rev. John Hagee. The founder of Christians United for Israel has taken Jew-hating to a new level altogether, wedding ultra-Likudnik rhetoric to obvious contempt for the Jewish tradition. Hagee believes that, come the End Times – after the Final War between God and Satan, one pitting Israel and the U.S. against the Muslims and the Russians, with the Chinese probably thrown in for good measure – the grateful Jews will finally see the light and be converted to Christianity.

The rest will, naturally, burn in Hell."

http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=12942

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