11/04/08
Now that I’ve overcome the lack of timeliness with this post by luring you in with that dramatic title that will probably be used by Oliver Stone in his next installment of the presidential docudrama series, please play the following clip.
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That was the scene at Solomon’s Porch in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn when MSNBC pronounced Barack Obama the projected President-Elect of the United States on Election Day night.
To be in New York City that night was a blessing for me. Not because I’m some Obamaniac and I could carouse with my liberal brethren, but because I got to witness the spectacle that was New York City on the night of Nov. 4, 2008.
Well… Brooklyn actually. I didn’t get to Manhattan.
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I really only ran into Obama supporters, so I don’t know what McCain backers were doing that night. If I was a McCain supporter, instead of the totally non-partisan, non-biased, non-feeling pressbot that I am, I would at least come out to witness people going absolutely crazy in a totally non-violent way (with the possible exception of Williamsburg, but those kids don’t count). It was history in the making and we were all there, regardless of who we voted for. When reflecting on the events of November 9, 1989, even the highest ranking GDR official has to say to himself, “zat vas pretty cool.”
Not that I’m comparing McCain supporters to Stalinist fascists, but it’s a convenient analogy because, like then in Berlin, a barrier fell in America almost 19 years later.
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Manuel Williams of Canarsie, Brooklyn celebrates at Solomon's Porch in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn as President-elect Barack Obama takes the stage in Chicago for his victory speech on Tuesday night, Nov. 4, 2008.
With most significant historical events, I believe that it is the reaction to the event, rather than the event itself, that makes it significant. Obviously, we all knew that Obama is black throughout the election. However, he didn’t present himself as a black candidate any more than McCain presented himself as a white candidate. When race came up, Obama addressed it eloquently and dispassionately, and it was again put on the back burner. At the end, it was two intelligent, qualified candidates running for office and race became somewhat of a non-issue. That is, until Election Night.
I shouldn’t have been, but I was really surprised how much talk there was on the streets and in the media about the First Black President (or the second, if you agree with Toni Morrison, who has recently rescinded her 1998 opinion). It would be redundant to speak further on this when my classmate Sophie Cocke has already put it so well. Besides, I would be remiss if I didn’t mention John McCain on that night.
I have the feeling that McCain had been working on his concession speech for quite a while because it was absolutely fantastic (even if his supporters in attendance weren’t as gracious). When I heard that speech, I remembered why I was happy to see McCain get the nod from the GOP, because either way there would be change in the White House. But it seems that nod had some preconditions and even the Maverick had to kowtow to the Republican base and its campaign methods. His stance on some key issues notwithstanding, I think McCain is an intelligent and earnest leader, and the character he displayed (and referenced ad nauseum) in Vietnam is as important a credential as his 30+ years in the Senate. It’s unfortunate for him and his supporters that his concession speech was the first glimpse we’ve seen of The Real McCain in a long time because if he’d run his entire campaign with the same grace, he might be President-Elect McCain now.
But, of course, the day was Obama’s.
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***BLOGGER’S NOTE***
Love it or hate it, Iowa’s first-in-the-nation primary got things going for Obama. Here are a couple of pictures I took in my home town of Davenport for my former paper during the months he (basically) lived in Iowa.






November 14th, 2008 at 11:34 am
[...] 11/04/08 That was the scene at Solomon’s Porch in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn when MSNBC pronounced Barack Obama the projected President-Elect of the United States on Election Day night. To be in New York City that night was … [...]