My wife made me canvas for Obama; here's what I learned

Joeychgo

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Charlotte, N.C. - There has been a lot of speculation that Barack Obama might win the election due to his better "ground game" and superior campaign organization.

I had the chance to view that organization up close this month when I canvassed for him. I'm not sure I learned much about his chances, but I learned a lot about myself and about this election.

Let me make it clear: I'm pretty conservative. I grew up in the suburbs. I voted for George H.W. Bush twice, and his son once. I was disappointed when Bill Clinton won, and disappointed he couldn't run again.

I encouraged my son to join the military. I was proud of him in Afghanistan, and happy when he came home, and angry when he was recalled because of the invasion of Iraq. I'm white, 55, I live in the South and I'm definitely going to get a bigger tax bill if Obama wins.

I am the dreaded swing voter.

So you can imagine my surprise when my wife suggested we spend a Saturday morning canvassing for Obama. I have never canvassed for any candidate. But I did, of course, what most middle-aged married men do: what I was told.

At the Obama headquarters, we stood in a group to receive our instructions. I wasn't the oldest, but close, and the youngest was maybe in high school. I watched a campaign organizer match up a young black man who looked to be college age with a white guy about my age to canvas together. It should not have been a big thing, but the beauty of the image did not escape me.

Instead of walking the tree-lined streets near our home, my wife and I were instructed to canvass a housing project. A middle-aged white couple with clipboards could not look more out of place in this predominantly black neighborhood.

We knocked on doors and voices from behind carefully locked doors shouted, "Who is it?"

"We're from the Obama campaign," we'd answer. And just like that doors opened and folks with wide smiles came out on the porch to talk.

Grandmothers kept one hand on their grandchildren and made sure they had all the information they needed for their son or daughter to vote for the first time.

Young people came to the door rubbing sleep from their eyes to find out where they could vote early, to make sure their vote got counted.

We knocked on every door we could find and checked off every name on our list. We did our job, but Obama may not have been the one who got the most out of the day's work.

I learned in just those three hours that this election is not about what we think of as the "big things."

It's not about taxes. I'm pretty sure mine are going to go up no matter who is elected.

It's not about foreign policy. I think we'll figure out a way to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan no matter which party controls the White House, mostly because the people who live there don't want us there anymore.

I don't see either of the candidates as having all the answers.

I've learned that this election is about the heart of America. It's about the young people who are losing hope and the old people who have been forgotten. It's about those who have worked all their lives and never fully realized the promise of America, but see that promise for their grandchildren in Barack Obama. The poor see a chance, when they often have few. I saw hope in the eyes and faces in those doorways.

My wife and I went out last weekend to knock on more doors. But this time, not because it was her idea. I don't know what it's going to do for the Obama campaign, but it's doing a lot for me.

Jonathan Curley is a banker. He voted for George H.W. Bush twice and George W. Bush once.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1103/p09s02-coop.html
 
So you have a guy voting for Obama because he thinks it's about hope for change. And he's made the critical error disregarding what Obama considers "change" and instead he's just assumed that the answers are obvious and has imposed his own perceptions on Obama as though he were some kind of blank slate.

He was a blank slate. That was before Frank Marshall Davis and his associations with men like Jeremiah Write, Bill Ayers, and the rest of the radical left establishment.
 
Why would you canvas for a guy who may not even be a legal citizen of this country? Doesn't make any sense. This lawsuit has now made it's way to the supreme court. Check out the latest info here. www.obamacrimes.com
 
Why would you canvas for a guy who may not even be a legal citizen of this country? Doesn't make any sense. This lawsuit has now made it's way to the supreme court. Check out the latest info here. www.obamacrimes.com

Because that story doesn't interest you, you're unaware of it, or you simply don't give it any credibility.

Most people can't possibly imagine that a political party would nominate someone who wasn't eligible, or that the media wouldn't report on it if that were to happen. I find it hard to imagine myself... but I have so little regard for the DNC (the party, not the traditional voters) and contempt for the media, I realize it's actually possible, though unlikely.
 
Because that story doesn't interest you, you're unaware of it, or you simply don't give it any credibility.

Most people can't possibly imagine that a political party would nominate someone who wasn't eligible, or that the media wouldn't report on it if that were to happen. I find it hard to imagine myself... but I have so little regard for the DNC (the party, not the traditional voters) and contempt for the media, I realize it's actually possible, though unlikely.



Or that the other major party wouldnt do something about it early on.

Hence why I give is no credibility.
 
Joey, several comments and questions---

First, tell us about the ethnic makeup of those folks you talked to.

Second, Don't you understand that 'change' isn't necessarily good. It would be a change if somehow Idi Amin became POTUS.

Third, although I don't find conspiracy everywhere, I have had experiences that make it easy to recognize that anything's possible. I see a woefully inexperienced individual, with a plethora of questionable (to be polite) connections offering 'everything to everybody'. He's intelligent; he must be aware that his rhetoric is far beyond the 'let's try this' of the usual politician. I must conclude that he'll simply say anything to gain power.

If you find that you must do something to make yourself feel better, give to some missionary activity. Don't help to give away the country as a 'feel-good' enterprise.

KS
 
Joey, your thoughts in this thread were inspiring. Up until about two weeks ago I was leaning towards him. But today I decided on McCain. I voted based on some things that in the end, I thought he would do better. What truly concerns me personally, so much thinly veiled outright racism by some members. But it is both a free country and a free forum. I'm 54 years old. As a soldier who volunteered during the draft and later a Police Officer in Baltimore, I met some great men of virtue and character. They happened to be black. Vote as you please. But I would love to see the day when race or religion no longer caused such hatred in some.
 
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Red Cell, 'racist' suggests the assigning of negative values purely based on skin color. You're mistaken when you call the recognition of a racial component in our national proceedings racist.

Number one, I refuse to walk around with my eyes shut. And two, it's gross stupidity to refuse to recognize that, in a large contingent, race and the perception that race will be a factor in awarding benefits is what's driving the activity within that community. That's reality!
KS
 
racism has nothing to do with just skin colour. and it's not negative values, it's hatred based on an identifiable group. you should try wide open eyes cammerfe.
 
I live in the South and I'm definitely going to get a bigger tax bill if Obama wins.

Joey, your location says, Chicago. How can you specify Chicago as your location and say you live in the south?

Inspiring little spill, but there are far too many questions still left unanswered about Obama for me to believe (based on Obama's record) that he provides hope. No, on the contrary. I'd like to think that I'm wrong on this, but only time will tell. As a business owner and physician, I take issue with Obama's redistribution of wealth plan and the subsequent socialist factor that he intends to engage our country in. A quote from Abe Lincoln that holds truth:

You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.
You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
You cannot lift the wage earner up by pulling the wage payer down.
You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred.
You cannot build character and courage by taking away men’s initiative and independence.
You cannot help men permanently by doing for them, what they could and should do for themselves.

The violation of these under the guise of “helping our fellow man” will bring about the demise of this nation. We are in trouble now for that very reason. Government’s aim should be to ensure independence not a sense of beholdeness back to government. This hope and change that Obama speaks about is exactly that….beholdeness back to government.
 
Joey, your location says, Chicago. How can you specify Chicago as your location and say you live in the south?

I'm 99% sure that Joey didn't write that article.

A) Looking at his pictures in his gallery, he'd be the youngest looking 55 year old male I've ever seen.

B) The guy who wrote that article is named Jonathan, not Joey.

C) Just like you said, that guy lived in the south, and Joey's from Chicago.

:slam

I'm 20 and voted for Obama.
 
Nope - didnt write it - thats why there is a link to the article there
 
Joey, your location says, Chicago. How can you specify Chicago as your location and say you live in the south?

Inspiring little spill, but there are far too many questions still left unanswered about Obama for me to believe (based on Obama's record) that he provides hope. No, on the contrary. I'd like to think that I'm wrong on this, but only time will tell. As a business owner and physician, I take issue with Obama's redistribution of wealth plan and the subsequent socialist factor that he intends to engage our country in. A quote from Abe Lincoln that holds truth:

You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.
You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
You cannot lift the wage earner up by pulling the wage payer down.
You cannot further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred.
You cannot build character and courage by taking away men’s initiative and independence.
You cannot help men permanently by doing for them, what they could and should do for themselves.

The violation of these under the guise of “helping our fellow man” will bring about the demise of this nation. We are in trouble now for that very reason. Government’s aim should be to ensure independence not a sense of beholdeness back to government. This hope and change that Obama speaks about is exactly that….beholdeness back to government.
Well said. Time will tell, as you stated.
 
I'm 99% sure that Joey didn't write that article.

A) Looking at his pictures in his gallery, he'd be the youngest looking 55 year old male I've ever seen.

B) The guy who wrote that article is named Jonathan, not Joey.

C) Just like you said, that guy lived in the south, and Joey's from Chicago.

:slam

I'm 20 and voted for Obama.

My mistake! In the developing nausea I experienced as I read through it, I only skimmed the ending.
 
Not a problem I was drunk doing homework for principles of management, I had to come on here to hone my typing.
 

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