Maybe I'm paranoid -- well, of course I'm paranoid, I've lived in the USA all my life, what else coud I be -- but watch this space for further developments. I wish I had voted for Zelaya, while not a revolutionary by career choice,knows how to take a fundamentally principled stand and stick with it in a flexible manner, but he wasn't on the ballot. I had to settle for Cynthia McKinney, a tough fighter but totally out of the running.)
We seem to be seeing a disintegration of the Obama administration. Maybe -- MAYBE -- they will allow him out to give one of them inspiring speeches he does so well, or maybe for SIGNIFICANT social events like the meeting with the pig and the perfesser, with Biden around to prevent any spontaneous "racism-in-reverse" in favor of the perfesser. But at this point, the Obama presidency as a distinct period like the Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton and Bush III presidencies, seems to be already over.
Understanding the dangers we face in the situation taking shape on every level including elementary democratic rights, is a very important challenge. I assure the ultra-critics of Obama that grasping this is much more difficult and much more important than "seeing through Obama" which is radical child's play.
One prediction I can stand on is my view that a Black person could only be elected president of the United States in a situation of crisis. I forgot the obvious corollary. This excludes the possibility that the first Black President will have a normal presidency. And so it appears.
>From the start of the Honduras crisis, Fidel and Chavez insisted that this
was a crisis and a struggle for the US government as well, and that it
represented an attack on the Obama presidency. I don't think the slightest
element of prettification of what Obama represents is needed to recognize
the truth of this.
I'm a slow coach. It took me weeks to catch up with them Fidel and Chavez. Hopefully others will get the message as well. Fred Feldman