The issue no one wants to talk about

You might have noticed that the superheroes have been silent since the election.  We talked about hanging up our capes until the election in 2010, but recent events have made me change my mind about that.

In the last week alone, the horrible, terrible New York Post published a racist cartoon with the image of a gorilla being shot with the caption, “They’ll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus bill.”

Then there’s the case of the mayor of Los Alamitos, CA (thanks, Ripley, for the tip).  He sent a picture of the White House in an e-mail.  That should be fine, right?  Nope.  Instead of grass, the picture had a watermelon patch in in the front lawn.  The title of the e-mail: “No Easter egg hunt this year.”  Just in case you didn’t  get the “joke,” the implication is that because the Obamas are different, everything will fundamentally change.  Oh, no. There are scary black people in the White House.  And they aren’t servants.  Eek!

Still don’t think there’s anything going on?

Well, around time time of the inauguration, a bakery in New York came up with the fabulous idea of selling pastries commemorating the historic day.  Great idea, right?  Nope.  This baker decided that he would sell “Drunken Negro Head” cookies.  Think I’m kidding?  Watch this news report on the bakery and see for yourself.

What does this say about race in our country?  We have elected an African-American as president, but how far have we really come?

These incidents remind me of the racist yard sign Ferosha saw during the campaign.  The fact that people think blatant racism is something they can get away with kind of makes me worry about where race relations in our country are headed.

I don’t really know how to talk about this.  But I feel it would be wrong for me not to.  After all, I am a black woman and now I’m a blogger, too.  That means I can get on my soapbox and talk about whatever I want.  And you can read it or you can ignore it, but at least I get to say what I want.  If you don’t like it, post a comment or get your own blog.

But, like I said, I don’t really know what to say about this.  All I do know is that these events have compelled me to write.  And I’m putting it out there because I think that race is an issue that should be talked about.  What do you think?

~Vulcanella

February 26, 2009. Barack Obama, Hypocrisy, bigotry. Leave a comment.

Obama Pie!

It’s blueberry and raspberry — both fresh and frozen, since fresh berries are so damn expensive. Best served with chocolate and vanilla ice cream, of course.

The pastry is store-bought because I’m lazy. I need to work on my technique a little (where’s America’s Test Kitchen when you need them?), but it wasn’t difficult and, in the end, it tasted pretty good. The next time, I might try baking the pastry parts of the logo design separately and dusting them with powdered sugar before putting them on top of the fruit. That way, they’ll look more like the white parts on the logo. And what doesn’t taste better with powdered sugar?

An easier variation would be to make a custard pie and put fresh berries and whipped cream on top in the logo design. But I prefer baked fruit pies and I’m not a fan of whipped cream.

~Ripley, who don’t like the cornbread either.

November 12, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008, Food. 3 comments.

Change we can Believe in

Andrew Sullivan found this illustration by Patrick Moberg that depicts the magnitude of what happened on November 4, 2008.

Some Change in the White House

Some Change in the White House

~Vulcanella

November 10, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008. Leave a comment.

Video: The Final Days of Obama’s Campaign

The video below comes from Time reporter Jay Newton-Small on the campaign trail.

more about “Swampland – TIME.com » Blog Archive V…“, posted with vodpod

~Lucky

November 4, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008. 1 comment.

What it’s like to stump for Obama

My friend Total BS and I went canvassing in Pottstown, PA a few weeks ago, but I never got around to writing about it.  It was an amazing experience and one that I won’t forget.  I’ll never forget the woman who earned less than $7,000 a year and struggled to support herself and her four adorable children.  I won’t forget the relief she felt when I told her that, no, Obama would not take money from her paycheck to pay for other people’s abortions.

I won’t forget the man who scared Total BS and I half to death when he said that he didn’t want Obama to take away his guns (one of which was a machine gun) and when he said that Biden’s Violenece Against Women Act was the law that put him in jail three (yes, three) times.  I also won’t forget the door (yup, only one) that got slammed in our faces.  I won’t forget the odd sensation that came over us when we realized we were more comfortable canvassing in the low-income Pottstown than we were in the upper-class neighborhood of Limerick, despite the fact that the neighborhoods we grew up in were much more similar to the upper-class Limerick.

I won’t forget the tears that came to my eyes when we discussed the war in Iraq with a woman who had just seen two of her friends travel to Afghanistan (with their year-old baby in tow) to do humanitarian work.  I won’t forget the long talk Total BS and I had with the libertarian who wanted to vote for Obama and was convinced Obama would win PA, but decided to vote for Bob Barr because he felt the need for a viable third-party candidate in future elections.  I won’t forget the man who yelled at his dog, “sic ‘em” when we told him we were from the Obama campaign.  Finally, I won’t forget the sensation of hope (yes, hope) that coursed through my veins as Total BS and I knocked on more than 150 doors for Obama.

I never got around to writing much about that weekend, but I’m not the only person who was moved by canvassing for Obama.  Read one undecided voter’s experience.  He felt a lot of what Total BS and I felt.

~Vulcanella

November 2, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008. 1 comment.

Case Closed

If you had any doubts about it, last night Barack Obama delivered his “Closing Argument” and it couldn’t have made his case for why he should be president any better.  If you missed it, watch it here.

October 30, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008. 1 comment.

What if?

The text below comes from an e-mail a friend forwarded to me.  It has some valid points.  What if things were a little different and roles were reversed?  How would this year’s presidential campaign be different?

Ponder the following:

  • What if the Obamas had paraded five children across the stage, including a three month old infant and an unwed, pregnant teenage daughter?
  • What if John McCain was a former president of the Harvard Law Review?
  • What if Barack Obama finished fifth from the bottom of his graduating class?
  • What if McCain had only married once, and Obama was a divorcee?
  • What if Obama was the candidate who left his first wife after a severe disfiguring car accident, when she no longer measured up to his standards?
  • What if Obama had met his second wife in a bar and had a long affair while he was still married?
  • What if Michelle Obama was the wife who not only became addicted to painkillers but also acquired them illegally through her charitable organization?
  • What if Cindy McCain graduated from Harvard?
  • What if Obama had been a member of the Keating Five? (The Keating Five were five United States Senators accused of corruption in 1989, igniting a major political scandal as part of the larger Savings and Loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s.)
  • What if McCain was a charismatic, eloquent speaker?
  • What if Obama couldn’t read from a teleprompter?
  • What if Obama was the one who had military experience that included discipline problems and a record of crashing seven planes?
  • What if Obama was the one who was known to display publicly, on many occasions, a serious anger management problem?
  • What if Michelle Obama’s family had made their money from beer distribution?
  • What if the Obamas had adopted a white child?

You could easily add to this list. If these questions reflected reality, do you really believe the election numbers would be as close as they are?

This is what racism does. It covers up, rationalizes and minimizes positive qualities in one candidate and emphasizes negative qualities in another when there is a color difference.

Educational Background:

Barack Obama:
Columbia University – B.A. Political Science with a Specialization in International Relations.
Harvard – Juris Doctor (J.D.) Magna Cum Laude

Joseph Biden:
University of Delaware – B.A. in History and B.A. in Political Science.
Syracuse University College of Law – Juris Doctor (J.D.)

vs.

John McCain:
United States Naval Academy – Class rank: 894 of 899

Sarah Palin:
Hawaii Pacific University – 1 semester
North Idaho College – 2 semesters – general study
University of Idaho – 2 semesters – journalism
Matanuska-Susitna College – 1 semester
University of Idaho – 3 semesters – B.A. in Journalism

Education isn’t everything, but this is about the two highest offices in the land as well as our standing in the world. You make the call.

~Vulcanella

October 24, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008, Hypocrisy, Joe Biden, John McCain, Sarah Palin. Leave a comment.

Opie, Andy Griffith and the Fonz Support Obama

If you’re a baby boomer or if you like old TV shows like me, you’ll love this video. Watch Ron Howard, Andy Griffith and Henry Winkler voice their support for Barack Obama.  There’s nothing like seeing Opie, Andy Griffith, Richie Cunningham and the Fonz come together to rally for change!

more about “E! Online – Entertainment News, Celeb…“, posted with vodpod

~Vulcanella

October 24, 2008. Barack Obama, Election 2008. Leave a comment.

I Voted for “That One”

I’m voting I voted for “That One”   We’re coming down to the wire, and, before the weekend hits, I want to make a last-minute plea to everyone to VOTE EARLY.  There is still time to vote early or to vote absentee in most states.  Most states have “No Excuse” absentee or early voting, meaning you don’t need a reason for casting an early ballot.  In other states, you’re supposed to have a reason, but the range of reasons is pretty broad.  In Virginia, for example, the fact that you won’t be able to make it to the polls because of your work hours is a legitimate reason to vote early/absentee.

I voted in person in early October, and there wasn’t a line.  There will be lines now, but they still won’t be as bad as they will be on Nov. 4.  And it looks like many places will have in-person early voting for the next two Saturdays (Oct. 25 and Nov. 1).  For more information on voting early/absentee, check out your State Board of Elections web site by looking it up here or use Obama’s early voting assistance web site.

“But, Ripley, they won’t count my absentee vote unless there’s a tie!” It is an urban legend that early and absentee votes are counted only in the case of a tie.  They are counted just like regular votes. NPR covered this issue in a voting FAQ earlier this month.
Reasons to vote early/absentee:

1. You won’t have to wait in line for God-knows-how-long to vote on Election Day.  I had to wait for almost two hours on primary day this year, and I went relatively late in the morning.  It’s going to be much much worse on Nov. 4.

2. You can do something else on Election Day to help the campaign:  drive other people to the polls, make last-minute calls to remind people to vote, be a poll observer, travel to a swing state where your help is needed more, or do something else to get out the vote.

3. There aren’t enough poll workers. Voting early reduces lines at the polls on Election Day, which not only alleviates pressure on the poll workers, but also frees you up to be a poll worker, if you so choose.

4. There aren’t enough polling machines and the ones we do have are not reliable. In 2004, Ohio became the Florida of the presidential election, with massive problems with their polling machines causing havoc, uncertainty and disenfranchisement throughout the state.  Whether or not these problems cost John Kerry the election is still hotly debated.

5. You will have time to correct any problems with your voter registration. In the unlikely event that there is a problem with your registration, you will still have time to correct it if you vote early.  If you don’t find out about a problem until Election Day, you most likely will have to fill out a provisional ballot, which is counted only once the problem is resolved.  And provisional ballots are more likely to be rejected even though the vote might be valid.

6. Early voting neutralizes voter intimidation, voter caging, and other shenanigans designed to suppress (mostly Democratic) votes.  For information about the range of problems that could happen on Election Day, check out this report from electionline.org and the Pew Center on the States and this report from Common Cause and the Century Foundation.

7. The more people who vote early, the more people will vote. There is a record number of newly registered voters this year.  Many of these first-time voters won’t realize how long the lines will be.  These new voters are more likely to be discouraged by the prospect of waiting in line for hours to vote and are more likely to leave without voting.  This is especially true if the weather is bad on Election Day.  If you don’t vote early for yourself, do it for others!

8. Because it helps the Obama campaign. Early voting is a keystone of Obama’s election strategy, and the campaign has set up a special web site to help people vote.  If you don’t want your data to be added to his database, visit your State Board of Elections web site by looking it up here.   So I can’t stress it enough:  vote early.  Do it for yourself.  Do it for others.  Do it for Obama/Biden.  Do it for America’s future!

~Ripley
“Your ass is already on the line. The only question is, what are you gonna do about it?”

October 24, 2008. Barack Obama, Change, Election 2008. Leave a comment.

Patience Paves the Road Ahead

Captain O’Biden and myself did a little fall gardening this weekend in hopes of having a colorful garden in spring.  It can sometimes be difficult to envision what the garden will look like in several months when it now just sits as a pile of recently disturbed soil.  However I have faith in those daffodil bulbs, and the patience to wait for my springtime reward.  My patience extends to the upcoming election.  I know that our country’s problems won’t be solved in one day.  We have to hunker down are really get to work, but there are no east fixes.

I do worry that the country’s apparent ADD and short-term memory will cause people to forget that all our goals, universal healthcare, balanced budget, healthy economy, secure borders, reduced gun violence, etc, will take a lot of hard work and time!.  I worry this falls on deaf ears.  After all no one this entire campaign season has remembered that John McCain was under investigation in the 1980’s when we were going through the Savings and Loan crisis.  He was never charged with a crime, but …  it was forgotten almost as quickly as the report finding that Sarah Palin abused her power as governor.

Why don’t people remember the past and learn from its lessons?  I cannot believe that Sarah Palin admonished Joe Biden in the VP debate for not looking forward.  Where are we going if we don’t know our point of origin?

My point is that the United States has serious problems and we need to identify all the problems and we cannot forget some in lieu of others.  Then we must draw the solutions from every available port of information including our own past.  Then we must implement our solutions, support President Obama, and above all exercise patience.  Understand that it took 8 years to get into this mess and it will take time to repair, but like those spring daffodils, the rewards will be the first color in the gloom and bountiful for us and generations to come.

~ Ferosha

October 23, 2008. Barack Obama, Change, Election 2008, Joe Biden, John McCain, Sarah Palin. Leave a comment.

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