Monday, March 31, 2008

Day Seven, March 31

So far, almost all of my posts on Daily Dose of Hope have focused on Obama's policy (including campaiging/fundraising practices), so tonight I wanted to offer up something slightly different: a work of art. I find the amount of artists, writers, and other creative types getting behind the Obama movement to be, at the risk of playing the 'trite creative type' card, inspiring. Speaking of which, last night I was browsing the barackobama.com online store and came across this image:

The artist that created these screen print is none other than internationally-renowned Shepard Fairey ('Change' poster copyright Shepard Fairey, 2008). I had recognized this style in his 'Hope' poster, and thought that the contrasting colors and central image were reminiscent of Fairey's 'OBEY' prints, but wasn't sure that this was actually done by his hand until I found it on the website. Fairey had this to say regarding the creation of the print:

“I wanted to make an art piece of Barack Obama because I thought an iconic portrait of him could symbolize and amplify the importance of his mission. I believe Obama will guide this country to a future where everyone can thrive and I should support him vigorously for the sake of my two young daughters. I have made art opposing the Iraq war for several years, and making art of Obama, who opposed the war from the start, is like making art for peace. I know I have an audience of young art fans and I’m delighted if I can encourage them to see the merits of Barack Obama.” (Shepard Fairey quote taken from barackobama.com, copyright 2008.)

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Day Six, March 30

Just a quick one before I go to bed and finish off my first week of this experiment.

One of my favorite things about the Obama campaign is Barack's approach to raising money for his cause. Not only because it's unusual in approach, but also because its sheer success is downright unbelievable. Unlike the vast majority of politicians operating on a large-scale level (including his presidential rivals), Barack Obama has insisted that the way his campaign is funded from the start has been from small individual donors. Turning away the temptation to take money from PACs and lobbyists, the Obama presidential machine has been run primary, although not entirely, by small denomination donations (he's legally not allowed to accept over $2,300 per person) from donors. The term 'grassroots' is almost legally bound to Barack's campaign at this point, but this is one feature that started--and has remained--about as honest to the everyday American as you can possibly get, and I wanted to point this out for any readers who weren't already aware of the situation.

Here are a more flushed out description of the fund-raising stance, culled from a Myspace bulletin released by Obama's official myspace page. The bulletin was trying to raise money for the campaign by offering donors a chance to be a part of a dinner with Obama and four other donors. This offer was only open to donors that donated prior to 11:59 pm on March 31st. The bulletin is copyright http://www.myspace.com/barackobama, 2008:

Refusing money from PACs and Washington lobbyists makes this campaign different in one very important respect.

We are not beholden to anyone but you.

We've rejected the traditional Washington fundraising strategy -- including countless dinners hosted by lobbyists -- and put our trust in millions of Americans owning a piece of this campaign.

Senator Clinton and Senator McCain have a different approach.

Both have accepted millions from lobbyists and special interests, and both have relied on high dollar donors for the majority of their funding.

This campaign is different, and I'm looking forward to supporters like you joining me for a different kind of fundraising dinner.

If you make a donation in any amount between now and 11:59 pm EDT on Monday, March 31st, you could join me and three other supporters for an intimate dinner for five:

On Monday, at 11:44 am, Bonnie Lochetta of Rushville, Indiana made her first donation of $25.

I'm pleased to announce that Bonnie will be one of my dinner guests.

Here's what she told us about herself:

"I come from an incredibly Republican county in a little tiny town.
I've always been the rebel in my family. I had a fantastic government teacher in high school who really opened my eyes to a lot of things.
I haven't always voted Democratic, but I wanted to vote for someone who
spoke to me personally.

Now my kids are doing well in school, but I'm praying for scholarships. I have no savings, and I don't know how I'm going to put them through college.
I have never contributed to a political candidate before, but I have
started an organizing group in my very Republican county.

My children are
very active in their support, and I will do all I can to show my neighbors

that together, YES WE CAN."


I'm looking forward to having dinner with Bonnie, but there are still three seats left at the table.

Will you be in one of them?

If you make a donation by 11:59 pm EDT on Monday, March 31st, you could join us:

We'll pay for your trip and the meal -- all you need to bring is your story and your ideas about how to make this a better country for all Americans.

Continue to support this campaign and strengthen your role in our movement:

Together we can put an end to pay-for-influence politics.

We can turn the page in Washington, and it all begins with you.

Thank you for your support,

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Day Five, March 29

Great news for the Obama campaign from the Keystone State: today Pennsylvania Senator Bob Casey has announced that he is endorsing Barack Obama for president. Both a well-respected Senator in the swing state as well as one of the coveted remaining superdelegates in the party, Casey had previously insisted he would wait until after the April 22nd primary to lend his support to either candidate. By deciding to tip his hat early, the Obama campaign is expected to experience a boost in popularity in the crucial weeks leading up the Pennsylvania state primary. As this Yahoo! news article covering Casey's endorsement is quick to point out, Casey's support is especially beneficial since the Senator is an Irish Catholic whose popularity with working class voters lead him to carry the vote by 59 percent in the 2006 Senate election.

In his endorsement speech, Casey credited his daughters' passion for Senator Obama as a strong influence in helping him make an early decision in which candidate he would endorse for the presidency. "We need a president who's committed to change and we need a president who will lead us in that new direction, and he's right here with us today, Barack Obama," remarked the Senator. One of Casey's most noteworthy political achievements was his defeat of controversial right-wing Senator Rick Santorum in the 2006 election.

Click here to read a complete transcript of Bob Casey's speech endorsing Obama for President, or you can watch a capture of the Senator's speech on Youtube.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Day Four, March 28

Today on the drive to work I was listening to NPR, and caught the tail end of two political panelists (columnists from the Washington Post and New York Times) talking about recent developments, or lack thereof, in the race for Democratic presidential nominee. The final question that the host proposed to his guests was whether this year's presidential race would come down to the war in Iraq, or economic and domestic concerns in the U.S. Both columnists agreed that this year's election would "definitely" be decided by the latter, which was "good news for the Democratic party." Although all three presidential candidates have been reluctant to acknowledge the possibility of a recession in the American economy (or the increasingly obvious fact that we are already in one), any potential candidate for the presidency has no choice but to recognize that the economy is in trouble, and needs a shot in the arm to avoid seeing the bottom fall out of the housing market as well as to prevent the continued floundering of Wall Street on a weekly basis.

Yesterday, both Democratic nominees clarified their positions on how they plan to fix the economic woes the country is facing. Both Obama and Clinton took a rest from highlighting the differences between themselves for once, and turned their barbs against John McCain's own economicaly conservative policies, which Obama said "amounts to little more than watching this crisis happen.'' In a two-prong entry, today I'm including both a video capture of Senator Obama's speech yesterday at Cooper Union in New York that outlines his economic outlook in his own words, as well as a link to an article from The Guardian regarding both Obama's and Clinton's plans to repair the state of the union. Click here to read that article, written by Devlin Barrett and Beth Fouhy, of the Associated Press.

Obama's speech:


The speech itself is something to behold, but in the interest of immediacy, I've attempted to sum up the main points of Obama's plan here. My own grasp of economic frailty is limited (as I will soon demonstrate), but here are the six points that Obama says need to be taken into action to repair the economy:

1.) Any institution that is able to borrow from the Federal Reserve should also be called to answer to any guidelines that the Fed should deem appropriate for these institutions.

2.) General reform is needed in all regulated financial institutions. This is particularly relevant in the mortgage business, to prevent another housing calamity from occurring in the future. This applies for domestic institutions, as well as those that the U.S. is subject to overseas, both to stablize economies and to maintain competition between said institutions.

3.) It is time to restructure regulatory agencies to meet needs for the current U.S. marketplace. Many of these agencies are either being reorganized constantly or are still under the same guiding policies as they were decades ago, and adopting streamlined approach to increase their functionality.

4.) One of the main causes contributing to the current mortgage crisis is the fact that two-thirds of sub prime mortgages were obtained from companies that didn't adhere to the same tight regulations that banks are required to follow. Where these loans originate shouldn't matter, and regulations should be enforced across the board to protect homeowners.

5.) Heightened vigilance is needed in the stock market to prevent marketplace manipulation activities by traders. These type of activities should be liable for punishment from the Security and Exchange Commission.

6.) A financial market commission should be created to oversee the state of the economy and assess upcoming risks we are facing. Such a commission would meet regularly and advise the President, Congress and market regulators about economic risks ahead, so that action can be taken to combat potential problems before they grow.

A complete transcript of the Senator's speech can be retrieved here, from barackobama.com

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Day Three, March 27

This afternoon I was reading my daily chapter from Barack Obama's eye-opening book, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream. Today's selection, a chapter entitled Opportunity, is the longest chapter in the book, and also one of the most practical from a political standpoint. Considering the many opportunities that Barack has been afforded in his life, one might expect to encounter inspiring tales of his youth spent living in Hawaii or Jakarta, or how he overcame racial or economic hardship to go on to attend Yale law school. Instead, almost the entirety of the 58-page chapter gives the Senator an opportunity to expand on opportunity of a different type, those that can (and must) be seized by all Americans if we are to compete in a global marketplace. He also uses the, er, opportunity to expand on his specific platforms regarding education policy, science and technology, and the environmental and energy crises we face in the 21st century.

It should come as no surprise that for this reader, a teacher, I am particularly interested in--and supportive of--Obama's outlook on education. I'm not a single issue voter, but education is one of my top three issues when it comes to any candidate, and Obama's views on the importance of education reform is one of the key things that draws me to him, not the other way around. In this selection from The Audacity of Hope (pgs 159-163), the author clearly outlines what American education is lacking, how he plans to reform it for students today as well as tomorrow, and what we stand to gain by putting such a plan into action. What follows is both a demonstration of Obama's understanding of the problems that are plaguing teachers and students around the country every day, but also proof-positive of his solid judgment and understanding of the importance of education reform to the continued well-being of the United States as a whole.


Throughout our history, education has been at the heart of a bargain this nation makes with its citizens: If you work hard and take responsibility, you'll have a chance for a better life. And in a world where knowledge determines value in the job market, where a child in Los Angeles has to compete not just with a child in Boston but also with millions of children in Bangalore and Beiking, too many of America's schools are not holding up their end of the bargain.
In 2005 I paid a visit to Thornton Township High School, a predominantly black high school in Chicago's southern suburbs. My staff had worked with teachers there to organize a youth town hall meeting--representatives of each class spent weeks conducting surveys to find out what issues their fellow students were concerned about and then presented the results in a series of questions to me. At the meeting they talked about violence in the neighborhoods and a shortage of computers in their classrooms. But their number one issue was this: Because the school district couldn't afford to keep teachers for a full school day, Thornton let out every day at 1:30 in the afternoon. With the abbreviated schedule, there was no time for students to take science lab or foreign language classes.
How come we're getting shortchanged? they asked me. Seems like nobody even expects us to go to college, they said.
They wanted more school.
We've become accustomed to such stories, of poor black and Latino children languishing in schools that can't prepare them for the old industrial economy, much less the information age. But the problems with our educational system aren't restricted to the inner city. America now has one of the highest high school dropout rates in the industrialized world. By their senior year, American high school students score lower on math and science tests than most of their foreign peers. Half of all teenagers can't understand basic fractions, half of all nine-year-olds can't perform basic multiplication or division, and although more American students than ever are taking college entrance exams, only 22 percent are prepared to take college-level classes in English, math and science.
I don't believe government alone can turn these statistics around. Parents have the primary responsibility for instilling an ethic of hard work and educational achievement in their children. But parents rightly expect their government, through the public schools, to serve as full partners in the educational process-- just as it has for earlier generations of Americans.
Unfortunately, instead of innovation and bold reform of our schools--the reforms that would allow the kids at Thornton to compete for the jobs at Google---what we've seen from government for close to two decades has been tinkering around the edges and a tolerance for mediocrity. Partly this is a result of ideological battles that are as outdated as they are predictable. Many conservatives argue that money doesn't matter in raising educational achievement; that the problems in public schools are caused by hapless bureaucracies and intransigent teachers' unions; and that the only solution is to break up the government's education monopoly by handing out vouchers. Meanwhile, those on the left often find themselves defending an indefensible status quo, insisting that more spending alone will improve educational outcomes.
Both assumptions are wrong. Money does matter in education--otherwise why would parents pay so much to live in well-funded suburban school districts?--and many urban and rural schools still suffer from overcrowded classrooms, outdated books, inadequate equipment, and teachers who are forced to pay out of pocket for basic supplies. But there's no denying that the way many public schools are managed poses at least as big a problem as how well they're funded.
Our task, then, is to identify those reforms that have the highest impact on student achievement, fund them adequately, and eliminate those programs that don't produce results. And in fact we already have hard evidence of reforms that work: a more challenging and rigorous curriculum with emphasis on math, science and literacy skills; longer hours and more days to give children the time and sustained attention they need to learn; early childhood education for every child, so they're not already behind on their first day of school; meaningful, performance-based assessments that can provide a fuller picture of how a student is doing; and the recruitment and training of transformative principals and more effective teachers.
This last point--the need for good teachers--deserves emphasis. Recent studies show that the single most important factor in determining a student's achievement isn't the color of his skin or where he comes from, but who the child's teacher is. Unfortunately, too many of our schools depend on inexperienced teachers with little training in the subjects they're teaching, and too often those teachers are concentrated in already struggling schools. Moreover, the situation is getting worse, not better: Each year, school districts are hemorrhaging experienced teachers as the Baby Boomers reach retirement, and two million teachers must be recruited in the next decade just to meet the needs of rising enrollment.
The problem isn't that there's no interest in teaching; I constantly meet young people who've graduated from top colleges and have signed up, through programs like Teach for America, for two-year stints in some of the country's toughest public schools. They find the work extraordinarily rewarding; the kids they teach benefit from their creativity and enthusiasm. By by the end of two years, most have either changed careers or moved to suburban schools--a consequence of low pay, a lack of support from the educational bureaucracy, and a pervasive feeling of isolation.
If we're serious about building a twenty-first-century school system, we're going to have to take the teaching profession seriously. This means changing the certification process to allow a chemistry major who wants to teach to avoid expensive additional course work; pairing up new recruits with master teachers to break their isolation; and giving proven teachers more control over what goes on in their classrooms.
It also means paying teachers what they're worth. There's no reason why an experienced, highly qualified, and effective teacher shouldn't earn #100,000 annually at the peak of his or her career. Highly skilled teachers in such critical fields as math and science--as well as those willing to teach in the toughest urban schools--should be paid even more.
There's just one catch. In exchange for more money, teachers need to become more accountable for their performance--and school districts need to have great ability to get rid of ineffective teachers.
So far, teacher's unions have resisted the idea of pay for performance, in part because it could be disbursed at the whim of a principal. The unions also argue--rightly, I think--that most school districts rely solely on test scores to measure teacher performance, and that test scores may be highly dependent on factors beyond any teacher's control, like the number of low-income or special-needs students in their classroom.
But these aren't insoluble problems. Working with teacher's unions, states and school districts can develop better measures of performance, ones that combine test data with a system of peer review (most teachers can tell you with amazing consistency which teachers in their schools are really good, and which are really bad). And we can make sure that nonperforming teachers no longer handicap children who want to learn.
Indeed, if we're to make investments required to revamp our schools, then we will need to rediscover our faith that every child can learn. Recently, I had the chance to visit Dodge Elementary School, on the West Side of Chicago, a school that had once been near the bottom on every measure but that is in the midst of a turnaround. While I was talking to some of the teachers about the challenges they faced, one young teacher mentioned what she called the "These Kids Syndrome"--the willingness of society to find a million excuses for why "these kids" can't learn; how "these kids come from tough backgrounds" or "these kids are too far behind."
"When I hear that term, it drives me nuts," the teacher told me. "They're not 'these kids.' They're our kids."
How America's economy performs in the years to come may depend largely on how well we take such wisdom to heart.

This passage was taken from pages 159 through pages 163 of The Audacity of Hope, copyright 2006, Barack Obama, published by Three Riverse press, an imprint of Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Day Two, March 26

In case anybody missed it (I was actually teaching when it was broadcast last Tuesday), last week Obama delivered what is already being heralded as a landmark speech on racial tension in America. I think that this speech, while not approaching the importance of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech, as some have equated it with, is vital to hear in order to get a grasp of where Obama really stands on the issues surrounding race. It is a subject that has the candidate trapped in an ongoing media tug-of-war, sometimes raising his popularity, sometimes forcing him out of popular favor, but no matter its effect on him, the matter of race is constantly hovering over him. In this moving oratory, Barack speaks from the heart to address Americans of all races, asking his audience to reconcile not only their racial presumptions about him, but about their fellow citizens as well.

Here is a Youtube capture of the speech, from CNN's feed:



Or you can click here to read NPR'S transcript of the Obama speech.

A testament to Obama's ability as both a writer and a speaker is the fact that the speech is just as moving to read as it is to listen to. Much like the manuscripts of his books, simply reading the words on a page (or computer screen) has the power to make the reader feel like you're right there in the live audience. Either way, make sure you hear it for yourself.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Day One, March 25

For my first day's post of outside content, I present an entry from another blog, the Daily Kos (I told you it wouldn't take long to do this). The title of this entry is 'I Refuse To Buy into the Obama Hype'. Posted on February 20, the entry is written by a poster nicknamed 'Grassroots Mom', and is meant as her personal investigation into figuring out which Democratic candidate is up to snuff, and which one is better left to eating dust. Its content is basically a condensed summary on proposed legislature made by Clinton and Obama in the Senate in 2007, as an examination of the candidate's values as well as their ability to get things accomplished in congress. I strongly recommend you to read this insightful glance into who's really getting bills passed in the Senate.

Some of the enlightening facts uncovered by the blog include...

  • Senator Obama has authored ten bills in health care last year, and one of them passed. Senator Clinton has authored many more bills aimed at improving health care, but none of them have passed.
  • A link to an Obama-authored bill, S.453, the proposed 'Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention Act of 2007'. This bill addresses several specific instances of boldfaced voter deception or intimidation in recent American history, and aims to prevent it from occuring in the future. Click here to read S.453.
  • In 2007, Obama introduced in regards to cleaning up air and supporting alternative forms of energy. This is not a platform that Obama is rarely heard boasting about, but he obviously supports legislation to protect environment and our resources.
  • More than once, the author points out how Clinton has proposed bills that are without a single co-sponsor in the Senate. Her entry wraps up by mentioning how Senator Clinton, Ted Kennedy, and even Republicans are willing to co-sponsor on Obama's many bills. This is a testament to Obama's ability as both a leader in getting legislation passed, as well as the 'uniter, not a divider' angle that you've heard so much about.
Although it provides some modest fuel for Obama's fire, and some handy credit for his experience and successes in his term as Senator, the real reason I posted this is because it as an example of one mother's examination of the leading candidates to find out which one is right for her. It is surprisingly unbiased, and focuses on the candidate's effectiveness in their Senatorial work. Practically any time I turned on the news this month, I couldn't help but feel one of the few platforms the Clinton campaign still has going for them is the advantage of political experience. But then again, as Grassroots Mom points out, if Senator Clinton was really kicking ass on Capitol Hill, wouldn't she be able to get more support from her fellow Senators to co-sponsor a bill or two? Or manage to get a single one of her well-meaning, well-written health care initiatives passed? Obama has a lot more Senatorial clout than most folks realize, which will help make him a worthy president, not to mention the type of leader that can recruit members of the opposite party behind his causes. At ajuncture where the opposing campaign is grasping at straws to try and swat down the success Obama has had in his career in Washington, this sort of examination of experience couldn't come at a better time.

Prologue to a Blog

I started this blog on March 25, 2008 with the goal of raising awareness of Barack Obama. It seems redundant to try and make a name for a person who's already enjoying airtime on the mainstream news, often the top story, every day, due to the success of--and sometimes the controversies surrounding--Obama's campaign for president. And it is redundant. It's really redundant. There are plenty of other blogs out there that will more eloquently, passionately, and succinctly sum up the many excellent reasons that this man deserves your vote for president, and I hope you'll go read them. I'm sure I'll be linking to some of them before long. So in an age where competition for the superior product, especially political ones, is so cutthroat, why would I spend my time with a humble little blog to promote a man who is a stone's throw from the clinching the Democratic nomination for President?

The answer is a no-brainer: simply put, because I think it could make a difference. This blog is my small way to give air to the many reasons why myself and so many other Americans find Obama such a moving, motivating man. Before this current campaign season, my mind reels to think of a single political candidate in my lifetime, local or national, that would motivate me to think of a new reason, every single day, to make him or her worth voting for. Let alone making these reasons public. But from here on out, that's exactly what this blog will be doing. Every day, I'm going to post a new speech, video, quote, debate, or news item relating to the Senator, in the hopes that somebody will read it, consider it, and maybe get a little push in their own investigation for truth in what's going to be an undeniably hairy campaign season.

The content of this journal will be almost entirely constructed by the news media, or Obama himself, which makes it much easier for me to write. He proposes a noteworthy bill in the Senate, an article or gives another one of his trademark outstanding oratories, I'll post it here. One thing I am going to stray from as much as possible is any content that I deem to be full of hype, intentionally distorted facts, carries a strong partisan bias, or is overly critical of another politician. With most politicians, this sort of content would make for a very difficult search every day, but Barack has already made my work handy, even joyful. I despise the played-out name calling and retaliatory remarks of political campaigning as much as everybody else does, and I will screen all content prior to posting to make sure that this blog is free from this nonsense. I recognize that this goes on, but that doesn't mean its going to happen on here. Although I welcome any readers to contribute comments, including criticisms and counter arguments to any blog entry, I will ask them to make sure their own contributions stray from this mutually degrading pap as much as possible. Excepting a few recent slip-ups in the past six weeks or so, Obama's conduct on the campaign trail has been remarkably clean, a standard I intend on upholding for as long as this goes on. I also recognize the overwhelming hype that has circled around the Senator's campaign long before I got it into my head to start this meager blog, and I don't intend on contributing to any empty showmanship just to get his name out there, either. This is addressed in the next blog entry.

One final motive that I had in starting this blog is inspired by Obama in a more subtle way, but perhaps a more meaningful one. One of the most impressive aspects of the Obama campaign is the same one that is being overlooked by the mainstream media: the overwhelming power of the individual to get behind this candidate and make a difference in an immediate, localized fashion. It's a rare and inspiring opportunity for people to take action for a candidate, and to have their actions add up to the kind of change that can alter history for the better. I have no illusions about the potential success of this endeavor. If five of my close friends take the time to read this far, and continue reading future entries, then that's five people who have at least been exposed to the politics of Senator Obama and the good that he has to offer. If those five readers tell five friends, family members, or classmates about what they've seen or read, then that effectively encircles a wider community, spreading the awareness further as it goes. I'm not here to raise money for Obama, or even to necessarily convince you that he's the candidate worthy of your vote (though these would be welcome outcomes of the things posted here). All I'm trying to do is use my own voice to shed light on a man who New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson has precisely described as "a once-in-a-lifetime leader". I'm casting my vote for Obama this November, now let me tell you why...