domenica 23 marzo 2008

Video "More voices"


Barack talked earlier this week about bridging divides and bringing people together to solve our common problems.
That's not just the theme of this campaign -- it's been the theme of his life's work.
When Barack came back to Chicago after law school, he led a voter registration drive to attract people to the political process.
The deadline to register to vote in Pennsylvania is fast approaching -- Monday, March 24. This is the last opportunity for Pennsylvanians who are unregistered -- as well as Independents and Republicans -- to register as Democrats so they can support Barack in the primary.
Watch this short video about Barack's voter registration efforts and start making calls to help register Pennsylvanians right away:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f102ddf9808c1444/PZ7pdK/VEsE/

Registering voters and bringing more voices into the political process is what this campaign is all about.
In the ten contests left in this race, we have an opportunity to build a base of support that will lead Democrats to victory up and down the ballot in November.
But more importantly, we have the chance to transform our party and our politics. Our next opportunity is Pennsylvania.
By bringing in new voters and encouraging voters who have gotten fed up to get involved again, we can move beyond the divisive and petty tactics that have dominated our politics for far too long. We can send a message that we're ready for something new -- something positive that brings us together around a shared goal of a better future for all Americans.
You can help build our movement and create a lasting change in our party and in our country.
Start making calls for this historic drive to register Pennsylvania voters:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f102ddf9808c1444/ZBHoly/VEsF/

One of the special things about this campaign is that it's inspired people from all walks of life to take action.
Supporters are organizing in their neighborhoods and traveling across the country to help register voters. People like you are making calls to crucial states and talking to potential voters about a new kind of leadership and a new kind of politics.
There are ten contests left in this race, and we can set the tone for all of them in Pennsylvania. Your voice can make a difference in how they turn out. You can have an important impact on the direction of the Democratic Party and politics in this country.
Be a voice for change and bring more voices into the political process:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f102ddf9808c1444/ZBHoly/VEsC/

Thank you for everything you're doing,

Jon

Jon Carson
National Voter Contact Director
Obama for America

sabato 22 marzo 2008

Big endorsement


This morning Governor Bill Richardson endorsed Barack Obama's candidacy for president.
Governor Richardson called for a new generation of leadership that would bring us together here at home and strengthen our relationships with our allies abroad.
He praised Barack's speech on race in America this week as an example of courageous, thoughtful, and inspiring leadership. He thanked Barack for speaking to us as adults, and reminding us that cynicism is not realism, and that hope is not folly.
Governor Richardson also said Barack would be an outstanding Commander-in-Chief. He recognized Barack's opposition to the Iraq war before it began, and emphasized the need for a President that understands the national security challenges facing America.
Watch the video of Bill Richardson and Barack Obama, and make a donation of $25 today:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f1083bb1db40a026/twTZSY/VEsF/
Thank you,

David

David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America

venerdì 21 marzo 2008

La nostra sfida!

Senator Clinton and Senator McCain are reading from the same political playbook as they attack Barack on foreign policy.
They have both criticized Barack's commitment to act against top al Qaeda terrorists if others can't or won't act.
And they have both dismissed his call for renewed diplomacy as naïve while mistakenly standing behind George Bush's policy of non-engagement that just isn't working.
But most of all -- after five years of overwhelming evidence that we are less safe, less able to shape events abroad, and more divided at home -- Senator Clinton and Senator McCain are failing to address the consequences of a war they both supported that should have never been authorized and never been waged.
We need a leader who had the judgment to oppose this war before it began and who has a clear plan to end it.
But Barack is facing a two-front battle against Senator Clinton and Senator McCain. Make a donation of $25 to support this campaign today:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f117f19ceff6ae18/VES3an/VEsE/

We knew at the beginning of this campaign that we'd be up against the full force of the conventional thinking that grips Washington.
But no one could have imagined it would go on this long, or that we'd have to fight this battle on two fronts at the same time.
Senator Clinton's campaign, with her chances of winning dwindling and our delegate lead even larger than it was before her so-called comeback on March 4th, has adopted a "kitchen-sink" strategy to throw everything they can at us. Her campaign has made it clear they will do and say anything to win this nomination.
Senator McCain, now the presumptive Republican nominee, is already running his general election campaign. He's so eager to justify another 100 years of war in Iraq and drum up conflict with Iran that he and his campaign have been making sloppy and woefully false assertions about links between Iran and al Qaeda in Iraq.
We've got to take on both Senator Clinton and Senator McCain at the same time.
Your support now is more important than ever -- please make a donation of $25:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f117f19ceff6ae18/R8DoUw/VEsF/

Yesterday, Barack laid out a clear plan to make America more secure and end the war in Iraq.
Today, he laid out the economic costs of the war that Senator Clinton and Senator McCain supported.
In both speeches -- and in his speech on race in America earlier this week -- Barack Obama demonstrated that he is the candidate with the courage and judgment to tackle the challenges we face.
The choice Americans have in this election is clear -- and your support right now sends a message to those who support the status quo that it is time for a new kind of leadership.
Please do what you can to help fight this two-front battle for change:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f117f19ceff6ae18/qNoI8B/VEsC/

Thank you,

David

David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America

mercoledì 19 marzo 2008

Five years later

Five years ago today, President George W. Bush launched a war that should never have been authorized based on faulty premises and bad intelligence.
This war has now lasted longer than World War I, World War II, or the Civil War.
Nearly four thousand Americans have given their lives. Thousands more have been wounded. Even under the best-case scenarios, this war will cost American taxpayers well over a trillion dollars.
And where are we for all of this sacrifice?
We are less safe and less able to shape events abroad. We are divided at home, and our alliances around the world have been strained. The threats of a new century have roiled the waters of peace and stability, and yet America remains anchored in Iraq.
I am running for President because it's time to turn the page on a failed ideology and a fundamentally flawed political strategy, so that we can make pragmatic judgments to keep our country safe.
That's what I did when I stood up and opposed this war from the start and said that we needed to finish the fight against al Qaeda. And that's what I'll do as President of the United States.
Please take a few minutes to read my strategy for ending the war in Iraq and making America safer. I hope you will sign on and show your support:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f16e7372b7c59fb4/L0D1Fw/VEsE/

Senator Clinton says that she and Senator McCain have passed a "Commander-in-Chief test" -- not because of the judgments they've made, but because of the years they've spent in Washington.
She made a similar argument when she said her vote for war was based on her experience at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.
But here is the stark reality: there is a security gap in this country -- a gap between the rhetoric of those who claim to be tough on national security, and the reality of growing insecurity caused by their decisions.
It is time to have a debate with Senator McCain about the future of our national security. And the way to win that debate and keep America safe is to offer a clear contrast -- a clean break from the failed policies and politics of the past.
Nowhere is that break more badly needed than in Iraq.
Join me in supporting an end to this war and a plan for a safer America:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f16e7372b7c59fb4/L0D1Fw/VEsF/

The judgment that matters most on Iraq -- and on any decision to deploy military force -- is the judgment made first.
If you believe we are fighting the right war, then the problems we face are purely tactical in nature. That is what Senator McCain wants to discuss -- tactics. What he and the Administration have failed to present is an overarching strategy: how the war in Iraq enhances our long-term security, or will in the future.
That's why this Administration cannot answer the simple question posed by Senator John Warner in hearings last year: Are we safer because of this war? And that is why Senator McCain can argue -- as he did last year -- that we couldn't leave Iraq because violence was up, and then argue this year that we can't leave Iraq because violence is down.
When you have no overarching strategy, there is no clear definition of success.
Success comes to be defined as the ability to maintain a flawed policy indefinitely. Here is the truth: fighting a war without end will not force the Iraqis to take responsibility for their own future. And fighting in a war without end will not make the American people safer.
When I am Commander-in-Chief, I will set a new goal on Day One: I will end this war. Not because politics compels it. Not because our troops cannot bear the burden -- as heavy as it is. But because it is the right thing to do for our national security, and it will ultimately make us safer.
Show your support for a clear strategy to end the war in Iraq and focus our national security efforts on making America safer:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f16e7372b7c59fb4/L0D1Fw/VEsC/

Here are the core elements of my strategy to address our critical national security challenges in the 21st century:
End the war in Iraq, removing our troops at a pace of 1 to 2 combat brigades per month;
Finally finish the fight against the Taliban, root out al Qaeda and invest in the people of Afghanistan and Pakistan, while making aid to the Pakistani government conditional;
Act aggressively to stop nuclear proliferation and to secure all loose nuclear materials around the world;
Double our foreign assistance to cut extreme poverty in half;
Invest in a clean energy future to wean the U.S. off of foreign oil and to lead the world against the threat of global climate change;
Rebuild our military capability by increasing the number of soldiers, marines, and special forces troops, and insist on adequate training and time off between deployments;
Renew American diplomacy by talking to our adversaries as well as our friends; increasing the size of the Foreign Service and the Peace Corps; and creating an America's Voice Corps.
Please take a minute to show your support for this plan:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f16e7372b7c59fb4/L0D1Fw/VEsD/

We are at a defining moment in our history.
This must be the election when America comes together behind a common purpose on behalf of our security and our values.
That is what we do as Americans. It's how we founded a republic based on freedom, and faced down fascism. It's how we defended democracy through a Cold War, and shined a light of hope bright enough to be seen in the darkest corners of the world.
When America leads with principle and pragmatism, hope can triumph over fear. It is time, once again, for America to lead.
Thank you,

Barack Obama

martedì 18 marzo 2008

Obama in his own words

Barack Obama just finished a major speech on race in America and building a more perfect union.
You should see it and read it for yourself.
Here's the video and full text:



http://my.barackobama.com/hisownwords

Please forward this message to everyone you know.
Thank you,

David

lunedì 17 marzo 2008

More voices

When Michelle and I decided to enter this race more than a year ago, one of our hopes was to bring people back into the political process.
Like so many Americans, we'd been exhausted and frustrated by the slash-and-burn politics that had come to dominate our elections. Smallness and pettiness were the rule, not the exception. And it seemed like every day, more and more Americans were tuning out their democracy.
This election, we're seeing something different.
Nearly as many people have participated in the Democratic primary this year than in 2000 and 2004 combined. And there are still ten contests left to go.
As we enter the final stretch of elections, we have a unique opportunity to shape the outcome -- and the outcome of elections up and down the ballot this November.
The last day to register new voters in Pennsylvania is March 24th. In North Carolina and Indiana, it's in early April. And in West Virginia and Kentucky, the voter registration deadline is a little more than a month from today.
So today we're launching a national initiative to register an unprecedented number of voters in each of the upcoming states.
No matter where you live, you can help get people registered in the upcoming states. You can make phone calls from home, reach out to people you know in these states, or even sign up to travel to one of these states to be on the ground for this massive voter registration effort.
Learn more about what you can do to bring as many voters as possible into the political process:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f640dc7586e91d99/NNcmkQ/VEsE/

Young voters have shaped this presidential primary like no other.
In Iowa, South Carolina, Georgia, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Mississippi, the youth vote has tripled since 2004. And in all other states it has reached record levels. And these young voters are breaking 2-to-1 Democratic.
Statistics show that if we can get young people to vote Democratic now, they are far more likely to vote regularly -- and vote for Democrats -- throughout their lives.
So by getting involved and helping to register voters, you're not just increasing the number of voters in this election. You're increasing the number of people who will be engaged Democratic voters for the rest of their lives.
Sign up to help bring More Voices into the Democratic primary today:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f640dc7586e91d99/NNcmkQ/VEsF/

More than fifteen years ago, after I finished law school, I came back to Chicago and led a voter registration drive on the South Side.
For months, our passionate and hardworking volunteers pounded the pavement -- registering folks everywhere they could, from barber shops to grocery stores to apartment building lobbies to local fairs. One particularly enthusiastic woman -- who until then had never been involved in politics -- made it her personal goal to register 100 voters a day, and ultimately registered 3,000 new voters.
In the end, we made a real difference in Illinois. Our team registered more than 150,000 new voters, not only impacting local elections, but helping to shift the balance in state and national races as well. Illinois went from voting Republican in 1988 to Democratic in 1992.
That lesson has informed how we've run this campaign. And now we have an unbelievable opportunity to apply it on a massive scale.
When new or returning voters participate in the Democratic primary, they are far more likely to come back and participate in the general election.
That's not just good for presidential candidates; it's good for Democrats up and down the ticket. More engaged, committed Democratic voters in the primaries means more votes this November in all fifty states -- from competitive statewide races to state legislative and city council seats everywhere.
You can make a difference right now. Encourage someone to register in time to participate in the presidential race in their state.
Learn more and get involved here:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f640dc7586e91d99/NNcmkQ/VEsC/

Thanks for all your hard work,

Barack

P.S. -- Here's an example of how you can get involved right now.
In Pennsylvania, Independent voters must register as Democrats by March 24th in order to vote in the primary. One supporter made calls this weekend and reached 10 Independent voters who wanted to vote for us -- four of whom needed information about how to register.
Our team has created an online tool that provides all the information you need to make calls from home.
Get started now:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/m/f640dc7586e91d99/Xn2Z5P/VEsD/

giovedì 13 marzo 2008

Spun out

When we won Iowa, the Clinton campaign said it's not the number of states you win, it's "a contest for delegates."
When we won a significant lead in delegates, they said it's really about which states you win.
When we won South Carolina, they discounted the votes of African-Americans.
When we won predominantly white, rural states like Idaho, Utah, and Nebraska, they said those didn't count because they won't be competitive in the general election.
When we won in Washington State, Wisconsin, and Missouri -- general election battlegrounds where polls show Barack is a stronger candidate against John McCain -- the Clinton campaign attacked those voters as "latte-sipping" elitists.
And now that we've won more than twice as many states, the Clinton spin is that only certain states really count.
But the facts are clear.
For all their attempts to discount, distract, and distort, we have won more delegates, more states, and more votes.
Meanwhile, more than half of the votes that Senator Clinton has won so far have come from just five states. And in four of these five states, polls show that Barack would be a stronger general election candidate against McCain than Clinton.
We're ready to take on John McCain. But we also need to build operations in places like Pennsylvania, Indiana, North Carolina, and Oregon that will hold their primaries in April and May.
Barack Obama needs your support to fight this two-front battle. Please make a donation of $25 right now:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

With our overwhelming victory in the Mississippi primary yesterday, our lead in earned delegates is now wider than it was on March 3rd, before the contests in Ohio and Texas.
And thanks to your help, we have dramatically increased our support among so-called "superdelegates" -- Governors, Members of Congress, and party officials who have a vote at the Democratic National Convention in August.
As the number of remaining delegates dwindles, Hillary Clinton's path to the nomination seems less and less plausible.
Now that Mississippi is behind us, we move on to the next ten contests. The Clinton campaign would like to focus your attention only on Pennsylvania -- a state in which they have already declared that they are "unbeatable."
But Pennsylvania is only one of those 10 remaining contests, each important in terms of allocating delegates and ultimately deciding who our nominee will be.
We have activated our volunteer networks in each of these upcoming battlegrounds. We're putting staff on the ground and building our organization everywhere.
The key to victory is not who wins the states that the Clinton campaign thinks are important. The key to victory is realizing that every vote and every voter matters.
Throughout this entire process, the Clinton campaign has cherry-picked states, diminished caucuses, and moved the goal posts to create a shifting, twisted rationale for why they should win the nomination despite winning fewer primaries, fewer states, fewer delegates, and fewer votes.
We must stand up to the same-old Washington politics. Barack has won twice as many states, large and small, in every region of the country -- many by landslide margins. And this movement is expanding the base of the Democratic Party by attracting new voters in record numbers and bringing those who had lost hope back into the political process.
Push back against the spin and help build the operation to win more delegates in these upcoming contests:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

Thank you for your support and for everything you've done to build a movement that is engaging voters and winning contests in every part of this country.

David

David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America

mercoledì 12 marzo 2008

Vittorie e attacchi

It's tough to think of two states more different than Wyoming and Mississippi.
But we won Wyoming on Saturday, and we just learned that we won Mississippi by a large margin tonight.
Between those two states, we picked up enough delegates to erase the gains by Senator Clinton last Tuesday and add to our substantial lead in earned delegates. And in doing so we showed the strength and breadth of this movement.
But just turn on the news and you'll see that Senator Clinton continues to run an expensive, negative campaign against us. Each day her campaign launches a new set of desperate attacks.
They're not just attacking me; they're attacking you.
Over the weekend, an aide to Senator Clinton attempted to diminish the overwhelming number of contests we've won by referring to places we've prevailed as "boutique" states and our supporters as the "latte-sipping crowd."
I'm not sure how those terms apply to Mississippi and Wyoming -- or Virginia, Iowa, Louisiana, or Idaho for that matter.
I know that our victories in all of these states demonstrate a rejection of this kind of petty, divisive campaigning.
But the fact remains that Senator Clinton's campaign will continue to attack us using the same old Washington playbook. And now that John McCain is the Republican nominee, we are forced to campaign on two fronts.
It's up to you to fight back. Please make a donation of $25 today:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

Thank you,

Barack

domenica 9 marzo 2008

Indiani e cow boys scelgono Obama

L'America è tornata a votare per le primarie. Dopo gli importanti Texas e Ohio è stato il piccolo Wyoming, un grande territorio dal peso elettoralmente insignificante o quasi ad andare ai seggi. Ha vinto Barack Obama, dato in testa dalle proiezioni CNN basate sul 91% dei voti per 58-41 su Hillary Clinton. Sono stati chiamati al voto 59 mila elettori per 12 delegati. Tutti democratici. I Repubblicani in Wyoming hanno già votato (il 5 gennaio scorso, vinse Mitt Romney davanti a Fred Thompson), il loro candidato ce l'hanno già (John McCain) e il voto odierno non li riguarda. Riguarda invece i democratici. Molto. L'appuntamento del Wyoming, che in tempi normali sarebbe risultato del tutto secondario, in questa fase delle presidenziali 2008 secondario non è perché in casa democratica quelli che si stanno vivendo non sono affatto tempi normali. Troppa tensione. Per questo il partito spera che il Wyoming abbia un effetto calmante sulle polemiche interne. La corsa alla nomination vede sempre più contrapposti i due candidati. La campagna di Obama accusa Hillary di giocare sporco, la campagna di Hillary accusa Obama di "doppio linguaggio" e di inesperienza, una consigliera di Obama ha dato a Hillary del "mostro", una consigliera di Hillary a suo tempo aveva dato a Obama del "drogato". Entrambi dimessi. "Troppe parole, troppi nervi scoperti, così non va bene" dice il partito, che spera in un effetto Wyoming capace di raffreddare gli animi. Tanto più che i delegati in palio sono solo 12. Ma è bene che la coppia Hillary-Obama si renda conto di questo dato: mentre l'America Repubblicana si gode con calma la sua nomination di John McCain, e pianifica i mesi da qui al 4 novembre, l'America Democratica assiste a una lotta sempre più fratricida che rischia di indebolirla al punto da mettere a rischio la conquista della Casa Bianca. Per questo il Partito Democratico spera che il piccolo Wyoming abbia se non altro l'effetto di rasserenare i toni. Barack Obama ha vinto (58 a 41). Era previsto. Secondo la CNN dei 12 delegati, 7 andranno a lui, 4 a Hillary, 1 è da assegnare. Il voto in Wyoming non è stato tanto l'occasione per definire la nomination, quanto per riflettere circa l'opportunità di far rientrare nel gioco del voto democratico Stati importanti come Florida e Michigan a suo tempo esclusi per 'indisciplina'. Nonostante le indicazioni ricevute, sia Florida sia Michigan avevano infatti voluto anticipare il loro voto a gennaio. Il presidente del comitato direttivo del Democratic Party, Howard Dean, li aveva puniti: nessuno dei vostri delegati avrà posto alla convention di Denver. I risultati di Texas e Ohio hanno però portato molti esponenti del partito a chiedere di rivedere la decisione. "E' paradossale che uno Stato come la Florida non partecipi alla nomination" hanno dichiaro alcuni superdelegati. E il partito si è ulteriormente spaccato. Hillary (secondo calcoli CNN) può contare ora su 1.428 delegati, Obama su 1.527. Non sono stati certo i 12 del Wyoming a decidere. Ma l'appuntamento è servito per fare il punto sul dibattito circa l'opportunità di riaprire a Florida e Michigan. Se nei due Stati si tornasse a votare per le primarie, i delegati in palio sarebbero 210 in Florida e 156 in Michigan. Senza contare che la battaglia campale - su questo nessuno ha dubbi - si giocherà il 22 aprile in Pennsylvania, terra di lavoratori e piccole imprese oggi alle prese con una crisi economica senza precedenti. Può il partito democratico affrontare un tema così delicato presentandosi diviso?

Luciano Clerico per ANSA

venerdì 7 marzo 2008

The math - di Barack Obama, in riferimento alla precedente comunicazione di David Plouffe

Want to add some more news to David's note about the state of the race.
As you know, we've won 27 of 41 contests and have maintained our commanding lead among pledged delegates.
But today I want to share another staggering number: supporters like you donated more than $55 million to this campaign in the month of February.
That's a humbling achievement, and I am very grateful for your support.
No campaign has ever raised this much in a single month in the history of presidential primaries. But more important than the total is how we did it -- more than 90% of donations were $100 or less, and more than 385,000 new donors in February pushed us past our goal of more than 1,000,000 people owning a piece of this campaign.
From the beginning, this campaign has always been funded by a movement of grassroots supporters giving whatever they can afford. And unlike Senator Clinton and Senator McCain, we have never taken money from lobbyists or PACs.
Senator Clinton has decided to use her resources to wage a negative, throw-everything-including-the-kitchen-sink campaign. John McCain has clinched the Republican nomination and is attacking us daily. But I will continue to vigorously defend my record and make the case for change that will improve the lives of all Americans.
I need your help to continue this battle on two separate fronts. Now is the time to step up and own a piece of this campaign.
Please make a donation of $25 today:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

Thank you for your support,

Barack

giovedì 6 marzo 2008

The math - di David Plouffe

Our projections show the most likely outcome of yesterday's elections will be that Hillary Clinton gained 187 delegates, and we gained 183.
That's a net gain of 4 delegates out of more than 370 delegates available from all the states that voted.
For comparison, that's less than half our net gain of 9 delegates from the District of Columbia alone. It's also less than our net gain of 8 from Nebraska, or 12 from Washington State. And it's considerably less than our net gain of 33 delegates from Georgia.
The task for the Clinton campaign yesterday was clear. In order to have a plausible path to the nomination, they needed to score huge delegate victories and cut into our lead.
They failed.
It's clear, though, that Senator Clinton wants to continue an increasingly desperate, increasingly negative -- and increasingly expensive -- campaign to tear us down.
That's her decision. But it's not stopping John McCain, who clinched the Republican nomination last night, from going on the offensive. He's already made news attacking Barack, and that will only become more frequent in the coming days.
Right now, it's essential for every single supporter of Barack Obama to step up and help fight this two-front battle. In the face of attacks from Hillary Clinton and John McCain, we need to be ready to take them on.
Will you make an online donation of $25 right now?

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

The chatter among pundits may have gotten better for the Clinton campaign after last night, but by failing to cut into our lead, the math -- and their chances of winning -- got considerably worse.
Today, we still have a lead of more than 150 delegates, and there are only 611 pledged delegates left to win in the upcoming contests.
By a week from today, we will have competed in Wyoming and Mississippi. Two more states and 45 more delegates will be off the table.
But if Senator Clinton wants to continue this, let's show that we're ready.
Make an online donation of $25 now to show you're willing to fight for this:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

This nomination process is an opportunity to decide what our party needs to stand for in this election.
We can either take on John McCain with a candidate who's already united Republicans and Independents against us, or we can do it with a campaign that's united Americans from all parties around a common purpose.
We can debate John McCain about who can clean up Washington by nominating a candidate who's taken more money from lobbyists than he has, or we can do it with a campaign that hasn't taken a dime of their money because we've been funded by you.
We can present the American people with a candidate who stood shoulder-to-shoulder with McCain on the worst foreign policy disaster of our generation, and agrees with him that George Bush deserves the benefit of the doubt on Iran, or we can nominate someone who opposed the war in Iraq from the beginning and will not support a march to war with Iran.
John McCain may have a long history of straight talk and independent thinking, but he has made the decision in this campaign to offer four more years of the very same policies that have failed us for the last eight.
We need a Democratic candidate who will present the starkest contrast to those failed policies of the past.
And that candidate is Barack Obama.
Please make a donation of $25 now:

https://donate.barackobama.com/math

Thank you,

David

David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America

mercoledì 5 marzo 2008

Cos'è successo oggi

Pubblichiamo l'e-mail di Barack Obama pervenutaci questa mattina, a conclusione delle "ostilità" elettorali di questa notte.

We may not know the final outcome of today's voting until morning, but the results so far make one thing clear.
When the dust settles from today's contests, we will maintain our substantial lead in delegates. And thanks to millions of people standing for change, we will keep adding delegates and capture the Democratic nomination.
We knew from the day we began this journey that the road would be long. And we knew what we were up against.
We knew that the closer we got to the change we seek, the more we'd see of the politics we're trying to end -- the attacks and distortions that try to distract us from the issues that matter to people's lives, the stunts and the tactics that ask us to fear instead of hope.
But this time -- this year -- it will not work. The challenges are too great. The stakes are too high.
Americans need real change.
In the coming weeks, we will begin a great debate about the future of this country with a man who has served it bravely and loves it dearly. And we will offer two very different visions of the America we see in the twenty-first century.
John McCain has already dismissed our call for change as eloquent but empty.
But he should know that it's a call that did not begin with my words. It's the resounding call from every corner of this country, from first-time voters and lifelong cynics, from Democrats and Republicans alike.
And together you and I are going to grow this movement to deliver that change in November.
Thank you,

Barack

martedì 4 marzo 2008

Il giorno dell'O.K. Corral


Come accadde a Tombstone il 26 ottobre 1881, dove si svolse l'epico scontro tra lo sceriffo Wyatt Earp che, insieme ai suoi fratelli Morgan Earp e Virgil Earp e l'amico Doc Holliday, duellarono contro Billy Claiborne, Frank McLaury, Tom McLaury, Billy Clanton ed Ike Clanton e dove ebbero la peggio i due McLaury e Billy Clanton che vennero uccisi, così oggi un'altro epico scontro del west americano sta per avverarsi.
Ma questa volta i rivali non si confronteranno con le pallottole, ma con le armi più potenti di questa epoca: i voti degli elettori.
Obama come Wyatt, si sta incamminando verso l'OK Corral, dove l'attende la Clinton che non ha per nulla voglia di arrendersi.
Oggi si fa la storia del "new west", dell'America e del mondo intero!