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Local News & Opinion
09.25 State Elections Boards Seeks Volunteers to Help Process Unprecedented Number of Voter Applications Travel
Books, Arts & Education
09.18 Reviewing Danny Schechter's "Plunder: Investigating Our Economic Calamity and the Subprime Scandal" Letters
Ref. : Letters to the editor Open Letters:
09.30 To Joe Biden: Time for Confession 09.28 Open Letter to Senator Barack Obama 09.26 Bailout Package Must be Transparent to the American People 09.18 Possible $2 Million Donation to Support Md. Slots Sends Wrong Message Health & Environment
Media Watching
10.11 Censored News Stories in US Highlighted by Academic Research Group 10.11 Without a Trace: The Smokeless Gun of Flagrant Election Fixing 10.10 Ayers = Keating? 10.02 Project Censored's Media Democracy Advocacy 09.23 Satire: Louella Reads the Baltimore Sun 09.22 CBS Cheats on Tax Coverage 09.10 Post's Post-Convention 'Balancing' Act 09.10 McCain/Palin Campaign Relies on Lazy Thinking and Prejudice to Win 09.10 The Rising Cost of the Iraq 'Surge' US Politics, Policy & Culture
10.09 McCain-Palin Put 'Country Last' 10.07 GOP Judges Aid White House Cover-up 10.07 Voting the Fate of the Nation 10.07 Alaska GOP's Last-Ditch Palin Defense 10.07 Election '08: Here Comes the Sludge 10.02 John McCain v. The Truth 10.02 Drinking at the Public Fountain 10.01 Who won the Mississippi debate? Obama—but for different reasons than you think 09.30 The Shadow of the Pitchfork: Elite Panic Attack as Bailout Goes Bust 09.29 The Resurrectionists: Beltway's Big Money Cultists Bail Out the Dead 09.29 We Have the Money 09.27 Debate Evades Dark Realities 09.26 Alaskan Officials Allege Palin Cover-up 09.24 Don’t Worry, Be Happy 09.24 Text of Draft Proposal for Bailout Plan 09.24 Hey, Government! How About Calling on Us? 09.23 Coming Attractions: War Without End, Amen 09.22 The Evolution of John McCain 09.21 Palin's 'Troopergate' Battle Rages 09.19 Burning the First Amendment 09.15 Subverting Democracy Through Electoral Fraud 09.15 Military Industrial Complex 2.0 09.13 Acceptable Sacrifice: For the Right to Endorse 09.13 Why More Soldiers from Alaska? 09.12 Experience is Over-Rated 09.10 Obama Must Call for Palin's Removal from the Ticket 09.10 9/11 Plus Seven 09.10 Palin's Strange Probe of a Trooper 09.10 Dear Democrats: Integrity Won’t Win this Election US High Crimes
10.09 The Surge That Failed 10.08 The Orwellosphere: Anglo-American Drive to 'Total Security State' Rolls On 10.08 Justice for Yemini Sheik 10.06 The Wounded Shark: 'Good War' Lost, But the Imperial Project Goes On 10.02 U.S. Army Troops To Serve As U.S. Policemen? 09.25 Life on the Ledge 09.16 "Awakening" Into Nightmare: Seeding More Sectarian War in Iraq Economics & Business
10.06 Thinking About Treason 10.06 The Fleecing of America 10.03 Can a bailout succeed? 10.02 Empire of Greed 10.02 No Surprise in the Senate Bailout Vote 10.02 How Wall Street Can Bail Itself Out Without Destroying The Dollar 10.02 The Specter of Wall Street 10.01 We Need to Demand Hearings! 09.30 Surprise! Congress Listened to the Voting Public! 09.29 Thinking About Gyrations 09.29 Grand Theft America 09.26 Seizing America by Withholding the Mother’s Milk of Politics 09.26 Framing the $700 Billion Question 09.26 Bail Out NO, Buy Out YES 09.26 Just Say "No" to Any Immediate Bailout 09.26 Has Deregulation Sired Fascism? 09.25 Don't Fuel the Fire: Fire the Arsonists 09.25 America Pays the Piper, Big Time 09.24 Just Thinking Aloud Here 09.23 What Nobody's Saying: The Bailout Will Kill the Dollar 09.22 Thinking About Escalations 09.18 US Economy: Rudderless and Reeling From Direct Hits 09.18 US Economy: Rudderless and Reeling From Direct Hits 09.17 Creative Destruction: The Solid Core Behind the Financial Crisis 09.16 You Can't Feel Blue About the Economy If You Want To. There Are No Blue Chips Anymore 09.15 Thinking About Spotlights 09.15 U.S. Economy—Temporary Respite, Permanent Decline International
10.10 Another Israeli West Bank Land Grab Scheme 09.26 Annals of Liberation: Sex is Death in a Darkened Land 09.25 New Coup D'Etat Rumblings in Venezuela 09.22 Remembering Edward Said Five Years On 09.20 Filter Tips: Distortion and Demonization on the Iran Beat 09.11 Wall Street and Washington We are a non-profit Internet-only newspaper publication founded in 1973. Your donation is essential to our survival.
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COMMENTARY:Obama's Surge in BerlinThere is no global leader—save the Pope, perhaps, or Nelson Mandela—who could draw such a crowd—and he is only a presidential candidate.
I am not sure Americans appreciate how remarkable it is that Obama drew a crowd of 200,000 in Berlin last week. Upon hearing the news, the press declared that Obama would suffer in the polls for presumptuous presidential posturing, but at the same time, admitted that McCain could hardly draw a crowd one twentieth that size—in Berlin or New York, for that matter. Needless to say, our current president might well draw such a crowd in Europe, but of protestors. If you think about it, though, there is no global leader—save the Pope, perhaps, or Nelson Mandela—who could draw such a crowd. Not Sarkozy or Gordon Brown. Not Merkel or Berlusconi. Not Putin or Hu Jintao of China. No, on the current world stage, only Obama commands such a draw. And he is only a presidential candidate. Obama's feat says two things. First, Europe is unbelievably smitten with this man—even more so than his homeland (Obama enjoys only a marginal lead over McCain in the polls, after all). Why is this? The answer, I believe, is indelibly tied to the second message of Obama's stellar draw abroad: the US is still tremendously popular in Europe. Over the past eight years, it has often seemed as if continental Europe and the US were engaged in a prolonged divorce, highlighted by the conflict over the war in Iraq. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld famously dismissed France and Germany as 'the Old Europe' when they refused to back our invasion. France in particular was roundly denounced for betraying American liberation in World War II. Western Europe—excluding good old boy Tony Blair—was downright disloyal, ungrateful, even vindictive in the eyes of many Americans. Tensions flared as we revoked 'French' from our fries, and the French cheered on a native son who dared tow a McDonald's into the street. Now, however, we send a prospective president to France, and Sarkozy giggles with glee at the press conference. Obama's remarkable reception in Europe proves that the US remains hugely popular there, and that Europe longs to embrace the US once again. Obama's remarkable reception in Europe proves that the US remains hugely popular there, and that Europe longs to embrace the US once again. It signals, furthermore, that Europe still looks to the US as the preeminent global power—or at least, the global power of preference. Russia and China are rising fast and have made no bones about their global aspirations. China clearly looks to its upcoming Olympics as a coming-out party on the world stage. But Russia and China are both totalitarian regimes with testy leadership, abysmal environmental and human rights records, and the world largely fears them. The US, on the other hand, despite the damage wrought by this past administration, remains the global power of democracy, liberty and rule of law. To the Europeans, Obama represents a return of the global power they have loved and admired since World War II. In his very person, Obama epitomizes the values the US claims to stand for, and the goals it invokes willingly or not. For, here we send a prospective president to the world abroad, and he is a minority, self-made, raised by a single mother, bearing a Kenyan name. Obama promises a return to ideological consistency, and redemption for a foundational democracy and pillar of the United Nations. Obama's US would roll back the expansive War on Terror and resume its natural place as the defender of human rights. Obama has suggested that he would opt for talking with America's enemies, and work to build bridges rather than burn them. He claims America will assume the forefront of sustainable energy research and development, as its prosperity and entrepreneurial energy allows. Obama is hardly perfect on these accounts. But, by and large, he is a unifying, forward-looking figure rather than a divisive, nationalistic one. Europe recognizes this, and is relieved—and inspired. Polls around the globe reflect a similar sentiment. I might go further and suggest that Europe's recent adulation of Obama signals that it is desperate to love the US again. Europe—and much of the world—yearns for a global leader who is just, fair, inspirational, who will look to global interests and not America's only, who will stand up to Russia and China—Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Venezuela—and not look hypocritical in so doing. In short, the world is ready for a leader who acknowledges America's unique power and responsibility on the global stage, and assumes its role with integrity. Firmin DeBrabander is Professor of Philosophy at Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore. He may be reached at fdebrabander@mica.edu.
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