Seriously...HOPE. Hope means nothing. It's hard work that pays off in this lifetime. All the people I listed and the un-named thousands of others I referenced got where they are through hard work and talent. That is what a role model should inspire in my view. Anybody can sit around and "HOPE" for something better but HOPE isn't going to make it happen.
To use Obama as a role model, one must place a value on a tacit, if not explicit, acceptance of voter fraud, prevarification, having only a vague recollection of your closest associates, not hearing anything that's said inside your church and coming from a life of privilege and educational opportunity as a birthright. (Madelyn Lee Payne Dunham, Barack Obama's maternal grandmother, was a bank vice president in Hawaii).
Obama is all ambition without ethics and that does not make a role model.
You have not described Obama. He did not lead a tough life, being raised by his grandmother the bank vice president, although he would have you believe that he did. Nor did he get himself elected. That was through the efforts of ACORN and the Chicago political machine backed by Soros' money. His meteoric rise to the White House came without a single significant achievement prior to his one significant achievement, getting elected president. His career is the closest thing to
Being There. No, he still is not a role model, still just a peddler of cheap cliche's that mean nothing.
And more so than that of your president. That's what I'm saying.
When I reference that thousands of others that would make better role models, it was precisely people like that that I was thinking of. Successful athletes and entertainers are simply more prominent and easier to reference than any of the myriad people who would make better role models than your president.
As far as this being an historic election, it could have been historic either way, first black or first woman president or first woman vice-president. There's no outcome that would not have made this an historic election.
Let me give you an analogy to explain how I feel about this. When I was a young man, I had the momentous, historic opportunity to buy my first car. At that time, my father's friend had a car for sale. I was very excited about buying that car, a Mustang, so I bought it. The car itself was old and deeply flawed, poorly maintained and worse for wear but the excitement overcame caution. In retrospect, I should have bought a good car instead of the first car that I was in a position to buy. The same applies to presidents.
Just because he is a black man that's running for president does not mean he is the black man (or woman) that should be president. (Condi - 2012
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