US Election Coverage 2008


Na mimi nayaunga mkono mawazo/ maoni yako. Wapambe wa Obama eti wanafurahia ushindi wa vi-caucus ktk states ambazo Republican wana-dominate kila uchaguzi...kuanzia Georgia-Alabama-Utah-hadi Idaho...
McCain ndio raisi ajaye wa Marekani...
 
Hebu someni haya yanayotokea huko South Carolina

Black worker says boss put noose on him
By PAGE IVEY

COLUMBIA, S.C.

A black former hotel worker who claims his white supervisor put a noose around his neck at an event on one of the country's oldest plantations said Friday he was fired when he complained about it.

John Green, 62, said he was scared and embarrassed by his boss's actions at the Charleston Place Hotel function at Boone Hall Plantation in October.

Green and his attorney, Ed Brown, said a complaint was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's office in Savannah, Ga. However, Mason Barrett, director of that office, said Friday he would not confirm whether his office had received a complaint.

The hotel's general manager said in a statement he had not seen a complaint from the commission and that Green was fired for violating company rules. Those rules were not specified.

Green, a former event supervisor at the hotel, said his boss laughed about the incident and "he thought it was funny."

"He was actually showing another guy from another country how to make a hangman's noose," Green said. "He sneaked up from behind me and slipped the noose over my neck and began tightening the noose."

Green said he was fired about a month later when he complained to hotel managers.

He said he recorded a meeting with hotel managers after he was fired, and when he told them about the recording, Green's boss was fired.

Pippa Isbell, vice president of corporate communications for Orient-Express Hotels, which owns Charleston Place, confirmed that the supervisor was fired "as a direct result of the incident with the noose."

Hotel general manager Paul Stracey said in a statement the company has a strong policy against discrimination.

"When any employee or former employee makes a complaint claiming unlawful discrimination, that complaint is thoroughly investigated and appropriate action is taken based upon the results of that investigation," Stracey said.

Green said he hasn't been able to find another job since being fired. He worked at the hotel about 10 years, he said. Before that, he owned a seafood market on Johns Island near Charleston.

Boone Hall Plantation offers guided tours of what life was like in the 1800s and is the site of wedding receptions and other events. It is about 10 miles from Charleston.
 
Hahahaaaa...demu wangu kifaa wewe...huwezi ukamlinganisha na mke wa Obama. Hata kama nimeishiwa points lakini ninachokisema ni kweli...kama huamini m-google kwenye net ujionee mwenyewe halafu uniambie....eeeeewwwwww

..nilijua utamsifia! poa,tukate issues!
 

hiyo ya mambo kuwa kama kenya ndio howard dean anajaribu kui-avoid!!
ni kweli mizungu mibaguzi sana, lakini tuna hope for the best. kama ikishindikana basi.......kwani McCain si mbaya sana uki-compare na Romney.
na admit kwamba binafsi nilikuwa naive sana na wazungu, lakini juzi juzi hapa nimewekwa mtu kati na mizungu minne ktk masuala ya elimu. mwisho wa siku nimebaguliwa live bila aibu......sasa inabidi nianze upyaaaa, kazi ambayo itanichukua miezi tisa kuimaliza!! yaani sita sahau.

uchaguazi huu hasa primaries za dem ni good v/s evil, so far Obama is good and likely winner.
 

Loh! Pole na yaliyokukuta. Si wenzio tumesha-experience ubaguzi wa kila aina kutoka kwa hawa wazungu. Wabaya zaidi ni wale wanaojifanya marafiki zako huku wakikusengenya nyuma yako halafu wakikuona wanakuchekea. Ndio maana bado nina wasiwasi kama Obama atashinda uchaguzi mkuu..
 
Kinachofanyika ni Uhuni wa Hali ya JUU.

Kundi la BUSH linampa nguvu media kubwa Obama kushinda..kama alivyosema Nyani kuwa majimbo anayoshinda Obama ni yale ambao Republican wana wafuasi wengi, pamoja na majimbo yote aliyoshinda Obama, bado KURA zake hazimfikii Ms CLINTON.

Kundi la bush halimtaki clinton, so wanachofanya sasa ionekane ktk Picha ya NJE obama kashinda lkn Mwishoni OBAMA ataangushwa ktk Bunge la Mabwanyenye ktk kile ambacho wenzangu wamekizungumza juu rangi ya mtu.

Pia si vema watu kushangia utumbo juu ya mke wa mtu. Uzuri ni sifa ambayo ni comparative. Unaemuona wewe mzuri kwa mwezio hovyo, so tuheshimu maamuzi ya mtu hasa ktk ndoa.

kama Mwafrika ningependa Obama ashinde kuondoa nuksi iliyosambaa ulimwenguni. lkn kilio changu..kama alivyosema REMMY ONGALA...ni kilio cha SAMAKI...!!!
 

Soma hii kitu hapa....kwa sasa nasema lets not worry about November maana ata August hatujapita...
 
Nyani,

unajua........uzuri wa mtu ni very subjective analysis......leo waweza kutuwekea picha ya demu wako................SteveD akapiga madongo (joke)........well the point is unless uko ktk beauty contest.............she is still beautiful to some people and ugly face to some of you!!!

binafsi nimemcheck ktk Larry King Live.........naona yuko poa tu
 
Jamani, uzuri au ubaya wa MIchelle Obama tuweke pembeni, tuendelee na mada nzito.
Mimi nadhani Nyani si mshabiki wa Hillary lakini haoni realism ya Obama kushinda. Mimi nadhani kuna some concerns anazosema zina msingi, kwa hiyo tusipuuze.
Mimi ninachoona ni kwamba wamarekani are ready for change and it will happen. Hata McCain ana wakati mgumu sana katika chama chake kwa hiyo it will get very interesting. Nadhani tukiangalia the lesser of two evils for conservatives, inawezekana kabisa kwamba McCain akapata kura, hiyo hatuwezi kubisha. Also McCain anawavutia moderates (republican) ambao wanaweza wakaacha ku-vote for Obama kama sasa hivi walivyofanya in some states. Lakini pia nadhani Democratic party faithfuls watampigia Obama if he gets the nomination kwa sababu wanaelewa what it means for another Republican kukaa pale.
But I think that this year, uchaguzi umekuwa mtamu kwa sababu everything is unpredictable. So let's wait and see.
Nasikia evangelicals prefer Hillary over Obama. So keep that in mind Obama fans like me, safari bado ni ndefu sana!
 
Barack's Opportunity

In the Name of God, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate

Last week, Barack Obama, a freshman US Senator from Illinois and an African-American, decidedly took the Iowa caucues, winning by comfortable margins over his closest rival. Who would have thought that even Democrats in Iowa, an overwhelmingly white, rural, and homogeneous state would choose an African-American as their potential nominee to be President of the United States? It is truly a historic moment.

Barack’s victory is a testimony to the lengths that this country has gone since its days of slavery, where people can now come together to choose someone so different from them racially because of the merits of his message. Although the Iowa victory is a huge boost for the Obama campaign, the fight has only just begun. Winning in Iowa is no guarantee that the party will nominate him for the White House.

But this fight will bring out the anti-Muslim forces in earnest. We will once again hear the whispers that Obama is a "Muslim plant," that he "trained at a madrasa," that his first name sounds a lot like "Osama," and his middle name is the same as Saddam's. Those whispers will now become louder. If Obama continues to win, they will become shouts of alarm.

Cynics may try to "swift boat" Obama with his Muslim heritage and try to smear him with the sins of extremist Muslims. What they did with Senator John Kerry in 2004, they can do it with Obama in 2008. If they ran an overtly racist ad against Harold Ford in the 2006 Tennessee senate campaign, they can do something similar to Obama in 2008. Politics is a dirty business. If Obama continues to take state after state, the gloves will come off, and things will get ugly.

Herein lies the opportunity for Barack. If he truly wants to unite the nation, if he truly wants to be an agent of "change we can believe in," then he should stand up - when the attacks about his "Muslim ties" come - and repudiate the attacks. But he should do it in a different way than he has in the past. Imagine a response like this:

Now, recently there have been some accusations against me that I attended a "madrasa," when I was a young boy. Some have even accused me of being a "clandestine Muslim," a "Muslim plant" seeking to capture the White House. Yes, my middle name is "Hussein," and there is nothing wrong with this. Now, I have said many times that I am not a Muslim, I am a Christian, who is devout and proud of his faith.

Yet, this does not mean that there is something wrong with being a Muslim. Islam is an honorable religion, the basis of a glorious civilization that has given the world some of its greatest gifts. Muslims comprise one-fiftth of the world's population, and millions of our fellow Americans derive comfort from the Muslim faith. Indeed, there are those who claim to be Muslim who have attacked our country, who have committed inhuman acts of violence in the name of their religion.

But, these people defile the religion of Islam, and they do not represent the overwhelming majority of Muslims, across the world and here in America, who are peace-loving, law-abiding citizens who want what everyone else wants: to live in peace and security. It is high-time that we as Americans, citizens of the greatest nation on earth, to repudiate and reject the politics of division, fearmongering, and hate. We can do better as a nation, and let us start today.

A bold statement like this would be a huge step forward for interfaith relations in America. It could deal a convincing blow to the forces of hatred and fear in America. If delivered with sincerity, people across the political spectrum would be receptive.

In his autobiography, The Audacity of Hope, Obama notes that “we are no longer just a Christian nation. We are also a Jewish nation, a Muslim nation, a Buddhist nation, a Hindu nation, and a nation of nonbelievers.” But when the whispers of his Muslim heritage first surfaced, Obama remained almost completely silent, and it was truly disappointing. An opportunity to encourage fellow Americans to be more open-minded was lost. When the whispers emerge once more, Barack's opportunity should not be lost again.
 

Kuna mambo mengi ambayo yapo kwenye stake. Kuna majaji wa mahakama kuu. Obama ni liberal kuliko hata Mama. Republicans wata-make case kwamba this guys is still unknown to be entrusted with such powers like nominating supreme court justices and believe me that message will resonate with the majority who happen to be center right on the political spectrum.

Democratic voters wanaweza kupuuzia suala la experience kwenye vi-caucus na vi-primaries lakini ikija kwenye uchaguzi mkuu Obama dhidi ya McCain wapiga kura hawatalipuuzia hilo na Obama hawezi kusema hata kidogo kuwa McCain hana experience. Hawezi kusema hata kidogo kuwa McCain can't bring people together and haven't reached across the aisleto work with Democrats......nawaambieni ngoma ipo November...McCain is no joke! Obama can't say anything to him about national security, war, and more....
 
kama ni ubaguzi poa tuu na tunajua upo,i dont care kama wakiamua kuvote kwa namna hiyo na watakao umia ni wenyewe na policy za Republican kama walivyopelekwa na Bush kwenye vita isiyoisha maana Mccain naye ndio huyo kishasema Iraq hatoki mtu,uchumi umeanguka kazi wanapoteza na serikali imekuwa police state kwa sera za Bush...acha China azidi kuwakomesha labda ndio rednecks watajifunza Republican policy zinawamaliza na soon wataanza kuwa kama third world,hope yao ni Obama tuu ila kama hawaoni hilo poa tuu.
 

Nasikiliza talk radio hapa na kuna jamaa anasema eti Obama atashinda jimbo la Mississippi kwenye uchaguzi mkuu...bwahahahahahahaha.....hivi ni lini Mississippi wamevote Democratic kwenye uchaguzi mkuu...au hata South Carolina? Yaani washabiki wa Obama wanaamini yeye atakuwa kama Reagan aliyeshinda majimbo 49 kati ya 50 mwaka '84. Haya tusubiri tuone.....
 
Susuviri,Nyani Ngabu,YNIM,Masanja,Koba,

..kwa kweli Hillary akishinda itakuwa ni come back of a century. kwa mtizamo wangu Obama ndiyo nominee wa Democrats mpaka sasa hivi.

Rev.Kishoka,

..kama Tanzania tungeendesha uchaguzi[primaries] wetu kama hawa Democrats tungefika mbali sana. hebu linganisha primaries za democrats na lile zoezi la wana ccm kuzunguka mikoani kutafuta wadhamini.

..sijui kama uliwahi kuhudhuria kampeni za uchaguzi wakati wa chama kimoja. at least zile ziliwakutanisha wagombea ana kwa ana ktk kila mkutano. nadhani wakati ule uchaguzi kulikuwa na mijadala ya kweli.

NB:
..for the benefit ya ndugu zetu wa miaka ya 1980. wakati wa chaguzi za chama kimoja, wagombea 2 walikuwa wanazunguka vijijini na kumwaga sera zao pamoja ktk mikutano ya hadhara. yaani ilikuwa ni kama 2 way debate all the way to the election day.
 
Hii kitu hapo chini ina summarize in great lenght, the fear of color divide and what measures have been taken in attempt to quill the problem(s)in the Obama campaign............ubaguzi bado upo tena alive and well, god wishes we're goin' to witness the unexpectable in the end of these primaries and hopefull in November!!!!. You Gotta believe.

updated 3:25 a.m. ET, Tues., Feb. 12, 2008
WASHINGTON - It was November 2006 when Senator Barack Obama first gathered friends and advisers at a Washington law firm to brainstorm about what it would take for him to win the presidency.

Those who attended the meeting said the mix of excitement and trepidation at times felt asphyxiating, as the group weighed the challenges of such a long shot. Would Mr. Obama be able to raise enough money? What kind of toll would a campaign take on him and his family? What kind of organization could he build?

Halfway into the session, Broderick Johnson, a Washington lawyer and informal adviser to Mr. Obama, spoke up. “What about race?” he asked.

Mr. Obama’s dismissal was swift and unequivocal.

He had been able to navigate racial politics in Illinois, Mr. Obama told the group, and was confident he could do so across the nation. “I believe America is ready,” one aide recalled him saying.

The race issue got all of five minutes at that meeting, setting what Mr. Obama and his advisers hoped would be the tone of a campaign they were determined not to define by the color of his skin.

As he heads into a fresh round of contests Tuesday, the Potomac primaries, in a tight rivalry with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and with an impressive record of victories across the nation in which he drew significant white votes and overwhelming black support, he claims to have accomplished that goal. Some South Carolina supporters summed up his broad appeal and message about transcending differences in a chant: “Race Doesn’t Matter.”

Glimpses inside the Obama campaign show, though, that while the senator had hoped his colorblind style of politics would lift the country above historic racial tensions, from Day 1 his bid for the presidency has been pulled into the thick of them. While his speeches focus on unifying voters, his campaign has learned the hard way that courting a divided electorate requires reaching out group by group.

Campaign zigged and zagged
Instead of following a plotted course, Mr. Obama’s campaign has zigged and zagged, reacting to outside forces and internal differences between the predominantly white team of top advisers and the mostly black tier of aides.

The dynamic began the first day of Mr. Obama’s presidential bid, when white advisers encouraged him to withdraw an invitation to his pastor, whose Afro-centric sermons have been construed as antiwhite, to deliver the invocation at the official campaign kickoff. Then, when his candidacy was met by a wave of African-American suspicion, the senator’s black aides pulled in prominent black scholars, business leaders and elected officials as advisers.

Aides to Mr. Obama, who asked not to be identified because the campaign would not authorize them to speak to the press, said he stayed away from a civil rights demonstration and did not publicize visits to black churches when he was struggling to win over white voters in Iowa. Then, a month after Representative John Lewis of Georgia endorsed Mrs. Clinton, setting off concerns about black voters’ ambivalence toward Mr. Obama, the campaign deployed his wife, Michelle, whose upbringing on the South Side of Chicago was more familiar to many blacks than Mr. Obama’s biracial background.

The campaign’s strategy in the first contests left Mr. Obama vulnerable with Latinos, which hurt him in California and could do the same in the Texas primary on March 4.

Faulted by Latino leaders as not being visible enough in their communities and not understanding what issues resonated with immigrants, the campaign has been trying hard to catch up, scheduling more face-to-face meetings with voters, snaring endorsements from Latino politicians and fine-tuning his message.

Mr. Obama has resisted any effort to suggest that the presidential primaries were breaking along racial lines.

“There are not a lot of African-Americans in Nebraska the last time I checked, or in Utah or in Idaho, areas where I probably won some of my biggest margins,” he said Sunday in an NPR interview.

“There’s no doubt that I’m getting more African-American votes,” he said, “but that doesn’t mean that the race is dividing along racial lines. You know, in places like Washington State we won across the board, from men, from women, from African-Americans, from whites and from asians.

A rhetorical tightrope
David Axelrod, the chief strategist of the Obama campaign, said in an interview that although he and Mr. Obama did not map out a detailed strategy for dealing with race when plotting a presidential run, they were well aware it would weigh on his campaign.

As a consultant to several black elected officials, Mr. Axelrod has been steeped in racially charged elections. And he said Mr. Obama had faced the challenges of racial politics in the campaign that propelled him to the Senate, where he is only the third black elected since Reconstruction.

Mr. Axelrod said he had learned there was “a certain physics” to winning votes across racial lines. Previous campaigns by African-Americans — the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton — had overwhelmingly relied on black support that wound up defining, and confining, their candidacies.

By contrast, from the moment Mr. Obama stepped onto the national political stage, he has paid as much attention — or more, some aides said — to a far broader audience. “He believes you can have the support of the black community, appealing to the pride they feel in his candidacy, and still win support among whites,” Mr. Axelrod said.

Questions about Mr. Obama’s “blackness,” though, quickly threatened to obscure the reasons he believed himself most qualified to become the country’s next president. A Rolling Stone article linked him to the militant preaching of his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. The story quoted the minister as saying in a sermon, “Racism is how this country was founded and how this country is still run.”

Mr. Axelrod said he and Mr. Obama decided to take Mr. Wright off the program for the campaign announcement in February 2007, concluding that the attention would drag the pastor into a negative spotlight and might distract from efforts to portray the senator as a candidate capable of unifying the country.

The day after the rally, which was on the steps of the Old State Capitol in Illinois, Mr. Obama was sharply criticized by African-American academics, media celebrities and policy experts at a conference in Hampton, Va. Among the most often cited was Cornel West, the renowned Princeton scholar. He and others argued that Mr. Obama should speak forcefully about the legacy of racism in the nation and not cast the problems that disproportionately affect blacks as social ills shared by many Americans.

“He’s got large numbers of white brothers and sisters who have fears and anxieties,” Dr. West said at the time. “He’s got to speak them in such a way that he holds us at arm’s length; enough to say he loves us, but not too close to scare them away.”

Working from inside
Mr. Obama was so annoyed by the complaints, one aide recalled, that he asked staff members to invite more than 50 influential African-Americans, including some of his critics, to meet with him, hoping to win them over with the gale force of his charisma.

But his aides cautioned that such a large event would be sure to draw press attention. Instead, they suggested that Mr. Obama establish a smaller advisory council of prominent black figures. In a two-hour telephone call, he not only persuaded Dr. West to serve on the panel, but also convinced him that his rhetorical tightrope — reassuring whites without seeming to abandon blacks — was necessary.

Dr. West recalled the conversation, saying that if Mr. Obama focused on disparities caused by a history of white privilege, “he’d be pegged as a candidate who caters only to the needs of black folks.”

“His campaign is about all folks,” Dr. West said.

Initially, Mr. Obama’s aides said, his campaign was all about Iowa, whose mostly white electorate had established a reputation for launching political underdogs. He seldom talked explicitly about race, aides said. He did not publicize appearances at black churches on his press schedule. Still, his campaign reached out quietly to African-American voters, realizing that even the smallest pockets of supporters could be decisive.

Aides said Mr. Obama’s campaign was unaware of the magnitude of the tensions brewing in Jena, La., over charges of attempted murder that had been filed against six youths involved in a schoolyard fight until plans for a march, organized by Mr. Sharpton, began to appear in the news media.

Mr. Obama was the first presidential candidate to respond to Mr. Sharpton’s call to denounce what was going on in Jena, saying the cases against the students were not a matter of black versus white, but a matter of right versus wrong. He then called Mr. Sharpton to explain that he had important votes in the Senate, and that he would not attend the march because he did not want to politicize the issue

“We agreed on inside-outside roles,” Mr. Sharpton said, referring to himself and Mr. Obama, echoing a famous conversation between President Lyndon B. Johnson and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “I would continue my work agitating the system from the outside, and he would do what he could to make changes from the inside.”

By the fall, however, while Mr. Obama’s campaign was still trailing Mrs. Clinton among white voters in Iowa, the loss of the endorsement by Mr. Lewis, the Georgia representative, made clear that he faced troubles among black voters as well.

“He told John that that he felt like a father was stabbing him in the back,” an aide to Mr. Obama said. “Barack sees himself as an extension of the civil rights movement, and so it hurt him deeply when a leader of that movement told him he wasn’t ready.”

Aides said it proved a pivotal moment in the campaign, with some staff members — mostly white — urging Mr. Obama to stay focused on Iowa, while others — most of them black — warning that he needed to court black voters and elected officials more actively.

“Nobody put race explicitly on the table,” one aide said. “But there was certainly the feeling among some of the black staff that some of the white staff did not care enough about winning black votes.”

New efforts to reach out
In the end, Mr. Obama satisfied both groups, keeping himself focused on Iowa while dispatching his wife to South Carolina, where she delivered a major speech at South Carolina State University, a historically black college in Orangeburg.

“It took Barack a while to agree,” said Charles J. Ogletree Jr., a Harvard professor who is part of the black advisory group. “But we told him she had to be the one to confront the myths and fears of black voters.

“Here was a black woman, a mother, who grew up poor, learned to sleep without heat and rose above that to get an Ivy League education,” Professor Ogletree added. “But she was also the kind of woman who would take her shoes off because her feet hurt. She was real from the moment she stepped on stage.”

By mid-January, Mr. Obama had so much support among black voters in South Carolina that he worried that his rivals would try to marginalize his campaign as a black-only phenomenon — a concern that later proved well-founded when former President Bill Clinton compared Mr. Obama’s campaign to Mr. Jackson’s. So before arriving in the state, Mr. Obama stopped in Atlanta to mark Martin Luther King’s Birthday.

Georgia, like South Carolina, was expected to deliver large numbers of black votes to Mr. Obama. But it was also a place where his viability as a candidate would be measured by his ability to win a respectable number of white votes.

Standing before a congregation filled with veterans of the civil rights movement, Mr. Obama talked about the struggles of a poor white woman, whose family had no health insurance and often had to choose between buying food and medicine.

While Mr. Obama has made great strides in appealing to white and black voters, his campaign has proved less effective in drawing Latino support. While a few experts point to longstanding rivalries between blacks and Hispanics over jobs and other opportunities, most faulted him as doing too little, too late.

“Obama’s campaign failed to rise to the occasion,” scolded La Opinión, the leading Spanish-language newspaper in California, which had endorsed Mr. Obama.

Mr. Obama’s national field director, Cuauhtemoc Figueroa, vowed that Mr. Obama’s effort in Texas would be different.

“You are going to see Senator Obama campaign the way he did in Iowa,” Mr. Figueroa said. “We’re going to take him to little communities so that he’s not only going to touch voters with his words, he’s going to be able to reach out and physically touch them.”

Jeff Zeleny and Kitty Bennett contributed reporting.

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times
 
...another sweep Obama wins Virginia according to CNN,DC and Maryland nazo zita fall to Obama tonight..ikifika midnight leo itakuwa bao tatu mtungi,Obama 3 Nyani ngabu buyu!
 
one down two to go! this will look eazy, by 9 EST, all of the three potomac states will be on Obamas column......sweeeeeety!!! Ngabu kama umenuna basi pasuka, watu wanadundika kwa swing flani hivi la bega moja chini!! twi twi twi twi...bwaaaaaahahahaha, kama ile ya Tony Sinclair.
 
Duhh!!

haya kumekucha.......Obama projected winner Virginia.........kanyaga twende mwanangu
 
Duhh!!

haya kumekucha.......Obama projected winner Virginia.........kanyaga twende mwanangu

Mkuu,
Hivi hii super delegetes inakujaje ama ni nini hasa na ina athari gani kwenye matokeo ya hawa waungwana
 
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