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While I thought that the speech was amazing - perhaps the best since MLK - I believe that it is NOT a singular speech, but something of a piece with his presentation of a new way of politics. He has talked often about throwing out the old political textbooks and redrawing the maps of our national consciousness. We have now seen that these are not "just words."
He urged us to heal old wounds and come together. He told us that he could lead us, but that change would only happen when he accepted our part in the national and global dramas unfolding around us. Obama didn't want to make us feel good, he wanted to inspire us into action - to look at old problems we believed were insurmountable with fresh eyes and say to ourselves, "yes, we can."
The speech he gave yesterday, again, was amazing. But it was hard - not for him politically, but for what he demanded of the American people. Hope isn't just some four letter word to him. He proved that yesterday. With a degree of courage to avoid the safe politics of mere damage control, Obama put his faith in the American people that we can transcend, rather than bury deeper, our pains and our fears.
Obama's speech was a testimony to the biggest truth: that the truth itself, though costly, shall ultimately set you free.
The level of deep understanding, wisdom and clarity that Obama demonstrated yesterday was something that he will bring far beyond any matters of race.
It is something he will bring to the health care debate, to discussions of global warming and our culture of convenience, and - perhaps most importantly - to matters of foreign policy.
Where others may use our military and defense spending as a stage for political theater, Obama has shown the ability to discuss the war on terror in a way that allows for its complexity, but retains a sharp degree of moral and strategic clarity.
While others choose to puff their feathers as a hawk, with hundreds of thousands of lives at stake, Obama has shown that, more often than not, it is through the hard road of peaceful solutions and improving the lives of the suffering that we walk upon the road to victory.
The old textbooks just won't do, as Obama says. The stakes are too high. The "fierce urgency of now" demands that we look to a new generation of politics to deal with this young century.
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