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were the people in the audience...all 10-12 thousand of them. People of all ages, races, economic status. A few younger hipsters from Santa Fe among many Native Americans, Hispanics, "white" people. Everyone was calm and decent, waiting patiently in the hot sun. Hardly anyone left even though it was hot and he was so late. There was a line up of preliminary speakers, beginning with local people, the mayor, Udall's wife, all the way up to Governor Richardson. No one was excited about any of them. Skeptical of them all -- except for the young Hispanic and Native women who spoke as organizers -- they made us cry-- otherwise a few boos, pointed lack of clapping for Richardson and others. But when Obama came out, the crowd roared.
You could tell everyone was concerned, worried. The economic meltdown was big news. Obama said intelligent things about the economy, about McCain, about things lost that needed to be restored. I imagine we all felt like we were getting a dose of reality, and the knowledge that someone reasonably responsible, informed, and who cared about the country was speaking. It was that, a basic adult respect between the audience and Obama, rather than any Obama-mania that was at play. It was deeply reassuring somehow. It felt so good just to stand in the midst of so many real people. My friend and I had been staying with someone in Santa Fe who had the news on constantly and it was all Palin and McCain. That's why I insisted we go to the rally. To get a dose of reality after so much false information from CNN, etc.
It is such a relief to hear him, maybe that is why I kept seeing men and women around me wiping off tears. Even the children were solemn and quiet.
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