http://rawstory.com/showarticle.php?src=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.miami.com%2Fmld%2Fmiamiherald%2F16494347.htmPresident Obama?
No, not yet. But, the intention of Sen. Barack Obama, Democrat of Illinois, to move toward that goal seems clear with this week's news that he is forming an exploratory committee to raise money toward a possible White House bid. Count me among those who regard the bid as a foregone conclusion.
Strike while the iron is hot. Isn't that what the axiom says? And whose iron has ever been hotter than Obama's? The man is a rock star, a combination plate of handsome, intelligent and charismatic that has his supporters giddy. On the other hand, the battlefield of presidential politics is littered with the bones of rock stars for whom the giddiness of supporters was not enough. John Anderson and Ross Perot come to mind.
There are two obvious pitfalls facing Obama. One is his lack of experience. His two years in the Senate represent the sum of his federal résumé, though he also has under his belt many years in the Illinois statehouse and as a constitutional lawyer and community activist.
Obama has a ready answer for the experience question. As he told me in an interview in November: ``I think the one thing the American people require of their president is good judgment. In most of our lives, we hope that more experience gives us better judgment -- but not always. Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld had an awful lot of experience, but displayed poor judgment in this Iraq War, in my mind. So part of the measure I have to take is, do I feel I have the judgment to take the toughest job on earth.''
Touché. But one wonders if the question will be so easily put to rest this year. While his inexperience at the federal level certainly does not disqualify Obama from the presidency and while we've had politically inexperienced presidents before -- Ulysses Grant and Dwight Eisenhower come to mind -- I suspect experience is going to loom large as a factor in the next election,
given the mess the new president will inherit from George W. Voters will be more wary than usual of a would-be chief executive who seems to require too much on-the-job training.
.....The man has major star power and appeal to the masses,I thought the bullshit that was stated by FAUX News on Fridays morning show was total bullshit.About his childhood and the course of his travels but that is to be expected its "Fair and Balanced" and if there where any balanced the world would tip over to the right.