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On
the Dock for this Snippet
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Non-Americans Speak on Obama
While 9 of 10 of our print readers live in Metro Washington, we are
proud to have print and electronic readers at home and abroad. We
asked a couple of our readers living outside of the United States what
they think about Barack Obama. This is what your fellow Snippet readers had to say:
Raul Sarmiento
Havana, Cuba
From the candidates you have, the only one that speaks about change is
Barak Obama. Changes that have to do with the internal politics
of protection of the humblest layers in their own towns, changes that
would diminish the breach that separates the richest from the poorest,
of prevention of illnesses, prevention of crime (the United
States has the biggest penal population per cápita in the world),
protection to the worker, and protection and prevention against natural
catastrophes (remember Katrina and New Orleans).
If United States has the most solid agricultural and industrial economy
in the world, with bigger efficiency and productivity, it should have
the best social services. These (social services) would be
very beneficial for the whole population of United States. But,
do you believe that these changes are possible?
Paul Boakye
London, The United Kingdom
Barack Obama is the best hope America has of nominating a president
that the rest of the world can believe in. I read with great interest
his book Dreams from My Father
and wept with recognition at the ‘skinny
kid with the funny name’ in me. I may not be able to vote in your
elections, or even donate to his immaculate campaign (believe me, I've
tried), but I've never been more interested in the political process
than now. Yes We Can!
Paul Boakye is a writer
and former political commissioner for POWER (a detailed report on
democracy in Britain).
Besenty Gomez
Kitty Village, The Gambia
I am very happy that Barack Obama is progressing well in his campaign
to become a Democratic Party presidential candidate nominee and
eventually America's first Black President. Barack has charisma. He has
even won the hearts of many who even don't like him for any
reason. His intelligence and personality are something that
endears me to him. Our troubled world needs someone who has seen
the worst and best of life and this is found in Obama. He knows what to
be poor and helpless is as he was brought up by a single parent who
lived with him in Indonesia.
If Obama emerges as the President of America, most of America's sworn
enemies would become her greatest allies as it's the policy of America
toward those nations that make those nations to build up resistance
against her. Obama, if not elected President of America, would be
a President that America never had. He is an embodiment of WORLD PEACE.
The whole world is crying for Obama's Presidency and America should
listen to their cries as people always listen when America speaks
whether rightly or wrongly.
Henry Kiilu
Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
I think Barack Obama might make a great American president if you give
him the chance. He seems to have a better vision for America and for
the world as well.
Eugene Eastman
Monrovia, Liberia
Liberians are excited
about Obama’s run for the presidency. They see him as someone who “who
will not want his people to die” as George Bush has done.
Liberians get their news from CNN. A 15 year old water carrier told me
that Obama is an African who migrated to America; they believe he is
likely Nigerian. They don’t expect that the White people will
allow him to win.
Next Snippets:
Obama and The “Hardworking” White Working Class.
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Bush
Officials Speak With
Two Heads on Aid
U.S.
First Lady Laura Bush on Myamar’s Not Seeking US aid after a cyclone
hit Myamar.
"The
response to the cyclone is the most recent failure of the regime to
meet its people's basic needs," Bush told
reporters.
U.S.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack on the U.S. Not Seeking Cuban
aid after Hurricane Katrina hit the United States.
“When
it comes to Cuba,” said
McClellan, “we have one message for Fidel Castro: He needs to offer
the people of Cuba their freedom.”
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A
Hundred
of Newly-Arrived African-Americans Network in D.C.
About a hundred
young newly arrived African-American professionals jammed the Liberian
Embassy, 5201 16th Street, NW, in Washington, D.C. Wednesday, May
21 for an African Wine and Dine. The event was part of the week long Passport to Africa
celebration. During the three hour networking session,
participants enjoyed a jollof rice cooking demonstration by Nylah’s
Catering followed by a tasting of South African desserts by Dessert
Haven.
Photo:
Networkers gather to see the cooking demonstration.
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Marriage
Equality
in
California,
Racism
and Hillary Clinton
the
Power of Privilege
What allows straight
opponents of same-sex marriage, who are
members of a privileged group, to place a higher
value on opposite-sex marriages? In our May - July 2007
print issue, Looking at Power:
Male Privilege/Heterosexual Privilege, Dr. Edd ie Moore says we sometimes are aware of
our privileges and use them to our advantage. For an example, “I
sometimes use my maleness (which has privilege status), and become very
domineering and intimidating to female service workers when I am
complaining or seeking more from the service industry,” he sadly admits
in the May-July 2007 print issue.
What gives Hillary
Clinton, who as a female is a member of an oppressed group, the right
to place a higher value on White working class voters over that of
Black working class voters? Both of our diversity experts whom we
interviewed in Looking at Power,
Elena Featherston and Moore, agree that the oppressed can oppress
others. “We are often unaware of our own oppressive behavior
because we are usually taught about what privileges we do not have
versus the privileges we have,” says Featherston.
In the current print issue, Nicky
Grist, Executive Director of The
Alternatives to Marriage Project,
goes beyond the recent legalization of same-sex marriages in California
and writes about the laws that
financially discriminate against unmarried people including single
people who have never married, are no longer married, or are not able
to marry legally. “Marital status discrimination affects
our
access to society’s benefits and our bank
accounts,” she
explains. (In a recent survey, 7 percent of registered voters say
someone in their household decided to get married mainly to have access
to health care benefits.)
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Six
Readers Win
Free Jacob Lawrence Tickets
Port of Harlem is proud to work
with the Phillips
Collection to award six lucky Snippets
winners a pair of tickets
to witness the unforgettable The
Migration Series. The work portrays the 20th-century
exodus of more than a million African Americans from the rural South to
the industrial North. Rarely seen in its entirety, the 60-panel
cycle has been reunited for a limited time exclusively at The Phillips
Collection through Monday, Oct. 26, 2008.
To win, they simply had to answer:
What is the name of the environmentalist on the cover of the current
print issue of Port of Harlem?
The answer: Lavell Merritt, Jr.
Tanya
Champion
Hyattsville,
MD
Barry
Lester
Upper
Marlboro, MD
Glen Marcus
Washington,
D.C.
Norman West
Washington,
D.C.
Paul Williams
Washington,
D.C.
Kathleen H. Wills
Washington,
D.C.
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Free
Ancestry Information
Until May 31
In celebration of
Memorial Day, Ancestry.com is
making its U.S. Military database
available to public for free until Saturday, May 31.
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Guyanese
Independence
Celebration - NYC
Some of Guyana`s
outstanding musicians and cultural performers are set to lift their
voices Saturday, May 31, as the Guyana flag is again raised for the
second time in New York`s financial district. This year’s event,
to mark the 42nd anniversary of Guyana`s independence, is set from
12:30p to 2p. at the Bowling Green Park, in Lower Manhattan.
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