On education, we must trust students to learn if given the chance, and empower parents to demand results from our schools. In neighborhoods across our country, there are boys and girls with dreams -- and a decent education is their only hope of achieving them.
Six years ago, we came together to pass the No Child Left Behind Act, and today no one can deny its results. Last year, fourth and eighth graders achieved the highest math scores on record. Reading scores are on the rise. African American and Hispanic students posted all-time highs. (Applause.) Now we must work together to increase accountability, add flexibility for states and districts, reduce the number of high school dropouts, provide extra help for struggling schools.
Thanks to the D.C. Opportunity Scholarships you approved, more than 2,600 of the poorest children in our Nation's Capital have found new hope at a faith-based or other non-public school. Sadly, these schools are disappearing at an alarming rate in many of America's inner cities... Now let us apply that same spirit to help liberate poor children trapped in failing public schools.
On trade, we must trust American workers to compete with anyone in the world and empower them by opening up new markets overseas.
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> > This is fairly interesting... > > Who is Barack Obama? > > Probable U. S. presidential candidate, Barack > Hussein Obama was born in > Honolulu , Hawaii , to Barack Hussein Obama, Sr., a > black MUSLIM from > Nyangoma-Kogel , Kenya and Ann Dunham, a white > ATHEIST from Wichita , > Kansas .
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I listened to the full 20 minute speech by Senator Obama at the Jefferson Jackson Dinner on YouTube this evening.
The availability of video content like this on YouTube is personally transformational for me, as far as my thinking and decisions that relate to politics go. I rarely watch television anymore. I am on the Internet working many hours of almost every day, however, and I have opportunities to read articles as well as watch videos from traditional news sources online. When I want, as I did tonight, to take some time and listen to a message from a candidate, it is SO POWERFUL as well as valuable to be able to listen to their message directly, without advertisements or distractions, as I did tonight on YouTube.
I think all U.S. voters should be taking time to listen carefully to the messages of the different candidates running for office, both at the national as well as at state and local local levels. I am thrilled the Obama campaign is thoroughly embracing the use of read/write web technologies and user-created content, and look forward to sharing more of my thoughts and reflections which relate to Senator Obama and his Presidential campaign in the weeks and months ahead. I maintain my own blog ("Moving at the Speed of Creativity") and regularly contribute to several other education blogs, but none of those spaces are entirely appropriate for the political ideas and views I want to share. This blog provides me with that space. For that I am thankful.
I resonated with many things Senator Obama said in his speech at the Jefferson Jackson dinner recently. I am ready for a President who will take steps to end the war in Iraq. I agree this is a war we should never have started, and never gotten engaged in to begin with. I do agree with Senator McCain, that we are not going to be able to just drop everything and leave Iraq tomorrow. A great deal is at stake. But I AM supportive of a President that is committed to ending this war which should never have been started. I will elaborate more on this point in later posts, but I will say for now that I am VERY committed to the ideals of human rights and self-determination. Saddam Hussein was NOT a good leader for the people of Iraq, but neither is the current leader of North Korea or the leaders of the communist party in China. We don't see the United States marching into those countries with our military might and forcing a political transition "to democracy," and we shouldn't see the US doing this in Iraq either.
I also agree with Senator Obama's position on torture. It is ridiculous, embarrassing, and intolerable that the United States continues to violate the human rights of numerous people with our military and intelligence facility in Guantanamo Bay. The Bush government has kidnapped many, many people in Iraq as well as elsewhere and moved them to Guantanamo because there, they ostensibly have no human rights-- to due process or anything else. I am not naive. I know we are at war. I know there are lots of people who hate the United States and want to destroy our nation and what we stand for. But I fervently believe one of the things we DO NOT and SHOULD NOT stand for is condoning torture and the arbitrary suspension of habeas corpus. Senator Obama is right to speak out on these issues, and I support him because of these views.
I also am ready to have a President who will lead meaningfully on the issue of health care. As a husband and father of three young children, I'm quite aware of health care costs. They are ridiculous. We have not seen strong national leadership on the issue of health care costs, and we need it. I'm not for nationalized health care. I've been in the military, and I'm quite familiar with the challenges and problems which come with socialized medical care systems. We do, however, need a system which serves the interests of the average consumer more than it serves the interests of the insurance companies. I think our current system fails to meet the needs of many, and I'm ready for leadership on health care.
I could write more, but I will close with those thoughts for now. If you haven't already, take some time to watch some of the videos of Senator Obama posted to his campaign's official YouTube channel. You may not be able to tune in "live" to watch him give a speech, but thanks to the power of digital communication technologies, sites like YouTube, and the work of his tech-saavy campaign support team, you don't have to. Take some time and watch Senator Obama speak online, on your own time. That's called "time and place shifting" in your consumption of electronic media, and enabling that dynamic as the Obama campaign is doing should be considered a "best practice" for 21st century electoral politics.