American Perseverance Triumphant

Filed in National by on January 17, 2009

iwojimabondrally

I mentioned earlier today that I was nearly overwhelmed by happiness that America has a President again. I was happy for myself, but deep down I was happy for the country. America has more than just a President now. It has its heart back.

This election proves that the America of opportunity and fairness that I learned about and loved as a child will endure. Through the wisdom of our founding fathers and the bedrock commonsense and determination of its people, the American democracy will continue.

Over the past eight years this country has taken all that the radical right-wing could throw at it and it came come through. Beaten up and abused to be sure, but sound. I have often wondered if the democracy designed by great enlightenment minds like Jefferson and Adams could bear up against the impossible to imagine onslaught of a imbecilic President and a stridently corrupt Vice President and I am ready to say that it has.

Yes, it will take a lot of work to undo the damage that deranged ideologues in Congress and the media wrought, but we are Americans and we can do it. I’m fired up and ready to go.

About the Author ()

Jason330 is a deep cover double agent working for the GOP. Don't tell anybody.

Comments (13)

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  1. arthur says:

    Jason-

    You do realize what that picture represents, right? Action, not only on the part of the individuals who posed for the picture, but the american citizens who went back to their pockets 7 times to buy war bonds. So far, as with any president elevt, obama has talked. what this country now needs is action. but in all the years of hurt, anger, delsuionment, can the country be made whole again. In my opinion, even after a hopeful 8 years of prosperity under obama, this country and its people will need a lot longer to grow together to that level of unity.

    Semper Fi.

  2. jason330 says:

    So far, as with any president elevt, obama has talked.

    100% not true. He defeated the worst, most anti-American political party we’ve ever had. That was important and I picked the picture because it celebrates a similar accomplishment.

    Yes, it is going to take years for us to recover from Bush and I think the picture also captures the spirt of the country now as we move forward to fix this mess as one country, united once more.

  3. jason330 says:

    IN 2 DAYS, 2 HOURS, 46 MINUTES

    The more I think about it arthur, the more I think that we can probably all agree that Obama’s defeat of wingnut Republicanism this fall was as important to our nation’s continuance as our defeat of Nazi Germany or Japanese militarism.

  4. kilroy says:

    “Yes, it will take a lot of work to undo the damage that deranged ideologues in Congress and the media wrought, but we are Americans and we can do it. I’m fired up and ready to go.”

    OMG Jason! I am struggling for the right word! But profound comes to mind!

    You pointed the finger at congress as a body not taking sides and you said “we” as meaning together as one!

    You would have made a great hippie!

  5. jason330 says:

    I’m just going to keep on posting proof to this thread:

    Michael Scherer had reaction at TIME:

    But on this day, many of those neighborhoods came to life. Most people could only see Obama’s train for a matter of seconds. It rarely slowed, and Obama only stepped outside the caboose to wave on a few occasions. But none of this seemed to dent the enthusiasm of the crowds. They cheered as if the train was coming to see them, as if Obama’s victory had been their victory, and it was only now just beginning. For miles and miles, for people in dress coats and work clothes, it was the same–Americans literally jumping for joy over a president who has changed his country without yet taking office.

    America is literally jumping for joy.

  6. cassandra_m says:

    The NYT today publishes its poll:

    Most Americans said they did not expect real progress in improving the economy, reforming the health care system or ending the war in Iraq — three of the central promises of Mr. Obama’s campaign — for at least two years. The poll found that two-thirds of respondents think the recession will last two years or longer.

    As the nation prepares for a transfer of power and the inauguration of its 44th president, Mr. Obama’s stature with the American public stands in sharp contrast to that of President Bush.

    Mr. Bush is leaving office with just 22 percent of Americans offering a favorable view of how he handled the eight years of his presidency, a record low, and firmly identified with the economic crisis Mr. Obama is inheriting. More than 80 percent of respondents said the nation was in worse shape today than it was five years ago.

    By contrast, 79 percent were optimistic about the next four years under Mr. Obama, a level of good will for a new chief executive that exceeds that measured for any of the past five incoming presidents. And it cuts across party lines: 58 percent of the respondents who said they voted for Mr. Obama’s opponent in the general election, Senator John McCain of Arizona, said they were optimistic about the country in an Obama administration.

    Translation: lots of optimism, and a willingness to give him time to get the broken stuff fixed.

  7. 100% not true. He defeated the worst, most anti-American political party we’ve ever had.
    *
    Jason, I think that this is the sentiment that the GOP will try hardest to but will fail to dispute.
    Americans recognize, however foggified, that the GWB reign was anti-American. The GOP/RNC/White House and its Congress betrayed even the ‘conservative’ tenets that drew them into power in the first place.
    Still, it is going to be tough going to keep the pressure up for us to insist that Obama honor the Constitution he will soon vow to uphold and protect and that he persue justice for the many crimes committed by the past administration.

  8. anon says:

    Translation: lots of optimism, and a willingness to give him time to get the broken stuff fixed.

    I am giving the public some credit for seeing through the bullshit, but I am afraid it won’t last. Wingnuts still control the MSM… on the other hand, many of their outlets are on their knees financially. I can imagine them trying to whip up viewership with red-meat attacks on Obama. Or, they could get on the bus and draw viewers by covering Obama fairly.

  9. Mike Protack says:

    You clearly do not understand the significance of Iwo Jima.

    I have stood on Mr Suribachi and it has nothing to do a resurgence of liberals or conservatives.

    A very sad post indeed.

    What will be more sad will be the flip flops of Obama which have already started, maybe then liberals will see they were sold a farce of a candidate.

  10. jason330 says:

    Talk about sad. Dude, you are the poster child for sad.

    And guess what…based on your on going support of George Bush I can say with certainty that you you don’t know shit about America or the significance of Iwo Jima you anti-American son of a bitch.

  11. Mike Protack says:

    The president-elect also gave his support for legislation that would make it easier for workers to unionize, but he said there may be other ways to achieve the same goal without angering businesses. And while many Democrats on Capitol Hill are eager to see a quick vote on that bill, he indicated no desire to rush into the contentious issue.

    “If we’re losing half a million jobs a month, then there are no jobs to unionize, so my focus first is on those key economic priority items I just mentioned,” he said. “Let’s see what the legislative docket looks like.”

  12. jason330 says:

    Go soak your head.

  13. Neptune says:

    Wipe your chin!