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41 Responses to “Barack and Michelle Obama talk to People Magazine about their family”

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  1. Anni says:

    he´s in berlin right now giving a speech at the siegessäule. i am watching it on tv. he´s seems to be a nice guy. hm. i like him.

  2. Trillion says:

    I just read that the U.S. state dept. has barred it’s employees from attending his speech in Berlin.

  3. Bodhi says:

    I love this family! Politics asides, they are both really great parents

  4. daisy424 says:

    @Trillion, look to the source of that reporting; Daily Kos, Huffington Post, etc. Far left bias reporting.

  5. Kaiser says:

    Love him. Love the soon-to-be first family.

    CB, did you go to his speech?

  6. Mr. T says:

    The emporer’s new clothes. You either see him for what he is or as he paints himself as the new messiah. People are clueless.

  7. Karen says:

    Is he branding himself as a new Brangelina instead of focusing on plans and substance?

    When someone wants us to focus on his private life, I wonder how “professional” is it.

    If it’s some lousy actors who have less to offer in the acting department and they opt to garner publicity by PR stunts it’s one thing.

    But a presidential candidate?

    What’s next? Attending a premiere?
    Adopting an Asain child?
    Photo op at Starbucks?

  8. geronimo says:

    Even allowing for the fact that they have to be careful with what they say, they come across really well here. Very sweet with the kids saying ‘never mind the Whitehouse, what about our school and friends?’

    Edit. Where exactly is he painting himself as the new Messiah?? Must have missed that bit. Not his fault if others have decided to invest a lot of possibly unrealistic expectations in him?

  9. Kaiser says:

    @Karen – McCain has an adopted Asian daughter. And he just did a photo op at a grocery store, but alas, not at a Starbucks. And McCain’s written books – and taken the profits for himself – about his life, including *gasp* lots of personal info.

    Michelle & Cindy McCain have both done photo shoots with Vogue & interviews with womens’ mags. And The Bushes, McCains, Clintons and Obamas have all given interviews to People Magazine. It’s called appealing to low-information voters.

  10. Bob says:

    Trust me. The kids don’t have to worry about leaving their friends. They’ll be staying in Chicago.

  11. Trillion says:

    Daisy: read it in the Washington Post, hardly the far left.

  12. Syko says:

    I don’t see anyway that being far left is any worse than being far right. Look where the right has us – poised on the brink of a depression.

    When did “liberal” become a bad word anyway?

  13. daisy424 says:

    Yeah Trillion, with Bill Arkin?

    @Syko, I am neither.

  14. ziggybutterfly says:

    His lead economic advisor was on Fresh Air this morning and he was SO IRRITATING.

    I get the Messiah complex from Obama as well.

  15. Syko says:

    I knew you weren’t a baddie, Daisy. 🙂

  16. jessiee says:

    and i get the doddering old grandfather vibe from McCain.

  17. daisy424 says:

    The first election I was old enough to vote in was ’80.
    I vote for the person, not their Party affiliation.

  18. Syko says:

    Me too, Daisy. I’ve been voting since 1964. The sad thing is, I have never voted for anyone that excited me. Not in my entire life. It’s always been for the one I hated the least. Looks like this is another one of those elections.

  19. Bodhi says:

    Ditto Syko… But the 1st time I voted was in 2000 😉

  20. Trillion says:

    I’m searching to see if the story is B.S. about the State Dept. being banned. Sorry Daisy, but it seems to be fact so far. The diplomats union is trying to appeal the ruling. (American Foreign Service Assoc.)

  21. Kaiser says:

    Sounds like Syko voted for Nixon! 🙂

    But seriously, I think some of these complaints against Obama are a bit weak. It’s like the old joke:

    A woman stands, waiting on the blood-soaked battlefield of Gettysburg. President Lincoln steps up to the podium and delivers the Gettysburg Address. Afterward, a journalist asks the woman what she thought of Lincoln.

    “He’s too tall,” she complained.

  22. Syko says:

    Nope, sure didn’t, Kaiser. I would have in 1960 because I liked him better than Kennedy – but I wasn’t old enough to vote. Back then you had to be 21 and I was only 18. But I learned enough about him to be glad when he resigned.

  23. Celebitchy says:

    @Kaiser, I did go to his speech. But he really left me and the crowd underwhelmed. I have heard much better speeches from him and I expected more. He is so middle of the road now and focused on security, terrorism, etc. Toward the middle it started picking up but he had all these talking points that just seemed fake and b.s. like he was trying to come across as a centrist. I’m still going to vote for him, but I don’t have the enthusiasm for him that I used to – and I don’t think he has the enthusiasm he used to have either.

  24. Karen says:

    Kaiser, well excuse me for expecting something diffeent from him.

    I thought he was about “change” and not another politician.

    If he is just like all the rest and opting to “talk about his family” instead of his plans, that he doesn’t have a lot to offer.

    I am not voting for his ability to talk about his children.
    I would have voted for Angelina if that was the case.

  25. daisy424 says:

    Trilion 😉 Thanks!

    Syko, I agree with you. No excites me either.

    CB, I am surprised that you leaked your vote on-line. I see exactly what you mean. I hear about the ‘change’ he touts, but I want firm answers about where he stands on specific issues. He has charisma, but is vague.

    I think that we all want who is ‘best’ for our country. Every American voting has different priorities and concerns. That is what will steer you toward the candidate that is right for you.

  26. Plot says:

    cb, I was underwhelmed as well (damn! Was it crowded or what?) For the number of people who showed up, I expected something huge from Obama. But when he started in on the Berlin Airlift bit, I turned to my BF with a big “Uh-oh” and knew Obama was phoning it in.

    Guess he had a long, hard day dealing with Merkel. Germans are tough for the uninitiated.

    Loved the crowd response to the environmental parts.

    Still voting for him.

  27. countrybabe says:

    Bob that’s funny. Kaiser would love Obama. He appeals mostly to the hard left.
    He seems to only spend time with his daughters on a photo op.

  28. Scott F. says:

    He has to appeal to the center if he wants to have any chance of being elected. Name a single far left candidate that’s ever won a presidential election in this country. The closest you’ll come is probably Carter, who was a dismal failure.

    Clinton won the first time by becoming a ‘new Democrat’, which translated into being for social programs but still being tough on defense and crime. We found out what a crock of shit that was when he cut the balls off the military just in time for the war on terror to begin (but hey, the Army got schnazzy new berets). He won the second time by taking credit for welfare reform (which he’d vetoed twice and only passed because Carville told him if he didn’t it would cost him reelection).

    Kerry tried the far left, anti-war, anti-tax cuts, anti-patriot act approach, and it got him buried by 3 million votes by arguably one of the least popular incumbent Presidents of all time. I don’t often credit Obama with much, but apparently he can at least learn from past mistakes.

    He would have had to go far left like that to really impress most of Europe, which is pretty far left in general compared to the US. But Europeans need to understand we really only have 2 viable parties, so you have to appeal to a MUCH larger percentage of people than your average European politician who’s party may only represent 5-10% of the population.

  29. Anastasia says:

    Karen, I need to tell you something: Angelina isn’t running for president. Sorry. LOL.

    Why do you keep injecting her into every thread you post on? In other words, why the obsession?

  30. Anastasia says:

    And more on-topic, I really like Obama. I think he’s going to make a great president, and thank God, because we sure as hell need it.

  31. Shane says:

    Being President is not the end all, be all of everything. If Obama doesn’t win, I wonder if he will move forward anyway on the issues he has campaigned for. He certainly has financial and celebrity backing, so it seems he can accomplish alot from here on out, President or not. Just a thought.

  32. lunachick says:

    I love how Obama advocates personal responsibility, and challenges all of us to get involved and make a difference.

    After 8 years of embarrassment and, frankly, horror…I mean, before Bush II I never would have imagined U.S. would stoop to the level of torturing people…we’re supposed to be the good guys!

    Seeing Obama represent a different side of America today on an international stage felt so good. It made me really proud to be an American again.

    I’ll never forgive Bush and his gang of criminals for having taken that pride from me for a time.

  33. ROBYN says:

    WHY CAN’T OBAMA BE SEEN FOR WHAT HE IS,
    THE NEXT PRESIDENT. IT SHOULDN’T COME AS A SUPRISE…. FOR YEARS LOOK WHO HAS TO COME IT AND CLEAN UP AFTER YOU KNOW WHO…………………..

  34. Karen says:

    Scott, why can’t he show his true colors?

    If he is a far left candidate than let’s hear what he stands for and if he is repesenting a new kind of leadership- than gossip mags and phot ops are not the way to go.

    There is a difference from what I expect from a rock star and a president.

    I do not like this new twist in what he was supposed to represent.

    I am not voting for the coolest rock star of the year.

    This is supposed to be something much more important and respectable, based on merits and ideas, plans etc.

    He was supposed to “not play” these old school games of old politics.

  35. geronimo says:

    Watched coverage of Obama’s Berlin outing last night on Newsnight (political affairs prog) and there seemed to be very mixed reactions to it. European opinion was on the whole fairly positive but American opinion seemed less so. The consensus seemed to be that it matters not one iota to Americans how well he is received in other parts of the world since it’s Americans he needs to impress, There also seemed to be a lot of raised eyebrows at what was perceived as a presidential candidate prematurely acting like an elected president. Obama’s in a hard place.

  36. Kaiser says:

    For God’s sake, Scott. For all the bitching you did on the Angelina thread… you know what you are? A Bushloonie. Just a few points:

    *Kerry wasn’t hard left. He voted for the Iraq war resolution, and engaged in little to no war oversight. He pissed off a lot anti-war voters (like me).
    *Yeah, Clinton is such a douchebag for not spending money like a drunken sailer after the Cold War. Good thing your butt-buddy Bush prioritized! Afganistan is a growing democracy! Oh wait… Bin Laden and al-Zawihiri are now in custody! Oh wait…

  37. vdantev says:

    Bush didn’t win an election Scott, it was a bloodless coup. Don’t look for him or his toadies to give up power so easily.

    They still have 4 months for another ‘unprecedented’ terrorist action to save the day.

  38. Mebe says:

    At least Obama is for birth control.

    All of the girls on here do know OBAMA SUPPORTS WOMEN BEING ABLE TO TAKE BIRTH CONTROL, & MCCAIN DOES NOT SUPPORT BIRTH CONTROL!!!

    Obama offers jobs converting to a green economy, McCain hasn’t voted for the environment in his history of the Senate. McCain is awful, awful, awful.

    Please don’t let the “liberal media” lie to you about Obama find our his position for yourself.

  39. Ms C says:

    Seems this family is becoming new celebrities to the media, i wonder why the major news channels followed him to Europe, yet never sent their main anchors anywhere to follow McCain? Bias reporting? It’s all smoke and mirrors with the Obama’s. One term as junior senator, no leadership experience, not even boy scouts, etc. Scarey to think he may end up clueless president of this country. Change can be good or bad, depends upon whom you vote for.

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