It was sometime in late 2005, in one of my many trips to Helsinki, that I picked up the book “Dreams From My father” at the SFO airport. It was written by someone named Barack Obama. When I finished reading it, I told my wife - “I hope he runs for president someday; if he does, we should contribute to his campaign.” As soon as he announced, we steadily contributed time and money to his campaign, and of course we took a special pride in his victory.
It must be noted that my wife didn’t warm to him easily, She was a Hillary backer after all, but she kept an open mind. By the time we heard him speak after his Iowa primary victory, she was as committed a volunteer as any working mother with a husband and a child that any campaign could ask for. I cajoled her into reading “Dreams From my Father.” but she only read it after he was nominated. Obama’s campaign is the only time we have so actively engaged in the political process at a national level. (My wife has always been involved in school-board level issues/propositions)
While I do confess to having consumed a bit too much champagne on the night of Obama’s victory, I am not as giddy as some are and I am under no illusion about utopia being upon us. I know that, as president, he will have his share of failures. He is human - with personal flaws and prone to errors in judgment like the rest of us.
However, I am hopeful (and hope is something he promises in spades) that he will give me back the country I adopted as my own more than 8 years ago. It is a country that, despite tragic flaws in its history, has always promised something very noble. I bought into that promise and sought its citizenship, despite being the citizen of a country with a rich heritage. On a clear September day in 2001, a few deranged fanatics put forth a test to the very ideals that this country held dear, by tearing down the twin towers. They tested the very decency and moral character of this country. The Bush-Cheney co-presidency failed this test abysmally.
Instead of reassuring the world that despite immense challenges they would adhere to the basic tenets of democracy, the Bush administration indulged in a vulgar usurpation of power that modern democracies have never known. The balance of power that was carefully constructed between the executive, judicary and legislature was tilted overwhelmingly in favor of the executive. Through sheer hubris the Bush-Cheney co-presidency went about shredding the constitution and wielded it as a tool to achieve its own, often nefarious, ends. Cronyism trumped competency in every sphere. My government went so far as to withdraw from the Geneva convention and openly indulged in torture. It used means like extraordinary rendition to set up secret gulags that would have made Stalin proud.
Within 7 years George Bush had squandered - no, shredded - every noble ideal that this country was known for. While many know him as the architect of the two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, he is also the architect of a few lesser-known wars which include a class war against the poor, a religious war against non-evangelicals and moderates, a war against science and learning and intellectuals, and a war against the environment. My government indulged in an orgy of appalling human rights violations and made Abu Gharib and Gitmo household names the world over.
It doesn’t bother me that we are in the biggest economic crisis of my generation. Not for a moment do I lose sleep that the economy may get so bad that I may have to give up the “goodies of life” that I currently enjoy. No, what fills me with grief are the acts that have been done in my name as a citizen of this country. I don’t care if Obama doesn’t fix the economy and I couldn’t care less whether he serves one term or two. The only thing I hope for, from Mr Obama’s ascendancy to the highest office of this land, is that he restores the decency and moral character of this country.
I have reason to be hopeful - I don’t know of any other country that would have elected a man with a Muslim middle name, when that country was waging what many the world over perceived to be a war against Muslims. This country, unlike any other, has the remarkable ability to completely reinvent itself - especially when it is faced with its toughest challenges. Time and time again, it has picked leaders from George Washington, to Lincoln to FDR, to lead the country out of a seeming abyss to a new day. I hope that Barack Hussein Obama will join this pantheon of leaders.