Monday, November 10, 2008

Let's bring the terrorists to the U.S. for free!

Ok guys, while I admire Obama and did chose to vote for him.. one has to wonder what he is thinking. Our president-elect and his advisers are formulating planes to close Guantanamo Bay and bring all the prisonors to the U.S.

The worst part? Many of the detanees would just go free. That's it. No more time in jail for whatever they did that was bad enough to get them sent to Cuba instead of the U.S. I think my biggest problem with this is that Obama and his advisors plan on creating a seperate legal system for the "new" Guantanamo Bay when they rebuild it somewhere in the U.S.

The The American Civil Liberties Union is behind all of this nonesense. While I don't agree with all the crazy stuff that happens over in Cuba, I do think that shipping the bad guys over to the U.S. may not be the best way to go about things. While some of the practices are inhumane and unfair, (disclaimer: I don't agree with torture, but I thought this was amusing) do we really want these guys in a maximum security prison? They need more than that to hold them back, I think. I do feel that the military who sends guys over to Guanatanmo need to have more concrete evidence, we can't argue that they are sent there for no reason either. Most of the records are classified, so who knows whats going on? We need more rules, and for the people who work there to follow the rules (rather than just beating the prisoners), not to close down Guantanamo, but to make it more livable.
So, what do you all think of this?

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Election Day 2008

It’s over. The longest and most expensive presidential campaign in U. S. history ended last night with Barack Obama’s clear victory, both in the electoral and popular vote. His victory did not come easy; he had to outfight formidable opponents in Hillary Clinton and John McCain and persuade Americans that he had the ability to lead them in tough times. But the precision and professionalism with which he and his advisors ran his campaign made him the decisive winner and gave America its first African American president. It was a stunning moment, especially for people like me who vividly remember that less than fifty years ago, segregation was legal in the South and de facto segregation was pervasive in the North. Barack Obama’s victory does not mark the end of racism in the United States, but I think that it marks the beginning of the end.

This election galvanized voters of all parties. Everywhere I went yesterday, people sported “I Voted” stickers and were eager to discuss the election. My husband and I went to West Springfield High School at 7:15 AM to vote and found that the line was already snaking its way out of the building. But despite the early hour and the long line, people were upbeat and talkative, energized (in part) by the coffee and baked goods volunteers were selling outside, but mostly by a keen awareness that we were taking part in a historic election. Our long line moved swiftly, and in less than an hour, my husband and I were inside the school and voting. The use of scannable paper ballots made it possible for more people to vote at once, and this new voting method kept the line moving and frustration low. What about you? What happened when you went to vote?

On Mason’s campus, the weather was dreary and damp, but spirits were high.

Student Government ran vans to the Woodson High School polling place, and volunteers promoted this service by becoming “human advertisements.”

Rain apparently, does not damper revolutions!


This guy stole my heart!

Our university was not without its own drama. Yesterday morning, a hacker broke into the Provost’s email account and sent out a fake message announcing that the election had been moved to November 5th. Rumors circulated that Mason students who voted could lose their financial aid.

But such lame attempts proved ineffective against the smart and savvy youthful voters who went to the polls in record numbers. Your demographic – voters between the ages of 18 and 25 – voted overwhelmingly for Obama and helped power him to victory. Now it’s your turn to act upon that mandate and consider how you will help him guide our nation toward economic recovery, energy reform, and improved security both at home and abroad.

How will you meet the challenge Obama made to all Americans in his victory speech last night that change can’t happen without “a new spirit of patriotism, a new spirit of sacrifice?” How has this election influenced your outlook on the future and the role you will play in it as a working professional?