Monthly Archive for November, 2008

a new leader for the nation

[ed. new entries below]

obama and the us elections are so two days ago - the nz elections are the big news of the day.

new zealand grants voting right to permanent residents after their first year, so the jboss and me headed off the polls to cast our vote. actually as permanent residents we get all the rights and responsibilities of a citizen except a nz passport.

in the week before the election you receive an easy vote card that has you name, voter id, and electorate. you can use that to vote anywhere in the country, but easily and quickly anywhere in your electorate. here in island bay we are in the rongotai electorate - and we voted at the island bay school just a short walk from our house.

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you see see that i’ve aged a bit since i broke my leg - and the jboss is looking a bit grey after cutting back on the expensive salon visits.

i think the pictures below make it clear who won and who lost.

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the right honorable john key of the national party is our new prime minister-elect and helen clark of labour is ending her 9 year run as pm.

mr key is a more typical fiscally oriented church going slightly conservative politician, whilst helen is a unapologetically liberal agnostic (that’s not going to happen in the us in my lifetime) outdoor enthusiast. she’s second from the right below during one of her annual winter tramps through the southern alps.

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note the election even made the times (see the tiny yellow link right below the link to the article on caring for old timers with hip fractures)

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civics 101

since we’re 15 to 18 hours ahead of most of the us (i guess we have to acknowledge alaska and hawaii given their role in the current election), the results of the elections started flowing in at 1 in the afternoon of the 5th for us here in nz. knowing i wouldn’t be able to concentrate on anything else i took the afternoon off and the jboss and me headed into town to watch the returns at a bar that was covering the event.

the us embassy was also hosting an event at the civic center, but given the current ambassador is a bush appointee i’m confident that the crowd at the bar was more aligned with my desired outcome, so that decision was easy.

given the massive coverage of the us elections for months now in the nz media i expected there to be significant interest, but i was startled at the size of the crowd, the balloons, red-white-and-blue bunting, and all the obama signs. both floors of the bar were full of folks glued to cnn election coverage on the tvs. wild cheering as the results of each state were announced.

i think all americans should experience a us election from overseas to appreciate it’s impact on the world.

quite an emotional day - but the defining moment was a kiwi coming up to me and saying “congratulations - and thank you”

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wellington was nice enough to put on a fireworks display that night to celebrate the election of new president.

well - that and guy fawkes day.

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it got very cold in the evening, but given the excitement of the day the jboss and me wanted to stay for the festivities. not to complain, but the quality seemed quite dodgy. a lot of lopsided or odd shaped displays. next day the paper had the story:

“Two weeks ago, organisers were faced with a fizzer when they discovered that a cargo of fireworks from China was not going to arrive in time.

The council’s events manager, John Dawson, said organisers faced a late scramble to get fireworks when, for reasons still unknown, the original shipment was held up.

“Fortunately we were able to get a lot from an Auckland fireworks company which had stock left over.”

given the rivalry between auckland and wellington i’m guessing we got the rejects that some discount / shady fireworks dealer had wonder how he was ever going to unload.

“uh - sure. you got 100,000 people planning on showing up for fireworks tomorrow and you’re shipment is late. i think i can help you out…”

the voters in america pause and take note

ok, sure, 237 newpapers have already endorsed obama, but a late development that will surely push any remaining undecided voters over the line…

… the wellington dominion post has officially endorsed barack obama for president of the united states.

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Editorial: A man to restore his nation’s lustre

The Dominion Post | Monday, 03 November 2008


If the polls are to be believed, United States voters are about to make history. For the first time in 220 years, they are not going to elect a white male as president, The Dominion Post writes.

There are some who believe that it is still too big an “if”. They believe that, in the privacy of the polling booth, too many of their fellow citizens will decide that they are not yet ready to be led by a man who has described himself as being born of a father “black as pitch” and a mother “white as milk”.

It will be a tragedy for America, and for the rest of the world, if that is the reason Barack Obama loses the presidency - and it is hard to imagine that, this close to victory, he could be denied by anything else.

In the dying days of what has been a gruelling campaign that has tested the mettle of both candidates, the polls in 12 crucial battleground states has Mr Obama in front in 11 of them. Going into the weekend, Republican John McCain was leading only in Indiana.

Mr Obama’s campaign is awash with cash and volunteers. Mr McCain lacks both. He is having to offer US$12 an hour to get canvassers in the key state of Florida.

Mr McCain would not be a disastrous president compared to the incumbent, but Mr Obama has not put a serious foot wrong during the campaign. He has not, unlike Mr McCain, resorted to the politics of division. He did not, unlike Mr McCain, choose a neophyte as his running mate. Despite her initial everywoman appeal, Sarah Palin quickly became a liability as the shallowness of her experience was first revealed in the glare of a national campaign, and then ridiculed.

Nor has Mr Obama had to carry the burden of the bungled presidency of George W Bush. Mr Bush’s is a presidency that led the US into a costly and bloody war on the basis of a lie, which has trashed the rule of law in the name of security, and which has conspicuously failed to control the cowboys of Wall Street and regulate their greed.

Mr Bush’s approval rating is at 22 per cent - the equal lowest in history. Eighty-nine per cent have a negative view of the economy, and 85 per cent think the country is on the wrong track. A majority now think invading Iraq was a bad idea.

Sadly for Mr McCain, however much he may try to portray himself as a maverick, he cannot escape that he is still a Republican and America has been brought low in the eyes of the world by a Republican president.

The election of Mr Obama would in itself be a step to restoring some that lost lustre. Already his candidacy has given life to the ideals which underpin his nation, and put the US on the edge of making real Martin Luther King Jr’s hope that his country would become a “land where men will not argue that the colour of a man’s skin determines the content of his character”. As Mr Obama has said, “for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on earth is my story even possible”.

That a man who is one generation removed from the huts of Kenya now stands on the threshold of the Oval Office is a powerful symbol for the world of a nation that aspires to be better than it is. An Obama victory would underline that it is willing to live up to those aspirations.

the creature walks

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day 58 and i took my first unassisted steps since my accident.

just 10 steps today. more tomorrow.