AltWeeklies Wire

I've Got No Love for Seven Out of 10 Black Voters in Californianew

Yes, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008, was a day when you truly felt proud to be an American. But then, on Nov. 5, I read something that changed all that. I read that California's black voters favored Proposition 8 by a margin of 70 percent to 30 percent, which means seven out of 10 black voters voted against gay marriage.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Edwin Decker  |  11-12-2008  |  Commentary

Which Lesser-Known World Crisis Do You Want Obama to Solve First?new

The Democratic Republic of Congo and Somalia could use some attention from the president-elect. Here's what he should do.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Andisheh Nouraee  |  11-12-2008  |  Commentary

Election '08: The People's Electionnew

On (almost) every level, the grassroots beat the establishment and the progressives beat the big money.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Steven T. Jones and Tim Redmond  |  11-12-2008  |  Politics

Election '08: Virginia, the Wild Blue Yondernew

Obama was a shoe-in to win the whole thing -- but Virginia?
C-Ville Weekly  |  Dan Catalano  |  11-12-2008  |  Commentary

Orange County Sings the Obama Bluesnew

Election night in California's bastion of conservatism: Frolicking Dems, Dana Rohrabacher unbound, praying for fag hags, and booze all around.
OC Weekly  |  Matt Coker, Vickie Chang and Daffodil J. Altan  |  11-11-2008  |  Politics

Obama Wins, and So Does South Floridanew

It's a victory just to have an election pass without a local embarrassment.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Staff  |  11-11-2008  |  Politics

Election '08: Now Comes the Hard Partnew

Finally, at long last, the election is over. Now comes the really, really hard part. Our nation is facing a bad time economically. Detroit and Michigan are facing something much worse. Avoiding something that looks more like a depression than a recession will be tremendously difficult.
Metro Times  |  Jack Lessenberry  |  11-11-2008  |  Commentary

Election '08: Welcome Back, Americanew

This election was America's absolute last chance not to be a dick. And you took it. Electing Obama was such an astoundingly cool thing to do that it wiped out -- at least temporarily -- all the incompetent, arrogant, bloody horror of the Bush years. You are forgiven.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Steven Wells  |  11-10-2008  |  Commentary

Chicago Dispatch: Obama's Indie Uprisingnew

As I stood in Grant Park with hundreds of thousands of fervent Obama supporters, it was hard not to wonder if all the rhetoric might be true. Was I, a Canadian interloper in Obama-land, about to witness the birth of a new America? Was a younger, more vital force taking over the country?
NOW Magazine  |  Ben Spurr  |  11-10-2008  |  Commentary

Obama's Florida Gamble Pays Offnew

McCain was too late. The new prez spent heavily in Florida and eked out victory here.
Miami New Times  |  Tristam Korten  |  11-10-2008  |  Politics

A Historian Discusses the FDR/Obama Comparisonnew

After the global economy crashed, pundits began to compare Obama with Roosevelt, the man who saw his nation through both the Great Depression and World War II. But how apt is that comparison? Historian William E. Leuchtenburg explains.
Boulder Weekly  |  Pamela White  |  11-10-2008  |  Politics

An Open Letter to President-Elect Obamanew

Before Tuesday's election results were announced, we asked our fellow Milwaukeeans: If you could sit with the next president for two minutes, what would you tell him about your area of expertise? Here's what they had to say.
Shepherd Express  |  Staff  |  11-10-2008  |  Commentary

How Obama Can Become the President for Citiesnew

Here's what the president-elect's task could be: He could so shape federal policies on energy, infrastructure, transportation, housing, and environment that the 60-year trend toward suburbanization could change, such that the city once again becomes the focus of human activity in this country.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  11-10-2008  |  Commentary

Election '08: OK, So Now What?new

This word, change, which we've fussed about and assumed to know its meaning, is still enigmatic. What kind of change are we talking about? What form will it take? Will it last? How receptive is our politics to change?
Las Vegas Weekly  |  T.R. Witcher  |  11-10-2008  |  Commentary

Yes We Did: What We Know and What We Don't About Our New American Eranew

Barack Obama's election is laden with so much significance it seems an impossible task to attempt any systematic unpacking. But this much is for certain: The full impact of the Oval Office being occupied by a black man has yet to hit home.
L.A. Weekly  |  Marc Cooper  |  11-07-2008  |  Commentary

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