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I wonder just how much of a German protector would Obama be as a US president?
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"In the days before volcanoes were invented, lava had to be hand carried down from the mountains and poured on the sleeping villagers.
This took a great deal of time."
----- Original Message -----
From: Joe Brewoo <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Sunday, January 6, 2008 10:36 pm
Subject: Barack Obama's popularity soars - in Germany
To: [log in to unmask]
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>
> RENEW YOUR ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP WITH AAM!!!!
>
> SEND A CHECK FOR $25 TO AAM, P. O. Box 1016, MADISON, WI 53701
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> MEMBERSHIP PERIOD:OCTOBER 1 - SEPTEMBER 30
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> Global Obama-mania!!!!
>
> Joe
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> Europe
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>
> Barack Obama's popularity soars - in Germany
>
>
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>
> By Nicholas Kulish
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>
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> BERLIN: Barack Obama's popularity extends far beyond Iowa and into
> the heart of Central Europe. Germany has swiftly developed a serious
> case of Obama-mania.
>
>
> Obama's high standing goes beyond his opposition to the Iraq War,
> which has always been unpopular here. The sudden crush is intimately
> bound up with the near constant comparisons here between the young
> senator from Illinois and President John F. Kennedy - still admired in
> Germany and particularly in Berlin - which have stuck fast as his
> identity in the German press.
>
> The Berliner Morgenpost over the weekend ran with the headline, "The
> New Kennedy." The tabloid Bild went with, "This Black American Has
> Become the New Kennedy!" An editorial in the Frankfurter Rundschau
> went one historic president better with a headline that read simply:
> "Lincoln, Kennedy, Obama," adding that "hope and optimism" are "the
> source of the nation's strength." Obama's newfound popularity among
> Germans underscores not only the breadth of his appeal but also the
> opportunity he might have as president - though he is still far from
> the White House, much less his party's nomination - to mend fences
> abroad as well as at home.
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> "There are similarities between JFK's time and today," said Karsten
> Rossow, 49, of Berlin, who was visiting the small Kennedy Museum by
> the Brandenburg Gate on a dark, snowy afternoon Sunday with his wife.
> "People are ready for the politics of change." His wife, Änne Rossow,
> added that "after so much disappointment" - she was referring to the
> Bush administration - "one seizes on these liberal ideals." While all
> of Europe keeps a close eye on U.S. elections, Germans learned to pay
> particularly close attention because of the influence that America had
> as both occupier and protector after World War II. That is true not
> only for supporters but also for detractors on the political left, who
> held furious demonstrations against the Vietnam War and the nuclear
> arms race with the Soviet Union.
>
> During the Cold War, West Germany was dependent on the United States,
> nowhere more so than in West Berlin. President Kennedy is remembered
> here for the support that he gave the city as the Berlin Wall was
> built during his presidency in 1961, crystallized in his "Ich bin ein
> Berliner" speech.
> Fair or unfair, the comparisons to Kennedy stand Obama in good stead
> here. The man who could best lay claim to the title of importer of the
> Kennedy association is Christoph von Marschall, Washington bureau
> chief for the Tagesspiegel newspaper and author of a book released
> here last month called "Barack Obama, The Black Kennedy."
>
> As for many American voters, von Marschall said, Obama represents a
> change from the present government and policies in America, even if he
> was until recently an unknown quantity compared with Hillary Clinton.
> "Only a small, informed minority knew about Barack Obama in December,"
> said von Marschall, who returned to Germany for the release of his
> book. After the Iowa caucuses Thursday, however, interest in Obama and
> sales of the book took off. Despite the fact that Obama is not
> associated with Europe in general or Germany in particular, he has "a
> cultural record that the rest of the field does not have, a better
> international and intercultural record," von Marschall said.
>
> His race also plays well here, according to Uwe Andersen, a professor
> of political science at Ruhr University in Bochum: "In Germany, there
> is great sympathy first for Native Americans and second for black Americans."
>
> Some are still reserving judgment.
> "It's too early," said Udo Schacht, 53, at a train station on
> Friedrichstrasse, the street where the border crossing Checkpoint
> Charlie once stood. "Too early to say that he's the new Kennedy."
>
> Victor Homola contributed reporting.
>
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