Jan 21, 2012

Obama, looking for his presidential reelection

Barack Obama was elected in 2008 as the 44th US president.
He was elected looking for big challenges in his country after George W. Bush time. Two wars (Afghanistan and Irak) and the most important thing: a big recession that put in bankruptcy many important and historic companies.

Photo of Barack Obama
The White House web page.

Obama arrived to the White House after he did a good job as US Senator.
During the last 3 yeras he did good things and in other things he tried but he couldnt obtain the purposed goals. What about Guantanamo, what about some reforms?
Now is time to ask if he is the better candidate of Democratic Party to run for President next november?
Republicans are deciding nowdays who will be their candidate.
Obama can do a good job if he is elected in november.
9 months is a good time to see if this is true or not?
Check out his web page.

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Obama's Narrative.
(Taken from: http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2011/11/obama%E2%80%99s-narrative/)

Mixing historical perspective, personal reminiscence, and psychological analysis, Harvard Law School Professor Charles J. Ogletree Jr. kicked off a three-part lecture series titled “Understanding Obama” Tuesday at the Barker Center and sponsored by the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research.

“Barack Obama is a brilliant man — a really brilliant man — and sometimes that gets in the way of politics,” said Ogletree, the Jesse Climenko Professor of Law and director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice.
In Tuesday’s talk, “From Barry to Barack,” Ogletree focused on Obama’s childhood, schooling, and early career, tracing the role race and religion played in forming his character.
Ogletree covered what has become common knowledge about Obama’s upbringing, infusing the facts with fresh insight. The future president was born in Hawaii to a white American mother and a Kenyan father. “In each stage of his life, trying to understand race has become increasingly difficult,” Ogletree said.
Obama’s sense of racial identity came largely from his mother. “She was instrumental in telling him who he was,” Ogletree said. She told her son about his father’s struggles to improve his life; she brought home books on the civil rights movement. His father, whom Barack met only once, gave him his name, but called himself  “Barry,” as did young Obama until high school age. Ogletree showed a slide of the poignant inscription “King Obama,” drawn decades ago in a schoolyard’s wet cement by a youngster grappling with an absent father.
Ogletree described how Barry, now Barack, searched for a religious community in Chicago and found a connection in the church of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright. There he was brought to tears by a sermon on “The Audacity to Hope.” Obama changed the phrase for his book, “The Audacity of Hope.”
Ogletree, who knew both Obama and his wife, Michelle Obama, when they studied at Harvard, emphasized that Barack was an excellent student but had to be “pushed and pulled” to run for president of the Harvard Law Review.
“He was not always highly regarded by people when he was president,” Ogletree said.  “He believed then as I think he believes now that he can bring everybody together. And is that a benefit or is that a challenge in some respects? He allowed people of every political perspective to be editors on the law review and write what they wanted to write about. And some of the most conservative people respected him because he was smart and he had the judgment to say that what they wrote would be accepted because it was well-written even if he disagreed with it. He was deeply committed to bringing folks together.”
Ogletree played a video of a 1990 rally for Harvard Law Professor Derrick Bell, who announced he was taking an unpaid leave of absence to push the Law School for more diversity. The image was blurry and jumpy, but the voice of the young man who introduced Bell was unmistakably that of the future president. “Of course, we hid this during the 2008 campaign; I don’t care if they find it now,” Ogletree said.
A more significant development came after Obama graduated Harvard in 1991. He could have been a clerk for the Supreme Court; he could have easily gone to a big law firm with a big salary. He and Ogletree even talked about the options, and Obama said he wanted to go back to Chicago to be a community organizer.
“I thought about it and I said, ‘Barack, yes, you can,’ ” Ogletree said amid huge laughter. He added, to an even bigger laugh, “Barack has never given me credit at all.”
So Obama went back to Chicago, and eventually won a Senate seat. In 2004 in Boston, he gave a career-defining speech at the Democratic Convention, again sounding the theme of bringing people together. “It really was to be a defining speech about who was Barack Obama,” Ogletree said.
Audience members, however, questioned the effectiveness of the president’s efforts to unite people, and Ogletree acknowledged: “When you think about the stimulus package, health care, the jobs bill, there is something remarkable about watching other presidents do what they thought was right, even against congressional reaction, to put it in their face to get something done.”
He predicted, however, that the Supreme Court will uphold most of Obama’s health care plan and that the term “Obamacare” will become a positive not a pejorative description.
Asked, “What keeps him together? What is his core?” — or as Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, interjected, “What makes the brother tick?”— Ogletree cited Obama’s efforts every night in the White House to eat dinner with his family and to read about 20 of the thousands of letters he receives. “He is still really learning how to be a great president,” Ogletree said.



Jan 15, 2012

Raid Dakar, more than a Rally

2012 - Argentina/Chile - Personal
Dakar Official logo. http://www.dakar.com
Since 2009 the Dakar was transferred from Europe and Africa to South America. The landscapes changed (not radically) but Sahara dessert is kind of diferent of  different of Atacama dessert and Andes Mountains.


Raid Dakar was born in 1979, 33 years ago. Cars (Mitsubishi, Volkswagen, Hummer, MINI, BMW, Renault, Mercedes Benz, Porsche, Peugeot, Citroên, Toyota), motorcycles (KTM, Yamaha, BMW, Jincheng, Cagiva, Aprilia, Honda), trucks (Iveco, Kamaz, MAN, Tatra, Hino, DAF, Merecdez Benz) and quads (Yamaha) compete around 15 days each begin of the year across 8000 kilometers.

Dakar is a Off road endurance race and most of the vehicles are modified. During the history of the race there are lots of incidents and some drivers died. Its important to remark that the organization prepare a good test each year taking into account the geography.

This is the most difficult car race in the whole world. Only professional drivers can do the most important goal: arrive to the end.

http://www.dakar.com