Home arrow All Blog Posts arrow Barack Obama In Fargo Friday, November 21 2008  
HomeAll Blog PostsForumsWeatherContact UsMiniPuttAboutYouTube Page

Blog advertising works!
Latest Comment
Another Republican Success Story
If we are lucky, Bush's midnight regulation squad ...
WSI: Attorney General Opinions
After rereading Chet's commentary, I realized just...
WSI: Attorney General Opinions
Right on!!!!! It appears to me that the only hope...
Blogging NorthDecoder
I admit it, out of morbid curiosity, I check out t...
Blogging NorthDecoder
By the way Chet congrats on your third year, keep ...
Calendar of Events

Anybody got anything else that's interesting for me?

ND News
Links Worth Reading
The Seminal
Horses Ass
Texas Kaos
First Draft
AveryVoice
Democratic Strategist
FiveThirtyEight
Pollster
DailyKos
MyDD
Liberal Oasis
HinesSight
ActBlue
Progressive States Network
AmericaBlog
Donkey Rising
One Thousand Reasons
Wonkette
MediaMatters
Democratic Underground
DNC
Center for American Progress
Sirota Blog
Politics 1
FAIR
Huffington Post
Crooks and Liars
David Corn
Digby's Blog
Talking Points Memo
Sutton Impact
Talk Left
Senate Majority
Preemptive Karma
Common Dreams
Rockridge Institute
Real Clear Politics
FireDogLake
Absurd Times
ND Newspapers
Ashley Tribune
Benson County News
Beulah Beacon
Bismarck Tribune
Burke County Tribune
Crosby Journal
Devils Lake Journal
Dickinson Press
Edgeley Mail
Emmons County Record
Fargo Forum
Grand Forks Herald
Grant County News
Hebron Herald
Hillsboro Banner
Jamestown Sun
McKenzie County Farmer
Minot Daily News
Napoleon Homestead
New Town News
Oakes Times
Ransom County Gazette
Renville County Farmer
Tioga Tribune
Valley City Times
Wahpeton Daily News
Walsh County Record
Washburn Leader
West Fargo Pioneer
Westhope Standard
Williston Herald
Wishek Star
ND Outdoors Sites
FishingBuddy
NoDakOutdoors
Listen Up
Air America Radio
50 State Blogroll
Add to MyYahoo!
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to Newsburst
Add to Google
Add to My AOL
Add to Pluck
Subscribe in FeedLounge
Add to Windows Live
Add to NetVibes
Subscribe in Rojo
Subscribe in Bloglines
Add to MyMSN
Add to Plusmo for your cellphone
Add to PageFlakes
Add to Technorati
Add to BlinkBits
LeftyBlogs
Display Pagerank

Barack Obama In Fargo
Written by Chet   
Thursday, 03 July 2008

I wasn't there, but someone sent me this picture.

Fargo
If you were there, tell us how it went.

Here's the press release:

Remarks on Veterans
Senator Barack Obama
July 3, 2008

 
As Prepared for Delivery

Tomorrow, we’ll mark the 4th of July with barbecues and parades; fireworks and time off with loved ones. We’ll also have the opportunity to give thanks for our troops and veterans. Their sacrifice has made possible the freedom that we enjoy. And keeping faith with those who serve must always be a core American value and a cornerstone of American patriotism. Because America's commitment to its servicemen and women begins at enlistment, and it must never end.

Without that commitment, I might not be here today. My grandfather - Stanley Dunham - enlisted after Pearl Harbor and went on to march in Patton's Army. My grandmother worked on a bomber assembly line while he was gone, and my mother was born at Fort Leavenworth. When he returned, it was to a country that gave him the chance to go to college on the GI Bill; to buy his first home with a loan from the FHA; to move his family west, all the way to Hawaii, where he and my grandmother helped raise me. Today, my grandfather is buried in the Punchbowl, the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, where 776 victims of Pearl Harbor are laid to rest.

I knew him when he was older. But whenever I meet young men and women along the campaign trail who are serving in the military today, I think about what my grandfather was like when he enlisted - a fresh-faced man of twenty-three, with a hearty laugh and an easy smile.

These sons and daughters of America are the best and the bravest among us. When our troops go into battle, they serve no faction or party; they represent no race or region. They are simply Americans. They serve and fight and bleed together out of loyalty not just to a place on a map or a certain kind of people, but to a set of ideals that we have been striving for since the first shots rang out at Lexington and Concord - the idea that America could be governed not by men, but by laws; that we could be equal in the eyes of those laws; that we could be free to say what we want and write what we want and worship as we please; that we could have the right to pursue our individual dreams, but the obligation to help our fellow citizens pursue theirs.

Allegiance to these ideals has always been at the core of American patriotism - it's what unites a country of so many different opinions and beliefs. At the same time, we must never forget that honoring these ideals must mean honoring the men and women who defend them in the uniform of the United States. This requires more than saluting our veterans as they march by in a 4th of July parade. It requires only sending them to war when we must, and giving them the equipment they need to complete their mission safely. It requires giving them the care and benefits they have earned. And it requires standing shoulder-to-shoulder with our veterans and their families after the guns fall silent and the cameras are turned off.

We know that over the last eight years, we've often fallen short of meeting this test. We learned about the deplorable conditions that were discovered at places like Fort Bragg and Walter Reed. We've walked by a veteran whose home is now a cardboard box on a street corner in the richest nation on Earth. We've heard about what it's like to navigate the broken bureaucracy of the VA - the impossibly long lines, or the repeated calls for help that get you nothing more than an answering machine.

It doesn't have to be this way. Not in this country. There are many aspects of the war in Iraq that have gone inalterably wrong, but caring for our veterans is one thing we can still get right.

When I arrived in the Senate, I sought out a seat on the Veterans Affairs Committee so I could fight to serve our veterans as well as they have served us. We fought to make sure that the claims of disabled veterans in Illinois and other states were being heard fairly. We passed laws to get homeless veterans off the streets and to prevent at-risk veterans from getting there in the first place. I led a bipartisan effort to improve outpatient facilities at places like Walter Reed, and to slash red tape, and reform the disability process - because recovering troops should go to the front of the line, and they shouldn't have to fight to get there. And we passed laws to give family members health care while they care for injured troops, and a year of job protection so they never have to face a choice between caring for a loved one and keeping a job.

But there is so much more work that we need to do in this country. We have much further to go to keep our sacred trust with the men and women who serve.

That's why I've pledged to build a 21st century VA as President. It means no more red tape - it's time to give every service-member electronic copies of medical and service records upon discharge. It means no more shortfalls - we'll fully fund VA health care, and add more Vet Centers, particularly in rural areas. It means no more delays - we'll pass on-time budgets. It means no more means-testing - it's time to allow every veteran into the VA system. And it means we'll have a simple principle for veterans sleeping on our streets: zero tolerance. As President, I'll build on the work I started in the Senate and expand housing vouchers, and launch a new supportive services housing program to prevent at-risk veterans and their families from sliding into homelessness.

I'll also build on the work I did in the Senate to confront one of the signature injuries of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. We have to understand that for far too many troops and their families, the war doesn't end when they come home. But only half of troops returning with PTSD receive the treatment they need. Think of how many we turn away - of how many we let fall through the cracks; of how many suffer in silence. We have to do better than this.

In the Senate, I've helped lead a bipartisan effort to stop the unfair practice of kicking out troops who suffer from PTSD. And when I'm President, we'll enhance mental health screening and treatment at all levels. We also need more mental health professionals, more training to recognize signs and to reject the stigma of seeking care. And we need to dramatically improve screening and treatment for the other signature injury of the war, Traumatic Brain Injury. That's why I passed measures in the Senate to increase screening for these injuries, and that's why I'll establish clearer standards of care as President.

We have called on our troops and their families for so much during these last years, but we haven't always issued that call responsibly. We need to restore twelve month Army deployments, but we also need to restore adequate training and time at home between those deployments. My wife, Michelle, recently met with Army spouses in North Carolina who told her about the toll it takes to have your loved one leave for tour after tour of duty. And they told her something we all need to remember: "We don't just deploy our troops overseas, we deploy families." That's why we also need to provide more counseling and resources to help families cope with multiple tours. That’s what we owe our military families who have sacrificed so much for us.

And when our loved ones do come home, it is time for the United States of America to offer this generation of returning heroes the same thanks we offered that earlier, Greatest Generation - by giving every veteran the same opportunity that my grandfather had under the GI Bill. That’s why I was proud to be a strong supporter of the 21st Century GI Bill that was introduced by my friend Senator Jim Webb. This bill will provide every returning veteran with a real chance to afford a college education, and it won’t harm retention.

The brave Americans who fight today believe deeply in this country. And no matter how many you meet, or how many stories of heroism you hear, every encounter reminds that they are truly special. That through their service, they are living out the ideals that stir so many of us as Americans - pride, duty, and sacrifice.

Some of the most inspiring are those you meet at places like Walter Reed Army Medical Center. They are young men and women who may have lost a limb or even their ability to take care of themselves, but they will never lose the pride they feel for their country. It's this classically American optimism that makes you realize the quality of person we have serving in the United States Armed Forces.

This, after all, is what led them to wear the uniform in the first place - their unwavering belief in the idea of America. The idea that no matter where you come from, or what you look like, or who your parents are, this is a place where anything is possible; where anyone can make it; where we look out for each other, and take care of each other; where we rise and fall as one nation - as one people. It's an idea that's worth fighting for - an idea for which so many Americans have given that last full measure of devotion.

I can still remember the day that we laid my grandfather to rest. In a cemetery lined with the graves of Americans who have sacrificed for our country, we heard the solemn notes of Taps and the crack of guns fired in salute; we watched as a folded flag was handed to my grandmother. It was a nation's final act of service and gratitude to Stanley Dunham - an America that stood by my grandfather when he took off the uniform, and never left his side.

Abraham Lincoln once said, "I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. But I also like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him."

There is no doubt that we are a nation that is deeply proud of where we live. But it is now our task to live in a way that Stanley Dunham lived; to live the way that those heroes at Walter Reed have lived. It is now our task to live so that America will be proud of us. That is the true test of patriotism - the test that all of us must meet in the days and years to come. So as we mark this Independence Day, let us rededicate ourselves to meeting that challenge, and to serving those who have worn the uniform of the United States as well as they have served us.

Comments (4)add comment

Big Jake said:

...
Once again I am reminded why I made the decision to support Obama. As RFK did 40 years ago, he is speaking to us to rekindle the hope that has been shrinking ever since Kennedy died. It is a message of unity and strength. Of vision for the America that we long for. Not out of some sappy nostalgic mist but of the real belief that we can.

The reality of life here in America is not what the media nor the majority of politicians preach but one where we no longer believe that our children will have a better life than we have. The fact of the matter is that where we have arrived at is not happenstance. It has not happened to us rather it has been done to us.
I truly believe that we have an incredible opportunity to turn our country around. If we believe it we can. At this point, Obama appears to be the right leader at the right time. It is imperative that we speak even louder in order to tell him and those who he will turn to for advice and support, that it is time that we---the majority of Americans need a real change.
 
July 04, 2008, 07:19 PM
Votes: +0

Bobwilliams said:

Barack Obama
Barack Obama brought his traditional values tour to North Dakota on Thursday, but ended up struggling to explain how his upcoming trip to Iraq might refine, but not basically alter, his promise to quickly remove U.S. troops from the war. A dust up over war policy -- one of the clearest issues separating the Illinois senator from Republican John McCain -- overshadowed Obama's town hall meeting here with veterans to talk about patriotism and his plans to care for them.

----------------------------------
Bobwilliams
North Carolina Drug Treatment
 
August 20, 2008, 10:49 AM | url
Votes: +0

Mike lou said:

Barack Obama In Fargo
Obama emerged from the barn-red Children?s Museum at Yunker Farm in north Fargo to wild cheers and took the stage with thunderous applause and a standing ovation and wowing a crowd of more than 1,300 at the Children?s Museum at Yunker Farm in north Fargo. Standing in a wooded yard with the barn-red museum behind him, wearing a white shirt (sleeves rolled up) and red tie, Obama started his speech with a Fargo quip.
------------------
Mike lou

North Dakota Drug Treatment
 
August 23, 2008, 03:59 AM | url
Votes: +0

johnsmith5082 said:

Obama made a campaign
Barack Obama made a campaign stop in Fargo on Thursday, and the focus of his speech was military veterans benefits. But on Sundays in the fall, Fargo becomes Minnesota Vikings country, so Obama also took a brief moment to talk a little smack to the many Vikings fans in attendance.
-----------------------
dennie
South Dakota Alcohol Addiction Treatment
 
August 28, 2008, 11:15 PM | url
Votes: +0

Write comment

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
Click here
Login Form





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Main Menu
Home
All Blog Posts
Forums
Weather
Contact Us
MiniPutt
About
YouTube Page
Popular

  * Forum Throws Down
  * WSI: Former Board Chairman Double Dipping
  * WSI Board Meeting Today
  * Dr. Long's Response
  * Open Thread
  * Ed Schafer -- U.S. Secretary of Agriculture?
  * Eye Candy For Number Crunchers
  * WSI: Lines Have Been Crossed
  * WSI Board Discussing Sandy Blunt's Departure
  * Survival: WSI
  * Personal
  * The Low Road
  * Indvik Resigns
  * Hometown Girl Does Good II: Marcela Hoeven
  * Bottineau County
  * Hand-outs, NDGOP Style
  * WSI's "Dirty Little Secret"
  * This Week In History: 1934
  * Remember the Sabbath...
  * Whistleblower Disclosure II
  * WSI Invitations
  * More WSI In The News
  * Blunt's Legal Defense Fund
  * WSI: Under The Bus
  * WSI Update: Joel Heitkamp's Show
  * WSI: Tribune Editorial
  * Another WSI Whistleblower
  * WSI Whistle Blower Retaliation?
  * Case Against WSI Officials Continues
  * Why Bob Indvik Should Resign
  * Videos For Public School Children
  * Dr. Jim Long Has A Website
  * WSI: The Journal
  * Another WSI Employee Seeks Protection
  * Former ND Gov. Ed Schafer (R): Plagiarist?
  * Frustrated
  * Charges Dismissed
  * Long Gone?
  * Grand Forks County Passes
  * A Barn Burner
Lijit Search
Goal Thermometer
Latest Forum Posts
Feature Stories
Personal
The Low Road

Blog advertising works!
ND Blogs (leftish)
Dakota Democrat
Mortal Spin
BismarckDems
J5MC
2 Focus Inn
Political Prairie Fire
Prairie Sun Rising
Teller of Truths
DemNPL Blog
Dakota Democrat
Common Sense
Graeme's Blog
UND U-Dems
Renew ND
Hear Me Roar
Donkey Ears
Diatomaceous Earth
Breathe Fargo
Off Center
ND Blogs (apolitical)
IW of ND Advocates
Rural Bus Route
Flat and Treeless
Donkephant
Bismarck ND Blog
Diatomaceous Earth
BisMan Rocks
InnerJoeJoe
ND Energy Legislation
The City Beat
Grand Forks Life
Prairie Pundit
Regional Blogs (leftish)
Dakota Today
Robbinsdale Radical
Bleeding Heartland
Badlands Blue
Dakota Women
Prairie Progressive
SD Progressive
Hoghouse Blog
Clean Cut Kid
Mount Blogmore
Proud Liberal
Liberal Catnip
Justice for Women
Big Sky Democrats
KBlogA
CoatHangersAtDawn
Plain(s) Feminist
Don't Worry Abt The Govt
SD Watch
Democracy In Action
Other Links
ND Blogs (rightish)
FreeRepublicans
Meartz's Lake
Too Much Dog Hair
Conserv. Harvest
Boyd Drive Follies
Matt's Blog
ND Political Sites
District 12 Dem-NPL
District 24 Dem-NPL
District 29 Dem-NPL
Voices For 32
Cass County Dems
Mandan Dems
Mitch Vance for Treasurer
Daryl Splichal For ND Auditor
Jim Long for ND Senate
Sen. Carolyn Nelson
Rep. Jasper Schneider
Sen. Tom Seymour
Impeach Bush
Weather
Fargo
Last Update: 5:22pm Nov 21, 2008
Today
Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy
24°F
Current Conditions:
This observation is more than 2915 hours old
Fair
70°F
wind is from the south at 17 gusting to 23 mph
barometric pressure is 30.08" (1018.2 mb)
visibility is 10 miles
Jamestown
Last Update: 5:19pm Nov 21, 2008
Today
Mostly Cloudy
Mostly Cloudy
24°F
Current Conditions:
This observation is more than 2926 hours old
Fair
70°F
wind is from the southeast at 10 mph
barometric pressure is 30.03" (1016.4 mb)
visibility is 10 miles
Bismarck/Mandan
Last Update: 6:29pm Nov 21, 2008
Tonight
Snow Likely, Probability Of Precipitation: 60%
Snow Likely
18°F
PoP 60%
Current Conditions:
This observation is more than 2926 hours old
Fair
75°F
wind is from the southeast at 8 mph
barometric pressure is 29.98" (1014.3 mb)
visibility is 10 miles
Dickinson
Last Update: 5:28pm Nov 21, 2008
Today
Chance Snow, Probability Of Precipitation: 80%
Chance Snow
32°F
PoP 80%
Current Conditions:
This observation is more than 2915 hours old
Fair
69°F
wind is from the southwest at 7 mph
barometric pressure is 29.88" (1009.9 mb)
visibility is 10 miles
JoomlaWatch Stats 1.2.4 by Matej Koval
2008 DNC Convention Attendees
Convention List
George Barnes
Jackie Brodshaug
Ellen Dunn
Mark Greenwood
Dan Hannaher
Amanda Kubik
Barb May
Stephen McDonough
Erin Mowers
Esther Omotunde
Kathi Osteen
Jenny Pinkerton
Tim Purdon
Renee Pfenning
Sen. Tracy Potter
Katherine Satrom
David Strauss
Lonny Winrich
Top of Page Copyright 2008 NorthDecoder.com