Responsible Voters Are Informed
Barack Obama, the now Democratic nominee for President of the United States, opens up & shares with readers valuable information about himself. As responsible voters in what has become one of the most important elections in history, Americans owe it to themselves to learn as much about the candidates as possible. Obama¿s book empowers the reader to shape an informed opinion of him & hear his beliefs on the issues that Americans face today. If the reader is still undecided as to whom they should vote for in the election, The Audacity of Hope would be time & money well invested.
Obama did not grow up privileged. Born in Hawaii the product of an interracial marriage between a black African father & a white American mother during the civil rights movement, he writes about his sister and other family members, ¿¿that family get-togethers over Christmas take on the appearance of a UN General Assembly meeting.¿(231) Although Obama was too young to fully understand the changes taking place in the country during the 1960¿s, he wrote of his mother, ¿whenever the opportunity presented itself, she would drill into me the values that she saw there: tolerance, equality, standing up for the disadvantaged.¿(29) These values undoubtedly influenced the Columbia University & Harvard Law School graduate work as a community organizer in his home state of IL & to practice as a civil rights attorney before his election to the senate in 2004.
Being a devoted family man is one of Obama¿s main priorities and he devotes an entire chapter to the subject. His parents divorced when he was a boy and he was raised by a single mother and later, his grandmother. Now as the father of two children, he feels a great sense of responsibility to be a participating parent in their lives. While he credits his wife Michelle for making the family work, he also points out how important it is that fathers take an active role in the lives of their children. Obama writes of the many sacrifices made on his behalf by his mother & grandmother & identifies with parents who cannot spend as much time with their children as they would like. It is the memory of those sacrifices that keep him humble and drive his passion to repair what he sees as broken government.
According to Obama, government has failed the people it should represent. He recalls his early meetings with President George W. Bush and writes, ¿I had found the president to be a likeable man¿¿(45), however he goes on to say, ¿I¿ve been a steady & occasionally fierce critic of the Bush Administration policies. I consider the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy to be both fiscally irresponsible and morally troubling.¿(47) Obama has taken the position in his campaign that the middle class deserves a tax cut.
Obama¿s book offers the reader an overview of his core beliefs. He writes, ¿I believe in evolution, scientific inquiry, and global warming; I believe in free speech, whether politically correct or politically incorrect, & I am suspicious of using government to impose anybody¿s religious beliefs-including my own- on nonbelievers.¿(10) A reviewer from the Chicago Tribune called The Audacity of Hope ¿An upbeat view of the country¿s potential & a political biography that concentrates on the senator¿s core values.¿
In the Philadelphia Daily News a review of Obama¿s book read, ¿The Audacity of Hope¿is fascinating in its revelation of Obama as someone who consider
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