I thought it was excellent: the focus on the economy, on the middle class, on his personal story, a story that is so profoundly American, on a strong foreign policy that focuses on the real threats and that restores America’s standing in the world, on the themes of hope and change that have come to define Obama’s run for the presidency from the very beginning.
And, once again, as in the debates, he presented himself as a strong, determined leader with a bold vision, certainly not someone to be feared, certainly not the caricature the other side is making him out to be.
And the transition to the live event in Florida was fantastic.
Compare that to the anger and bitterness coming from the other side.
Compare Joe the Plumber, the new McCain-Palin mascot, a man who spews partisan ignorance, to the good and decent people whose stories Obama told tonight, like the couple who work for Ford, occasionally, and who are having trouble making ends meet for their family.
Compare Obama’s supporters, those at the rally in Florida, those who were in Denver for his acceptance speech, those who have been at his events all along, to the venomous mobs that show up to McCain-Palin rallies and lead the procession of hatred.
I wrote a few days ago that I have been deeply moved by Obama, and tonight was no exception.
There were times, as a husband and father myself, when I was almost moved to tears.
I was listening to a Buffalo radio station on my way home from work today, and the hosts said they weren’t going to watch Obama tonight. They’ve simply had enough of the whole partisan campaign, because all there is on both sides is misrepresentation.
That’s a common sentiment out there, no doubt. Many people see politicians, all politicians, as liars, or at least as deceivers. I am not one of them.
Similarly, many of us who follow politics closely — reporters and pundits, analysts and pollsters, bloggers and junkies — have become desensitized, losing the capacity to be deeply moved. This was the point of the post I wrote a few days ago.
No, there’s nothing wrong with harbouring some healthy cynicism, or being non-partisan, or examining the race from a dispassionate perspective, but there is something wrong when cynicism or — what is so common to the professional punditocracy — smug condescension takes over.
Don’t let yourselves succumb to numbness, to desensitization, to detachment, to disengagement.
Keep your hearts and minds open. This is an incredible time for America and for the world.
And it is time for Barack Obama.
(Cross-posted from The Reaction.)