Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts

ohhh : Obama will use spring summit to bring Cuba in from the cold

President Barack Obama is poised to offer an olive branch to Cuba in an effort to repair the US's tattered reputation in Latin America.

The White House has moved to ease some travel and trade restrictions as a cautious first step towards better ties with Havana, raising hopes of an eventual lifting of the four-decade-old economic embargo. Several Bush-era controls are expected to be relaxed in the run-up to next month's Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago to gild the president's regional debut and signal a new era of "Yankee" cooperation.

The administration has moved to ease draconian travel controls and lift limits on cash remittances that Cuban-Americans can send to the island, a lifeline for hundreds of thousands of families.

"The effect on ordinary Cubans will be fairly significant. It will improve things and be very welcome," said a western diplomat in Havana. The changes would reverse hardline Bush policies but not fundamentally alter relations between the superpower and the island, he added. "It just takes us back to the 1990s."

The provisions are contained in a $410bn (£290bn) spending bill due to be voted on this week. The legislation would allow Americans with immediate family in Cuba to visit annually, instead of once every three years, and broaden the definition of immediate family. It would also drop a requirement that Havana pay cash in advance for US food imports.

"There is a strong likelihood that Obama will announce policy changes prior to the summit," said Daniel Erikson, director of Caribbean programmes at the Inter-American Dialogue and author of The Cuba Wars. "Loosening travel restrictions would be the easy thing to do and defuse tensions at the summit."

Latin America, once considered Washington's "backyard", has become newly assertive and ended the Castro government's pariah status. The presidents of Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic, Ecuador and Guatemala have recently visited Havana to deepen economic and political ties. Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, is expected to tell Obama on a White House visit this week that the region views the US embargo as anachronistic and vindictive. Easing it would help mend Washington's strained relations with the "pink tide" of leftist governments.

Obama's proposed Cuba measures would only partly thaw a policy frozen since John F Kennedy tried to isolate the communist state across the Florida Straits. "It would signal new pragmatism, but you would still have the embargo, which is the centrepiece of US policy," said Erikson.

Wayne Smith at the Centre for International Policy, Washington DC, said: "I think that the Obama administration will go ahead and lift restrictions on travel of Cuban Americans and remittance to their families. He may also lift restrictions on academic travel.

"There are some things that could be done very easily - for example it's about time we took Cuba off the terrorist list. It's the beginning of the end of the policies we have had towards Cuba for 50 years. It's achieved nothing, it's an embarrassment."

Wayne Smith, a former head of the US Interest Section in Havana, famously said Cuba had the same effect on American administrations as the full moon had on werewolves.

Cuban exiles in Florida, a crucial voting bloc in a swing state, sustained a hardline US policy towards Havana even as the cold war ended and the US traded with other undemocratic nations with much worse human rights records.

To Washington's chagrin, the economic stranglehold did not topple Fidel Castro. When Soviet Union subsidies evaporated, the "maximum leader" implemented savage austerity, opened the island to tourism and found a new sponsor in Venezuela's petrol-rich president, Hugo Chávez.

When Fidel fell ill in 2006, power transferred seamlessly to his brother Raúl. He cemented his authority last week with a cabinet reshuffle that replaced "Fidelistas" with "Raúlistas" from the military.

Recognising Castro continuity, and aghast at European and Asian competitors getting a free hand, US corporate interests are impatient to do business with Cuba. Oil companies want to drill offshore, farmers to export more rice, vegetables and meat, construction firms to build infrastructure projects.

Young Cuban exiles in Florida, less radical than their parents, have advocated ending the policy of isolation. As a senator, Obama opposed the embargo, but as a presidential candidate he supported it - and simultaneously promised engagement with Havana.

A handful of hardline anti-Castro Republican and Democrat members of Congress have threatened to derail the $410bn spending bill unless the Cuba provisions are removed, but most analysts think the legislation will survive.

Compared to intractable challenges in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East, the opportunity for quick progress on Cuba has been called the "low-hanging fruit" of US foreign policy.

That Obama has moved so cautiously has frustrated many reformers. But after decades of freeze, even a slight thaw is welcome, and there is speculation that more will follow.

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Barack Obama style photos 1

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Barack Obama style photos 1

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I don't know how he get these shot

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black america web,Obama And McCain

Posted by Sherifer921 | 08:07 | | 0 comments »

black america web,Obama And McCain



Obama And McCain, In Black And White
To the growing genre of docucomics, add 08: A Graphic Diary of the Campaign Trail. Its brisk narrative and stark visual style make this a compelling time capsule of the longest presidential contest in U.S. history.

by Glen Weldon

Over this past election cycle, many Americans expressed dissatisfaction with media coverage of the presidential campaign. They decried the media's obsession with tracking polls, fundraising and the relative strengths of each candidate's ground game. Forget the horse race, they implored; let's hear about policy.

Michael Crowley and Dan Goldman's 08: A Graphic Diary of the Campaign Trail is not for those people.

This boisterous chronicle of the longest presidential campaign in U.S. history is a paean to the who's up, who's down gamesmanship of American politics. Every thrown elbow, cringe-worthy gaffe and desperate 11th-hour gambit of the past two years has been gleefully documented between its covers. New Republic senior editor Crowley successfully wrangles into compelling narrative shape what could easily have devolved into a cacophonous blur of debates, stump speeches and photo-ops. We watch the fortunes of presidential candidates rise and fall in the span of a few pages, and go into the trenches with political reporters as the 24-hour news cycle churns through its recurrent storylines about momentum, nigh-impossible comebacks and, yes, pigs in lipstick.

If daily journalism is history's first draft, this illustrated compendium of the campaign's most memorable moments is closer to history's raw edit, a series of strung-together images and sound bites that collectively reveals how America came to choose the leader it did.

The book's bold black-and-white design scheme — artist Goldman's page layouts incorporate elements of collage and poster art — adds a defiantly impolitic layer of playfulness. Drawn entirely on a computer, 08 depicts the world of politicians, pollsters and pundits in stark detail as Goldman's heavy line work lingers over every wrinkle, every blemish, every double chin. The result, though rarely flattering, hammers home the unglamorous realities of political life after the balloons drop and the spotlights fade.

In one sense, 08 belongs to the burgeoning genre of docucomics that includes Josh Neufeld's sobering Web comic AD: New Orleans After the Deluge; writer/illustrator Rick Geary's multivolume, painstakingly researched true-crime books; and Sid Jacobson and Ernie Colon's 2006 graphical adaptation of the 9/11 report.

But while those nonfiction treatments adopt the classic narrative conventions of comics, 08 strikes out on its own to create a method of visual storytelling that owes as much to '60s magazine layouts as it does to modern Web design. It's largely thanks to Goldman's singular graphical style that this book, essentially a time capsule of the campaign's conventional wisdom, feels so defiantly and refreshingly unconventional.

Sourse : http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kuar/.artsmain/article/5/1338/1477704/Books/Obama.And.McCain,.In.Black.And.White/