新年快乐! 恭喜发财!
Happy New Year to all of my friends and colleagues in the US, China, and elsewhere. I wish all of you a prosperous and healthy Year of the Ox.
Wu Cheng-en (Translated by Anthony C. Yu): The Journey to the West, Volume 3
Thomas L. Friedman: Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--and How It Can Renew America
Good summary of the major challenges and opportunities presented by our energy needs and the environment. Not a lot new per se, but kudos for being prescriptive and timely. (****)
Ronald W. Clark: Einstein (The Life and Times) 1972 Pb By Ronald W. Clark
Bart Yasso: My Life on the Run: The Wit, Wisdom, and Insights of a Road Racing Icon
Inspiring, amusing and endearing anecdotes about running (****)
Muhammad Yunus: Banker To The Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle Against World Poverty
Seminal work on microfinance. A must read for anyone interested in economic development (****)
Neal Stephenson: The System of the World (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 3)
(****)
David McCullough: 1776
(***)
Cao Xueqin: The Story of the Stone, Vol. 2: The Crab-Flower Club
Lasting images come to mind after reading the somewhat slow second volume of the Jia family saga (****)
Happy New Year to all of my friends and colleagues in the US, China, and elsewhere. I wish all of you a prosperous and healthy Year of the Ox.
Much has been written analyzing the presidential election in the two plus weeks since Barack Obama defeated John McCain to put himself in line to become the forty fourth President of the United States.
I’ll save the analysis and thoughts about what an Obama presidency could look like for future posts.
In 2000, I was living in London when George Bush snuck into office. In 2004, I watched the election results on a big screen television at the Ritz Carlton in downtown Shanghai. Thus, it was particularly special this year to work on the Obama campaign. After a hectic morning in the boiler room and a surreal (read quiet) afternoon and closing of the polls, the campaign staff headed to Winston Salem’s Millennium Center to watch the election results.
Virginia was the first battleground state to be called for Obama and soon after Florida was blue. As they confirmed that Barack Obama would be President the campaign staff mobbed the stage and led the celebrations.
Now I’ve always been a somewhat reserved person and I stayed on the floor on the Millennium Center. I worked on the campaign for three phenomenal weeks, but did not think it proper to be up on stage with people that had been putting in seven days of work for three, six, nine months or longer to help us win.
But that does not change how I feel. While the economy tanks and the debate about whether or not Senator Clinton will become Secretary of State continues, I am extremely happy. President Obama is going to be a great leader and I have the utmost confidence that he can and will navigate a strong course for the US in what will be a difficult first term.
Obama’s victory is especially poignant for me because it has been viscerally painful to watch the country I love falter and wander aimlessly for the last eight years. This, at a time when the rest of the world has been moving forward. China, India, Europe, and the petrocracies are certainly hurting with the global pullback and will likely continue to have economic challenges for a while. But the US has been incredibly misguided for the 2000s. Leaders in Beijing have certainly been thanking their lucky stars that the US got itself bogged down in Iraq. A largely unfocussed, naïve US leadership has allowed Beijing to press its “peaceful rise” rhetoric while pushing its soft and hard power abroad and increasing the United States’ economic reliance on the Middle Kingdom.
So now we get back to reality. I am hopeful that President Elect Obama will use his power wisely and not overreach in his first term. It is becoming clear he will need to pick his key issues because there will not be enough capital to fund too many big initiatives. Foreign policy challenges may be on the back burner while the TARP bailouts are decided, but I am looking forward to a US government that once again acts as a global leader, rather than a global police officer. The twenty first century will be the Asian century – there is little doubt. However, the US can and should remain the dominant global power through a combination of diplomacy, hard military power, continued economic innovation, and the influence of US culture.
President-elect Obama’s books are apparently flying off the shelf in Shanghai bookstores, in spite of widespread racism and a usual ignorance or disinterest amongst most Chinese when it comes to US politics. I look at it as a sign that people recognize that President-elect Obama will be a positive force not only for the US, but for the world overall.
I am deeply proud to be an American and am extremely thankful that for at least the next four years we will once again have a true leader in the White House. A close friend related a story to me the other day: His niece lives in Taiwan. She is about ten years old and has never been to the US. Still, she chose to write a poem for her class about President-elect Obama. In the poem she wrote that Barack Obama is not black, Barack Obama is not white. He is the color of the rainbow.
GOTV has been in full swing since Saturday and it is less than 5 hours until the polls open. I'll be in the boiler room in Winston Salem all day tomorrow, helping keep things on track. I'm hoping that by this time tomorrow we'll all be celebrating a victory for Senator Obama and a blue North Carolina!
Today was the first official day of the Get Out The Vote (GOTV) effort for the Obama campaign. My role has morphed from being a GOTV helper to a GOTV fixer - I've been working with lots of different teams to help them get organized and focus on the key issues. Thankfully, I still have had some opportunites to reach out to potential voters directly and work with our volunteer leadership. Behind the scenes strategy, tactical and operational work is interesting, but I really enjoy being out in the field.
It has been great working with so many smart, motivated people. The campaign has done an incredible job during early voting. According to the State Board of Elections, more than 2.5 million people cast their ballots during the October 16th - November 1st early voting period, as of 3:45 pm today (Saturday). The lines were supposed to close at 1 pm today, but the State Board of Elections allowed counties to keep the polls open until 5 pm. I am stationed in Forsyth County and yesterday the local Board voted to follow the State's suggestion.
It was pretty amazing seeing the turnout today. For North Carolina, more than 40% of ALL registered voters have already voted. I have heard that news reports are saying that as many as 25% of registered voters across the country have already cast their ballots. I think we are on track for having a 65+% turnout and maybe we will reach 70% - realize that the last election where more than 70% of registered voters participated in a presidential election WAS IN 1900! So get out and vote on Election Day - I believe Barack Obama is the best person to lead the US for the next four years, but the most important thing is to make your voice heard. It is what the US is all about.
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