You know the Obama campaign is getting desperate when they trot out poet Maya Angelou to try to convince Americans to back Obama. Angelou famously stated that opposition to Obama was about him “being the first place president.” She also said that while George W. Bush was president, she had to “apologize for my country when I’m abroad.” Now she’s proud enough of her country to pen a letter on behalf of her flailing candidate:
Dear fellow American,
I am not writing to you as a black voter, or a woman voter, or as a voter who is over 70 years old and six feet tall. I am writing to you as a representative of this great country — as an American.
It is your job to vote. It is your responsibility, your right, and your privilege. You may be pretty or plain, heavy or thin, gay or straight, poor or rich.
But remember this: In an election, every voice is equally powerful — don’t underestimate your vote. Voting is the great equalizer.
Voting has already begun in some states that President Obama needs to win. So please use this handy tool to make sure your friends in those key states know where to cast their ballot. You will be doing them a great favor.
As a country, we can scarcely perceive the magnitude of our progress.
My grandmother and my uncle experienced circumstances that would break your heart. When they went to vote, they were asked impossible questions like, “How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?” When they couldn’t answer, they couldn’t vote.
I once debated with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. about whether an African American would ever be elected president. He believed it would happen within the next 40 years at the time — I believed it would never happen within my lifetime.
I have never been happier to have been proven wrong.
And since President Barack Obama’s historic election, we’ve moved forward in courageous and beautiful ways. More students can afford college, and more families have access to affordable health insurance. Women have greater opportunities to get equal pay for equal work.
Yet as Rev. King wrote, “All progress is precarious.”
So don’t sit on the sidelines. Don’t hesitate. Don’t have any regrets. Vote.
Go, rise up, and let your friends and family in early vote states know where they can vote today. We must make our voices heard:
http://my.barackobama.com/Help-Your-Friends-Vote-Early
Your vote is not only important. It’s imperative.
Thank you,
Dr. Maya Angelou
P.S. — Not on Facebook? Send your friends to vote.barackobama.com — don’t let technology get in the way of your incredible duty to our democracy.
Citing Martin Luther King Jr. as the big rationale for Barack Obama’s re-election is not just a sign of weakness. It’s playing the race card. We’ve elected our first black president. Now we’re going to throw him out because he’s incompetent, not because he’s black. But according to Angelou, we need to re-elect him based on the color of his skin rather than the content of his character. Martin Luther King Jr. would be appalled.
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