New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman's most fervent hope about President Obama is that he will be as radical as this moment — that he will put everything on the table and boldly tackle the myriad problems confronting the nation.
For one day, for one hour, let us take a bow as a country. Nearly 233 years after our founding, 144 years after the close of our Civil War and 46 years after Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, this crazy quilt of immigrants called Americans finally elected a black man, Barack Hussein Obama, as president.
Walking back from the inauguration, I saw an African-American street vendor wearing a home-stenciled T-shirt that pretty well captured the moment — and then some. It said: "Mission Accomplished."
But we cannot let this be the last mold we break, let alone the last big mission we accomplish. Now that we have overcome biography, we need to write some new history — one that will reboot, revive and reinvigorate America. That, for me, was the essence of Obama's inaugural speech and I hope we — and he — are really up to it.
Dare I say, I hope Obama really has been palling around all these years with that old Chicago radical Bill Ayers. I hope Obama really is a closet radical.
Not radical left or right, just a radical, because this is a radical moment. It is a moment for radical departures from business as usual in so many areas. We can't thrive as a country any longer by coasting on our reputation, by postponing solutions to every big problem that might involve some pain and by telling ourselves that dramatic new initiatives — like a gasoline tax, national health care or banking reform — are too hard or "off the table." So my most fervent hope about President Obama is that he will be as radical as this moment — that he will put everything on the table.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2008655902_opina22friedman.html
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