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Obama Campaign Button
Written by Charley Norkus   
Wednesday, 12 May 2010 14:55
Obama Campaign ButtonSenator Barack Obama, D- IL, ran for President and was elected in 2008. A campaign button now serves to commemorate this historic election of the first African American to this office. To access the campaign's web site, it was no longer necessary to even enter, much less mention, the http://www. prefix to this URL address, so sophisticated had become the Internet by 2008. More than just a web site, one of the major reasons that Obama was elected (politically-correct experts say) was the grass-roots on-line organization that Obama's supporters fostered during the primaries and general election. The button's colors are true red, white, and blue, but many people who supported McCain during the general election have called Obama's patriotism and national objectives into question, and they continue to rant and rail against his administration, making it anything but a smooth path for the new President.
 
Saying A Lot with A Little - Dense or Intimate?
Written by Charley Norkus   
Wednesday, 12 May 2010 14:36
Rubber bracelet imprinted with 'FAMILY'Introduced in 1989, the "What would Jesus do?" cloth bracelets caught on and over 9 million were sold in the '90's. With the beginning of the 21st century, rubber bracelets were introduced with WWJD and several other messages, like this one that just says 'FAMILY' that was first produced in 2007 and worn by all members of the Carolina Railhawks professional soccer team as a symobl of unity. It is fashionable today to say a lot with just a word or few words - ABC Good Morning America's Saturday show features home videos from people all across the country who sum up their week in just three words and about five seconds, not spoken but written on poster board, cardboard, etc. "Welcome Baby Jane", "Just Got Married", "Grandma Passed Away", "Got the Job" and "Finally Graduated Yippee!" are some of the "quick stories" that have been submitted and aired. Are these a sign that Americans have learned to be humbly concise and open, or are we now - with texting and Twitter - increasingly incapable of long thoughts and expressing them so that we have now resorted to a few words short of mumbling? WWJ think?
Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 May 2010 14:37
 
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