Saturday, November 15, 2025

Flashback 2008: Like the first nick in a new car

     Yesterday being Nov. 14 led to the column on World Diabetes Day, so why not take that lead, and also pivot today's post off today's date? This ran in the paper exactly 17 years ago. It's notable for several reasons. The opening observation holds true for people who are NOT being dragged off the street and muscled into a van. Yet.
    The number of papers sold announcing Obama's election is worth the price of admission — I won't give it away here. But DAMN! 
     Though my primary takeaway from this is: the wheel turns. It sure turned from the first week of eight years of Barack Obama to the current nadir — O were it so! —of the Trump enormity, with Megyn Kelly actually trying to defend Jeffrey Epstein by pointing out that "he wasn't into, like, 8-year-old girls." Those MAGA sorts, always managing to limbo below the moral bar, no matter how low it is set.

     The problem with grasping a crisis is that while it's going on all over, it can still seem contradicted by localized events — thus, on every cool day in July, those ideologically opposed to the idea of global warming get to shout, "See? Fifty-nine degrees in July — some warming, huh?"
     Or last week. We went to Abt, the electronics and appliance giant in Glenview.
     A mass of humanity that defies description. Police cruisers parked on Milwaukee Avenue, cops using flares to control traffic. I think we got the last open parking space, a quarter mile from the entrance.
     "What is this, 'Free Day'?" I asked my wife as we struggled like salmon to get in. "Isn't there supposed to be a recession going on?"
     There is. Looking at Abt as evidence of financial hardiness is like pointing to the freezer compartment in the kitchen of a house ablaze and saying, "Fire? What fire? Look at all this ice." It's something they should teach in school, along with the alphabet, but don't: One example isn't proof.
     Newspapers are too self-referential. The guy who delivers your milk doesn't pause to expound about the magnificence of the dairy profession, the gorgeous red sunrises, the solemn dignity of cows.
     So I held back on the following, tucking it into columns and then plucking it back into the electronic limbo where bits and pieces wait for their chance at life in print.
     But a marvel should not go unremarked upon. And now that the phenomenon is waning, I have to add it to the record.
     Every day for a week after the election of Barack Obama, employees coming to work at the Sun-Times' building at 350 N. Orleans were greeted by an incredible sight: people lining up outside our store to buy back issues of the newspaper, particularly the one announcing Obama's election. Sometimes, the line has been 50 deep, and, yes, I counted, and asked, "Why wait in line?"
     "It's a piece of history," explained Haroon Rajaee. "He represents the true American spirit. This is what America is about."
     "So few [black men] on the cover they aren't looking for," added Gregg Parker, tamping down the protests around him with an indignant, "I'm just keeping it real!"
     The Nov. 5 issue of the Sun-Times shattered our circulation records — 900,000 copies, last time I checked. Nor is the phenomenon limited to Chicago -- across the nation, people are saving mementoes.
     A reminder of newsprint's role as official imprimatur of fact -- if it's in the newspaper, it's true, in theory. People who can scarcely believe Obama won want to hold the confirmation in their hands.
     "Give me the ocular proof!" Othello demanded, and a newspaper is just that.
     They also want something to pass along to generations unborn, as Michelle Holmes, editor of the SouthtownStar, said, "Nobody bookmarks a Web page to save for their grandchildren."
     Not yet anyway. There is an eagerness among some to embrace anything that squirts into their in-box as fact, however improbable. They'll get a text message, "SPACE BEES DOOM WORLD TUES." and start eating all the cookies.
     For the rest of us, we like verification in print. Which raises the troubling question: If there were no newspapers, how could we be sure that anything really happened?
     The stock market has been fluctuating wildly for weeks. Yet the Wall Street Journal on Thursday felt confident dubbing the latest dive a result of the market cringing away from Obama's "anti-growth" policies. Which raises the humorous possibilities of wondering what other quotidian woes can be set at the feet of the president-elect?
     I stamped inside Friday, brushing the rain off my hat.
     "This rain. ..," I thought. "It isn't natural, not for November in Chicago. It must be the heavens spitting cold disapproval down upon the Obama administration forming in Kenwood."
     OK, so maybe you can do better. But it's hard to top what people are offering up sincerely.
     "So what do you think will be his 'Bay of Pigs'?" asked the wise old city editor, and I nodded and pondered.
     The Bay of Pigs, for those just joining us, was the first big stumble John F. Kennedy made after he took office. The Eisenhower administration had cooked up a harebrained scheme to try to overthrow Fidel Castro by training Cuban nationals into a ragtag army.
      The invasion was set to go, and Kennedy, worried that he'd seem weak if he spiked Ike's Cuban D-Day, gave it the green light. The whole thing was an embarrassing fiasco, evidence that our bright young president had flaws.
     But somehow, the morning after Barack Obama's election didn't seem the time to speculate on future failings.
     They will come, of course. The Obama presidency will have highs and lows, like any other. But trying to anticipate them is futile — the weeks after Kennedy was elected, few knew about this lunatic CIA plot moving forward in the swamps of south Florida.
     Futile, and a little overly cynical, even for me, who has a tendency to stand in the back of weddings as the bride and groom kiss, feel that one moment of sappy sentiment, then bat it away by reminding myself the truth — that they'll both live their lives and grow old, and the man will die at 64 and the woman will go on another 25 years playing bingo and end up in an ammonia-scented day room somewhere, and the wedding dress she so carefully folded and preserved and stored on a shelf for 70 years will go into the trash.
     That's the truth — or, rather, it's a truth. The thrill of anticipation people are feeling now is also true, and one can embrace that, too, and probably should, because it was a long time coming, to quote the song, and it'll be a long time gone.
     — Originally published in the Sun-Times, Nov. 15, 2008

16 comments:

  1. And sadly, it is Mr. Obama's election that would later expose the Maga nuts and drive them batty.

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  2. No, the demented, deranged, fat, moronic, fascist traitor isn't into 8 year old girls, he's into 12-13 year old girls, several of whom have said he raped them on Epstein's island, which is just as disgusting!

    As for Abt, it's not just a store, but also a mini playground, with all sorts of weird things to do there.

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    1. Well you may be correct about the ABT store I don't know where you found this information regarding Donald Trump it seems like a false allegation . I don't know why it's published here in the comments

      All the assault allegations against Donald Trump, recapped | PBS News https://share.google/tcnifkJe55kZMTh1f

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    2. Phil: Did you even read the link you posted? It includes this: "She claims she was repeatedly raped by Trump and Jeffery Epstein at Epstein’s New York City apartment in 1994, when she was 13 years old."

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    3. I did and it went on and on and on and on until I got sick of it and I thought f*** this I don't want to read about this pervert

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  3. This Maga 15 year old mega-tantrum has got to run out of tears and mouth frothing eventually. After yesterday, I think maybe dt is questioning if his prison evasion and dirty deeds exposure tactic was worth it. He would certainly have had les tsourris in the Clink.

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    1. Would that not require a level of introspection on his part that has yet to be detected?

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  4. Just a note about Abt. They recycle. Last year I found out they take your old appliances and electronics even if you did not purchase from them. You can drop off or they will pick up for a fee. I dropped off an old freezer no charge. Apparently there is a charge for electronics. I got a glimpse of the recycling operation and it is impressive. Might make a good column.

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    1. And it did. Though it's been over a decade. Might be time for an update: https://www.everygoddamnday.com/2015/07/bob-abt-created-sprawling-world-of.html

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    2. That's a great piece about Abt. I have no need to an appliance and it's really far, but I'm tempted to check it out! I recently learned BestBuy will take electric/electronic items to recycle including many surprising things they don't even sell. I'm a little obsessed with recycling and repurposing things so love that stores will do that, although I worry it's just a marketing ploy and it all just gets dumped somewhere.

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  5. That's the truth — or, rather, it's a truth

    Very important to remember this statement.

    Often we forget there can be more than one thing thats true in most circumstances.

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  6. 2008 - it's been a fast seventeen years! Election night in Grant Park was sweet.

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    1. Was just thinking about Obama the other day. Those 17 years have raced by. In your 60s and 70s, time doesn't march on...it runs. Faster and faster. The fastest summer is always next summer. The day after Sarah Palin was nominated, I was down at the local HQ, offering my services.

      Naturally, they made me a phone-banker. Calling the GOP suburbs. Soon got very weary of being called a Commie, a baby-killer, and a ni**er-lover. Luckily, I was re-assigned to the direct-mail operation. In 2008, campaigns still mailed printed brochures and leaflets and flyers.

      The printed materials were trucked to Cleveland from the huge Donnelly plant in Chicago, and our facility sorted them, addressed them, bundled them by zip code, and shipped them to the main post office downtown. Three shifts, 24/7, for weeks. A million pieces a day. Every address in Ohio got mail from us. Eleven million people.

      Met folks from all over the country, and even from Europe, who had flocked to Ohio to help put it into the win column. They slept on couches and crashed with strangers. The camaraderie was euphoric. Felt like working in a war plant during WWII. We gonna beat dem fascists. And we did.

      At the very end, I walked for miles and banged on doors, even though I was 61 years old. Big party on election night, at a downtown hotel. When Ohio gave the Democrats the win, young Black folks were screaming and hollering. The older ones were praying out loud. Prayers of thanks. Two or three were even down on their knees.

      The next day, Black men I didn't know walked up to me and shook my hand, like I'd just fought and won a war for them. So, this is what victory feels like? Yes. My friends from Michigan sent me flowers. Saved all my buttons and posters and the campaign literature with Obama's face on it, and it's tucked away in a plastic bag.

      Think I still have the newspapers somewhere. If it's in the paper, especially on the front page, it's official. Still proud that I helped make history. And then I ask myself: "How the hell have we sunk to where we are now?" I foolishly believed we had turned a corner, onto a post-racial and bright new road. Turned out to be a dark alley. Can Nazi to the other end. 2008 feels like a century ago.

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  7. I saw this yesterday on tick tock. Great response from a 14 year old girl. The sound is really low at least on my computer. It was fine when I saw it on tick tock. There is closed captioning. https://www.reddit.com/r/goodnews/comments/1oxr9dg/14_yearold_responds_to_megyn_kellys_depraved/

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  8. Sorry if I am doing this twice. It was a response to Megyn Kelly by a 14 year old girl. Used closed captioning if he sound is not loud enough. I was going to click on the notify box and my comment went away. https://www.reddit.com/r/goodnews/comments/1oxr9dg/14_yearold_responds_to_megyn_kellys_depraved/

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  9. Your terrific piece instantly reminded me of the very first item I ever collected: a Chicago Sun-Times We were an S – T family (still are) on Saturday, November 23, 1963, when I was 12. The headlines took the whole of the front page.– –
    Kennedy Killed!

    Suspect, 24, charged as assassin

    Johnson the new president.

    I still have the copy of the paper, as delivered to us– – it was the “five star final, turf edition. 68 pages – 7 cents“

    By bizarre coincidence, today we received delivery of a much-needed new refrigerator, from… Abt

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