Forum Comments
Matt Rosenberg said
The gap between Election day and inauguration has felt like a small eternity. The Mall started filling up before dawn and the Washington Post was reporting gridlock as early as last night. Several Media General reporters are in DC and we will be following them all day long. The most up-to-date coverage will be on Twitter. You can follow us there http://twitter.com/dailyprogress or keep up with the widget on this page.
Matt Rosenberg said
The Washington Post has just posted a great article on one Earl W. Stafford in NOVa who is shelling out 1 million plus to bring disadvantaged people and wounded soldiers to the inauguration. Link below to the WaPo article.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/03/AR2008120304095.html?hpid=artslot
Bob Gibson said
When I was 10, I attended the political event of a lifetime.
I have been to hundreds of political events since, none quite like this one.
My father, a federal employee who commuted each day from our house in Arlington to an office not far from the Potomac River, took me to witness John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s inauguration.
It was a bitter cold January day and snow still lay piled around Washington’s wide avenues, scraped clean for the occasion.
Tanks and soldiers made Pennsylvania Avenue loud that day as a military parade marked the occasion.
Kennedy’s words made an indelible impression that day on me as on many others.
We didn’t want to ask what our country could do for us.
We wanted to ask what we could do for a country we all thought was going to do great things under this new, young president.
I had viewed Dwight D. Eisenhower as a kindly grandfather, a hero and a guy who loved to play golf.
This new president was of my parents’ generation. He inspired.
Dad pointed out Joe Bellino, a Navy football hero, as he marched with his fellow Middies that cold day.
They looked damned sharp, I thought. He was awful short, but one great player.
Government wasn’t the enemy in those days for either political party.
The Russians were, those crafty people who beat us into space.
How did they do that?
I didn’t know, but knew that math and science mattered. Even engineering.
My dad was an engineer. I was proud of that.
I was even prouder of Kennedy.
I saw him once more before his life was cut short.
Another speech. Another time I knew politics mattered.
It mattered a lot because, well, because he inspired.
The day he was shot I cried my eyes out.
I sought out my favorite teacher and we cried our eyes out together.
Politics was a little different after that.
The country was a little different.
Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon were different.
Political heros were different, and harder to find in the White House.
I found mine elsewhere.
You don’t have to be a hero to live in the White House.
You do have to have one fine day and one heck of a parade.
Bob Gibson
Matt Rosenberg said
Welcome to the DailyProgress.com Inauguration forum. If you can’t get a ticket or don’t feel like traveling to Washington, DailyProgress.com will be aggregating all of the inaugural coverage that we can.
Are you traveling to DC for the Inauguration? Let us know! Whether you are blogging from the parade or Tweeting the swearing in, we can post your thoughts on our inauguration page.
More info will be available as Inauguration Day draws closer. If you are interested in having your blog or Tweets featured by us contact me at .
Tweets
Latest News
Passion was as plentiful as two dozen vociferous and animated proponents of the new president reacted to the images on a big-screen TV.
Waving cardboard red, white and blue “W’‘s, thousands gathered in Midland’s town square Tuesday to welcome former President George W. Bush and his wife to their post-presidential home in Texas.
Photos from Washington and around the world as President-Elect Barack Obama makes the transition into the White House.
It was a day of high spirits — jarred by sudden concern about the health of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, a legendary Democrat who is suffering from brain cancer.
“To those leaders around the globe who seek to sow conflict, or blame their society’s ills on the West — know that your people will judge you on what you can build, not what you destroy.“
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