I am too Evian. Perhaps not for the same reasons. But equally inspired I'm
sure nonetheless. Thanks for sharing. I hope you grow up to be like Obama.
I  think you're well on your way with nudging from JDAM and your Grand-Dad.
To  complete the journey, you gotta quit PDOIS though. Woh dinkiraa mang
healthy for  yew. Haruna. I'm just sayin'. MQJGDT. Darbo. Let me know if Ginny
abandons  us.


In a message dated 4/18/2009 11:47:23 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

Obama at his first all-American summit. You  may be inspired by him. I am.

Bailo


By MARK S.  SMITH, Associated Press Writer Mark S. Smith,  Associated Press
Writer – 29 mins ago
PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad – President Barack Obama extended a hand to
America's hemispheric neighbors on Saturday at a summit where he offered  a new
beginning for U.S.-Cuba relations and accepted a book about the  exploitation
of Latin  America from Venezuela's fiery, anti-American leader.
At the Summit of the  Americas in the two-island nation of Trinidad and
Tobago, Obama signaled he was  ready to accept Cuban President Raul Castro's
proposal of talks on  issues once off-limits for Cuba, including the scores of
political prisoners held by  the communist government. Obama exchanged
handshakes and pats on the  back with Venezuela's Hugo  Chavez, who once likened
President George W. Bush to the devil.
Chavez gave him a copy of "The Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries
of  the Pillage of a Continent," a book by Eduardo Galeano, which chronicles
U.S. and  European economic and political interference in the region.
Later, when a reporter asked Obama what he thought of the book, the
president replied: "I thought it was one of Chavez' books. I was going  to give
him one of mine."
Their exchange on the first full day of meetings at the summit  followed a
brief grip and grin for cameras that the two leaders had on  Friday night
when Obama greeted him in Spanish.
"I think it was a good moment," Chavez said about their initial  encounter.
"I think President  Obama is an intelligent man, compared to the previous
U.S.  president."
Obama was taking part in a series of plenary sessions, group gatherings and
 one-on-one meetings that the White House hoped to squeeze into a busy
schedule. He hoped to make time for individual sessions with leaders  from
Canada, Colombia,  Peru, Haiti and Chile, aides reported.
Obama was noncommittal about a possible meeting with Chavez. "I think
we're making progress at the summit," was all Obama would say.
At his first meeting with South American leaders, Obama waited  several
minutes while security officers and members of the media pushed  noisily into
the room. Somebody accidentally hit a light switch,  prompting Obama to ask:
"Who turned off the lights, guys?" He said he  hoped events would go more
smoothly during the meeting where he said he  would talk to the leaders about
energy, security and other topics. "I  have a lot to learn and I'm very much
looking forward to listening," the  president said.
In an opening speech to the 34-nation gathering on Friday, the  president
promised a new agenda for the Americas, as well as a new  style.
"We have at times been disengaged, and at times we sought to dictate  our
terms," Obama said to loud applause. "But I pledge to you that we  seek an
equal partnership. There is no senior partner and junior partner  in our
relations."
He also extended a hand to a leader Ronald Reagan spent years trying to
drive  from power: Nicaragua's  Daniel Ortega. The Sandinista president stepped
up and  introduced himself, U.S. officials reported.
Yet soon after, Ortega, who was ousted in 1990 elections that ended
Nicaragua's civil war but who was returned to power by voters in 2006,  delivered
a blistering 50-minute speech that denounced capitalism and  U.S.
imperialism as the root of much hemispheric mischief. The address  even recalled the
1961 Bay of  Pigs invasion of Cuba, though Ortega said the new U.S.
president could not be held to account for that.
"I'm grateful that President Ortega did not blame me for things  that
happened when I was three months old," Obama said, to laughter and  applause from
the other leaders.
But perhaps the biggest applause line was his call for a fresh start  in
relations between Washington and Havana.
"I know there's a longer journey that must be traveled to overcome  decades
of mistrust, but there are critical steps we can take toward a  new day,"
he said.
On Tuesday, Obama ordered an easing of travel and remittance  restrictions
for Americans with relatives in Cuba. Within hours, Castro  — who took over
from his ailing brother Fidel a year ago — responded  with an offer of talks
on "everything" that divides the two  countries.
The White House  welcomed the offer, but suggested actions would be better,
such as  releasing some of Havana's scores of political prisoners.
Added Obama: "I am not interested in talking for the sake of talking.  But
I do believe that we can move U.S.-Cuban relations in a new  direction."
To Latin American nations reeling from a sudden plunge in exports,  Obama
promised a new hemispheric growth fund, an initiative to increase  Caribbean
security and a new regional partnership to develop alternative  energy
sources and fight global warming.
But most of all, he offered an end to old hemispheric arguments.
"I didn't come here to debate the past," Obama said. "I came here to  deal
with the future ... We must learn from history. But we can't be  trapped by
it."
___ Associated Press Writer Vivian Sequera in Port-of-Spain,  Trinidad
contributed to this report
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