Opinion

Memo from Obama to his Kenyan supporters

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating

 

By DONALD KIPKORIR
Posted  Friday, November 7  2008 at  18:17

Dear Kenyans, I am grateful for your unwavering support during my entire presidential campaigns, which reached its peak with my victory.

During the campaigns, I consistently and fondly spoke of my Kenyan roots. I am an American citizen and, on January 20, 2009, I will be America’s 44th president.

As a son of a Kenyan father, I know that Section 90 of your constitution bestows upon me automatic citizenship. In the fullness of time, who knows, Michelle and I may decide to come and retire in the land of my father.

I know that most, if not all, Kenyans expect me to have a magic wand to your problems and aspirations.

To avoid future misunderstandings, we need to agree at the outset on my limitations. And I am making candid confessions only because of my paternal heritage and the special place you hold in my life.

I was elected by 64 million Americans, comprising nearly 53 per cent of the voters. Few presidents have passed the 50 per cent mark — not even the great Abraham Lincoln who came from my state of Illinois.

Such a clear mandate means that Americans voted for me because they believed in my campaign promises. I promised that my priorities would be to fix our education and public health sectors, manage fuel prices and arrest or kill Osama bin Laden.

My country is the richest in the world, but you will find it unbelievable that 46 million Americans cannot access proper healthcare as they lack medical insurance.

Share This Story
Share

Medical insurance in America is privately funded. We do not have government hospitals as you do in your country. My key priority is to resolve this uninsured large portion of the population.

In education, I am proud that American universities are the best in the world. However, a crisis is brewing in high schools as we are losing our competitive edge in maths and the sciences to other developed countries. Unless we fix this anomaly now, we risk losing our innovation and research leadership in the future. I will not allow this to happen under my watch.

The USA is addicted to oil, and every American consumes about 8,000 litres a year. No other country uses as much oil. Increased oil prices thus affect every American without exception.

Other than working with our key suppliers to stabilise the prices, I promised Americans during my campaigns that I would work on new and innovative sources of energy.

The same day that you declared a public holiday in my honour, I got my first presidential daily briefings which will last as long as I am America’s president. These briefings let me into esoteric knowledge of the challenges facing our country that no American has access to other than the top heads of the various intelligence agencies. I will share with you the broad outlines.

America as the pre-eminent democracy, military and economic power in the world faces unique challenges which we are demanded of to resolve or lead the way.

Since the attack on our country on September 11, 2001, we know that Islamic terrorism is our existential threat. My predecessor authorised the attacks in Iraq and Afghanistan to neutralise this threat.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (45 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by gietmany

    iam truelly very proud to be born and raised in southern sudan and came to America and it happened that my first vote started with mr.obama as president of the United States of America. there is no greater joy than that You make me and other Africans proud and not kenyans alone but whole Africa where you come from i hope your gov't will be aa success and not a failure

    Posted  March 03, 2009 05:27 PM  
  2. Submitted by kenmare69

    Yes, indeed. And for anyone firmly wedded to the dream of reparations for slavery, be advised that that’s one of the dreams that won’t manifest. Certainly not during Obama’s tenure. How about dreaming on something worthwhile such as, “ a lovely country in Africa; a haven of peace and stability where ethnic barriers have collapsed and citizens live freely wherever they choose. There’s equal access to opportunity and things like thieves in charge of govt., hunger, disease, poverty are a dead history”? That’s a better dream.

    Posted  November 14, 2008 09:54 PM  
  3. Submitted by mikegitonga

    What?This was a classic to say the least.Keep it up,i keep on reading it over and over again...cant wait for the next one!

    Posted  November 14, 2008 02:40 PM  
  4. Submitted by Dom Mshindi

    Obama is not a lame duck. As president of the US he will have executive powers to influence and make fundamental decisions on behalf of America. If he chooses he can make Kenya his priority African project. It all depends on the cooperation he gets from Kenyan leaders. If you give him a headache, or embarass him he will drop you like a hot potato and focus on Israel and other strategic areas. If you ask me we should exploit the Obama- Kenya connection to get tourists from all over the world. Everybody knows Kenya now.

    Posted  November 14, 2008 06:22 AM  
  5. Submitted by sankara02

    I see the man kip is as usual pushing his pro-west agenda. A base in Lamu. Man, get serious!! First of all Lamu is a world heritage site and given its significant muslim population, i doubt whether an american base would play well with the local populace I do agree with kip (first time ever) that SOME kenyans are expecting too much from BO. However, those are a minority and we all know kenyans love to hav an excuse to boogie

    Posted  November 13, 2008 07:58 PM  

See all 45 comments