she whose name can't be spoken
If it's who I think you mean (and it is!), I believe that her name is spoken quite frequently in these 'ere annals, even when she is not herself present therein; that said, the presence of anyone here should not act as any kind of discouragement to your own. Lecture over!
And yes, back to Barack:
Over here we watched the election with a sense of elation and excitement and history being made. The election of Obama signals the return of the US into the international fold after the Bush administration turned it into a pariah and a laughing stock and an object of hate and derision.
On the train on the way home from work, just moments after CNN called it for Obama, I was relaying the information to a friend on my mobile phone and the carriage broke into spontaneous applause.
The next day local schools had signs up on billboards saying "Barack Obama. Change has come".
His eloquent and inspiring "yes we can" victory speech still makes me teary.
For a long time I was down on the US (and certain posters to this forum only deepened my prejudice against Americans as ignorant, dangerous, rednecks who really think god created the world). But I went to the states and realised you actually have a lot in common with Aussies and I actually liked the people I met. Not a bible-basher, creationist or bush supporter in sight.
Much of the UK coverage leading up to a few weeks prior to the event could arguably be seen as leading people to assume that an Obama victory was a more or less foregone conclusion, whereas several people in US (including some Brits, an Iranian and - yes - an Australian) told me that journalistic coverage over there seemed largely to have concluded the very opposite. Anyway, we all know the outcome of the election now but, just as a wedding does not a marriage make, a presidential election win does not a successful government make. We'll just have to see what happens, not least of which will be the extent to which what America does on the world stage and at home means as much and exerts as much effect and influence as once it did. I'm the wrong person to ask about how it might all work out, anyway, as one problem with so-called (and actual) "democratic" nations is that people are voted into governmental (does one have to be mental to govern?) office and - forgive my apparent cynicism - I have little experience that persuades me that a government can be trusted to do a good job consistently just because they've been voted in by the electorate. Democracy may, as Churchill famously put it, be the worst form of government save all the others, but that doesn't in itself mean that democratically elected governments will serve their electorates well and inspire and deserve their trust. And no, I am not in favour of dictatorships but, in so saying, it is worth remembering that there is always a risk that electorates in "democratic" countries might vote in dictatorships (the Thatcher years in UK, for example, have sometimes been described as a period of elected dictatorship).
So you just stopped short of writing that "some of your best friends are Americans"! Of course one has to go there even to hope to obtain any kind of perspectives on real life in that country and, of course, even the most superficial comparison of day-to-day life in Maine, South Carolina, New York State, Texas and - er - Pennsylvania will reveal immense differences of many kinds.
We also enjoyed watching Sarah Palin in action. We once had our own Sarah Palin here. Her name is Pauline Hanson. She left politics, ended up in jail and is currently pursuing a career in reality TV.
Does she do this from her cell or was she let out first?(!)...
As to the egregious Ms Palin herself (palin' into insignificance, as has been said over here more times than I've written semiquavers), I am reminded of Stravinsky's nasty barb against a certain German composer which runs "if Richard, then Wagner - if Strauss, then Johann", to which my knee-jerk respose (when first I heard it) was "if Igor, then Prince"; in this instance, if Palin, then Michael - if Sarah, then Leonard. So one of the credentials of this Alaskan redneck (does it ever get warm anough in Alaska for anyone to get a red neck? I don't ask myself) is that of being "pro-life"; well, I'm not exactly anti-life myself...
Let us just hope, for the sake of all Americans of whatever political persuasion or none, that the new political dawn in US (if that's what it turns out to have been) leads to a new, improved and sustainable climate; only time will tell...
Best,
Alistair