Um, Teheheman, was your post in jest? Yes, Obama campaigned on a promise of change (as did McCain). He promised change in Washington. That change can't begin until January 20th. Obama has no more power today than he had in October. Right now he's a senator from Illinois.
But some things did change. For the first time since the end of WWII people all over this country and all over the world peacefully and spontaneously filled streets in celebration. Is that going to create jobs or provide health care, of course not. But seeing people come together and feel good about themselves and the future is powerful. Positive energy can create a lot of change.
Virginia, the cradle of the Confederacy, voted for a Black man for the highest office in the land. If that isn't change, I don't know what is. I grew up in that state. When I was a kid there were restaurants that still wouldn't serve African Americans. The Confederate flag was the symbol of a high school in the county where I grew up. White kids attacked black kids at the high school football game and the white kids had guns. I'm not talking about the 1950s and the height of the Civil Rights movement. I'm talking about our recent past. For that state to vote for Barack Obama is huge. Regardless of what one thinks about his politics, for him to carry Virginia is significant progress for this country. There was a powerful editorial in the NYT that called it the end of the Civil War and I'm not at all convinced that was an over-statement.
Change on a federal level is slow. It takes time to enact. A vote for Obama was a vote for change, not a guarantee of change. Obama said the election was just the first step-- now the hard work begins, now we have to make change a reality. Perhaps now is a good time to remember JFK's inaugural address: ask not what your country can do for you- ask what you can do for your country.
Muppets rarely sit around complaining, they wallow for a minute and then they get on with it. In that spirit: let me ask, what have you done to make things better?
Jamie-- what are we going to do about civil rights for the last group of Americans currently denied those rights?
Heralde-- what are you doing to help make universal health care a reality?
Teheheman-- what are you doing to make a better job a reality?