Quite a few popular, yet controversial candidates, like Barack Hussein Obama, have been presented a Nobel Peace Prize award for carrying out “peace” in especially contrasting and different ways. These so-called peace prizes show that peace can be associated and parallel to war engagement, destruction, unorthodox doings; In other words, a wrong can make a right! What makes Obama rise above the rest is his “Yes We Can!” attitude, his attempts to make peace in different countries along with his own, and his journey becoming who he is today. In 2009, Barack won this particular prize for his exceptional endeavor to better the international diplomacy and cooperation between the people (Lunstead). He did a lot of rebuilding relationships and …show more content…
Growing up, Obama resented his father Barack Obama Sr., for abandoning him with his mother while he worked for his Ph.D. at Harvard University then afterward, left to go back to his homeland which was Kenya. His mother on the other hand, was not in a position to take care of the future president, so she let Obama stay with his grandparents; Obama didn’t have any hate for his mother although he didn’t live with her throughout his early stages of life. As Obama got older and started attending school where he was one of the only kids of color, he became self conscious about his appearance and wondered why he was different from the others. Although he got picked on throughout school, he wasn’t a featherweight. Barack “was built like a bull, so [the kids would] get [together] to fight him” according to Yunaldi Askiar (one of his former second grade classmates). Once he got older, Obama learned to be comfortable in his own skin. During his college days, he had a motivation to be somebody. He was motivated to get a Bachelors degree in political science at Columbia University and a J.D in law school at Harvard, which he successfully did. He was also a leader. Even in his college days he had a taste of presidency considering the fact he was the president of the Harvard Law review. Law school is also where Obama met the love of his life, Michelle Obama; they met through Michelle mentoring Obama and they were inseparable ever since. 1991, Michelle was proposed to and they
President Barack Obama did many things to get to the positions he is at now.” Obama himself struggled with his mixed-race identity and sought to figure out how he fit in with the rest of the world”(Source B). He also had many problems growing up and many complications to get through school since he didn’t have much money. But Obama showed great appreciation for the things he had. He went out in his community becoming a great leader. Not only did he go out in his community and be a leader, But he showed great leadership, as a senate and as a president.Barack Obama was more than just an ordinary President, but he showed great leadership, hard work and cared for others than himself.
Binyon states his claim in the title of his article, and throughout the text, he provides evidence to support and strengthen that claim. He makes use of background information to help the reader understand the principles behind the Nobel Peace Prize, and he makes comparisons that give the audience a perspective of the controversy that they might not have had originally. Binyon creates an effective argument that shows the audience how detrimental it is to the award’s reputation because of the unfair circumstances that led to President Obama’s
The general argument made by Michael Binyon in “Comment: Absurd Decision on Obama Makes a Mockery of the Nobel Peace Prize” is that many recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize have not actually achieved peace. More specifically, Binyon argues that Barak Obama should not have been awarded the prize. He writes “rarely has an award had such an obvious political and partisan intent. This is correct because it demonstrates a lack of the integrity that this award was I tended to uphold. More specifically it is believed that this was a way for the Norwegian Nobel Committee to show approval for America’s election of its first black president and in hope that Washington will “honor its promise to re-engage with the world”.
The President has been dealing with losses and tough experiences since birth. “Away from my mother, away from my grandparents, I was engaged in a fitful interior struggle. I was trying to raise myself to be a black man in America, and beyond the given of my appearance, no one around me seemed to know exactly what that meant” (Pg. 67). He had to learn a lot on his own which made him a stronger person and more independent as he looked for ways to learn and how to adapt to different surroundings especially since he moved around so often. Mr. President also took from his father in intelligence as he states, “He arrived at the University of Hawaii as the institutional’s first African student” (Pg. 9). This tells us that there was some kind of inherited intelligence because multiple African students had applied to the University of Hawaii, but Barack Obama Sr., was the only one to be accepted, and then went on to attend Harvard University for graduate school, one of the most prestigious schools in the nation today. President Obama suffered a good amount in his childhood, but he realized he was different stating, “I realized that who I was, what I cared about, was no longer just a matter of intellect or obligation, no longer a construct of words. I saw that my life in America — the black life, the white life, the sense of abandonment I'd felt as a boy, the frustration and hope I'd witnessed in
Barack Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii on August fourth. Obama studied at Harvard Law School, he has an undergraduate degree in Political Science and became a community organizer in Harlem. In 1990 he was elected president of the Harvard Law Review journal and was also the first African American to work in the post. Obama’s political supporters come from a diverse range of ethnicities and economic backgrounds, which is rare in American politics. Additionally minority candidates have not done well in voting where predominantly non-minority vote significantly more, even before the election Obama grew in popularity and become a star in the Democratic Party, significantly because if his ethnicity and where he comes from and who he represents. When Obama sought out for a seat in the U.S. Senate some of his supporters said he was aiming too high and he wouldn’t make it, however, he proved them wrong by taking fifty three percent of the vote and
The Nobel Peace Prize is a prize is one of the five awards created by Alfred Nobel and the peace prize is awarded to those who “have done the most or the best work for the best for fraternity between nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.” (Nobel). This paper is about James Earl Carter Jr. or as others know him as the 39th president of the United States. Carter won the 2002 peace prize for promoting human rights and peace on a global scale. Carter has empowered others around the world because he has “worked extensively with Habitat for Humanity and founded the Carter Presidential Center to promote human rights and alleviate suffering across the globe… has worked effectively
“There are still many causes worth sacrificing for, so much history yet to be made.” Many people have inspired or influenced America but Michelle Obama has influenced America ever since she was younger. Michelle LaVaughn Obama was born on January 17,1964, in Chicago, IL, to Fraser C. Robinson III and Marian Shields Robinson. As a child, Michelle grew up in a household where her father was always at work, and her mother stayed home to do household duties. Attending Chicago’s public schools, Michelle Robinson studied sociology and African- American studies at Princeton University. After graduating college, Harvard Law School, Michelle joined the Chicago Law firm, Sidley & Austin in 1988. There Michelle met Barack Obama , the young African American that would become the love of her
It is amazing how two completely different people with totally different cultures came together from across the world and connected. They had no discriminations against each other that right there shows how much color is in our world and what can happen. Unfortunately good things cannot last forever and a divorce was finalized when young Obama was 2 years old. The parents went their separate ways with his father dying in 1982 ("Barack Obama Featured Biography”). What makes it even more astonishing is that this man was able to overcome all his hardships and became our president. A
Barack Obama is the forty-fourth and first black president of the United States of America. Obama was born in Hawaii on April 4th, 1961. He was raised as a black and white child since his mother was a white American and his father was a black kenyan (“Barack Obama: Life Before the Presidency”). Obama served as senator of Illinois before his being elected as president, however, his journey towards becoming senator wasn’t an easy one (“Barack Obama: Life Before the Presidency”). Barack Obama, overall, beat all odds in order to get to be president of the United States.
Growing up as a child Obama he was a smart yet troubled kid. In the book Barack Obama By Sherri and Mark Devaney they stated as a child Obama went to Indonesia has a child and was introduced to the poverty around the world. When Obama returned to the U.S he attended Punahou Academy but, he was one of the only two black children and he would made fun of for his foreign
He takes two personal identities: African and American, and he truly combines them into African American, embracing his African roots while showing that he is as American as any white American. In the opening paragraph, Obama says: "My father was a foreign student, born and raised in a small village in Kenya. He grew up herding goats, went to school in a tin-roof shack. His father, my grandfather, was a cook, a domestic servant." In these statements, Obama quickly accepts his African roots, as he describes a situation that is almost completely foreign to the Americans in his audience. He describes his father 's life briefly, a life that most of his audience would not understand. With these short statements, he establishes that he is an individual and that his history is different from most of the audience 's. However, he immediately uses this difference to connect with the audience as he says: "But my grandfather had larger dreams for his son. Through hard work and perseverance my father got a scholarship to
What would you do if your entire nation is being ravaged by a disease that you don't know how to treat? That's where The Carter Center stepped in to aid struggling families in Africa. Led by former president Jimmy Carter and his wife, they were able to bring cures to villages that have none. Some people may say that the Carters just want to gain media attention but I will prove that is not the case. The purpose of this essay is to show why I believe the Carter Center should be awarded the "Nobel Peace Prize."
If he was still around, I believe that Martin Luther King should be nominated again for another Nobel Peace Prize.
It was announced on October 9, 2009 that American President Barack Obama is this year’s recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. The Nobel Foundation states that Obama was chosen "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples." (Nobel Foundation) Controversy and debate ensued in the world wide media. Critics have debated Obama’s worthiness. Supporters have cited numerous examples of the current U.S. Presidents’ nobility. Obama does deserve this prestigious award.
Barack Obama is from a multicultural background, which exposes him to different types of socialization and different social norms. His personality would have been formed in an open-minded household respectful of cross-cultural values and beliefs. However, Barack Obama also experienced a significant amount of turmoil and upheaval in his childhood. His mother and father divorced and young Barack Obama moved to a different country when he was young. The exposure to different countries was a fruitful experience, but his loss of his father left an indelible mark on his personality. Barack Obama writes about his feelings about his childhood in Dreams from My Father.