--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, Daryle Lockhart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Both  Conan and Spidey are Marvel books! A Marvel man in the white  
> house! now we KNOW something's gonna get  done. I need someone to 
ask  
> his position on the registration act  in an interview...
> 

Did anyone read the long NEWSWEEK piece on the election? Obama was 
overheard teasing his wife making reference to Dilithium Crystals. 
The point is moot.



> 
> On Nov 13, 2008, at 9:33 PM, sincere1906 wrote:
> 
> > That's what I'm mfkn' talkin bout...
> > Obama's a hip N.E.R.D. like Pharrell or Rza.
> > Cool intellect n creativity...and no pocket protectors.
> >
> > Sin
> >
> > ---------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > 5 Lessons We Hope Obama Learned from Spider-Man
> > Matt Brady
> >
> > Newsarama.com Matt Brady
> >
> > newsarama.com
> > Thu Nov 13, 4:52 pm ET
> >
> > Not only has America elected its first African-American President,
> > it's looking more and more like we've elected our first Geek-in-
> > Chief. He's read Harry Potter, he's addicted to his BlackBerry, 
and
> > his Mac laptop has a Pac Man sticker on it. Do we need any more
> > evidence he's one of the nerd generation?
> >
> > Most recently, the President Elect has acknowledged that he 
collected
> > both Conan the Barbarian and Spider-Man comic books growing up
> > (although he identifies with Batman as well as Spidey).
> >
> > But let's look closely at Spider-Man for a minute.
> >
> > Over the Marvel Comics icon's 45-plus year crime-fighting career, 
the
> > Amazing Spider-Man learned many hard lessons about what it takes 
to
> > be a true hero, something the United States sorely needs right 
now.
> > Here are the Top 5 Lessons we hope the President-Elect has learned
> > from the Wall-Crawler.
> >
> > 5. In Order to Get Things Done, Sometimes You Have to Reach Across
> > the (Super Hero) Aisle.
> >
> > Where Spider-Man Learned It: Virtually every issue of Marvel Team-
Up
> > and Marvel "crossover" events.
> >
> > The Lesson: Marvel's recent Civil War miniseries brought the 
point to
> > a head -superheroes don't always get along. Just like politicians
> > they often bring very different approaches and ideologies to the
> > table. In Marvel comic books Iron Man has recently become 
something
> > of a big government fascist, and the Sorcerer Supreme Dr. Strange 
has
> > extreme libertarian leanings, but Spidey's managed to serve as
> > teammates on the Avengers with both.
> >
> > Spider-Man also works closely with minority groups (the X-Men), 
and
> > isn't threatened by gender differences (Spider-Woman). Sometimes 
in
> > order to do good, you have to look past your differences.
> >
> > 4.The Press Isn't Your Friend
> >
> > Where Spider-Man Learned It: From the first time J. Jonah Jameson
> > wrote his first anti-Spider-Man editorial, shortly after he 
debuted.
> > No matter what he does, Spider-Man can never catch a break with 
JJJ.
> >
> > The Lesson: Jameson is convinced Spider-Man is a menace to 
society,
> > rather than a hero trying to save it. But Spidey doesn't let it 
get
> > him down or make his second guess what he knows is right. Sure,
> > seeing anti-Spidey screed blasting down from billboards and on
> > newsstands can grate, but he keeps rolling on. And yes, even 
Jameson
> > has jumped on the Spider-Man bandwagon once or twice, but has 
jumped
> > right off it again and gotten back to his normal ways.
> >
> > 3. Bad Things Are Going to Happen. The Important Thing Is How You
> > Respond
> >
> > Where Spider-Man Learned It: Practically every issue, including 
being
> > trapped under tons of machinery in Amazing Spider-Man #33, 1966 
and
> > the death of his first love Gwen Stacy in Amazing Spider-Man #121,
> > 1973.
> >
> > The Lesson: As Joe's Biden and Lieberman both predicted, new
> > presidents are usually tested early, and no one can predict 
exactly
> > how. As Spider-Man has showed time and again, it's how you react 
to
> > adversity that defines you. Spider-Man's probably had to deal with
> > more tough hands over the years than any superhero alive, and 
while
> > he's always flirted with throwing in the towel during the dark 
times,
> > he always comes back with renewed purpose and shows himself to be 
the
> > hero we know him to be.
> >
> > 2. Never Lose Your Sense of Humor
> >
> > Where Spider-Man Learned It: From the early days of his career, up
> > through the latest issues on the stands.
> >
> > The Lesson: Putting Spider-Man's mask on freed the once nerdy and 
shy
> > Peter Parker to let his constant - and sardonic - inner monologue
> > out, and be the superhero who reacts to adversity with quick wit 
and
> > even a little charm.
> >
> > Over the years, Spider-Man's snappy one-liners have helped him 
keep
> > his spirits up in difficult times, as well as the heroes around 
him.
> > American isn't looking for a Comedian-in-Chief, but as all our 
401k's
> > shrink in size like Spidey's buddy the Astonishing Ant-Man, we 
could
> > use a little levity from our leaders.
> >
> > Obama ought to allow himself to occasionally relax that famous
> > disciplined approach of his let the country see that even our 
leader
> > can laugh in the face of adversity.
> >
> > 1. With Great Power There Must Also Come -- Great Responsibility
> >
> > Where Spider-Man Learned It: His very first appearance in 1962's
> > Amazing Fantasy #15, and as seen 2002's Spider-Man feature film.
> >
> > The Lesson: Probably the most famous line in comic book history, 
this
> > nugget, originally penned by Spidey's co-creator Stan Lee, has
> > informed Spider-Man almost since he was first bit by that 
radioactive
> > Spider, along with countless superheroes that followed.
> >
> > Sure, Obama has the Supreme Court and Congress checking him, just
> > like Spider-Man has the Fantastic Four and Captain America, but 
you
> > still want the most powerful man in the world to have his head in 
the
> > right place from the start, and to use his powers for truth, 
justice,
> > and the American way...
> >
> > Oh wait, wrong superhero...
> >
> >
> >
>


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