Image of the Day : Political Cartoons – Andy

13 Responses to “Image of the Day : Political Cartoons – Andy”


  • savita vega – how true and even an aged bottle of wine may be corked – obama, today i’m thrilled for the american people and what this has meant to the world!

  • Well, he is inexperienced and he is taking on quite a responsibility… so the old bones may be too old to have an opinion but it may well be a valid one. Its not as though the skeleton is vying for the position lol

    Obama is impressive to listen to, I hope he does well.

    Kathleen

  • Obama mi sembra un brav’ uomo,ma di cucina italiana non se ne capisce molto,la pasta alla carbonara che intende lui è un miscuglio di chincaglierie speziate,tanto vale andare al cinese che si risparmia

  • the cartoonist is kind, if i were he i’d used the skeleton of a t-rex… these type of thinking should be extinct. if they want obama, let it be. everyone deserves to hope and everyone deserves a chance

  • I feel this happens at my workplace. There are always older men who try to handle people using age or gender. For them correct solutions and great ideas cannot be from people with less experience, or from a female.

  • Conversation in the “Praehistorical Museum”:

    “Obama’s too young to be commander-in-chief.”

    “Yes, boy, I agree – and he is by far not tough enough. This job needs someone authoritative with assertiveness and expert knowledge how to kill – someone like me”, talkes commander T. Rex down to his bony brother.

    Note: Commander T. Rex did not fit in this image anymore.

  • lol…Today only fun.very nice,I know what means….here we have same problem.Young are too young,after they are too old.Never ok?…….

  • who said that change is brought only by the youth?
    there must be wisdom with change… it is regardless of age :)

  • Nice!

    On the morning the election results were announced, I was in London. That day, my daughter and I went milling about the Southwark area, poking our noses in shops, looking at sites, eating a bite. I have to say that it was the first day of my life that I can remember feeling even minimally proud to be American. I have a bit of an American accent myself – enough to be recognizable – and my daughter speaks what can only be described as “Texan.” Everywhere we went that day, people were asking, “Are you American?” Normally, when I am abroad and people ask me this, my first reaction is to duck under the nearest table or, at the very least, hide my head in shame. I have even been known, on occasion, to fake a “no” with a few words of German, a masquerade which my features tend to support. This day was different, however. I could see not looks of accusation hiding behind their questions, but smiles, waiting to emerge. Everyone was happy to say “Hello,” to shake my hand, to say, “Congratulations!” I don’t know how many times I was congratulated throughout the day, but it was many. Obama’s win does not erase the past (a past that it may take us centuries to live down) but it does give some glimmer of hope to the future. Even if I am not yet exactly “proud” to admit my nationality, as least I am not quite so ashamed as I was a couple of weeks ago and as I have been for the greater part of my adult life.

    Incidentally, Teddy Roosevelt was also 42 when he was sworn in as President. Not only was he highly popular with the people of his era, he is, even today, considered by many historians and scholars as one of the greatest U.S. presidents ever to assume office. Even the noted historian Thomas Bailey, an adamant opponent of Roosevelt’s policies, concluded in the end that “Roosevelt was a great personality, a great activist, a great preacher of the moralities, a great controversialist, a great showman. He dominated his era as he dominated conversations….the masses loved him; he proved to be a great popular idol and a great vote getter.” So adored was Teddy Roosevelt that his image was chosen to take its place alongside the likes of Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln on Mount Rushmore. It might do us well to remember, too, that the oldest president ever to assume office (also notably a Republican) was Ronald Reagan, who is now considered by many as the biggest buffoon ever to hold office (with the possible exception, of course, of George Bush, Jr.). Age isn’t everything – not unless you’re a bottle of wine.

  • ‘Discrimination of …. age!!’
    Love,
    Thelma

  • he is only skin and bones

  • I AM 42 YEARS OLD, OR 10 000 YEARS? ;-)

Leave a Reply