Obama Awarded 2009 Nobel Peace Prize.

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Obama gasped too. :-o
At what? The prize announcement, Britney Spears and Madonna, or the "wardrobe malfunction?"
 
Yeppers! I bet a big ole gasp could be heard from that one!:lol:

Lol! I just bet.

I finally remembered what you're talking about when referring to Kayne West. I don't follow celebrities news very closely.:Oops:
 
*it's a pix of comic sketch - Obama smiling, standing while the Nobel Committee person was about to put the medal over his neck. He said - "Because you are not George Bush"

:rofl2:
 
Commentary: Nobel award recognizes U.S. dominance
Editor's note: Kiron K. Skinner is an associate professor of international relations at Carnegie Mellon University, directs the university's International Relations and Politics Program, and is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. She is the co-author, along with Serhiy Kudelia, Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Condoleezza Rice, of "The Strategy of Campaigning: Lessons from Ronald Reagan and Boris Yeltsin."

(CNN) -- As an American of African descent, I swelled with pride when I heard that the Norwegian Nobel Committee selected President Obama to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. The award further validates what the 2008 presidential election demonstrated: The United States is the most mature and fully functioning multi-ethnic democracy in the world.

Despite its emphasis on multilateralism, the Norwegian Nobel Committee's statement also recognizes the predominant power of the United States.

The accepted wisdom among diplomats is that the international system is multipolar because of the increasingly multilateral governance structure of the world's numerous international institutions. In reality, however, the United States is by far the single greatest economic, military and political power on earth. Furthermore, many international institutions are dependent upon the United States for their survival.

Announcing the award, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said "multilateral diplomacy has regained a central position, with emphasis on the role that the United Nations and other international institutions can play." The Committee thus joins a chorus of international forums that contend that multilateralism is the hallmark of the international system.

Today there are more formal and informal international institutions than ever before, and they share a common theme. Leaders attending the G-20 summit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on September 24-25 declared that the G-20, a collection of advanced economies and fast-growing developing economies, would replace the G-7/G-8, the long-standing group of advanced economies, as the "premier forum for our international economic cooperation."

This decision is seen in no small measure as bowing to pressure from states such as Brazil, China and India that have powerhouse economies but have been left out of key international economic meetings such as the G-8, which includes the United Kingdom, the United States, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, Canada and Russia.

The G-20 leaders also agreed to increase the voting power of developing countries in the World Bank by at least 3 percent and to shift the quota share in the International Monetary Fund from developed countries to countries in economic transition by at least 5 percent.

The Nobel Committee's sentiment was expressed at the G-8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy, in July when the G-8 countries joined with the G-5 (Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and South Africa), Egypt and the European Union to declare: "Our purpose is to foster a genuine partnership, in the context of a strengthened multilateralism."

That is similar to what BRIC -- Brazil, Russia, India, and China -- stated at its first summit on June 16 in Yekaterinburg, Russia: "We underline our support for a more democratic and just multipolar world order based on the rule of international law, equality, mutual respect, cooperation, coordinated action and collective decision-making of all states. ... We express our strong commitment to multilateral diplomacy with the United Nations playing the central role in dealing with global challenges and threats."

The very next day, the members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan) put the matter more starkly as they concluded their summit: "The tendency towards true multipolarity is irreversible."

An increasing number of regional and international institutions with evolving memberships and leadership are multilateral. The world, however, is not multipolar.

Consider some important facts: the United States has the largest gross domestic product defined in terms of purchasing power parity of any single state in the world; it is surpassed in GDP only by the European Union, a collection of states; and its GDP is twice that of China, its nearest competitor. The United States accounts for approximately half of the world's defense spending and it provides extended military deterrent cover for many of its allies, especially European.

Whether it is the subject of positive or negative international public opinion, the United States is a major source of cultural, political and social power in the world. In its recently released Global Competiveness Report, the World Economic Forum placed the United States just behind top-ranked Switzerland, hardly a nation best positioned to lead the global economy. It is reasonable to expect that the United States will soon regain the number-one position it held in earlier World Economic Forum competitiveness reports.

International political, economic and military realities are not changed merely by declaring that they are something different from what they are. I believe the Nobel Committee knows this better than those writing communiqués for the various international institutions.

The Committee asserts that President Obama has "created a new climate in international politics." In other words, it recognizes the United States' predominant global power -- power that does not appear to be diminishing and that is capable of shaping many of the multilateral institutions that depend on it.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Kiron K. Skinner.
 
I found this comment in the Ottawa Citizen today while going through it about Obama receiving the Nobel Peace prize. I felt that it reflected my views exactly... Nobel Prize lost meaning with political awards

President Barack Obama was awakened during the early morning hours Friday to the news that he had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Undoubtedly humbled by his nomination and subsequent award, Obama joins the ranks of Yasser Arafat, Henry Kissinger, Al Gore and Kofi Annan to name but a few.

The very honour that comes with such an award is based on the father of the prize: Alfred Nobel. In an excerpt from Nobel's will and testament, he notes that one award should go "to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses."

Whether we say they are great statesmen or not, we have all been told that we are judged not by what we start but by what we finish. Obama, merely 10 months into his presidency, remains relatively untested and has, thus far, produced very little in tangible results.

The very design of the Nobel Prize was to recognize great achievement. Hope and good intentions are not achievements. The Norwegian Nobel Committee, tasked with selecting the recipient, has noted Obama's "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and co-operation between peoples." Unfortunately, the president has done neither particularly well.

International diplomacy has been seriously tested by Iran and North Korea's growing disdain for co-operation and compromise; while globalization, poverty, and political instability around the globe has placed greater divisions between peoples, cultures, and nations. The clash of civilizations has become ever more apparent and diplomacy has been plagued by endemic underachievement.

The Obama administration has been given a most difficult task to repair its finances and economy, turn the tables in Iraq and Afghanistan, and seek solutions to world problems. We must not belittle that mission, but we must recognize that an award for greatness and achievement must be based on exactly that. Otherwise, we threaten a most noble award with relegation to meaningless value and worth. Obama may indeed deserve such an award several decades from now; but his awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize now smells of political favour.
 
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