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That man needs a memorial

sparkling water

Posted 5:31 pm, 06/24/2017

Maniacal nonpartisan Laughter

george h w b

Posted 4:45 pm, 06/24/2017

Obama Boulevard.....Another good place to take a whizz or dump.

sparkling water

Posted 3:40 pm, 06/24/2017

Update

Even though it runs through the heart of L.A’.s Baldwin Hills/Crenshaw neighborhood, most Angelenos would be hard pressed to locate Rodeo Road on a map.

In fact, they’d probably point to its ritzy doppelganger �" Beverly Hills’ Rodeo Drive �" instead.

That may change very soon, however.

Residents here are cheering a proposal to rename the asphalt thoroughfare in honor of former President Obama, who visited here when he was a U.S. senator.

The news that southwest L.A.'s Rodeo Road may soon be renamed “Obama Boulevard" was received positively by residents of the surrounding Crenshaw district.

"I'm so happy, that would be wonderful," said Robbi Work, 60.

A retired former prosecutor, Work was even wearing a shirt emblazoned with the former president's face when she learned of the proposal to rename the road Obama Boulevard.

"They were wonderful, he and Michelle," Work said.

The street, a 31/2-mile residential strip in a predominantly African American community, is flanked on both sides by squat one- and two-story houses and gated communities. The road is also home to Dorsey High School, Baldwin Hills Elementary school and Rancho Cienega Sports Center and Park �" where Obama held a campaign rally when he was running for president.

"At one point, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard used to be called Santa Barbara Avenue," said Admee Aguierre, 33, a locker room attendant at the sports center who was present for the rally. "So that will be kind of cool, because Martin Luther King ends right here where the park is and then to have Rodeo called Obama, it's like we have these streets being named after our own."

Los Angeles City Council President Herb Wesson proposed renaming the street on Thursday. There are several other streets named after presidents in the area, including Washington, Jefferson and Adams.

The street would not be the first in the area to be named after the nation’s first black president, however. In May, a plan to rename a stretch of the 134 Freeway after Obama moved forward with approval from the state Senate. The freeway is near Occidental College, which Obama attended from 1979 to 1981.

Even the youngest residents of the southwest L.A. neighborhood were receptive to Wesson’s idea.

"Obama! I like that," said 8-year-old Kory Gable. "Then there will be only one Rodeo which is Rodeo [Drive]."

"I think that's a great idea," agreed 10-year-old Golden Wilson. "Because it teaches you the presidents and it can teach you the streets and it'll be easier ..."

Though residents were receptive to having a street named after Obama, they did ask why the president's name couldn't be given to a more significant street.

"Change La Brea, change Sepulveda," said Taylor Strong, 21, a parks and recreation assistant at Rancho Cienega. "Sepulveda is the longest street in California. Change a major, major street. I think he deserves more than Rodeo."

"Obama is something we've never had, and in my lifetime we thought we would never see it," said Walter, a retired gardener who declined to give his last name. "He deserves more than a little bitty street."

"Changing the name here won't change anything because it's already a black neighborhood," agreed Shawn Rahman, a cashier at I Smoke 4 Less smoke shop. "Why not take it to Beverly Hills? Why not change Rodeo Drive to Obama Drive? Because it's a white neighborhood? You're changing the street, you're spending the money, might as well change it there."

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sparkling water

Posted 6:45 pm, 06/22/2017

His policies, legacy, influence...

all dead and defunct.

Mad Scientist

Posted 6:43 pm, 06/22/2017

For some reason, I thought streets and bridges were only named after dead people.

sparkling water

Posted 6:43 pm, 06/22/2017

Repeating your false assertions won't make them true.

1goddess

Posted 6:38 pm, 06/22/2017

chasing a racist

sparkling water

Posted 6:33 pm, 06/22/2017

I simply proved you are barking up the wrong tree.

1goddess

Posted 6:30 pm, 06/22/2017

no, it didn't...you yet proved it again!

sparkling water

Posted 6:30 pm, 06/22/2017

****, I didn't even express an opinion as to the propriety of naming a street in LA for the former president or anyone else.

sparkling water

Posted 6:28 pm, 06/22/2017

There was not one reference to race, creed, Kenyan national origin, gender, sexual orientation or any demographic identifier.

Your sad attempt to label me racist fails utterly.

1goddess

Posted 6:23 pm, 06/22/2017

all of it, period!

sparkling water

Posted 6:22 pm, 06/22/2017

Take a good look at my original post, goddess.

Tell me which part was racist.

1goddess

Posted 6:18 pm, 06/22/2017

there's nothing to be ashamed of.....I called you out for what you posted and the fact that yes, you're racist!!!!


You still haven't explained what your point was....or did I already do it for you!!!

sparkling water

Posted 5:18 pm, 06/22/2017

You Libtards are so predictable. You always assume the worst. You always go for the racist word. Shame on you.

1goddess

Posted 4:59 pm, 06/22/2017

isn't this more or less the same as with MLK...what's your point, racist?

sparkling water

Posted 4:53 pm, 06/22/2017

LA Daily News

Barack Obama could soon hear his name being uttered as part of Angelenos' driving directions, with a Los Angeles city councilman proposing to name a street after him.

Obama Boulevard could prove a relatively more innocuous role for the 44th president's name than "Obamajam" - the oft-used term to refer to the anticipated congestion that accompanied his frequent fundraising trips to the Los Angeles area.

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