Back to regular view     Print this page

Weather: YAWN
Become a member of our community!

Olympics
Local sports
Other favorite sports on the web
Sports Blogs
Sports
Columnists
 


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Olympics
Print Article Email Article Share / Bookmark

Contests & Sweepstakes

Check out our contests & sweepstakes and find out how to enter for a chance to win great prizes!






TOP STORIES ::
Targeted Danish cartoonist feels safe, but angry

Street-smart U.S. prosecutor is moving on

Join us at 3:15 for our live chat during the Bears-Patriots game

Book digs up plenty of Brat Pack dish

Chop, chop: Honing knife skills is essential and quite fun


Video





Chicago torpedoed by anti-U.S. sentiment?

October 3, 2009

Some Chicago officials say anti-American resentment likely played a role in Chicago's Olympic bid dying in the first round Friday.

President Obama could not undo in one year the resentment against America that President Bush and others built up for years, they said.

"There must be" resentment against America, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said, near the stage where he had hoped to give a victory speech in Daley Center Plaza. "The way we [refused to sign] the Kyoto Treaty, we misled the world into Iraq. The world had a very bad taste in its mouth about us. But there was such a turnaround after last November. The world now feels better about America and about Americans. That's why I thought the president's going was the deal-maker."

State Rep. Susana Mendoza (D-Chicago) said she saw firsthand the resentment against America five years ago when she was in Rio de Janeiro. "I feel in my gut that this vote today was political and mean-spirited," she said.

"I travel a lot. ... I thought we had really turned a corner with the election of President Obama. People are so much more welcoming of Americans now. But this isn't the people of those countries. This is the leaders still living with outdated impressions of Americans."

U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) said she was approached by a consul general at the plaza as they waited for word Friday. "He said ... he was hearing that there wasn't enough time for Barack Obama to dispel the old image. ... But I don't know if that's it."

Presidential press secretary Robert Gibbs rejected the notion that the vote was influenced by the United States' standing: "No, I think you saw both at the U.N. General Assembly, you saw at the G20 last week ... I think virtually every measure of our standing in the world is different than it was just this time last year. So I don't read too much of that into this."