February 11, 2009 2:18 PM
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Obama Says Economy, Iraq Are Top Issues
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Royal Air force Red Arrow display team fly pass Buckingham Palace in London where Britain Queen Elizabeth II watches from the palace balcony as part of a four-day Diamond Jubilee celebration to mark the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II accession to the throne, Tuesday, June 5, 2012. (AP Photo/Sang Tan) (Sang Tan)
Like Sen. McCain, Barack Obama's life has been unconventional - and in many ways just as inspiring - community organizer, law professor, legislator, best selling author, U.S. senator. Born 47 years ago, to a white mother and a father from Kenya who were both students at the University of Hawaii, he was raised under modest circumstances by white family members and left to struggle with his own identity.
Kroft: Senator McCain talks a great deal about his experience as a prisoner of war. And how it has shaped him. What are the things, or what is the thing, that has shaped you?
Obama: Well, I don't think I can come up with something as powerful and unique as the experience Senator McCain talks about as a POW. You know, he deserves extraordinary thanks for his service while in uniform.
The story for me is of being born into pretty humble circumstances. Not having a dad in the house. But having a mother and grandparents who loved me. Who instilled in me some pretty, you know, Midwestern Kansas values of hard work and stick-to-it-ness, and honesty and looking out for other people. And what's shaped me most powerfully, maybe because I'm half black and half white-that a big chunk of my childhood, I was sort of an outsider, didn't quite fit anywhere. Part of what shapes me is being able to find a connection with all kinds of different people, and want to bring them together and bridge misunderstandings, and bridge conflict, so that we can actually get things done. And that, I think is something that led me into public service. And in some ways, that's something very profoundly American about me. Because when I think about America, at its core, we've got these common values. But we come from all kinds of different places. And if we can unify around those values, that are quintessentially American values, then I don't think there's any problem that we can't solve in this country. And that's the kind of leadership that I want to provide for the White House.
And Senator Obama took a large step toward that goal last month in Denver when he accepted the Democratic Party's nomination, and admitted backstage that he'd overcome some long odds.
Kroft: Did you ever doubt it was gonna happen?
Obama: Of course.
Kroft: When?
Obama: Well, let's see. About a year ago we were down 30 in Iowa. But I never doubted that it could happen.
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved. Kroft: Senator McCain talks a great deal about his experience as a prisoner of war. And how it has shaped him. What are the things, or what is the thing, that has shaped you?
Obama: Well, I don't think I can come up with something as powerful and unique as the experience Senator McCain talks about as a POW. You know, he deserves extraordinary thanks for his service while in uniform.
The story for me is of being born into pretty humble circumstances. Not having a dad in the house. But having a mother and grandparents who loved me. Who instilled in me some pretty, you know, Midwestern Kansas values of hard work and stick-to-it-ness, and honesty and looking out for other people. And what's shaped me most powerfully, maybe because I'm half black and half white-that a big chunk of my childhood, I was sort of an outsider, didn't quite fit anywhere. Part of what shapes me is being able to find a connection with all kinds of different people, and want to bring them together and bridge misunderstandings, and bridge conflict, so that we can actually get things done. And that, I think is something that led me into public service. And in some ways, that's something very profoundly American about me. Because when I think about America, at its core, we've got these common values. But we come from all kinds of different places. And if we can unify around those values, that are quintessentially American values, then I don't think there's any problem that we can't solve in this country. And that's the kind of leadership that I want to provide for the White House.
And Senator Obama took a large step toward that goal last month in Denver when he accepted the Democratic Party's nomination, and admitted backstage that he'd overcome some long odds.
Kroft: Did you ever doubt it was gonna happen?
Obama: Of course.
Kroft: When?
Obama: Well, let's see. About a year ago we were down 30 in Iowa. But I never doubted that it could happen.
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