Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Maverick Maneuvers

So we're down to two weeks. Time is running out, and with the McCain camp letting go of Iowa and New Mexico and now Colorado, he has to (as CNN loves to say) look for a mathematical way to win those magical 270 electoral votes. So minus Colorado (9 EVS and Iowa (7 EVs) and New Mexico (5 EVs). The maverick dreams big though--he hopes to hold on to Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Missouri, and Nevada. But that won't be enough, so he's adding....wait for it... Pennsylvania. Yes, McCain is campaigning today in PENNSYLVANIA. Can I just remind his campaign that Obama has an averaged 12 point lead in this state? Jeez man, go back to Colorado, Obama's only got a 5 point lead there!

But really, Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Missouri, and Nevada and Pennsylvania? That's a lot of territory to hold.

This week's polling from CBS/NYTimes show the Obama-Biden team with a bump nationally from last week's debate. They are now at 54% to McCain's 41% with the same group of people who were polled before the debate. Pre-debate it was 48%-43% Obama-McCain.

Trends show the race tightening, although Obama's lead in Gallup Daily poll expanded to 11 points from yesterday's 10. He now leads McCain 52%-41%. Still, Politico is noting that Obama's lead is expanding in two key counties-- he leads 50-40 in Nevada's Washoe County and 52-43 in North Carolina's Wake County-- which may help swing those two state to his column more solidly.

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14 days to the election! We are now only TWO WEEKS from the Election!

AVOID THE LINES (or join the lines...)! Early voting has started in 29 states across the nation.
Your state may offer the option of voting early, if you're willing to go to your local Board of Elections. Reed College has compiled lists of which states offer early voting/absentee balloting options with links to official websites. Here is the shortlist of states and their early voting windows:

Alaska: Oct 20-Nov 3
Arkansas: Oct 20-Nov 3
Arizona: : Oct 2-31
California: Oct 6-Nov 3
Colorado: Oct 20-31
Georgia: Sept 22-Oct 31
Florida: Oct 20-Nov 2
Hawaii: Oct 21-Nov 1
Idaho: Oct 10-Nov 3
Illinois: Oct 13-30
Indiana: Oct 6-Nov 3
Iowa: Sept 25- Nov 3
Kansas: Oct 15-Nov 3
Louisiana: Oct 21-28
Maine: Oct 5-Nov 3
Montana: Oct 6- Nov 3
Nebraska: Sept 30- Nov 3
Nevada: Oct 18-31
New Mexico: Oct 7-Nov 1
North Carolina: Oct 16-Nov 1
North Dakota: Sept 25-Nov 3
Ohio: Sept 30-Nov 3
Oklahoma: Oct 31-Nov 3
South Dakota: now-Nov 3
Tennessee: Oct 15-30
Texas: Oct 20-31
Utah: Oct 23-Nov 2
Vermont: Oct 6-Nov 3
West Virginia: Oct 15-Nov 1
Wisconsin: now-Nov 3
Wyoming: Sept 25-Nov 3


* * * * * * * *

And if there are problems voting early with the machines (!!!)--Jeez, Florida-- what is your problem??-- please don't give up!!

Nevada, you're doing well, where the First Read blog says that: "Of the 25,000-plus who voted early, 15,644 were Democrats and 5,721 were Republicans, according to Clark County Election Department records. If that trends holds, this won't be a wave; it'll be a tsunami."

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Warped Shelalagh Edition

AT LAST -- we have our answer as to where McCain got his campaign and debate strategy.... "He's as crooked as a warped Shelalagh..." Brilliant.

John Heilemann at NY Mag notes that: Presidential debates are not only — or even mainly — about substance. They're about tone and affect and body language, and on all these counts, McCain was once again fairly awful. This time his awfulness was enhanced (or, rather, exacerbated) by the split-screen TV presentation. As Obama looked at him with preternatural calm, all smiles and nods and respectful glances and rueful shakes of the head, McCain twitched, smirked, glowered, smoldered, rolled his eyes. And when he opened his mouth, what came out was too often a tonal match for his facial expressions. He sneered at Obama, interrupted him constantly, mocked his eloquence. A Republican media savant with no small experience in presidential politics e-mailed me, "He's Bob Dole morphed into Howard Beale from Network. I've had fistfights with guys who looked less angry. I don't see how he gets on a commercial airline and passes security."

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Anger Management Edition

Jesus God Almighty in heaven, please somebody, Help me! My head just exploded.

It's a good thing this was the last damn debate because I am ready to tear my last hair out and stamp myself into two pieces every time I watch one of these things. One more of those and I'll have an aneurysm.

Okay, okay, "Serenity NOW!" snarls Eric.

First things first. Debate transcript from the Times. Read it at your peril. The Times' Caucus blog also provides a liveblogged factcheck, as does the Washington Post.
Plus Politico's bite-sized debate videos.


Debate

So I ask you, who do you want next to the Big Red Button? The frantic, fidgety angry, old guy with a grudge, or the unflappable young guy who doesn't break a sweat even when the rest of us are about ready to pop both eyeballs out with apoplectic rage. If I had to watch McCain every day for four years, I'm fairly certain that I'd stick a freaking ice pick through my brain.

[Breathe... breathe... in with the good, out with the bad... in with the good...]

See, this is why I'm not running for president.

Why does John McCain always have to start things out by mentioning someone who's in the hospital? Talking about folks who are sick is like the ultimate Old Guy thing. "Your knee? My hip!!" First it was Ted Kennedy, now it's Nancy Reagan, who BY THE WAY, hates your guts because you dumped her friend Carol in order to marry a prettier, not-crippled beer heiress. Don't think she's forgotten.

Now, Joe the Plumber (plumBer, livebloggers, it's spelled with a "B", it's not "Joe the Plummer") needs to be put mercifully out of business. If I were drowning in broken pipes I wouldn't call Joe, so you, my friend, now have a dead business because we're bloody well sick of hearing about you. Sorry, you are now "Joe the Collateral Damage."

I loathe listening to McCain. He sounds to me not older and wiser, but actually more childish and petulant. He reminds me of a young friend of mine who, when I tell her she should do something, says "I KNOW. I know how to do it..." Now I can understand when she gets a little kvetchy-- she's six. He's 72 and he's rolling his eyes like a child. The whole ticket is like Winkin', Blinkin' and Nod.

It's like someone told both McCain and Palin that facial tics could win them votes. Watch McCain blink about 45 times when Obama tells him that Joe the Plumber will pay ZERO dollars in healthcare fines. Already, before the debate was even over, someone had started mashing up a YouTube video with the best moments of McCain, set to Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy."

Funny thing is, I had a whole subsection already earmarked for tomorrow called "Eye-rolling." I must be psychic. McCain's worst moment by far was his eye-rolling while Obama talked about free trade. Ah, the splitscreen...

The low point of the debate had to be when Bob Schieffer, (whom I dearly wish could have been replaced by Campbell Brown) goaded each of them to talk trash about each other, to their faces. Great. Thanks Bob, for elevating the discourse. But I have to say I thought McCain walked into a trap by going after the Lewis comment about violent rhetoric. Obama had the perfect opening to go right into a pithy line that works really well: "I think the American people are less interested in our hurt feelings than they are in the issues... I don't mind being attacked for the next three weeks, what the American people can't afford is four more years of failed economic policies." What's even worse, is that as Obama is recounting that Palin never stopped her supporters when people shouted "terrorist" and "kill him," McCain is DOODLING on his yellow Pad.

Obama tries to take the high road and says that they can disagree without being disagreeable, McCain drags it right back into the mud.

And WHAT was with the "air quotes" when he talked about concern for a mother's health. McCain says: "He's [airquotes] health {air quotes] for the mother. You know, that's been stretched by the pro-abortion movement in America to mean almost anything. That's the extreme pro-abortion position, quote, 'health.'" Really? Seriously? You put airquotes around the idea of being concerned for a woman's HEALTH?? Just to be clear, you mean to indicate that you feel that a woman's health is obviously a completely bogus issue compared to a fetus' health.

I take comfort in the fact that as he did the "air quote" gesture, you could hear dozens of cameras clicking away madly. Yes, my paparazzi friends, capture that moment of supreme condescension and absolute filthy insensitivity. At the UK Guardian, Melissa McEwan says tartly, "Ah, yes. Hello there, Straw-Woman Who Gets Abortions Willy-Nilly in Her Third Trimester Because She's a Silly Flibbertigibbet With a Hangnail. Nice to see you again. If McCain hasn't reached the nadir of his appalling campaign with that moment, I don't want to see it when he does."

Okay, must concentrate...finding my Temple of Positivity. I can only beg everyone to please, please, for the love of Mike, please put him out of our misery.

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Debate Number 4 Reaction

First, will it do your blood pressure good to know that Obama was declared the winner by a mile of this last (THANK GOD) debate?

Instapolling:
  • CBS: 53% said Obama won it, 22% thought McCain won it.
  • CNN: 58% for Obama to McCain's 31%.
  • Stan Greenberg with favorable and unfavorable numbers before and after the debate:
      • McCain: 54 favorable / 34 unfavorable
      • Obama: 42 favorable / 42 unfavorable
    • After the debate:
      • McCain: 50 favorable / 48 unfavorable
      • Obama: 72 favorable / 22 unfavorable
NY Times Editorial: "But Mr. McCain stuck to his script, and the nasty tone of his campaign, including a rather bizarre claim that Barack Obama had told a plumber in Ohio that Mr. Obama wanted to take away his wealth...In the debate, Mr. McCain again raised Mr. Obama's old and meaningless association with William Ayers, a violent, 1960s radical who served with Mr. Obama on the board of a charitable foundation. The overall effect was to make Mr. McCain seem angry and desperate, which didn't surprise us much given how badly his campaign has been doing."

Politico: "Debates should not be confused with trips to Lourdes: Few miracles are dispensed. John McCain needed a miracle in his final debate with Barack Obama on Wednesday night, a miracle that would wipe away McCain's deficit in the polls and re-energize his flagging campaign. He did not get one. The clouds did not part. Heavenly choirs were not heard. Instead, the American public heard angry attacks from McCain. Sometimes McCain attacked directly, and sometimes he attacked sarcastically, but he never stopped attacking. And he never rattled Obama. Obama answered every attack and kept his cool. How cool? Obama was so cool that after 90 minutes under blazing TV lights, an ice cube wouldn't have melted on his forehead."

CNN: Gloria Berger predicts that McCain's grimaces would become an enduring media narrative. Already in progress, Gloria. The YouTube of him making faces has been viewed 46,829 times as of 11:45 pm PDT.

David Gergen (on CNN): McCain "looked angry. It was an exercise in anger management up there."

Bob Shrum: "McCain also sounded like an aggrieved coot who thinks this campaign is all about him...When it isn't sad, it's sinister. McCain isn't a candidate anymore, but a negative research dump-- a heedless purveyors of distortion and untruth, a man who started off running on his experience, but ends up now as a right-wing caricature stumbling toward defeat with dishonor."

Brian Beutler: "John McCain says Sarah Palin knows a lot about having children with autism. Presumably he thinks she knows more about this than anybody in the country. Presumably he also thinks autism is approximately equal to Down Syndrome."

A fabulous photo from Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty.

Nora Ephron: "As he smirked and blinked and raised his eyebrows, I couldn't help wondering what tonight's McCain seemed like to all those conservative pundits who'd been hoping a different McCain would show up. Is this what they meant? Is this the John McCain of Bill Kristol's dreams? Whichever McCain shows up, some things stay the same. He's a towel-snapper. He can't land a joke. He seems old. (As Martin Short said on Letterman just after the debate, "The only time he doesn't have to pee is when he's peeing.")

Arianna Huffington: "This debate wasn't decided on the arguments being made. It was won on the reaction shots. Every time Obama spoke, McCain grimaced, sneered, rapidly blinked, or rolled his eyes. 'He looked like Captain Ahab, again and again going after Moby Dick,' John Cusack told me. 'Or an animal caught in a bear trap. He even seemed pissed at Joe the Plumber.'..By contrast, every time McCain was on the attack, Obama was smiling. And the nastier McCain got, the brighter Obama's smile became. It was the non-verbal equivalent of Reagan's disarming "There you go again' -- and it served to underline McCain's need for anger management. The angrier McCain got, the more unruffled Obama appeared.'

Ari Melber: "The entire offensive was muddled, however, by McCain's umbrage. Asked about his running mate's false charge that Obama "palled around with terrorists,' McCain offered an indignant non-sequitur. He demanded that Obama condemn Rep. John Lewis's criticism of incendiary rhetoric at GOP rallies, which McCain said was unfair because it likened his campaign to America's segregation era. 'That, to me, was so hurtful,' he intoned. Yet within minutes, McCain busied himself with the guilt-by-association attacks."

Ron Dreher: "McCain came off as sour, agitated and petulant. Obama -- man, nothing rattles that guy. McCain was two tics away from a vein-popping "You can't handle the truth!" Jack Nicholson moment, I felt. At one point, I thought: Which one of these men would I want in the White House when the 3 a.m. phone call comes in?"

"Grimacing," "petulant," "desperate," "angry" versus "calm," "unruffled"... Amazing, isn't it, the national Gestalt moment we're sharing?

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Debate Number 4 Prep

So you've probably already got your Tivo set and your pizza ordered, but just in case...a reminder that the last debate is TODAY Wednesday, October 15, 2008 at 9pm EDT (6 pm PDT)at Hofstra University's Hofstra Arena in Hempstead, New York, moderated by Bob Schieffer, CBS News chief Washington correspondent and host of Face the Nation. This debate will focus on domestic and economic policy. It will have a different format than the first two debates, no podiums or stools, but candidates at the table with Bob. "The 'Knights of the Round Table' format is better," CBS's Jeff Greenfield wrote in Slate on Monday. "It's much harder to deliver well-worn talking points when you're sitting right next to your opponent and a moderator than when you're at a podium, which invites bloviation. It permits Schieffer to look into a candidate's eyes from just a foot or two away and press him for an answer."

setstatsGreenfield also fields some other excellent ideas: "So widespread is the discontent that some people are getting desperate. In Indiana's highly competitive Ninth Congressional District, Republican Party Chairman Larry Shickles actually proposed last week that the candidates be hooked up to lie detectors for their scheduled Oct. 21 debate. The Republican and Libertarian candidates said yes while the Democratic incumbent had no comment....I confess that I'm drawn to Shickles' idea, not just because it tracks closely with my own notion of slipping sodium pentathol into the candidates' drinking glasses."

Poor Bob's getting a lot of unsolicited advice on how not to screw this one up and hold feet to the fire. "When a candidate doesn't answer the question, my opinion is that, at the very least, the moderator needs to say, 'You didn't answer the question,' former CBS anchor Dan Rather told Politico, on the sidelines of a Time Warner conference Tuesday on the media and politics. "Even if you have to interrupt," Rather added, the moderator should "keep on asking the question, either until the candidate answers it, or it's clear the candidate is not going to answer it." I guess that's why Dan wasn't asked to moderate. Hah!

On CNN today, some pundit or other was saying, "But will Obama be ready if McCain decides to bring up Ayers?" Now, I ask you, when in the last 20 months have you seen this guy NOT ready?? McCain is a man without a plan-- he's in New York for the last couple of days trying to raise money, while Obama is out greeting the 3pm shift workers at the Chrysler plant in Perryburg, Ohio. And people wonder why Obama is leading in Ohio?

I actually rather expect that McCain will try to bring up Ayers and ACORN and I expect a lot of vague generalities about his economic plan. But frankly at this point, if he's even got a hope of winning some independents, McCain has gotta start by first convincing people that his cheese hasn't done slid off his cracker, if you know what I mean. And heaven help him if Obama decides to bring up the fact that the guy heading McCain's transition team once LOBBIED for Saddam Hussein.

The Caucus Blog at the NY Times offers some stuff to watch for in this debate. "Mr. McCain has already vowed to "whip" Mr. Obama's "you-know-what" tonight. Of course, he has signaled such a get-tough approach before, only to flag. But this promises to be his last chance for direct confrontation. Watch to see how he uses it and whether he spends more time trying to restore voters' confidence in himself or to raise doubts about Mr. Obama's readiness to serve as commander in chief. The tone he strives for and the degree to which he hammers Mr. Obama will say a lot about where he thinks the race stands now and how he will conduct the rest of the campaign.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

Warmed Debate Leftovers

Warmed Debate Leftovers

MSNBC catches up with the guy at the debate who was at the receiving end of McCain's condescending "You probably never heard of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac before this..." remark.Michael Levine says: "Well Senator, I actually did. I like to think of myself as a fairly intelligent person. I have a bachelor degree in Political Science from Tennessee State, so I try to keep myself up to date with current affairs. I have a Master degree in Legal Studies from Southern Illinois University, a few years in law school, and I am currently pursuing a Master in Public Administration from the University of Memphis. In defense of the Senator from Arizona I would say he is an older guy, and may have made an underestimation of my age. Honest mistake. However, it could be because I am a young African-American male. Whatever the case maybe it was somewhat condescending regardless of my age to make an assumption regarding whether I was knowledgeable about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac."

The Planetarium: McCain accused Obama of backing what sounded like a crazy "$3 million [earmark] for an overhead projector at a planetarium in Chicago, Ill." According to the AP, it wasn't just and "overhead projector" for any old planetarium, it was a complete overhaul of the 40-year-old projection system used at Chicago's Adler Planetarium, the first planetarium theater in the Western Hemisphere. Adler issued a statement in defense of its request for federal funding, noting: "The Adler's Zeiss Mark VI projector - not an overhead projector - is the instrument that re-creates the night sky in a dome theater, the quintessential planetarium experience. The Adler's projector is nearly 40 years old and is no longer supported with parts or service by the manufacturer. It is only the second planetarium projector in the Adler's 78 years of operation. Science literacy is an urgent issue in the United States. To remain competitive and ensure national security, it is vital that we educate and inspire the next generation of explorers to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math."

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Sarah Palin Humor Break

Since Sarah Palin joined this race, I've become obsessed with folksy sayin's. Y'know, like, "If ya put all her brains in a thimble, it'd rattle around like a b.b. in a boxcar." That's Eric's favorite.

Here's a fun little flowchart that Helene sent along. This pretty much describes the entire Sarah Palin Debate strategy...



And thanks to Dina for sending this little gem along -- someone has actually--ACTUALLY--attempted to diagram Sarah Palin's sentences, and lived to tell the tale. Oh, how proud my 8th grade English teacher would be.

The Race Card

From the New Yorker's panel discussion on "If I Ran the Campaign," former campaign strategists Ed Rollins, Alex Castellanos, and Donna Brazile offered their takes on this year's campaigns. "Toobin raised the specter of race in the campaign, and Brazile, 48, let loose with an impassioned, ad-libbed exhortation that could be seen as a prescient, preemptive strike to the race-and-religion baiting tactics ("strategies"?) employed by the increasingly-ugly McCain-Palin campaign. Donna's remarks in the link above; you can watch the entire video here."

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Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Square Deal

"Let the watchwords of all our people be the old familiar watchwords of honesty, decency, fair-dealing, and commonsense.... We must treat each man on his worth and merits as a man. We must see that each is given a square deal, because he is entitled to no more and should receive no less...The welfare of each of us is dependent fundamentally upon the welfare of all of us."
---Theodore Roosevelt

setstatsYes, my weary fellow-travelers, we have now survived three debates. I feel like each time I burn out neurons and my ulcer gets bigger.

"Stop watching that stuff," Eric shouts from the back room (where he himself has been listening in the the CNN post-debate blather), "It's going to ROT YOUR BRAIN."

I can't help myself though. I'm addicted. Can we just vote? Everyone? Right now? Call today Election Day and have DONE with it?

First off, in case you missed it, the evening's choicest tidbits from Politico, a video-transcript from the NY Times, full video from C-Span and the text transcript from CNN.

And the liveblogged factcheck from: the AP, ABC News, MSNBC, and the Washington Post and Barack Obama's website.


Plays Well With Others.

Sometimes I wonder if I even know what I think until someone tells me what I think that I think. Word from the instapolls:
  • NBC's focus group of undecided Pennsylvania voters had the Illinois Democrat winning by roughly a 60-40 split.
  • Frank Luntz's focus group, over at Fox, showed undecided voters leaning towards Obama because of his position on health care.
  • CBS's focus group of independents had the Democratic nominee winning the debate at 39 percent to McCain's 27 percent, with 35 percent of the respondents saying it was a tie.
  • Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, a Democratic polling firm, had a focus group of undecideds leaning to Obama by a margin of 42 percent to 24 percent. "Before the debate, McCain had a 48/46 favorability rating; that improved to 56/36 by the end. But that's about where Obama started the evening—54/36. After an hour and a half, Obama's favorability numbers were 80/14. As Joe Biden would say, let me repeat that: 80% of the undecided voters had favorable views of Obama and only 14% saw him negatively for a net rating of +66. Not even Bill Clinton got such a warm response in town hall formats."
  • Meanwhile, SurveyUSA interviewed 741 debate watchers in the state of Washington, 54 percent of whom thought Obama was the "clear winner" compared with McCain's 29 percent. That same polling firm had the first debate as a tie. In tonight's survey: 42 percent of respondents said McCain was too forceful.
  • And the CNN focus group of undecided voters in Ohio had the margin at an even wider spread: Obama 54 percent to McCain's 30.
Reaction:
Andrew Sullivan (The Atlantic): "This was, I think, a mauling: a devastating and possibly electorally fatal debate for McCain... All I can say is that, simply on terms of substance, clarity, empathy, style and authority, this has not just been an Obama victory. It has been a wipe-out."

Will Wilkinson: "Gut read. Obama owned it. This election's over unless he murders and eats the flesh of a child on live television."

Ron Dreher (Crunchy Conservative): "Nothing McCain did tonight changed a thing. He's done. This race is now the 2008 version of Clinton vs. Dole. And you know how well that turned out for the Republicans."

Andrew McCarthy (National Review): "We have a disaster here -- which is what you should expect when you delegate a non-conservative to make the conservative (nay, the American) case. We can parse it eight ways to Sunday, but I think the commentary is missing the big picture... "

Ross Douthat (The Atlantic): "Obama was unruffled and consistent - change vs. more of the same, change vs. more of the same, rinse and repeat - and for whatever it's worth the physical and generational contrast between the two men was very striking in this setting, and especially in the early going McCain seemed to me be showing his age as he delivered his answers. He improved as the night went on, but the vigor gap was palpable."

PoliticalWire.com: "Tonight's debate wasn't even close. Sen. Barack Obama ran away with it -- particularly when speaking about the economy and health care. Talking about his mother's death from cancer was very powerful. On nearly every issue, Obama was more substantive, showed more compassion and was more presidential."

And 23/6 offers this darkly humorous observation: "John, it this really how you want to go out? Calling Obama a terrorist behind his back and a "one" to his face? You've come this far without snapping, but you're turning into Grandpa at Christmas dinner. You don't like how any of the grandkids turned out, your dentures hurt and you're two scotches away from calling Grandma a slut."

The NY Times weighed in with an "ow-ee" editorial this morning. "It is a sorry fact of American political life that campaigns get ugly, often in their final weeks. But Senator John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin have been running one of the most appalling campaigns we can remember.They have gone far beyond the usual fare of quotes taken out of context and distortions of an opponent's record — into the dark territory of race-baiting and xenophobia. Senator Barack Obama has taken some cheap shots at Mr. McCain, but there is no comparison...We certainly expected better from Mr. McCain, who once showed withering contempt for win-at-any-cost politics. He was driven out of the 2000 Republican primaries by this sort of smear, orchestrated by some of the same people who are now running his campaign." Well, it is that bastion of Liberal trash -- so what have they got to lose by calling a spade a spade?

Here's my take (not that I'm so much more insightful than everyone else above): McCain came off as flippant, IMHO, unserious, and yes, at times, he sounded nasty to me, especially the little side cracks to Tom Brokaw and the hair transplant thing. He blustered, and gave his words dramatic overtones, but ultimately looked just graceless, both physically and temperamentally. Everyone kept saying this "town hall" format was McCain's metier, but honestly, I thought he looked like a non-dancing guy told to move across the stage in a ballet, (Michael Crowley at the National Review agrees) while Obama looked comfortable, and more importantly, really seemed to be listening both to the questioners and to his opponent. Maybe this town hall thing works well for McCain if the audience is in the same room, but on TV, it had shades of Nixon vs. Kennedy.

Body Language
Oh look -- he actually looked at him! Well I guess that's better than the chilly glare and "Get Away from Me" look Obama got when he crossed the aisle in the Senate to offer a handshake to McCain last week.

But really now, is McCain not able to rise above his personal dislike of Obama? Wolf Blitzer at CNN observed: "It's apparent to say that Sen. McCain has some disdain, I think it's fair to say, for Sen. Obama. That was very apparent throughout the course of this debate."

Swipes?
Was that hair transplant thing a swipe at Joe Biden? The man just put his mother-in-law in the ground--lay off him, Johnny Mac.

McCain: "Really the match that lit this fire was Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. I'll bet you, you may never even have heard of them before this crisis." Um, actually pretty much anyone with a mortgage has heard of them, you condescending blatherer.

McCain: "You know who voted for it? You might never know. That one. You know who voted against it? Me."

Zingers
I liked this moment that HuffPo points out too:" In their first debate, John McCain's constant refrain was that Barack Obama "didn't understand." Tonight, Obama grabbed that phrase and ran with it in the other direction, prefacing his remarks on how the economic downturn would affect our foreign policy goals by saying, "Senator McCain, in the last debate and again today suggested that I don't understand. It's true. There are some things I don't understand. I don't understand how we ended up invading a country that had nothing to do with 9/11."

setstatsObama nailed McCain about singing "Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran." McCain responds that he was just "joking with an old veteran friend..." Yeah, um, too bad it's on YouTube and too bad it shows you making that crack at a large public gathering.

Tom Brokaw: At the end of the debate, Brokaw asked McCain to get out of the way of his Teleprompter, so he could sign off. A waggish Arianna Huffington cracks: "Brokaw might as well have been speaking on behalf of the future: Senator McCain can you please get out of the way so we can get on with it?"

Who is Barack Obama?
I think we know the answer to McCain's Ayn Rand-styled question now. The Caucus notes that after the debate, "Mr. McCain shook hands with several audience members and then left fairly quickly. Mr. Obama and his wife, Michelle, stuck around to shake far more hands, pose for pictures, sign autographs, and answer more questions, including from people who had been on stage but did not get a chance to ask their questions. Only when Secret Service agents told them it was time to go did the couple leave." Well, he is the biggest celebrity in the world.

Obama even had time to show up to Al Gore's fundraiser right after the debate. I guess John had to get home to get to bed early.

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Georgia on My Mind

So McCain has been hawkish about Russia for, lo, these many weeks, but Andrew Sullivan points us to some interesting background on McCain and his personal relationship with Georgia's president Saakashvili. How did I miss this? Was McCain involved in egging on Saakashvili in this ill-advised tweaking of Russia's nose??? From Newsweek last August: "Mikheil Saakashvili, his eyes bloodshot from sleeplessness and his face caked with television makeup, summoned his closest advisers into his office above Tbilisi's Old City. It was 2 a.m. on Aug. 12, and columns of Russian tanks were rolling down the highway toward the Georgian capital. "I am never going to flee," the president told his team. "I will not live my life regretting that I abandoned my own country at war." Then he sent them home to change out of their suits and ties so they could fight the invaders. Swigging a can of Red Bull, Saakashvili grabbed a phone and called the trusted friend and mentor he had turned to every night since Aug. 8, when the war began: John McCain. A source close to the Republican standard-bearer, asking not to be named discussing a private conversation, says McCain voiced support for diplomatic and political pressure against Moscow. "Hang in there," the senator said, according to a Saakashvili aide on condition of anonymity. "We are not going to let this happen … We are doing everything we can to stop this aggression."

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setstatsSquare Deal

During the debate McCain reached back in history to reference Teddy Roosevelt, whom he said was his "hero." (He also mentioned Hoover, which I think takes him on dangerous ground-- "Wait, were you and Herbert Hoover drinking buddies, John?") Anyway, Teddy Roosevelt. That's nice, John, I didn't know you were such a Progressive. You know, while you're looking for Teddy Roosevelt quotes, you might want to check into the Rough Rider's "Square Deal" plan too.

It is all-essential to the continuance of our healthy national life that we should recognize this community of interest among our people. The welfare of each of us is dependent fundamentally upon the welfare of all of us, and therefore in public life that man is the best representative of each of us who seeks to do good to each by doing good to all; in other words, whose endeavor it is not to represent any special class and promote merely that class's selfish interests, but to represent all true and honest men of all sections and all classes and to work for their interests by working for our common country.

setstatsHmmmm, sounds a little bit like someone else I know... "For alongside our famous individualism, there's another ingredient in the American saga, a belief that we are all connected as one people. If there's a child on the south side of Chicago who can't read, that matters to me, even if it's not my child. If there's a senior citizen somewhere who can't pay for their prescription and having to choose between medicine and the rent, that makes my life poorer, even if it's not my grandparent.If there's an Arab-American family being rounded up without benefit of an attorney or due process, that threatens my civil liberties. It is that fundamental belief -- it is that fundamental belief -- I am my brother's keeper, I am my sisters' keeper -- that makes this country work. It's what allows us to pursue our individual dreams, yet still come together as a single American family: "E pluribus unum," out of many, one."

By the way, John, Teddy Roosevelt also said this: "Working women have the same need to protection that working men have; the ballot is as necessary for one class as to the other; we do not believe that with the two sexes there is identity of function; but we do believe there should be equality of right." Ted Kennedy and I will be checking in with you on "Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act," Sen. McCain. You should show up to vote this time.

Oh, and note to Sen McCain? Stop peppering every rhetorical moment with the phrase "my friends." In case you haven't noticed, I am not your friend. Even if I didn't take a drink every time you uttered the phrase, I'd still be barfing by the end of the night.

===========================

Statistical significance: Obama's Gallup Daily lead has expanded to 11 points today. I know, I know, I'm still skeptical about polls. Frankly I think Obama's actual lead is MUCH bigger than even pollsters are measuring. I admit though, I do like to see all the little charts on former McCain states with the red line going down and the blue line going up. North Carolina. Virginia. Ohio. Florida. Warms the cockles of my heart. Whatever those are.

Clock is ticking...Only 27 days to the election, people!

RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold).
  • Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
  • Friday, Oct 10: New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma
  • Saturday, Oct 11: Delaware
  • Tuesday, Oct 14: Maryland, New Jersey, Oregon
  • Wednesday, Oct 15: Massachusetts, West Virginia, Wisconsin

Also don't forget to check
Project Vote, which lists the names and addresses of purged voters in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas (so far). If you live in one of these states, check the list TODAY to see if you have been purged and also check for friends, relatives, and neighbors." If you find yourself or someone you know on one of these lists, they may be able to protest being removed from the rolls.

If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot.

And again, in many states, you may vote EARLY, before Nov 4, to avoid the long lines (Ohio, your early voting week is over). Reed College has compiled lists of which states offer early voting/absentee balloting options.

* * *
And since Katie mentioned overseas friends, I do want note that U.S. citizens residing abroad can still vote! If you know US citizens abroad, folks in the active military, paople working for the State Department -- YES, they CAN vote. Forward them the link to the Overseas Vote Foundation.

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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Cry Havoc!

And Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge,
With Ate by his side come hot from hell,
Shall in these confines with a monarch's voice
Cry 'Havoc,' and let slip the dogs of war;
That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
With carrion men, groaning for burial.
--Shakespeare, Julius Caesar

The Ugly Has Arrived

John Aravosis at Americablog (via HuffPo) reported on a McCain rally- one which in some ways shocks me, and in other ways is SO Bob Roberts: "McCain was speaking today in New Mexico, doing his usual personal attack on Barack Obama, as the stock market plummeted (you can see the ticker next to McCain on the screen, an apt reminder of what McCain and his fellow Republicans represent), and McCain asked the crowd 'who is Barack Obama?' Immediately you hear someone yell 'terrorist.' McCain pauses, the audience laughs, and McCain continues on, not acknowledging, not chastising, not correcting. Oh, but McCain does say in the next sentence that he's upset about all the 'angry barrage of insults.'"

The Washington Post reports on a similar moment at a Palin rally today: "Now it turns out, one of his earliest supporters is a man named Bill Ayers," Palin said. "Boooo!" said the crowd."And, according to the New York Times, he was a domestic terrorist and part of a group that, quote, 'launched a campaign of bombings that would target the Pentagon and our U.S. Capitol,'" she continued. "Boooo!" the crowd repeated.
"Kill him!" proposed one man in the audience.

A FINE Christian attitude. Ya gotta ask yourself, is that what you think Jesus would do?

Maybe Palin is fuming that she might owe some back taxes. The Wall St. Journal notes: "Several tax experts said they believe Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin is required to pay federal taxes on $25,000 in reimbursements from the state of Alaska for her children's travel expenses."

=============================

Speaking of Bob Roberts puts me in mind of that fantastic last scene in the movie, in which the camera pans around the interior of the Jefferson Memorial, under whose dome the following quote is inscribed: "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

I was interested to learn that it comes from a longer letter that Thomas Jefferson wrote to Benjamin Rush about how his words and philosophy on the subject of religion were being twisted and distorted:
"I promised you a letter on Christianity, which I have not forgotten. On the contrary, it is because I have reflected on it, that I find much more time necessary for it than I can at present dispose of. I have a view of the subject which ought to displease neither the rational Christian nor Deists, and would reconcile many to a character they have too hastily rejected. I do not know that it would reconcile the _genus irritabile vatum_ who are all in arms against me. Their hostility is on too interesting ground to be softened. The delusion into which the X. Y. Z. plot shewed it possible to push the people; the successful experiment made under the prevalence of that delusion on the clause of the constitution, which, while it secured the freedom of the press, covered also the freedom of religion, had given to the clergy a very favorite hope of obtaining an establishment of a particular form of Christianity thro' the U. S.; and as every sect believes its own form the true one, every one perhaps hoped for his own, but especially the Episcopalians & Congregationalists. The returning good sense of our country threatens abortion to their hopes, & they believe that any portion of power confided to me, will be exerted in opposition to their schemes. And they believe rightly; for I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man. But this is all they have to fear from me: & enough too in their opinion, & this is the cause of their printing lying pamphlets against me, forging conversations for me with Mazzei, Bishop Madison, &c., which are absolute falsehoods without a circumstance of truth to rest on; falsehoods, too, of which I acquit Mazzei & Bishop Madison, for they are men of truth.

Eugene Robinson at WaPo puts challenge out to the media: "If we in the media really believe what we say about serving the public interest, we have a duty to avoid being turned into instruments of mass distraction. Of course we should cover what the candidates say, putting their words in context and pointing out when the candidates are exaggerating or lying. But we should also think hard about how much prominence we give to smears and counter-smears."

Maybe all this talk will spur the Fourth Estate into a higher gear. We can only hope. At the New Yorker Festival, NY Times editor Bill Keller said, of the attack on his paper by the McCain camp: "My first tendency when they do that is to find the toughest McCain story we've got and put it on the front page." Please, Bill--PLEASE--do.

Over at Countdown, of course, Keith Olbermann weighs in with a sarcastic Special Comment (now that's my style). He also touches on this very sad and desperate story about a 90-year old woman who shot herself in her foreclosed home. Good God, this is a Dickens novel.

Even Rich "Starbursts-in-my-eyes-over-Sarah-Palin" Lowry at the National Review is chiding McCain for not drawing a bead on the ISSUES."McCain has suffered from his own manifest lack of interest in economic issues. He was chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee for four years, but you'd never know it. He repeatedly misstates his only real tax proposal for the middle class, an increase in the dependent exemption. Often, he calls it a credit. In the first debate, he called it a dividend. He might as well lurch into Tina Fey territory and call it that "hoozie-what's-it." Most voters probably didn't even know that McCain had a (creative) health-care plan until Obama began lambasting it."

=========================
Most pollsters are now putting Florida in the Obama column-- I guess finally catching up with the newly registered hordes of voters? "'Between Jan. 1, 2008 and Sept. 30, 2008, 803,909 people have registered to vote [in Florida], including 360,478 Democrats, 253,294 Independents and NPAs, and 190,137 Republicans,' party communications director Eric Jotkoff wrote."

As for those of us over here in Biased-Liberal Land, our guy is ahead and we don't quite know what to do with ourselves. I'm such practiced hand at FRETTING that I find myself fussing over poll numbers even though Fivethirtyeight.com has Obama at 345 electoral votes, Gallup Daily Tracking has given him a statistically significant lead for 11 straight days, and Electoral-vote.com has Florida even more solidly in Obama's column than Colorado and Ohio. I'm such a Frequent Fretter though that I can't help worrying that somehow, some way, something will happen to upset it all.

Daniel Chun makes the case for insanity: "Go knock on some doors. Make some phone calls. Make a donation. Recruit your friends. You only have to do it for a month. This s**t makes a difference, and with the country in such a bad way, the stakes could not be higher. If you aren't going crazy, there's something wrong with you.

Let me leave it today with a quote from Peggy Noonan, former Reagan speechwriter: "In a president, character is everything. A president doesn't have to be brilliant... He doesn't have to be clever; you can hire clever... You can hire pragmatic, and you can buy and bring in policy wonks. But you can't buy courage and decency, you can't rent a strong moral sense. A president must bring those things with him... He needs to have, in that much maligned word, but a good one nonetheless, a "vision" of the future he wishes to create.. But a vision is worth little if a president doesn't have the character-- the courage and heart-- to see it through." Too bad John McCain hasn't read Peg's essay-- he could learn a thing or two about "honorable." Incidentally, it's about the last Republican hero, Ronald Reagan.

==============================

It's a shorter edition today so I can prep for the debate. I.e. go and check that I have a full tank of Scotch.

Clock is ticking...Only 28 days to the election, people--that's just 4 weeks!

RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold).
  • Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
  • Friday, Oct 10: New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma
  • Saturday, Oct 11: Delaware
  • Tuesday, Oct 14: Maryland, New Jersey, Oregon
  • Wednesday, Oct 15: Massachusetts, West Virginia, Wisconsin

Also don't forget to check
Project Vote, which lists the names and addresses of purged voters in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas (so far). If you live in one of these states, check the list TODAY to see if you have been purged and also check for friends, relatives, and neighbors." If you find yourself or someone you know on one of these lists, they may be able to protest being removed from the rolls.

If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot.

And again, in many states, you may vote EARLY, before Nov 4, to avoid the long lines (Ohio, your early voting week is over). Reed College has compiled lists of which states offer early voting/absentee balloting options.

Remember to watch the debate tonight, October 7, 2008
at 9pm EDT, 6pm (PDT), from Belmont University's Curb Event Center in Nashville, Tennessee, moderated by Tom Brokaw, special correspondent for NBC News. This debate will have a town-hall meeting format.

P.S. Thanks Helene and Milena for this "Trains of thought" pictorial:



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Monday, October 6, 2008

Presidential Character

"If you will think about what you ought to do for other people, your character will take care of itself. Character is a by-product, and any man who devotes himself to its cultivation in his own case will become a selfish prig."

--Woodrow Wilson

The qualities of a great man are "vision, integrity, courage, understanding, the power of articulation, and profundity of character."

--Dwight D. Eisenhower

The Kindness of Strangers

I thought it interesting that, for a man who really had seen and done so much, in Eisenhower's quote above, he doesn't mention "experience" or even "wisdom." And the Woodrow Wilson quote makes the perfect lead-in to this NICE story, which I include because these days, I find myself a little beaten down by the negative turn in the campaigns.



Several bloggers are carrying this little item, which first appeared in the Norwegian daily newspaper Verdens Gang or VG. (You can get a rough idea from the Google Translator here.) It sounds a bit like the all those all-too-heartwarming email forwards, but VG is a well-known newspaper with a circulation of 1 -1.5 million throughout Norway.

Anyway, here's the story: It seems that back in 1988, then newlywed 31-year old Mary Andersen was in the Miami airport, on her way to joining her husband in Norway. She had all of her prized possessions in two suitcases, but because they were overweight, the airline representative told her she would have to pay $103 in luggage surcharges. Mary unfortunately had no money, and her husband had travelled on ahead of her, so she had no one to call. I was completely desperate and tried to think through which of the things I could do without. But the bags were filled with my most prized possessions, "says Mary.

"As tears streamed down her face, she heard a 'kind and friendly voice' behind her saying, 'That's okay, I'll pay for her.' Mary turned around to see a tall man whom she had never seen before.

"She was thrilled to be able to bring both her suitcases to Norway and assured the stranger that he would get his money back. The man wrote his name and address on a piece of paper which he gave to Mary. She thanked him repeatedly. When she finally walked off towards the security checkpoint, he waved goodbye to her.

The name on the piece of paper was "Barack Obama."

A grateful Andersen paid him back the day she got to Norway. Years later, Andersen heard Obama was thinking about running for president and Mary's parents decided to write to Obama supporting him and to thank him for helping their daughter 18 years earlier.

setstatsObama replied in a letter to Mary's parents dated May 4th, 2006 and stamped 'United States Senate, Washington DC':

'I want to thank you for the lovely things you wrote about me and for reminding me of what happened at Miami airport. I'm happy I could help back then, and I'm delighted to hear that your daughter is happy in Norway. Please send her my best wishes. Sincerely,

Barack Obama,
United States senator'.


Mary says that when her friends and associates talk about the election, especially when race relations is the heated subject, she relates the story of the kind man who helped out a stranger-in-need over twenty years ago, years before he had even thought about running for higher office.

In the PBS website for their 1996 TV special on what constitutes Presidential Character, they cite a quote from Dear Abby, "The best index to a person's character is (a) how he treats people who can't do him any good, and (b) how he treats people who can't fight back."

==================================
And now, the news
Dear me, the Dow is down AGAIN today. 800 points. Perhaps we're still gripped by an Olympic fever, because we're just all about setting new records these days. The DJIA dipped below 10,000, which apparently hasn't happened since October 22, 2004. Hmmmm, just before the LAST presidential election. My Fellow Americans, does suffering through a presidential campaign depress you?

setstatsBut I guess we're not the only ones. World markets are coming along for the ride too. You know, this whole "failed bailout" thing kinda puts a fresh perspective on the Germanically snarky article, "The End of Arrogance," which Betty sent me from Der Spiegel, "The Americans are now paying the price for their pride. Gone are the days when the US could go into debt with abandon, without considering who would end up footing the bill. And gone are the days when it could impose its economic rules of engagement on the rest of the world, rules that emphasized profit above all else -- without ever considering that such returns cannot be achieved by doing business in a respectable way." Oh, wait, what's this in the Wall Street Journal? "In tandem with its surprise move to protect deposits, the government of Germany, Europe's largest economy, arranged a bailout for Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, a giant property lender that came close to collapsing after private lenders pulled out of an earlier €35 billion ($48.2 billion) aid plan last week."

$48.2 billion? Pshaw. Hey, Angela Merkel, take that-- we still LEAD, even in Global Thermonuclear Economic Flameouts after ridiculously high-priced bailout plans! Yeah.

If you've got time, play around with the Google chart for the Dow. Via the links on the top of the chart, you can "Zoom" and show how much the Dow has grown since 1970, or just examine how much it's fallen in the last month.

Folks, take some cash--not all of it, just some-- and break it into small bills. Place those bills under your mattress. (Okay, maybe not literally under your mattress.) But you get my point. I have a lot of faith in the resiliency of the world economy, but I also know that there are places in this world with nice people who have woken up one morning to discover that they have no access to cash, and no way of getting access, and therefore no way of eating. I'm just sayin'. Also.

And not only that, it's going to be a cold winter. I get nasty chills just thinking about this report from the AP that thousands of Americans have had their power shut off because they couldn't afford to pay their utility bills. "Shut-offs have been running 17 percent higher than last year among customers of New York state's major utilities, and 22 percent higher in economically hard-hit Michigan. They are up in all or part of dozens of other states, including Pennsylvania, Florida and California, according to an Associated Press check of regulators and energy companies." And here comes winter. My God, this is turning into a Dickens novel

Sidebar: Did we just strike inside Pakistan? Just like John McCain said we should never do??? From WaPo "The attack is apparently the latest in an escalating U.S. campaign of strikes originating across the border in Afghanistan and aimed at al-Qaeda and Taliban targets in the rugged tribal lands of Pakistan. The attacks have generated a substantial backlash in Pakistan, where insurgents have used the strikes as a tool for rallying public opposition to U.S. anti-terrorism efforts."

Pre-Debate Mood

Refresh my memory, folks, was it like this in the last election in 2004? I don't remember having quite this much energy about the candidates before...Even Roger Ebert is voicing political opinions: "I do not like you, John McCain. My feeling has nothing to do with issues. It has to do with common courtesy. During the debate, you refused to look Barack Obama in the eye. Indeed, you refused to look at him at all. Even when the two of you shook hands at the start, you used your eyes only to locate his hand, and then gazed past him as you shook it." (Thanks Mary Ann for the link!)

Rolling Stone comes out with a devastating portrayal of "the real John McCain."

"In its broad strokes, McCain's life story is oddly similar to that of the current occupant of the White House. John Sidney McCain III and George Walker Bush both represent the third generation of American dynasties. Both were born into positions of privilege against which they rebelled into mediocrity. Both developed an uncanny social intelligence that allowed them to skate by with a minimum of mental exertion. Both struggled with booze and loutish behavior. At each step, with the aid of their fathers' powerful friends, both failed upward. And both shed their skins as Episcopalian members of the Washington elite to build political careers as self-styled, ranch-inhabiting Westerners who pray to Jesus in their wives' evangelical churches. In one vital respect, however, the comparison is deeply unfair to the current president: George W. Bush was a much better pilot."

setstatsPolitico reports that the Obama campaign is ready to roll on the attack (Did I not bring up McCain's history as a member of the notorious Keating Five and his "Bahama Mama" vacations weeks ago? Just checking.) : "Pushing back against what it calls McCain's "guilt-by-association" tactics, the Obama campaign is e-mailing millions of supporters a link to a website, KeatingEconomics.com, which will have a 13-minute documentary on the scandal beginning at noon Eastern time on Monday. The overnight e-mails urge recipients to pass the link on to friends." Here's the movie on YouTube.com, but visit the site too, for some interesting archives of articles about McCain's unethical involvement with Charles Keating and Lincoln Savings and Loan.

Hey, at least when Obama attacks, it's about something completely relevant to the ECONOMIC CRISIS AT HAND! It's not about radicals from the 1960s who have nothing to do with how the world is falling to small bits these days. By the way, do take a moment to check out John Wilson's comprehensive "Thirty Lies Refuted about Obama and Ayers."

And more in the negativity report: in an interview with Bill Kristol for his column in the NY Times, Palin unveils her latest attack --on Obama's connection to Reverend Jeremiah Wright. Kristol asks her "if Ayers is a legitimate issue, what about Reverend Wright? She didn't hesitate:
"To tell you the truth, Bill, I don't know why that association isn't discussed more, because those were appalling things that that pastor had said about our great country, and to have sat in the pews for 20 years and listened to that — with, I don't know, a sense of condoning it, I guess, because he didn't get up and leave — to me, that does say something about character. But, you know, I guess that would be a John McCain call on whether he wants to bring that up."

Which I think is *just RICH* coming from the woman who was once a member of the Pentecostal Wasilla Assembly of God, led by a pastor, Ed Kalnins, who "has also preached that critics of President Bush will be banished to hell; questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would be accepted to heaven; charged that the 9/11 terrorist attacks and war in Iraq were part of a war 'contending for your faith;' and said that Jesus 'operated from that position of war mode.'" Palin is on YouTube, addressing the WAG (I love using the acronym), and talking about how thrilled she is to have gotten a "laying on of hands" from the Pastor Thomas Muthee, an African evangelist and WITCH-HUNTER (???), who in his own words, wages "spiritual warfare." She's also immortalized on YouTube (I love YouTube) asking members of the Pentecostal church to pray for an oil pipeline, "I think God's will has to be done in unifying people and companies to get that gas line built, so pray for that," she said. Palin's CURRENT church is the Wasilla Bible Church, which recently promoted attendance at a conference to "Pray Away the Gay."

(Do you think Jesus is up there someplace saying, "Stop asking me for stupid things like oil pipelines and 'pray away the gay'-- what about asking for BROTHERLY LOVE AND WORLD PEACE??")

setstatsAnd aw, geez, Palin was actually just here in San Francisco. (What? WHAT did she think she could accomplish in San Francisco? Oh, right.. praying away the gay... I got it.) Whilst here, she bestowed an extra- special Palin Gaffe-awe upon our fair city. '"They are also building schools for the Afghan children so that there is hope and opportunity in our neighboring country of Afghanistan,' she told several hundred supporters at a fundraising event in San Francisco."

Um...question in the back? Can you see Afghanistan from Alaska too? Well,doggone it, they keep on moving those little country-thingies on the map-ey-whatsits.

Oh, wait! It's all coming clear to me! OBVIOUSLY, when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in the 1970s, they had to go through Alaska! Look where it is!
PLUS, Afghanistan...is just south of Alaska...where they want to put the TransAfghanistan pipeline... that everyone prayed for in church! It all makes sense now!

Wow. Gosh. Gee-whillickers. THIS is why Sarah Palin is such an expert in Russia/Oil relations also!

==============================

But seriously, folks. Today's topic is:

The Fog of Deregulation

I'm struck these days by all the talk from McCain on more regulating (but less government? He and Palin should really try to align their world-views on this...). Maybe John McCain doesn't remember, maybe it's the Alzheimers? But he's actually been a FAN of deregulation--like, um, all of his life? Oh, until last month.

Here are a few key highlights from Johnny Mac's Wonderful World of Deregulation:
  • 1980's- as noted above and on the new website KeatingEconomics.com, McCain was a key figure in deregulating the savings and loan industry. McCain parlayed it into highly profitable graft for himself. In the Keating Five scandal which followed the collapse of the savings and loan industry, McCain was reprimanded for his role in asking Federal regulators to back off closing down Charles Keating's Lincoln Savings and Loan.
  • In early 1995, after Republicans had taken control of Congress, Mr. McCain promoted a moratorium on federal regulations of all kinds. He was quoted as saying that excessive regulations were "destroying the American family, the American dream" and voters "want these regulations stopped." The moratorium measure was unsuccessful.
  • In 1996, one of McCain's chief responsibilities on the Commerce Committee was overseeing the Telecommunications Act of 1996. "The act removed or set conditions for the removal of the walls that had separated different parts of telecommunications. Its sponsors claimed that the act would encourage competition in the telephone, cable, and broadcast industries and lead to lower prices for consumers.... It has encouraged a spate of gigantic mergers. SBC Communications and Bell Atlantic, having gobbled up their competitors, now control two-thirds of local telephone lines. AT&T and TCI own 60 percent of cable lines. Cable rates, which were deregulated, have gone up 23 percent since 1996, three times faster than inflation. Hourly rates for phone users have declined, but access charges and other fees have skyrocketed. While large businesses are paying less for phone service, most consumers are paying more—about $2 billion more annually than three years ago." Ultimately, McCain was one of only five senators to oppose a comprehensive telecommunications act, but only, he says, because it did not go far enough in deregulating the industry.
  • In 1999, McCain voted for the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which essentially repealed the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act's prohibition on bank holding companies from owning other financial firms. The deregulation bill loosened restrictions on the activities of banks, brokerage houses, and insurance companies. McCain had joined with other Republicans to push through landmark legislation sponsored by then-Sen. Phil Gramm (Tex.), who is now an economic adviser to his campaign. "The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act aimed to make the country's financial institutions competitive by removing the Depression-era walls between banking, investment and insurance companies. That bill allowed AIG to participate in the gold rush of a rapidly expanding global banking and investment market. But the legislation also helped pave the way for companies such as AIG and Lehman Brothers to become behemoths laden with bad loans and investments. McCain now condemns the executives at those companies for pursuing the ambitions that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act made possible, saying that 'in an endless quest for easy money, they dreamed up investment schemes that they themselves don't even understand.'"
  • setstatsMcCain's economic guru, Phil Gramm, slipped the "Enron Loophole"--which exempts most over-the-counter energy trades and trading on electronic energy commodity markets from government regulation-- into legislation in the year 2000. This deregulatory loophole was used by that infamous company to game the electricity markets so egregiously that it led to Enron's own collapse. Since then, McCain has blocked every effort to close the loophole which is now being used by energy traders to game gasoline prices.
  • In 2002 he did vote for some regulatory reforms in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which was introduced after the accounting scandals involving Enron and other major firms and which passed the Senate without opposition. In 2007, he told a group of bloggers on a conference call that he regretted his vote in favor of Sarbanes-Oxley, which strengthened financial reporting requirements for publicly held companies but which has been the subject of complaints from businesses.
  • In Sept, 2002, McCain introduced Senate Bill 2863. Consumer Broadband Deregulation Act of 2002, intended to deregulate the broadband Internet market. Most residential broadband Internet users currently connect over cable systems, but the local phone companies dominate the business market. The bill was intended to increase the power of the Baby Bells to offer their services to American homes. Federal regulations then prevented this from happening until the Baby Bells opened their own historical local calling areas to competitors. "The potential for government interference with market forces is not limited to federal regulation. State and local governments are also capable of obstructing the deployment of broadband," said McCain during the introduction of his measure, The McCain measure also called for a study within two years to determine whether state regulation is necessary to protect consumers, as well as a study on the government's role in facilitating wireless broadband. It did not pass.
  • In 2008, McCain expressed approval of the results of financial deregulation by pointing to it as a model for health care policy, writing: "Opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation."
It makes no difference whether a good man has defrauded a bad man, or a bad man defrauded a good man, or whether a good or bad man has committed adultery: the law can look only to the amount of damage done.

--Aristotle

******************************************

setstatsNews from SurveyUSA, which reports that in new polls, Obama is not only leading handily in Virginia (13 electoral votes) 53%-43%, he's stomping McCain. "McCain no longer leads in any region of the state. In Northeastern VA, which includes the DC suburbs, Obama leads by 24 points. In Central Virginia, home of the Confederate White House, the Museum of the Confederacy and Appomattox, Obama today leads by 8. In Southeastern Virginia, Obama leads by 11. In the Shenandoah, where John McCain led by 24 points one month ago, Obama and McCain today tie." Dude, you just blew my mind. I guess Jim Webb was right. Scots-Irish Populism works all the way, even in Appalachia.
The Ballot Ballet
setstatsClock is ticking...Only 29 days to the election, people!







For new registrations, time has already run out in many states (Today was the deadline for Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, DC, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia). RockTheVote's list of voter registration deadlines. Here are some upcoming dates--forward this on to your friends in the appropriate states (swing states in bold).
  • Tuesday, Oct 7: Illinois, New Mexico
  • Wednesday, Oct 8: Missouri
  • Friday, Oct 10: New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma
  • Saturday, Oct 11: Delaware
  • Tuesday, Oct 14: Maryland, New Jersey, Oregon
  • Wednesday, Oct 15: Massachusetts, West Virginia, Wisconsin

Shenanigan Watch

I've already passed this on to many of you, but here it is again: news today that hundreds of thousands of people in the United States who filed registration applications but were not put on the voter rolls because of actual or alleged defects in their applications.
Electoral-vote.com notes that "Unbeknownst to them, thousands of people have been purged from the voter rolls. Project Vote lists the names and addresses of purged voters in Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas (so far). If you live in one of these states, check the list TODAY to see if you have been purged and also check for friends, relatives, and neighbors." If you find yourself or someone you know on one of these lists, they may be able to protest being removed from the rolls.


Some of you may be wondering, is there really any reason to worry? I've got my ID, so no one can turn me away, can they? But thanks to Leslie (sending word via Lisa) who compiles this sobering list of reminders:

setstatsI'd also like to remind people that there's more than one way to rig an election. No one paid much attention to this item that appeared in Wired a year ago, but we might want to notice, when those Ohio results start coming in: Researchers commissioned by the Ohio Secretary of State's Office "found that a voter or poll worker with a Palm Pilot and no more than a minute's access to a voting machine could surreptitiously re-calibrate the touch-screen so that it would prevent voters from voting for specific candidates or cause the machine to secretly record a voter's vote for a different candidate than the one the voter chose. Access to the screen calibration function requires no password, and the attacker's actions, the researchers say, would be indistinguishable from the normal behavior of a voter in front of a machine or of a pollworker starting up a machine in the morning." (Full report here in PDF format)

Yep, this is me, the absolute paranoic who sees conspiracy theories around every corner. But just because I'm paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get us.

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If you're voting absentee, you may have to get your ballot in weeks before the Nov 4th Election date. Declare Yourself has links to each state's voter information page where you can find out how to get your absentee ballot.

Also, in many states, you may vote EARLY, before Nov 4, to avoid the long lines. Reed College has compiled lists of which states offer early voting/absentee balloting options.

And remember, tomorrow TUESDAY
October 7, 2008 at 9pm EDT, 6pm (PDT), is the next Presidential Debate, from Belmont University's Curb Event Center in Nashville, Tennessee, moderated by Tom Brokaw, special correspondent for NBC News. This debate will have a town-hall meeting format.





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