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Political ads and analysis of the status of the US Presidential campaigns


Jae Onasi

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OK, the stupid ads that have come up recently are driving me crazy.

 

1. The one claiming Obama wants to teach sex ed to kindergartners. People, there's a whole lot more to sex ed than just the one physical act, and the curriculum planned is intended to be age appropriate with an opt-out clause. I haven't had a chance to look at the curriculum, but my guess would be the kindergarten curriculum is about learning what that thing is between the legs, and what's an appropriate touch and what's a 'bad' touch by someone else. If we're lucky they'll teach a little toilet paper hygiene and hand-washing after using the bathroom, too. I despise scare techniques in ads, and this is one I don't like one bit.

 

2. The claim that McCain can't send an email in an attempt to make it look like he doesn't know about modern technology. I found this ad extraordinarily insensitive to the physically impaired community. That's like blaming a blind person for not seeing the street signals. McCain has trouble using his arms and hands, so he dictates and his staff does the typing for him. The Obama ad writers didn't bother to fact-check that one, or they would have found that out in a few minutes by using the modern technology of google searching. I can't believe they never heard of a dictation machine, either--it's in common use all over the country every day. Furthermore, McCain landed multi-million dollar, ultra-high tech fighter jets on the postage-stamp size decks of aircraft carriers moving 35 knots or so. Don't tell me the man doesn't understand technology. Obama should fire the person(s) who thought it would be appropriate to put that ad on the air.

 

/rant

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I have never seen it in my lifetime. Could Palin, McCain, Powel, or George Bush do this? I don't think they can.
Last I checked, Bush won the presidential election of both 2000 and 2004 (inb4 butthurt Gore/Kerry supporters saying NO HE DIDN'T BAWWW). The press has been hounding Sarah Palin for an interview, and around half the country favors McCain.

 

Obama's lipstick comment was made right after Palin's speach. The crowd even picked up on the comment. Watch the youtube video again. It's all about timing. They knew where he was going.
For the purposes of discussion, we'll assume he was taking a shot at Palin. So what? It's politics, which has turned into calling your opponent an ******* as cleverly as possible. It's essentially people who have taken a high school social structure to a professional level.

 

John Hagee was endorsing McCain. McCain didn't go to his church for 30 years. McCain didn't endorse or support John Hagee. Obama went to Rev. Wright's church for 30 years, he called him uncle, he was married by the guy, and his kids were baptised by the guy. They are two different things.
Once again I'm forced to say "So what?". Wright criticized the US' behavior, and, to my delight, actually got angry about the ****-ups of our government, which is a welcome change from the apathy of our current generation ("Hey what do you think of Sarah Palin?" "Who?").

 

I'm genuinly curious. Between the two canidates, Obama has the most controversy surrounding him. I just wanted to know what his supporters were thinking.
I'm thinking "He's not McCain". McCain has said he'll make sure we stay in Iraq, Palin has said she wants Roe vs. Wade overturned, because in her world women can just pop out one little rugrat after another and not have to worry about their financial situation or potential health risks.

 

And I honestly think that McCain nominating Palin is far more sexist than anything anyone has said, a woman being nominated for the Vice Presidency simply because she's a woman and not because she's the best person for the job goes against everything women's rights groups in the past have fought for.

 

The claim that McCain can't send an email in an attempt to make it look like he doesn't know about modern technology. I found this ad extraordinarily insensitive to the physically impaired community. That's like blaming a blind person for not seeing the street signals. McCain has trouble using his arms and hands, so he dictates and his staff does the typing for him. The Obama ad writers didn't bother to fact-check that one, or they would have found that out in a few minutes by using the modern technology of google searching. I can't believe they never heard of a dictation machine, either--it's in common use all over the country every day. Furthermore, McCain landed multi-million dollar, ultra-high tech fighter jets on the postage-stamp size decks of aircraft carriers moving 35 knots or so. Don't tell me the man doesn't understand technology. Obama should fire the person(s) who thought it would be appropriate to put that ad on the air.
Jae I think I mentioned this last night when you brought up this subject in Skype but John McCain isn't some cripple that can't use a computer because he has a disability, he's just an old guy that hasn't bothered to learn how to use a computer. If you seriously think that lifting your arms is necessary to type I would appreciate it if you could post a video of you typing, although iirc you aren't a cavewoman and are quite proficient at typing.

 

As for your assertion that McCain landed "multi-million dollar, ultra-high tech fighter jets" and therefore understands technology:

 

  • We can pack the same amount of processing power those jets had in a case the size of a wristwatch
  • Flying a plane != being able to navigate a modern OS to perform what could now be considered basic tasks

 

 

Honestly I think your bias towards McCain and/or Palin has clouded your judgment if you're willing to make a comparison like that -- it's tantamount to him responding to any question he doesn't want to answer with "I was in a prison camp for 5 and a half years".

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Jae I think I mentioned this last night when you brought up this subject in Skype but John McCain isn't some cripple that can't use a computer because he has a disability, he's just an old guy that hasn't bothered to learn how to use a computer.

As I understand, technology is suppose to help us, not hinder us. If using a computer is going to be so slow for him that dictating to staff is faster, what are you going to do when you have to respond to a zillion pieces of communication a day?

 

If you seriously think that lifting your arms is necessary to type I would appreciate it if you could post a video of you typing, although iirc you aren't a cavewoman and are quite proficient at typing.
I certainly bend my elbows and move my arms up a bit and forward when I type, but I didn't crash a plane and have the crap beat out of me for years, either. It takes a lot of hubris for you to determine what his physical limitations should let him do. Does Obama type every single thing for his office and campaign? I'd be betting he doesn't. Are you going to give Obama a hard time for having staff who research and type for him? I would hope not. Both candidates need staff to do a lot for them.

Further, who cares whether he knows about the ins and outs of Linux or Windows? Is that going to make a difference in deciding how to respond to a Palestinian-Israeli conflict or a hurricane disaster?

 

As for your assertion that McCain landed "multi-million dollar, ultra-high tech fighter jets" and therefore understands technology:

 

  • We can pack the same amount of processing power those jets had in a case the size of a wristwatch
  • Flying a plane != being able to navigate a modern OS to perform what could now be considered basic tasks

Yeah he was using that technology long before the rest of us moved from slide rules to calculators.

Naw, flying a fighter jet doesn't require any technology knowledge. Just advanced avionics, understanding of aerodynamics and engineering, propulsion, physics, meteorology.... Yep, I guess knowing how to double click my mouse on my Guild Wars icon trumps that.

 

Honestly I think your bias towards McCain and/or Palin has clouded your judgment if you're willing to make a comparison like that -- it's tantamount to him responding to any question he doesn't want to answer with "I was in a prison camp for 5 and a half years".

When did I say I was voting for McCain? Hint--I voted Democratic in my state primary. For Obama, no less, when the race was very close between Clinton and him.

It's your judgment that's being clouded if you refuse to see blatant errors that could end up costing Obama the election if they don't get it turned around right now. I've watched enough presidential campigns now that I have a feel for how it's going, and the tide has changed from a significant groundswell for Obama to a more neutral level and perhaps even an edge for McCain. McCain is gaining because he's doing nearly everything right from a campaign standpoint while Obama and his team have gotten off message. By all rights, with such a great dissatisfaction for Bush and the Republicans, Obama should be so far in the lead that McCain tastes nothing but dust, but that's not happening. Obama can't count on winning just because he's not from Bush's party. He has to tell voters what he's going to do in office, and why he's better at doing it than McCain, not Bush. He has to do it with clarity, and he needs to do it now.

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As I understand, technology is suppose to help us, not hinder us. If using a computer is going to be so slow for him that dictating to staff is faster, what are you going to do when you have to respond to a zillion pieces of communication a day?
I'm not asking for him to answer those zillion pieces of communication every day, I'm just saying he should know how to use a computer.
Flying a plane != being able to navigate a modern OS to perform what could now be considered basic tasks

 

<snip>

 

It takes a lot of hubris for you to determine what his physical limitations should let him do. Does Obama type every single thing for his office and campaign? I'd be betting he doesn't. Are you going to give Obama a hard time for having staff who research and type for him? I would hope not. Both candidates need staff to do a lot for them.

Further, who cares whether he knows about the ins and outs of Linux or Windows? Is that going to make a difference in deciding how to respond to a Palestinian-Israeli conflict or a hurricane disaster?

See above. I didn't say "oh he should be the sysadmin for his campaign website and write all the code for it", so if you keep insisting that I'm making unreasonable requests of him by making things up, I'll just ignore those sections of your posts since saying "basic computer knowledge" three times is two times too many.

 

 

Yeah he was using that technology long before the rest of us moved from slide rules to calculators.

Naw, flying a fighter jet doesn't require any technology knowledge. Just advanced avionics, understanding of aerodynamics and engineering, propulsion, physics, meteorology.... Yep, I guess knowing how to double click my mouse on my Guild Wars icon trumps that.

Oh that's right I forgot he designed every plane he flew and has degrees in physics and engineering. Even if the previous sentence was true, it still has no relevance since he never took the time to learn how to use a computer.

 

When did I say I was voting for McCain? Hint--I voted Democratic in my state primary. For Obama, no less, when the race was very close between Clinton and him.
You voted Democratic when you had a choice between Democrats?

 

It's your judgment that's being clouded if you refuse to see blatant errors that could end up costing Obama the election if they don't get it turned around right now. I've watched enough presidential campigns now that I have a feel for how it's going, and the tide has changed from a significant groundswell for Obama to a more neutral level and perhaps even an edge for McCain. McCain is gaining because he's doing nearly everything right from a campaign standpoint while Obama and his team have gotten off message. By all rights, with such a great dissatisfaction for Bush and the Republicans, Obama should be so far in the lead that McCain tastes nothing but dust, but that's not happening. Obama can't count on winning just because he's not from Bush's party. He has to tell voters what he's going to do in office, and why he's better at doing it than McCain, not Bush. He has to do it with clarity, and he needs to do it now.
McCain's ads are far worse. Furthermore, I'm pretty sure that last comment is just a re-phrasing of a GOP talking point, last I checked Obama has talked about his policies and not just how he's better than McCain in whatever area.
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Belief in Obama........ah, the audacity of hope. :rolleyes::lol: Also, if you had a kindergarden age child who's teacher was friendly with a known pedophile, would the question of someone's "acquaintances" be meaningless to you as well. Afterall, if the teacher had no convictions/record of charges...Fact is, a person's friends and acquaintances are a sign of their judgement. If you don't buy that, try applying for sensitive govt postions and see where that philosophy gets you. Simply saying "I want to do X" is no sign of anything other than positioning. If you find a person's integrity questionable, you have trouble believing anything they say about their stated intentions. Afterall, you question McCain in part b/c you believe he no longer has the integrity you once thought he had.

---------------------------------------------

Seriously, b/c a guy doesn't use email (or hasn't bothered to learn to use that system), he's unqualified? What nonsequitur bs. You do know that won't hurt someone in the office, right? Where email can be handled by employees, staff.... What's next.....no ipod, OMFG!!! he can't be president.. how's he gonna listen to Ludacris!?! Oh, wait, McCain's to old to be that "hip" anyway. :lol: And really, Jmac, even you have to realize that Jae was saying she supported BO, even in the primary. IIRC, she's stated elsewhere that she intends to vote BO over McCain. He probably hasn't used a typewriter much either over the last 30 years or so. Using your logic, most older people who resisted learning how to use "technological mainstays" like a vcr should not be in a position of any responsibility either. "Look, he's to stupid to do X, b/c he can't even program his own VCR/DVD player". :lol: If McCain's ads seem worse to you, maybe you should watch something else besides Keith Obermann or reading the Daily Kos. ;)

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I'm not asking for him to answer those zillion pieces of communication every day, I'm just saying he should know how to use a computer.
Why? What advantage is it to him? What's he going to get out of computer use that his staff can't do already? Research? Staff does it. Emails? Staff prints them out, he dictates answers to staff. Typing documents? Staff for that, too. If he didn't already have staff for all this, then yes, computer facility would be mandatory.

 

The argument by Obama's campaign is that he's out of touch with modern life because he doesn't use a computer. I'm saying that argument is bogus because he has used plenty of modern tech--it just doesn't happen to be a computer.

 

See above. I didn't say "oh he should be the sysadmin for his campaign website and write all the code for it", so if you keep insisting that I'm making unreasonable requests of him by making things up, I'll just ignore those sections of your posts since saying "basic computer knowledge" three times is two times too many.
Where have you said 'basic computer knowledge' in this thread once, let alone twice? If you said it in skype last night, my apologies--I don't have access to skype at work.

 

It may be an unreasonable request if you're asking him to do something that is physically difficult to do with any speed or efficiency due to a. impairment and b. having staff to handle that already. I don't care if he gets information by typing in urls himself or staff typing it for him, as long as he gets appropriate information.

 

Oh that's right I forgot he designed every plane he flew and has degrees in physics and engineering. Even if the previous sentence was true, it still has no relevance since he never took the time to learn how to use a computer.
Did I say he designed the planes? No. However, you have to know a lot of flight science to fly planes, know how to read weather forecasts and maps so you know where the storms are so you avoid them, etc. That requires facility with modern tech.

 

You voted Democratic when you had a choice between Democrats?
I had a choice to vote in either primary because WI allows that--I chose the Democratic one.

 

McCain's ads are far worse. Furthermore, I'm pretty sure that last comment is just a re-phrasing of a GOP talking point, last I checked Obama has talked about his policies and not just how he's better than McCain in whatever area.
Obama does at his rallies and needs to--the recent ads aren't however, and that's what a lot of people see.

 

I'm not rephrasing a GOP talking point--have you seen the polls lately? Depending on the news source, Obama is only a couple points ahead, or is in fact now behind McCain. He should be double digits ahead of McCain, and the fact that he's not means he's not doing what he did last winter/spring when he attracted so many people to the polls and so many people to go to his website and donate to show their support for him. He needs to recapture that message and that excitement.

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Why? What advantage is it to him?
Because it's 2008 and nearly everything is run by computers.

 

The argument by Obama's campaign is that he's out of touch with modern life because he doesn't use a computer. I'm saying that argument is bogus because he has used plenty of modern tech--it just doesn't happen to be a computer.
If you're referring to the planes he flew, that's NOT modern technology.

 

Where have you said 'basic computer knowledge' in this thread once, let alone twice? If you said it in skype last night, my apologies--I don't have access to skype at work.
Ugh.
Flying a plane != being able to navigate a modern OS to perform what could now be considered basic tasks

 

Did I say he designed the planes? No. However, you have to know a lot of flight science to fly planes, know how to read weather forecasts and maps so you know where the storms are so you avoid them, etc. That requires facility with modern tech.
PLANES FROM THE 1960s ARE NOT CONSIDERED MODERN TECHNOLOGY BECAUSE THAT WAS NEARLY 50 YEARS AGO AND FURTHERMORE IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THE TOPIC AT HAND
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Where did this come from and what does it have to do with Obama? I must warn you libel is bad.

 

Nice jump there, sithy. :rofl:~snipped~ If you know someone that has ties to questionable people, you end up questioning them and their values as well. BO has all kinds of ?? around him and his character (to be "fair", many people in politics do). You may wish to ignore them b/c you favor his policy positions, but that doesn't make them go away. They, like his policy positions, are fair issues in a political campaign. It's not a matter of "this pundit or that", anyone that looks at the facts in any election on any candidate has to square what they are hearing with what they believe about someone's charachter. Hence, in the example of the pedophile, I was trying to suss out exactly when associations became a problem for you in assessing someone else's credibility. Hope that helps. :)

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I should point out that Tony Rezko (et al) != pedophile. Drawing the comparison between a pedophile and a white collar criminal is incredibly silly. In politics it's really fairly unavoidable to have no ties to someone who got a little greedy. :)

 

By the way guys, just do what I do and mute the TV when the campaign ads come on. ;)

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~snipped~

 

@inyri--I never stated Rezco=pedophile. You people are frankly making hysterical leaps. There are more ?? around BO than Tony Rezco. Please try to keep your blind faith/adoration of BO in check. You guys are looking silly.

 

Usually, I settle for channel surfing. :) Of course, I do that for commercials most of the time anyway.

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OK, this is NOT supposed to be a fan-boy/rah-rah thread for either Obama or McCain. I want to see an analysis of how the campaigns are being handled, and that means looking at all the warts as well as the good stuff. If you want fan-boyism, go to the candidates' websites--you'll get all you want there. I respect both candidates, but I'm going to call a mistake a mistake when I see one. If the candidates' fallibility is too uncomfortable for some of you, then this may not be a thread that you'll want to participate in.

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I'm not rephrasing a GOP talking point--have you seen the polls lately? Depending on the news source, Obama is only a couple points ahead, or is in fact now behind McCain. He should be double digits ahead of McCain, and the fact that he's not means he's not doing what he did last winter/spring when he attracted so many people to the polls and so many people to go to his website and donate to show their support for him. He needs to recapture that message and that excitement.
That's one way of looking at it. Another would be that McCain's doing better. There is more than one possible explanation for why the horse race has tightened.

 

Obama's record breaking $66 million dollar haul (and 500,000 new contributors) from last month tells me that the above premise isn't well supported by the facts.

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That's one way of looking at it. Another would be that McCain's doing better. There is more than one possible explanation for why the horse race has tightened.

I thought McCain had been doing everything right in the last month--say what you want about her, naming Palin VP was brilliant in terms of rallying the party. The Republicans and conservatives are absolutely ga-ga over this, and it's fired up the party to a degree I hadn't anticipated.

Obama's record breaking $66 million dollar haul (and 500,000 new contributors) from last month tells me that the above premise isn't well supported by the facts.

I think that's more likely a post-convention donation bump--McCain also got huge funds, and that kind of donation surge has happened in previous election cycles, even when the candidate was clearly way behind. I couldn't quite pinpoint why I was thinking there was a problem with the message being unclear until I realized Obama's saying one thing and some of his staff are saying something else. He needs to get his rogues back in line so everyone's on the same page. Granted, some of those people are there to say the things that Obama can't, but they can't look disorganized in the process.
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I thought McCain had been doing everything right in the last month--say what you want about her, naming Palin VP was brilliant in terms of rallying the party. The Republicans and conservatives are absolutely ga-ga over this, and it's fired up the party to a degree I hadn't anticipated.
Many of them are. Some of them are not.

 

I think that's more likely a post-convention donation bump--McCain also got huge funds, and that kind of donation surge has happened in previous election cycles, even when the candidate was clearly way behind.
I repeat: "record breaking".

 

McCain also got huge funds? Source please, as I was under the impression that he was taking public campaign financing for the general election (thereby cutting him off from further private campaign contributions).

 

I couldn't quite pinpoint why I was thinking there was a problem with the message being unclear until I realized Obama's saying one thing and some of his staff are saying something else. He needs to get his rogues back in line so everyone's on the same page. Granted, some of those people are there to say the things that Obama can't, but they can't look disorganized in the process.
Examples please?

 

And in your attempt to be fair and balanced, will you be leveling equally rigorous criticism against McCain as well? Or is there a separate (but not equal) set of standards for Senator Obama?

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I thought McCain had been doing everything right in the last month--say what you want about her, naming Palin VP was brilliant in terms of rallying the party. The Republicans and conservatives are absolutely ga-ga over this, and it's fired up the party to a degree I hadn't anticipated.
I really hope they realize how much of an idiot she is. What kind of public figure sets the security answer on the Yahoo email account they handle government business with to their ZIP CODE?
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Many of them are. Some of them are not.

 

I repeat: "record breaking".

Point taken, but still not surprising.

 

McCain also got huge funds? Source please, as I was under the impression that he was taking public campaign financing for the general election (thereby cutting him off from further private campaign contributions)
I'll have to look it up when I get home and edit it in.

 

Examples please?
I'll find those--may take awhile because this is more of a gut feeling that I'm still trying to fully sort out. Bear with me on that--it's really hard for me to articulate this disquiet I have about what's going on in Obama's campaign right now that make me worry that he could lose if he doesn't fix it asap.

 

And in your attempt to be fair and balanced, will you be leveling equally rigorous criticism against McCain as well? Or is there a separate (but not equal) set of standards for Senator Obama?
Most people here in Kavar's have covered a lot of McCain's faults in the campaign already. Don't get me wrong--I'm not a McCain fan-girl by any means, but I can appreciate when both camps do things right and sigh in frustration when they do something wrong. The best analogy I can think of to explain that sentiment is a Bears-Packers game--I love the Bears, but I can nail them to the wall for their faults, and when Favre was on the Packers' team, I surely could appreciate the skill with which he played the game, even if he mowed over my favorite team. Obviously football is not nearly as important, but I hope that explains the feeling I'm trying to get at.

 

Obama is dazzling, to be sure, and has tremendous gifts and I think he'll bring a lot to the Presidency--things that McCain can't bring. However, he's dazzled so many here that they're missing some of the things that could put a win at risk. Likewise, so many here are so anti-Republican that it's blinded their ability to see the things that could secure him a win if the Obama team doesn't address those properly.

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However, he's dazzled so many here that they're missing some of the things that could put a win at risk.
That may be true, however when I ask for specific examples so that I might better understand what you're referring to, you tell me that it's "more of a feeling" that you have. Not saying that it's wrong, but I think we have to agree that it's clearly not objective.
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That may be true, however when I ask for specific examples so that I might better understand what you're referring to, you tell me that it's "more of a feeling" that you have. Not saying that it's wrong, but I think we have to agree that it's clearly not objective.

Oh, definitely not objective. Some of it's purely gestalt--I've seen patterns emerge in elections cycles in the past and I see certain patterns emerging here, but there's no way to objectively quantify that. Asking for politics to be objective is like asking politicians to be completely honest--it's not going to happen.

 

Some of it is things like this:

"As for the tight campaign, David Axelrod, Mr. Obama's chief strategist, said, "We never anticipated anything but a close race and now [after the political conventions], it's settled back to where we expected it to be, which is a very close, competitive race."
(link)

Horse hockey. The campaign expected to be way ahead months ago and were confident of a win. This is just spin.

 

This is what they need to be hammering home:

Biden ended the first day of his tour by urging college students to imagine a nation more respected overseas and committed to change at home. He told about 4,500 people...that U.S. standing worldwide had been hurt by the Bush administration. An Obama presidency would change that, he said.

 

"Imagine a country where we lead by the power of our example and not by the example of our power," Biden said.

(link)

 

The Saddleback answer 'it's above my pay grade' when asked when a baby's human rights start. Obama needed to be honest about his pro-choice beliefs there. It sure as heck isn't going to be above his pay grade when he's President. However, I respect the fact that he later was also honest enough to admit it was a flip answer and that he shouldn't have said it that way.

 

His stance on war is a bit muddied--it's gone from 'bring the troops home asap' to 'well, let's make sure the Iraqis are OK, and Afghanistan is where we should be'. I think in this case it's recognition of reality on his part, but it comes off as having being a floating policy unless it's couched properly. The move by the Bush administration to bring troops home and shorten deployments of those who are still there has taken some of the possible impact away from anything Obama could say now, however.

 

The move to suppress shows or ads negative to Obama. I still don't believe that Obama would ever have approved the email to tell people to call into WGN radio to tell them not to air someone just because they don't like what he had to say. I'm not sure what the staffer who decided to do that was smoking that day.

 

The complete bonehead political comment of the week (yes, I know it's only Wed/early Thur, but I don't think anyone will top this one): McCain saying the economy was strong in the face of government bailouts of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, Lehmann brothers going bankrupt and Merrill Lynch being sold to prevent bankruptcy, soaring gas prices, and a 504 point Dow Jones stock market plummet.

 

Yeah, I'm not sure what economy McCain was talking about, but it sure isn't the one I live in.

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Oh, definitely not objective. Some of it's purely gestalt--I've seen patterns emerge in elections cycles in the past and I see certain patterns emerging here, but there's no way to objectively quantify that. Asking for politics to be objective is like asking politicians to be completely honest--it's not going to happen.
I guess I'm just wondering why any of us should be persuaded by your opinions moreso than any others. Like those of people that do this for a living, etc.

 

Again, not saying you're wrong, just trying to figure out which way is up.

 

Some of it is things like this:

(link)

Horse hockey. The campaign expected to be way ahead months ago and were confident of a win. This is just spin.

And this is opinion.

 

This is what they need to be hammering home:

(link)

Ok. And that they're doing that says what?

 

The Saddleback answer 'it's above my pay grade' when asked when a baby's human rights start. Obama needed to be honest about his pro-choice beliefs there. It sure as heck isn't going to be above his pay grade when he's President.
I think this may be the part where you and I have a fundamental disagreement over which responsibilities belong to the President and which don't. Seems to me that this one should be answered by the medical community.

 

So I disagree that it won't be above his pay grade. His job will be to lead the country, not settle medical issues (a boundary which Bush happily crossed)

 

His stance on war is a bit muddied--it's gone from 'bring the troops home asap' to 'well, let's make sure the Iraqis are OK, and Afghanistan is where we should be'.
Interesting. I've followed his campaign for quite some time and have never sensed any lack of clarity as to what he meant. I feel he's been pretty clear the whole time, but that's just my interpretation.

 

I think in this case it's recognition of reality on his part, but it comes off as having being a floating policy unless it's couched properly.
Indeed I can see how it might come off that way to some. I guess he's not going to be able to please all the people all the time.

 

The move by the Bush administration to bring troops home and shorten deployments of those who are still there has taken some of the possible impact away from anything Obama could say now, however.
I'm sorry? :confused:

 

I think it would definitely impact his ability to say "see? I was right the whole time." or "Even Bush agrees with my policies", or if McCain switches his stance "flip-flopper", etc.

 

The move to suppress shows or ads negative to Obama. I still don't believe that Obama would ever have approved the email to tell people to call into WGN radio to tell them not to air someone just because they don't like what he had to say. I'm not sure what the staffer who decided to do that was smoking that day.
Firstly, this is speculation on your part. Secondly, I don't see how sending out an email encouraging supporters to boycott a radio program constitutes "suppression".

 

The complete bonehead political comment of the week (yes, I know it's only Wed/early Thur, but I don't think anyone will top this one): McCain saying the economy was strong in the face of government bailouts of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, Lehmann brothers going bankrupt and Merrill Lynch being sold to prevent bankruptcy, soaring gas prices, and a 504 point Dow Jones stock market plummet.

 

Yeah, I'm not sure what economy McCain was talking about, but it sure isn't the one I live in.

Yep. I agree.
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I guess I'm just wondering why any of us should be persuaded by your opinions moreso than any others. Like those of people that do this for a living, etc.
Because it's interesting to talk about these things and hear each other's thoughts on it, and because we're not trying to sell newspapers or gain market share with viewers, so we might turn up something unique in the discussion that those who do this for a living might miss, ignore, or suppress.

Again, not saying you're wrong, just trying to figure out which way is up.

And this is opinion.

Yes, some of it's opinion.

 

Ok. And that they're doing that says what?
They should do more of it.

 

So I disagree that it won't be above his pay grade. His job will be to lead the country, not settle medical issues (a boundary which Bush happily crossed)
It becomes his pay grade when he appoints justices to the Supreme Court.

 

Interesting. I've followed his campaign for quite some time and have never sensed any lack of clarity as to what he meant. I feel he's been pretty clear the whole time, but that's just my interpretation.
My understanding was his message early on was 'bring them home now.' I remember him saying when he was elected he'd bring the troops home as soon as he got in office. Granted, it's been a year so I may not have that 100% right.

 

Indeed I can see how it might come off that way to some. I guess he's not going to be able to please all the people all the time.
Well, no one can make everyone happy all the time, but he just needs to be careful with the presentation of the message.

 

I'm sorry? :confused:
If Bush is bringing troops home, it takes some of the wind out of the sails of the anti-war plank. I would hope that Bush isn't doing that for political reasons, but I don't know with him anymore.

 

I think it would definitely impact his ability to say "see? I was right the whole time." or "Even Bush agrees with my policies", or if McCain switches his stance "flip-flopper", etc.
Well, maybe Obama should point that out and take advantage of that.

Firstly, this is speculation on your part. Secondly, I don't see how sending out an email encouraging supporters to boycott a radio program constitutes "suppression".

The email wasn't to boycott the program. The email advised people to call into WGN to tell the radio station not to air the program. That's different from a boycott.
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