Wednesday, February 6, 2008

I Pick Obama

I said that I was going to wait and see what happened on Super Tuesday. Even though there is no clear winner, I have made up my mind. Ever since John Edwards dropped out of the campaign, I have been trying to decide who to support. There are things I like and don't like about Obama and Clinton. I have been leaning toward Obama but now I have decided to support him in his run for the White House. When you get down to it the reason I support Barak Obama is very simply, the 90s are over and there is no reason to go back. Right now the Republicans are down and they are depressed. The hard core conservatives hate their probable nominee John McCain. However the Republicans would love to run against Hillary Clinton, and even though they may not fully support McCain nothing will motivate the Republican base like fighting against the Clintons. I don't see any reason to activate and motivate the sluggish Republican base. Besides even if Hillary Clinton does become the president there is a strong chance that it will be a return to the battle of 90s. It will be hard to move forward with another Clinton White House. Think about the heyday of right wing radio was during the Clinton years. Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity could have a field day bashing away at the Clintons again. Having said that it will not be easy for Obama. You have seen the stories that Obama was a Muslim and taught at madrasa. You have also seen the questionable story from the National Journal about Obama being the most liberal Senator. You have already seen many of right wing talking heads playing that story up. So far he had done well fighting those kind of stories, but I would like to see him a bit tougher. Another advantage Obama has over Hillary is he able motivate and excite people in a way Hillary can not. It is clear just be looking at results that Democrats are much more active and excited about their candidates this cycle. Obama supporters most embody that kind of raw enthusiasm. It just may be the excitement and positive nature of Obama's message may overwhelm the Rove like gutter fights the Republicans are known for. When you get beyond the excitement and into the details of Obama you begin to wonder what kind of president Obama will be and how he will be on policy issues. The most important question may be will he will be able surround himself with good people. I will be curious to what an Obama administration and cabinet would look like. Lots of people say that Obama does not have enough experience, but the experience issue does not really bother me. Chenney and Rumsfeld had lots of experience in government and see where that got us. I can't help thinking even with unknowns there is far more upside and promise with Barak Obama. This is a chance for something new and Obama can represent that change better than Clinton.

Update - This morning at the CPAC conservative love fest Mitt Romney annouced that he is dropping out of the race. I heard a couple of interesting things on talk radio this morning. There was one that was conservative Rush Limbaugh and one was progresive Thom Hartman. I listened to Rush for about 20 minutes at lunch and it appears without Romney he has given up on McCain and is instead saying that Hillary is our best hope. He wants to have Hillary as an opponent because he knows that will be the best thing to motivate this conservative base. Thom Hartman is at CPAC and he was all there was tons of anti-Hillary stuff but nothing about Obama. So in other words these conservatives have been planing and working on running against Hillary Clinton for at least two years now. I think Barak Obama is the best hope for the Democratic Party. We can not give the Republicans Hillary to run against.

Day After Super Tuesday

So it's a new day and the candidates look at their prospects to become the next president. For Obama and Clinton it is pretty much just another day. Obama won more states but Clinton won the big states like New York and California. Most of the talking heads said it was a draw meaning they will continue to campaign. John McCain is probably fairly perky this morning. He netted some big wins and may have mortally wounded the much hated Mitt Romney. John may be concerned the party is still a mess, conservatives do trust him still and he did not win the South. Speaking of the South Mike Huckabee came back from the edge by winning the ruby red states including his own state Arkansas. It is probably a pretty dark day in Romney. Mitt won the states he was expected to win but none of the others especially California. The Romney people are going to have the frank talk about the future of the campaign. No matter Mitt can take comfort in the fact that the people of Utah really, really like him.

Monday, February 4, 2008

What to do With Edwards Gone

I have been trying to what to do since John Edwards has left the race. I had already voted for him in the Tennessee Primary and still do not regret the vote. The only question I have now is who do I support moving forward. On one hand you have the experience of Hillary Clinton but you get the high negatives and her ability to unite the right wing and on the other hand you have Barak Obama with his vision and ability to motivate people but with you get sketchy details and lot of unknowns about how he would do in a general election. My gut reaction is to go to the Obama side but I am not sure. I was a supporter of John Edwards because I really liked him and wanted him to be the next president. So it is hard for me choose between the two survivors. I think for now I am going to see how things shake out tomorrow.

What's the Deal With Lieberman and McCain

The BFF John and Joe tour is hitting the trial hot and heavy. It is obvious that Lieberman doesn't care what the Democratic leadership or voters think about him. He got the Republicans in Connecticut to help get re-elected in 2006, and now he is embracing John McCain who is seen by some as being a black sheep in the Republican Party like Joe is with the Democrats. If you listen Rush Limbaugh and the right wing noise machine they have similar complaints about McCain. That he is not one of us and if anything takes great delight in going against the grain and do things to annoy the base of the party. Unlike Lieberman because John McCain is running for president he is far more active and interested in wooing the base and trying to prove that he is a true blue conservative. The question I have is the Joe and John tour really going to help McCain. I know they have Iraq and the war on terror in common and is probably the main reason they appear to be joined at the hip these days. However to me this just angers Democrats who already had plenty of issues with Holy Joe, and for McCain embracing Lieberman just proves that Rush was right all along about McCain. It just seems like an odd pairing. Maybe they should just give it up and become running mates, and would be the sort of Republican teaming up the sort of Democrat. McCain/Lieberman pissing of all the sides in 2008.

Friday, February 1, 2008

The Right Wing Hate Against McCain

I was skimming through Townhall to see what the right wing had on its mind today, and came across this little gem from the less famous brother of Rush Limbaugh, David.

McCain, the Anti-Conservative

Most of it was the many ways the McCain is big government liberal and not a true conservtive. You see the usual complaints against tax cuts, imigration, campaign finance, and so forth. It is only when he got to the part about Iraq that he that he really got nasty if not downright moranic, when offered this gem of conservative insight.

"Whoa, you object. When it comes to the most important issue of all -- the war -- McCain is more hawkish and more conservative than anyone. But even that is not entirely true on closer inspection. He's been good mostly on Iraq -- from a conservative perspective -- but very disappointing on opposing tough, life-saving interrogation techniques, in wanting to close down Gitmo, and in favoring constitutional protections for enemy combatants. Only liberals think like that. Only liberal instincts tell us that if we are tough on them, they'll be tougher on us -- as if they need any excuse to be barbaric toward us. They just are."

Aside from the handy euphemism of saying interrogation instead of torture, to say that McCain opposes torture because he is a secret liberal is perhaps one of the most idiotic things I have read or heard in awhile. Perhaps, and I may be going on a limb here perhaps McCain opposes torture beause he was tortured you bloated right wing tool. I am not a fan of McCain for a lot of reasons, but I think he gets to have the last word on torture simply because of what he went through. You morons on the right need to stop beating off to 24 and actually listen to someone went through "enhanced interogation".