Positive Obama thread

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NoH8
NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
edited June 2014 in The Political Corner
Positive Obama thread
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  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    I wanted this thread for people who are enthusiastic about an obama candidacy and presidency since both other political threads seem mostly to be anti obama ones.  I hope this thread can stay positive since people who want to pick at anything have two other threads to do that.

    I am disappointed that the campaigns have been off to a negative start. I'm so sick of the :gotcha: politics. This one on this side made this gaffe, this one on the other side made a different gaffe. I guess I was wrong that, which I find truly disappointing because of all that bush put him through in 2000. I just heard someone who interviewed Cindy McCain said that their teenage daughter recently found out about the ugly rumors about her when she googled her name, that's so sad and unfair, yet Cindy has criticized Michelle Obama on several occasions. Spouses and kids should be off base, unless one is a current or former politician.

    I love Michelle Obama and think that she's an asset to her husband's white house, in a personal, not professional way. I love that the $149.99 dress she wore on the View has been a sell out-- I wonder when the last time most other candidates spouses shopped off the rack. Now, that's a bit pricey for me, but it's a reasonable price for a dress. I love the passion in her voice and how natural she seems, I hope having a staff and publicist doesn't change that.

    I haven't volunteered since the fire. I got a call from the campaign office asking where I've been. I can't wait to be around those people again, all the positive energy is infectious.

    I'm glad that Obama has been firm about off shore drilling. This is such a golden opportunity to work on our independence on oil, foreign and domestic and start being the world leaders that we claim to be in something other that starting wars and conspicuous consumption.  I think drilling, aside from damaging the environment would just give this country from the top down an excuse not to conserve and change our ways.

    I heard a great quote on tv last night, about the difference between a flip flop and an evolved change of opinion. One is what you do, the other is what your opponent does LOL.

    I am really sick of the petty sniping on both sides. Obama needs to not sink down to the level of his opponents and sometimes he gets caught up in things when particularly nasty mud is slung. I wish both sides would stop it with the gotcha. People are gonna misspeak sometimes unless they're robots.

    Faux news has been particularly nasty, and I am disappointed (but not surprised) at the racial/cultural overtones. Now that I'm staying at a hotel I have the luxury of seeing lots of different newspapers and reading different kinds of editorials.  There was one yesterday with a lot of the faux ones from just the previous week--- it's a shame because people who just watch that station don't get a full view. I watch the channel for a little bit, until I'm ready to throw the remote through the tv and one of the news readers talked about a side of the story that only fox was showing, which made me laugh because MSNBC talked about it the day before-- I can't even remember what the story was-- maybe about public financing.

    I'm anxious to see how the Hillary/Obama campaign stops go on friday.I hope it's not too artificial. It should be interesting to see how she does as 2nd fiddle.

    As for the Veep stakes... I still think  Richardson is a good pick, although he's not been mentioned much lately. I am adamantly against Nunn for reasons including DADT and Hagel because of his antichoice. I want Obama to pick someone who can help him win, preferably not a current senator because of the slim majority lead. Jim Webb might be an ok pick, but I don't know much about how he stands on social issues and I really love Kathleen Sebilius (sp?). If Barbara  Boxer wasn;t a senator, I'd love her too.

     Word is that if Obama picks a woman other than Hillary her staunch supporters will bail, which I think is ridiculous. I'm still disappointed at the overplaying of the gender card and the use of a few random situations to make sweeping generalizations that just aren't there.  I believe with all my heart that this country is ready for a woman president and had there been a different woman candidate who ran a better campaign that Hillary, she would have been embraced. I don't dislike Hillary, I just don't think she did herself any favors the way she acted during the primaries. I think she ran a bad campaign and that  Bill made things even harder for her with some of his off the wall behavior. 

    Anyhow, who else is an Obama supporter? Besides Grace?

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited June 2008

    Hi Amy!

    First, sorry about your fire, but glad to see you're back and posting.  Very glad you and the cats are OK, if shaken and temporarily homeless!

    Thanks for starting this thread.  I'm an Obama supporter and totally agree with you about the "gotcha" news coverage.  If nothing else, it's boring.  I mean, unless they're getting caught tapping their feet in an airport bathroom and loudly declaring they're "not gay!!", it's just not that interesting.  Plagairized cookie recipes?   Flag lapel pins?  Please.  It's funny the things people focus on when assessing candidates.  Pretty much everything except their actual world view and policies.  Of course sometimes it can be hard to pin them down on their policies.  They're slippery devils by profession.  But I don't believe you can accurately extropolate a person's leadership qualities, or predict how they're going to govern, based on a few random moments from their lives, especially when they're taken out of context and blown up and dissected beyond recognition.  I know we sometimes try to convince ourselves that these moments, or tiny behaviors, are true reflections of people's characters, but I try to judge candidates by their voting records and the content and manner of their speeches.  The ability to communicate effectively is absolutely key to being a good president, IMO.  Bush has shown us just how problematic not being able to explain policy coherently can be.    

    Like you, I've always liked Hillary, and I really would like a woman to become president.  I genuinely understood the letdown and anger her supporters felt when she conceded.  I wasn't as bothered by her campaign as you and many other Obama supporters were, but in the end, I felt that Obama's ability to inspire, a la Martin Luther King, was more important for the country right now than competency.  (Not that Obama isn't competent too, but that seemed to be Hillary's main claim.)  I have confidence that Obama will pick a good team and will *listen* to and learn from his advisors.  He's obviously intelligent and thoughtful.  And tough and ambitious in his own intelligent and thoughtful way (as his decision not to take public financing shows). 

    I know it's unlikely to happen, but I'd love to have Hillary as VP.  I think the two of them together would make an awesome team--very ying and yang.  They say Webb won't fly with women, because of past anti-feminist statements he made while Navy Secy (not sure what they were).  I like Richardson, too, and he certainly might help get the Western vote.  Don't know much about Gov. Strickland, but his name's been floated, too.  I think Gov. Warner of VA is a good guy, but I guess he's already said no.  No go on Nunn, I agree. 

    I like Michelle a lot too, but I'm not sure I agree with Obama that wives should be completely off-limits.  If they campaign on behalf of their spouses, as both of them have, then their remarks are fair game, IMO.  That doesn't mean I think it's OK to accuse them of terrorist fist-bumping or having illegitimate babies with their black lovers, and other patently obvious crap like that.  But if Michelle makes a speech and says she is in favor of universal health coverage (please!), then I think it would be OK to grill her on why  And hold her accountable for her statements.  And if there's any potential conflict of interest in regards to the wife's family business (beer), then that's fair game too.   

    Anyway, I certainly hope the tenor of the campaign and the coverage improve with the upcoming conventions.

    (Another) Amy

  • miamimama
    miamimama Member Posts: 77
    edited June 2008

    Hi Amy,

    I just heard about the fire.  How awful for you.  But, judging from your post - you haven't lost your spunk.  Good luck with getting back to normal. (What is normal, anyway?)

     I am a big Obama fan but it's kind of lonely here in Orlando.  I don't think the coverage will change since cable networks have so much time to fill.  Thank goodness for Keith Olbermann.

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

     what I like about Obamagh is that I think he will put together a team of people who are more than yesmen and yeswomen. He has said that he wants people who will disagree with him, and I believe that because he's confident to know what he doesn't know and he learns from his mistakes.

    No matter whatanyone says, I think it is possible to run a candidacy about the issues that doesn't get into the mud.

    I was really bothered by Hillary's campaign against obama but I'm letting go of that. I've always appreciated people who can make themselves look good without making the other guy look bad.

    I love Keith Olbermann, he's a breath of fresh air, except I think he sometimes goes too far against Bill O'Reilly. Far be it for me to say or think anything positive about the man, but I think the way he points out O'Reilly's awful comments takes away from the message. O'Reilly doesn't need any help to make himself look bad. I admire Keith's passion and loyalty.

    Tim Russert died the same day of my fire, Friday the 13th and I'll tell you, his death really put my own stuff into perspective. I was so glad to see all the positive coverage about him.

    Well, I'm off to get a tooth pulled, when it rains it pours,.

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited June 2008

    Glad you're back, Amy, and very happy that you recovered all your cats.   

    Speaking of Yesmen, from Time Magazine, this week:

     Since becoming the presumptive nominee, nearly every step Obama has taken seems to underline the message that his brand of change is not threatening, or even revolutionary. His first general election ad, “Country I Love,” is a 60-sec. paean to Obama’s Main St. normalcy. In it he extols policies designed to reach across the aisle, such as “cutting taxes” and “moving people from welfare to work.” His initial choice of Washington powerbroker Jim Johnson to run his vice presidential search was also traditional: Johnson had done the same job for John Kerry in 2004 and Walter Mondale in 1984. Unfortunately, Johnson was a little too old-school — his ties to the subprime loan industry forced him to resign. The campaign this month released a new roster of foreign policy advisers that includes many old, comforting names from the Clinton years, such as former secretaries of state Madeleine Albright and Warren Christopher. But in some ways Obama has boxed himself in: in trying to counter criticisms about his experience, he’s brought in a team full of gray-haired advisers who by dint of their long established positions and Washington relationships represent the furthest thing from change.

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    My landlord says I might be able to get back home by the 4thof july, but the apartment will still have some work,.that needs to be done.

    Mad, I certainly hope that Obama isn't distancing himself from muslims. Although I understand the political reasons for doing so, I can't condone alienating people who already experience such prejudice. My landlady and I had a discussion before the fire and she swore to me up and down that Obama is muslim and just pretending to be christian. Since I was talking to her about (hopefully) not raising my rent, I thought keeping my mouth shut was the best idea at the time. This other person in my neighborhood said Obama is unamerican because "he still has relatives living in mud huts in africa." Apparently to him this means the same thing as terrorists. No one that I care about believes that garbage, but knowing that each of those comments probably stands for a certain number of votes who agree is disheartening.

    Ann, in my opinion Obama has to compromise and reach across the aisle for a number of reasons. He has said he wants to be the president of the united states and that president of republicans and democrats. I believe that without compromise, washington is not much more than gridlock. I think Obama can accomplish more through give and take that way and I don't resent that. I also think it's important to have experience, like those who were successful in the Clinton administration and perhaps even some who weren't horrible in Bush 1 or 2's administrations, like a Colin Powell. I think Powell was scapegoated.... 

  • sccruiser
    sccruiser Member Posts: 1,119
    edited June 2008

    Hi Amy,

    Glad you are back on the board and posting! Glad your place will be ready for you and your fur babies sooner than you thought! Must be tough living in a motel room (no matter how many amenities) and no car to get around. If I was where you are, I would drive you whereever you needed to go (no matter what price gas is LOL).

    AND, I'm really, really glad you started this thread! The naysayers have taken over the "respectful" thread and it's a little tiring listening (or really reading) their blather. Just the same old-same old. So tiring and boring!!

    When I put all the candidates (during the primaries) side by side, Obama stood out for me--especially when Edwards dropped out of the race (guess he was the number 1 for me at that time). Now, I put Obama and McCain side by side, and hands-down Obama comes up on top.

    Yes, Obama has made some misspeaks or gaffes (whatever someone wants to call them), and so has McCain. Yes, the candidates seem to be making generalized statements--both are doing that! But, whether or not Obama can institute as much change as he first discussed in his speeches, I think he is tempering his ideas for change, because as President (and I'm convinced he will win) he must work with all of Congress, and all of the people; with all of their ideas from the far left to the far right--so of course he will compromise. Isn't that what politians have to do to survive? Isn't that what politians have done for ages? I've seen that happen in the representatives that have been elected from the state of California and go to DC. Every one of them has adjusted their ultimate desires to compromise and get the best possible results. Even people in business negotiate for the best deal. I learned to ask for more than I knew I could get when requesting a raise, and that what I ended up with was what I wanted in the first place! It doesn't make politians who adjust (not flip flop) demons!!

    The demons are Bush and Cheney (and those advisors who lied for these men), who have ignored what the American people wanted; who used men in political positions to change the election results; who lied to the United Nations and invaded a country without true reasons; who continued to thumb their noses at Congress and the American people when confronted with their lies; these are the people who should be demonized and who have used politics for their own reward.

    Bush and Clinton, and probably other presidents before these two, brought advisors into their campaigns who had gray hair (well, except for Rove who appears to be pretty much bald); and so it is not unreasonable for Obama to do the same. After all, he wants to win in November. I'm sure that people who wanted a different Democratic president will see this, and consider voting for Obama. He is doing what every candidate in time has done to get elected, and that is try to get as many votes has he can in as many ways as he needs to to win the election. After all, if he doesn't win, he's going to have a hard time getting any changes in place.

    And I am somewhat cynical when it comes to elections and campaigns and politics. I think that any Democratic nominee would do what Obama has done. He may have come out far left, but we all know he has to swing a little to the middle to get those votes for a majority. We all know that no matter who is elected it takes time to make changes, and they aren't going to happen in the first 100 days. I don't think it would happen if it were Edwards, Clinton or whoever.

    I think whoever is asked and accepts the VP position will be critical to Obama's ability to win. He and his advisors will have to carefully look at all his options. It will depend on what issues he needs support for that a VP can help with.

    So, I take all with a grain of salt. I guess I have been disappointed before in candidates who did not perform as I thought they would. It seems like much can be interpreted any variety of ways. The polls are showing Obama with an 11 pt lead over McCain right now. Of course, it depends on who did the poll, who was polled and the +/- error of the poll. Statistics can always be misleading, depending on who did the analysis.

    And living on the Central Coast of California, we are a mecca of liberalism. Yes, there are conservatives here, but they are few. So, the view that I see, and read about, and hear about is mostly from a liberal perspective; and that is why I don't get too upset with the other political threads on this board.

    Anneshirley, I think you hit the nail on the head with your posting--he cannot be revolutionary or threatening when it comes to change--it would be too far left for the majority of this country. He will scale back the changes, and unfortunately, as much as I want this war to end, and for us to get the h@#* out of Iraq, he isn't going to be able to pull that off. It will now be like the Vietnam War, I'm afraid, and we are in it for the long haul. Such a shame that all these young men and women are killed or maimed for oil, just oil and greed.

    Again, Amy, thanks for starting this thread. One place I will look forward to visiting and posting on!! 

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    What do you guys think of Bill Clinton's statement through a publicist of his support? Rumors abound that Clinton wants an APOLOGY (wtf?) from Obama for what Clinton perceives as slights against him. I don't want to believe that it could be true, but fear it is.

    One of my doctor relatives and I were discussing Clinton and I brought up the possibility that there Bill might be experiencing some medical problems that could be responsible for some of his thought processes and behavior. I wondered about a brain tumor in the frontal lobe, before Ted Kennedy was diagnosed. In the Vanity Fair article they suggested that people with major heart surgery like Clinton had can experience personality changes and residual anger. I like what Bill did as president (except for Monicagate) and he always had an air of narcissism, but he seems to have gone over the edge.

    Grace, I so wish I lived where you do!

  • carolsd
    carolsd Member Posts: 358
    edited June 2008

    I'm not very political, I must admit. I really grieved to learn of Tim Russert's passing because I so looked forward to his commentary and assessments of the political scene, especially in light of this historic election.

    That said, I had mixed feelings between Clinton and Obama. It was exciting to me to think of Hillary becoming president, the first woman to do so. But it's also exciting that Obama might be our first black president, and there's no one more deserving. I find him intelligent, thoughtful, a gifted politician, and charismatic to the gills. As others have said, I would trust him to surround himself with good advisors to guide him through things he's perhaps not as experienced in. Let's face it, no one man (or woman) knows everything and it's comforting to feel that Obama would do the right thing to align with smart, educated advisors.

    I think Obama has a lot of class and I support him.

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited June 2008

    I wanted to add that I think Edwards would be a good choice for VP too, if for no other reason than that would mean Elizabeth would have more visibility and influence.  That would have to be good for us!  Elizabeth's presence might also help with the Clinton vote.  I think she is greatly admired among Dem women.  John would help with the South and working class voters.  I like him a lot too.     

    Amy, that's really awful what your neighbor and landlord said about Obama!  Obviously those folks wouldn't have been voting for a Democrat anyway, but still, who wants to hear that crap?  Do these people honestly believe that Obama is some kind of Manchurian candidate?  I love it when they say, that guy's a Muslim, and by the way, did you hear what his pastor said?     

    The whole Clinton drama is just that, a weird drama.  I don't know if Bill is losing it in general, or is just frustrated over Hillary's loss.  I read somewhere that he's taking it harder than she is.  Maybe he feels partly responsible for it.  A friend of mine who was working an event here in LA last week met him backstage and said he was amazingly charming and friendly.  A true politician, he went out of his way to thank her and shake her hand even though she was just standing there.  (And she's not really his type, physically speaking.)  So he can still turn it on when he wants to. 

    I guess because I've been following politics for a long time, I don't get that worked up about gaffes and "evolving" positions anymore (OK, pandering).  You just hope that, overall, your "guy" is going to support the positions that are most important to you.  I agree that if you expect a paragon of virtue, you're going to be disappointed.  I guess we each pick our candidates based on which virtues matter most to us.  For me, openness, thoughtfulness, and compassion -- virtues Obama  seems to have -- are the most important virtues a candidate can have.  Sexual behavior is definitely not high on my list!   

    Amy G. 

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    amyg, elizabeth edwards is on Obama's heath care committee. John Edwards would be a great vp choice, but he's said he's not interested (although they all say that). Edwards doesn;'t have any foreign policy experience and I think Obama needs that to give him some balance on the ticket. Personally, I don't need that to think he's the best commander in chief, LOL.

    Kucinich was the candidate who had most of my views, but I knew that was never going to happen and I don't even think if he was president he'd be able to get much done because he's too polarizing. Obama isn't strong enough on gay issues, but I hope once he gets into office he will be the best advocate we've had so far.

    Carol, I think the best president will know what s/he does not know, which might be even more important than what s/he does.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2008

    Amy:  Well I must admit, although being a Hillary fan - I do like Obama now.  Hope he picks the perfect vice-president to win over McCain.  Oopps sorry to all of my good friends especially Shokk ane Shirley.

    Its so good to see you Amy.  You know me, politics definitely not my forte.  I think about you alot and hope you get back to your apartment very soon.  Weird the fire happened on Friday the 13th.

    Lots of hugs for you and your kitties.

    Nicki

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    Thanks Nicki-- I hope to be back by july 4th, but I'm not getting my hopes too far up...

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited June 2008

    Hey, finally something I can agree with on this thread - Hillary on the Supreme Court. That would be cool.  Not gonna happen but it's a nice thought anyway.

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited June 2008

    Edwards would be a good choice for AG, I agree.  The CEOs would be shaking in their boots.  Even though he said a while back he wouldn't want to be VP, the talking heads now say he's been auditioning for the role.  I'm glad to know that, either way, Elizabeth will be involved in the campaign.  

    I just heard some talking heads on CNN speculating that Hillary wouldn't want the Supreme Court as it's not a public enough arena, that she would want to take advantage of the national following she created during the primaries to lead in a more direct and political way.  The Supreme Court, while powerful, would be too low-key for her now.  If she's not VP, I don't know if there's any position she would likely be offered that would appeal to her more than staying in the Senate.  Of course everyone assumes she's going to be running for president again. 

    I found all the symbolic gestures of the Unity rally, real and imagined, kind of funny.  They were color-coordinated!  They gave each other matching checks!  He put his arm around her!  She leaned in to him and smiled!  I can't wait till the convention to see how all the inter-party drama will play out and how the media will over-interpret it all.     

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited June 2008

    Hillary on the supreme court would be great, but one of her advisors said she is absolutely not interested because she likes making policy and being out in the open, not doing thing behind closed doors. Selfishly, I originally said Hillary on the supreme court so we would never have to deal with the Clintons campaigning for one of their own (please Chelsea don't go into politics), since I hate their brand of politics,.

    Edwards would make a great Attorney General and if Hillary balks at being one of the supremes, perhaps secretary of health etc.

    LA, do you think the color coordination was planned? I hope it was just an accident. If Hillary is acting about the unity thing, she needs to give Bill some acting lessons, LOL. I hope it's genuine on some level. Most of Hillary's supporters, die hard democrats are supporting Obama-- it's just the fringe of the party who want to believe she was denied the opportunity because she's a woman who might stray or stay home. I think Hillary's power will be tested by just how many of her supporters turn to Obama, if she's not able to use her influence to show how much better Obama is for women and families, that doesn't bode well for her in the future.

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited July 2008

    I'm a bit disappointed about Obama's pandering about the Wesley Clark remark, which was taken out of context by faux news. I said what Clark said way before he did, that simply being a POW doesn't count for presidential experience in terms of foreign policy. Of course McCain was courageous in service to his country and he went through a horrible ordeal and showed a lot of character. That experience itself isn't foreign policy experience-- it's life experience which I'm sure is transferable to the qualities needed to be president, but not foreign policy. Clark (and I) never said that McCain has no experience or military experience. I hate that some people say it's not ok to criticize McCain's on foreign policy or national security because he's a war hero and I think Obama's response to Clark's statement comes close to pandering to those people.

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    I suspect I'm the only liberal on this board, since I seem to be the only person who is totally, and I mean totally, offended by Obama's pandering hypocrisy.  I am proved right every single day as this campaign continues.  The man hasn't a single principle that he'll stick with. Now we have the faith-base initiatives.  Common, you guys, at least admit what's happening, as I predicted. Wow, Italy here I come, again.  And this time driven out by a Democrat!  Who would have thunk?

    I wonder how long it will take for him to back out on his support of gay initiatives.  Another week, month, or, like Bill Clinton, will he wait until sworn in!  Should we start a pool? 

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited July 2008

    Hi everyone! 

     First of all....Amy, so sorry to hear about the fire.. thankfully you seem to be ok and I am happy to hear that you should be able to go "home" this weekend....  hope all goes well for you...


    Secondly... thanks for starting this thread... hope it doesn't get poisoned like the other two.. unfortunately there appears to be only one "correct" opinion..

     That said, I think there is a lot more substance to Obama than people give him credit for.  I am excited about his candidacy.  I also would have been fine with Hillary.  I don't understand people who say they either won't vote...or...will vote for McCain because Hillary didn't win.  Aren't we talking about a "different path" than the one George Bush has us on??   Do I think Hillary got a bad rap with the press?  Absolutely.  Do I think she could do the job?  Absolutely... but...it was not to be and here we are.  

     As far as Wesley Clark's comments?  What was so wrong about them?  He spoke the truth.  John McCain served our country well and endured 5 years of who knows what kind of treatment in Hanoi...but...that hardly makes him qualified to be president.  Now, to be fair, if the shoe were on the other foot, I would say the same about Obama.   Wesley Clark merely stated what IS... it doesn't take anything away from MCain's record of service.  The man is not "with it" in my opinion.  He seems spaced out a LOT.

  • spar2
    spar2 Member Posts: 6,827
    edited July 2008

    anneshirley, quit trying to poison this thread like you did the other.  This is the POSITIVE OBAMA THREAD!

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited July 2008

    It appears inevitable that once Democratic presidential candidates have been nominated, they slide to the center.  What is it they say?  Appeal to the base during primaries, and the center during general elections.  I think Obama is as resourceful and ambitious a politician as both Clintons.  I mean, he did cut his political teeth in Chicago, which is about as rough-and-tumble as politics can get.  He knows he can't win without appealing to the moderates.  I just keep telling myself, he's going to be a helluva lot better than what we got now.  

    I agree with you, blue, about Clark's comments and the over-the-top reactions from the swift-boat loving right.  Did he call McCain a traitor, coward and a liar, like the swift-boaters? 

    What is that Michael Kinsley quote?  "Gaffes" are what happen when people tell the truth?

    Amy G.          

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    I'm wondering what's happened to all the high-minded liberals on this board, who were for Obama because he would be equally high-minded and principled.  See articles below.  Of course, if you view politics as a grand old game of gottcha and win at all costs, as apparently some of the posters here do, then what does it matter that Obama is turning right on just about every position he held during the primary. Even Bill Clinton waited until after he was in office to do most of his right hand turns.  I will add that it was Clinton's decision to renege on his promise to allow Gays to serve openly in the military (he waited until after he was elected on that one) that prevented me from voting for him a second time.  How long will it take Obama until he throws that one out with the bathwater?

    Obama's shuffle to the right suggests this man is ruthless enough to win

      •  

    Call it the Potomac shuffle, the traditional election-year dance in which a candidate who has earlier moved left or right to win over the party faithful in a primary campaign promptly slides back to the centre to appeal to the rest of the country. Barack Obama, quite a mover on the dancefloor, has spent the month since he beat Hillary Clinton to the Democratic nomination giving a demonstration of this time-honoured piece of Washington choreography - and at an unusually high tempo, too.

    Just yesterday he announced, in a speech on religion aimed at wooing evangelicals - who Democrats believe are no longer a guaranteed bloc for the Republicans - that he would continue George Bush's support for "faith-based initiatives", channelling public money to religious groups to perform social services, whether drug rehab or care for the poor. (Side note: watch for David Cameron, who also favours this approach, to claim he is Obama's spiritual brother.)

    A day earlier Obama had delivered an equally long address on the virtues of patriotism. On his lapel was the flag pin he has worn since mid-May, the same pin he once disdained as an unnecessary, shallow display of love of country. More substantively, Obama has tacked towards the centre on a string of issues where a matter of months ago he was to be found much further left.

    He once opposed legislation needed for Bush's much-reviled programme of domestic surveillance; now he supports a new law that would grant immunity to phone companies that help the government eavesdrop on US citizens. He was an advocate of gun control, but only hemmed and hawed when the supreme court struck down the District of Columbia's ban on hand guns last week. He now says he will consider joining his Republican opponent John McCain in calling for a cut in the corporate tax rate. Suffice to say, these were not positions Obama took when he was trying to win Democratic votes in New Hampshire or Iowa.

    What will most strike - and disappoint - those outside the United States, those who have been all but panting in their excitement at the prospect of an Obama presidency as a break from the Bush era, is the Democrat's march rightward on foreign policy. His signature stance, which propelled him from obscurity into challenging the mighty Clinton, was his opposition to the Iraq war and his promise to bring the troops home. Now, though, the talk is not of immediate withdrawal but of pulling out one or two "combat" brigades a month, a pledge so vague it leaves acres of wriggle room. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that the Iraqi foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, had been concerned that Obama would withdraw US forces too hastily, but came away from a long phone call with the candidate "reassured" that a President Obama would not do anything too "drastic".

    Last autumn Obama skilfully contrasted himself with Clinton by promising to replace Bush's bellicosity with a willingness to talk even to America's sworn enemies, the president of Iran among them. But in a major foreign policy speech last month, he diluted that promise of talks and said he would do "everything in my power" to stop Iran getting a nuclear bomb - pointedly repeating the word "everything" in case Tehran had not got the message.

    Obama's most leftwing supporters have dutifully played the role expected of them, howling betrayal, with the activists of MoveOn leading the lamentation. But even centrist Democrats, who understand the politics of the Potomac shuffle only too well, are troubled. "He's overdoing it," says a longtime party strategist (who, admittedly, did not back Obama in the primaries). "He's reversing too many positions too quickly."

    This view is shared by those who reckon Obama is a special case. Of course, they say, presidential candidates always have to shift towards the centre after a primary campaign; indeed, as Michael Tomasky argued in these pages on Monday, it is a sign of McCain's weakness that he has not been able to do so nearly as extensively as his opponent. But Obama is not just any candidate.

    "You can't do it if you've run as Gandhi," says Leon Wieseltier, who observes Washington from his perch at the magazine New Republic. He contrasts Obama with the Bill Clinton of 1992, who also moved rightward once he had bagged the nomination. Both men offered to transcend the old categories of left and right, but Clinton did so by promising to be ideologically flexible. Obama's implicit promise is that he is above left and right, not because he is pragmatic so much as because he is morally good. In this context, says Wieseltier, U-turns are much less tolerable: "They compromise his radiance."

    There are other contrasts. Bill Clinton could finesse shifts by wrapping them in the language of policy detail; Obama is the very opposite of a policy wonk. He operates at 30,000 feet, somewhere in the rhetorical stratosphere. While the Clinton of 1992 talked obsessively about the economy, ensuring hard-pressed voters knew he felt their pain, Obama has not yet persuaded Americans that he has the answer to current woes. One Democratic strategist thinks Obama should be talking about rising gas and food prices every single day, not making grand speeches about faith or patriotism.

    Indeed, Obama's sheer eloquence, combined with the string of recent policy flip-flops, points to another worry many Democrats are beginning to voice about their nominee: that there might be a hollowness to him, an absence where there should be a clear core of belief (not that Bill Clinton had that either). When Ronald Reagan ran in 1980, it was clear that he relied on two ideological pillars: free-market economics and a fierce anti-communism. Obama-sceptics ask what the equivalents would be for the senator from Illinois. The harshest say his campaign has no theme beyond his own life story. They note that in his three years in the Senate, he found no time to author legislation - though he did manage to write a second volume of autobiography.

    Yet none of these grumblers and doomsayers will go so far as to predict that Obama will lose in November. He remains ahead in national polls, while some analysts say a reshaping of the electoral map is possible: if black turnout rises, several southern states could be Obama's, while wins out west, in New Mexico, Colorado and Nevada could, by themselves, be enough to give the Democrats the White House. Obama fervour remains high, especially among the young. This weekend word emerged of a new fad on college campuses, as students, both male and female, adopt Obama's middle name of Hussein - the target for much xenophobic whispering - as their own. Think "I am Spartacus".

    In this light, Obama's U-turns look different. They suggest that he is determined not to be just another principled loser - and the Democrats have had plenty of those. The clearest illustration came in Obama's most blatant reverse. He had promised to stay within the system of taxpayer-funded campaign finance, which would have obliged him to stick to an $85m spending limit. Once it became clear he could raise, and spend, many times that amount, he broke his pledge. Sure, it was unprincipled. But it suggested a man bent on winning and ruthless enough to make sure he does. That's the standard operating procedure for Republicans. For Democrats it takes some getting used to.

    freedland@guardian.co.uk
     

    From Stephen Ducat:

    OK, we all knew, deep down, that our wondrous golden boy of change would one day reveal his feet of clay. What most of us did not anticipate was just how easily they would fit into jackboots.

    There has emerged a conventional wisdom among progressives that is not entirely wrong about why Obama has so readily embraced police state surveillance, and why he felt compelled to express his solidarity with Scalia, et al, on the death penalty. As the thinking goes, these moves are simply the expectable, if disheartening, political positioning typical of Democratic presidential candidates, once they enter the general election campaign.

    He surely did not want to rebut Republican ads like this:
    Low, rumbling, ominous music gradually increases in volume as a solemn voice that oozes manly gravitas announces, "Barack Obama voted against a bill to that would help our intelligence agencies detect terrorist plots against our nation before they can be carried out. Why does he want to protect the privacy of Al-Qaeda's phone calls more than he wants to protect Americans from Al-Qaeda? [Cut to an image of a World Trade Tower falling.] Barack Obama doesn't want the death penalty applied to criminals who sexually assault and brutalize little children. Why does he care more about child rapists [cut to image of a swarthy unshaven convict doing the perp walk] than he does about their victims? [Cut to an image of doe-eyed little blond girl with tears rolling down her apple cheeks, as she lies in an oversized hospital bed holding tightly to her teddy bear.] Barack Obama and his friends at the ACLU care about terrorists and rapists. Vote for John McCain. He cares about us." [As reassuring music swells, cut to an image of a younger looking, photo-shopped McCain in his crisp Naval officer's uniform. One arm is around a child, the other rising in a determined salute to the flag.]

    It is certainly reasonable for Democratic candidates to fear they might face attack ads such as this, and we might have seen something like this one air had Obama opposed the new FISA bill. Facing the possibility of this kind of right wing assault, it is not surprising to see so many erstwhile liberal politicians preemptively surrender their principles. That Obama, too, would adopt this strategy has been particularly demoralizing for his progressive supporters. After all, he has a mostly excellent and morally consistent voting record. But more importantly, he has very vocally eschewed the Machiavellian political calculations that we have come to expect from other members of his party. To see Barack Obama behave like any other invertebrate Democrat is an especially painful blow.

    However, this conventional wisdom on his political cowardice doesn't plumb the problem deeply enough. Obama's resort to the triangulation of the old politics is an admission of a much more serious limitation. It tells us that he does not believe in his own ability to reframe certain key issues in a way that makes a progressive stance the one that is obviously the most moral. It shows that he does not feel up to the task of rendering some liberal principles intellectually clear and emotionally compelling.

    His limited ability to exercise moral leadership leaves him with no choice other than to accept Republican frames on issues. So, on the FISA bill, for example, loss of privacy and immunity for criminal telecom companies become a trivial price to pay for protection from unfathomable and pervasive Evil.

    But this raises the question of what a progressive reframe on an issue like this might look like. Here is one idea. But I'd love for commenters to offer theirs. Someone from Obama's staff is probably monitoring the Huffington Post in order to take the temperature of the progressive blogosphere, which has grown increasingly feverish over the Democratic candidate's recent unprincipled retreats. If they are reading this, perhaps together we may be able to revivify the Obama campaign's moribund moral imagination.

    The 30-second ad opens on a scene in a middle class suburban kitchen. A mother is speaking on the phone. Her voice is muffled and is drowned out by an intermittent electronic beep, along with the sounds of someone frenetically striking a computer keyboard. The screen quickly splits in half to reveal the woman's nine-year-old daughter speaking by cell phone to inform her mother that she is ready to be picked up from the school bus stop. The screen is then split in thirds to reveal a man wearing headphones sitting in front of a computer typing notes, obviously monitoring the mother-daughter conversation. Behind him is a massive warehouse filled with computers and scurrying NSA technicians. This image then takes up the entire screen. The voiceover says, "Republicans, like George Bush and John McCain, have taken away our freedoms, invaded our private lives, and made us less safe." We then quickly see a succession of images -- a scene from Iraq that features a burning American tank, a scene of grenade launchers being placed into a packing crate, a scene of an unguarded American port where uninspected shipping containers are being off loaded, and finally a scene of a car with blacked out windows slowing down in front of an unsecured nuclear power plant. A window rolls down. A hand holding a camera reaches out to snap photos. Then the car speeds away. The voice over then concludes, "Protecting America means preserving our rights [cut to an image of the Constitution in which the camera scrolls down the Bill of Rights section], along with defeating terrorists." The last image is a scene of Barack Obama standing up and pointing toward a large map of some unidentifiable part of the world. Below him is a large conference table of twenty or so advisors who are listening with rapt attention.

    In spite of his limitations, there is too much at stake to not work hard to make sure Barack Obama moves into the White House. And, once there, we must hold his clay feet to the fire.

    .

    Me:  Please note my disagreement with Ducat's last paragraph.  

  • NoH8
    NoH8 Member Posts: 2,726
    edited July 2008

    AnneShirley-- the only liberal on this board? Please give me a break. There are already 2 negative obama threads.

    LA, I think democrats have to side toward the middle in a general election to get elected and I don't resent Obama for doing that. I don't see how he, or any president, can unify the country while being so far to the left or the right that the majority of citizens feel disenfranchised.

    In my ideal country, Kucinich would be president and most of the citizens would embrace his socially liberal policies. Guns would be outlawed, marijuana legal andgays would have the same rights as there heterosexual counterparts. The United State would be citizens of the world, not bullies of the world. 

    As much as I'm liberal and my beliefs are left of Obama I believe he is and has always been the best home for a less divisive country.

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited July 2008

    Oh my Gosh.... Ann Shirley...PLEASE spare us the endless articles....for everyone you copy and paste here, there is another with a different point of view. I don't know ANYONE who lives and dies by what the Huffington Post writes. 

    I don't look at Obama's so-called about face as a negative thing at all.  Of COURSE he is going to move toward the "middle", just as McCain will move a little to the left. I also don't believe it is a "vote getting" ploy.  His main focus has always been and will undoubtedly continue to be working towards unity not divisiveness. Why is that so sinister?  Maybe, just maybe this guy is for real?  As far as ending this war, we are SO SCREWED thanks to the current administration that I don't think ANYONE can say when we'll get out.  At least Obama is TALKING about getting out.   Right now, I am trying to figure out how I am going to pay next month's bills...

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    Madalyn--I just wrote a dissertation, well not quite that long--in response to your post, lost it (don't know how) and don't have the energy or time to rewrite it. 

    My perceived hostility to Obama is actually hostility towards those who call themselves liberal yet voted for a man, who demonstrated from the very beginning of the Democratic Primary (in the first debate when he indicated a willingness to drop bombs in Pakistan, without Pakistan's knowledge or permission, and to use nuclear weapons) the arrogance of Bush & Company in their use of military power. I don't think Obama is worth my hostility.  I don't trust him on any single position--but then I don't believe he has a single position on any issue--and I honestly don't believe he has a  principle he wouldn't forego for the right number of votes. Obama's middle name shoud be "Expediency."

    I won't vote for McCain, mainly because I'm afraid of who he might appoint to the Supreme Court, but I do believe that he has some principles he wouldn't sell for votes. Not as many as I once thought he had, but he does apparently have some.

    And, to add more fat to the fire, I found Obama's willingness to throw Rev. Wright (with whom I agree on most things, excepting his view on AIDS) to the dogs on the right and his grandmother to the dogs on the left highly offensive.  There are things one does not do, for any reason.

    And the far left, of which I am a member, is beginning to realize its huge mistake.  I'll be interested to see how many on the left who supported Obama continue to support him, considering all his recent very definite turns to the right, in some cases further right than Bush.   

    About my support for Hillary.  It came late, but it came when she endorsed "mandated" universal health care.  Health care is this country's most pressing domestic issue (far more pressing than bringing down the cost of oil) and, in my view, it's a moral disgrace that the U.S. does not provide health care to all our citizens.  Obama refused to endorse "mandated" care for fear the Republicans would call him out.  He's without backbone.

    I posted many times since January (when I initially supported Kucinich) on my objections to Obama.  No doubt Blue would have a stroke if I went over each one of them again, so I won't. But if your're interested, you can read why on my earlier posts.   

     I just heard him say on Iraq, this minute, "we have to be as careful gettng out as getting in."  As I said earlier, not a single principle!  

    Spar, et al.--this is a public board and all threads are public, and additionally, this is a political thread.  It's nonsense to suggest, or for anyone to insist, that only positive (and I gather "glowing") comments can be posted about Senator Obama.  I will also add that the other thread, started by Amy, with the heading "respectful" was rarely respectful--not to name names--and almost always, by Obama supporters, disrespectful to Senator Clinton.  I'd be happy to cut and paste some quotes for your perusal.   

    I don't post anything I can't support, but if you disagree the simplest solution is to post evidence that my facts are wrong. If, for example, you think I'm incorrect in stating that Obama is changing his positions every day, moving to the right, then provide the facts that show I'm wrong.  Some items you might want to discuss are his recent positions, supporting:

    Obama's support of Scalia's disagreement with the Supreme Court's (SC) ruling on the death penalty and child rape;
    Obama's agreement with the SC's 5-4 decision overturning Washington, D.C.'s ban on hand guns in the home.
    Obama's support of the Bush position on FISA.
    Obama's decision to forego federal campaign financing when he agreed earlier to accept it, and then later agreed to sit down with McCain to discuss accepting it, which he did not do..
    Obama's statement that he would give Jersulam to Israel when in other, earlier positions, he said the United States should be even handed in its dealings with the Palestinians.  By the way, even Bush never made such a concession.
    Obama's support, yesterday, of Bush's faith-based initiatives, a position that almost all liberals find horrifying as it smacks of supporting religion.
    Obama's statement just recently on Iraq, which suggests that he is changing his position on getting out.
    Obama's speech on Iran, where he did saber rattling, about equal to what Bush does, suggesting (I'll look up exact words if you wish) that he wouldn't hesitate to use nuclear weapons.  

    If you disagree that he did not change, please give particulars, rather than asking me to be silent.    

    There are many others, but these are the ones that particularly horrify me, and ones that were made directly by Obama, not by his surrogates.

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited July 2008

    anneshirley, did you read what you just wrote??  You just confessed to having hostility towards Amy and everyone else who has come to this "Positive Obama" thread to post positive thoughts about Obama.  We can individually block your comments, but wouldn't it be more respectful of you to just not post on this thread?  Are your positions so precious, in your opinion, so correct, that you feel it's fine to disrespect and insult us?  Clearly since Amy started a thread called "The Positive Obama Thread," this isn't the place for criticizing not only Obama but the people who support him.  Sheesh.  Given your hostility, why should we be in the least bit interested in anything you have to say?  What the hell difference does it make whether you've been "objecting" to Obama since January?  You clearly don't want to initiate a thoughtful dialogue, you want to shove your self-righteous indignation in our faces.  Please, don't waste your time trying to enlighten us.  I'm sure you have better things to do.    

    Amy G. 

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    Amy G.

    I gather from your above post that you also believe this to be a private board, and to reinforce that belief threaten to block my posts if they don't agree with yours. Are you seriously suggesting that a political thread on a tax-exempt bc board should exist solely to extoll a single candidate or political party. That's hardly political; sounds more like abject worship. So sheesh, back to you!   As I wrote to Spar above, I am providing what I believe to be facts, not opinions.  I posted a number of them above.  If you disagree, then counter with evidence to show that I'm wrong. Don't tell me to go away because I disagree with you.

    More important, Madalyn addressed a question directly to me, and I answered her question, honestly, and also gave her some facts, since she was questioning--sincerely, I believe--how some one on the left could have supported Clinton and not now support Obama.  Rather than go into the myriad reasons why I don't support him (I did, in fact, but lost the post), I suggested she read my earlier posts from January on, as I give extensive reasons, usually with extensive facts, backing my reason for backing Hillary and not Obama.  I love words, but like facts even better.

    And, yes, I did read what I wrote. And if you knew anything of me, you would know that I frequently wrote very positive posts about Obama, until recently when he turned sharply right. 

  • spar2
    spar2 Member Posts: 6,827
    edited July 2008

    Anneshirley, haven't you figured it out yet that people here are not interested in what you have to say on this thread so go back to your other thread where a few do want to hear you.

  • anneshirley
    anneshirley Member Posts: 1,110
    edited July 2008

    Spar--I'm gone, as it's apparent this is a rock star thread, not a political thread, and I've never been one to worship rock stars, not even when I was fourteen.  I am a big fan of philosophers, however, and Kierkegaard is one of my favorite existentialists.   Interesting that you quote Kierkegaard, considering that he devoted his life to questioning everything, a habit of mind which apparently makes you distinctly uncomfortable.  

  • Jaybird627
    Jaybird627 Member Posts: 2,144
    edited July 2008

    Anneshirley, I'm with you on this subject! I swear that I hate to gloat but I do believe I'm going to after this next election.....

    I'm STILL going to write in Hillary's name!  Laughing

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