BernieHund: The Political Watchdog

August 7th, 2008 at 2:06 pm

When Will Obama Hit Hard?

Well, that’s what the talk is.  According to some, Democratic candidate Barack Obama should lower the bar on his campaign ads.  Perhaps, he isn’t quite as flexible as John McCain when it comes to the limbo bar of negative political ads.

We all remember the Swift Boating of John Kerry, and the loss that followed.  Some of the polls seem to indicate that John McCain is closing the gap by bending over backwards to slim under his campaigns limbo bar.  For some reason Barack Obama has been hitting back, but most of his strategists are indicating that he is throwing soft punches although timely ones.

Barack Obamareleased a television advertisement Wednesday that questions John McCain’s claims to be a “maverick,” and he charged in a campaign appearance that the Republican displays independence only when it suits him politically.

To counteract some of the McCain campaign ads, Barack Obama has addressed them at various town hall meetings, such as the one in Elkhart, IN.

“The price [McCain] paid for his party’s nomination has been to reverse himself on position after position,” Obama told a crowd of more than 1,000 at a high school gym in Elkhart. “That doesn’t meet my definition of a maverick. You can’t be a maverick when politically it’s important for you but not a maverick when it doesn’t work for you.”

The real question is whether Obama should hit harder, faster and more often.  Some political strategists suggest he should.  Last week the McCain campaign began a series of new ads that went from the ridiculous to almost sacrilegious.  I must admit that had it not been so humorous I would have found the following ad a bit offensive.

What is Obama to do?  How should he respond to this ad and the “Celeb”?

A liberal advertising consultant said: “There’s frustration there because they’re watching these childish ad campaigns, and they know exactly how to answer it, but they’re powerless to do so.”

Powerless, that is, because most of the independent groups that would have taken the lead in such an independent campaign have been sidelined by Obama’s insistence that Democratic donors channel their money to him, rather than outside groups. Obama’s efforts have succeeded in maintaining message discipline in a campaign predicated on what the senator from Illinois has called a new kind of politics.

So the real question isn’t whether the Obama campaign willnplay down and dirty, but will they do it soon enough.  Most of us would have been pleased with a high road campaign, like the one both candidates insisted they would run.  Obama is still trying to fly above the polical ad fray, but eventually he will get sucked down into it.  That’s sad.

I guess it is the same as usual, play by the rules until you are at a disadvantage, then do what it takes at any cost to win.  That’s what it is really all about, isn’t it?  Winning.  It’s not how you play the game.  It’s whether you win or lose. 

 

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August 1st, 2008 at 5:57 pm

John McCain Goes Negative (Again) and Shows Lack of Respect for Religion

» by sinde in: John McCain

I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t warm the pew on Sunday mornings.  After seeing this last ad from the McCain campaign I’m not sure if the intent is to make fun of Barack Obama or McCain’s right wing conservatives.

I really have no comment beyond that.

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July 31st, 2008 at 7:53 pm

Chinese Censorship and America

Everyone is jumping on the story of China’s great firewall.  Amnesty International has been blocked from China.  It was minutes after I received the email from Amnesty that I heard the story on television.  There were interviews of computer geeks and reporters saying how they had found ways to encrypt and code and whatever to get over, under or through the firewall. 

I have supported Amnesty International for years.  And, like most of the world I am disturbed that the press and  reporters had been led to believe that they would have total access to all the Internet, not just the sites approved by the Chinese government. 

Additionally, I have been amused that the Chinese government has put out flyers instructing the people not to wear more than three different colors at one time.  (Perhaps, we need a copy of that flyer.)  I have been amused that the Chinese population has been instructed not to ask where the tourists and reporters live, not to ask what they do, and not to ask how much money they make… and not to spit on the sidewalks.  Again, those instructions could come in handy in some parts of America.

All joking aside, this is a serious issue.  Hopefully, some of the media will manage to get pictures and stories that they will report through encryption and coding, or at least will publish once they return home.

Yet, as I have watched the media jump on the Chinese censorship as if it is the worst censorship in the world, I thought about our own country.  I’m totally against censorship in any way, shape or fashion, not matter who is doing the censoring.  I was engrossed in the Amnesty International email when I was reminded that censorship is alive and well in our country, too.

How long has it been since Americans have seen the caskets of our dead sons and daughters being returned to Dover from Iraq or Afghanistan?  Didn’t the Bush administration say there would be no pictures?  I was reminded of Americans being escorted from and “detained” for wearing an anti-Bush t-shirt to a gathering where George 43 was to speak.  I was reminded that NSA had been authorized to listen to phone calls and intercept emails.  I was reminded that our country has engaged in “rendition.”  I thought of Guantanamo and the “enemy combatants” who had been labeled as such so they would have no access to attorneys or enjoy the right of habeas corpus.  I was reminded of waterboarding as a means of getting information from our enemies. 

I thought of all the uninsured citizens in America while the President has been praised for our pledge of funding for the HIV/Aids fight in Africa.  I’m all for the funding of AIDS prevention, treatment and cures worldwide, but it is a bit pompous and disingenuous to stand on the world’s stage and offer AIDS funding to the world and turn our backs on the fact that we have millions of children in our own country who cannot afford to see a doctor when they are sick. 

I’m not making light of Chinese censorship.  It is a terrible thing as is censorship anywhere.  And, I am so proud to be an American where I can write this blog without fear of censorship, although there are times when I parse my words.  By no means am I excusing or condoning Chinese censorship.  We should never take the pressure off the Chinese government until the people of China, Tibet and Taiwan can live as freely as we do.  Yet, I do suggest that while we sit in judgment of the rest of the world and extol our own liberties, we must not become so arrogant or pompous in our attitudes that we close our eyes to the silent censorship that goes on in America.

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July 31st, 2008 at 1:17 pm

Back to the Issues Please

The “Celeb” ad from McCain and the chide about the $520.00 shoes McCain wears from the Obama campaign have brought me to the point of nausea.  There are issues that are far more important than what kind of shoes John McCain wears, or if Barack Obama likes arugula.  Quite frankly, none of us are going to walk a mile in McCain’s $520.00 shoes and none of us are going to sit down to soup and salad with Obama.  So, please tell me why the campaigns think we really care about those little tidbits.  If the economy had not been flushed down the toilet, if we, the citizens, could afford to pay the high price of gas and buy every item on our grocery lists, if all our sons and daughters were safely at home instead of prosecuting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan maybe we would have the time and inclination to care about the eating habits of one candidate and the designer shoes of the other.

It’s time to get back to the real issues, please.  Has anyone noticed that Exxon had another record profit quarter?

Record earnings for the world’s largest publicly traded oil company have become almost as predictable as the surge of gasoline prices at the pump in recent years, and for the second quarter income rose 14 percent, to $11.68 billion.

It was the highest quarterly profit ever for any American company, as Exxon made nearly $90,000 a minute.

That’s just one issue.  I’m not against profit.  But, as Americans are paying record gas prices at the pump, it seems a little odd that Exxon is also earning record profits on Wall Street.

So, energy is just one issue.  There are others.  But, so far this week we have heard about one candidate’s favorite dining experience and the other’s favorite Italian shoes. 

Both candidates have shown a total disrespect for the intelligence of the American voters and a lack of understanding of the concerns and issues before the people.  If neither have anything more important to say that what has been reported this week, perhaps both should suspend their campaigns and donate their “campaign chests” to the American people.  Let us eat arugula and buy a pair of shoes.

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July 30th, 2008 at 9:10 pm

Why Would Any Woman Vote for John McCain!

Okay, so everyone is entitled to a rant once in a while and this is mine for July.  I haven’t been off on a tangent for some time, but John McCain has hit my hot button.

First of all, his latest negative ad is so ridiculous that he should be ashamed to have his name associated with it. 

Of course, it reaches to the same depths that Senator Bob Corker dipped to in order to defeat Harold Ford for the senate seat from Tennessee in the last major election.  The limbo bar was just lowered again by the McCain campaign. 

As disgusting as the ad is…. even my 85 year old mother-in-law who has been known to vote for Republicans from time to time (most of the time) called me screeching at the top of her voice, saying that John McCain was as nasty an old man and as devious as Bob Corker.  That says something coming from her.  She lives in Bob Corker’s home town.  Anyway, let’s forget the Cindy McCain interview with her saying there would be no negative ads.  Let’s forget about the “high road” of the McCain campaign.  Let’s forget all the “holier than thou” talk of the Republican campaign.  Perhaps, that was the intention before the campaign realized that Barack Obama is a serious candidate.  Now that Obama has a slight lead in the polls it is safe to say that the McCain campaign seems to have taken the approach that the end justifies the means.  The Straight Talk Express just derailed again.

But, that isn’t my rant!  As a woman I am terribly disturbed by John McCain’s attitude toward women and women’s issues.  I have long suspected that he lacked the real mental acuity to be President.  Of course, George W. Bush lowered the bar on that issue, but all in all McCain doesn’t seem to be as sharp as “W.”  Let’s face it, for eight years we have known that “W” is a butter knife in a block of butcher knives.  In some cases, it has been downright embarrassing to watch him and listen to him… knowing that the rest of the world is watching the “leader of the free world” mispronounce common words and act like the school yard bully.

Now, we are faced with John McCain who may be slower and more embarrassing, as devious as “W,” and all that without Karl Rove running the show… as far as we know.

Let’s take the latest look at McCain on women’s issues.  Just get past the “amen” music and watch the first minute.

“We have not done enough. And I’m committed to making sure that there’s equal pay for equal work. That there is equal opportunity in every aspect of our society. And that is my record and you can count on it.”
John McCain, Town Hall meeting, Hudson, WI, July 11, 2008.

Did you see his nose grow?

According to the Washington Post… today… McCain claims to be for “equal pay” but opposes the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Bill.  Now that it is on the way to the Senate, we can rest assured that McCain will vote against it.

And, his reasoning is what?

Asked to provide support for the senator’s claim that he is committed to ensuring “equal pay for equal work,” the McCain campaign cited several pieces of legislation that he has supported including the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act of 1989, which prohibits discrimination against older workers, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and the Family Medical Leave Act of 1993. However, none of these measures directly addresses the Ledbetter situation.

Does anyone else see that McCain’s reasoning makes no sense unless someone has discovered a way to rationally compare apples and oranges?  None of the acts he has supported had a thing to do with fair pay for women.

McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said that the Ledbetter would “flood our already over-burdened court system and burden employers, who will have no choice but to charge consumers more for goods and services in order to pay for the swarm of new lawsuits that will only serve to fatten the pockets of trial lawyers.”

Those trial lawyers may be women, John.  And to counter the bill, to offer his explanation of what is needed, McCain said

there were better ways to help women find higher paying jobs. “They need the education and training, particularly since more and more women are heads of their households,” he explained.

Ah… if we are doing the same job… the exact same tasks… wouldn’t it be reasonable to assume that McCain missed the point entirely!

Besides, as a woman, I wish to add that women are as educated as men.  We are no longer chattel, John.  Medical schools are at least 50-50 men and women, as are the law schools.  McCain makes the statement that women need to be better educated and better trained… with the former CEO of eBay on his staff?  Excuse me, John.  How does Meg feel about that?

Let me just say that as a woman with a professional degree from a major university, I remember sitting in a counselor’s office and being told that “because you are a woman you can expect to earn approximately $300 a week less than a man.”  That was in 1970, John.  I made dean’s list, John.  And, for all the hard work and the good grades, because of my sex I could expect to earn in 1970 a mere 70% of what men were earning with the same educational degrees.  Unfortunately, women are still earning only approximately seventy-seven cents to a dollar for our male counterparts.  And, John, you really expect those of us who fall into the category of educated professional women to vote for a man who graduated fifth from the bottom of his class?  Oh, please. 

So, Senator McCain, continue to vote for insurance companies to provide Viagra for the men, and to prohibit birth control as a covered prescription for women.  Continue to support Supreme Court justices that dictate what I can and cannot do with my own body.  And, please Mr. McCain, make damned sure that no matter how much education, training, and experience I have in the workplace, I will make only seventy-seven cents to your dollar.  (Up seven cents in 40 years!)

And, you expect my vote?  I don’t think so.

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