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Election 2008: Postmortem

Tuesday November 4, 2008 will long be remembered as one of the most historic nights in the history of the American republic, for on that night, The One officially became “The Chosen One.” The American electorate has spoken and Barack Hussein Obama is due to become our 44th President of the United States.

I offer congratulations to the victor and the same prayer that I have prayed for every President that I have voted for (or against) in the time that I have been eligible to vote; I pray that he governs us well, with no attempt to rule; I pray that he is and remains in good health; that he leads us with wisdom and foresight; that he remembers that he is in office to serve us and not his personal ambitions or any political Party, and that he allows Almighty God to be the Ruler of his heart and the Governor of his actions.

But as I look at the end of this long…long…long campaign, I am struck that the Pope of Hope’s election has shown me several things that I would like to share with you now.

Woody and Bo were right! Back in the 1960s though early 1970s Big Ten football was defined by the way Ohio State and Michigan played the game: “Three Yards and a Cloud of Dust!” That meaning the team that was successful was the team with the better ground game, and Obama proved that it works in politics as well as football. The Obama campaign had the better ground game all though the campaign season, and I can personally attest to that: In the last week of the campaign I had two “robo-calls”, a visit by campaign volunteers, information through the mail, and a personal call from an Obama volunteer. During the course of the campaign I, a duly registered Republican in a battleground state (!) received NOTHING from the McCain campaign; not a call, not a piece of mail, and not a visitor. When the opposition is reaching out to your supporters more than you are, you should know you are in big trouble!

This is the last “First”! With Barack Obama becoming the first African American to win the office of President, maybe now we can stop celebrating meaningless “firsts” for blacks in this country. After this, being the first black to win a gold medal in the high dive or something just loses whatever luster it had!

The Justice Brothers…R.I.P. As many of you may know, Rush Limbaugh likes to call Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton “The Justice Brothers” on his radio show, and Obama’s election just put a serious crimp in their hustle, as well as the prestige of the old line civil rights groups. Because Obama did not kowtow to the NAACP and did not rely on them for support and/or prestige, the NAACP now finds its standing diminished. Barack Obama won the Presidency without having to rely on them, and that basically makes them irrelevant. As for “The Justice Brothers”, it is going to be really hard to work the racism hustle when America just put a black man in the Oval Office.

Our “Original Sin” has been washed away. The one thing that I really hope this election result does is finally put to bed the idea that America is a Nation filled to bursting with racists just waiting to “keep a brother down.” Barack Obama just rose above all of that and showed that the promise of our founding “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal” is not just lofty rhetoric penned by “dead white men”, but it is a promise that has now been kept. While I do not agree with President-Elect Obama’s politics, I do recognize that his is a life and a story that could be found (to steal one from Don King) “Only in America!” We have fulfilled the promise that Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, and Madison made to us ad now we can move freely into the next chapter of our history.

One brief aside: While I was watching the “Fox & Friends” segment talking about the impact of the youth vote in this election, I was appalled to see several young people in the crowd shots wearing the Hammer and Sickle of the old Soviet Union on tee-shirts, and one guy waving a Hammer and Sickle flag at a celebration of Obama’s victory. Do these young dumbkoffs not know what that means, what it represents…or do they just not care?

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McCain-Palin '08

With only a week left before Election Day and with all the major (and minor) newspapers having made their endorsements, I feel that now is the time that The Spade makes it’s first official endorsement for the office of the President of the United States. After much consideration and deliberation by the editorial staff of The Spade we (mainly I) have decided to support Senator John S. McCain for the Oval Office.

I know that my decision may rankle some regular readers, and I know that I have stated in the past that I would not be able to support  a McCain candidacy, but times and circumstances change, and these changes have forced me to reconsider my previous position.

As a conservative Republican the nomination of John McCain has been very problematic for me, as Senator McCain has often done things and taken positions that run exactly counter to my conservative beliefs. Who can forget his complicity in the amnesty plan for illegal immigrants, his assault on free speech with McCain-Feingold, his crazy embrace of the global warming myth, or his participation (along with his lapdog Lindsey Graham) in the Gang of Fourteen? All of these things, coupled with his thin skinned approach to even dealing with conservative critics has left me far from warm to the Arizona “maverick”.

But even with all of that said, this electoral choice boils down to a choice between a candidate that seems to have an antipathy towards  many conservative positions (McCain) and a candidate that seems to have an antipathy towards America herself (Obama). Given that choice, I will choose the former over the latter every day of the week…and twice on Sundays! While McCain may not be in agreement with every position that I personally hold dear, I at least know that he is not trying to attempt to turn America into a socialist paradise. I can safely assume that McCain has no desire to redistribute my (little) wealth under any type of governmental plan, and I can safely assume that McCain is not going to weaken us by cutting and running from Iraq at the first opportunity to declare victory. We know that Obama has in mind “spreading the wealth” as part of his economic philosophy, we know that he is not seriously committed to winning the war in Iraq, and just the last day or so we have seen that his $250,000 figure for who is rich has been adjusted down to a level that Joe Biden now says stands at around $100-150,000.

And I also feel confident that John McCain is not going to use the power he has at hand to attempt to destroy anyone that has the gall to speak negatively to or about him, as Barack Obama has done repeatedly, and most recently with the accessing of the records of “Joe the Plumber”. While the Obama campaign may be totally innocent of any involvement in this mess, it says a lot about the man and the people who support him, that they have no qualms about attempting to smear the reputation of a common man who dared “speak truth to power” to the Almighty Obama.

Lest anyone get the impression that my endorsement of McCain is more of a repudiation of Obama, let me explain why I am willing to support John McCain. First, I respect his long years of service to this country; first as a fighter pilot in Vietnam, then as a Representative from Arizona, and now as a long term Senator from that state. I have always been struck by the notion that McCain’s use of the slogan “Country First” is not just election year rhetoric, but is more of a personal conviction that the Senator is now sharing with the public.

Most importantly, I respect John McCain as a man of honor and integrity. Ironically, it has been the issues that I have disagreed with McCain on the most that have gone the furthest in earning my respect. No matter how wrong I have believed McCain to be on an issue, I have never thought that he based his positions on any of them on political expediency. He could have gained major points with the conservative base of the GOP by standing against the President’s immigration ideas, but McCain took the bullets because it was a stance that he believed in. He could have done what so many Republicans were doing in the early aftermath of the invasion of Iraq and simply supported the status quo strategy of the President and Secretary Rumsfeld, but he instead tried to move the administration to a position where there were more troops added in order to begin securing that country. And McCain could have easily mollified the Republican base by switching his position on what constitutes torture and going along with popular sentiment that water-boarding does not equal torture. Yet McCain stood up and said that he believed that water-boarding was torture, and that the United States should not be involved in using any techniques in interrogation that could be reasonably deemed to be a form of torture.

On two of the three issues I hold a position that is almost the polar opposite of McCain’s, but it was those stands that made me respect the man…even if I didn’t agree with him. Because in all of those instances that I highlighted, I saw a man making a stand on what he honestly believed to be right and a man who was willing to stand up for his principles, regardless of any political price to paid. I admire that about him, and even though I find myself in disagreement with some of his positions, I at least know that this is a man who is doing his best to do right by the nation and not pandering to everyone in sight in an attempt to advance his political career.

I know that there are many readers of The Spade and beyond who are going to cast third party protest votes, and who believe that both Obama and McCain are trying to take the nation in the same direction, and on some issues it may seem that you are right. But the difference is that McCain is not a blind ideologue that is willing to sacrifice anything in order to advance his ideology. McCain, in my opinion, is a man who has always been motivated not by ideology but by what he honestly thinks is the right thing for his country. This has often put him at odds with the base of the Republican Party, but at least he has been willing to stand for what he believes in and not flitted about in an attempt to ride the wave of every “popular” issue that has come up in his career.

I know that the endorsement of The Spade is not likely to change any minds, but hey if Colin Powell can get some attention by making an endorsement, then so can I!

 

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Strange Days

Yesterday I watched with undisguised glee as the $700 billion bailout bill died an ignominious death in the House. Being the good conservative that I am, I watched the news coverage on Fox News and was actually surprised by something I heard there. One of the Fox news anchorettes was actually bemoaning the fact that this travishamockery of a bill had gone down in the flaming defeat it so richly deserved. She was saying that this was a time when the members of Congress had to lead the American people instead of listening to their constitutents...you know, "We the People." Then this morning on Fox and Friends all purpose political expert Larry Sabato from the University of Virginia was on saying the the President had failed to sell the bill properly to the people, and that whoever was able to tag the bill a "bailout" had effectively killed any chance of it passing the House. His idea was that if it had been called a "rescue" or "recovery" that the people would have gone along with it, because it didn't sound as if the government was trying to fix the mistakes of private businesses.
 
What these people don't seem to understand are just a few small things, and I will quickly go over them here.
  1. The American people just forced the Congress to lead us (at least for the time being) away from the precipice of eternal government bailouts of private enterprises. The American people were not going to stand by and watch these entities get free  oney for running their companies into the ground, all in the quest for ever rising profits. And for the second time in a couple of years We the People imposed out collective will on those elected to represent us.
  2. The system worked as designed on this bill, since the members of the House, including a sizeable number of the Democratic Party, refused to vote for a bill that they knew the people were opposed to...just like the way it went down with Harriet Meiers and immigration. The Congress responded to the people and did their business, instead of trying to advance their own agendas.
  3. The President was never going to get this passed, because he has no political capital left to get this done! George W. Bush could be the greatest salesman in the world, but the People were not going to buy this crock of crap, because we all saw it for what it was. And how could any of the Democrats in the House really be seen supporting this White House backed proposal, after spending the last 7 years telling anyone who would listen what an incompetent boob "Dubya" is? How good would it have looked to the constituents of those anti-Bush House members up for reelection to be out trumpeting  the Bush Plan?
  4. Larry Sabato and others need to understand that We the People are not some group of dolts who can be easily fooled b calling something by a different name. They tried that with their immigration proposals, but we all knew that "comprehensive immigration reform" was just a fancy way of saying "amnesty". No one was fooled then, and to think that calling this a "rescue" would divert attention from the fact that this is just a bailout of poorly run corporations is foolish. You can put a dead possum on a plate and call it filet mignon, but that doesn't change the fact that it's roadkill!

 

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The Lost Cause

I am officially done. I am tired of fighting the last battle, trying to win a rearguard action when the fight is over. I am laying down my rhetorical rifle and keeping my powder dry for the battles that must be fought, and must be won. My war against John McCain is over.

As much as it pains my conservative brethren to acknowledge it, no matter how it was done, John McCain has become the GOP standard bearer against Barack Obama and he deserves our respect, if not our support. We may not like the way the caucuses and primaries are set up, and changing them would be great, but the system produced John McCain as the winner and we have to accept it. What’s done is done and as much as I dislike many of Senator McCain’s policy ideas, I would much rather wake up on November 5th with a President Elect McCain than the alternative.

Many of the conservative base have spent a lot of time and effort telling us things about Senator McCain that we already know: he has been way too cozy with the Democrats on too many issues, he has been openly hostile at times towards the conservative base of the Party, he sides with liberal thought on AGW, and we all know his stance on the immigration issue. We also well remember the Gang of 14, McCain-Feingold, and his initial resistance to the Bush tax cut plan. But even with all those negatives, he managed to find a way to win the nomination after everyone had his candidacy dead and buried. He survived that fight and he grabbed the brass ring with both hands, so to speak.

Many conservatives speak of McCain as being no better than Obama, but that is not based on any objective analysis…it based on the enmity that many conservatives have towards McCain. Because of his past actions, they have decided that he can never garner their support, no matter what he does. They have come to the conclusion that because he has voted with the Democrats on some key issues, that he is one of them; what they fail to realize is that McCain is just McCain. He has never represented himself to be anything other than what he is, which is a man who thinks for himself…and the consequences be damned. McCain gets some us conservatives so fired up because he shatters a myth that we have held onto for far too long; the myth that to be Republican means to be conservative.

Yes, the GOP has the reputation for being the home of conservative thought but it has never been a truly conservative Party in my memory. In fact, in my memory the GOP has only produced on real “movement conservative” as President and we all know who that is. And GOP congressional leadership has produced some outstanding conservatives, but they have been more a product of their state/district electorate than of their Party leadership. Many want McCain to embrace that myth, and when he acts on his own initiative instead of the mythical values of the Party he is attacked, instead of people recognizing that McCain is not out of step with us…the Party is.

The problem is that too many conservatives are not worrying about what is best for the country, but are instead worried about salvaging the position of influence that conservatives have had in the GOP. It is all about the idea that if McCain wins that conservative influence in the Party will wane, and we just can’t have that. Who cares if a President Obama, the absolutely most left wing candidate to ever win the Democratic nomination, paired with a Democrat controlled Congress could do serious damage to the Republic? Who cares if a President Obama would be able to replace not just two Supreme Court justices with left wing ideologues in the mold of Ruth Bader Ginsburg? And more importantly, who cares if a President Obama packs the federal appeals courts and district courts with the same type of judges? And who cares if we see a Justice Department filled with US Attorney’s in the mold of Patrick Fitzgerald or Ronnie Earle, appointees who will use the office to do the bidding of their political master?

So what if a President Obama would snatch a defeat from the jaws of victory in Iraq? What does it matter if an Obama administration abandoned Israel, or refused to defend Ukraine against Russian aggression? What’s the big deal if a President Obama would spend all day talking to Iran, while she armed herself with a nuclear weapon?

My friend Philosophocon at his blog sees those arguments as scare tactics to move conservatives into the McCain camp, and discounts them. I see them as legitimate questions that many conservatives are willing to overlook in their nearly blind devotion to opposing McCain. Many conservatives say that an Obama administration could not do that much damage in a four year period, that he would not have enough time to do any lasting damage to the Nation; but they are banking on Obama being so bad that the people will reject him after a four year term. But what happens if the people re-elect him? What then? And we know what kind of damage liberal courts are doing now, so why do we think that federal courts packed with even more liberals won’t do even more damage?

We conservatives have fought the fight for this election cycle and we lost. We split our votes among too many candidates, and our numbers were blunted by the more moderate Republicans who picked a guy and stuck with him. But instead of recognizing the mistakes we made in the primaries, we have decided to punish the winner of the Party nomination. We have spent more time waging war against him for his ideological impurity than we have in going after the candidate who is our ideological opposite! We have been so worried about protecting our ideological turf inside the GOP, that we have forgotten that there is a bigger issue than the fate of the conservative voice within the Party. We are willing to swallow four years of socialist dogma from Obama, under the assumption that it will act as castor oil, when it is much more likely to act as arsenic. It may not kill us immediately, but it may very well cause us a slow, painful death. And we are willing to take that chance not because McCain really is as bad as Obama, but because we have to paint him as such in order to justify our abandoning the field to the opposition.

I am not going to tell anyone how to vote, who to vote for, or question their motivations for their decisions; that’s not my job.  Heck, I’m not even sure how I’m going to vote because I still have my issues with Senator McCain. But I can say that when I go to Forest Chapel Church on November 4th, get my ballot, and go in to mark it I will not be in there basing my decision on the future influence of the conservative voice in the GOP. I will not be making it on any personal animosity for McCain, nor will I decide on the basis of protecting my “territory”. I will be making it based on the issues that I deem to be the most important, and I will be making it based on what is in my view in the best interest of this Nation.

And I trust that all of you will as well.

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Reviewing RNC '08

In all honesty I must admit to not watching the entire GOP convention this week, but I did manage to catch what I thought were the most important and interesting moments. All in all, the convention was a pretty good kick-off for the general election campaign, with some highlights…and some not so wonderful moments. So what follows are my personal observations of what was right and wrong with the convention.

Rudy rises to the occasion: As much as we conservatives fond to dislike about Rudy Giuliani, we have to give him his due; the man knows how to give a speech and engage a crowd. His speech was a gem, especially in singing the praises of McCain and Palin and making them seem like a perfect combination to have on the ticket. And he was especially good in hitting Obama and Biden on their lack of leadership and vision, with his most memorable line being, “Change is not a destination, and Hope is not a strategy.” That pretty much sums up what the Obama campaign has been about, and did a good job of pointing out that the words are nice but more is needed that Hope & Change to govern this nation.

Fred ain’t dead: Fred D. Thompson did a great job in reintroducing himself to the folks with his speech as well. He showed a fire in the belly that seemed to be lacking in his early campaign, but which was evident later on in his run. He was engaging, he did a great job in telling the McCain story, and he was pretty biting in some of his criticisms of the Obama ticket. Whether he was just stumping for McCain or angling for a spot in the administration, he did a great job of getting his name back out before the people.

Joe Lieberman…not so much: I understand that Joe Lieberman and John McCain are longtime friends and colleagues, and I know that the sight of Lieberman onstage at the RNC was supposed to show bipartisanship, but in my view it was a failure. Lieberman was boring in his delivery for the most part, and his speech brought into focus the very things that make conservatives so wary of McCain. Did anyone in the McCain camp actually think that having Lieberman get up there and remind us of McCain-Feingold, McCain-Kennedy, or the Gang of 14 was the way to get the base fired up? I could have seen it if Lieberman had gotten up and given a passionate, heartfelt, rousing oration like Zell Miller did in the ’04 convention, but unlike Miller, Lieberman only breaks ranks with the Democrats on national security issues. Lieberman is still on the left side of the aisle on nearly every other issue, and his presence there made McCain look as if he is willing to tilt left, instead of moving a little more to the right. This was a case of a good idea in theory, but a terrible one in practice.

The Palin pile-driver: When Gov. Sarah Palin took the stage at the Xcel Center; I have never seen a crowd pop like that at a political event! This was the moment the delegates had been waiting for, the chance to hear from “Sarah Wasilla”, as some liberals snottily refer to her. This was a chance for the delegates to hear her story from the source, not given to us through the MSM filter, and Gov. Palin did not disappoint. She was poised on the stage and her story of being the PTA member who ran for office in her town, who became the mayor of Wasilla (population 9,000), and who made her way to the governor’s office was compelling. And her story of her family life, of having met her husband in high school and his still being her guy 20 years and five kids later; of the birth of their youngest son, born with Down’s Syndrome but loved nonetheless; the pride she has in her son and nephews who are serving the nation in the military, and her touching on her daughter’s unexpected pregnancy showed her to be just one of us. And as much as Obama’s story is the American Dream, so is hers; she has risen from the simplest of roots to possibly the second highest elected office in the land. What really stood out was her willingness to fight back against the Obama campaign and media questions about her experience by pointing out the lack of experience that Obama brings to the top of the Democratic ticket. And her lines that stung Obama so much were well written and well delivered, and directly on point; as much as the Obama camp and the media began caterwauling about her “demeaning” his experience as a community organizer, she was not wrong in her criticisms. In what world does being a community organizer prepare one to be President of the United States? And it was delicious to hear the Obama camp and media crying foul about her describing him in that manner, when the Obama campaign has made it a point to overlook the fact that Sarah Palin is the sitting governor of the state of Alaska, while trying to portray her as only the mayor of Wasilla (population 9,000). All in all Sarah Palin did exactly what she needed to do in her speech; she introduced herself to the public, she showed she was more than willing to fight back hard in the coming campaign, and she rallied the conservative base. That was as effective a speech as I have seen in some time, and it served notice to the Obama-Biden ticket this won’t be any easy win for them.

Heeeere’s Johnny: Finally we came to the acceptance speech of the nominee, John S. McCain. After the excitement generated by Palin, all McCain had to do was ride the wave, give the people a reason to get behind him, and show that he valued the base that Palin had so energized with her performance. In my view, McCain dropped the ball with his speech. For one it was nearly an hour long, and I don’t want to listen to anyone speak for that long unless they are saying something truly captivating. In cases like that an hour seems like a few minutes, but McCain’s speech felt every bit like an hour long speech; the man is just not a speech maker. Now I see why he prefers the town hall approach because it allows him to move and really engage with the crowd, but even with the new stage at the RNC he just never seemed to be in his element. It was compelling to hear him finally tell his story of captivity and his realization of just how much his country meant to him, and it was inspiring to hear him tell of his change in attitude , “No longer was I my own man, but my country’s”, the speech just lacked pop. And it was obvious to me that McCain was still trying to draw in the moderates and independents with his speech, and in doing that he was managing to off put a number of conservatives who are searching for a reason to back him. We all know that hyper-partisanship does not allow important work to get done in Washington, but with McCain’s reputation for dallying with the Democrats a bit too much, his talk of reaching across the aisle and embracing all good ideas will make some conservatives that were leaning towards him take a step back. I was watching the speech on CSPAN, and you could see it on the faces of many of the people in the crowd that this talk was not what they wanted to hear. Even after the acceptance speech McCain still has work to do in shoring up his base for the general election.

All in all, the RNC was pretty well done, especially with the juggling done in the face of Hurricane Gustav. It would have been great to have heard from Gov. Bobby Jindal in person, but his decision was to stay in state and lead in the face of the hurricane. And the staging of the events were a stark contrast, with the DNC being about glitz, what with those “Styrofoam pillars”, while the RNC was more reserved and traditional. The one thing that I did notice was similar in both tickets is that they are both upside down in their own ways; the Democrat ticket has all of its experience at the bottom of the ticket, while the GOP ticket has the unifier of the base at the bottom. We will soon see how this works for the two tickets as we start the general campaign in earnest now that the conventions are over.

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The Week In Retrospect

The convention of Hope [their caps, not mine] has just ended and a very interesting week (or two) of politics has gone by the wayside. A period that started with Obama picking his running mate, progressed through the staged unity of the convention, and ended with the One speaking from his own personal temple constructed at INVESCO Field was surprisingly upstaged by the McCain campaign. Here is a brief look at my take on the week that was.

Obama picks Biden. What was Mr. Hope & Change thinking with this pick? After basing his entire campaign on the theme that he was an agent of change and that he rejected the “old politics”, Obama goes out and picks a living symbol of the status quo as his running mate. Joe Biden, 36 year senator Joe Biden, is going to bring change to America? As one pundit said at Fox News, “Who knew that the agent of change had been sitting in the Senate for the last 36 years?”

A topsy-turvy world. It seems that the reason many gave for Obama getting Mr. Insider as his running mate was that it added experience to the ticket, and perhaps it did. But what type of experience exactly? Just because Joe Biden has been a part of the Foreign Affairs committee and its chair does not mean that he has any real experience in the area. What foreign leaders has Biden dealt with and what problems has he solved? And if that is seen as out of bounds, then ask yourself this: Seeing that Biden has been consistently wrong on his foreign affairs pronouncements (remember, according to Old’ Joe the surge wouldn’t accomplish anything), is that the type of experience you really want? And the idea that picking a person with experience somehow transfers experience to another is laughable!

Where are the celebs? Everyone knows that Hollywood is totally in the tank for Obama, but the stars were conspicuous by their absence. Sure there were some at the acceptance speech by Obama, but even then they were largely out of sight of the public. It seems that the McCain ad really struck a nerve when he linked Obama’s rise to his celebrity status. Even though Oprah was there crying her fake eyelashes off, the celebs were mostly out of sight-out if mind, and that had to be by design.

The Clinton Convention. Even thought they were nowhere on the ticket, this convention was all about the Clintons. Hillary did her part to try to heal the Party fissures, but even that didn’t seem quite sincere. Because in all of the things that she said in her speech, and even in urging her voters to board the Obama bandwagon, Mrs. Clinton stopped well short of really endorsing Obama. She urged her voters basically to vote for the party, but she never said that she believed that he was the man to lead…just that he was the winner of the nomination. Then there was Bill; the speculation over what he would say, and how he would say it was a source of much drama in the days leading up to his speech. He gave a pretty good speech and he actually gave Obama something of an endorsement. And strangely, Bill Clinton was the only speaker who really made an effort to sell Obama the candidate, not just appeal to Party loyalty.

The One speaks from his Temple. The craziest thing that went on that I saw was the temple that was erected for Obama to give his acceptance speech from. If nothing before pushed the idea on the public that Obama was being set up as some sort of secular messiah, the construction of that temple…complete with Roman columns…sealed the deal. I mean really, how many other presidential aspirants have ever given a speech from their own personal temple?! And speaking of the speech, what was so great about it? It was just more Democratic Party boilerplate and the usual list of socialist plans: raise taxes, grow government, increased dependence in the populace. But what struck me was the part of the speech where Obama talks of his grandfather getting an education using the GI Bill, and his mother managing to raise him as a single parent and helping to create a better life for him…and then he unravels it all by saying that it shouldn’t be that way! He says that, if elected, he will basically take that responsibility from the individual and transfer it to the state, because no one should have to struggle like that to make it. Does this man not understand that those “struggles” are what make America great? Does he not know that he is the American Dream and that his plan would destroy the Dream forevermore? And why does he fail to understand that the American people generally want to earn their way in the world, rather than be perpetual wards of the State?

Stealing Obama’s thunder. The day after the convention, John McCain was able to effectively push Obama from the front pages and lead news stories by announcing his pick for Vice President. By picking Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska, McCain shook up the ideas of a “status quo” pick and wrested the headlines from the DNC. Gov. Palin was a good pick, in my opinion, because she does several things for the McCain campaign: she appeals to disaffected women voters, she is the ultimate Washington outsider, and she can appeal to the conservative base of the GOP which has been very wary of McCain. Now, some feel that Palin is damaging her future political prospects by running with McCain as his VP, but if she is part of a winning ticket I don’t see how her career is going to be adversely affected. Others are arguing that her addition to the ticket somehow takes the issue of experience from McCain, but I fail to see how that works. Gov. Palin has nearly 2 years on the job in Alaska, has a 65% approval rating, and is the only person on either ticket with any executive experience! And honestly, she has about as much political experience as Barack Obama, since he has only been in national office for about 3 years and has spent 2 of those running for President! Gov. Palin has a record that she can stand on, while Obama has only rhetoric and the unabashed adulation of the media and the celebrity set. But all of that is actually irrelevant, since the only people whose experience matters reside at the top of the ticket, and in that contest McCain wins hands down; the experience that Biden has cannot be transferred to Obama, no matter how hard the media tries to make it so.

So that’s what I think about the way things are, and I am looking forward to what the GOP does at their convention that kicks off early next week.

*The bad word police forced me to revise my article because I used the word er*ction where the word construction now appears...how stupid is that?
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Et tu, Barack?

Now that Barack Obama has finally repudiated his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, in a press conference this week, we the people are supposed to suddenly forget the longstanding relationship between the two men. We are being asked to believe that we, as people who never heard of Jeremiah Wright until his inflammatory remarks were splashed all over the news and internet, know more of him than Barack Obama did...even though Obama was a member of his church for twenty years.
 
Barack Obama and his supporters will now try to say the matter is closed, but to me the matter remains open mainly because even this raises questions about Mr. Obama's essential character. Obama and the media have painted this man as someone who is above the politcal fray; he is post-partisan, post-racial, clean as the wind driven, and oh-so-erudite. Yet this move smacks of politics at its most base level, a level where a man that has stood beside you for over twenty years suddenly becomes expendable in the crucible of a presidential campaign.
 
This is a man, Wright, who took Obama under his wing after he joined his church; this is the man that led Obama to Christ; this is the man that married the Obamas and baptized their children...and now he is persona non gratta? If Rev. Wright is taking this rather personally, well he should. Maybe Rev. Wright is just now realizing that Obama has used him for his own political gain for the vast majority of his career. Is it a coincidence that the young man from Hawai'i trying to estbalish himself in the black community wound up at Trinity? Is it a coincidence that Trinity has a huge congregation and prescence in the city of Chicago? And is it yet another coincidence that Obama attached himself to Wright and held fast to that relationship for all of this time? After all, Wright was more than a pastor to Obama, he was a spiritual mentor whose sermon The Audacity to Hope was channeled in the title of Obama's book The Audacity of Hope.
 
What Wright has so recenly learned is that politicians are not to be trusted. No matter how much you supported them in the past, no matter how many times you were there when they needed you to be there, when the time comes to get votes you can be scuttled if necessary. The man that Obama claimed just a few weeks ago he could no more disown than his own racially insensitive grandmother has just been disowned, disavowed, and denounced. Suddenly Obama has become Popeye to Wright's Bluto; "That's all he can stands, and he can't stands no more!" Suddenly the sermons that got a big fat Amen for twenty years are words that Obama is angered by, is disappointed in, and are not representative of what he believes. And worst of all, Wright has had the audacity (yes, audacity) to not spend his time working to keep the Obama campaign afloat.
 
Because all of this is not about what Wright preachd from his pulpit or said at the National Press Club; it is all about Obama's need to save his campaign. So the man who gave him entree into the Chicago black community, the man who served as pastor, friend, and mentor for many years is no longer a part of the Obama program. There is no room here for real friendship, only for politocal allegiance. And so, when Rev. Wright went out and had the chutzpah to say that Obama was "speaking like a politician", Obama had to strike back. He could not allow himself to be so characterized by anyone, even if it was the pastor that just a few short weeks ago Obama was defending by saying that his incindiary comments were being taken out of context. So Obama and his staff circled around the Rev. Wright and proceeded to rhetorically stab him to death, just as the conspirators did to Caesar in Shakespear's classic work.
 
But this also brings into focus a glaring question about Obama: Does he have any scruples or have any loyalty? Or is his loyalty only to his ambitions? If this man (Obama) is willing to attack his mentor, his friend, and pastor for political gain, what else is he willing to do to have his way?
 
And as he lies suffering, with his repuatation near death, Wright must look up at hs attackers, recognize the one he loved most of all, and ask "Et tu, Barack?"
 
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Set Trippin'

Back in the day when the federal government was paying attention, people became obsessed with the gang warfare in South Central Los Angeles that was claiming the lives of gangbangers and innocents on a daily basis. Time has passed, the news cycle changed, and many have started to forget about the gang war between the Crips and Bloods that raged in L.A. for such a long time.
 
But what many never realized is that the real bloodshed was never so much between the Crips and Bloods, as it was between rival factions (sets) within the gangs. Take the Eight-Trey Gangster Crips and the Rolling Sixties Crips; both were Crip gangs, but they were more interested in establishng their dominance and warring with other Crip sets than they ever were in going after Bloods. In the world of gangbanging, they call that set trippin'; in the world of politics we call it  Democratic party politics!
 
The Democrats have long practiced the art of set-trippin', where they rip each other to shreds to get ahead. We saw it back when Michael Dukakis was campaigning for the nomination and Al Gore...yes, Mr. Nobel Peace Prize...and his associates introduced the world to Willie Horton; we saw it when the Democrats turned on Joe Lieberman for not being anti-war; I see it here in North Carolina as our sitting lieutenant governor and state treasurer trade charges of corruption, and we all see it in how Barak Obama and Hillary Clinton are at each other's throats right now. That's not to say that Republicans don't go after one another in election cycles, but it usually lacks the type of viciousness that you see from the Democrats. Republicans may take some shots at one another, but you don't generally see GOPers calling one another elitists or pulling out the race/gender card to win a primary.
 
As the Democrats continue to slice and dice one another, you have to wonder just how this is going to damage the Party. It cannot be a good thing to have your major candidates calling each other names on the regular, having one (Obama) having to restate nearly everything he says (see his San Francisco gaffe), or having a person that has been credibly called a "congenital liar" battling it out for your nomination. If the set trippn' continues unabated, the Democrats may find themselves like Humpty Dumpty: unable to piece themselves back together again.
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Embracing Obama

 

A little while ago I wrote post about why black Americans were slow in warming up to Barak Obama, and in it I posited that the reason was that Barak was not viewed as “black like me.” He had not gone through the same struggles that many blacks had gone through, that he was just so different from most blacks that he would have a hard time connecting with them. Since that time the worm has truly turned, and now I find myself trying to figure out why there is this sudden embrace of Obama by much of the black voting populace. Some think it is simply about his race, some think it is just the same old politics as usual, and there are I am certain other theories floating around that may or may not shed led on the subject. But what follows is my particular take on the issue.

I was in my African American history seminar class the other day, and we were having a class discussion about how blacks treat one another, how we relate to one another, and how we see each other. One of my young classmates had the view that much of what we see in the black community is a manifestation of how the rest of the world views us; that we are in essence victims of the perceptions of us that others have created. I countered that the problem is not how others see us, but how we see ourselves; I felt that many of the images that we say bother us are our own creation, so we are victims of ourselves. Thinking a little more about it, we were both right in sense and it is in the melding of those ideas that I see the traction that Obama has been able to gain in the black community, even after first struggling to gain traction with “his” constituents.

The embrace of Barak Obama all comes back not to the fact that he is simply black, but because he is what blacks want people to see when they look at us. His image, politics aside, is the image that blacks want to be associated with all of us, as opposed to the dominant images of blacks in the media. So many times the images associated with blacks is of the inner city single mother, the gangbanger on the corner, or of the “iced out” rap star. These are all negative images, and many blacks want nothing more than to not be associated with these images, as we know how negative they are. We know that the world is watching and judging all of us on the basis of those images.

Politically, the images that people have of blacks in this country by and large are dominated by people like Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Sheila Jackson-Lee, Maxine Waters, John Conyers, and Charles Rangel. All of these people are your archetypical hardcore “Black Left” Democrats, whose very stock in trade is to garner power by appealing to what Shelby Steele so correctly called “white guilt.” Every slight is a reason to cry racism, every plan in opposition to them is a conspiracy against blacks, and every policy debate is a reason to launch another scathing attack on “institutional racism.” As much as we would like to see ourselves in the images of people like JC Watts, Condi Rice, Colin Powell, or Harold Ford, we have come to realize that since the squeaky wheel gets the media grease, the image of blacks in the political realm that are going to be publicized will not be the articulate manner of a Harold Ford, but the wild eyed conspiracy mongering of a Maxine Waters.

Into this political scene then steps one Barak Hussein Obama and he is exactly what many have been waiting for. He is tall, good looking, accomplished, educated, successful, polished, and as slick as black ice. He carries himself with pride, without looking haughty; he speaks like an Ivy League graduate, yet he retains some of the street patois that identifies him as “one of us”; he has “made it” in this world that seems like it is stacked against our success, yet he has never stopped being “down”, as the slang puts it. His is the image that we all want for the world to see and associate with black Americans, that of a man that is all of the things that whites admire and is still at home among the “regular” black folks.

And that is what concerns me about this situation, and not so much Obama’s decidedly left of center, boilerplate Democratic politics. It is the fact that we, as blacks continue to allow ourselves to be defined by what white people think of us; we internalize their views of us and spend so much of our time attempting to either live up to or escape those views that we barely are able to define ourselves. We are constantly wearing a mask to project to others what we think they want us to be and in so doing we lose sight of who we are. We allow ourselves to be seen as members of a group, whose image is wrapped up in how white people perceive one member of our race, and if that member is getting a negative reaction we all feel as if we are being viewed in a negative light. Until we are able to honestly define ourselves as individuals, until we are able to truly accept the fact that our black “brothers” are not wrong to hold unpopular opinions, and until we are able to divorce our ideas of “blackness” from the embrace of a defined set of opinions, mores, and political views we will remain stuck in our current rut.

We have the power to become Americans just like any other people, regardless of our skin color. But until we embrace those opportunities and divorce ourselves from the compulsion to group identify instead of behaving as true individuals, we are always going to be a people searching for just the right image, and just the right leader. We have to understand that we are too diverse to need a single leader, and that we are too diverse to allow ourselves to be defined by any single image. We have among us the poor, the rich, the gangbanger and the graduate; our race contains all of these things…but we have to be strong enough not to allow any one of those things to define all of us.

And as much as it may pain some to hear it, that includes rejecting the image of Obama as the image of all black Americans. His story can be an inspiration, and he can be used as a role model for people to aspire to be like. But he is no more the singular image of black Americans than I am, and we have to be strong enough to say so.

Even if it hurts.

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Surprise, Suprise!

So it begins, the GOP hacks jumping onto the "Straight Talk Express" to endorse the candidacy of John McCain for President. There have always been those that were McCain supporters, or at least jumped on the bandwagon when their boy Rudy was seen to be failing miserably; people like Mort Kondrake, Fred Barnes, and Bill Kristol have all been supporters of either McCain or Giuliani all along.
 
But with the Bush family jumping on the McCain train, we have confirmation of what we all knew or suspected: there is not one conservative voice to be found in the Bush family. Big George, Little George, and Jeb have all thrown their support behind the McCain candidacy, with GWB having the audacity to claim that McCain is a "real conservative"! I guess GWB and McCain were able to mend fences while they huddled together and invented new ways to call Americans racists or nativists when opposing the McCain introduced and Bush backed illegal alien amnesty bill. The support of GHWB is no surprise, as he is the original "compassionate conservative" who sold out the Reagan legacy to raise our taxes, and try to get in good with the Democrats in Congress instead of standing up to them. And I suppose that I shouldn't have been too surprised about Jeb, since he was leading the charge to have the state government of Florida stick it's nose into the Terri Schiavo case...very liberal, you know.
 
What has surprised me is that so many others are willing to support a man who has done nothing to advance conservatism in his tenure in the Senate, and has in fact opposed many conservative actions, all for the sake of "Party Unity". Hearing John Bolton singing that tune was a bit of a shock, because I always viewed him as a conservative in the GOP, not as a Party hack. Evidently I was wrong, because there was Ambassador Bolton giving his support to a McCain presidential run. Maybe Bolton, like many other members of the Party is basing his decision to support McCain on his strong stance on the war on Islamic facism; but even that in my opinion is not a good enough reason to support him. Honestly, McCain is an advocate of closing Gitmo, extending Geneva Conventions protections to terrorists, and has declared that waterboarding is torture. Besides, with his war on the Constitution at home what is the point of beating the terrorists if we end up losing our rights to another assault on free speech or the 2nd Amendment?
 
What's really funny though is how the media acts as though having the Presidents Bush on McCain's side is going to sway conservatives to his side! This is a man (GWB) that the media has painted as inept, corrupt, criminal, and damned near evil...now we are supposed to swoon because he gives his endorsement to McCain? An edorsement from Bush in the last election cylce was an albatross, but now for their boy McCain the media acts as though it is an earthshattering announcement! Puh-leeze! Let all the RINOs and hacks back McCain, all it does is show movement conservatives how much work is going to be needed to save the GOP from itself!
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