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Tag Archives: Palin

The President and the Teleprompter

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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Hinderaker. Power Line, McCain, Obama, Palin, Sean, teleprompter

A recurring theme among the detractors of President Obama has been his reliance on a teleprompter. Anyone who spends time on the internet has seen it on an almost daily basis.

In the minds of some this apparently is an indicator of a lack of intelligence, as ridiculous as that is when speaking about a Harvard graduate, editor of The Law Review, and author of 2 books.

One of the bloggers on the far-right, John Hinderaker, who writes for Power Line, said this about a recent speech by President Obama in which he mis-pronounced the word “Orion.”

“Everyone knows that Barack Obama is lost without his teleprompter, but his latest blunder, courtesy of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, via the Corner, suggests that the teleprompter may not be enough unless it includes phonetic spellings.

So evidently we have to add astronomy to history and economics as subjects of which Obama is remarkably ignorant. I’m beginning to fear that our President has below-average knowledge of the world. Not for a President, but for a middle-aged American.”

 

Just as a point of reference, this is the same Mr. Hinderaker who wrote this shortly after last year’s election:

“Obama thinks he is a good talker, but he is often undisciplined when he speaks. He needs to understand that as President, his words will be scrutinized and will have impact whether he intends it or not. In this regard, President Bush is an excellent model; Obama should take a lesson from his example. Bush never gets sloppy when he is speaking publicly. He chooses his words with care and precision, which is why his style sometimes seems halting. In the eight years he has been President, it is remarkable how few gaffes or verbal blunders he has committed. If Obama doesn’t raise his standards, he will exceed Bush’s total before he is inaugurated.”

 

But you know, the more I think about it, the more I tend to agree with Hinderaker and others. Only a complete idiot would have to rely on a teleprompter when speaking to the country. Right, Senator McCain?

 mccaitele

 

Right, Governor Palin?

 palintele

 

Right, Sean?

hannitytele 

 

Oh no, say it ain’t so.

 reaganteleprompter

 

Oh well, I guess it’s back to the birth certificate nonsense.

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How Will President Obama Govern?

14 Friday Nov 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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Barack Obama, McCain, Palin, presidential campaign, Republican Party, talk radio, the real Obama

There was much written and said during the recent presidential campaign about the supposed “mystery” surrounding now President-elect Barack Obama. Senator McCain and Governor Palin, along with the Republican Party spokespersons and their allies on talk-radio, often raised the question, “Who is the real Barack Obama?”

Their contention was that his thin record as a United States Senator gave us no clue as to what kind of president he might be or how he might govern if elected. The right threw around buzz words like “the most liberal member of the Senate” and pointed to Obama’s “radical associations” in an attempt to portray him as a far-left ideologue who would carry that ideology into the Oval Office.

As is brought out in a post on today’s Moderate Voice, there is a much better guidepost to how President-elect Obama will govern than his time in the Senate, and that is his tenure as president/editor of the Harvard Law Review.

According to the post:
“The environment at Harvard during Obama’s matriculation was rife of protests and peaceful sit-ins of the Dean’s Office and other faculty. Divergent activist groups of blacks, Hispanics and others demanded more diversity among the composition of law professors.

In this divisive setting, Obama was selected to join The Harvard Review, the most prestigious publication of any law school in America. His peers elected him president/editor of the group his third and final year at Harvard.

Juan Zuniga (a law student one year behind Obama) said Obama’s emergence in the selection process was “a neutral, middle-ground, non-threatening, non-ideological candidate.”

His (Zuniga’s) impressions of Obama from friends on the Harvard Law Review and faculty were “that he was not perceived as an ideologue by those who knew him. Rather, he has an incredible facility to listen to other people, consider their positions, respect their positions when making a decision and then use his own intellect to reach his own conclusion. He draws talented and respectful people to himself. He makes responsible decisions based on merit and not ideological principles. It is very much worth noting that in many ways he keeps himself above the fray.

“While a bunch of us were out there trying to take over the Dean’s office, Barack was never a meaningful presence at any rallies. I have no doubt he believed we needed a more diverse faculty, but he also knew that the role he had as Editor in Chief of the Law Review meant he could accomplish so much by approaching his task with professionalism without raising an ideological torch and being a rabble rouser.”

I had my own skepticism about then Senator Obama at first. That was due mostly to listening to the characterizations of him in some of the media. But as I listened to him, I didn’t hear a strident, far-left ideologue, I saw what his fellow students at Harvard saw, a pragmatist, with reasonable solutions to the problems facing our country. And that is how I expect President Obama to govern beginning on January 20, 2009.

The Barracuda Is Now An Albatross

22 Wednesday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

George Bush, McCain, NBC News/Wall Street Journal, negatives, Palin, Pew, polls

Two new polls released yesterday, one by Pew and one by NBC News/Wall Street Journal, show that John McCain’s selection of Sarah Palin as his running mate has turned into an unmitigated disaster. Her negatives are rising at an alarming rate and, if you can believe this, the list of voter’s biggest concerns about McCain’s candidacy now has Sarah Palin at No. 1, and continuing George Bush’s policies at No. 2.

She is also losing the support of women that she was allegedly put on the ticket to attract, and is turning off independent voters at an ever-increasing rate. And if that wasn’t enough, Gov. Palin has made McCain’s age an issue that it wasn’t in previous polls. In baseball terminology that is known as the golden sombrero, Sen. McCain, 0 for 4.

Here’s how the numbers break down. From Pew:

* 49% now have an unfavorable view of Gov. Palin, up from 32% in mid-September.

* 60% of women under 50 now have an unfavorable view, up from 36% in mid-September.

* 53% of all women have a negative view of Gov. Palin, up from 38% in mid -September.

* 56% of independent women have an unfavorable view of Palin, up from 28% in mid-September.

* 27% of all independents have a very unfavorable opinion of Palin, up from 10% in mid-September.

* Gov. Palin has maintained her support among the Republican base, you know, the “real Americans” with the same 83% approval she had in previous polls.

* 34% now say McCain’s age is an issue, up from 23% in mid-September.

 

From NBC News/Wall Street Journal:

* 55% say Palin is not qualified to serve as president if the need arises.

Just as an aside to all the “guilt by association” zealots out there, on the list of the top 4 concerns about Obama, his relationship with people like Bill Ayers and Jeremiah Wright ranks dead last. See, I told you so.

Apparently Governor Palin’s vast knowledge of foreign policy by virtue of being able to see Russia from her front porch, and her rather unique interpretation of the Constitutional powers of the vice-presidency is not impressing the voting public.

Who could have seen that coming?

Palin Out Of The Loop On Iraqi Agreement

18 Saturday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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Biden, Iraqis, McCain, Obama, Palin, Status of Forces Agreement

This article from the Examiner says all we need to know about the regard, or lack thereof, in which Sarah Palin is held by those in D.C. when it comes to foreign policy matters.

Three of the four presidential and vice-presidential candidates were notified this week of the progress in the negotiations on the Status of Forces Agreement between our government and the Iraqis. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called John McCain, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice phoned Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Do you notice a name missing there? You betcha, that would be vice-presidential nominee, Gov. Sarah Palin.

According to State Department spokesman Sean McCormack:

“Senator Obama is the Democratic presidential nominee and, obviously, is an important political figure in the United States. (Either) one of Senator McCain or Senator Obama are going to be president come January. And so just in terms of the courtesy and protocol aspects of this and the practical aspects of this, we thought it was appropriate to make those calls.”

I take that to mean that Gov. Palin is not an “important political figure” as far as the State Department is concerned. I think that’s what critics of Sen. McCain’s choice for a running mate have been saying all along.

Ignorance On Parade

18 Saturday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

angry mob, guilt by association, McCain, Palin, rally

Yet another video of the angry mob waiting in line outside a McCain/Palin rally, this time in Johnstown, PA. Before you go down the road of guilt by association, McCain supporters, take a close look at the people with whom you are associated.

I Told You So, Republicans

15 Wednesday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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attacks, CBS, liberal media, McCain, New York Times, Obama, Palin, Republicans, unfavorable

I hate to say I told you so, Republicans (not really) but I told you so. Your attacks on Barack Obama’s associations aren’t working. In fact, the opposite is true. McCain and Palin’s unfavorable ratings are rising and Obama’s favorables are at an all-time high since the attacks began. Thanks, GOP.

Before we go any further, these numbers are taken from a poll done by the New York Times and CBS, so I know some will dismiss it immediately as “liberal media bias.” You are free to leave at this point.

Now back to the polling data. About McCain’s attempts to tie Obama to William Ayers, the Times found this:

“After several weeks in which the McCain campaign sought to tie Mr. Obama to William Ayers, 64 percent of voters said that they had either read or heard something about the subject. But a majority said they were not bothered by Mr. Obama’s background or past associations. Several people said in follow-up interviews that they felt that Mr. McCain’s attacks on Mr. Obama were too rooted in the past, or too unconnected to the nation’s major problems.”

 

On the issue of favorability:

“Mr. McCain was viewed unfavorably by 41 percent of voters, and favorably by 36 percent. Ms. Palin’s favorability rating is now 32 percent, down 8 points from last month, and her unfavorable rating climbed nine percentage points to 41 percent. Mr. Obama’s favorability rating, by contrast, is now at 50 percent, the highest recorded for him thus far by The Times and CBS News.”

To show how poorly this attack strategy has worked, Palin’s favorable rating is now only 8 points ahead of President Bush, who is at an all-time low of 24%. Nice job Republicans, keep it up.

To show you how out of touch Republicans are at this point, take a look at this chart showing voter’s responses when asked which candidate has spent more time explaining his positions or attacking his opponent:

 

 

 

Almost half of the Republicans surveyed actually think that McCain has spent more time explaining his positions, talk about living in an alternate reality.

But then again, these are the same Mensa members that we see in line at McCain/Palin rallies, never mind.

 

 

Exclusive: An Inside Look At The McCain Campaign

11 Saturday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

McCain, Obama, Palin, rally, video

Never before seen: Here’s an inside look as the McCain/Palin team devises a plan to attack Barack Obama, and lists the type of people they will need to carry it out, followed by video of the line outside a rally.

Meanwhile, Back In The Real World

03 Friday Oct 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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credit freeze, debate, economic woes, Palin, Republicans, slowdown, tightening belts

I know the partisan Republicans are all a-twitter this morning over what they perceive as a victory by Sarah Palin in last night’s vice-presidential debate, and the McCain campaign would like nothing better than to take the focus off of our economic woes, but unfortunately for them, that’s not going to happen.

The credit freeze is deepening, unemployment is up, and companies large and small are tightening their belts in anticipation of a severe economic slowdown.

From Bloomberg:
“The crisis deepened after the worst month for corporate credit on record. Leveraged loan prices plunged to all-time lows, short-term debt markets seized up and even the safest company debt suffered the worst losses in at least two decades. Credit markets have frozen as financial institutions hoard cash to meet future funding needs amid deepening concern that more banks will collapse.”

The president of Chrysler said, “The credit window is now closed.”

Ford and Toyota reported sales for September were down over 30% from a year ago.

General Motors estimates it is losing 10-12,000 sales a month due to tightening credit.

AT&T is having trouble raising cash. From CNN Money:
“CEO Randall Stephenson said Tuesday that his company was unable to sell any commercial paper last week for terms longer than overnight. Commercial paper, which helps lubricate the flow of business operations, is a short-term IOU available to corporations that banks usually know are good for the money.”

Small businesses are suffering as well. From the New York Times:
“Some small companies say they are no longer able to get loans from newly cautious banks as credit tightens across the country, and even those who do qualify are increasingly reluctant to borrow and expand, fearful of overextending themselves in the midst of the financial crisis.”

Manufacturing is at it’s lowest level since 2001.

According to the Wall Street Journal;
“The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for unemployment benefits rose 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 497,000 in the week ended Sept. 27, the Labor Department said. That was the highest since Sept. 29, 2001.”

Unemployment figures for September are due to be released today and are expected to be bleak.

So I ask you, with these facts and figures staring us squarely in the face, does it really matter how well Sarah Palin is able to speak from a prepared text or recite talking points? Not one iota. What matters is electing a president who has the judgement and the vision to tackle these tough problems, not one who admits that he has little knowledge of economics.

Remember Issues? Straight Talk About The Deficit

11 Thursday Sep 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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CBO, economic projections, economy, issue, lipstick, McCain, Palin, pigs

Lost in all the media lunacy over pigs and lipstick were the economic projections released by the CBO this week. So instead of talking about the latest McCain campaign smear or repeating Sarah Palin’s lie about the Bridge to Nowhere for the 1,000th time, let’s discuss an actual issue, the economy. I know this election isn’t supposed to be about issues, but it might be a nice diversion.

From the Washington Post:

“A weak economy and a sharp increase in government spending will drive the federal budget deficit to a near-record $407 billion when the budget year ends later this month, and the next president is likely to face a shortfall in January of well over $500 billion, congressional budget analysts said yesterday.

This year’s deficit will be more than double last year’s $161 billion, and it will rise from 1.2 percent of the gross domestic product to nearly 3 percent.”

To make matters worse,  these numbers don’t take into account the government bailout of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which could add as much as $200 billion to that figure.

So how do our 2 presidential candidates intend to tackle this growing deficit monster? Senator Obama wants to allow the Bush tax cuts to expire on those making over $250,000 a year, increasing revenue to the Treasury. Senator McCain wants to cut taxes further, making the deficit even larger.

Here is a chart showing the projections of what the effect of McCain’s plan could be:

McCain’s solution to the deficit problem is to eliminate earmarks and reduce spending, offsetting the reduction in revenue that further tax cuts would bring. Although both of these sound good to the ear of the average taxpayer, the facts are that neither one is a feasible solution to the problem.
By most estimates, earmarks accounted for approximately $16 billion in 2007. Even if they are completely eliminated, which is highly unlikely, the effect on the deficit would be the equivalent of spitting in the ocean and hoping to make the tide rise.

Cutting spending is a similar situation. It is a familiar campaign promise by Republicans, but the question is, what do you cut? Senator McCain is short on specifics.

The facts are that 80% of the federal budget is spent on three things–entitlements, defense, and interest on the debt. These three accounted for $2.3 trillion out of a $2.8 trillion budget in 2007. That means all discretionary spending totals $500 billion. These are dollars spent on things like education, transportation, veteran’s benefits, agriculture, science and technology, energy, and the environment.

So which of these does Senator McCain intend to eliminate? Again, no specifics have been given.

Since McCain is not going to reduce defense spending, to the contrary, he will more than likely increase it, and since interest payment on the debt is fixed, that leaves entitlements, specifically Social Security and Medicare.

These two make up 36% of total federal expenditures. To make any serious reduction in government spending, McCain would have to make drastic cuts in one or both. I haven’t heard that promise from his campaign, have you? Not likely you will, either.

Palin’s Speech: Sound and Fury, Signifying Nothing

04 Thursday Sep 2008

Posted by Craig in Election 2008, McCain, Obama, Politics, Uncategorized

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McCain, Palin, Republican Convention, speech, stump speech

Calm down Republicans, she’s only your VP nominee.

With all the gushing praise and the glowing reviews after Sarah Palin’s speech at the Republican Convention last night, one would have thought she was the presidential nominee and not John McCain. Home run, amazing, brilliant, fantastic, the pundits proclaimed. What it was to me was a typical Republican stump speech, with a little personalized biographical information thrown in for good measure.

I’ll give Governor Palin credit for this much, she was well-rehearsed, well-prepared, and well-scripted. She threw enough chum in the water for the Republican sharks on hand and in the television audience to feast on for days and weeks to come.

She repeated the falsehoods and misrepresentations about her record, recounted again for us John McCain’s ordeal in a North Vietnamese prison camp, and took the obligatory shots at Barack and Michelle Obama. Yawn. Same old, same old.

What Governor Palin also did was leave herself wide open for attacks from the Democrats on everything from her alleged status as a reformer during her time as Mayor of Podunk, Alaska, to her support/non-support of the Bridge To Nowhere, to the accusations that she abused her power, to her knowledge, or lack of same, on foreign and domestic policy.

In his remarks to the Convention on Tuesday, President Bush spoke of the “angry left.” What I saw on display last night was the angry right. From Huckabee to Giuliani to Palin, I heard constant attacks on Barack Obama’s lack of experience and his policy proposals. What I didn’t hear were GOP alternatives to those proposals.

Nothing about the economy, other than the tired old ‘Obama will raise your taxes’ line. Nothing about how to deal with our dependence on foreign oil, nothing about the worsening situation in Afghanistan, just a constant stream of one-liners and zingers aimed at Barack Obama.

So I’ll end where I began, calm down Republicans, your main man has yet to be heard from. After all the hubub over Palin’s speech, McCain’s may become anti-climactic. Palin is a base consolidator, nothing more, and this election is not going to be decided by the respective bases, but by the independents and undecideds.

And when those undecideds get beyond Palin’s rhetoric and take a look at her hard-line stance on some issues and her lack of knowledge on others, I believe they will come to the conclusion that she is completely unprepared to be the person a heartbeat away from the most powerful position in the world.

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