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Week of April 6, 2008 - April 12, 2008

Bitter and Angry in Rural Pennsylvania: Obama's Reality vs. Hillary's Fantasy


Maybe there aren't Bubbas driving around in pickup trucks with the classic bumpersticker "God, Guns and Guts Made America Free"  where Obama's detractors live, but here in rural Pennsylvania that line may as well replace "e pluribus unum" as the motto on the national currency.

I live in western Pennsylvania, and I can tell you, people here are bitter and angry. Poverty is prevalent. People hunt squirrels and eat them, along with racoon stew. People also hunt deer here, not for sport, but so they can put meat in their freezer so they can feed their families. They cut wood in the forests and heat their homes with wood stoves because they can't afford to pay the gas bill. I know a guy who goes to old landfills to dig up old milk and beer bottles to sell on eBay. He uses the proceeds to buy clothes for his family at the Salvation Army (and to pay for his dial-up connection).

Racism and prejudice are ever-present here. A friend of mine is part-owner of bar in a small rural town south of where I live. I meet up with him there occasionally and watch as down-and-out people come in with their disability and welfare check money and drink it away. It's a pretty depressing place, but it does serve as the social center for a town that has seen its few industries shut down and the local people's jobs eliminated or shipped off elsewhere.

I hear the usual rants there, that it's all the fault of gays and minorities and immigrants (although those aren't the terms used, but rather the usual, virulent slurs). A black man walked in the last time I was there, and a guy near me at the bar muttered in a not-so-quiet way, "What's he think he's doing in here?" When I brought up the presidential race and Obama with another man at the bar, his response was, "there ain't no way America is ever going to vote for a black guy." Later on my bar-owner friend told me about his experience talking about Obama with another woman at the bar, and her angry response was that "it's because of half-breed n*****s like him that America is in such bad shape today."

Prejudice, racism and fear do run rampant in areas like this. People are poor. They are in bad health, overweight from a deep-fried diet, and toothless from the lack of dental care. They are unemployed. They are uneducated. They do cling to their hunting rifles and to their religious beliefs. For many, it is about all that they have. The towns around here are full of decaying, boarded up buildings. People live in rundown old trailers with abandoned cars in the front yard. I have seen people using an old car as a stable, with their goat tied to and living in it. I could drive you by a least three old houses that have Conderate flags in the windows.

So go ahead and discount Obama's talk of how bitter and angry that some of the people of rural Pennsylvania are. Call him elitist for taking the time to pass through areas such as this to listen to what the people have to say, and to then relate what he has heard to people in more prosperous parts of the country when he is asked about it. I have lived in San Francisco, and let me tell you, there is a marked difference between the general attitude there and the attitude here in the "rust belt". Go ahead and dismiss everything that Obama said as political posturing. Let Hillary and McCain "pick him apart" and parse his words. But please keep in mind that when Obama said:

"it's not surprising then that they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."

that he is 100% accurate in his assessment.

I know, because I live here, my family and my friends' families have lived here for generations, and we see it every day, all around this region. There is a very fine line between poverty and prosperity here, where making above $20,000 a year puts you in the realm of the "haves", but also knowing that you're one contract termination away from joining the ranks of the "have-nots".

I come from a family of dairy farmers. I know what it's like to spend up to 12-16 hours a day sitting on a tractor for three dollars an hour, which I did through high school and every summer until I was fortunate enough to head off to college. Many of my friends were also fortunate and went to school, and then relocated to other parts of the country. Some of us were able to come back under better circumstances, but the large majority of people here are not as fortunate.

Thirty years worth of the right wing dismantling our public education system has taken its toll. Thirty years worth of mismanagement of the economy, of shutting down factories and shipping jobs out of the country, of subsidizing corporate farms and taxing family farms out of business, has taken its toll.

Yes, people are angry, and bitter, but Obama never said that they aren't resilient, opitmistic or hard-working. Those are Hillary and McCain's twisted words, and for them to stand up and suggest that rural Pennsylvanians aren't fed up with the way things are, only reveals how out of touch they really are with at least this part of the country.

Of course, all McCain has to do is suggest to poor rural folk that the party of gun-control, gay marriage, and NAFTA is going to take away what little they have left, and rural conservatives will vote for him, just as they did for Reagan, Bush I and Bush II. As for Hillary, the more she "takes apart" Obama's message, the more she does the GOP's work for free. If Hillary can't see that the people of rural Pennsylvania are bitter, and angry, and mad as hell about the way things are, then she needs to step down from that one hundred million dollar platform of hers and take a real look around.

In western Pennsylvania I hear two things: the "God, Guns and Guts" crowd see John McCain as the heir-apparent to the mantle of rural conservative values; and the people who hope for some kind of change see Barack Obama as the person who understands the situation that we are in, and maybe is the one who can lead us in a new direction. What I don't hear is anyone talking about whatever and whomever it is that Hillary claims to stand for.

Cocoa Tea's Tribute to Obama - Happy Saturday!


Reggae fans only!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Tw8tesd5EA


I was hoping for some video, but it's a great tribute track that will stick in your head. Be forewarned, you may like this.

It's All About the Endgame.


I'm a pretty decent chess player. I can usually beat anyone I can get to play me, but my weakness has always been my endgame. I can always get my pieces set up with a strong arrangement and attack from protected positions, but when it gets down to arranging a quick and decisive kill, I often falter, and when I do, it ends in a war of attrition, as I gradually take out all of the other player's pieces, and finally get their one remaining piece, the king, cornered.

I guess it's that quest for a good endgame that has made me so aware of this ability in others, and how glaringly present this problem is today in both Iraq and the presidential primary campaigns.

In the congressional testimony yesterday and today, just like last year, and the year before that, it's obvious that Bush and Co. have no decisive endgame strategy. Maybe it's because they really have no intention of giving up control over Iraq's huge and untapped oil reserves, but even in regard to maintaining control, they could have approached the whole occupation of Iraq from such as stronger postion if they would have had any kind of planning in place from the beginning. And now we are stuck in a slow and brutal war of attrition with no end in sight.

The Obama vs. Clinton battle seems to be stuck in the same situation. Clinton, the heavy favorite going into this, based her whole strategy on a fast and decisive win on Super Tuesday, and blew it. Regardless of all of the other issues that could be indentified as weaknesses in her campaign, the false stories, the campaign shake-ups, the financial missmanagement, it was her complete lack of any kind of contingency plan for after Super Tuesday that will be seen as her greatest, fatal error. Her chances now depend soley on a bloody war of attrition, hoping to pick away at Superdelegates, hoping to kneecap Obama on any issue where she can find a toehold, hoping to rewrite and sneak around the rules in some way as to advantage her slim opportunity. In my experience, hoping that someone comes along and kicks the chessboard off the table, is not much of an endgame strategy. In the end, for Hillary to win, she might have to resort to kicking it off the table herself.

Obama, too, seems to be suffering from the lack of having a decisive endgame strategy. He did engineer one of the biggest come-from-behind series of primary victories that any of us have ever seen, and seems to almost have this thing wrapped up, but is still enmeshed in the above-mentioned war of attrition that Hillary is subjecting him to. With Pennsylvania favoring her, and North Carolina favoring him, the battle will continue on into an unforseeable future.

Eventually though, and within a few months, the primary and then the general election will be over. At least we have hard and fast dates for these events. It is most unfortunate that in Iraq, there is no end in sight.

In all of these enterprises, though, it appears that no one has a decent endgame.

Is There an Avatar Stork?


Tired of living your TPM life in the shadows? Tired of being one of hundreds of grey-as-a-ghost lurkers with no color, no clever identity? It doesn't have to be that way!

How to make an avatar:

1) click on the "edit" following "profile" at the top of this page
2) scroll down to "photo"
3) click "browse" to find the jpeg file you have pirated from some other website (by right-clicking on your image of choice and choosing "save as image" on most PCs)
4) click on your saved image file
5) hit the "save" button at the bottom of the page.

It's that easy! Don't feel avatar-deficient any longer! Power to the Avatars!

Clinton Aides: Mark Penn "Demoted"


Updated NY Times article - The key word now appears to be "demoted":

"other knowledgeable aides said that Mrs. Clinton was furious when she learned of the Colombia talks and insisted on Mr. Penn’s demotion. Mr. Clinton concurred in that judgment, aides said."

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/07/us/politics/07hillary.html?hp

And again the word "demoted" later in the article:

"Although the end of the primary season is drawing near, campaign aides said Mr. Penn’s demotion would change the internal dynamics of the Clinton camp, with a more collegial atmosphere replacing the first-among-equals structure Mr. Penn created around himself."

So he's not really going anywhere. It's all just for visual effects. Penn has been a "loyal" member of the Clinton team since 1996, and the Clinton's value "loyalty" above all else (sound familiar?), again from the same article:

"He remained for the second Clinton term and through Mr. Clinton’s impeachment trial, demonstrating, among other things, one of the virtues that the Clintons prized most: loyalty."

So there you have it, nothing more than a "demotion" for a "loyal" surrogate.

Breaking News! Penn is Out!


Just broke on CNN. Mark Penn has "asked to let go from the Clinton campaign."
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astral66

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