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Week of October 5, 2008 - October 11, 2008

McCain Accuses Economy of Bias


The Republican presidential hopeful John McCain let his frustration with the US economy for torpedoing his campaign boil over today. When asked in an interview about the challenges his campaign faces, McCain responded, "Look, it's no secret that the economy favors my opponent." Asked to elaborate, he replied, "This country is in crisis. Now is the not the time to point fingers. But everybody knows that the economy caused this crisis, and I think everybody knows why it's doing it."

Separately, Steve Schmidt, who is the top strategist for the McCain campaign, called the economy a "pro-Obama institution..uh...organization...whatever, it's pro-Obama." He added,

This is an economy that is completely, totally, 150 percent in the tank for the Democratic candidate. Everything that happens to the economy should be evaluated by the American people from that perspective.

Challenged by reporters to defend the accusation, Schmidt continued:

The economy could have gone sour at any point in the past four years or the next for years. You have to ask yourself why now? Who stands to gain? Why, on the same day that John McCain declared that the fundamentals of our economy were strong, would the Dow Jones suddenly tumble 300 points? Some people might call it a coincidence. I call it spite.

Asked why the economy might bear ill will towards the campaign, Schmidt answered, "I have no idea. Go ask the economy."

But others have suggested that the economy, which has been increasingly fragile in recent years, feels disrespected by John McCain, whose priority in the Senate has been military affairs and earmark reform. McCain's blunt acknowledgment that "I know a lot less about economics than I do about military and foreign policy issues," may have particularly incited the economy's wrath.

According to traditional economic theory, economies follows strict mathematical rules and lack any independent agency of their own, but many economists have recently embraced the controversial new theory of Agent-Based Economics which asserts that economies have feelings too. The theory offers support to McCain's assertion that the economy has it out for him. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has accused the economy of engaging in malicious behavior, calling it "the worst economy I've ever seen" and "a corrosive force." Dr. Richard S. Satrams, Professor of Economics at Prestigious University, was even more direct:

Much to the dismay of my colleagues, the economy is a capricious and unpredictable beast. Whether driven by chance or animus, I cannot say, but it surely has John McCain by the balls and shows no sign of letting go. One suspects that it seeks another trophy to hang next to [former President] Jimmy Carter's peanuts.

The Obama campaign immediately ridiculed McCain's accusations, stating in a press release that "John McCain is so out-of-touch that he wouldn't recognize the economy if it collapsed on his doorstep. Any of his doorsteps."

Late update: The McCain campaign has just released evidence which they claim proves that the economy is against John McCain. The scrap of paper appears to so show the angry scrawl of a clearly disturbed and bitter economy. The authenticity of the document has not been established.

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This article has been cross-posted at DagBlog.com. For more on John McCain's tempestuous relationship with the economy, see my previous articles:

Shirt-Off for Obama


Since I began writing for TPM, one of the most popular subjects in the comment sections of my posts has been an issue of great national import: my shirt. When it made its monochrome debut at TPM last April, a fierce debate ensued as to the precise color of the collar. Unable to reach consensus, cafe member DF helped me to end the debate by pimping my shirt with technicolor. The animated colors served to further enrage the critics, and I am still asked on a regular basis to change my shirt. Last July, a cantankerous, wise-ass baby known as Allsburg, took the challenge a step further by publicly offering to bribe me into removing my shirt. He promised to donate $100 to the Obama campaign and another $100 to a Senate candidate of my choice if I would permanently change my avatar to a non-animated image. But some of the shirt's supporters came to its defense, offering to donate the same amount if I were to keep the shirt on, creating a stalemate.

Baby Allsburg hasn't been seen around the cafe lately, and I've recently heard a very disturbing rumor that he was eaten by dingos in the deserts outside Seattle. While I have become very attached to the shirt, I feel that I owe it to the memory of our dear be-dingoed ex-baby to fulfill his dream by sacrificing my shirt to help Barack Obama in this final, critical month of the campaign. But to be fair to the shirt's supporters, I would like to give them the opportunity to save the shirt. Therefore, I hereby announce the first ever SHIRT-OFF FOR OBAMA contest. Please donate to show your support for Obama and your love/hate for the shirt at my online fundraiser: http://my.barackobama.com/page/outreach/view/main/ShirtOff. If the sum of the anti-shirt donations is greater than that of the pro-shirt donations, I promise to permanently remove my groovy seizure-inducing avatar and replace it with something innocuous. Maybe a cat. Those seem to be popular.

If you donate, please indicate your vote by including in the message Save the Shirt or Lose the Shirt. The contest will last 24 hours, concluding at midnight tonight. I will publish updates on this thread throughout the day.

Please rec until this post makes the list, for Obama's sake if not that of the shirt.

Regards,
Genghis

This fundraiser is not supported or endorsed by Talking Points Memo. The shirt isn't either.

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