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   <title>joehigashi&apos;s Blog</title>
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   <updated>2008-03-29T00:56:06Z</updated>
   
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<entry>
   <title>Obama, McCain, and Pokemon</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/obama-mccain-and-pokemon.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.186262</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-29T00:56:06Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-29T00:56:06Z</updated>
   
   <summary>hohohohttp://dailyyeah.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/c43db51bb449373a3e4b5aa67252ee4d.gif...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
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<entry>
   <title>Bent double, like old beggars under sacks...knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/bent-double-like-old-beggars-u.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.185344</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-24T23:21:07Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-24T23:21:07Z</updated>
   
   <summary> A race, at least in the notional sense, is a competition of speed.  There’s usually a finish line somewhere, and the principle objective for everyone involved is to try and reach that point ahead of all other runners.  Get...</summary>
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      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
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      <category term="Election Central" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
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      <![CDATA[

<p>A race, at least in the notional sense, is a competition of speed.  There’s usually a
finish line somewhere, and the principle objective for everyone involved is to
try and reach that point ahead of all other runners.  Get to the end of the line, get the gold, get the Gatorade
endorsement, get the girl/groupie, and so on.</p>

<p>For a while, the Democratic Primaries were fundamentally
following the essentials of this race metaphor. Hill and Barry were stumping
from state to state, racking up votes and delegates, campaigning in an exciting
realm of infinite possibility. 
Back then, Hillary was running under inevitability, but after suffering
twelve consecutive defeats, she lost it. 
Then, on Super Tuesday, among not-so-hushed whispers confidently
forecasting her demise, Hillary whipped out a butterfly knife and fought
back.  Obama had grown pudgy on
good press and 55 million dollars, and when Hillary got down n’ dirty, he
wasn’t prepared.  So she spanked him, causing a huge upset with a modest win in the Texas primary and a
not-so-modest victory in Ohio. 
Jaws dropped, hats flew off heads, and I’m going to guess a shrill cheer
rose up among her claque of winged monkeys over at Hillaryis44.org. Anyway, she
claimed momentum—since momentum, like a big penis, is something you can claim
to have without other people testifying to it—and the media obviously snatched up the story and started
in with horse-race metaphors.</p>

<p>Since Super Tuesday, Hillary has once again begun running
under inevitability.  But this
time, it’s the wrong kind of inevitability.  After being coddled for the better half of March by press
coverage that treated her as a viable contender, it’s finally registered within the MSM that
the odds against her are staggeringly high. With a roughly 20 percent
chance of actually winning the nomination, even Joe Scarborough is beginning to wonder if she will drop out of the race.</p>

<p>But there's nothing to drop out of, because this isn't a race.  It’s a war of attrition.  This contest is no longer about moving forward, or competing abilities, or issues.  Its
priorities have ceased to be on amassing delegates, and even the popular vote is fast becoming irrelevant.
Now, Hillary has dug her trenches, and is gearing up to relentlessly pound Obama with attacks until he crumbles and surrenders.  She’ll blacken the landscape, choke the sky, and gas Obama’s character beyond all recognition before she concedes an inch.  Whether it's an acceptable plan is a matter of debate, but I think it's a malicious, vindictive, and generally ugly way to campaign. It reminds me of the same winning
strategy that made World War I such a resounding triumph for all nations involved.</p><p>As much as I love him, I can't say I'm not beginning to worry about Obama.</p>




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<entry>
   <title>Desidero: a response to Obama&apos;s fact check</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/desidero-a-response-to-obamas.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.184354</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-19T19:34:19Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-19T19:34:19Z</updated>
   
   <summary>A thoughtful post, but some counter points: &quot;What I don&apos;t see is…how Obama…can compare whatever racist mumblings of his white grandmother to the prepared sermons of a preacher before his flock.&quot; The point here, as you can probably tell, is how these...</summary>
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      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
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      <![CDATA[<p>A thoughtful post, but some counter points:</p><blockquote> "What I don't see is…how Obama…can compare whatever racist mumblings of his white grandmother to the prepared sermons of a preacher before his flock."<br /></blockquote><p></p><p> The point here, as you can probably tell, is how these relationships parallel one another.  The stock counterpoint I've encountered most frequently has been "Obama can't choose his grandmother, but he can choose his pastor."  I suppose that's true to an extent, but it ignores what he was saying about personal nature of those connections by grilling him (rather obtusely, I’d say) on the literal bearing of these relationships.  I mean, yes, technically, he can "choose" another pastor.  But he can also "choose" to spurn his grandmother.  I've written before that my father, for all his wisdom in many areas, carries some unquestionably blue-collar baggage when it comes to homosexuals, hispanics, etc.  If that was all he was, or even what most of him was, just because begot me doesn't mean I'm contractually obliged to love and honor him.  God knows some people really hate their parents.  The point Obama was attempting to make, I thought, was that his relationship with Rev. Wright extends to a level far deeper and meaningful level than heated, three-minute youtube clip. He said as much.  Besides putting Rev. Wright's anger in a historical and cultural context, which he asks us to try and understand--not condone, but understand--he also asked us to cease our self-righteous chatter of gavels that in effect relegate a well-respected religious scholar and noted community activist to the cartoonish embodiment of "black hate."</p><p></p><p> </p><p>Personally, I don’t see the difference between “racist mumblings” and “prepared sermons.”  Both are releasing pent up prejudices.  How is giving greater articulation to the same fundamental anger any worse or different?  It’s all catharsis for the same emotional undercurrent.  Does the fact "mumblings" could be better checked on second thought make the emotion less prevalent? How it’s expressed has less bearing than why it’s being expressed in the first place—at least in terms of this example.</p><p></p><blockquote> “He excuses Rev. Wright's anger because of when he grew up, but Wright was quite a bit younger than Martin Luther King, who had many more fights to wage against worse conditions, and who managed to keep his message of love and hope even while standing up to racism. Malcolm X split from the intolerance of his church and made his way into a more accepting if not humbled view of humanity.”<br /></blockquote><p> </p><p>I think it’s pretty dense to suggest that just because Jeremiah Wright was younger than Martin Luther King, Jr., he has somehow been spared the worst parts of discrimination.  His age has absolutely no bearing on the nature, frustration, and pain of his experiences of being a black man living in America, and it’d be terribly thick to assume otherwise.  Furthermore, throwing up Martin Luther King, Jr. as an appropriate model for constructive protest holds Wright up to a very naïve standard of conduct.  How many Gandhis do you know, personally or historically?  Anger is a far more natural and inevitable human response than is becoming a historical paragon of peace.  I’m not saying it’s preferred, but I mean, let’s get real here.  To cynically dismiss Obama’s message as you have done on TPM numerous times, I’m guessing that your worldview is littered with half-empty glasses.  Expecting Wright to take some notional highroad shows a pretty credulous idealism, no? </p><p> </p><p>As for Malcolm X, he left the Nation of Islam not because of its anti-white rhetoric, but because he was spiritually repulsed by the adultery of its leader, Elijah Mohammad.  What’s more, the event that directly precipitated Malcolm’s departure had nothing to do with the NOI’s spiritual hypocrisy at all, but came when Mohammad silenced Malcolm for, interestingly enough, describing the assassination of JFK as “America’s chickens coming home to roost.”  Malcolm X did eventually recant his earlier anti-white rhetoric after leaving Elijah Mohammad, but it wasn’t a matter of him simply growing disgusted or shocked with the racist views of the Nation of Islam.  He had vocally espoused those ideas for over a decade, in terms far more racist and hostile than anything Jeremiah Wright has ever said.  He completely mocked MLK’s belief of nonviolent protest several times, which goes to show how not all angry black activists are endeared to non-threatening protest. But the point is, Malcolm’s spiritual reawakening came at the end of his Hajj—a profoundly meditative and soul-searching experience taken by a man who had lost an enormous portion of his spiritual identity—it was not a simple matter of splitting “from the intolerance of his church.”  To say the driving issue for him was being suddenly fed up with the racism he had believed in for over a decade blurs his motives for leaving and the nature of his religious meditation entirely.  What's more, you're using it to discount the reality and historical legitimacy of racially tinged black anger.  I do not agree with it, nor do I like it, but it's a visceral reaction to the perpetual treading on a collective sense of worth by a group who historically oppressed them with violence.  It is a different kind of anger than the hate of the KKK, emerging out of an wholly different collective experience and is, yes, therefore not stigmatized to the same levels that white society treats its own legacy of oppressive, exploitative race hate.  No, it's not okay, but saying 9/11 was the result of The Great White West's arrogant lording over ethnically colored nations is worlds away from African Americans genetically inferior, stupid, lazy, savage, criminally-inclined, n*ggers.  What sounds more hateful to you, and what sounds more generically angry?Yes, Malcolm X may have been an angry black man who eventually saw the folly in being angry, but it’s a far cry from even remotely paralleling the circumstances surrounding Jeremiah Wright.</p><p> </p><p>Personally, regardless of Jeremiah Wright’s comments on Louis Farrakhan (he did not, by the way, ever say Farrakhan “epitomized greatness.”), Trinity Church is not the Nation of Islam.  Not only is Trinity’s father-denomination, The United Church of Christ, overwhelmingly white, but also the Trinity congregation is not exclusively black.  An op-ed in yesterday’s Chicago Tribune by a woman who attends Trinity (and who is, incidentally, married to a white man) admits that while some of the sermonizing might make some whites uncomfortable, there are always whites sitting in the pews at Trinity.   It is not a “hate whitey” church, wherein a dashiki-swathed Wright furiously expounds upon the evils of the white character while the enraptured throng echoes his sentiments with resounding Amens.  All of the controversial comments made by Reverend Wright I’ve heard just denounce white America, which, when you look two words down within the context of that statement, is rhetorically linked to the government (and who heads it up?  Why, the Grand Old White Party, of course!) Anti-American it might be, anti-white "hate speech" it most certainly is not.  And if it isn't anti-white, then how can it be called "hate speech"?  Hate speech, when I last checked, is defined essentially by race.  Wright has never called anyone a “white devil” in these speeches, nor has he ever demanded his “flock” eschew associations with whites or cooperation with white organizations.  Big deal, you might say.  It doesn't change the fact he said “white.”  Yeah, but he does not expound upon the perceived tyrannies or eternal flaws of white character.  He attacked the government, sometimes with honest points, sometimes with horribly looney ones, but the government--not the coveted Reagan Democrats, not the white people in attendance that day, not you, and not I.  The closest thing to a culturally racist remark was when he claimed Zionism had an element of “white racism” to it—a comment which, by the way, is regarded anti-Semitism-free by the Anti-Defamation League.  Trinity is not a racist church, despite its edgy sermons, as its members—black and white—have and will continue to attest.  Yet, to stubbornly persist with allegations of hate speech despite these accounts is truly bad, arrogant form.  In continuing to harp on the "hateful" content of these snippets with wholly undue self-assurance in your convictions, you are not only casting suspicions about the potentially “hateful” effects of Wright’s sermons on Obama, but you are also effectively extending the same baseless and ugly mistrust to the entire congregation of Trinity.</p>]]>
      
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<entry>
   <title>Clinton and Obama Supporters, Let&apos;s Talk Healthcare</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/clinton-and-obama-supporters-l.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.183885</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-17T15:39:38Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-17T15:39:38Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[Someone said if we really want a constructive discussion and comparison between candidates, we should talk policy.&nbsp; So, I'm going to ask an open question to Clinton and Obama supporters: who has the better healthcare plan and why?Personally, I think...]]></summary>
   <author>
      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
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      <![CDATA[<p>Someone said if we really want a constructive discussion and comparison between candidates, we should talk policy.&nbsp; So, I'm going to ask an open question to Clinton and Obama supporters: who has the better healthcare plan and why?<br /><br />Personally, I think incentives are better than a mandate, but I'll wait to see if people respond before I lay out my reasons.</p>]]>
      
   </content>
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<entry>
   <title>Why I support Obama and not Hillary (Clintonistas, let&apos;s have a civil discourse)</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/why-i-support-obama-and-not-hi.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.183748</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-16T16:34:19Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-16T16:34:19Z</updated>
   
   <summary> See, I wish I could find more Clinton supporters like you.   I support Obama, but what you&apos;ve said has some truth. I do agree that a lot of Obama supporters do make constant parallels to Hillary, and in...</summary>
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      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
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      <![CDATA[

<p>See, I wish I could find more Clinton supporters like you.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>I support Obama, but what you've said has some truth. I do
agree that a lot of Obama supporters do make constant parallels to Hillary, and
in recent months, it'd seem that as the Clinton campaign gets ballsier, the
blogosphere is alight with a lot of outraged Obama supporters baying for
blood.  This could be the majority
of them, and even though I too have partaken in lampooning the Hildebeest
(rather smugly, as you can tell), I wouldn't really consider myself to be part
of the "non-Hillary" voting bloc.  See, I suppose one main area where we fundamentally disagree
is, unlike you, I do want to see an inspirational leader in the White House.  I hardly think Obama is nothing but an
award-winning smile--I believe he could get things done as well as Hillary
can--but I treat his charisma and ability to galvanize so many people
(particularly my youth group) as a definite asset.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>Before Obama, excluding a very, very casual anti-war
stance, I really didn’t have a noticeable interest in politics.  I can remember Bill Clinton telling
America he did not have sexual relations with that woman, but I essentially
came of age/ awareness during the Bush years.  The political understanding my mind begot over this period
has been that there is absolutely no point in taking action for anything, ever,
because ultimately the administration will turn an arrogant and defiant
cheek.  Because of Bush's
neo-imperialist aggression, the world seems to dislike us quite a bit at the
moment, and I fear we now have far more genuine international threats than we
did eight years ago.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>So, you have to understand (and I hope you don't dismiss)
the appeal a guy like Obama has for me. 
Clearly, his message resonates beyond the youth, but it's probably not a
stretch to say American youth have been most stirred by his words.  There are plenty of people in my
twentysomething age bracket who find his message supremely bracing.  Many Obama naysayers pish-posh this
appeal, and dismiss his supporters as cutely naïve, a noisy cafeteria of
political Augustus Gloops stuffing Obama’s silver-tongue rhetoric into our
mouths two hands at a time.  But I
think this criticism falls resoundingly on its bum, because it wrongly assumes
we're lapping up Obama’s words in the expectation that once he's in office,
things will somehow, in some indescribable and unknowing way, get miraculously
“better.”  It’s a big
misconception, and all those pundits (yes, sadly, including Hillary) continue
to cling presumptuously to this notion that we really are expecting “the skies
to open up” and that “celestial choirs will start singing,” the moment Obama is
sworn into office.  With it comes a
procession of punditry that bandies around additional stereotypes—we’re all
children and should be patronized as such, that an optimistic and inspirational
political message automatically makes his policies void of content and meaning,
that his perfervid throng of teenyboppers (that means you, union delegate
teenyboppers) have canonized St. Barack and believe he can do no wrong. But all
of it is such a painfully obtuse and tone-deaf understanding of Obama’s
cultural appeal, essentially founded on belittling what they don’t
understand.  The appeal of Obama
isn't that he's someone who is going to make everything inexplicably better,
some multi-racial rockstar/soothsayer, or Political Pied Piper vowing to
single-handedly lead the rats out of Washington.  His appeal lies in the fact that he promises to let us have
a voice again--a voice that has been so muted under Bush that many of my
generation fail to see the point in even talking anymore.  Sure, this may not be particularly
convincing to all of you. Those of you who have been around the block, I can only
assume, have weathered enough political disappointment, lagging expectations,
and broken promises to crack a bittersweet grin at the prospect of being
charmed yet again.  Perhaps this
message is not new to you, and so you won't buy into his ideological
platform.  But all I can say is
this: if I have confidence that our President will listen to us if we're loud
enough, it's an enormous incentive to start getting involved in political and
social action.  Change, Obama has
continually maintained, is only possible when the people start working for it, and
in order for the people to start working for it, we need an ideological match
lit under our bottoms.  Scoffing
Obama for being “just words,” misses the entire point.  Firstly, because he isn’t “just words,”
and secondly, “just words” mobilize entire legions of young people to go out
and believe they can make a difference. 
Don’t underestimate that.  A
person’s cynicism may be grounded in unfortunate experience and may well be
justified, but on principle, cynicism does not equate sageliness.  Cynicism, in general, tends to be
little more than an embittered condescension.  That's why I think inspiration is a lot more important than
cynics and naysayers assume it to be. 
If we're active, we have the chance to be formidable.  If we're apathetic, little will get
done, regardless of who is sitting in Capitol Hill.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>But look, I get that some people shrug or shake their
heads at Obama’s alleged gospel of starry-eyed hope evangelism.  It's understandable.  I can even get the confusion over why
so many people are taking a gamble on young senator Obama over Clinton's
soi-distant "experience" when they ultimately agree on so many
critical issues.  Frankly, angry as
I have been at Hillary these past few weeks, chances are I'll still vote for
her.  But where they differ has
substantial bearing for me.  I'd
like to point out that comparing candidates on their stances is essentially the
way I choose my vote.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>Hillary is a little too hawkish for my tastes.  She promises to withdraw our forces
from Iraq, but the fact that she's stumped on slogans like "you need a
leader who can bring both the arrows and the olive branch!" is
disquieting.  I don't want her to
start rattling a saber at Russia or even Iran over diplomatic stalemates, and I
worry that her foreign policy ideology, while obviously not blunderingly
Bushian, is still essentially confrontational and combative.  I don't like that she stumps on keeping
America’s sleeping children “safe,” because keeping America “safe” seems to
entail an overeager trigger finger. 
McCain is stumping on keeping America “safe.”  Obama is also for bolstering national security, but his
approach to foreign policy doesn’t suggest the same antagonism as
Hillary’s.  I'd like to point out
that during their Ohio debate, Hillary mentioned several times Serbia and
Russia in vaguely threatening terms--as if these countries needed to be
'watched' or ‘dealt with’ rather than approached.  I dislike that stance. 
We’re living in an age where there is no wisdom in going nuclear, and I
don’t want someone whose foreign policy approach lingers remotely peripherally
around such a hyperbolic outcome.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>In contrast to Senator Arrows and Olive Branch, Obama has
repeatedly stumped on meeting hostile leaders without preconditions--a policy
that, tellingly, Hillary has attacked him frequently on.  Personally, I think it’s a very sound
one.  Diplomacy can lead to
stalemates, but rarely megaton destruction.  In a world where there is so much acute animosity towards
us, I'd rather we have a leader eager to diffuse this animosity by way of
reconciliation and negotiation, not needlessly, and perhaps defiantly, stirring
the pot.  I don't think we need to
engage in macho posturing with Putin, or treat Cuba with the throwback ideological
hostility and apprehension we had back when the Cold War was relevant.  Hillary stumps an awful lot on her
foreign policy credentials, but when she isn't touting her resume, she does
tend to talk in terms that aren't particularly diplomatic--or if they are,
represent a sort of hardline diplomacy that rarely, if ever, gets things
done.  I want a negotiator and a
conciliator in my leader, a person who will steer the country courageously in
its darkest hours, but who will use military action as a last, defensive (and
not preemptive) resort, rather than treating it like a holstered pistol, or a
diplomatic fallback.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>Another issue is healthcare.  Both Hillary and Obama want better coverage, but frankly,
even though Hillary's plan is coated in a pleasant little socialist gloss, I
think Obama's is much sounder. 
Hillary says she wants to "provide" Americans with universal
healthcare, but that's rather deceptive. 
In reality, she wants to make every American to buy healthcare,
enforcing the policy either by taking it out of our paychecks or penalizing us
if we refuse to buy it.  There is
an insurmountable chasm difference between state-sponsored healthcare and
state-mandated healthcare.  I mean,
it’s not the state sponsoring healthcare here, it is still the insurance
companies. She hasn't disclosed how she's going to do this, and while she has
hinted at ways of making it affordable through tax breaks and so on,
ultimately, she remains very vague. 
Sure, I suppose Obama's course of action is also hounded with hypotheticals
and notional outcomes, and Hillary has roundly lampooned him for evidently
being naïve enough to think all he needs to do is "ask" the industry
to lower its rates.  Frankly, I
don't think Obama intends to simply ask "please" and expect the
industry to capitulate.  I do think
he intends to get legislative of their ass.  I think regulating healthcare to provide more affordable
rates for all Americans is a far more achievable and desirable plan than making
everyone simply buy it at an undisclosed cost and for questionable
coverage.  I already have to buy
car insurance in New York; I don't need to be saddled with another steep,
mandatory insurance bill for something that doesn’t guarantee to be that good.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>Big deal, you might say.  Socialist countries tax heavily, so what's the difference in
having the government simply take our healthcare payments out of our
paychecks?  True, true.  But herein lies another reason why I've
been lukewarm about Hillary: her bosom relationship with the healthcare
industry.  The truth is, while
Hillary's plan *may* benefit Americans, it will be an undeniably boon to the
healthcare industry.  The
government isn't regulating healthcare in this scenario, the insurance
companies are, and Hillary is enabling them to reap a heinous superabundance of
profit.  It's a veritable bonanza.  This won't be a problem if the coverage
is acceptable to Americans, but I have to ask: if Hillary enjoys thoroughly
chummy relations with the health insurance companies, and they're bound to reap
profits regardless of the fate of the American people, what's to ensure that
Hillary will work to give us the best deal possible?  For everyone who claims Obama can’t bring it about because
he lacks the savvy of a season legislative vet, how can we be sure Hillary will
even work for us?  If she's trying
to reconcile the interests of both the insurance companies and the public, does
this not open up the possibility a lacking compromise? Obama stumps on taking
the healthcare industry down to size to have it serve the people.  Hillary seems to be trying to conflate
big moneyed and public interests into one mutually beneficial agreement.  I'm not saying it won't work, but I
will say I'm pretty dubious.  Given
that Hillary obviously has some questionable donors in her tax returns and
suspect earmarks projects, it causes me to take pause and ask just how many
corporate interests is she obliged to before she owes us anything?  Yes, I know Obama has also taken
corporate money.  It is just the
way of Washington, and I'm sure it will hinder him in accomplishing certain things.  Again: I have not apotheosized the man;
I do not expect him to be perfect. 
The diminishing of his MSM-anointed super-morality with
Rezko/Wright-related histrionics doesn’t cause my faith to curdle.  But for me, lobbied money is
incriminating because of quantity and specifics of the sum more so than it
being totally a matter of principle. 
It's important to know where the money is coming from, how long it has
been coming from where it has, and the implications of the sum. If Hillary is
taking large funds from the healthcare industry, how can we really expect her
to cut a fair deal for the American public?</p>

<p> </p>

<p>Also: the judgment thing.  Hillary hasn't convinced me she'd be a good leader.  She is a little expedient, and while I
suppose every senator does his or her share of political posturing, I thought
it was bad form to jostle for electability on an issue as crucial as the war in
Iraq.  Any decision that involves
the mass mobilization of lives and resources should not ultimately boil down to
how it benefits you in the long run. 
I'm sorry, but that is poor character, and I want our Commander-in-Chief
to be strong and conscientious, not conniving.  Bush and Cheney went into Iraq for selfish interests, and
Hillary Clinton enabled them out of personal gain.  Hell, she can’t even admit she was wrong.  I don't want a president whose
conscience plays second fiddle to her personal ambitions.  It is, among slimier things, an
underwhelming starting point for making levelheaded decisions and trustworthy
judgment.  Furthermore, Hillary's
judgment over healthcare in the 1990s was a legislative cataclysm, and many of
the missteps that enabled its implosion are still being exhibited by Hillary
now: the moneyed interests, the egregious secrecy, exclusiveness to the point
of alienating her fellow democrats, the overall inability to handle the
pressure...if she's still essentially the same, how can I trust her to go about
leading the country in any other way from what she's already shown me she's
capable (or incapable) of?  Hillary
had a hard time managing responsibility of one large executive project, and she
seems to have an equally hard time in managing her current campaign, which is
shaping up to be an operatic portrayal punctured hubris paired with a descent
into madness that would belittle Lady Macbeth.  Obama has gone from 3am, to NAFTAgate, to several vettings
on Rezko, to Muslim allegations, to Rev. Wright, and never once has he lost his
composure, dignity, or grace. 
Hillary, alternatively, is teetering to an emotional Chernobyl.  I’m having a hard time coming to terms
with “Shame on you, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad!” being howled on the floors of the
U.N.</p>

<p> </p>

<p> </p>

<p>Finally, I'm unsold on Hillary's claim to "get things
done."  Granted, Obama,
although he does paint himself as post-partisan politician with both hands
perpetually reaching across the aisle, he has an undeniably progressive senate
record.  Yet, independents and old
Rockefellar Republicans (you know, the legitimate, non-morally hypocritical
Republicans) still support him.  I
think he has the potential to make Washington less-partisan and will be more
likely to conciliate opposing forces to bring about real policy.  However, Hillary, as exemplified in her
"I'm a fighter" line, is not the kind of person to try and work towards
group consensus on major issues. 
Hillary is partisan and an inarguably polarizing figure, and while she
may fight for and accomplish change in the short run, there's no telling how
long it would last should Washington stay divided along the same partisan lines
as it has. I honestly don't want a fighter.  I want a listener. 
I don’t want the feminine candidate; I want the candidate touting the
feminine approach.  Balls to the
chromosomal makeup, I’m seeking a candidate who bests represents those chromosomes
in their policies, not in their pantsuits.  I want a president who seeks to talk with, relate to, and
reconcile people, a president who gets all parties to agree on a positive
healthcare plan or economic policy to forge general consensus agreeable enough
that the next majority/administration won’t work ceaselessly to bring down (as
did the GOP post-Bill).  Policies
don't need to simply shift, the whole political mindset needs to change.  With Obama, while I'm not sure he can
deliver on everything he says, there is a progressivism that vows to work
towards alerting fundamental perspectives on how to reach across the aisle and
get things done.  The man has a
vision, and vision, even if it is not entirely achieved, is what I feel this
country needs.  I feel like taking
a gamble on someone who has the potential to be progressive rather than the
candidate who will merely herald the return to the administration of
blue-dresses, blowjobs, rampant privatization, and a vicious assault on the
welfare system.</p>

<p> </p>

<p>That’s why I support Obama.  Now, why do you support Hillary?</p>




]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>

<entry>
   <title>Clintonistas and Rev. Wright (don&apos;t get looney)</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/03/clintonistas-and-rev-wright-do.php" />
   <id>tag:tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com,2008:/talk//17.183721</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-16T02:30:40Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-16T02:30:40Z</updated>
   
   <summary>Okay, so for all you bewildered neocons and Hillary supporters who portentously harp on the implications of Obama&apos;s association with Reverend Wright, I have to ask: what exactly are you so afraid of? I want specifics here, guys. I know,...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>joehigashi</name>
      
   </author>
   
      <category term="Cafe" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
      <category term="Election Central" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/joehigashi/">
      <![CDATA[Okay, so for all you bewildered neocons and Hillary supporters who portentously harp on the implications of Obama's association with Reverend Wright, I have to ask: what exactly are you so afraid of? I want specifics here, guys. I know, some of you are just using Wright's outbursts as a new and convenient justification for why Hillary should get the nomination. It's kind of flimsy, but whatever, nothing new in the perennial wishful thinking of ye olde Clintonistas. I suppose this comment is directed more at those people who keep forecasting that Wright's speeches are some ominous indication of how Obama will run the country as president. I'm just wondering if you'd care to elaborate on these fears? Because asking "Just WHO is Barack Obama???" is getting awfully inane,  despite all the new anti-Obama scuzz Sean Hannity manages to dredge up. Personally, I think you have a better chance in whining about Rezko and Obama's ability to bring about change than your new approach of suggesting that he is somehow deceiving the American public, eagerly waiting to plunge the country someplace very big, very bad, and very black. I mean, I don't really know what you're getting at when you talk about how you can't support him because he's known this pastor for twenty years...is it that you think this association has poisoned Obama's character?  That he's just talking a nice game of post-partisan unity and change, but the moment he's sworn into office he's going to put white America in one giant labor camp, appoint Louis Farrakhan as his veep, declare himself ruler for life and beyond, bomb Israel, and sell our children to Iran to build nuclear weapons? That he's really a glib hatemonger? It sounds like you're edging towards that wonderful new e-mail smear that Obama is the antichrist. It's sad, because I'd like to think you'd be able to keep your rancor on the level, instead of following Hillary off the edge of sanity like a herd of buffalo off a cliff.<br /><br />Look, I love my father. He's a kind, insightful, and generous man. But he grew up in a blue-collar area of Long Island, his father was a railroad worker, and sometimes his opinions on groups like homosexuals and hispanics are pretty offensive (he is, by the way, an Obama supporter). Sometimes the things he says really makes my skin crawl, but nevertheless, I understand that he grew up in a different time, with different social and cultural norms and influences.  In the end he's my father, and I've always been smart enough to discern the wisdom from the sixty-year old prejudices. It's just an inevitability (or perhaps tendency) of the older generation, I'd say.  My father remains my mentor and continues to offered me priceless advice, but that hardly means I've ever agreed with him on any of his close-minded opinions. Ever. We've gotten into plenty heated arguments about it, but in the end what's meaningful about our relationship isn't based on an ignorant, bygone cultural understanding from the 1950s. So Lord knows, I am not going to hold Obama accountable for the sins of the father--especially seeing as how Jeremiah Wright, being a crusader in the Civil Rights campaign, must have infinitely more reasons to be angry than my old man.<br /><br />The HuffPo article titled 'Guess Who's Coming To Dinner?' got it right (no link, because I'm lazy). You twits need to stop jerking off your visceral fears and examine what it is you're actually so afraid of. One user wrote something on Huffington along the lines of, "Try to understand where this racist is coming from? I don't want to understand!" Well, I suppose some people have already learned all they'll ever need to know about black people from rap music and basketball, so there's no need to look any further into the history an feelings of some of those 1960s Civil Rights fighters who had hot coffee poured on their heads or dogs set on them.  Let's disregard the fact that racism doesn't end just when you get rid of colored water fountains, and systematic oppression and discrimination is still alive and well in this country today, and might cause a bubbling reserve of slightly irrational but righteous indignation among oppressed minorities.  Let's not even give them the benefit of the doubt.  No, let's just take this outburst as a militant threat against white security and cry foul because Geraldine Ferraro didn't get so much understanding.  Rev. Wright doesn't speak for Obama, and I don't see how on earth Obama could ever be a hatemonger...unless I'm to believe these oh-so-rich allegations that he's a *secret* hatemonger with a *secret* agenda for America that he'll *secretly* pass despite our time-honored (well, maybe less recently) of checks and balances. <br />In sum, Hillary people, please stick to dismissing his change. Then you can be snide and all knowing and we can start touting the math and call you delusional and we can all go back to agreeing to disagree. But I'm begging you: do not go down this looney road. I mean, what's next? He's going to paint the White House black? Please.<br /><br />As for all of those trolls who have started to jabber about how this outburst has sounded the death knell for Obama, I would like to remind you PA is six weeks away.  Media coverage is a capricious mistress...or maybe an a child with ADHD...anyway.  NAFTAgate was what? Two weeks ago?  And who even considers that relevant at this point? If this Wright codswallop is as intense and unrelenting in six weeks as it is now, then maybe you little wonky Nostradamuses can start with the predictions. But 48 hours is a little too soon to start consulting your crystal ball.<br />So uh, suck it.<br />Peas]]>
      
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