September 13, 2008, 9:31AM
It was two weeks yesterday that Senator McCain announced his selection of Govern Palin of Alaska, an arch radical right-wing conservative with minimal experience. In those two weeks we have focused on nothing except Governor Palin and her children, her ex-brother-in-law, her position on the Bridge to Nowhere, and we are really making her look silly (at least in our little bubble). That is two weeks in an election that is approximately fifty days away. That's two weeks since the starting date of the official campaign. That's two weeks of Palin and nothing but Palin.
Well, how are we doing? Should we keep it up? Should we turn this election into a referendum on Governor Palin? Is that the key to an Obama victory? I think Josh Marshall and his fellow members of the creative class are having a field day, to the point where, from my vantage point, they have become a bit unhinged. It's a weird spectacle.
If it works, nice job and shut my mouth. If it doesn't we will know why. I wonder how many of us who are voting for Senator Obama--either because we supported him from the start or, like yours truly, turned to him once HRC conceded--anticipated that the two weeks after Labor Day would center on the trashing of an easily trashable poor substantive choice of a vice presidential choice.
Is it concern trolling to question the strategy and to ask why Obama isn't talking about how he's going to preserve the American Dream into the 21st strategy? Is it concern trolling to point out that, right now, two weeks after Labor Day, with the help of the fabulous creative class of bloggers and the MSNBC FOX wannabes, the Obama campaign appears to be rudderless and without heart and without soul. Frankly, this Democrat doesn't care what you call it; I'd rather respond (or not) to a charge of concern trolling in September than be left with writing I told you so in November.
My Saturday morning opinion: this is getting stupid, really stupid, and this is why we Democrats generally lose elections. How's 'bout I'm Senator Obama and in the first 90 days of my Administration, we are going to change the course of the last eight years by. . . tackling a health care system that isn't working, and by eliminating our dependence on foreign oil producers. Here's how we're gonna do it. . .
Let's get real for once. Have a nice weekend.
September 2, 2008, 8:55AM
I won't be participating in the feeding frenzy going on right now about the fact that Governor Palen's 17 year-old daughter is pregnant. Apparently, the daughter will have the baby and rumour has it she intends to marry the boyfriend who fathered the child. I wish them well, and hopefully the child will be born healthy.
I would never vote for Senator McCain, even before his selection of Governor Palen. Indeed, I have every intention of voting for the guy who's mom fathered him when she was 18. Palen makes me even less likely to vote for McCain; she is as radical right as they come. But, of course, I'm into voting against them because of their respective domestic positions, and candidly, like most liberals and progressives I used to know, I don't judge people based upon how their kids turned out.
Like many of you out there, I know lots of folks, decent folks, very decent folks, whose children have disappointed them for all kinds of petty and real reasons. I think, like most Americans, like most people, you see quite a few things as you get older that they didn't teach you about in elementary school.
Governor Palen's daughter raises a question that millions of parents, pro-choice an pro-life, have had to face when their children turned into young adults. These are real decisions, and as the father of four, three of whom are girls, and two of the girls now being women (ages 21 and 22), I have confronted these decisions head-on. I bet I am not the only Cafe reader or American who dealt with birth control and teenagers in the same breath. Thank G-d, my adult daughters never became pregnant, but I'm not going to claim that the reason we were so lucky is that my ex-wife and I are exceptional parents. Stuff happens, and I think we dodged this bullet because, guess what, here's a secret. . . teenagers have sex.
In short, this is a real story that millions of American families, liberal and conservatives face. I know there will be plenty of wanna-be Rove/Drudges pushing this intimately personal family story who will claim that this is an issue that goes to Senator McCain's judgment (see Kleefield and Sargent with the imprimatur of Josh Marshall going ga ga over this). Have at it. But, to this life-long Democrats who absolutely destests the political views of Governor Palen and for reasons other than her daughter believes that she was a horrible and insulting VP choice (which, in light of her experience and views, does go to McCain's judgment), my heart goes out to her and to her husband and to her daughter right now.
Ultimately, it's not about me. So, more importantly, how do you think the rest of America outside of the Cafe is feeling about this story right now? Do any of you believe those Reagan Democrats we need to bring back into the fold want to have a whisper campaign about Governor Palen's family challenges?
In crass political terms, who are the American people who would have voted for McCain before this story broke, but will not vote for him now, or will just stay home? Always remember as we squabble into November, the issues we discuss are not just about us
August 28, 2008, 11:07AM
Josh links to David Axelrod being quoted as saying that Senator Obama's acceptance speech will be inspired by the 1980 speech of Ronald Reagan, the JFK speech of 1960, and the Clinton speech of 1992.
http://politicalwire.com/archives/2008/08/28/obamas_speech.htmlI am not one to dance on the graves of deceased politicians for deeds they did a generation ago, but I can tell you that I heard Ronald Reagan's speech in 1980, and it didn't inspire this Democrat in the least. It disturbed the hell out of me. (The speech is linked to below.)
I'd love to have folks address a couple of questions Axelrod's statement raises in my mind. What are the political benefits of referencing any link to Ronald Reagan tonight? I'm sure Axelrod et al. have thought this through and have concluded that the Reagan reference is a net positive.. In addition,, politics aside, is there anything good we can take from the Ronald Reagan of 1980, who for the official start of his campaign, went over to Philadelphia, Mississippi and spoke to about state rights?
http://www.nationalcenter.org/ReaganConvention1980.htmlPenny for your thoughts.
Bruce
August 26, 2008, 8:42AM
This former Hillary supporter and never-ending defender of his junior senator had a bit of a catharsis last night. I don't usually post my own blogs because it's too much work. But I want my friends to know that Teddy Kennedy reminded me what November is all about, and I felt some love last night.
At the threshhold, let me confess that the evening did not start out that well. Jesse Jackson Jr. was the first person I saw speaking and he makes me ill. He needs, I think, to apologize to Hillary Clinton for making the most vile, race-baiting comment of the campaign, when he spoke of Hillary's tears and her lack of empathy towards our brothers and sisters in New Orleans. Absent an apology, G-d willing, Jesse Jackson, Jr. will fester in the mire of House gridlock for the remainder of his Daddy-boosted cheesy political career. He is no friend of mine.
But I digress. Teddy made me weep and reminded me why I am who I am, why I do what I do, what direction this country needs to go, and why it is an imperative that Senator Obama be elected in November. He is, indeed, a lion, a throwback who nonetheless understands and communicates the necessity of moving forward. He inspired last night with his ability to come to Denver and speak despite his precarious health, but to me he has always inspired. Last night, he did a good thing, and for the first time in this campaign I began to feel that maybe I don't have to be an outsider in my own Party anymore.
I know folks like to talk about the disunity, and it's not the fault of the MSM. People around here eat up the continuing rift between Clinton and Obama folks. To me, it has been torture to have felt "othered" over the past couple of months in the political party I have always been loyal to. Teddy Kennedy pushed all of that out of the way, and reminded this guy that health insurance for all is what it's all about. All this other stuff is just plain stupid and, for guys like me, a bit narcissistic.
Things are coming together. The president of my biggest client, a staunch Hillary delegate from New York, is out there and when I spoke with him he was saying all the "right" things. The grown-ups, beginning with Teddy Kennedy, know what to do, and they're bringing it home. I stuck with Teddy in 1980, perhaps too long, but he was my guy. He's still my guy, and I'm sticking with him and I'm committed to Obama, and I even started to feel some love last night.
It was a good night to be a Democrat, and it was a good night to be an American. Just thought I'd let y'all in on that before I go back to my crotchety, contrarian self.
Peace.
Bruce
June 5, 2008, 9:38AM
I am a luddite. I have no idea how where avatars come from and then made part of a person's identity. So I don't have one, and to hide my ignorance, I have pretended that I don't have one because I'm much too groovy for such insignia.
But, now that my champion is out of the race for good (even though I did write that she was toast after Indiana), and now that we have nothing to fight about (hee), it's time to throw the avatar issue into the ring.
Here's my proposal. I am asking folks, if they could spare the time, to propose an avatar for yours truly. The winner will typecast me into perpetuity and have a $50 donation made by me on their behalf to a favorite cause or charity (such as the Clinton debt-relief fund for example).
I need a judge or judges. If you would like to volunteer for that role let me know. I'm kind of leaning for someone like the kid Greg from Missouri, because he's nice. But anyone will do.
Vital Statistics:
Male
Age 48
Married (Round 2)
Jewish (who has banned himself from most discussions about Israel)
Four Kids (22, 20, 18, and 1)
New Yawker thru and thru, with time spent in midwest and the nation's capital (hee)
Big Yankee Fan (Bobby Murcer belongs in the Hall)
Union lawyer
Crotchety son of a bitch
Looks like a cross between Danny Kaye and a canteloupe
Let's play avatar. And if you don't wanna play, then so be it!
September 11, 2007, 8:22AM
The 9/11 we all remember took place on a Tuesday, just like today. I could write about about where I was and what I saw and who said what but, to me, nothing marks this day more appropriately than what I saw this morning at the local fire station on 66th and Amsterdam.
They're a great bunch of guys and they give out dog biscuits to the neighborhood dogs and stuff like that. They also put out fires and on the exterior wall of the station there are about a dozen plaques in memory of their brothers who were lost forever six years ago today. They were just doing their job.
This morning, the garage doors were open and they were dressed in their dress blue uniforms and they were with family and friends, and they remembered together.
As my wife and I passed the fire station on the way to the subway she sighed and said that she wished that there was something we could do for them. I do too.
Thank you New York's Bravest. We love you.
July 13, 2007, 2:10PM
Jerome M. Segal is director of the Peace Consultancy Project at the University of Maryland's Center for International and Security Studies. In this column in today's issue of Haaretz, Segal lays out a peace process, inclusive of Hamas participation, which he suggests could lead to Palestinian statehood within one year.
I offer it as one of the few comprehensive and concrete plans that I have seen from the myriad experts in this area and, accordingly, I believe it merits consideration by those of us who express frequent interest in the topic.
Any comments this weekend that are directed to me are not likely to be answered because I'm off to G-d's country, the Berkshire Mountains (and in particular for all you American history buffs, just a hop, skip and a jump from the sign that marks the site of the last fateful battle of the famed Shay's Rebellion). In order to preserve domestic tranquility, I will not be searching for internet access this weekend.
Enjoy the weekend everybody.
Bruce
P.S. Don't miss MJ's Friday piece at Israel Policy Forum this weekend. It's a homer. http://www.ipforum.org/display.cfm?id=6&Sub=15