Sunday, May 4, 2008

CBS poll: support for Obama rebounding


Excerpt from a CBS.com article:

Democrat Barack Obama appears to have rebounded from some of the damage caused by the controversy surrounding his former pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright, according to the latest CBS News/New York Times poll.

On one key measure, Obama has seen a big reversal since his denunciation of Wright’s remarks on Tuesday. He now leads presumptive Republican nominee John McCain in the hypothetical fall contest by eleven points, 51 percent to 40 percent. That compares to a tied match-up in a CBS News/New York Times poll that was released last Wednesday.

Indiana and North Carolina: closing arguments

Good sense from today's Op/Ed pages


From Thomas Friedman's New York Times article today:

Much nonsense has been written about how Hillary Clinton is "toughening up" Barack Obama so he'll be tough enough to withstand Republican attacks. Sorry, we don't need a president who is tough enough to withstand the lies of his opponents. We need a president who is tough enough to tell the truth to the American people. Any one of the candidates can answer the Red Phone at 3 a.m. in the White House bedroom. I'm voting for the one who can talk straight to the American people on national TV — at 8 p.m. — from the White House East Room.

Who will tell the people? We are not who we think we are. We are living on borrowed time and borrowed dimes. We still have all the potential for greatness, but only if we get back to work on our country.

IT's BACK!

This video got pulled from YouTube, but now it seems to be back!

a celebrity endorsement worth watching...

Tom Hanks:

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Great NYT article

Bob Herbert has written a wonderful article on the Rev. Wright echo chamber which the mainstream media has become of late. Please read the article...

then Buzz it Up on Yahoo (if you have a yahoo email address)!

McCain's spiritual advisor

Rev. Hagee, featured in the below video, might not be a narcissistic opportunist like Rev. Wright...he's just straight-up all-out bat-s#$t CRAY-ZEEEE. Here, he likens the Catholic Church to Hitler.

The Christian Post reports that well-known evangelist and former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee (among others) was surprised that McCain accepted Hagee's support.

The New York Times also has a few choice words on the subject.



Here's a few more gems from Hagee:

Friday, May 2, 2008

McCain: Iraq War was/is for oil(?)



DIGG it here, please.

Barack on TV for kids: "turn it off"

At a stop in Hickory, N.C., after promising to spend $18 billion on education, Sen. Obama said: "This money is not going to make a difference if parents don't parent."

He has folded the line into his stump speech across North Carolina and a TV advertisement in the state, where one-third of the Democratic electorate is African-American, ahead of Tuesday's primary.

The ad, called "Turn It Off," shows Sen. Obama in a classroom promising to improve education. "But the truth is, government can't do it all," he says. "As parents, we need to turn off the TV, read to our kids."

The personal-responsibility line typically brings the loudest applause from African-American audiences. Sen. Obama first delivered it in an unscripted moment before a mostly black audience in Beaumont, Texas, in February.

"I got to talk about us a little bit," he said, before chiding parents for feeding their kids junk food and not accepting responsibility for their children's education. Women stood on their chairs, arms in the air, screaming "Tell the truth!" and "Amen!"

Since then, Sen. Obama has made the pitch before audiences of all stripes.

"If you're a parent, you've got to turn off the TV set. Make sure your child is doing their homework.... Have a curfew so your child's not out all hours of the night," he says, before delivering a line that often gets the crowds roaring: "If your child misbehaves in school, don't curse out the teacher."

I couldn't find the "Turn It Off" ad (there was a copy on YouTube, but the video for it was badly distorted), but here's a very similar ad the Obama campaign ran back in December:

Early voting turnout in Indiana looks favorable for Obama


Yahoo reports:

INDIANAPOLIS - Early voting in Indiana could offer some encouragement to presidential hopeful Barack Obama, who needs a victory in its upcoming primary after a tough few weeks on the campaign trail.

Obama victories in the Indiana and North Carolina primaries on May 6 could help him regain momentum in his nomination fight against Hillary Rodham Clinton. Obama has been on the defensive because of comments by his former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, and his own comments about people in small towns growing bitter.

About 20 percent of the 127,000-plus absentee ballots received as of early Friday were cast in three Indiana counties -- Marion, Monroe and Lake -- that political observers believe Obama is strongly favored to win.

Lake County has a large population of black voters and is in Chicago's shadow. Obama has typically won big among college-age voters, and Monroe County is the home of Indiana University in Bloomington. Obama's campaign sought out IU students with voter registration and early voting drives and a free Dave Matthews concert.

Robert Dion, a professor of American politics at the University of Evansville, said Obama has mounted an innovative campaign that's stressed early voting and his supporters appear more energized than those for Clinton.

"In a close race, modest advantages in organization can yield big results, and if Obama out-organizes the Clinton campaign on these absentee ballots, it would be a great boost to him," Dion said.

Director Spike Lee speaks out on the presidential race

Lee made these comments in addition to his suggestion that Rev. Wright...um..."shut up". A little unpolished, Spike, but I'm with you on the message...

Obama responds to Rev. Wright

Rev. Wright has finally exceeded the boundaries of Sen. Obama's tolerance.

Kudos to Obama for standing up to intolerance...even when it comes from a man who served as something of a father figure to Obama --- a man to whom Obama tried very hard to remain loyal over the past few months.

Tolerance is a wonderful thing. But tolerance of intolerance is something else altogether.



More clips on this topic here.

Excerpt:

"I want to use this press conference to make people absolutely clear that obviously whatever relationship I had with Rev. Wright has changed, he said. "I don't think he showed much concern for me ...and what we are trying to do in this campaign." "My reaction has more to do with what I want this campaign to be about.... in some ways, what Rev. Wright said yesterday directly contradicts everything that I've done during my life. It contradicts how i was raise and the setting in which I was raised; it contradicts my decision to pursue a career of public service. It contradicts the issues that I've worked on politically.

I'm outraged by the comments that were made and saddened by the spectacle that we saw yesterday. I have been a member of Trinity United Church of Christ since 1992 and have known Jeremiah Wright for almost 22 years. The person I saw yesterday was not the person I met 20 years ago. His comments were not only divisive and destructive, but they also give comfort to those that prey on hate and I believe they do not accurately portray the perspective of the black church. They certainly do not accurately portray my values and beliefs. If Reverend Wright thinks that is political posturing on my part, he does not know me very well.

I have already denounced those comments that have come out of these previous sermons. I gave him the benefit of the doubt in my speech in Philadelphia, explaining that he has done enormous good in the church, has built a wonderful conversation. They are a wonderful people and what attracted me has always been the ministries reach beyond church walls. But when he states and then amplifies such ridiculous propositions, that the U.S. government is involved in AIDS, when he suggests that Louis Farrakhan represents one of the greatest voices of the 21st century, when he equates the United States' wartime effort with terrorism, then there are no excuses. They offend me, they rightfully offend all Americans, and they should be denounced. That is what I am doing very clearly and unequivocally here today.

I have spent my entire adult life trying to bridge the gap between different kinds of people. That's in my DNA, trying to promote mutual understanding to insist that we all share common hopes and common dreams as Americans and as human beings. That's who I am, that's what I believe, and that's what this campaign has been about."


UPDATE, 5/2/08

E.J. Dionne, noted commentator, had this to say about "false prophets".

Another former DNC Chair now backs Obama

Paul Kirk, a superdelegate and former head of the DNC, threw his support to Obama today.

Exerpt:

"Senator Obama is the one candidate who has and will continue to expand the electorate beyond the traditional Democratic party base and bring young and new and Independent voters to the Democratic banner in November, an essential ingredient to a Democratic victory," Kirk said in a statement issued by the Obama campaign.

"America never turns back," he continued. "America always marches forward to seize the future. Eight of 10 Americans believe their country is on the wrong track. Senator Obama is the one candidate who, in the best tradition of American history, will not take us back but will lead us to a new future."

true support

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Staying on the high road

from a recent North Carolina speech:

Hoosiers switching to Obama...



Please DIGG this video!

Sen. Clinton's energy policy: "self-serve"



According to the Washington Post (excerpt):





A growing chorus -- including a top congressional Democrat -- labeled Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's proposal for suspending the federal gasoline tax ineffective and shortsighted yesterday, even as she continued to paint Sen. Barack Obama as insensitive to drivers' woes for not endorsing the plan.


Obama spoke about how the proposed 3-month gas tax "holiday" would only result in a $30 savings for most households. A point that I think might be added into the mix is infrastructure. Perhaps we should pull out some video of last year's Minnesota bridge collapse (pictured, above left)? Bridges and roads are in terrible shape nationwide. Suspending the gas tax would have a tiny effect on each taxpayer's wallet, but would have major implications for spending on infrastructure.

We have gargantuan amounts of work to do on the energy front. Band-aid measures like gas tax holidays will not get that work done --- plain and simple. How about a government SUV buy-back program instead? Offer drivers of the largest SUVs a chance to unload those monsters, because as it stands, NOBODY is buying them...particularly not the budget-minded shoppers in the used car market!

Obama is avoiding Clinton and McCain's pandering. (Pictured: Sen. Clinton riding with a "regular Joe" in a pickup truck to demonstrate the importance of car-pooling. She carpools all the time...pooling multiple cars to get her to her destination! She left the motorcade back at the hotel for a few minutes! Wouldn't it have made a better pojnt if she'd carpooled with a mom with her 2.2 kids on the way to daycare and work in her minivan, rather than a blue collar guy in his F-250 hemi?).

Once again, Obama refuses to just "tell us what we want to hear" because it would be popular. May it continue. As he said at a campaign speech this week:

"This isn't an idea designed to get you through the summer. It's an idea designed to get them through an election."




And some reaction from ABC news:

NWI poll: Winner on Tuesday in Indiana?

Please vote!

Top middle of the page.

curiouser and curiouser...

Fun details of the choreography behind the promotion of Sen. Clinton's gas plan...

Michelle and Barack in a joint interview

Time.com: quick vote

Has Rev. Wright hurt Obama's chances?

Please vote!

Meanwhile...keeping our eyes on the November race

Tell two college Supers how to vote!

Plans

Prominent superdelegate shifts support to Obama


Joe Andrew, superdelegate and former Democratic party chair under the Bill Clinton administration, has just switched his allegiance to Obama.

He also wrote an inspired letter to his fellow superdelegates. Excerpt:

My endorsement of Senator Obama will not be welcome news to my friends and family at the Clinton campaign. If the campaign’s surrogates called Governor Bill Richardson, a respected former member of President Clinton’s cabinet, a “Judas” for endorsing Senator Obama, we can all imagine how they will treat somebody like me. They are the best practitioners of the old politics, so they will no doubt call me a traitor, an opportunist and a hypocrite. I will be branded as disloyal, power-hungry, but most importantly, they will use the exact words that Republicans used to attack me when I was defending President Clinton.

When they use the same attacks made on me when I was defending them, they prove the callow hypocrisy of the old politics first perfected by Republicans. I am an expert on this because these were the exact tools that I mastered as a campaign volunteer, a campaign manager, a State Party Chair and the National Chair of our Party. I learned the lessons of the tough, right-wing Republicans all too well. I can speak with authority on how to spar with everyone from Lee Atwater to Karl Rove. I understand that, while wrong and pernicious, shallow victory can be achieved through division by semantics and obfuscation. Like many, I succumbed to the addiction of old politics because they are so easy.
Innuendo is easy. The truth is hard.

Sound bites are easy. Solutions are hard.

Spin is simple and easy. Struggling with facts is complicated and hard.

I have learned the hard way that you can love the candidate and hate the campaign. My stomach churns when I think how my old friends in the Clinton campaign will just pick up the old silly Republican play book and call in the same old artificial attacks and bombardments we have all heard before.