QUOTE(moif @ Mar 15 2008, 07:16 AM)

As I usually do, I nulled my vote since I'm not American. I would like to address the topic from inception though since I feel the need to speak my mind.
Policy and issues should determine where you place your vote. Not personality, ethnicity or gender.
In a perfect world policy and issues should determine how you vote. But we don't live in a perfect world and even as a non-American, you know that
Moif.
I don't think it makes someone a racist or a sexist to factor race or gender (or age in the case of Senator McCain) in their decision. I think it makes us human and human beings make important decisions based upon irrational criteria. Did it really make a difference that some people voted for George Bush over John Kerry because they thought he'd be a better guy to have a drink with--despite the fact that Bush doesn't drink?
I trust you are familiar with how heavily television impacts the decisions people make in choosing a president? During the televised Nixon/Kennedy debates, people who listened on the radio overwhelmingly felt Nixon clobbered Kennedy. Nixon had a better command of the facts and appeared the more knowledgable of the two. But based on how he appeared on televison he was declared the "loser" of the debate and it may have contributed to his defeat in the general election.
The key turning point of the campaign were the four Kennedy-Nixon debates; they were the first presidential debates held on television. Nixon insisted on campaigning until just a few hours before the first debate started; he had not completely recovered from his hospital stay and thus looked haggard, sickly, underweight, and tired. He also refused makeup for the first debate, and as a result his beard stubble showed prominently on the era's black-and-white TV screens. Kennedy, by contrast, rested before the first debate and appeared tanned, confident, and relaxed during the debate. An estimated 80 million viewers watched the first debate. After it had ended polls showed Kennedy moving from a slight deficit into a slight lead over Nixon linkA silly reason to favor one man over another? Certainly, but elections aren't conducted in lecture halls and laboratories where X-factors can be controlled or eliminated from the decision-making process. Out here in the real world, people make their choices on arbitrary and at times ridiculous criteria.
Race, gender and age will continue to influence the decisions voters make as long as human beings make distinctions based upon race, gender and age.
QUOTE(scubatim @ Mar 16 2008, 03:08 PM)

BoF, let's not pick on anyone due to a simple typo, holdingtheline was making a valid point related to this thread. I applaud you for supporting Obama, and if I were a liberal Democrat, I would probably support him as well. I believe he is the best of the two candidates for your party. He is a definite breath of fresh air of rallying people together. He definitely has an air about him that does give hope. From my personal perspective, I don't think a good orator is enough to convince me to vote for someone. I don't agree with his policies, I also don't see how he has proven leadership abilities. Whenever anyone claims that they are going to bring America together, or that they are going to bring both parties together, I immediately think to myself "Liar". I would love to see anyone bring the likes of Rep. Steve King and Rep. Nancy Pelosi together on anything.
But
scubatim, does that mean there aren't ANY issues that even Rep. King and Rep. Pelosi can agree on? Politics is art of both the possible and compromise. I get it that King is a conservative Republican and Pelosi is a liberal Democrat. We've established that. But there has to be some common ground and shared interests they both share. Because if Congress is so broken and fractured by partisan division and rancor, then we might as well take a wrecking ball to the place and turn it into a Starbucks or something more useful.
Barack Obama can't make the Steve Kings and Nancy Pelosis of the world sing "We Are the World." However, there have always been contention, friction and different ideas how to address the same problem. But we need somebody willing to say, "Look, at the end of the day, we've all been sent here to do a job. Can't we sit down and try to figure out how we can do it without killing each other in the process?"
Maybe a silver tongue and rosy rhetoric
isn't enough to bridge the gap in Washington. But is anyone even trying to get beyond gridlock and mutually assured destruction of the democratic process? Any manager worth the title knows you can't get people with competing interests working together until they start talking
TO each other instead of
AT each other.
QUOTE(scubatim)
My point, as well as what it seems holdingtheline was trying to point out is that the race shouldn't be about well, race. Setting some timetable for when we should have someone of a minority race does not make sense. Electing the best person for the job regardless of race should be what we focus on.
I don't disagree with you or
holdingtheline. Perhaps if I had given the topic more thought, I would have eliminated the poll questions entirely as it seems they may be short-circuiting the actual questions I posed. Besides
Aquilla, I am not seeing many actual choices of potential minority candidates for the presidency.
However, there is something to said about raising the idea of a timetable for when it may become likely a racial minority may assume the presidency. Not because "it's time" for a Black or a Latino or Asian president. It simply seems a reasonable question, if not now, when? If not this particular racial minority, then who?
Choosing "The Right Man" (or woman) as POTUS should be the overriding criteria instead of having "the White man" or "the Black man" or whatever. Let's face the facts though. The presidency is not a meritocracy. The best person for the job doesn't always get it.
Had McCain beaten Bush for the Republican nomination in 2000, would he have waged the war in Iraq as Bush has? Would have Watergate had occurred if Humphrey defeated Nixon in '68? If Goldwater beats Johnson in 1964, is the Vietnam War ended with a clear and decisive victory or would it have been even bloodier and protracted?
Nobody can say with certainty. But it's clear in retrospect that in cases like Warren Harding or Herbert Hoover or Jimmy Carter that when the
wrong man gets the top job the result is somewhere between rank ineptness to hopelessly corrupt.
If there were a fail-safe in the machine to keep total boobs out of the Oval Office, I think even Steve King and Nancy Pelosi would agree to using it.
QUOTE(moif @ Mar 16 2008, 05:49 PM)

Seriously BoF. Given American history, how can race not be an issue? What is it you (and the other Obama supporters) really expect? That your going to be able to just shoot down any one who brings up Obama's ethnicity whilst you yourselves capitalize on it to your hearts content?
Because thats the impression one gets, especially when one reads threads like this one.
I'm sorry Moif, but I honestly do not understand how, as the originator of the thread, that I am "shooting" down anyone over Obama's ethnicity or how I capitalizing upon it.
Would you please explain to me why you believe this is the case?
QUOTE(moif @ Mar 16 2008, 08:51 PM)

It seems to me that the Obama supporters are willing to point the finger at McCain's people (and even Clintons) for perceived racism BoF, but your not willing to accept that you Obama's supporters are also using race as a political tool. There is a glaring hypocrisy in the Obama camp and its parading proudly in this thread.
I certainly hope I'm not expected as a supporter of Barack Obama to act as a campaign spokesperson. That is a responsibility beyond my capacity to fulfill.
I'm not willing to accept the accusation Obama supporters are using race as a political tool, without some concrete examples, Moif. Anyone can make an accusation, but unless there is evidence presented to support the accusation, how can I respond to the charge?
Respectfully, I suggest you have not come forth with the proof of your claim.
QUOTE(Aquilla @ Mar 16 2008, 09:02 PM)

First we have a supporter of the idiot Ron Paul telling the GOP how to re-invent itself, then another attack on the Swifties for telling the truth about John Kerry, followed by a "Bradley effect" excuse for why your candidate might lose.
Aquilla, you were angered by my derogatory characterization of Condoleeza Rice and took offense in a separate thread to Dontreadonme's statement that Senator McCain's plan to continue prosecuting the Iraq war.
DTOM speaks quite well for himself and already has, but I'll admit to going over-the-top in slamming Rice. O.K.? That's the closest I can get to admitting I went too far.
However, you've consistently ripped into Ron Paul and you
never pass up a chance to dog him out.
Why do you expect others to be civil towards politicians you like, while you don't even bother to conceal your contempt for those you dislike?
QUOTE(Aquilla)
Well, John McCain isn't a rock star, but he's a damn fine politician who knows how to win elections. He faced enormous odds in winning the GOP nomination. He took on the Republican establishment and won. Shocked the hell out of me, but he did it. And, he did it by being John McCain. He did it by holding true to his principles and keeping the faith.
Maybe he's not a rock star in '08, but in 2000, I was at St. John's Arena at Ohio State University, with a crowd of almost 10,000 people waiting for a Arizona Senator to show up and speak. It's not hard to recall as I was one of the few Black folks in attendance. McCain was an hour late, but the audience was fired up when he stepped into the spotlight in the middle of the basketball court.
McCain isn't putting butts in the cheap seats like he used to back in the day, but he's still got a few "rock star" moves left in him.
He has never faced anything but token opposition for his Arizona Senate seat and the last time he was on the national stage, George Bush and Karl Rove dirtied him up in the 2000 Republican primary in South Carolina and snatched the nomination away from him. The Republican establishment lined up against him eight years ago and totally dissed the war hero for a frat boy who sat out Vietnam.
This time around, McCain wasn't even the presumptive front-runner. Rudy Giuliani was. He, not McCain, was the one with the money, the endorsements and the blessing of the Republican establishment. McCain was the aging "maverick" making a last run for glory, like Brett Favre saying last season's Green Bay Packers team could go all the way to the Super Bowl. And like Favre, McCain is a media darling. That hasn't changed. If the mainstream media is fond of Barack Obama, John McCain is their "Viva Viagra" fix; the media treats McCain like a rock star even if the Republican establishment and the self-appointed sages like Limbaugh, Coulter and Hannity don't.
Every one of the major Republican candidates had a major flaw with the party base. Huckabee was conservative enough on some social issues, but had no foreign policy or economic chops. Romney had the money and the look, but he was a one-term Massachussettes politician who governed like a progressive (pro-gay rights, pro-choice, instituted a statewide health plan) but ran for president as a born-again conservative. Also he pandered shamelessly to the right-wing and thinks he can pander his way onto the ticket as McCain's running mate. McCain clearly has no enthusiasm or like for Romney, but he may have to accept him to throw a bone to the Republican Right. Giuliani ran a crazy "win Florida, but lose everywhere else" strategy that was doomed and as for Fred Thompson...
QUOTE(Aquilla)
Yeah, he's an old white guy, but he, unlike either of his two potential opponents has a long record of working across the aisle to get things done.
Why do you keep mentioning the fact that McCain has some miles on his odometer and happens to be a White man? Do you think nobody's going to notice when he walks out on to debate Clinton or Obama that they aren't?
Moif accuses Obama supporters of exploiting his race. You seem to be sending a not so-subtle message about McCain as well,
Aquilla.
I half expect to see a campaign commercial this fall with a nice picture of McCain smiling and a voiceover saying,
"John McCain for President. He's the White Guy."QUOTE(Aquilla)
Eventually, the Democrats will end their little soap opera (or should that be Oprah) and make a decision on who they want to nominate for President. Once that happens, the real fun will begin. The political landscape will change from one of form to one of substance. The differences between the candidates, whether it be Clinton or Obama V. McCain will be stark. McCain is well-defined on his stances, neither of the Democrats really are. I have no doubt John McCain will run an honorable yet hard-hitting campaign, he always has. He will present the issues of the day, where he stands on them and challenge his opponent to do likewise. No more rock star rallies, time to talk issues. We'll see if the Democrat opponent is up to that. If they define themselves, they'll lose on the issues. If they don't, we'll define them like we did John Kerry in the last election.
Well, that depends on what the issues are, doesn't it?
If the war in Iraq is still buried deep in the back pages of the morning newspapers, that's good news for McCain. He has plenty of time to bone up on the crappy economy he admits he doesn't know much about. Yes, McCain is "well-defined" on his stances. When you've been entrenched in Washington for over 20 years you should be. The steam may run out of his "100 years in Iraq" misstatement.
Yeah, McCain could sail right along into The White House. If people are looking for a bona fide war hero instead of the trendy "flavor of the month" he's a stone cold lock. Cindy can start picking out the new linen for the Lincoln Bedroom.
But then again....Iraq could get bloody again with civilians and U.S. troops could start coming home in ever-increasing numbers of coffins. McCain wants to take credit for the success of the surge. Great. If the surge starts to fail he'll get the lion's share of the blame.
There's nothing much McCain can do about the housing market and the economy in the Senate. He may be able to "reach across the aisle" but Harry Reid ain't going to do him any favors for the next several months. If his idea of a economic stimulus package is to make Bush's tax cuts permanent, that's not going to excite anyone but the upper 1 percent.
And unlike Obama, while Hillary will have the bogeyman of Bill Clinton used against her (not by McCain of course, he's far too nice and dignified to take cheap shots at his challengers---though I suspect the 527's and the rest of the GOP will happily do so), McCain is joined at the hip with the overwhelmingly unpopular George W. Bush. It won't take any wild exaggeration of McCain's record to suggest a vote for McCain is a vote for a third term of Bush. McCain will gladly accept the money Bush raises from his network of "rangers" and other cash cows (especially if Hillary is the Democratic nominee), but along with the money comes Bush's fingerprints, and that will make McCain look a lot less of a maverick and a lot more like Bush's older clone.
Bush was poison to Republican congressional hopes in 2006. The potency of his venom and the nation's distaste for it has only grown since then and it should prove fatal to McCain's bid in 2008.
John McCain is just as susceptible to being "defined" by the Dems as the Repubs and the Swifites "defined" Kerry. And the best part of it is, the Dems won't even have to lie about McCain. The truth alone should be enough to get the job done.