Category Archives: Obama 08

Obama is Hope, Billary is Hate

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It was telling about the hate, devisiveness, and disgusting nature of Billary how after Obama’s win in S.C., it was Bill and not Hillary who first spoke to the press. And what did Bill say? He said that even Jesse Jackson had won a primary in South Carolina. That’s about as devicive and bottom-feeding as you can get.

Are you disgusted? Well, apparently the majority of senior Democrats have had enough of Bill (who now thinks he’s running for president). Ted Kennedy is about to announce his endorsement of Obama. What does it mean for Hillary’s experience argument when Ted Kennedy (who has been a U.S. senator for 40 years) says that Obama is more qualified than Hillary? It means that it’s time for change. Ironically, every single candidate in the race, both Republican and Democrat, all represent a break from the past . . . all of them except for Billary.

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Hillary’s Race Card Confirmed: Part III

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Dick Morris was one of President Clinton’s most trusted advisors and able spinsters. He has just written an op-ed piece confirming what I have previously said about how the Clintons were using Obama’s race and latent racial slights to Obama’s detriment. It is all just too disgusting, especially considering that all of the Clintons’ repulsive techniques appear to be bearing fruit. Is there any hope for this country if playing the game is what wins an election? Continue reading

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Reduced Bill

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Just after having written my last post on why I find Bill’s over-the-top campaigning inappropriate, William sends me this excellent piece from the New Republic: Continue reading

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Appropriate (ex) Presidential Behavior

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Americans have a special relationship with the presidency and their presidents. Americans and American politicians on both sides of the table can disagree with their president on policy and other issues but will always support and honor the figure of the “president” out of respect for the institution of the presidency.

As a result, when a U.S. president’s mandate reaches it finale, the president is converted into an ex-president with all that the new mandate entails. Ex-presidents are honored as elder statesmen, as having served their country, and are bestowed with the enduring title of “President”. Former presidents Bush and Clinton, for example, are still officially called President Clinton and President Bush (respectively). And former presidents continue, for the remainder of their lives, to be representatives of their country.

Nevertheless, in the present elections, we’re seeing some of these traditional notions change. Of course, there is the obvious (and possibly hypothetical question) as to what role a former president may play in the new administration if his spouse becomes president. But there is a much more immediate question, that I believe, should be raised. What is the appropriate behavior of a former president in a presidential campaign? What happens when Bill Clinton acts more like James Carville, the Ragin’ Cajun, than like a dignified statesman? Or said another way, is it ethical for Bill Clinton, with all of the weight of his honorary role of ex-president, to campaign as fervently as he is doing now? Continue reading

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Bush Clinton Bush Clinton . . .

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Does anybody realize what alternating dynasties and revolving door presidencies say about our country? I think that our history, our country, and the world deserve so much better.

Unfortunately because we’re in the primaries, a certain degree of decorum (and party loyalty) impedes Obama from raising this fundamental question about the state of the American democracy when the role call of four consecutive presidents could potentially be “Bush Clinton Bush Clinton”.

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The Vast Clinton-wing Conspiracy

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I am trying to change course, but I just can’t give it a break. I promise I will do better, but it’s just that I was reading these lines from an article in The Economist,

In a remarkable exercise in doublethink she claimed on one of the Sunday talk shows that “you have a woman running to break the highest and hardest glass ceiling. I don’t think either of us wants to inject race or gender in this campaign. We’re running as individuals”.

The other reason why the debate will continue is that the Clintons’ main aim at the moment is to drive up Mr Obama’s “negatives”. They desperately need to reverse polls that show that, despite his failure in New Hampshire, Mr Obama is picking up support in a large swathe of demographic groups.

This will involve attacking his political record and picking apart his personal biography (it is striking that two Clinton supporters have already brought up Mr Obama’s admitted cocaine use). None of this is likely to go down well with Americans who regard Mr Obama as one of the most talented politicians of his generation, and who hope that he will become America’s first black president.

The first part of the quote simply shows the Clintons’ love for double-talk and pretty-sounding contradictions. But the second part reminds me of how the Clintons were always so enraged whenever their characters or pasts were brought into question. And whenever that happened, they always blamed the inquiries on some “vast right-wing conspiracy” to shame and undermine them.

So if the Clintons’ goal is to now do to Obama what the Republicans tried to do to them, then I suppose, by logical deduction, there is now a “vast Clinton-wing conspiracy” against Obama. If Shakespeare were alive today.

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The Case Against Hillary

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I will try to give this whole topic a nice, long breather for a while, but please indulge this addtional post on why I am in favor of Obama and against what I see as the tiresome legacy of Hillary and the Clintons, as if they were a once fashionable but now long-outdated 50’s pop group.

The farce of the Hillary New Hampshire comeback is something that I still can’t quite understand. How someone who has been in the lead for months, has 35 years of both real and derivative experience, has former president Bill Clinton campaigning for her, and has the most sophisticated campaign team in the world can only pull off a two point win in pale white New Hampshire is astonishing. It is much more of a shocking loss than a comeback victory.

There are even some conspiracy theorists out there who believe that the final New Hampshire results were related to computer error or to voter fraud. I won’t go there, but I will say that Hillary and Bill are besides themselves that a neophyte like Obama would even think of posing an obstacle Hillary’s presidency. It is even claimed that Bill is “furious, outraged, angry and utterly dismissive of Obama” for challenging Hillary’s entitlement.

So to give it a little rest (I know ReWrite is growing bored with the elections), here is Christopher Hitchens’Case Against Hillary” (thanks, William): Continue reading

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Hillary’s Race Card Part II

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In his op-ed “A Hand the Clinton’s Aren’t Showing” today in the Washington Post, Eugene Robinson mirrored my concern for Hillary’s use of race as play to get whitie to stop supporting Obama.

Is it possible that accusing Obama and his campaign of playing the race card might create doubt in the minds of the moderate, independent white voters who now seem so enamored of the young, black senator? Might that be the idea?

Yes, that’s a cynical view. But history is history.

You can’t put anything by these old skoolers.

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Hillary and the Race Card

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The Clintons always know exactly what they are doing, at least when they are losing. Hillary claims she is the best qualified candidate (and its entitled to the presidency) because she has 35 years of experience, including 8 years of derivative or vicarious presidential experience (it makes you wonder whether the Constitution should prohibit more than 2 terms of derivative presidential mandates). You’d wonder why if someone who’s ready for day-one at the White House has to wait for 35 years to get to New Hampsire to find her voice.

In any event, plenty has been said the last couple of days about Hillary’s comments regarding Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President Johnson and then about Bill’s belittling of Obama’s candidacy (and all those who suport him) as a mere “fairy tale”. Is someone stirring the race issue? The interesting thing, to date, is that Obama is running as a “change candidate” not as a black candidate and not on a minority-centric platform. Continue reading

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It’s Not Easy Being Hillary

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This morning I watched the images of Hillary in New Hampsire, emotional and teary-eyed, explaining that it wasn’t easy being Hillary Clinton and that she couldn’t do it if she didn’t “passionately believe it was the right thing to do”. The reason why she is running for president is because, in her own words, “I see so many opportunities for this country, I just don’t want to see us fall backwards . . . You know, this is very personal for me. It’s not just political. It’s not just public. I see what’s happening, and we have to reverse it.”

Yes, Hillary is smarter than the rest of us all, and she sees what is happening in the country, and only Hillary can reverse it. Continue reading

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