Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The End

As you may have noticed roundabout the end of October my posts tapered off. When Palin was first announced as McCain's running mate my exasperation and frustration needed an outlet, thus the birth of this blog. But as it became more and more clear that the rest of the country generally seemed to actually realize that she was unqualified, I began to feel less like I had to shout to be heard, that there was enough ammunition out there within the media that was reaching people. It was a satisfaction I was unable to experience with Bush, as voters seemed to see the truth but not want to hear it and kept right on believing in him--and we all know the end of that story.

So here we are on the other side. Obama is the president-elect and I'm elated. We made it through, and we didn't have to wait weeks for a result, we didn't have to feel powerless as the Supreme Court made the decision for us. He won with 365 electoral votes to McCain's 173--a clear and decisive victory, and now we can move on into this new phase in politics. Palin was just a blip on the screen in all of this, and what's important now is that we will have a real leader in the White House, with an excellent Vice President at his side. Just as amazing will be watching the first African-American president be sworn in. He has a tough road ahead of him but I believe he's up for the task. I'm proud that I voted for him and helped make his upcoming presidency possible.

Thanks for taking this journey with me and for tolerating my rants and raves. It will be nice to return to real life. My election fever has broken and the future looks bright!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: 'cause I spent more money on my clothes in three months than Joe the Plumber made last year. How mavericky.

Personally I really don't care about her outfits--the issue for me is that she has presented herself as "of the people": as a hockey-coaching, Walmart-shopping, down-home mom, and she should be aware of the impression the amount of money she spent on threads for the campaign would make. In many ways one could say it smacks of the very elitism she claims to abhor so much. And they made fun of Edwards when he got a $400 haircut...

Are you smarter than a third grader?

Watch this video where Keith Olbermann shows his complete exasperation with Sarah Palin's continued lack of knowledge about what the vice president actually does. She really should read the constitution if she's going to talk about it so much.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: 'cause nothin' says I love my country more than you do like pallin' around with domestic fringe radical secessionists.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: Take one Cheney and one Bush, combine into a cute little package, add lies and bake at 360 degrees maverick.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Be afraid

Me for VP: because I'm not one of those who maybe came from a background of, you know, reading Bill Shakespeare but I sure as heck can make much ado about nothin.'

Seriously, "pallin' around with terrorists?" This just smacks to me of the same kind of tactic whereby you say 9/11 and Saddam Hussein enough times in the same sentence in an attempt to get people to equate the two (and unfortunately they will. There are still people who think Obama is Muslim, all evidence aside). Never mind that charges against Ayers were dropped, that he is now a university professor (are all of his students pallin' around with terrorists too?), and that it could be seriously argued that calling him a terrorist is debatable. In fact, read this segment obtained from Wikipedia about the Weathermen:
In his 2001 book about his Weatherman experiences, Bill Ayers stated his objection to describing the WUO (Weather Underground Organization) as "terrorist". Ayers wrote: "Terrorists terrorize, they kill innocent civilians, while we organized and agitated. Terrorists destroy randomly, while our actions bore, we hoped, the precise stamp of a cut diamond. Terrorists intimidate, while we aimed only to educate. No, we're not terrorists." Dan Berger, in his book about the Weatherman, Outlaws in America, quotes Ayers' objection, then adds, The WUO's actions were more than just educational — one could argue that there was a component of 'intimidating' the government and police attached to the actions — but the group purposefully and successfully avoided injuring anyone, not just civilians but armed enforcers of the government. Its war against property by definition means that the WUO was not a terrorist organization — it was, indeed, one deeply opposed to the tactic of terrorism." Berger also describes the organization's activities as "a moral, pedagogical, and militant form of guerrilla theater with a bang."
I think this is a case of demonizing the scary liberal left-wing, or "the other" in a way akin to McCarthy ranting about the commies. It's very convenient to find some method where you can attach the word "terrorist" to something, take it out of context, stick it in a sentence with Obama's name, and generate images of the twin towers connected to the man with the middle name Hussein. We're back to the "be afraid, be very afraid" mantra that was so pervasive during Bush's second run for office: "vote for me or die." The irony is that it seems to me the people who fall most heavily for this sort of pandering to their basest fears are those who are the least likely to actually be attacked. The New Yorkers who witnessed 9/11 and its aftermath (including me and my husband) are almost overwhelmingly in support of Obama. Those of us who live and/or work in big cities are the most vulnerable, and yet these very cities mostly vote democratic. So I take a bit of offense to people acting as if they have something to be afraid of, when they'll be just fine should another strike occur. Joe Six-pack, you gonna fall for this one? Remember WMDs?

And I'd like to bring up the topic of an incurious mind again, which I touched on in this post about Palin; there's a great article by Charles J. Brown called "Palin, Passports, Fake Snobs, and Real People." Here's a quote: "I know I have one quality that Sarah Palin never will: curiosity about what exists beyond my corner of the planet." Read it in full here.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Read this article


There's an absolutely fantastic article by Michelle Goldberg in The Guardian called "Flirting her way to victory." Read it. (Thanks to my sister for the link.)

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Gaffes

Something that perhaps shouldn't surprise me is the fact that the media hasn't been jumping all over some of the blunders Palin made during the debate. A quick Google search reveals most headlines reading "no major gaffes" for either candidate. But just read this word-for-word transcript of some of Palin's remarks:

PALIN: Also, John McCain's maverick position that he's in, that's really prompt up to and indicated by the supporters that he has. Look at Lieberman, and Giuliani, and Romney, and Lingle, and all of us who come from such a diverse background of -- of policy and of partisanship, all coming together at this time, recognizing he is the man that we need to leave -- lead in these next four years, because these are tumultuous times...And we have not got to allow the partisanship that has really been entrenched in Washington, D.C., no matter who's been in charge. When the Republicans were in charge, I didn't see a lot of progress there, either. When the Democrats, either, though, this last go- around for the last two years.
(Emphasis mine.) Oops, I meant partisan, eek--I meant lead! I meant lead! Quite a Freudian slip...The final sentence is royally confusing--is she separating herself from her party? Or did she mean to say Democrats, mistakenly say Republicans, and cover it up by moving on to the Democrats? We'll never know.

Or how about this line? "It is a crisis. It's a toxic mess, really, on Main Street that's affecting Wall Street." Did she mean people need to not get into to debt like her ma and pa taught her, as she implied at the beginning of the debate, or did she mean Wall Street is affecting Main Street? Again, her answers mean something, but what that meaning is remains unclear.

It seems to me she's getting a free pass--what they would have called a gaffe if it had been uttered by Biden seems to be passed off as a "slip of the tongue" in her case. Dirk McQuigley has a good post over on Daily Kos about how the media hammered Ford in 1976 for a similar slip, and it might have cost him the election. Why the media isn't hammering Palin is sadly most likely due to the lowered-expectations factor. Or that we've all gotten so used to Bush's use of "nukyeler" (when in doubt, spell it out) and "misunderestimate" that no one cares anymore. But heck, she sure had practiced saying Ahmadinejād, dontcha think? You betcha.

Palin flunks

There's an excellent letter in today's New York Times from Barbara Weinstein, a history teacher. Here's what she wrote in:
To the Editor:

Re “The Palin Rebound,” by David Brooks (column, Oct. 3):

As someone who teaches history, I often give essay exams, and inevitably there are students who arrive ill prepared to take the exam. These students typically adopt one of two strategies: they either construct an essay that is a torrent of words, hoping that by filling up the space I will not notice that they don’t know anything (Sarah Palin’s performance in the Katie Couric interviews); or they ignore the question I’ve asked, and answer something else they do know a little about (Ms. Palin’s performance in the vice-presidential debate).

Both strategies earn an F, since neither indicates that they can tackle a crucial issue in the course.

Many of us watching the vice-presidential debate wanted to know how well Governor Palin could tackle a crucial issue facing the nation. Mr. Brooks informs us that Republicans were relieved that Sarah Palin adopted what amounts to Strategy No. 2 in the debate, and therefore avoided seeming as clueless as she did in the Couric interviews, but let me assure him (and them) that it was no more helpful in establishing her ability to be an effective vice president than Strategy No. 1.
This further illustrates my point that all Palin proved is that she knows how to debate, and little else.

Palitudes

From The Huffington Post

Darn wrong

What I was most struck by in the debate between Biden and Palin was the stark difference in their approach to following a line of questioning and the lack of critical thinking on Palin's part. Biden was thoughtful and intelligent; he clearly has a deep understanding of the issues behind the questions posed. Palin was all personality, platitudes, and empty talking points (and why people are so drawn to her sarcastic, forced-folksy style I personally have no idea). She blatantly didn't answer many of the questions, most notably flat-out ignoring the issue of McCain and deregulation. This was the same issue that tripped her up in the Couric interview when she infamously answered "I'll try to find ya some [examples] and bring 'em to ya." After so much prepping you'd think she'd have an example by now--here's a transcript from the debate:

BIDEN: If you notice, Gwen, the governor did not answer the question about deregulation, did not answer the question of defending John McCain about not going along with the deregulation, letting Wall Street run wild. He did support deregulation almost across the board. That's why we got into so much trouble.

IFILL: Would you like to have an opportunity to answer that before we move on?

PALIN: Oh, I'm still on the tax thing because I want to correct you on that again. And I want to let you know what I did as a mayor and as a governor. And I may not answer the questions that either the moderator or you want to hear, but I'm going to talk straight to the American people and let them know my track record also.

She flat-out says "I won't answer the questions you want to hear, only the ones I want you to hear." That right there points out a very simple fact about Sarah Palin: she's not a thinker. She has a debate format and will ignore the questions asked of her to focus on her talking points. Repeat words often enough and hopefully people will start to believe them: "maverick" "reform" "taxes" "Main Street." What this means is that people will think she's doing OK simply because she's not acting like a moose caught in headlights, but all the debate proves is she knows how to debate.

Taken out of structure of the debate format she's exposed for who she really is, as we've seen in interviews with follow-up questions (false claims of "gotcha" journalism aside). At this point throw away the issue of her experience: what she lacks is intellectual curiosity. Which is an awful lot like our current president. I'm not saying she's not smart, I'm saying she doesn't care. She doesn't think about the issues the way that politicians like Biden and Obama do. She doesn't turn over various options in her mind, reasoning things out, examining all angles in order to come up with an answer or a decision on a critical issue. She sticks to what she knows: to black and white, right and wrong. And the world doesn't work this way. We don't live in a Hollywood movie where it's "good guys" versus "bad guys." Life is complicated; sometimes you have to sit down with people you don't agree with or understand in order to work out a solution to a crisis, but she (and McCain as well I might add) take what I would call a superficial stance, a stubborn worldview, claims of bipartisanship aside.

This is dangerous. This is what we've had to deal with in the White House over the last 8 years, and we all know how disastrous that's been. I would argue at this point it's about a philosophical outlook, and in this sense Palin is eerily similar to Bush. Heck, he was called a maverick when he ran against Kerry. I'd say maverick is becoming a synonym for two-dimensional. There are those who would argue that it's McCain, not Palin, who will be running the country. But he picked her--he's comfortable with her leading should something happen to him, which is a very real possibility given his age and history of cancer. Regardless, anyone can choke on a chicken bone, and McCain's choice reflects his own outlook.

I was also struck by the emotion Biden showed in talking about losing his wife and child, which I found to be an authentic and heartfelt moment. Palin's reponse after this? "People aren't looking for more of the same. They are looking for change." That she didn't acknowledge his loss shows one of two things: she literally wasn't listening to him or she couldn't be bothered. The debate was coming to a close and she was either so busy searching her cue cards for any talking point she might have missed that she simply seized on the last line he spoke which was "[people aren't] looking for more of the same" or she didn't want to waste any time acknowledging his loss, once again so she could check off the last of her hot-button issues. I would honestly hope it was because she wasn't listening, because if she heard him then she is one cold Alaskan. That people haven't picked up on this more is surprising, given her claims to understand middle America's pain and all of her supposed "approachability." All of this again points to a lack of critical thinking--she was playing off a certain rehearsed structure: vaguely listen to your opponent, latch on to something that can bring you back to one of your broad topics, hammer said topic home with repetition. Another example that the only thing we learned is that she knows how to debate, not how to think.

The point I want to hammer home is to make clear that Biden showed he's ready to be president should the unthinkable happen; he demonstrated his ability to think deeply and thoughtfully about the issues facing the country. All I heard from Palin was a bunch of talking points peppered with "you betchas" and "darn right." Ready to be president? Darn wrong.

Fundamentally a liar

Did anyone else notice this?

Two days ago McCain went on "Morning Joe" and told Joe Scarborough that "the fundamentals of this package are good, they're strong" regarding the new bailout plan. Later he went on to say,"now, we have to go about fixing the fundamental problems in our economy, and that’s going to be long and hard and tough."

It seems to me that if he was going to claim in September that by "fundamentals" he meant the American worker (insulting us by claiming this was obviously what he meant), then by his logic it's the American worker who is apparently propping up the economic package. And the American worker needs to be fixed. (I love that Palin used the old fundamentals=workers line in the debate as well.)

McCain's statement to Scarborough exposes once and for all what he truly meant when he said "the fundamentals of the economy are strong." Fundamentals=fundamentals, no matter which way he spins it, and no amount of semantic game-playing can alter that fact.

This is just another glaring example of McCain's propensity for lying in the face of challenges. I'd like to know how he's going to explain this one. Hey, I'm a fundamental--are you?

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: because it's sexist for reporters to ask me questions I don't know the answers to.

Let me speak for you

It's apparently "gotcha" journalism to ask Palin to explain herself...I would argue it's quite patronizing and (dare I say?) sexist for McCain to speak for Palin, and to--for all intents and purposes--put words in her mouth. 

Friday, September 26, 2008

Sarah Palin channels Nicholas Fehn


I have foreign policy experience because I can see Russian war planes from my house!

Apparently Palin isn't aware that the Cold War is over...I don't know who's funnier, Fred Armisen as Nicholas Fehn on Saturday Night Live or Palin trying to explain her Russian credentials to Katie Couric. But I do know who's scarier. 

There's an excellent recent article by Sam Harris in Newsweek on why the possibility of a Palin presidency is so frightening, and why it's preposterous that when it comes to politicians "elite" has become a bad word. 

Friday, September 19, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: I know you are but what am I?

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: because by "fundamentals" we mean "workers" and by "haters" I mean you, Charlie.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Darn McShame

Ruth Marcus at the Washington Post makes a compelling argument for why McCain has gone down the tubes with the campaign he's running. Read the article "True Whoppers" here.

Status update

Me for VP: because now doesn't it seem quaint that you thought Quayle was a dweeb when he couldn't spell "potato?" #truestory.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: because if we went to band camp together, and you love cows, I'll make you secretary of agriculture! 

Seriously, if you want to read more about Palin's appointment of childhood pal Franci Havemeister to the position of Director of Agriculture, check out this article by Jazz Shaw, assistant editor over at The Moderate Voice (see, I don't only read liberal blogs. I just read the articles written by the more liberalish writers on the non-politically affiliated sites. Yes, I made the word "liberalish" up). To be fair, it wasn't Havemeister who was in band with Palin--that was just her legislative director, John Bitney.

Mind control

Here's my secret fear regarding The Secret--did you watch it, along with everyone else? It's the pop-psychology DVD that was so widely touted on Oprah as one of those life-changers that you see once and then believe "if I just alter my thoughts I can have whatever I want!" And then a week later you're back to zoning out on too much mind-numbing TV and being as annoyed as ever that chip bags are so difficult to open, what with the advances in engineering and particle colliders and all--and everything's the same, except now you feel guilty.

But what if there's a kernel of truth to the whole premise behind The Secret? And here I am, and here we all are, going on and on about Sarah Sarah Sarah. About how she put a tanning bed in the governor's mansion, and charged the state for nights she spent in her own house, how sick we are of "thanks, but no thanks" and "in what respect, Charlie?" All that. And the more you think about something the more energy you give it. So maybe Palin is feeding off of our thoughts, be they positive or negative, and is gaining power like some creepy sci-fi monster sucking out our life force...

Anne Lamott writing for Salon says put the focus back on Obama, give him the energy, not the other side. And the hopeful part of me thinks, yes! Talk about his policies, what he can do for this country, how it's time for a clean slate and a fresh start. Except right now all I want to do is mock people, and expose their ethical snafus, and be righteously indignant. I can't seem to help it. Frankly, a post on Obama and his message of hope might be kind of *gulp* boring. And he does a great job of it himself on his website, I must say. And yes, this morning I surprised myself by getting choked up like a dummy while I was looking at said site because it just felt good and I want there to be someone who represents something that I can believe in in the white house. So while I can't say I'll be giving up the mocking tone of Me for VP anytime soon, maybe I will balance it out occasionally with what I'll call "happy posts." When I'm not on the computer I promise to meditate on visions of Barack giving his poignant, eloquent acceptance speech in November. 

Read me

The Ugly New McCain: article by former self-professed in-the-tank Johnny-backer journalist Richard Cohen. Look! It's the liberal-media and their smear-tacti--Oh, wait...

Bridge to Nowhere: the sequel


Maybe she said "thanks, but no thanks"--eventually. Sort of. Not really? on "that Bridge to Nowhere" (supportive T-shirt notwithstanding; I mean, it was just the zip code, Charlie--ignore those words above (and that man behind the curtain)). But did you know about the other bridge? The one that could kill off beluga whales? If McPalin wins, Alaskan animals have said they will consider moving to Canada. Yeah, it's fun to study seal DNA and crab mating habits, but not so much to actually protect their habitats.

Status update

Me for VP: because who needs to know about policy issues. And stuff. 

Status update

Me for VP: credentials schmedentials.

Win the lottery, get your GOP tax cut!

Originally from the Washington Post.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: because everyone knows there are just too many polar bears.

Status update

Me for VP: because the second amendment is cool and the first amendment is lame.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: because nothing says "I love my country" like regurgitated talking points.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: I can put lipstick on a pork barrel and convince you it's a piggy bank!

Friday, September 12, 2008

Status update

Me for VP: I drink wine, and wine comes from France!