Friday, September 26, 2008

WTF??

After all this blustery "Country First," "Bi-partisan," "I'll be politically unpopular" rhetoric the McCain campiagn's been spouting, you'd think they'd stick to the story and put politics aside in their most recent announcement that he's going to debate:

The difference between Barack Obama and John McCain was apparent during the White House meeting yesterday, where Barack Obama’s priority was political posturing in his opening monologue defending the package as it stands. John McCain listened to all sides so he could help focus the debate on finding a bipartisan resolution that is in the interest of taxpayers and homeowners. The Democratic interests stood together in opposition to an agreement that would accommodate additional taxpayer protections.

Gee. Not partisan AT ALL. Glad to see McCain not only stood in the way of negotiations, but he's using this as yet another opportunity to blame Obama, blame Democrats (in reality, not the ones blocking the plan), and frame himself as the hero. It's really hard not be incredibly angry about this, but I'm trying.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The Economy

I'm not happy that the US economy is currently being flushed down the toilet, and I don't even know how Wall St works, but I will say this: when I was 18 and living in a dorm, I said that this would happen. I read a lot at the time about Clinton's deregulation, and at the rate everything's been ballooning since I came of voting age, it just intuitively seemed that kind of growth was unsustainable. You can't expand forever, unless you're the universe. All those shoddily built McMansions just seemed too apt a metaphor.

So not to say I told you so, but I told you so.

Rethinking my interests

I, like many people I know, am not happy about McCain’s nomination of Sarah Palin for VP. I’m scared of how fascinated I am by her—because if I, an ardent Obama supporter from the beginning who leans to the left of the Democratic party, pick up US weekly when she’s on the cover and follow her every move on CNN, then the GOP base and the centrist independents out there are sure-as-hell interested in her. It’s scary to suddenly see the possibility of a McCain presidency creeping up, in light of all that’s gone on in this country in the last eight years, but it’s even scarier to imagine her, all deer (or Moose) in the headlights as the massive Mac truck of the economy crashes into Washington. I’m scared of her, and most of all, I’m scared of her supporters: the overly religious, fear-motivated status-quo-loving zealots who elected and re-elected George Bush and who want someone “just like them” at a time when our country is worse off than I’ve seen it in my lifetime.

In light of all the news and gossip magazine coverage—in addition to all the time I now unwittingly spend pondering the woman—I think we Obamaphiles should get back to what we had going until the GOP convention: making a celebrity of our candidate. I’m coming to understand the fear that Republicans must have felt when faced with the onslaught that was Obama—the non-stop news coverage, ravenous fans, gorgeous smile—how could they beat it? I was worried at the time that celebritizing him with those Paris Hilton ads would somehow work, but now I think we should welcome the celebrity status. Because under scrutiny, he stood up. He made memorable speeches to deflect the criticism. And most of all, we were voting for someone, not against another, and I’ve been told more than a few times that that’s how you win elections. I recently spent some time on Obama’s site, and it reminded me that his policies, his persona and his confidence are worthy of all the gushing adoration. I’m moved by him, and I want that to be my focus for the rest of the campaign, not the g—damn Governor of Alaska.