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Archive for September, 2008

Amazing.

Consecutive sentences.

McCain: “Senator Obama and his allies in Congress infused unnecessary partisanship into the process. Now is not the time to fix the blame; it’s time to fix the problem.”

I mean even forget the larger point that he was the one who swooped into Washington, Batman-like, making a big friggin’ deal about going there to get shit done when in fact all he did was sit at a table and be noncommittal and not deliver whatever magic pixie dust he thought would make it all better. Forget he went from “NO DEBATE UNTIL THERE’S A DEAL” to “Okay, we can debate because there’s a framework for cooperation” to “you guys better all get back to work because you didn’t fix it yet” in under a week.

I mean just look at the consecutive sentences. “I blame Obama. This is not the time to blame people.” Amazing.

Jack Cafferty may have an opinion on Palin

I have this empathy for embarrassment. I’m one of those people who has a really tough time watching things like Crank Yankers or America’s Funniest Home Videos or a sitcom where it’s the episode’s big punchline moment where someone’s caught in something really embarrassing. I get all squirmy and can barely look at the TV.

It’s because of this reaction that I’ve had a hard time watching clips of Couric’s interview with Palin, but I finally suffered through this one in its entirety because it carried the promise of Cafferty being a grumpy old man at the end:

Talking Points Memo | Cafferty: Palin’s a Friggin’ Laughingstock

(Personal to M.G.: Why do I think Palin should be laughed off the public stage? This.)

This scares me because I know exactly what she’s doing. I do that. Hit the popular phrases and the right-sounding words. I have a general confidence that if I just start running my mouth, I’ll either shortly have enough of an idea what I’m talking about, or I’ll be able to present it well enough to fool non-savvy people into thinking I know what I’m talking about. But I don’t risk it unless I have a general understanding of the topic and when I’m under less scrutiny.

But when I do it, I also have the confidence that, if I don’t pull it off, I have the safety net of apologizing, saying “oh, sorry, I got confused there,” and promise to get a better answer later after some research. I can work a crowd well enough that I can keep goodwill through that if I don’t try it too often, and people’s bullshit meters are usually thrown off by an admission that you don’t have all the answers.

But of course Palin doesn’t have that luxury. She can’t possibly say “I don’t know”—well, she can maybe a few times, but the number of times she can get away with that is very small—so she has no choice but to barrel through. And that’s what she’s doing here. I’ve heard a lot of people say “this sounds like a bad interview” because that’s exactly what it is. It’s a job interview with a candidate who has no right to be there, but she’s trying to bullshit through the interview and hoping for the best. If you were hiring a Safeway regional manager and she answered a question like this, you’d kick her out the door.

You know JOBS. Jobs and 1 in 5 and immigration. And oh yeah taxes! Taxes so hard-working Americans can 9/11 and jobs overseas the economy strong Israel and Iran porkbarrel spending bridge to nowhere. Russia.

edit: this guy does that riff better.

And then back to the unplesantness

Again, protecting Palin from reporters. For some reason. Because she’s totally ready, and like, stuff.

Talking Points Memo | Palin bans reporters from meetings with leaders
Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who has not held a press conference in nearly four weeks of campaigning, on Tuesday banned reporters from her first meetings with world leaders, allowing access only to photographers and a television crew.

CNN, which was providing the television coverage for news organizations, decided to pull its TV crew, effectively denying Palin the high visibility she had sought.

Presumably until they show the proper deference. Man, it blows my mind, the banhammer that would come down on the Obama camp if any of them said that Obama wouldn’t talk to reporters “until they give him the proper deference.”

On a lighter note

There’s something gratifying about playing Rock Band 2 in a Best Buy, and having an onlooking 12-year-old say “wow, you’re good.”

By his/her works shall you know him/her

I dig the Republicans making this election about personality rather than issues, because it’s what they do. It’s what they understand. Nothing sinister about it, it’s just an argument that sort of person finds more persuasive. So Barack + proximity to William Aires = “hates America” for them fairly easily.

I just don’t get it. You look at his life, and what has he done that makes these people think he hates America or that he’s some sorta secret sleeper cell terrorist or something? It’s an indicator of how conservatives dominate the discussion that this isn’t asked much. What is it about Obama that says he hates America? you’d ask. And in some sense I guess some prominent pundits have already answered it…I seem to remember Sean Hannity saying he is afraid that, in his heart, Obama doesn’t love America, or similar.

Meanwhile you get this:

Palin touts stance on ‘Bridge to Nowhere,’ doesn’t note flip-flop: Politics | adn.com
Meanwhile, Weinstein noted, the state is continuing to build a road on Gravina Island to an empty beach where the bridge would have gone — because federal money for the access road, unlike the bridge money, would have otherwise been returned to the federal government.

So 1) not only did she support the Bridge to Nowhere, but 2) she is currently in support of a road to nowhere. Why? Because if Alaska didn’t use the money, they’d have to give it back. So not only is the “thanks but no thanks” a lie, but it covers up a greater falsehood: she’ll keep Federal money and burn it on something useless.

But somehow, in many people’s minds, the perky scrappy hockey mom image wins.

Oh well that’s just great

ABC News: Sarah Palin Defends Experience, Takes Hard Line Approach on National Security

On the anniversary of the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history, Gov. Sarah Palin took a hard-line approach on national security and said that war with Russia may be necessary if that nation invades another country.

I’ve just realized: this is why the neocons don’t want to do anything about global warming. Because it’d mean that Russian winters aren’t as bad as they used to be.

Intrade markets on the election

Via Talking Points Memo, I learned about intrade.com, “The Prediction Market”. It’s set up like a stock trading site, but really what it is, is online gambling taking bets on current events. Kind of a slick re-casting of the concept, really. There’s a wide variety of topics, from legal to entertainment to whatever. I’d kind of like to be active in stock trading, but I have a hard time getting involved because I know there’s a lot of stuff I don’t know, so I couldn’t adequately predict what will happen with them. But things like this, I feel like I could be closer to making informed guesses, so it has some appeal to me.

I haven’t made the plunge, but I’m starting to itch to bet on who’s going to win the presidential election. The problem I have here, though, is which one to bet on. I really think Obama’s going to win, so I’d like to cash in on that…but on the other hand I am wondering if I should hedge my bets on McCain. If he wins, my life’s going to get worse and my money’s going to be worth less, so maybe I should throw a bunch of money to bet on him, so at least if he wins I’ll have some extra cash to offset what I’ll essentially be losing in his presidency.

what

how — how do you — how can you even — and of course the press — the press will let them get away — the press will — I’m comin’ Lizbeth

Marc Ambinder (September 05, 2008) – No Interviews Till She’s Ready
A senior McCain campaign official advises that, despite the gaggle of requests and pressure from the media, Gov. Sarah Palin won’t submit to a formal interview anytime soon. She may take some questions from local news entities in Alaska, but until she’s ready — and until she’s comfortable — which might not be for a long while — the media will have to wait. The campaign believes it can effectively deal with the media’s complaints, and their on-the-record response to all this will be: “Sarah Palin needs to spend time with the voters.”

Not out of the question are appearances on lighter, fluffier television shows. But — not for a while.