Posts Tagged ‘Obama’

Clueless- the debate

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

UPDATE: Obama is now running against Stephanopolis. The outrage on the left suggests that this will be a repeat of the George McGovern campaign. The major difference is that McGovern actually had a resume. The common theme is the candidate’s desire to surrender an American position and return to isolationism.

There is another kind of amusing aspect to the outrage. Where was all this high mindedness when Bush’s Texas ANG record was the subject ?

The lefty blogosphere went nuts over the debate questions last night. Shales is hopeless. He wants Obama to have adoring pseudo-questions like “How do you plan to solve all the world’s problems?”

No sooner was that said than Gibson brought up, yet again, the controversial ravings of the pastor at a church attended by Obama. “Charlie, I’ve discussed this,” he said, and indeed he has, ad infinitum. If he tried to avoid repeating himself when clarifying his position, the networks would accuse him of changing his story, or changing his tune, or some other baloney. This is precisely what has happened with widely reported comments that Obama made about working-class people “clinging” to religion and guns during these times of cynicism about their federal government.

Actually, he has said very little and each time he did mention the topic, he changed his answer. When you are in love, however, these things seem trivial.

Joe Klein, at Time was slightly better but not much.

But I was as dismayed with the second half of the debate–the “substantive” part–as I was with the first. The ABC moderators clearly didn’t spend much time thinking about creative substantive gambits. They asked banal, lapidary questions, rather than trying to break new ground. They asked the same old Iraq troop withdrawal question, rather than using the skillful interrogation Clinton and Obama deployed during the Petraeus hearings last week as a way to dig deeper toward the heart of the issue. (Question to Clinton: “Last week, General Petraeus said–in response to your question–that the U.S. military was going to support Prime Minister Maliki’s government in its assault against dissident Shi’ites, do you think that’s a wise move? And if not, why do you think Petraeus is moving in that direction?”)…and Charlie Gibson really needs a lesson in capital gains taxation–yes, the revenues go up (temporarily) when the rates come down, but only because traders hold onto the stocks in anticipation of the rate reduction so that they can gain higher profits. And there is an equity question here: should wealth be taxed at a lower rate than work?

Joe needs a lesson in capitalism but he would probably sleep through it.

Andrew Sullivan was, of course, hysterical as only he can be. On a TV program they both appeared on, Christopher Hitchens accused Sullivan of “wanting to have Obama’s child.”

This one was just humorous.

Will Bunch, a Philadelphia Daily News writer, posted an open letter to Gibson and Stephanopoulos on his blog. He wrote that he was so angry that “it’s hard to even type accurately because my hands are shaking.” He said the ABC newsmen spent too much time on trivial matters that didn’t concern most voters.

The best summary was, of course, from NRO.

Oh well. Who expects Democrats to know anything about economics anymore ?

Or national defense.

What’s the matter with…

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

A number of commentators have attributed Obamas’s gaffe about small town white working class voters to a well known book from 2004 called What’s the Matter With Kansas ? that postulates a theory that middle class voters act against their own best interests by voting Republican. David Frum has an excellent column on the problems with that theory. It looks more and more that this book has led Obama and many other Democrats astray. It has also confirmed a bunch of rather obnoxious prejudices about small town working class whites. Part of their problem is that they don’t know why anyone else is upset at these characterizations. They think this stuff is really true.

Arianna doesn’t get it

Monday, April 14th, 2008

UPDATE: Here is some more background on how this story came about.

geffenyacht.jpg

And here is where Arianna was when she was trying to decide what to do with the story. 454 foot yachts are not the best place to consider the thoughts of small town working class voters.

Arianna Huffington shows her elitist blind spot in this hysterical piece about Obama’s “bitterness” gaffe. In it she uses the usual angry slurs at Republicans as she tries to defend Obama.

On the foreign policy front, we’ve been fed a steady diet of her RNC-patented attacks: No Democrat can be trusted with national security — except her.

Her, of course, being Hillary.

Then she really gets into her explanatory mode.

It has been an article of faith in the Democratic Party over the last twenty years that when small town, working class whites vote for Republicans they’re voting against their economic self-interest. And why do they do that? Because every four years the Republican Party comes into those small towns and, to distract folks from the worsening economic situation, trots out a bunch of divisive, hot button social issues: “Let’s not talk about why you don’t have a job, can’t afford health care, or can’t send your kids to college; let’s talk about gay marriage, school prayer, illegal immigration, and flag burning amendments.

So, Obama was right about all those bitter small town white working class dopes.

I see.    That will be a big help. For more explanation, see above (the picture of the yacht of Obama supporter David Geffen).

Here’s a better explanation of his problem than any I’ve seen so far.

Mickey Kaus has a pretty good take on it too.

You saw it here first

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

Today on Meet the Press, James Carville suggested General Zinni as a potential Obama VP candidate. You saw it here first.

The return of appeasement

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Candidate Obama says he is in favor of withdrawal from Iraq in spite of the consequences although he recently said he would want to keep a “strike force” ready, presumably to reinvade if necessary. The theoretical basis for this sort of thing seems to be coming from the leftist blogosphere and an entire generation of isolationists and appeasers. A common theme is hatred of “neocons.”
International Herald Tribune columnist Roger Cohen, for instance, notes that “neocon has morphed into an all-purpose insult for anyone who still believes that American power is inextricable from global stability and still thinks the muscular anti-totalitarian U.S. interventionism that brought down Slobodan Milosevic has a place, and still argues, like Christopher Hitchens, that ousting Saddam Hussein put the United States ‘on the right side of history.’

The theory seems to be proclaimed in a book by Matt Yglesias. The similarity to the 1930s is striking.

The long tradition of liberal anti-totalitarianism thus appears to have come to an end, at least in mainstream political rhetoric. What about human rights groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch? Largely staffed by leftists, these days they escape the neoconservative charge because they generally presume moral equivalence between democracies and anti-American thuggocracies. Amnesty, for instance, has referred to Guantánamo as a “gulag” and Human Rights Watch has issued more press releases about the lack of gay rights in the United States than any other country on earth.

Iran, of course “has no gays” so it is not a problem there. Only here.

We’ll see how it plays out over the next six months. If the American people are ready to retreat from the world, Obama will be the next president.

How to make a recession into a depression

Monday, April 7th, 2008

UPDATE: Nancy Pelosi has taken another Smoot Hawley step by blocking a vote on the Columbia trade agreement. The FARC Caucus in the Democratic party is still strong.

The White House has a comment about Pelosi and her rule changing.

MORE EVIDENCE: The Columbia FTA is important to Caterpillar which has 50,000 union jobs, but you’d never know it.

There is an unending debate about just why the Great Depression occurred. We have had financial panics ever since the colonies declared independence. Severe ones occurred in 1893 and 1907. There was a severe recession after World War I.

One school of thought believes that the Glass-Steagall Act, that set up the Federal Reserve Bank, was responsible because the Fed panicked and contracted the money supply just when the need for capital was greatest. Amity Schlaes, in her book The Forgotten Man, believes it was the ill-advised actions of Hoover and Roosevelt that tipped us over the edge. Everyone, however, agrees that the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, which Hoover signed in 1930, was a big part of the problem.

One thousand twenty-eight economists in the United States, organized by Paul Douglas, Irving Fisher, James TFG Wood, Frank Graham, Ernest Patterson, Henry Seager, Frank Taussig, and Clair Wilcox, and representing the “Who’s Who” of the profession, signed a petition asking President Hoover to veto the legislation (New York Times, 5 May 1930)

Now, we have the other political party demanding a similar economic measure that will have similar effects on world trade. Fortunately, John McCain is speaking out against protectionism but a President Obama, in spite of his advisers, may do a Hoover and worsen the coming recession precipitously.

Santayana famously said, “Those who do not remember history, are condemned to repeat it.”

Obama’s Iraq policy

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Another Obama foreign policy advisor has now advocated keeping troops there for years. Which is better; a president who doesn’t know how to conduct a military policy, or one who lies about it ?

Obama vs Clinton

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Michael Barone, the dean of political analysts, has a thorough analysis of the Democratic primary, which sounds astute to me. Everyone should read it.

Hillary, Bosnia and Iraq

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Christopher Hitchens has some strong feelings about Hillary’s laughable Tuzla story. He doesn’t think it is funny, however, and says why. What is forgotten in the Democrat’s rush to abandon Iraq is how we get into these things in the first place. Saddam invaded Kuwait, imitating the Japanese who united the USA in 1941 by attacking Pearl Harbor. Had they nibbled away at Malaya and the Dutch East Indies, which is what they really wanted, they might very well have gotten away with it as we focused on Europe. What is different today is the influence of television.

We went into Somalia because CNN was showing thousands of starving Somalis and got out when Clinton’s attempt at nation-building caused casualties.  Why did we go into the Balkans ? CNN was showing the massacre of Bosnian civilians by Serbs. We had no strategic interest in Somalia or Bosnia. In fact, the first Bush administration made the decision to stay out of the war, a decision criticized by Bill Clinton during the 1992 campaign. After he was elected, he dipped a toe in the water a couple of times and finally decided to bomb Serbia from high altitude to avoid casualties. The Serbs eventually got out but the example set by Clinton probably encouraged Saddam in his ambitions toward Kuwait.

What would happen if Obama were to be elected and a precipitous withdrawal from Iraq resulted ?

Zbigniew Brzezinski thinks he knows:

Contrary to Republican claims that our departure will mean calamity, a sensibly conducted disengagement will actually make Iraq more stable over the long term. The impasse in Shiite-Sunni relations is in large part the sour byproduct of the destructive U.S. occupation, which breeds Iraqi dependency even as it shatters Iraqi society. In this context, so highly reminiscent of the British colonial era, the longer we stay in Iraq, the less incentive various contending groups will have to compromise and the more reason simply to sit back. A serious dialogue with the Iraqi leaders about the forthcoming U.S. disengagement would shake them out of their stupor.

So, a pain-free withdrawal happens. Fine. What if he is wrong and genocide results ?

Kevin Drum is not concerned:

there’s no point in denying that U.S. withdrawal might lead to increased bloodshed in the short term. It most likely will. But it’s highly unlikely to lead to a catastrophic regional meltdown of the kind that the chaos hawks peddle on cable TV. What’s more, Brzezinski is also right that the risk of increased violence is inescapable at this point and, in fact, probably grows the longer we stay in Iraq. The events in Basra over the past week ought to make that clear.

What neither of them address is what happens when the TV networks show massive genocide of Sunnis followed by a Sunni intervention by the Saudis to avoid an Iranian takeover ?

They don’t say.

Obama in a clumsy interview says he would have a “strike force” ready to do whatever…. That sounds like “Blackhawk Down” all over again. If I were an Army ranger who had been yanked out of Iraq just as we were on the verge of winning, what do you think my attitude would be about being ordered back ?

Especially by a wimp like Obama ?

Will Zinni endorse Obama ?

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

This op-ed in USA Today sounds like the vague, feel-good foreign policy pronouncements of Obama. Zinni has been an opponent of Bush and his policy in Iraq since the invasion. Here he was on 60 Minutes in 2004 denouncing Bush’s policy. Since McPeak’s meltdown, Obama needs a new retired general advisor and Zinni seems the best bet. Of course, Zinni was the Centcom commander prior to 9/11 so that isn’t the greatest endorsement I could think of, but what do I know ?