Posts Tagged ‘Hillary’

The end game cometh

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

UPDATE: The Clinton supporters smell blood in the Bill Ayers story and there may be more there than we know.

Eleanor Clift has seen the first shivers in the Obama edifice in her piece in Newsweek. Could this be the first day of the end of Ozymandias ? Hillary’s wrath will be terrible to behold if she wins. I still don’t think she can beat McCain without the black vote and I don’t see how she gets it. Still, she looks like a hell of a lot more competent president than Obama would be. President Hillary with a wounded and bleeding Democratic Party is better than the Obama juggernaught to socialism.

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.

A preview of Hillary as President

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

The Los Angeles Times, of all places, gives us a preview of what President Hillary would be like. I like these quotes:

“As a boss, she inspired equal amounts of devotion and fear. She built an insular White House fiefdom known as Hillaryland, surrounding herself with a tightknit band of loyalists who skillfully advanced her causes, but who were also criticized for isolating her from political realities.”

Sounds like the Democrats’ complaints about Bush. And then, of course, there is the secrecy issue.

“She appeared sensitive to scrutiny from the start. Just three days after her husband gave her authority over the healthcare plan, she was already considering limits on public access to the plan’s records. In a Jan. 28, 1993, memo, deputy counsel Vincent Foster advised the first lady and Ira Magaziner, who devised the complex healthcare process structure, that task-force records might be withheld from release under the Freedom of Information Act if the files remained “in the control of the president.”

Sounds like the Democrats’ complaints about the Cheney energy task force.

“Her response is not known because many of her healthcare documents have not been released. The Clinton library in Little Rock has released scores of healthcare memos sent to the first lady. But none of her own memos or notes is available, and though some are now scheduled for release early next year, others may remain locked away until after the 2008 election.”

Then, of course, there is the collegial relationship with Congress that Bush doesn’t have.

“She courted skeptical Senate Finance Chairman Daniel Patrick Moynihan, but undercut the stroking with threats. At a weekend retreat after the State of the Union address in 1993, she dismissed worries about meeting a 100-day deadline set by her husband for a healthcare bill. Asked what would happen if they were late, she said: “You don’t understand. We will demonize those who are blocking this legislation and it will pass.”

Except, somehow, it didn’t work. Well, we do know that the presidency “is no place for “on-the-job training.”

Hmmmm.