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Wednesday, August 13, 2008 12:00 AM

John McCain, Internet dunce

Why the Arizona senator, who can barely Google, is not the chief that an increasingly technological world requires.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008 09:33 AM

@maureenodonnell

Agreed - the level of discourse on many internet forums is quite often disappointing. But you can't judge the potential of the internet by a few dorks (myself included) who have nothing better to do with their time than posting comments on blogs. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

(You say that few have commented on the obviously more important and substantive question of Georgia/Russia. Well, as of 12:07 EST I saw that there were 228 comments to Glen Greenwald's interview with Professor King. Moreover, the Georgia/Russia conflict is not something that lends itself to a pithy one line or 1 paragraph comment. The interview was several paragraphs long. Maybe I am slow but reading it took a long time and I know that formulating a coherent, articulate letter would take even longer.)

Getting back to the internet. The Georgia/Russia conflict is a perfect example of the good that can come from the internet. Before the internet we got most of our news from US media outlets. Now thousands of media outlets are available over the internet. Yes, you have to sift through a lot of drech but you can ferret out the information for yourself.

Technology and the internet are not going away. It is v. important that we harness these for good. Unlike, McCain's website, Obama's website devotes a lot of space to the internet and technology. Obama recognizes that the internet offers the potential to improve government and bring it back to the people. Some examples: Google for government: Obama and Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) passed a law to create a Google-like search engine to allow regular people to track federal grants, conracts, earmarks, and loans online; before signing any non-emergency bill, it will be posted for public review and comment on the White House website for 5 days; require Cabinet officials to hold periodic national broadband "townhall" meetings to discuss issues before their agencies. Are all these things feasible? Will they make a difference? Who knows? But the point is that Obama knows that the Internet could be a tool for good governement.

The technology of radio broadcast FDR's "Fireside Chats" to thousands of Americans. These Chats were one of the ways he got us through a major crisis.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 09:37 AM

Zenhead

Unfortunate moniker again, for very unzenlike letter. Zen practioners are not 'attached' to following politics.

At any rate, living through an event, both long distance, and up close, does not preclude you from learning. I'm in my mid- 50s and have had to work with computers for years. Many older people have either learned the internet, or are learning. In fact, it keeps you 'younger' to learn new things.

With McCain, it is just a small pattern that exposes his larger pattern, and the overall pattern of the Republican Party. Underthinking everything. It does no good to 'experience' an event, but not really understand it.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 09:39 AM

Finally,

an article that addresses a concern of mine that has persisted throughout the campaign-- McCain's utter lack of intellectual curiosity and unwillingness to embrace the future. He is definitely NOT the leader we need in the Internet age.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 09:43 AM

rubbishing the opposition yet again

Here we go again playing the same old record they did with Hilary Cllinton columists rubbishing Obamas opposition. The absolutely best prime minister England ever had was 1. A woman Margaret Thatcher (2. Not charismatic 3. No a good speaker. 4. I should think not very computer literate but she was a wonderful prime minister because she was a woman of integrity, a courageous woman who made some really tough decisions and a couraageous woman but we didn,t discoveer these until her premiership. Perhaps McCain is the same.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 10:01 AM

Whose elite, zenhead?

George W. Bush: scion of old money New England WASPs, graduate of Phillips Academy, a private boarding school in Andover, MA; graduate of Yale University; graduate of Harvard Business School

John McCain: son and grandson of Admirals (the aristocracy of the military); graduate of Episcopal H.S., private boarding school in Alexandria, VA graduate of Naval Academy at Annapolis

You label Barack Obama "elitist" and many have applied the same label to Hillary Clinton, but if you look at their backgrounds, there are more similarities than differences:

Hillary Clinton: born in Illinois to parents who have roots in Scrantion, PA; grew up in middle class suburb of Illinois; attended public school; graduated from Wellesley; graduated from Yale Law School

Barack Obama: born in Honolulu, to a mother from Kansas; attended private (non-boarding) school, on scholarship; studied for 2 years at Occidental College; transferred to and graduated from Columbia University; graduated from Harvard Law School

It boggles the mind that anyone can say Obama is more elite than Clinton, their family backgrounds and education are strikingly similar. No, the elitists in this picture are George W. Bush and John McCain who come from privileged backgrounds that the vast majority of Americans wouldn't even dream of.

I am an Obama supporter but I admire Hillary Clinton. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama started out from humble roots and achieved amazing things - shouldn't we honor and respect both of them for this?

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 10:06 AM

when Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister

virtually no one was computer literate.

Not everyone would agree that Margaret Thatcher was the best PM Britain had. And, I find it difficult to believe that women who supported Hillary Clinton would have supported Margaret Thatcher. Clinton: liberal Thatcher: Conservative

Wednesday, August 13, 2008 10:18 AM

@wmoser

Think for yourself. I am so sick and tired of people like you parroting, without question, the line you have been spoonfed: "Obama is empty, no substance, socialist, etc., etc." How are you any different from the people in Soviet Russia who accepted, without question, the party line they were fed? You are not. Think for yourself. If you can't do that you deserve to be disenfranchised.

I did not just one day have an "epiphany" and decide to support Obama. I have been following his career and learning about him and his stands on issues since he came on the natinal scene. Mine is a well-informed decision. I have also educated myself on John McCain. I have made a well-informed decision not to support him. (And, there was a time when I was open to voting for him.)

An ill-informed, uneducated electorate leads down the road from democracy to tyranny. This is patriotism? I think not.

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