Letters posted here are associated with the following article:

365
Letters
Tuesday, July 1, 2008 12:00 AM

The Obama campaign's past two weeks

It matters what Obama says and what tactics he uses in his attempt to win the election.

The letters thread is now closed.

View:
Tuesday, July 1, 2008 07:22 PM

It's sad

The reason I liked Obama was because he was not letting the radical right/MSM gang define the issues and just reacting weakly to their very distorted priorities and imaginary crises. But he's dropped that bold attitude completely now. It's not just us; everyone respects conviction and despises wimpy capitulation. How has he managed to forget that so quickly?

And the Clark thing is just pathetic. My first reaction was: OK, Mr McCain, what is your command experience? That's what should have happened next: more information! But it's my reality-based attitude getting in the way again.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 07:40 PM

Oh! Mona.

Ok, Mom, I stand corrected.

I still don't like to see taxpayer dollars transfered to religious organizations.

Can I have my spanking now?

Please?

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 07:49 PM

@Jebbie

Ok, Mom, I stand corrected.

I still don't like to see taxpayer dollars transfered to religious organizations.

Can I have my spanking now?

Please?

No, you're standing. Bend over the chair and the paddle will fly.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 07:58 PM

A one term President?

On the way home from work, I was thinking that Sen. Obama will be a one term President.

Next election, he won't catch opponents by surprise. The Republicans will diligently search for and run a much more dynamic personality, with just enough nuance, to EASILY win back the votes of conservative minded people he's had to sweat and break his back for.

He's going to have improve a lot of people's lives economically for this not to happen. (Money talks, bullshit walks). As P. Mooney would say, "He doesn't have the complexion for protection" - so he's going to have to put Money into MANY pockets. Electing the 1st Black President won't change that.

Ralph Nader had a point the other day. Problem is he only shows up at election time to make his points and makes them very badly. "Talkin' white" was an awful term to use. But I understand what he was trying to say. If Nader was looking to get a rise out of Obama to get some discourse and publicity he should have said:

"If Obama is diplaying a good deal of cognitive dissonance (a term used by a radio show host today to describe Obama's latest political moves), it's a direct outgrowth of his life as described in his 1st book. He's always had to live in two worlds as a child of mixed race. It's the way his mind works."

In Obama's current world, the votes of the conservatives are the ones that count and are valued. He can present both sides of an argument (like most lawyers), but he truly believes both sides. As a politician, he feels he has to go with the side that has had the best press the last 40 years.

This is why he hasn't written a book called "Dreams of My Mother". She was the "liberal" many thought they were voting for. And she may be the moral compass (NOT his father) that would point toward a way that some feel has gone missing this election cycle.

I'm at the point now where I'm voting for him because maybe he won't bomb as many people as McCain would. That's saving some lives at least. I hope. Maybe. And, just maybe, Obama's change will be that he won't get in the way when people try to bring about change.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 08:46 PM

Conflicted

Glenn, you again perform a vital role in calling politicians to task and your reasoning is impeccable. I have had to take a break from your blog though, to think through these past two weeks, especially since I made that trip to Unity in the middle of all this "pivot to the General" weirdness.

Who among us isn't disappointed in the FISA capitulation? All I can think is that he had to make this deal due to the backroom politics that is Congress. I also read Matt Taibbi's Great Derangement last week, so my mood is sour on the DC front. [Sidebar: the book as a whole doesn't cohere, but the individual chapters on Hagee's church and the daily life of a Congressional rep is, imho, brill.]

I can't/ don't want to necessarily defend each of Obama's actions, and I'm not certain I'm informed enough to discern his grand election scheme or posit his "true" motives. I do believe he wants to advance a progressive agenda and can't find the quote from Feb or so where he said he thought the best way to do this was to "mainstream it," in other words not making it seem Far-Left, which, like it or not, seems to have a bad rap in our media's coverage and within the corridors of power in this country.

All I can say is that at Unity, one of his remarks was that "sometimes when you spend too much time in Washington it can get you discouraged." He looked like he felt and meant what he said. Politics is compromise. I'm glad you and others are trying to hold his feet to the fire, but I also think the stakes are pretty high right now to elect Obama over McCain. As disappointed as I am in some of these stances, and despite how much I hate how his actions could be seen as conforming into these soundbite, false-dichotomies of "true" vs. "center," "weak and liberal" vs. "strong and conservative," I'm trying to keep my powder dry for McCain and biased media.

I will always fight for the Constitution, and expected Obama to do the same given his educational background and rhetoric in the primaries, but I can't pretend to understand the trade-offs he's making at this level. I wish he would explain more about it but more importantly, I hope that President Obama will act to mitigate the FISA travesties and the many others that have come to pass under Bush. Here's hoping.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 08:48 PM

Obama also is a sponsor of government finger print registry bill

What I don't agree with on all these updates is, we can't be telling Obama that we'll support him no matter what he says and does. If he believes that he'll get the base vote even though he's been thumbing his nose at all of us who have supported him to "run to the center" then he'll keep on doing that. That's not the way to get a progressive candidate in the white house.

There are other parties out there where we can vote and choose someone other than McCain and Obama. That's the point we should be making to Obama as he runs very fast forward to the right (not center because he already was center). Remember he also supports a national finger print registry bill for real estate transactions! That's incredible!

I cannot vote for anyone who willingly gives up my constitutional rights such as FISA and the finger print bills do. That's the message that Obama needs to hear very loudly and clearly. Be careful in your run to the right because you'll loose your base. The idea that we keep on telling him, oh no matter he's better than the other one so I'll just vote while I hold my nose. There are other choices on the ballot.

An constituent of Obama from Illinois who is sick of Obama not listening to us.

Most Active Letters Threads

688

Obama's exceedingly familiar justifications for escalation

The "new" approach to Afghanistan touted by White House officials seems quite old
682

The commendably missing element from Obama's speech

There was no pretense that human rights is our goal, or the likely outcome, in escalating the war
440

The face of rotted Washington

Evan Bayh demands more debt-financed war - fought by others - while boasting that he's a stern "deficit hawk."
323

Yes, it's Obama's war now

An uninspiring speech sells a dubious policy, but progressives who feel betrayed have only themselves to blame
209

Bigotry wins in Switzerland

By voting to ban the construction of minarets, Switzerland apes the most extreme intolerance in the Muslim world

View all »

Letters Help

Currently in Salon