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By MC Pickard
Monday, Nov 3 2008, 12:04 PM
I've discussed within this blog
before just what are my three main priorities in this election. The
Iraq War, terrorism, and the Supreme Court. It is because of these
priorities, I have already voted absentee for Senator Barack Obama
three weeks ago.
I do have other concerns of course, but
they either take a lower position within my hierarchy of concerns, or
in the case of Church and State Separation and civil rights, are
combined as an element with the Supreme Court.
However, before I
launch into a discussion of how these three main priorities weighed in
my decision to vote for Obama, I want to take a moment and explain what
is not a priority for me in this election.
It is my hope that if
you one of the 14% who do not yet know to vote for but
intend to vote tomorrow, that this analysis of what lead
me to vote for Obama will help you. I apologize for the length of this article - you can skip to the end for the endorsement, or digest it into smaller parts if you need to. __________________________
The Non-Priorities This
list is not meant to be complete, nor is it meant to be objective -
although I tried to be. These are largely my opinions on these issues
and from what I know.
Taxes.
For liberals and a great majority of Americans, taxes do not
represent a burden. We realize that the monies collected by our
government largely goes for services that are essential to a civil,
fair society. We just ask that you tax us fairly, and spend wisely for
programs and infrastructure that have real demonstrable benefit. Just
make sure to cover our collective expenses and do not burden
generations to come.
But let's get real. If either McCain and
Obama would be committing political suicide if either of their tax
plans damaged the middle class. The debate that remains is just the
haggling over how much should the most richest of us should pay –
corporations included. That is social policy, not socialism.
The fear mongering over taxes by the republicans has simply failed to convince me to move this issue into one of my priorities.
Economy, Markets, and Regulation.
In relation to a strong economy we need the proper amount of
regulation for the circumstances we temporaneously find ourselves in.
At times we need less regulation and at times we need more. (Like the
tax rate.) Before Reagan, the richest were taxed too much and the
economy slowed because of it. Reagan was wise in adjusting the tax rate
and for deregulation Ma Bell – airlines, however, has not been as
successful. Clinton further tweaked the Regan and Bush's legacy which
lead to more economic goodness. Bush went totally off the rails and
McCain would continue along that course.
Obama would return to Clinton's tweaks and this will in return keep
investment at home and start to cover some of the enormous national
debt under Bush's mismanagement and tax cuts that McCain would
recklessly continue unabated.
There are smart liberal and conservative economists who continue to be benefited by a government which allows
for a wide range of experimentation. I think this is a good
thing which will lead to the best and most effective set of
principles and methodology to guide our economy over time.
Universal Health Care. While I
think it's a fantastic idea that should be implemented at least cover
to children until the age 18, I am not necessarily hung up over UHC at
this time.
McCain and Obama agree on the necessity of UHC, just
their implementation differs. Both Obama and McCain offer a hybrid
approach between government and business, but by different means.
Frankly,
I don't think either candidate will deliver UHC – although, I think
Obama is more inclined because of the interests he represents.
Character.
At first, I did not care that Obama is quick-tempered and was
promiscuous in college, bombed innocent civilians, endorsed by a
Minister who blamed the holocaust on the Jews, and was decidedly
un-Christian for the divorce of his first wife to marry another.
Oh wait, that's John McCain.
McCain has largely run his campaign
on Obama's character as a merit for his leadership over Obama. This
approach and the quality and the kind of attacks by McCain leads me
to question the quality and direction of McCain's leadership, not whether or not that McCain can lead. Experience. The argument by McCain that he should be elected because he is more experienced simply fails to impress me. A man 30 years older than McCain would have more experience than him. Experience means nothing, unless you let that experience guide your decisions in the future. Obama is indeed amenable and able to revise and change course when things are not working as facts and situations dictate. McCain holds on to those past judgments as absolute truths in respect to the Iraq War, regulation of the economy, and terrorism.
Immigration.
I do think we need to tweak our immigration system and provide a better
path to citizenship for many people who indeed want to become
Americans. For the most part, I really like most features of the guest
worker policy proposed by President Bush, but disliked the harsh
criminalization of illegal immigrants by our very own Congressmen Jim Sensensbrenner.
MILFS. I might be in the minority, but damn - I think Cindy McCain is quite the cougar. Meow!
Second Amendment.
We have an unequivocal right to bear arms. This June, in a 5 - 4 ruling
by the Supreme Court, overturned the handgun ban in DC. I think they
ruled correctly.
The Constitution does not enumerate
what kind of arms we can or can not own, therefore regulation of those
arms is necessary. Honestly, would you be comfortable if your neighbor
was building pipe bombs for self-protection, or owned an RPG? Since the
Constitution is so vague, conflicts over the 2nd Amendment are
inevitable.
There is much demonization of the left by
the right over this issue. No, liberals are not coming for your guns - you
got that? You do have the right to protect yourself in your home and
businesses. I unequivocally support the right to bear arms like many liberals I know do.
However, if you think that your hand gun or shot gun is really going to
protect you from the government if it should turn against you – as some
arguments insist, you live in an entirely different world than many of
us do. __________________________
On the Candidates I
know in my lifetime, I will never see the election of President who
will repeal these awful drug laws, get government out of the choices
that I or a woman make over the sovereignty our bodies, and stop
playing up their piety to God and legislating laws based upon that
Biblical worldview.
Way back last year – prior to this year's
primaries, my buddy and I were discussing the possible candidates
leading up to his election. I described to him what I liked about both
possible Republican and Democratic candidates.
Senator Ron Paul.
I agreed with him on Iraq and liked his iconoclasm, but found
his views toward markets and church and state too extreme for my taste.
One note: I
really hate using the word extreme
to describe a person. While I don't agree with a majority of Paul's
views as I find his libertarianism to right leaning, I don't think
he is someone you should fear - like "extreme liberal" that
right-wingers will generally use as a derogation to scare voters.
Senator John McCain.
I do respect him for his work on finance reform with Senator Russ
Feingold and his years of public service from the Navy to the Senate.
I thought he was direct and honest. Loved it when confronted the
religious right as agents of intolerance, however he lost that
credibility when he appeared at Farwell's Liberty University during the
primary season and pandered his way as their candidate. Because of that
pandering, I am wary of who he will appoint to the Supreme Court.
His
elevation of Alaskan governor Sarah Palin as his vice president, who
is decidedly unqualified to hold office much less lecture on the Supreme
Court, only confirms McCain's desire to appeal to the religious right of this country and a real lack of quality decision making. Added to that, his views on how he would lead us
out of Iraq, disqualified him eternally in my mind.
Senator Chuck Hagel.
While he's as every bit a social conservative like John McCain, the
retiring Senator from Nebraska said a lot of really smart things about
Iraq and the need to withdraw and the necessity of resolving the
conflict to bring our troops back home.
If the Democrats did not
offer up as strong candidate as Senator Obama and it was Hagel as
nominee instead of McCain, there would have been a strong possibility I would
be voting Hagel for president. And if Biden was his vice president as
the idea was floated around, we would have had a very strong, qualified
ticket to resolve the crisis in Iraq and get back to defeating a
resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan.
And while Chuck is very wrong on stem cell research, the criminalization of abortion, he is correct that we must move forward on Iraq and draw down.
Yes, I am very nearly a single issue voter in this election.
Senator Joe Biden.
I gave serious thought for voting for Biden in the primaries for
the reasons I addressed with Senator Hagel above. He dropped out
though and I voted for Barack over Clinton because of the consistency
of Obama's views and policy over Iraq and Afghanistan.
Ironically, in my support of Biden his views and legislation on drug
policy I disagree with. The no-default rule entirely avoids Constitutional
protections on property, liberty, and due process. However, it's standing law
now and it needs to be repealed post-haste.
Senator Hilary Clinton.
While I thought Bill Clinton was an above average president, I was
never sold on Hilary. Her vote to give Bush the authority to invade
Iraq is still too much of a political liability for Democrats. We saw this dynamic play out with John Kerry in 2004.
It should be
noted, that Chuck Hagel also voted to give Bush authority to use force
in Iraq. For the Democrats who voted for the Iraq War this is still a political
liability, however for Republicans who change their position about Iraq it is
not. Incoherent and as unfortunately that this is – this is still the political
reality of the United States today.
Senator Russ Feingold.
I wish he would have run. He was correct about Iraq, the war on
terrorism, and the Patriot Act. Feingold has shown balanced and reasoned
judgment through his years in the Senate. And he's also correct - it's
about time for a cheesehead president!
Senator Barack Obama.
Before the primaries I really didn't know much about the new Senator from
Illinois, other than the great speech he gave at the 2004 Democratic
Convention, his relative youth, and that he was a guest lecturer on the
Supreme Court at the University of Illinois for about a decade. Of
course, during the primary process I learned much more about him as he
had momentum decidedly in his favor over Clinton.
Honestly, I
underestimated Obama's electability as I didn't think America was
ready for an African-American president and only thought that a woman
could be elected office of president if she came from the right wing of
American politics.
Obama defeated Clinton in the primaries which is no small undertaking. _________________________
On the Priorities
These are my main 3 main reasons why Obama should be president and why McCain should be returned to the Senate.
In my opinion, these reasons illustrate definitive demarcations between each candidate.
The Iraq War. I've
disagreed with this war all along. Attacking Iraq for the lies we were
sold, confirmed by the absence of WMD's, and the continued moving of
the goal posts as reasons to continue to occupy this country, I simply find unconscionable.
Initially, Barack Obama supported a 16-month exit, but has moved more
to
the center with a 16-month reduction in forces. Unlike McCain, who in
May said
that timetables would be catastrophic, even if Iraq wants it. Obama's
views have changed to meet the facts on the ground. Iraq wants us out,
and is already negotiating with us to withdraw by 2011.
McCain
never convinced me he knew what to do with Iraq. Victory, he said,
would determine when we pulled out Iraq, and that victory would assure
victory in Iraq and would determine victory over Al Queda and the
Taliban in Afghanistan. This position by
McCain is incoherent and circular.
Timetables keep stakeholders responsible and cognizant of the urgencies
involved. McCain seemingly does not want to hold Iraq responsible for
its own security and self-determination. Obama will.
Only Obama
recognizes the
realities on the ground, while McCain lives in a world of his own spin
hitching his wagon to Bush's policy of never-ending occupation of Iraq
because he can not-qualify what "victory" means.
Despite
Obama's fudging, the "surge" has worked well enough, even if not all
benchmarks have been met. The Iraqis are standing up for themselves.
Let's take what we can get. We must now seize this opportunity to
re-align our forces.
Only Obama has taken the pragmatic
approach with Iraq and shows the agility to adjust his views and his leadership
which will bring our people home and
redeploy our forces in the fight against Al Queda and the Taliban.
Meanwhile, McCain will endlessly spin on "victory" because the word focus group's well.
Terrorism and Afghanistan.
I agree with the necessity of invading
Afghanistan and wiping out the Taliban, Al Queda, and killing that
jackass, Osama bin Laden. This is why the war in Iraq has been a
terrible waste of resources and lives in this regard, even though I am
glad there is one less bad guy in the world.
Recently,
commanders called for 20,000 more troops in Afghanistan. Our resources
are stretched because of the continued occupation of Iraq. Obama sees the need for redeployment of forces to concentrate on Afghanistan and the difficulties caused by throwing so much into Iraq. McCain, doesn't seem to get this functionally.
The Supreme Court. The court has simply
moved to far to the right, with the recent appointments of Judges
Roberts and Samuel Alito. McCain sold his political soul to the religious
right and for this reason, gay rights, 1st Amendment rights of free
speech and press will be in jeopardy if the court should migrate any further.
I
am confident that even if Obama were to select even a conservative
jurist to become a Supreme Court justice, that this justice will
consider legal precedent, respect the purity of the state and the
purity of religion. Regardless of political orientation, I think it is
more likely that Obama will pick qualified candidates that are not
selected off of Dobson's short list like McCain will, and as former
Justice Sandra Day O'Conner stated - not rule on cases according to the
court's present ideological make-up, but in light of the precedent
established by previous Supreme Court rulings.
This is the kind of judicial temperament that Obama will bring to the court.
__________________________
Vote Obama No
candidate is perfect, of course. If we each lived on separate islands, we
would all have the very simple task when it came to electing a leader.
Obviously, we don't.
Yet, we have this social contract with one another regulated by a government for and by the people. We must necessarily elect
representatives for office in Washington and in our local communities, even though in many cases we hold our noses when we do.
Obama's message of hope and change is a great start, and when I
begin to consider how each candidate would lead in respect to Iraq,
terrorism, and the Supreme Court, Senator Obama is clearly the choice
for me. As well as a number for a number of prominent conservatives,
from Colin Powell, Christoper Buckley, Scott McClellan, Kevin Adelman, Francis Fukuyama who've endorsed the Senator from Illinois here and here. McCain can not lead the economy, or any of the issues I discussed in a new, innovative ways. McCain knows this. This is why McCain must appropriate
Senator Obama's language, but not the policies which will bring real
meaningful change. The brand of "maverick" is unearned and as hollow as
the word victory which McCain uses to discuss how he would resolve Iraq.
Perhaps, the most skeptical of Obama is a fairly conservative publication, The Economist. I think they make a great case for why you too should vote for Barack Obama:
So Mr Obama in that respect is a gamble. But the same goes for Mr
McCain on at least as many counts, not least the possibility of
President Palin. And this cannot be another election where the choice
is based merely on fear. In terms of painting a brighter future for
America and the world, Mr Obama has produced the more compelling and
detailed portrait. He has campaigned with more style, intelligence and
discipline than his opponent. Whether he can fulfil his immense
potential remains to be seen. But Mr Obama deserves the presidency.
Clearly, these three reasons for the Obama presidency have become three reasons against a McCain presidency. Vote Obama!
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By MC Pickard
Saturday, Nov 1 2008, 07:23 AM
In government, the role of science holds an advisory position informing the President and as to how public policy should be directed.
During Bush's presidency, climate science and health science became
politicized. Bush simply did not like the conclusions of these
scientific investigations because of his prior political and
religious commitments. There are well documented cases and hearings by the Committee of Oversight and Government demonstrating how science was bent or ignored and scientific integrity damaged.
With McCain we can rest assured that he will continue down the path that
Bush has taken in regards to global climate change and health education, even
though he would take – as Colin Powell describes a "maverick approach."
Barack Obama understands the importance of scientific integrity and the role of science in relation to good governance. Stating that he would "restore
the basic principle that government decisions should be based on the
best- available, scientifically-valid evidence and not on the
ideological predispositions of agency officials or political appointees" in a questionairre to the SEA – Scientists and Engineers of America.
Ed
Lazowska, chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Chair of Computer Science at the
University of Washington, a member of the academy of engineering
explains why he endorses Senator Barack Obama over John McCain.
_____
It's also an understatement to say just how important the internet is in for all our lives. Vint Cerf, a computer scientist, and the "person most often called 'the father of the Internet,"
who holds honorary degrees and awards from include the National Medal
of Technology, the Turing Award, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
explains why net neutrality is import and why Obama receives his vote.
_____
Marty Chaife, this year's nobel prize winner (along with 60 others) in chemisty explains why he endorses Obama.
In order for the president to lead, he must make good decisions.
It's
not a maverick we need at this time, but a president who is willing to
listen and then wise enough to implement the advice he receives. McCain
will only stay the course.
This is why that many prominent conservatives (here and here)
judge Barack Obama as a man of good character and a man more qualified
to direct policy and lead the United States over John McCain.
It is an understatement to say how important science is in our daily
lives. Science is the best and only method of inquiry which we have to
confront the challenges that we face and plan for the future.
Barack Obama gets it.
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By MC Pickard
Friday, Oct 31 2008, 12:02 PM
While McCain has been a solid, staunch conservative on social issues the sum of his political career, many conservatives like Colin Powell, Christoper Buckley, Scott McClellan,
have now been joined other prominent conservatives who would prefer an
Obama presidency over McCain. You can read a quick snapshot of their
reasons here.
Joining the aforementioned, you'll note that McCain's pick of Sarah Palin weighs heavily in their decision to vote and endorse Obama.
Kevin Adelman. A "lifelong
conservative Republican. Campaigned for Goldwater, was hired by
Rumsfeld at the Office of Economic Opportunity under Nixon, was
assistant to Defense Secretary Rumsfeld under Ford, served as Reagan’s
director of arms control, and joined the Defense Policy Board for
Rumsfeld’s second go-round at the Pentagon, in 2001."
Adelman endorses Obama because:
"Primarily for two reasons, those of temperament and of judgment.
When the economic crisis broke, I found John McCain bouncing all over
the place. In those first few crisis days, he was impetuous,
inconsistent, and imprudent; ending up just plain weird. Having worked
with Ronald Reagan for seven years, and been with him in his critical
three summits with Gorbachev, I’ve concluded that that’s no way a
president can act under pressure.
Second is judgment. The most important decision John McCain made in his long campaign was deciding on a running mate.
That decision showed appalling lack of judgment. Not only is Sarah
Palin not close to being acceptable in high office—I would not have
hired her for even a mid-level post in the arms-control agency. But
that selection contradicted McCain’s main two, and best two, themes for
his campaign—Country First, and experience counts. Neither can he
credibly claim, post-Palin pick."
Francis Fukuyama.
Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
Studies, Strassuian, colleague of Harvey Mansfield, William Kristol and
Paul Wolfowitz, and author of The End of History (sitting
on my back burner) endorses Obama.
I’m voting for Barack Obama this November for a very simple reason. It
is hard to imagine a more disastrous presidency than that of George W.
Bush. It was bad enough that he launched an unnecessary war and
undermined the standing of the United States throughout the world in
his first term. But in the waning days of his administration, he is
presiding over a collapse of the American financial system and broader
economy that will have consequences for years to come. As a general
rule, democracies don’t work well if voters do not hold political
parties accountable for failure. While John McCain is trying
desperately to pretend that he never had anything to do with the
Republican Party, I think it would a travesty to reward the Republicans
for failure on such a grand scale.
McCain’s appeal was always that he could think for himself, but as the
campaign has progressed, he has seemed simply erratic and hotheaded.
His choice of Sarah Palin as a running mate was highly irresponsible;
we have suffered under the current president who entered office without
much knowledge of the world and was easily captured by the wrong
advisers. McCain’s lurching from Reaganite free- marketer to populist
tribune makes one wonder whether he has any underlying principles at
all.
America has been living in a dream world for the past few years, losing
its basic values of thrift and prudence and living far beyond its
means, even as it has lectured the rest of the world to follow its
model. At a time when the U.S. government has just nationalized a good
part of the banking sector, we need to rethink a lot of the Reaganite
verities of the past generation regarding taxes and regulation.
Important as they were back in the 1980s and ’90s, they just won’t cut
it for the period we are now entering. Obama is much better positioned
to reinvent the American model and will certainly present a very
different and more positive face of America to the rest of the world. The Economist.
Offers one of the least enthusiastic endorsements of Obama, but an
endorsement nonetheless. I think they take a rather balanced approach
over the question of who to elect or not.
For all the shortcomings of the campaign, both John McCain
and Barack Obama offer hope of national redemption. Now America has to
choose between them. The Economist does not have a vote, but if it did,
it would cast it for Mr Obama. We do so wholeheartedly: the Democratic
candidate has clearly shown that he offers the better chance of
restoring America’s self-confidence. But we acknowledge it is a gamble.
Given Mr Obama’s inexperience, the lack of clarity about some of his
beliefs and the prospect of a stridently Democratic Congress, voting
for him is a risk. Yet it is one America should take, given the steep
road ahead.
...
The selection of Mr McCain as the Republicans’ candidate was a powerful
reason to reconsider. Mr McCain has his faults: he is an instinctive
politician, quick to judge and with a sharp temper. And his age has
long been a concern (how many global companies in distress would bring
in a new 72-year-old boss?). Yet he has bravely taken unpopular
positions—for free trade, immigration reform, the surge in Iraq,
tackling climate change and campaign-finance reform. A western
Republican in the Reagan mould, he has a long record of working with
both Democrats and America’s allies.
...
So Mr Obama in that respect is a gamble. But the same goes for Mr
McCain on at least as many counts, not least the possibility of
President Palin. And this cannot be another election where the choice
is based merely on fear. In terms of painting a brighter future for
America and the world, Mr Obama has produced the more compelling and
detailed portrait. He has campaigned with more style, intelligence and
discipline than his opponent. Whether he can fulfil his immense
potential remains to be seen. But Mr Obama deserves the presidency. Zach, over at Blogging Blue observes the significance of this endorsement:
"The Economist is well
known for (and freely admits) its tendency to favor free market
economics. We’ll see if that stops some conservatives from employing
their newfound favorite word — “socialist” — to refer to the 165 year
old publication."
So if your one of those 14%
of voters are still can't decide on who to elect, please consider what
conservatives say about Obama. Their endorsements are significant
because they refute the assertions by the McCain campaign that Obama is
not ready for office.
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By MC Pickard
Friday, Oct 24 2008, 03:38 PM
Hold the presses.
It ain't true.
Apparently, a 20-year-old college student, Ashley Todd, invented the whole thing.
"Todd
initially told investigators she was attempting to use a bank branch
ATM when the man approached her from behind, put a knife with a 4- to
5-inch blade to her throat and demanded money. She told police she
handed the assailant $60 and walked away."
That usual suspect... a black man. Surprised? Nah... Todd then alleged that "he
then sat on her chest, pinned her hands down with his knees and
scratched a backward letter "B" into her face with a dull knife."
"They just started talking to her and she just opened up and said she wanted to tell the truth..." Bryant said.
So the attack never happened.
(Stop for a moment and exercise your powers of observation in the picture. What's become of college lately?)
Anyway, ignore all of that for a moment.
For
the sake of argument, let's say this attack really did happen and
everything that Todd alleges is true. In fact, let's also pretend that
the Pittsburgh police caught the suspect and he confessed to the attack and the attack was politically motivated.
What should the response of liberals and democrats be?
Should we say suspend judgment and say, well we don't know what Todd could have said to
incite such violence? Should we blame Todd for inviting the attack? I mean we could not see what Todd had said, so perhaps she
had said something in which begged this man to attack her. In fact, she deserved it.
No.
The proper response would be to condemn this person and an attack like this.
Liberals have no need to play Team "D" at the expense of common sense and respect to people rights.
However, some do (Amy Hemmer ... Amy Hemmer) because they must play Team "R" at all costs.
Lesson today: Do not defend the indefensible.
When you do, you've only exposed yourself as the hypocrite that you thought you gotcha'ed.
Filed under: barack obama, 08 elections, john mccain, hypocrisy, joe biden, sarah palin, campaign, 2008 election, endorsements, voting, attack, ashley todd
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By MC Pickard
Friday, Oct 24 2008, 10:37 AM
Very few – if any, deathbed conversion stories pan out to be reliable.
For example, Charles Darwin. It was said that he renounced evolution
and embraced Christianity on his deathbed. A fabricated story. Darwin
died an atheist and still convinced of the science he so painstaking tested over the course of some 20 years.
Despite the unreliability of these deathbed conversion stories, they
continue to hold a power over us and play upon our imaginations for whatever reason.
There is no need for imagination where the reliability of present day political conversions and endorsements are concerned though. Much has been made of the oft Hilary Clinton
supporter so miffed by Senator Obama's candidacy, who are now voting for Senator McCain. Yet, little has been said of republicans, or conservatives, who have endorsed Senator Obama instead of the de facto Republican Party leader and candidate, Senator John McCain. And I am not talking about those conservatives, like George Will, Kathleen Parker or Ken Adelman, who blasted McCain for his inane pick of Sarah Palin - which is quickly becoming McCain's own Harriet Myers moment.
Until now.
Here are just a few of the more prominent republicans and conservatives who have broken with their fellow partisans. Their collective endorsements directly rebut the criticisms by republicans and other conservatives against Obama that he is not able or ready to lead.
Colin Powell.
In probably the most high profile of all endorsements, Republican and
former Bush administration cabinet member rebuffed McCain for his
smears against Obama and stated "I
come to the conclusion that because of his ability to inspire, because
of the inclusive nature of his campaign, because he is reaching out all
across America, because of who he is and his rhetorical abilities --
and you have to take that into account -- as well as his substance --
he has both style and substance..."
Christoper Buckley.
When the son of the late National Review founder, William F Buckley,
endorsed Obama for president he forced to resign his small column due
to the hate mail he recieved. On Obama, Buckley stated that "Obama
has in him—I think, despite his sometimes airy-fairy “We are the people
we have been waiting for” silly rhetoric—the potential to be a good,
perhaps even great leader. He is, it seems clear enough, what the
historical moment seems to be calling for." Scott McClellan. Off the heals from the recent publishing of his book criticizing Bush over the policy to war with Iraq, the former Bush press sectary stated "From the very beginning I've said I'm going to support the candidate
who has the best chance of changing the way Washington works and
getting things done. I will be voting for Barack Obama."
Republicans for Obama. A grassroots organization of republicans who have campaigned and voted republicans for "all their lives." They endorse Obama because "Senator
Obama has rejected the politics of division and the win-at-all-costs
attitude that has hurt our ability to move forward as a nation. While
we as Republicans will not always see eye to eye with a President
Obama, we know that his politics of competency and unity will lead to a
stronger America."
Are these types endorsements convincing to voters?
Curiously, Obama did receive a boost
in the polls after Powell's endorsement. The Washington Post-ABC News
tracking poll showed a 11 point sway in Obama's favor, with 2 in 10
independents who are now more likely to vote for Obama in the wake of Powell's
endorsement. Will this ultimately sway the undecided come November 4th?
I do not know.
The reasons for why people vote the way they vote are complex and not easily understood and I do not wish to pay the issue lip service in this small space. However, it is interesting to note the reasons why when a member of either political persuasion endorses a rival candidate and what convinced them. I've voted for a "rivals" in the past and it has always been a curious experience for me. Why? It's a matter of priorities. If a republican would deliver gay marriage rights, protect a woman's reproductive rights, stand firm on the separation Church and State, repudiate racism (which many do obviously), and rebuff faith-based funding, I would vote for that republican despite my disagreements on the role and size of government or other areas of policy. (These are not my main priorities in this election, however.) The why's transcends the how's in this case. Allegiance to party does not obviate progressive necessity and human rights.
Likewise, the above republicans and conservatives have prioritized their concerns and have endorsed Obama accordingly.
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