Archive for October 10th, 2008

10
Oct
08

A cute old man who makes Britney Spears back in 2007 look sane

The McCain campaign is defending crowd members at its recent rallies who have called Obama a terrorist, accused him of treason and even screamed “kill him” when his association with former Weather Underground member Bill Ayers has been broached.”Barack Obama’s attacks on Americans who support John McCain reveal far more about him than they do about John McCain. It is clear that Barack Obama just doesn’t understand regular people and the issues they care about. He dismisses hardworking middle class Americans as clinging to guns and religion, while at the same time attacking average Americans at McCain rallies who are angry at Washington, Wall Street and the status quo,” reads a statement from spokesman Brian Rogers. “Even worse, he attacks anyone who dares to question his readiness to serve as their commander in chief in chief. Raising legitimate questions about record, character and judgment are a vital part of the Democratic process, and Barack Obama’s effort to silence and shame those who seek answers should make everyone wonder exactly what he is hiding.”

Earlier on Friday, Barack Obama had criticized John McCain recent campaign appearance saying it was “easy to rile up a crowd by stoking anger and division.”

“I think that folks are looking for something different,” he said. “But that’s not what we need right now in the United States. The times are too serious.”

In responding to this charge, Rogers attempted to deliberate simplify and obscure some of the rhetoric that has recently come from McCain supporters. Videos taken of people heading into McCain-Palin rallies have shown individuals who label Barack Obama as a terrorist, a communist and a threat to the well-being of the country. At a town hall meeting in Wisconsin on Thursday, several attendees urged the Republican nominee to attack his opponent on the Ayers issue and Reverend Jeremiah Wright, who McCain himself has said should be off limits.

The rabid nature of the scene has startled longtime political observers and even former associates of McCain himself.

John Weaver, the Senator’s former top strategist, has said McCain is making a tactical mistake by letting abusive hecklers have their voices heard during his forums. David Gergen, a longtime Washington strategist, has warned that the rhetoric from these attendees could “lead to some violence.”

Veteran Republican Congressman Ray LaHood criticized Sarah Palin in particular, saying her rhetoric did not “befit the office she’s running for.”

AFL-CIO President John Sweeney denounced the recent campaign stops as dangerous and expressed alarm that the top of the Republican ticket would not protest the crowd’s language.

“Sen. John McCain, Gov. Sarah Palin and the leadership of the Republican party have a fundamental moral responsibility to denounce the violent rhetoric that has pervaded recent McCain and Palin political rallies. When rally attendees shout out such attacks as “terrorist” or “kill him” about Sen. Barack Obama, when they are cheered on by crowds incited by McCain-Palin rhetoric — it is chilling that McCain and Palin do nothing to object.”

Veteran reporter Dan Balz has opined that “McCain’s tactics are over the line, with no restraint in sight, and threaten to provoke reactions among partisans on both sides that will continue to escalate.”

And Frank Schaeffer penned a solemn and critical column (first published in the Baltimore Sun) personally addressed to McCain himself: “If your campaign does not stop equating Sen. Barack Obama with terrorism, questioning his patriotism and portraying Mr. Obama as “not one of us,” I accuse you of deliberately feeding the most unhinged elements of our society the red meat of hate, and therefore of potentially instigating violence.”

McCain, through Rogers’ statement, is gambling that the voices of caution don’t matter as much as the sentiments of the people. But he is also implicitly arguing that even the vilest rhetoric sent Obama’s way is fair game when chalked up to concerns about the Illinois Democrat’s past associations and judgments. And he’s acknowledging that he won’t lift a finger to dissuade the raging tempers.

Source

The McCain campaign is defending crowd members at its recent rallies who have called Obama a terrorist, accused him of treason and even screamed “kill him” when his association with former Weather Und…
The McCain campaign is defending crowd members at its recent rallies who have called Obama a terrorist, accused him of treason and even screamed “kill him” when his association with former Weather Und…

10
Oct
08

When You’re Sincere…Good Things Happen

10
Oct
08

More Republican Leaders Jump McCain’s Ship and Support Obama

GRAND RAPIDS — He endorsed John McCain in the presidential primary, but now former Republican Gov. William Milliken is expressing doubts about his party’s nominee.

“He is not the McCain I endorsed,” said Milliken, reached at his Traverse City home Thursday. “He keeps saying, ‘Who is Barack Obama?’ I would ask the question, ‘Who is John McCain?’ because his campaign has become rather disappointing to me.

“I’m disappointed in the tenor and the personal attacks on the part of the McCain campaign, when he ought to be talking about the issues.”

Milliken, a lifelong Republican, is among some past leaders from the party’s moderate wing voicing reservations and, in some cases, opposition to McCain’s candidacy.

During a stop in Grand Rapids on Thursday, Lincoln Chafee, a former Republican U.S. senator from Rhode Island, said he’s voting for Obama and urging others to do likewise.

McCain campaigned for Chafee’s unsuccessful re-election bid in 2006, but Chafee said he is concerned McCain has swung to the right, a divisive strategy that could make it difficult for him to govern.

“That’s not my kind of Republicanism,” said Chafee, who now calls himself an independent. “I saw what Bush and Cheney did. They came in with a (budget) surplus and a stable world, and look what’s happened now. In eight short years they’ve taken one peaceful and prosperous world, and they’ve torn it into tatters.”

As for McCain’s choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for his running mate, “there’s no question she’s totally unqualified,” Chafee said.

He had similar reservations about Obama’s lack of experience, but said the Democrat’s handling of the campaign convinced him he’s ready to lead.

Chafee said he has spoken with several other moderate Republican leaders, and “there are a whole lot of us deserting.”

One of them is Phil Arthurhultz, a former Republican state senator from Whitehall, who was traveling the state with Chafee to drum up support for Obama.

Bob Eleveld is a former Kent County Republican chairman who led McCain’s West Michigan campaign in 2000. This year, he has remained mum unless asked.

“I’m not supporting either of them at this point,” he said. “Suffice it to say there are a number of people who have been strong Republicans in the past, including party chairs, who feel as I do.”

He declined to name them.

In the past, McCain was more of a moderate known for his straight talk, Eleveld said.

“I think the straight talk is gone,” he said, describing himself as a member of the party’s moderate wing. “I think he’s pandering to the Christian right. That’s some straight talk from me.”

Whether they represent a widespread movement or a few disenchanted members in the Republican Party is unclear.

“I don’t think for one minute John McCain has violated the trust we put in him,” said Marge Byington Potter, a former chairwoman of the Kent County Commission, who calls herself a moderate Republican. “I think McCain understands people are in a situation that people are hurting terribly.”

Milliken stopped short of saying he will vote for Obama, but said he differs with McCain on the Iraq war and his choice of Palin.

“I know John McCain is 72. In my book, that’s quite young,” said Milliken, 86, Michigan’s longest-serving governor. But he added, “What if she were to become president of the United States? The idea, to me, is quite disturbing, if not appalling.

“Increasingly, the party is moving toward rigidity, and I don’t like that. I think Gerald Ford would hold generally the same view I’m holding on the direction of the Republican Party.”

10
Oct
08

McCain’s Crap v. Obama’s Poker Face

The casino craps player is a social animal, a thrill seeker who wants not just to win but to win with a crowd. Unlike cards or a roulette wheel, well-thrown dice reward most everyone on the rail, yielding a collective yawp that drowns out the slots. It is a game for showmen, Hollywood stars and basketball legends with girls on their arms. It is also a favorite pastime of the presumptive Republican nominee for President, John McCain.

The backroom poker player, on the other hand, is more cautious and self-absorbed. Card games may be social, but they are played in solitude. No need for drama. The quiet card counter is king, and only a novice banks on luck. In this game, a good bluff trumps blind faith, and the studied observer beats the showman. So it is fitting that the presumptive Democratic nominee, Barack Obama, raked in so many pots in his late-night games with political friends.
For centuries, the nation’s political leaders have loved their games of chance. Andrew Jackson owned fighting cocks and raced horses. Richard Nixon helped finance his first congressional race with his World War II poker winnings. Teddy Roosevelt noted that the professional gamblers he knew “usually made good soldiers.” But even among this crowd, McCain and Obama are distinctive. For both men, games of chance have been not just a hobby but also a fundamental feature in their development as people and politicians. For Obama, weekly poker games with lobbyists and fellow state senators helped cement his position as a rising star in Illinois politics. For McCain, jaunts to the craps table helped burnish his image as a political hot dog who relished the thrill of a good fight, even if the risk of failure was high.
The Thrill of the Game
McCain’s passion for gambling and taking other risks has never been a secret. He was a Navy flyer, trained in the art of controlled crash landings on aircraft carriers. He spent his youth sneaking booze behind the backs of his schoolmasters and reveling in his stack of demerits. He came of age on shore leave in the casinos of Monte Carlo, in a Navy culture that had long embraced dice in the officers’ clubs.
The moral code of McCain’s youth always distinguished between sins of honor and sins of pleasure. “Don’t lie, cheat or steal — anything else is fair game,” McCain told his son Jack when the boy left for the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. In his memoir, McCain recalls that by his mid-20s, he “had begun to aspire to a reputation for more commendable achievements than long nights of drinking and gambling.”
Over time he gave up the drinking bouts, but he never quite kicked the periodic yen for dice. In the past decade, he has played on Mississippi riverboats, on Indian land, in Caribbean craps pits and along the length of the Las Vegas Strip. Back in 2005 he joined a group of journalists at a magazine-industry conference in Puerto Rico, offering betting strategy on request. “Enjoying craps opens up a window on a central thread constant in John’s life,” says John Weaver, McCain’s former chief strategist, who followed him to many a casino. “Taking a chance, playing against the odds.” Aides say McCain tends to play for a few thousand dollars at a time and avoids taking markers, or loans, from the casinos, which he has helped regulate in Congress. “He never, ever plays on the house,” says Mark Salter, a McCain adviser. The goal, say several people familiar with his habit, is never financial. He loves the thrill of winning and the camaraderie at the table.
Only recently have McCain’s aides urged him to pull back from the pastime. In the heat of the G.O.P. primary fight last spring, he announced on a visit to the Vegas Strip that he was going to the casino floor. When his aides stopped him, fearing a public relations disaster, McCain suggested that they ask the casino to take a craps table to a private room, a high-roller privilege McCain had indulged in before. His aides, with alarm bells ringing, refused again, according to two accounts of the discussion.
“He clearly knows that this is on the borderline of what is acceptable for him to be doing,” says a Republican who has watched McCain play. “And he just sort of revels in it.”
If McCain plays craps for thrills, Obama sees gambling as a way to vent his competitive urge. His love of basketball is well known. “I could get to the rim on anybody,” he told HBO’s Bryant Gumbel of his high school hoops days. He could not even play golf for fun, taking lessons to lower his handicap after a few poor performances. “Barack hates to lose,” says Dan Shomon, an old Chicago political aide.
Poker may be sedentary, but it is no less competitive. Obama played most regularly as an Illinois state senator in the late 1990s. The legislature met in Springfield, which had little to recommend it after hours, except on Wednesday nights, when “The Committee Meeting,” as it was nicknamed, convened in state senator Terry Link’s basement. Obama and fellow senators made up the “core four.” The game began at 7 p.m. and often lasted until 2 a.m. There were pizza and chips, a fridge full of beer, and enough cigars for a smoke-filled room. Obama usually showed up in a baseball cap and sweats. He cadged cigarettes and drank a beer, kept up with the boys’-night-out banter and roared at the off-color stories. When he lost a hand, Obama joked that he couldn’t afford gasoline to drive home.
But he always had his head in the game. The stakes were low enough — $1 ante and $3 top raise — to afford a long shot. Not Obama. He studied the cards as closely as he would an eleventh-hour amendment to a bill. The odds were religion to him. Only rarely did he bluff. “He had a pretty good idea about what his chances were,” says Denny Jacobs, a former state senator from East Moline.
Obama’s play-to-win approach drove other players crazy. Former state senator Larry Walsh, a conservative corn farmer from Joliet, once got ready to pull in a pot with a four-of-a-kind hand. But Obama had four of a kind too, of higher rank. Walsh slammed down his cards. “Doggone it, Barack, if you were more liberal in your card-playing and more conservative in your politics, you and I would get along much better,” he said.
Obama used the sessions to bond with those who could aid his political ascent, including several lawmakers with whom he forged lasting political alliances, as well as some lobbyists. The banks, utilities and insurance agents were often represented. “We all became buddies in the card games, but there never were any favors granted,” says David Manning of the Community Bankers Association of Illinois.
Obama usually left a winner. But he reaped a bigger payoff politically. When he announced his plans to run for the U.S. Senate, his poker pals — white guys from small-town Illinois — were among his earliest supporters. Link says the Wednesday-night gang didn’t realize how far Obama would go: “Nobody said, ‘Mr. President, it’s your deal.’ ” But Obama’s risk-averse, methodical approach to five-card stud gives Link confidence in his potential governing style. “If he runs his presidency the way he plays poker, I’ll sleep good at night,” he says.

From Time Magazine’s Michael Scherer and Michael Weisskopf
July 2008

What do the candidates’ gambling proclivities tell us about who they are? Politicians talk of their campaigns as grand contests of ideas. But in practice, the political battle is both a crapshoot and a poker game, a study in managing risk and in manipulating people. And there is no bigger gamble than a presidential run, which both candidates have conducted very differently this cycle. McCain’s campaign, like his life, has been marked by its embrace of living dangerously and by clear runs of fortune and disappointment. Obama, meanwhile, has succeeded, no less remarkably, by diligently executing a premeditated strategy. But the general-election game is new to both men. And as the stakes rise, both know they’ll need a little luck.

10
Oct
08

Wow….The McCain/Palin Mob SPEAKS!

10
Oct
08

Cindy McCain Puts Karen Walker to Shame

10
Oct
08

Cindy McCain Goes Buck Wild

The McCain campaign has released its ultimate weapon- an heiress with a pill habit. Cindy McCain, who mentions her son’s service more than a Florida sheriff mentions Obama’s middle name, said this about her husband’s opponent:

“The day that Sen. Obama cast a vote to not to fund my son when he was serving sent a cold chill through my body let me tell you.”

Cindy then asked Senator Obama to wear her shoes, which probably cost more than the Obama family car.

Did anyone tell her that John McCain also voted against funding Cindy McCain’s son? And that both bills contained extra provisions that both Senators objected to? Oh facts, they are a drag!

10
Oct
08

President Palin’s Inagural Address…Yikes! Funny Stuff

From 23/6…

Gosh hi! Oh my, hey! I see lots of you out there!

Hello America and welcome to my inaug . . . inau . . . gosh darn it.

First presidential address! Couldn’t see that but I’m OK now, thanks.

It’s just so amazin’! Bein’ a hockey mom, you know. And a proven maverick. And then one day some guy from some political thing, like a year ago maybe, asks about bein’ vice president. And of course you don’t blink. Just don’t blink. And now I’m here on this podium! So I never expected to be here, that’s for sure. I thought, you know, “it’s the VICE president, right?” Not the real deal at all. But America, hey, that’s our country. Thank you.

I understand, too, what with all that’s happened, John McCain–bless his heart–just leaving us like that. Just dropped to the ground, then didn’t move. Like a shot, real sudden, but I didn’t hear gunfire. He was a stiff guy–didn’t move well, as was known. But I didn’t expect him to go so quick! But if you’re a maverick, I guess that’s how you go. One minute a fightin’ maverick, taking those shots, and the next, game over. That arm, you know. Definitely a concern. And I said, about the decision on those medical records I said, “I don’t know.” But that’s what’s done and his reward’s in heaven, as they say.

But geez. I mean, he sort of left us in the lurch, don’tcha think? Nothin’ against him, but I thought he’d be around at least a year, right? I mean, just bein’ honest, I thought that was the deal. A year of on the job training, at least. That’s what I was promised. But to not even make it to Inaugural Day. To just be thrown into this.

And then the Democrats, you know, sayin’ we need a do over, right? Which I don’t blame them. But that Supreme Court up in their chambers they said, “No, President elect keels over like that, it’s the Vice-President is the new President.” And that’s what they said and the thing about that court? It’s the law when they say it. That’s our system.

And so now, though, the American people wanted change, and believe me, with Aunt Sarah, change is what you’re gonna get. And those Democrats were sayin’ they were change, but I have two words for them, which are: Just wait. They may have won a Congress majority but we’ll see just what we need Congress for, exactly.

Now, as for Katie Couric. First off, there’s a war on. And I don’t know if everyone realizes? But there’s press-a . . . press . . . precedence for in times of war you are not allowed to embarrass the President. So I have an announcement, which is that we have some things down at Gitmo that require Katie’s immediate attention. If you know what I mean. Sorry, Katie. God love ya.

Let that be a lesson to all the press, too, from here on.

And that Tina Fey, too. You know, I laughed at that, but there are lots a things you do on the trail that maybe you don’t like. So Tina Fey, you’ll be hearing from us as well.

Now, as for the Second Coming, which is, of course, much on everyone’s minds. As many of you know, and the Wasilla Bible Church of my hometown also said, the Second Coming is real, and Christ is already come for those with a true servant’s heart. And you know who you are. That is why I’m proud to announce today my first initiative as President: War with Iran. As a great man once said: The bombing begins in five minutes.

Now, for the earmarks. I know John McCain stood against those, because he was a brave man. Very brave, standing like that. And a maverick, too, lest it be forgotten. And also known. So we’ll be exercising the line-item, whether Congress likes it or not. And those signing statements, too. Gonna enforce those, finally. So that’s one thing.

I have other plans, too. After Iran, there are probably other countries we need to obliterate. Northern Pakistan, for instance. Don’t know if that’s a country, really, but seems like it might need to go. Then we have North Korea. And then maybe Russia. These are some of them yes.

We also have a list of books, and of my enemies, and there’s also a certain state trooper in Alaska who can kiss his pension goodbye, and who better be looking to move to Canada if he know what’s good for him. Mike, if you’re listening, Todd is already on a flight to Anchorage, and he’s got his shotgun and dog team waiting for him at Ted Stevens International.

Well, that’s all for now. I’m just so excited to be movin’ into the White House. I’ll be giving more speeches as we get more into this President thing, sorta figure it out, you know. No press conferences, though. I’ve learned my lesson on that one.

Thank you, America, and God bless!

10
Oct
08

McCain’s Treasury Secretary Would Put Everything On EBay

From 23/6…

At the debate, John McCain says he favors ex-eBay CEO Meg Whitman for Secretary of the Treasury. Which would make Whitman the first Treasury Secretary in history to administer financial, economic and PayPal policy. Since McCain promises smaller government, no new taxes and the private sector assuming government functions, he would no doubt encourage Secretary Whitman to combine her new place of business and her old one into one big on-line government service: TreasuryBay.

Here’s what she’ll most likely be selling:

10
Oct
08

How John McCain Can Help You Have a Better Relationship

From Huffington Post…

How John McCain Can Help You Have A Better Relationship

Understanding the language your body speaks can help you attain much deeper intimacy in relationships. One of the big complaints we hear from partners in relationship therapy is, “I can’t figure out what he/she’s really feeling.” A related complaint is, “I don’t know how to figure out what I’m feeling.” Knowing what you’re feeling and what your partner is feeling is essential to a healthy relationship. When people can’t, won’t or don’t know how to speak about their feelings openly, their bodies are left to communicate about those feelings in the form of blinks, twitches, clenches and other bits of Body-Talk. Electing a president is like signing up for a four-year marriage, a marriage in which about half of us will end up being married to someone we wouldn’t even want to share a cab with. In this political season, it behooves us all to get better at Body-Talk, so we can understand what those blinks, smirks and clenches are really trying to tell us.

Body-Smart Or Body-Dumb

The morning after the first debate we saw something odd. Several pundits made mention of the remarkable display of twitches, smirks and jaw-clenches that flickered across the face of John McCain throughout the debate. Others mentioned his lack of eye contact, particularly his unwillingness to look Obama in the eye. We were pleased that the commentators observed those things — many people overlook these important but subtle communications, in the spirit of “Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.” But here’s the odd part: some of the pundits seemed to be apologizing for having noticed McCain’s pyrotechnic display of facial flare-ups.

On MSNBC, Mika Brzezinski apologized for possibly sounding “superficial,” then went on to discuss McCain tics and smirks. Why did she and others feel like they had to apologize for noticing something that all of us should be paying a great deal of attention to? It’s probably because we’re taught, as part of our social training, to overlook the language of the body. We are trained to think of it as superficial or not to notice it at all. That training makes us body-dumb instead of body-smart, and it costs us mightily in terms of health and love. If we don’t know how to listen to and understand our body’s organic language, we can’t articulate our feelings in relationships and we can’t understand the emotional underpinnings of many diseases.

Any good therapist learns to read the language of the body, but you don’t need an advanced degree to understand John McCain’s. His patterns are about as subtle as the flashing lights on a sign that says “Danger Ahead.” Since we may end up married to him for four years, we need to pay particularly close attention to two patterns of his: smirking and jaw-clenching.

The McCain Smirk:
The Mouth Of Contempt
You probably noticed how often McCain smirked, particularly when he was being forced to listen to Obama speak. It’s his expression of contempt. If he were speaking the truth behind his smirk, he’d be saying something like “I hold you in utter contempt. I am superior to you. My disdain for you is boundless.” Any seasoned relationship coach knows a lot about contempt, because it’s one of the most destructive patterns in relationships. One of our colleagues in the relationship counseling field, John Gottman, calls contempt one of the Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse, behaviors that signal doom for a relationship (along with criticism, defensiveness and sulking.) Beware of electing a president who wears the Mouth of Contempt. If McCain is elected president, we’ll see a lot of it, because he particularly seems to wear it when someone he disagrees with is speaking.

The McCain Jaw-Clench:
The Painful Art Of Biting Back Anger
Out of politeness one is tempted to look away from McCain’s jaws, because his left jaw has a permanent bulge from his bouts with cancer. We encourage you, though, to turn your attention to his right jaw; it’s a symphony of clenches that played practically non-stop every time he was forced to listen to Obama in the first debate. Since McCain won’t release all his medical records, we don’t know the story behind the cancer in his left jaw. However, we know a great deal about what causes his right jaw to clench repeatedly. People clench their jaws when they’re angry and can’t, won’t or don’t know how to say it plainly. If his jaw-clench could speak, it would be saying: “I’m mad as hell and trying desperately not to show it.” The anger shows in 3-D, though, thanks to the eloquence of Body-Talk. That’s a good thing. We need to know when people are trying to conceal their feelings, in our relationships at home and in politics. We need to know what’s going on behind the denials and delusions of Mouth-Talk.

Mouth-Talk Vs. Body-Talk
Body-Talk always tells you the truth about what’s going on. If your mind thinks you’re not scared, but you feel speedy-queasy butterfly sensations in your belly, believe your body. If your mate says he or she isn’t mad, but you see him or her clenching those jaws repeatedly, believe the Body-Talk not the Mouth-Talk. Mouth-Talk is useful and often entertaining, but you’ve probably noticed that we humans can speak a lot of twisted stories, wild justifications and outright lies out of our mouths.

What will be very interesting in future debates is watching how John McCain tries to conceal the Body-Talk that was so obvious in the first debate. He’s getting media-coaching around the clock, and will likely try to hide his contempt and anger from us next time. It probably won’t work, because the twitches and clenches he’d be trying to hide are caused by trying to hide feelings in the first place. John McCain has been widely reported to have a volcanic temper. A ten-year-old, walking into the room and seeing him on television said, “That guy looks like he’s about to blow.” Frankly, we’d rather see him go ahead and blow his stack, rather than hide his anger and contempt under more and more layers of deception. We’ve seen enough of that already.

10
Oct
08

Why Sarah Palin’s Body Language Should Freak You Out

Since our last post, we’ve been asked many times to comment on Sarah Palin’s mannerisms. Her Body-Talk is not as blatant as her running mate, probably because she has a background as a performer in beauty pageants and television. She has learned to conceal the smirks and clenches that play so openly across the countenance of John McCain.

In our work we call body language the Five Flags, because there are five major ways human beings react when they’re not speaking the authentic truth. Twitches and jaw-clenches are examples of Flag #1, Body-Flags. To understand Sarah Palin, though, you need to understand Flags #2 and #3, Voice-Flags and Attitude-Flags. The English word ‘personality’ comes from two Latin words, per and sona, “through sound.” The Romans knew that the personality comes through in the tone of voice and other vocal aspects.

From thirty-five years of clinical experience, we can tell you a lot about Sarah Palin’s real personality and why it makes many people even more nervous that John McCain’s.

Attitude-Flag #1: The Aggressive Confidence Of The Con-Person

Sarah Palin has mastered one fundamental requirement of a Republican president: she can smile and look you directly in the eye while telling an outrageous lie. At least when John McCain lies, his body screams his discomfort by putting on an eye-catching display of twitches, phony smiles and robot moves. McCain’s body language is so strange that it’s easily observable; he appears to be operated by a puppeteer who is a couple of triple-espressos over the line. That’s a good thing, though. We’d much rather have a presidential candidate who reads like a comic book when he’s lying than one who conceals those whoppers under a grin and a wink. Sarah Palin belts out her deceptions and distractions with a radiant confidence we usually only see in sociopaths and infomercial pitch-persons. The last public figure we saw who could grin and lie with that kind of sunny confidence was O. J. Simpson.

Voice-Flag #1: The Exaggerated Folksiness Of The Huckster

Our partisan colors may peek through subtly from time to time, but we do our best to be non-partisan lie-catchers. We cringed when Bill Clinton did his famous “I did not have sex…” line. We immediately looked at each other and said “uh-oh,” because his body language let us know loud and clear that he did indeed have sex with “that woman.” About ten minutes after Clinton’s declaration, our phone started ringing from producers of talk shows wanting us to comment on Clinton’s body language. They knew they’d seen something, but they couldn’t figure out exactly what.

More recently, we cringed when we heard Sarah Palin start using more of those pseudo-folksy expressions such as “You betcha” and “doggone-it.” She was droppin’ so many g’s on-stage at last week’s debate that the janitorial staff may have had to work over-time pickin’ ‘em up, by gum. The last eight years have taught us all a sobering lesson: you don’t have to be smart to be the President of the United States. However, we hope that America is smart enough to see Palin’s exaggerated folksiness for what it is, a cheap trick to cozy up to us so they can sell us four more years of Bush Lite. We hope America will hear those “You betchas” and send Mc Cain/Palin a message right back: Just because you pretend to be dumb and folksy, you don’t automatically get to live in the White House.

Voice-Flag #2: The Metallic Shriek Of The Fear-Monger

To emphasize certain points, Sarah Palin takes her voice up the tone scale to a metallic shriek. This tone will be familiar to many of us: it’s the voice your mother employed as a last resort to get you out of bed when you were a teenager. It’s designed to scare you, to rake fingernails across your inner chalkboard. She often uses this voice when she first takes the stage at a rally. It works quite well there, because it cuts like a knife and jolts any of the faithful who might be dozing to sit up in their seats. We hope Americans are not so sleepy as to vote in favor of hearing this tone of voice for four years.

Here’s the bottom line: The McCain/Palin campaign strategy is based entirely on stirring up fear. It’s a classic way to distract people from thinking about real issues and to cover up the lack of any real solutions. Their thinking goes like this:

•If we can get people scared that Obama might secretly be a Muslim or a terrorist, maybe we can get them not to think about the real issues.

•If we can get people scared that Rev. Wright might turn the inaugural benediction into an anti-American rant, maybe we can get them to believe America’s economic problems are just something cooked up by the elite media as a way to play “Gotcha” on poor Sarah and John.

•If we can scare people into thinking Barack HUSSEIN Obama is going to put Louis Farrakhan in charge of the annual White House Easter egg hunt, maybe people won’t notice that we have absolutely no solutions to the real problems they face.

Barack Obama has so far opted to run a positive campaign based on hope and thoughtful solutions. It’s our fervent desire that he continue to do so, because it’s about time we turned our national attention to positive possibilities. Over the past eight years we’ve had enough fear-mongering to last a lifetime.

(Stay tuned! In our next post we’ll look at two more important bits of body language that we all need to be paying attention to during the campaign. We’ve noticed these flags at play in both Joe Biden and John McCain, and they spell trouble for all of us.)

10
Oct
08

What REAL Political Analysis Looks Like

From Huffington Post…

Everyone wants the media to “talk about the issues.” But it’s rare to see a reporter provide a deep and intricate dive into a particular issue or policy proposal with any degree of real expertise. Take the issue of health care. The press has typically tipped off the public to the facts that there are foundational differences between the health care policies of Barack Obama and John McCain. We’re also made aware of the “Cliff’s Notes” snapshot of each plan. Yet, in the debate the other day, each man said the other man’s healthcare plan wouldn’t work, to which the second responded to the first that it wasn’t true. Wouldn’t it be great if one could find out what everyone was talking about?

Over at Swampland, Ana Marie Cox has done what many of her commenters are calling a “public service,” by subjecting John McCain’s healthcare plan to up close, nuts and bolts scrutiny. Not from a reporter. Not from a campaign surrogate. But from an actuary. (Specifically, her father. A real live actuary.) In part, here’s what Samuel H. Cox says about the plan:

Most Americans with health insurance get it through an employer and those folks are relatively happy with it. Employers are not happy with it generally and would like to get away from providing it. The government allows companies to deduct health care expenses from income and does not count the cost of health benefits as income to the employee. In effect it is a way of paying employees tax free income, as long as it goes to heath care. (Originally this was a way to work around the WWII freeze on ordinary wages.) McCain’s proposal does away with this setup, making the heath care benefit taxable income. On average that is $12,000 per year for a family of four. If a family continues in an employer program it will pay an additional tax. If they are in the 25% bracket (say $75000 income) then they pay an additional $3000 in taxes. An individual in an employer plan with health benefits of about $6000 so will pay an additional $1500 in taxes.
McCain’s proposal gives individuals a $2500 tax credit so the net for an individual is a tax credit of $1000. For a family with two persons filing, they get a tax credit of $5000, so get a net $2000 credit they can use to off set other taxes. (Actually it is not clear on this; maybe you do not get an offset.) So far it looks good for those who that already have health care through an employer. However, the costs are escalating faster than overall price inflation, so unless the tax credits are indexed to heath care costs, the advantage will disappear in a few years. While this aspect looks good now (for those who have and can continue with employer coverage), that may change without indexing. The proposal says nothing about indexing.

There’s two takeaways from this analysis (and there’s more to be had than just what I’ve cited…do indulge). First of all: when Obama says that McCain’s plan extends a tax break with one hand and then takes it back with the other, this is technically true. BUT! At the same time, those who qualify for these tax break do, nevertheless, receive a net benefit in tax relief. BIGGER BUT! No one knows if these breaks and cuts and take-backs are indexed to future increases in health care costs. McCain is probably glossing over the fact that he knows this. Perhaps Obama isn’t hitting McCain on this score because the math that underpins his own healthcare plan is similarly unindexed.

Actually, there’s a third takeaway. Why can’t there be more reporting like this? I’m not suggesting that we replace all the pretty political reporters with actuaries, but in looking over this health care issue, it seems we have a classic example of those who know more not telling, those who would tell more not knowing, and campaign press serving as stenographers for all the not-telling knowers and not-knowing tellers. If you read the post, you’ll see that Samuel Cox is willing to provide a thorough disclaimer, attesting to both his expertise and his limitations. When was the last time a reporter took the time to stipulate to their precise expertise, or otherwise admit they don’t know enough about a topic to discuss it (Ana Marie’s own admission in this post is pretty unique in this regard. Must be a blogger thing.)

There are reporters out there who specialize in health care, who specialize in education, who specialize in regional foreign policy, technology, the environment. Their sort of reporting is not sexy or sensational and it doesn’t speak to matters that the traditional media find important, like, for example: “YYYAGAGAGAAGHHH! BILL AYERS!!! BOOOOOGAAHHH!” But, don’t you have a clearer idea about McCain’s health care plan? Wouldn’t you like the same sort of scrutiny applied to Obama’s? Maybe it’s time for some of the unsung experts to trade places with some of the campaign reporters we know and love. Hey! I know one guy who’s ready to pack it in!




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