Sooner Be Blue

Mostly politics, a few current events, a squirt of seltzer down yer pants .. a little blog for my rambles and rants.

2008/6/4

It's almost over

Tags:
@ 07:46 AM (1 month, 4 days ago)
 
Hillary and Barack were neck and neck, one with more delegates, the other, more popular vote...but Barack Obama will win the Democratic nomination for president.
 
I got so sick of the 16 month long campaign -- yes, 16 months -- that I stopped watching and reading about it. What a mess. Who can blame anyone for wondering how the Democratic party can run a country if they can screw up a nominating process like that.
 
But--first time in eight tries (since the present primary and delegate system was established) that it didn't work all that well. Simply because the two candidates were all but neck-and-neck.
 
Maybe we should rethink voting by caucus and have all states vote by primary. Maybe the Iowa/NH stranglehold should be replaced by a rotating regional primaries. Maybe we should get rid of the delegate system. Maybe the party nominee should be the candidate who gets the most popular votes. And while I'm at it, maybe the electoral college should be abolished for the general election, and the winner should be the candidate receiving the most popular votes.
 
That off my chest, now we Democrats must turn our attention to the general election, and on beating John McCain.
 
And Obama still has to figure out exactly what to do with Hillary Clinton.
 
To have her on the ticket, or not to...that is the question.
 
At this point the best reason to have Clinton on the ticket is to keep a bulk of her supporters who have sworn to defect. The gain might not be worth it, when you take into account those supporters who would eventually vote for Obama anyway.
 
She has appeal within the party, but doesn’t do so well outside the party. If you're trying to appeal to disgusted Republicans and Independents ... there is a real possibility that Clinton will end up being a bigger drag on the ticket than an asset.
 
While it’s nice to think of a "dream ticket" as being unstoppable, it’s also double the baggage. Obama’s got enough baggage he’ll have to deal with on his own, and having Hillary as the VP would also result in bringing her baggage -- and Bill’s (someone give him a tranquilizer) -- along for the ride.
 
Even without any baggage, the Clintons could very easily upstage the top of the ticket...and that’s not good under any circumstances.
 
So I don’t know. At this point, I’ll live with just about anything I guess. It's time to unite together and work on beating McCain.
 
But whatever else happens from here on out, Barack Obama will  become the first African-American to win the nomination. He has changed the course of American history. He has now opened the door to other people -- other young African- Americans and people of other ethnicities who can say if he can do it, I can do it. And that's an historic moment.
 
The fact that both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama now have legitimized the idea that no matter what your gender, no matter what your race, you can make it to the top of American politics. This alone is something to celebrate.
 
It's ironic that, when the Democratic convention is held on August 28 and Barack Obama accepts the nomination for president, 45 years ago on that actual date, a young man stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and gave his "I Have A Dream" speech. How I wish he could have lived to see this.
 
America with all her warts, her dark history concerning the rights of blacks and women, has indeed changed, is evolving, and still the best country in the world. As sick as we are of it, I think this whole Barack Obama/Hillary Clinton campaign has done a lot to help America's reputation around the world.
 
George W. Bush sometimes made me ashamed to be American...but the tide has, hopefully, turned. We should pat ourselves on the back as Americans, we are going to restore our reputation.
 
Now on to November...and the Reverend Wright commercials...and probably one hell of an October surprise...
 

2008/3/5

Call her the Comeback Queen

Tags:
@ 08:11 AM (4 months, 5 days ago)

See what can happen Hillary, when you run on your own and leave Bill off the stage...
 
"Clinton Counterpunches With Wins in Texas and Ohio"
 
From yahoo news: Hillary Clinton climbed back into the Democratic presidential primary race Tuesday by winning the popular votes in Texas and Ohio -- victories that halted Barack Obama's previous string of 11 wins in smaller contests and set the stage for a bruising final act in the party's nominating process.
 
"For everyone here in Ohio and across America who has been counted out but refused to be knocked out; for everyone who has stumbled but stood right back up; and for everyone who works hard and never gives up, this one is for you," Clinton told the crowd at her victory rally in Columbus long before the Texas outcome was clear. "We're going on, we're going strong and we're going all the way."
 
...Clinton has won six of the seven most delegate-rich states that have voted: California, Texas, Ohio, Massachusetts, New Jersey and her home state of New York. Of the top seven, Obama has won only his home state of Illinois.
 
..."No matter what happens tonight we have nearly the same delegate lead as we did this morning and we are on our way to winning this nomination," Obama told supporters in San Antonio.
 
Obama's camp has argued that Clinton cannot close the gap between the candidates in pledged delegates, who are chosen on a state-by-state basis through primaries, caucuses, party conventions -- typically in complex processes that award them based on proportion of popular votes and other factors.
 
The balance of power is in the hands of the superdelegates....[..]"
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/cq/20080305/pl_cq_politics/politics2681265_1
 
Ha ha, and you thought the endless nightmare battle between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama was finally coming to a close.
 
The wind was at Obama's back and the press was at his feet...but he still couldn't close the deal.
 
Toldja she was a fighter...and given the horrific shape this country's going to be in for the next 4-8 years, we definetly need a tenacious fighter.
 
And Hillary was masterful in embarrassing the media into finally getting over their obsession to see her lose long enough to give Obama more scrutiny.
 
In there any way the party can now deny the electability issues?
 
If the Democratic race continues to be contested until the convention in late August, that's nearly another six months of Obama and Hillary spending hundreds of millions of dollars picking on one another that should better be used against McCain. The more they pick each other apart the more ammo they give McCain.
 
I hate it, but what are we to do? Both camps fiercely believe in their candidate.
 
Then there's "Hillary Math"...which says no matter how many more races she wins she still can't get enough delegates to win. After all, last night she picked up only 20...23?
 
And it looks like Hillary is going to fight for those "illegal" delegates from Florida and Michigan. DNC Chairman Howard Dean says no way, rules are rules.
 
Are we going to have another tussle about a candidate losing even though they won by popular vote?
 
It might come down to the DNC trying to negotiate a joint ticket, and I don't think Clinton will concede to the VP slot. Obama, on the other hand, should feel honored to be her VP. He needs to learn from her.
 
Also I would like to point out: In Ohio TOTAL Republican turnout was 1,004,391. Hillary's vote total alone was 1,203,924...without a single Obama vote she would still blow them away. Not that we don't want Obama voters....we do, this just shows how strong she is in such a swing state.
 
I love Obama's speeches and his message, but one thing is for sure--this last week was his toughest challenge as a candidate yet, and he stumbled. If Hillary can knock him off kilter without getting all that nasty, what will the Republicans do to him come November? If he can't deflect it now....
 
Barack Obama probably lost Texas and Ohio because of the controversy over his NAFTA remarks and his denial of a campaign advisor's meeting with the Canadian counsel general in Chicago. I like Obama and will take him at his word that he didn't know about the meeting. But that raises other questions about shouldn't his left hand know what his right hand is doing? Do we want a White House run like that?
 
Meanwhile, GOP nominee McCain will be at the White House today to officially become Bush's heir apparent. Blow this picture up and paste it everywhere.
 
http://tinyurl.com/ytz4x3
 
Hillary Clinton. The first woman who ever had a chance to change the country and the world in one fell swoop. A woman with strength and wisdom, which comes through alliances gotten through years of hard work. A woman with a lifetime of experience applying for The Job.
 
A woman who is a fighter, but not just to win. To lead. To repair and heal our country. A woman at the helm. It can happen. Believe.
 

2008/3/3

Here's "Jack and Hill"

Tags:
@ 08:58 AM (4 months, 7 days ago)
 
"You can't handle the truth!"
 
Jack Nicholson, a man who knows the virtue of a powerful woman, released a web video supporting Hillary Clinton last weekend.
 
Using clips from his famous roles as Joker in "Batman," "Easy Rider," and "A Few Good Men," among others -- Nicholson tells voters what he’s looking for and why Hillary is his choice:
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsweXFpfa28
 
Wait a minute...does Hillary actually know what Army guys mean when they talk about "saluting a woman in the morning"?
 
I thought it was a great ad...fun...something that's been sorely lacking in her campaign.
 
And she's still getting SNL mileage, watch before NBC jerks it off line:
 
http://tinyurl.com/3boka3
 
BTW--I am well aware that referring to Sen. Clinton by her first name takes away from her seriousness as a candidate for the office of president...but I just can't help myself.
 
The last American to successfully get away with this kind of familiarity was Ike, who endeared himself to Americans by serving so well as a General in WWII. Also, the Brits called Prime Minister Thatcher, "Maggie."
 
Anyway, Hillary may not win...but nobody can say she didn't go down swinging.
 

2008/2/26

"Bitch is the new black!"

Tags:
@ 06:42 AM (4 months, 13 days ago)

Saturday Night Live returned from its writer's strike and hit a home run with the biggest overnight rating in two years. But the news of the night came when Tina Fey formally endorsed Hillary Clinton for President. She quickly made fun of just about every reason pundits and other women are using not to vote for Hillary.
 
[UPDATE: They jerked it off YouTube, here is the NBC URL, but you have to wade through an ad first]
 
http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/#mea=221773
 
If you are in the Clinton camp, this should make you happy. One thing for sure, it couldn't come at a better time.
 
I remember the McCain incident, when he was asked "How do we beat the bitch?"...how he just laughed and went along. Good ol' Tailhook boy that he is.
 
I think Tina was trying to reclaim the power of the term "bitch" for women...and defuse the nastiness that so many people intend when they call someone a bitch.
 
"Yo, Bitches get things done!"
 
What do you say, we start an All Bitch Party? Goodbye Democrats! The Bitch is Back could be our theme song! Yeah...we could have A Million Bitch March on Washington.........
 
Seriously, strong women don't necessarily want to be mean...or be seen as "bitches." However, misogyny and gender inequality are so tightly woven into our culture that women HAVE to work harder, speak louder and defend actions that are commonly accepted by men.
 
I really do wonder why women are called bitches for taking the same action as their male counterparts.
 
Men are ambitious, which is good. Women are just am-bitches.......
 

2008/1/30

So...did Hillary win Florida or what?

Tags:
@ 08:26 AM (5 months, 10 days ago)

According to CNN and MSNBC "Hillary didn't win anything"...because there are no delegates awarded. Forget that Democrats turned out in droves to vote and clearly Hillary won their support. She beat Obama by nearly 300K votes. Even if Edwards hadn't been on the ballot she still would have beaten Obama.
 
Today people are calling this a win, a big win. No Democrat campaigned in Florida, but Clinton got the most votes by a mile. Democrats turned out in droves even thought they were told their vote wouldn't count.
 
Yep, the media kept calling it an outlaw Dem primary and a meaningless beauty contest... that the delegates won't count.
 
Or will they count?
 
See, the DNC voted in '06 to give special permission to certain small states to hold early caucuses and primaries, because small states require personal campaigning rather than airport rallies...which prevents politics from becoming just a contest of who has the most money for TV ads. People get to meet the candidates face to face and look them in the eye.
 
And the early states did their job well ...they gave us a close look at the Democratic field before narrowing it down to Clinton, Obama and Edwards.
 
Under DNC rules no other state could hold a primary or caucus before Feb 5. But Florida and Michigan went ahead and scheduled their 2008 primaries in January. This riled the DNC, it not only undermined the special status of the four small states, but it also meant that Florida and Michigan were unfairly squeezing ahead of the 22 states and Super Tuesday, Feb 5.
 
So the DNC penalized both Michigan and Florida for 'going early' and stripped them of all their convention delegates.
 
But party leaders in Michigan and Florida point out that such penalties have always been lifted in the past.
 
If a squabble ensues, the dispute will go first to the Convention Credentials Committee...then if it came to a shoot-out the floor of the convention itself would have a test vote that could decide the nomination.
 
Lord, if that happens there will be blood ...and you know the losing side will squawk that they got screwed.
 
But, it ain't gonna happen. Of course the Florida and Michigan delegates will be seated. This is the Democratic Party not the Authoritarian Party...otherwise some 2 million voters would be disenfranchised. Why in the world would Dems be crazy enough to risk alienating all those voters and give those states to the Republicans?
 
People kept saying Florida doesn't matter. Believe me, after 2000, Florida matters.
 
Hillary has done her homework... Florida, and Michigan, matter very much.
 
And I can finally breathe a little easier. Rudy Giuliani will never be President! Thank you Florida!