2008 Primaries Thread 3: The Rejecting and Denouncening

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pravda.ru headline, tomorrow: Mountain Goat Unionizes China

StanM, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:23 (eighteen years ago)

Morbs is otm about obama's failing but waiting for a dem who is fdr lefty rather than a liberal is somewhat foolhardy

No liberals are running for prez (Ted Kennedy '80 might've been the last who had a shot, Feingold opted not to this time). And I think the only lefty in FDR's family was Eleanor.

But I'm not waiting for Lefty, the corporatization of "democracy" has made that a fantasy as far as the presidency (and most everything else) goes. I just evaluate every 4 years if I can hold my nose while voting for the Dem, and I haven't managed it since '84. All I'm looking for is a prez who can be pressured into doing progressive things, which is what many libs expected they could do to Bill Clinton to be before he shat on them by triangulating into Abolish Welfare/Promote School Uniforms/Bomb Kosovo territory.

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:34 (eighteen years ago)

I am yanking your chain, slightly, on the Liberal thing, I dislike the US definition of Liberal as Progressive. For me liberalism is something that should have died with the rise of the labour party but keeps coming back to haunt us. It is a US/UK semantics thing.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:46 (eighteen years ago)

the UK labour party has been "liberal" (as much as any party has been -- ie not much by C19 standards) for nigh on a century.

banriquit, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:49 (eighteen years ago)

I would disagree, I think it started off social democratic but has trended liberal since at least the 60s. Now is the most liberal of three highly Liberal political parties.

anyway this is a derail

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:51 (eighteen years ago)

Obama announces road trip, gabbneb swoons

gabbneb, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:52 (eighteen years ago)

if you think that any presidential candidate can get elected on the palestinian thing you are psycho

does it suck, maybe, but thats the reality of the situation

there is always going to be a balance between idealism and electability and the sooner morbius realizes this the sooner his ranting doesnt sound so tired. i dont even mind (and would in fact PREFER) if he continue to bring up issues like the four he listed above that you might consider Obama's missteps or flaws but couching them in damnation of any candidate who positions himself as 'electable' is just futile

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:53 (eighteen years ago)

Hey Mary:

We don't need people like you in PA either. You are so full of hate. YOu must live in the Alabama portion of the state.

Posted by Andrew | March 24, 2008 8:16 PM

Mr. Que, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:54 (eighteen years ago)

I'm sympathetic to Morbs' intransigence because Bill Clinton was enough to sour any liberal on the Democratic party for a generation.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:59 (eighteen years ago)

Also both Obama and Clinton deserve a slap for supporting 'clean' coal although I understand you can't be anti-coal in PA if you want to remain 'electable'.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 18:59 (eighteen years ago)

but a "progressive" will never get elected. In this country, whether you're Lincoln or LBJ, you need to be nudged towards expanding civil rights.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:00 (eighteen years ago)

universal healthcare is expanding civil rights.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:01 (eighteen years ago)

are you scoffing at the idea of 'electability'?

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:05 (eighteen years ago)

I am scoffing at the idea of anyone of intelligence (not funded by the coal industry or trying to win votes in mining areas) actually repping for the idea that clean coal is economically or technologically possible.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:12 (eighteen years ago)

I have not "damned" Obama (aside from saying He's a Politician), would be comfortable doing so to Rodham and McBickle.

Dr Morbius, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:15 (eighteen years ago)

ed, what's your problem w. liberalism anyway:

Sure free trade has hurt jobs in the devloped world but some of the blame lies at the feet of organised labour for not standing up for the rights and wages of the brothers and sisters in emerging economies, in effect globalising itself to deal with the globalisation of capital.

-- Ed, Tuesday, March 25, 2008 6:11 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link

plus obvious scoff @ "oh, it's easy, just globalize organized labour"

banriquit, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:16 (eighteen years ago)

man you guys I've only been at this for an hour or so but it turns out China totally does NOT want me to unionize them, Beijing is totally not even talking to me any more

J0hn D., Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:16 (eighteen years ago)

this sounds like a job for billy bragg, tbh

omar little, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:19 (eighteen years ago)

ha!

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:19 (eighteen years ago)

Oh well. Thanks for trying. You still coming to our Olympic Games Girl- and Boycott? (xxpost)

StanM, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:26 (eighteen years ago)

btw Ed OTM that "clean coal" is a steaming load of bullshit

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:37 (eighteen years ago)

the last thing dems need is to split the 'people's party' and 'environmental party' vote

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:40 (eighteen years ago)

Liberalism is light on compulsion and redistribution, it's kind of progressive but only at the whim of those who hold the resources.

A Peoples party and an enviromental party are one and the same.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:43 (eighteen years ago)

poll has O up 20 pts in NC. if that holds and IN is close, or if he wins by 10 and wins IN, it's over.

gabbneb, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:45 (eighteen years ago)

but the peoples party and environmental party votes are not

theres a reason that developing countries have a harder time dealing w/ environmental issues than developed ones. coal miners are not about to throw out their livelihoods

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:46 (eighteen years ago)

peoples party votes and environmental party votes are not

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:47 (eighteen years ago)

Coal Miners are going to have to be transitioned into other jobs because no one has a future if we keep burning coal.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:51 (eighteen years ago)

What's over, gabbneb? A Rasmussen poll from last Thursday had Clinton up 28 points in West Virginia, and I'd wager that she'll do well in Kentucky, too. Unless Obama manages to win these states, too, I don't think you can call it.

jaymc, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:53 (eighteen years ago)

Coal Miners are going to have to be transitioned into other jobs because no one has a future if we keep burning coal.

-- Ed, Tuesday, March 25, 2008 2:51 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Link

yeah i agree but if you want to elect someone who gives a shit ...

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:54 (eighteen years ago)

I don't disagree with that at all, that is realpolitik, but Obama, at least, is meant to be a charismatic leader, not a panderer.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 19:58 (eighteen years ago)

This belongs on the veep thread, but it's hilarious: Romney as McCain's #2:

Where the fuck do Republicans get the impression that Romney knows a good goddamn about the economy?

Well, it's unlikely that Mitt will flip Massachusetts to red, but in addition to having great fundraising network, and being ten years younger and a tireless campaigner, he brings one heck of a message. Romney's mastery of economic issues and rep as the business turnaround guy could prove highly valuable to McCain. (Not to mention the healing to party divisions it might prompt.)

While McCain hogs the campaign trail spotlight, Romney could quietly barnstorm the most depressed areas of the country laying out a plan to tackle economic woes. His expert knowledge here and relentlessly upbeat demeanor would probably go over well. Further, his expertise means he could go out on the attack against the other candidate(s) on the issue with confidence and ease as the McCain camp needs him to.

Once elected, Romney could continue to deal with the issue. Being weighed down with concerns over the domestic economy is probably not what McCain wants anyway. President McCain would then be able to focus in on the issues he cares about — the war, national security and congressional/fiscal corruption. Romney would have to be careful not to overshadow McCain, but if the economy improves he could take some measure of credit for it and end up with an elevated profile to set him up for his own run at the White House, which could prove crucial if McCain ends up going one term.

There's bad blood still left over from the primary, but Romney appears willing to bury the hatchet. If McCain's smart, he'll look past that and start objectively weighing the merits of Veep Romney now.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:00 (eighteen years ago)

xpost

clean coal is a little more complicated than that -- I doubt anyone would disagree that ideally we'd have discontinued coal burning entirely. but there's the increasingly likely scenario that coal will soon be so much cheaper than oil that people are just going to _start burning it no matter what_

in which case, the best-case scenario is that clean-burning technologies have already been put in place. and the politicians who are really thinking ahead are already looking into ways to cheaply distribute the same technology to China & India

Milton Parker, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:04 (eighteen years ago)

There are clean burning technologies in terms of desulpherisation but there is no economic way of dealing with the CO2. The two should not be conflated.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:06 (eighteen years ago)

strike at the root of the problem. wipe out half the population and burn down the internet, presto, CO2 emissions from coal become "manageable"

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:08 (eighteen years ago)

and quite frankly, although we could put resources into clean coal technology, we could equally put that money into renewable energies that work now. (although there is a promising line in biofuels based on algae that grow in CO2 rich environments which could be a limited CO2 sink, but lets not kid ourselves that this is going to be cheap).

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:10 (eighteen years ago)

strike at the root of the problem. wipe out half the population and burn down the internet, presto, CO2 emissions from coal become "manageable"

World heading this direction anyway.

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:11 (eighteen years ago)

Obama pwning the shit free online gamer vote 2:1

http://i28.tinypic.com/2u7x105.gif

http://www.miniclip.com/games/street-fight/en/

onimo, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:33 (eighteen years ago)

http://mediamattersaction.org/freeride/?src=top

and what, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:38 (eighteen years ago)

any ed posts about carbon footprints etc are hilarious.

banriquit, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:41 (eighteen years ago)

Indeed, I am a colossal hypocrite

Ed, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:42 (eighteen years ago)

I think it's interesting how places like NRO, et al complain about McCain in large part for the same reasons as discussed in that link -- 'too chummy with the mass media, it's all image, etc.' -- though through their lens, and a lot of that seems to boil down to a 'if only he dealt with an HONEST mass media like Rush and Fox News.'

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 20:43 (eighteen years ago)

Hillary: "I would not have chosen Wright as my pastor."

Hillary's Pastor as First Lady: "Lay off Wright, he's a outstanding guy"

http://www.foundryumc.org/pdfs/Statement%20concerning%20Rev.%20Jeremiah%20Wright.pdf

elmo argonaut, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:30 (eighteen years ago)

hahaha

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:36 (eighteen years ago)

Clinton Chats With The Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy?
Posted by Scott Conroy| Comments2

The news out of Pennsylvania today was that Hillary Clinton weighed in on the Reverend Jeremiah Wright controversy when she told a newspaper editorial board, "he would not have been my pastor … You don't choose your family, but you choose what church you want to attend."

But somewhat lost in the hubbub over this latest jab at Obama was the very fact that Clinton was meeting with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review editorial board at all.

Published by billionaire conservative activist Richard Mellon Scaife, the Tribune-Review is known for its opinion page, which tilts heavily to the right. During the 1990s, the paper published a series of stories examining the case of Vince Foster, the former White House Deputy Counsel whose 1993 death was ruled a suicide after several investigations.

The Tribune-Review was at the forefront of conspiracy theorists who speculated that Hillary and President Clinton may have been involved in murdering Foster and covering up his death. As late as 2002, the Tribune-Review published a column suggesting Hillary Clinton's presidential aspirations would be tampered due to the Foster "cover-up."

Asked at a news conference this afternoon what it felt like to sit in the heart of the "vast right-wing conspiracy," Clinton laughed.

"It was actually very pleasant … " she said. "I said in the beginning when I arrived that it was obviously somewhat counterintuitive for me to be there, but it was a good discussion."

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:40 (eighteen years ago)

seduced by the dark side...if you can't beat 'em blah blah blah

akm, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:45 (eighteen years ago)

Clniton's 'I was shot at by snipers' lie is getting front page mention by the BBC, which is presumably a sign that it's getting more tracion.

dowd, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:47 (eighteen years ago)

it could sink her in the all important britishes primary

banriquit, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:48 (eighteen years ago)

bbc's had a pretty anti-clinton tilt for awhile judging by the headlines ive been reading on google news

deej, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:48 (eighteen years ago)

dudes its been the lede on drudge for like 2 days

jhøshea, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:49 (eighteen years ago)

brit media is pretty uniformly probama, yeah.

banriquit, Tuesday, 25 March 2008 21:49 (eighteen years ago)


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