Republicans clearly laid out their strategy during their convention. Distance themselves from Bush, ridicule Obama and mock his public service, remind everyone every ten seconds that McCain was a POW, and reignite the culture wars. Oh, and lie. Palin's speech, dripping with disdain for Obama, was full of lies. McCain wants to win by making the election not about issues or policies and the future of America, but by painting Democrats and Obama as elitist, disdainful of those backbone-of-America small town values, and downright scary and dangerous. Palin is supposed to the one you relate to, just like Bush was the one you were supposed to want to have a beer with. McCain's campaign has basically admitted as much, by the way. It's all about cultural populism and character. Obviously, if it were about managing the government, solving our problems, restoring our good name internationally, upholding the Constitution, ending the war in Iraq - you know, the stuff that matters - Obama would win.
Meanwhile, revelling in their post-convention bounce and the novelty and media frenzy surrounding Palin, McCain's campaign is reaching unbelievable lows, leaving some wondering how the media is so complicit in it all, , what happened to McCain's integrity, and whatever happened to that thing we like to call the truth. New ads from McCain put forth blatant and verifiable mistruths (like this one and this absolutely despicable one). The new strategy is to create sideshow after sideshow, like claiming that Obama called Palin a pig when he used an old expression (that McCain himself has used repeatedly) to describe McCain's policies. Obama is justifiably annoyed and frustrated by the whole strategy:
See it would be funny, it would be funny except -- of course the news media all decided that that was the lead story yesterday. They'd much rather have the story -- this is the McCain campaign -- would much rather have the story about phony and foolish diversions than about the future.This happens every election cycle. Every four years. This is what we do. We've got an energy crisis. We have an education system that is not working for too many of our children and making us less competitive. We have an economy that is creating hardship for families all across America. We've got two wars going on, veterans coming home not being cared for -- and this is what they want to talk about! this is what they want to spend two of the last 55 days talking about.
You know who ends up losing at the end of the day? It's not the Democratic candidate, It's not the republican candidate. It's you, the American people. because then we go another year or another four years or another eight years without addressing the issues that matter to you. Enough.
I don't care what they say about me, but I love this country too much to let them take over another election with lies and phony outrage and swift-boat politics. Enough is enough.
Folks, we have a lot to do. McCain and the GOP think they've found a winning strategy that will keep them in power. Problem is, it's an insult to Americans and a dead end for our nation. I talked to a guy yesterday that supports McCain. He thought that Obama's entire plan for energy is about car maintenance and proper tire inflation. He loved that Palin has more "executive" experience than Obama. A majority of Americans believe the lie that Obama will raise everyone's taxes (this one really bugs me, as Obama's plan cuts taxes significantly for vast majority of Americans and raises taxes only for the most wealthy).
While we need to inform people about Obama's key policy proposals and his real accomplishments and how he would make a good President, we also need to let Republicans know that they don't have a monopoly on values, nor do their values represent those of most Americans. We need to expose the extreme social conservatism of the GOP's platform this year. We need to make it clear that the President's role is not to play some role as defender of so-called family values, but to improve families' lives by making our economy stronger and more just. We need to make it clear that Obama understand thats we need to use our might wisely and with restraint. We need to make it clear that we won't fall for that same old crap this time.
There's just too much at stake.


1 comments:
Ever wonder why Obama never had anyone by his side at that convention from those Community Organizing days...? Or even just a few pictures?
Or contemplate Obama's silence yesterday on Emil Jones....
I voted for him once thinking he'd clean up Illinois, but the closer you get to Obama, and the more you know, you realize he was in bed with some of the worst in our State. If elected he'll bring the whole crew to Wash DC.
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