Audacity of Truth

The Monetary Value of Speeches

Posted February 15th, 2008 | Permanent Link

OK, this might be my new favorite line of attack. I get a new one every week, like Primary Chanukah!

“There’s a big difference between us — speeches versus solutions, talk versus action,” she said.

“Speeches don’t put food on the table. Speeches don’t fill up your tank or fill your prescription or do anything about that stack of bills that keeps you up at night.”

Why is this my new favorite? Goon Tensen put it best.

I must say, as mindblowing as Senator Clinton giving a speech about how useless speeches are was, the biggest moment for me was the line “Speeches don’t pay the bills.”

…she does know how her husband made them rich after they left the White House, doesn’t she?

Speeches only put food on some people’s tables.

Written by chesh | In Personal | No Comments »

Too Professorial

Posted February 14th, 2008 | Permanent Link

This is one of my favorite slams against Senator Obama. “He speaks in generalities! He never gives specifics! Waaa!”

It’s my favorite because it so clearly shows how little attention the person claiming it is making. In fact, Steve Kroft brought it up in this 60 minutes interview:

“You talk about big ideas and often with a lack of specificity. And it’s been one of the complaints about your campaign,” Kroft remarked.

“Remember, early on in the campaign, the complaint about me was that I was too professorial. That I would go through these town hall meetings and, you know, go into great detail about this and that and the other. And you know, wondering what ever happened to that inspiring guy who spoke at the Democratic…convention. Yeah. And now that I’m inspiring people and saying, ‘Hey, you know, where is the specifics?’ And so, you know, if there are issues that you want to cover right now, I’m happy to,” Obama said. “So why don’t we work those through?”

You can, in fact, have it both ways. You can enjoy his oratory in one speech and then listen to a different one full of policy. You just have to do your civic duty and pay attention, America.

Written by chesh | In Career | No Comments »

Cuba

Posted February 13th, 2008 | Permanent Link

What is Obama’s position on Cuba?

  • Obama has advocated easing the Bush-imposed ban on Cuban-Americans visiting the island and sending money to their relatives. He makes a broader case for a new Cuba policy, arguing that capitalism, trade and travel will help break the regime’s stranglehold on the country and help open things up.Clinton immediately disagreed, firmly supporting the current policy. This places her in the strange position of arguing, in effect, that her husband’s Cuba policy was not hard-line enough. But this is really not the best way to understand Clinton’s position. In all probability, she actually agrees with Obama’s stand. She is just calculating that it would anger Cuban-Americans in Florida and New Jersey.

    ….

    This is not naiveté. Obama’s position on Cuba is not all hope. Most of the older generation of Cuban-Americans are hard-line Republicans anyway, so it’s probably pointless courting them. And the younger ones—under 45 or so—are far less wedded to the punitive approach and symbolic battles of the past. So Obama is taking a calculated risk that the time is right.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/107578

Written by chesh | In FAQ | No Comments »

Donating

Posted February 13th, 2008 | Permanent Link

I am a foreigner!

  1. Can I donate to Obama’s campaign?
    Emphatically no. It is illegal to donate if you are not a U. S. citizen. Please do not donate, and please do not ask a U. S. citizen to take money and donate it for you. IT IS VERY ILLEGAL
  2. Can I buy from Obama’s store?
    No, that counts as a donation. If you want Obama gear, there’s lots of it on CafePress and all of it perfectly legal for you to buy.
  3. Well then, can I make an avatar and buy it for someone in exchange for them donating?
    No, you cannot. Please do not do this, it is very shady.
  4. Can I make avatars just for fun?
    Yes, you may.
  5. What else can I do?
    You could buy Obama’s books, Dreams from my Father and The Audacity of Hope, but if you really want to give money to someone, please choose a charity (use Charity Navigator to find a good one) and donate money or time to it. The true spirit of this campaign is not just to help Barack get elected, but to help ourselves and each other.

I work for a government contractor? Can I still donate?

  • Yes you can. You are not a government contractor, your employer is.
  • Why are so many people donating $xx.01?

  • In one of Barack’s speeches, he told us a story about an elderly woman who sent him a check for $3.01 and a Bible verse. The addition of an extra cent is symbolic: every little bit counts.
  • Written by chesh | In FAQ | No Comments »

    I Am A Foreigner

    Posted February 13th, 2008 | Permanent Link

    Can I donate to Obama’s campaign?

  • Emphatically no. It is illegal to donate if you are not a U. S. citizen. Please do not donate, and please do not ask a U. S. citizen to take money and donate it for you. IT IS VERY ILLEGAL
  • Can I buy from Obama’s store?

  • No, that counts as a donation. If you want Obama gear, there’s lots of it on CafePress and all of it perfectly legal for you to buy.
  • What else can I do?

  • You could buy Obama’s books, Dreams from my Father and The Audacity of Hope, but if you really want to give money to someone, please choose a charity (use Charity Navigator to find a good one) and donate money or time to it. The true spirit of this campaign is not just to help Barack get elected, but to help ourselves and each other.
  • Written by chesh | In FAQ | No Comments »

    I am making flyers/pro-Obama merchandise!

    Posted February 13th, 2008 | Permanent Link

    Excellent! When making Obama merchandise, it is essential to keep it respectful and positive. Remember you are a representative of the campaign, and the face you present to the world is what people will remember about Obama. When making flyers, you need to add this DISCLAIMER somewhere on them: “Paid for by _________. Not authorized or paid for by the Obama campaign.” This is a legal requirement.

    Written by chesh | In FAQ | No Comments »

    Who Is Barack Obama?

    Posted February 13th, 2008 | Permanent Link

    Barack Obama is the junior Senator from Illinois, born in 1961 to a white mother from Kansas and a black father from Kenya. He spent his childhood and teenage years in Hawaii and Indonesia, and graduated from Columbia University with a degree in Political Science, specializing in International Relations. In the 1980s he worked as a community organizer in Chicago, then attended Harvard Law where he was elected the first black president of the Harvard Law Review. Graduating Magna Cum Laude, he returned to Chicago to continue his work in the community. As an associate attorney with Miner, Barnhill & Galland from 1993 to 1996, he represented community organizers, discrimination claims, and voting rights cases. In 1996 he was elected to the Illinois state senate representing Hyde Park and was a lecturer of constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School from 1993 until his election to the U.S. Senate in 2004. In February of 2007 he announced his candidacy for President and is currently a strong contender, building a vast grassroots campaign on a message of hope, community, unity, and empowerment. Visit his website at BarackObama.com.

    Written by chesh | In FAQ | No Comments »

    The Snub

    Posted January 30th, 2008 | Permanent Link

    Dubbed The Snub by the media, and played up endlessly, this photo has been getting a lot of airtime:

    Not content to just let the media talk about it, Clinton talked about it, too:

    Hillary went on ABC News on Tuesday night to insinuate that he had been rude Monday.

    “Well, I reached my hand out in friendship and unity and my hand is still reaching out,” she said. “And I look forward to shaking his hand sometime soon.”

    That would have been a pretty horrible diss by Obama, if that’s what had actually happened. Let’s look at it from another angle, shall we?

    Oh, look at that. He turned, actually, because Clair McCaskill had asked him a question. You can clearly see that he’s turned before she has. He didn’t even see Hillary. But, by all means, keep playing it up as something else.

    Written by chesh | In Personal | No Comments »

    Back To Reality

    Posted January 25th, 2008 | Permanent Link
    I was fighting against those ideas when you were practicing law and representing your contributor, Rezko, in his slum landlord business in inner city Chicago.

    Oh, Hillary. We’ve been over this. Once more, with feeling, then?

    Obama worked for a charity group that partnered with Rezko. He did 5 hours of work for them as an associate, which means his bosses told him to do this here job.

    William Miceli, Obama’s supervisor at the law firm, said the firm represented the Woodlawn Preservation and Investment Corp., a nonprofit group that redeveloped a run-down property on Chicago’s South Side with Rezko. He called Clinton’s assertion that Obama represented Rezko in a slum landlord business ‘categorically untrue. He was a very junior lawyer at the time, who was given responsibility for basic due diligence, document review,’ said Miceli, adding that Obama did what he was told by the firm.

    And he did nothing for Rezko while a state senator

    And a Tribune review of land and court documents and law firm files as well as correspondence and other records related to Obama’s eight years as an Illinois state lawmaker supports his contention that he did not directly represent Rezko’s development firm. Instead, the records show, he represented non-profit community groups that partnered with Rezko’s firm.

    Oh… hey, who’s this guy in the middle? That wouldn’t be Tony Rezko, would it?

    When shown the picture on The Today Show, Clinton responded:

    I don’t know the man. I wouldn’t know him if he walked in the door. I don’t have a 17-year relationship with him.

    No doubt Senator Clinton had her picture taken with lots of people while serving as both First Lady and as a Senator. Perhaps she should keep that in mind the next time she wants to create the idea that merely associating with someone equals corruption.

    Written by chesh | In Uncategorized | No Comments »

    Reagan, Reagan, Reagan!

    Posted January 25th, 2008 | Permanent Link

    I’ve heard that if you stand in front of a mirror and say his name three times it will summon him from his unholy rest…

    Obama gave a candid interview to the Reno Gazette-Journal in which he said something that turned out not to be demonizing enough about Ronald Reagan:

    I don’t want to present myself as some sort of singular figure. I think part of what’s different are the times. I do think that, for example, the 1980 election was different. I think Ronald Reagan changed the trajectory of America in a way that Richard Nixon did not and in a way that Bill Clinton did not. He put us on a fundamentally different path because the country was ready for it. I think they felt like with all the excesses of the 1960s and 1970s and government had grown and grown but there wasn’t much sense of accountability in terms of how it was operating. I think people, he just tapped into what people were already feeling, which was: we want clarity, we want optimism, we want a return to that sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing.

    The Lefty Blogosphere went nuts over this quote, completely missing the point. The 60’s saw an amazing upheaval of popular culture, politics, economy, etc.. We saw the end of segregation, the beginning of the feminist and gay rights movements, the emergence of rock and roll, the anti-war movement. We saw all of our most liberal leaders killed.

    The 70’s brought Cambodia, Watergate, fuel shortages, a recession, the Iran Hostage Crisis, a rise in violent crime, homelessness, and drug use, to name just a few. People were looking for a father figure. People were looking for someone to tell them that it was morning in America, and that he could make things all better. It was transformative, and came in the guise of a B-movie actor who was really good at connecting with his audience. And it worked.

    But oh no no. We can’t say that because, as we all know, Ronald Reagan was the devil and he invented AIDS. Goon Periodiko points out the obvious:

    In the rush to accumulate evidence that Obama is actually a Republican manchurian candidate no one is bothering to note that he’s talking about a historical event in a neutral tone as a point of comparison for christ’s sake. No reasonable person would read that and assume he was making anything remotely resembling a policy judgment about Ronald Reagan. Any reasonable person would read this and realize that he is focusing on Ronald Reagan’s significance and weight as a politician and the positive perceptions that he rode to office. There is nothing in there that condones, opposes, or even deals with Ronald Reagan outside of this aspect. It’s such desperate, willful misinterpretation it’s getting embarrassing.

    That’s not all Obama said about Reagan, though. He also said, in the same interview:

    The Republican approach I think has played itself out. I think it’s fair to say that the Republicans were the party of ideas for a pretty long chunk of time there over the last 10-15 years in the sense that they were challenging conventional wisdom.

    Oh boy. This quote was picked up by Clinton, so here we go.

    I have to say, you know, my leading opponent the other day said that he thought the Republicans had better ideas than Democrats the last ten to fifteen years. That’s not the way I remember the last ten to fifteen years.

    I don’t think it’s a better idea to privatize Social Security. I don’t think it’s a better idea to try to eliminate the minimum wage. I don’t think it’s a better idea to undercut health benefits and to give drug companies the right to make billions of dollars by providing prescription drugs to Medicare recipients. I don’t think it’s a better idea to shut down the government, to drive us into debt.

    He didn’t say better. He didn’t even say “good.” He said they had ideas. This, right here, is what we close observers call a lie. But since getting caught in a lie has never stopped anyone, let’s get Barney Frank to say it, and then let’s get Bill Clinton to say it and get everyone to say it some more!

    Yes, how dare he give credit to Reagan. He even did it in his book!

    Audacity of Hope page 31:

    That Reagan’s message found such a receptive audience spoke not only to his kills as a communicator; it also spoke to the failures of liberal government, during a period of economic stagnation, to give middle-class voters any sense that it was fighting for them. For the fact was government at every level had become to cavalier about spending taxpayer money. Too often bureaucracies were oblivious to the cost of their mandates. A lot of liberal rhetoric did seem to value rights and entitlements over duties and responsibilities. Reagan may have exaggerated the sins of the welfare state, and certainly liberals were right to complain that his domestic policies tilted heavily toward elites, with corporate raiders making tidy profits throughout the eighties while unions were busted and the income for the average working stiff flatlined.

    Nevertheless, by promising to side with those who worked hard, obeyed the law, cared for their families, loved their country, Reagan offered Americans a sense of common purpose that liberals seemed no longer able to muster.

    My GOD, man. But, what if maybe others have said stuff about Reagan?

    It was a remarkable moment: A young, free-thinking presidential hopeful named Bill Clinton sat down with reporters and editors at The Washington Post in October 1991 and started saying things most Democrats wouldn’t allow to pass their lips.

    Ronald Reagan, Clinton said, deserved credit for winning the Cold War. He praised Reagan’s “rhetoric in defense of freedom” and his role in “advancing the idea that communism could be rolled back.”

    “The idea that we were going to stand firm and reaffirm our containment strategy, and the fact that we forced them to spend even more when they were already producing a Cadillac defense system and a dinosaur economy, I think it hastened their undoing,” Clinton declared.

    His apostasy was widely noticed. The Memphis Commercial Appeal praised Clinton two days later for daring to “set himself apart from the pack of contenders for the Democratic nomination by saying something nice about Ronald Reagan.” Clinton’s “readiness to defy his party’s prevailing Reaganphobia and admit it,” the paper wrote, “is one reason he’s a candidate to watch.”

    Uh ho. Well, but Bill’s not running for the Presidency this time. This time it’s Hillary.

    But no president can do it alone. She must break recent tradition, cast cronyism aside and fill her cabinet with the best people, not only the best Democrats, but the best Republicans as well.. We’re confident she will do that. Her list of favorite presidents - Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Lincoln, both Roosevelts, Truman, George H.W. Bush and Reagan - demonstrates how she thinks.

    Well yeah OK but that’s just some endorsement from a newspaper but not her own words even if it is published on her own site. I mean, it’s not like there’s a book out on shelves now where she says:

    [Reagan] was a child of the Depression, so he understood it (economic pressures on the working and middle class). When he had those big tax cuts and they went too far, he oversaw the largest tax increase. He could call the Soviet Union the Evil Empire and then negotiate arms-control agreements. He played the balance and the music beautifully.

    Zombie Reagan ‘08!

    Written by chesh | In Personal | No Comments »