Daily Kos

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Email: shadowsd@snet.net

Independent Voter, Progressive Moderate, Professional Musician

UPDATED: McCain Accidentally Contributes To Obama Campaign

Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 09:12:59 AM PDT

One of the repercussions of John McCain learning to go online has come to light today:

According to FEC records, and to the dismay of GOP strategists, John McCain accidentally made a contribution to Barack Obama's campaign late last month, reportedly while learning how to navigate political sites online.

A consultant close to the McCain campaign, speaking anonymously, said that McCain intended to engage in an online debate with Obama by going on his website, but none of the Obama videos would pause for his rebuttals.  After McCain clicked on the donate button, intending to write an extensive screed on how he had donated far more of his life to America than Obama had, he saw no problem with giving the computer his credit card number - after all, it was just his own computer.  It was only after monthly donation figures were released by both campaigns, and after several hours of top McCain advisors working together with the candidate, that they were able to piece together the puzzle.

Updated 12:45 EST - More of the article below the jump:

Poll

A chief executive of any civilized nation in the 21st century should be comfortable with the Internet

96%139 votes
3%5 votes

| 144 votes | Vote | Results

Ten Reasons Even Conservatives Should Vote For Obama

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 06:23:16 AM PDT

For those of you who have tried to bring a conservative voter over to Obama, you know that the normal arguments like Iraq withdrawal or universal health care often don't work.  

In future such endeavors, this list will help; whether they say they most want the next President to be pro-Constitution, or anti-wasteful spending, or qualified CEO material, or anti-tax, or pro-growth, or fiscally responsible, or pro-military, or pro-free speech, Barack Obama is a better choice than John McCain by all those metrics.

1. Obama Is The Most Qualified Candidate On The Constitution In History

2. Obama Is The Most Credible Reform Candidate To Run For President  

3. Obama Is The Only Competent Executive Running

4. Obama Is The Better Tax Cutter

5. Obama Is The Pro-Growth Candidate

6. Obama Believes In Pay-As-You-Go  

7. Our Troops Prefer Obama  

8. Obama Is More Pro-Free Speech On Campaign Finance

9. Many Conservatives Support Obama

10. Only Obama Slayed The Dragon


Details below...

Poll

Do you think you will be able to use this list to sway conservative voters?

50%20 votes
15%6 votes
5%2 votes
30%12 votes

| 40 votes | Vote | Results

I Believe In The Constitution; I Also Believe In Barack Obama

Wed Jul 09, 2008 at 10:04:52 AM PDT

There have been some hideous affronts to the Constitution by previous Presidents throughout our history.  However, I feel I can confidently say, and without hyperbole, that the Bush Administration has been the worst to the Constitution in history; as opposed to cases in the past where one could argue there was overreaching due to a crisis, this is the one case in US history where the people who did this clearly had a fundamental disagreement with Constitutional freedoms and separations of power to begin with, only using a crisis (9/11) to justify what they had always hoped to do in the first place.  It is a systematic assault on our freedoms, our country, and our way of life, the type of which we have never seen.

After each affront to our Constitution over the last seven years, I have found myself faced with the choice of either throwing my hands up and saying we're all screwed, or having faith in the Constitution's ability and proven history as a living document to overcome previous abuses, and trying to figure out the straightest logical path there.

The latter choice, the only reasonable option, does not involve withholding a second of volunteer time or a penny of donations that was already intended for any Democratic candidates for Congress or President.

Why below the fold...

Poll

Which better describes your viewpoint?

30%19 votes
69%44 votes

| 63 votes | Vote | Results

Why We Must Stand United With Obama

Mon Jul 07, 2008 at 01:27:50 PM PDT

This morning, MSNBC's lead story was about how Obama's core supporters are doubting his integrity.  Later, referring to John McCain, NBC Political Director Chuck Todd said "suddenly it seems like everything is starting to come together for him".

It should have been impossible for the stumbling McCain campaign - with every political wind tilting against them and a huge new media communications deficit - to get all the progressive, conservative, and traditional media outlets to agree on the same negative narrative about his opponent - that he's a lying flip-flopper - and yet that is exactly what has happened over the last two weeks.

Poll

Obama is, historically speaking,

90%101 votes
9%11 votes

| 112 votes | Vote | Results

Obama's Primary Job Is To Become President

Sat Jun 21, 2008 at 06:21:12 AM PDT

Every Senator plays an important role in the crafting of laws, and has a duty to uphold the Constitution.  When one is in an elected office and seeking a higher office, how seriously one takes their job can say a lot about how they will perform.

A Senator, however, is utterly benign next to the power of a President - especially a President with the powers established over the last fifty years, ESPECIALLY a President with the exponentially greater powers established over the last seven years.  If there were any doubt what the Presidency can accomplish even when facing an opposition party Congress, this weekend, if not the year preceding it, shattered those illusions.

Poll

This Diary

87%49 votes
12%7 votes

| 56 votes | Vote | Results

Three Reasons Claire McCaskill Will Be VP

Mon Jun 16, 2008 at 11:25:02 AM PDT

This is not a diary intended to discuss who I or anyone else think might be a good choice for VP, the sort of which there have been so many; this diary considers what might actually happen, and welcomes your input as political observers as to how you think this will all shake out.  

I took a different approach than I even have in the past in contemplating this question today when I thought less about what the VP search typically entails, and more about what specifically Barack Obama as an individual would likely consider (to the extent that one's educated speculation can surmise about another's).  From that perspective I came up with the following metrics:

Poll

This is NOT a question asking who you'd like to be Obama's VP. The question here is: who do you think WILL BE Obama's VP? Let's see what dkos' collective wisdom suggests...

9%20 votes
0%0 votes
20%44 votes
1%3 votes
12%28 votes
3%8 votes
0%2 votes
5%11 votes
10%22 votes
8%19 votes
6%15 votes
7%16 votes
4%9 votes
0%2 votes
7%17 votes

| 216 votes | Vote | Results

The Three Reasons Obama vs. Clinton Wasn't Over in January

Sun Jun 08, 2008 at 07:42:30 AM PDT

I have suggested the following in a comment or two over the last couple months, but I believe this topic warrants a full diary as we coalesce around our nominee and prepare a defense against inaccurate and detrimental media narratives.  One consistent behavior of the punditry throughout the primary season was to attribute any strength of Clinton to a weakness of Obama, and then to spend hours debating exactly how much that weakness hurts him; I have no doubt in my mind that GOP strategists will heavily rely on continuing these narratives between now and November to poke and jab at Obama, as they provide an already established and "safe" way to indirectly touch upon the identity and cultural reasons not to vote for someone, reasons that the Republicans are dying to get their hands on without fingerprints.

Therefore, all Obama supporters must be ready with the following clear response:  

Poll

During the primary season, the traditional media was unreasonable in automatically interpreting any evidence of support for Clinton as a weakness of Obama

92%38 votes
7%3 votes

| 41 votes | Vote | Results

Obama's Top 5 VP Picks

Mon May 26, 2008 at 09:19:31 AM PDT

In my opinion, the following five candidates outlined in this diary - in no particular order - are top tier choices for Barack Obama's Vice Presidential pick, all with their pros and cons.

The criteria for determining the list was as follows:

Consistency With Obama's Message and Record on All Major Issues
Charisma/Likeability
Ability to Make a Case Clearly and Concisely
History of Being An Effective Campaigner
Executive Experience
National Security Experience
Electoral Benefits
Ability to Run in 2016

Poll

Obama's VP Pick Should Be

7%52 votes
16%113 votes
12%85 votes
10%68 votes
24%165 votes
1%12 votes
1%13 votes
2%15 votes
2%14 votes
6%41 votes
0%6 votes
2%19 votes
2%14 votes
0%1 votes
7%49 votes

| 667 votes | Vote | Results

MSNBC on Clinton: "Why does a woman's strength have to be compared to male genitalia?"

Mon May 05, 2008 at 05:00:26 PM PDT

I've always been a Contessa Brewer fan since she's been at MSNBC (and to the extent that I've mentioned that before in a comment or two, I've been met with the sound of crickets), but today I was reminded again why she is my favorite news anchor, and regarding a broader issue that I think is relevant enough to warrant an actual diary.

Hillary Clinton, as many of you have probably already heard, was touted at a campaign media appearance by a supporter as having "testicular fortitude", and the comment received a good amount of coverage on MSNBC this afternoon.  Aside from the incredible and unfathomable head trip it is to have a phrase popularized by the WWF adopted just a few years later by the first viable female candidacy for President, there was a genuinely disturbing aspect to this comment, and Brewer jumped on it right away, asking numerous guests during the hour some variation of the following question: "Why do they have to compare a woman's strength to male genitalia?"

No one really gave much of a good answer, of course, but the question is right on the money: why should strong women, who have been both pivotal and essential to human civilization throughout history, need to cast themselves in a male image to be perceived as strong?  

Poll

For a female to be perceived as strong, she needs to have

12%28 votes
4%10 votes
1%4 votes
3%8 votes
78%181 votes

| 231 votes | Vote | Results

Obama: The Most Experienced Candidate

Sun Feb 10, 2008 at 10:00:42 AM PDT

I have to say, I understand why Obama hasn't really drilled in this point because he'd rather be on the correct side of the change vs. experience dichotomy, but it's a sad day when a candidate with twenty-five years at the federal, state, and local level and dealing directly with Constitutional law is considered less experienced than a former first lady with seven years at the federal level and a corporate law background, simply because she has more national POLITICAL experience in the partisan mudfight; it's kind of appalling that this edge in political experience has been cast as a policy advantage, when Obama is in fact the one with the vast advantage on policy experience.

Poll

Who has the most experience relevant to being President?

12%18 votes
88%132 votes

| 150 votes | Vote | Results

Defecting to McCain Whether We Like It or Not

Thu Feb 07, 2008 at 08:28:13 AM PDT

This is a response to a diary on the recommended list, where it was suggested that the fact some Obama voters would not support Clinton in the general is a combination of hubris by Obama and hubris by his supporters here on dailykos.  This is extremely deluded - which in itself would not enough for me to write a diary in response - but it is also very dangerous and counterproductive to the cause of getting Democrats elected, which is the purported purpose of such a diary in the first place.

Poll

Are Obama-inclined voters who would not vote for Clinton in the general...

20%19 votes
79%75 votes

| 94 votes | Vote | Results

Obama Wins Nevada - Updated w/ Poll

Sun Jan 20, 2008 at 02:37:58 PM PDT

When considering Obama's Nevada victory and what it means to the overall race, I think it's best to first observe the facts of what happened yesterday, which were a matter of dispute between two dueling diaries on the rec list last night.  Each of the following are facts, not opinions.  


* There was no popular vote total reported in Nevada.


* Obama won 11 Nevada counties and Clinton won 6.


* Two delegate numbers came out of the Nevada election.  Clinton won more caucus delegates 51% to 45%, while Obama won more delegates to the national convention 13 to 12.


* Only the delegates to the national convention have any impact on the nomination.


* Every campaign, including the Clinton campaign, put out statements for days before Nevada about how this is a delegate race, and only delegates to the convention count.  They said this because it's true, and it's still true.


* The delegate count to the convention as a result of primary voting thus far has Obama ahead of Clinton by 2 delegates, 38 to 36, as explained below.


* Iowa: Obama 16, Clinton 15 - New Hampshire - Obama 9, Clinton 9 - Nevada: Obama 13, Clinton 12.



More below the fold...

Poll

Who won Nevada?

91%32 votes
8%3 votes

| 35 votes | Vote | Results

Obama Responds

Sun Jan 13, 2008 at 12:32:44 PM PDT

Barack Obama recently responded to the controversy in the African American community regarding Hillary Clinton's comments about Martin Luther King.  After the tone of the Democratic primary race has gotten a bit compromised over the past week, and threatened to go in a direction none of us would like to see, Obama's statement helps push us back towards the straightforward yet fair tone we would hope to see in a contentious yet civil campaign:

Why I'm Endorsing Barack Obama

Thu Jan 03, 2008 at 02:47:40 PM PDT

I started reading and posting on blogs about a year and a half ago, inspired to change my lifelong unaffiliated registration to support Ned Lamont in the Senate primary.  Just over a year ago, I began posting here; I never switched my party affiliation back, knowing that I wanted to have a say in the upcoming Presidential race.  

Obama appealed to me quite a bit around the time I heard the first rumblings of people asking him to run for President; however, the field was large, and very strong.  I'd always though thought if voters had picked Edwards instead of Kerry in 2004, there would have been no Bush re-election, and I liked his 2008 platforms even better; Dodd was my Senator that I had always had a positive opinion of; Clinton brought with her the revolutionary concept of the first female leader of the free world; Richardson and Biden had lengthy resumes; Kucinich and Gravel fearlessly pushed the party more towards progressivism with every word they spoke.  I realized that I had no reason to rush to pick a candidate right off the bat, and that waiting allowed my vote to be among those courted throughout the campaign.

Poll

Thoughts?

5%4 votes
2%2 votes
70%52 votes
2%2 votes
10%8 votes
8%6 votes

| 74 votes | Vote | Results

Obama wins CNN's hit-or-miss debate

Fri Nov 16, 2007 at 08:52:57 AM PDT

An analysis of last night's debate.

Poll

This post-debate analysis is

36%39 votes
26%28 votes
36%39 votes

| 106 votes | Vote | Results

Obama v. Clinton: Willingness to fight for progressive values

Sun Nov 04, 2007 at 08:07:06 AM PDT

Disclaimer: I have yet to endorse any candidate

Among all the other observations concerning the drivers license exchange at last week's debate, one of the most striking things I noticed was how it was symbolic of a far bigger difference between the two leading candidates, and not just involving honesty, but also the willingness to stand up and argue for a progressive position.

Poll

Which Presidential approach will lead to the passage of more progressive legislation

82%32 votes
17%7 votes

| 39 votes | Vote | Results

I take on George Will

Thu Nov 01, 2007 at 11:33:37 AM PDT

George Will is an old school conservative who often makes reasonable and respectable points, and I had been enjoying many of his recent articles, but the most recent one was certainly an exception - starting with the title:

Liberal or Progressive, Same Old Nonsense

In today's political taxonomy, "progressives" are rebranded liberals dodging the damage they did to their old label. Perhaps their most injurious idea -- injurious to themselves and public schools -- was the forced busing of (mostly other peoples') children to engineer "racial balance" in public schools. Soon, liberals will need a third label if people notice what "progressives" are up to in Utah.

Will goes on to bemoan progressive opposition to school vouchers in Utah, arguing that under the proposed program, "the vouchers are funded by general revenues", and don't use up public education funding.

Fortunately, Will's column provided an e-mail address; my response to him below the fold:

The Hypocrisy in Criticizing Obama for Another's Words

Tue Oct 23, 2007 at 11:23:55 AM PDT

The recent flap about gospel singer Donnie McClurkin, who will be performing at an Obama campaign event, has really caught fire as of late.  At issue are the man's comments that homosexuality is a choice, an ignorant and insensitive statement; those people who don't understand that there's an inherent component to sexuality are the kind of folks who dispute evolution, and who disputed the roundness of the Earth in centuries past.  

Poll

In answering the question above...

11%5 votes
77%35 votes
11%5 votes

| 45 votes | Vote | Results


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