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Old 02-19-2008, 09:31 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Obamania

I just watched a Nightline special on the zeal of Obama's supporters. Whether it was the slant the reporter put on the crowds... I don't know. In any case, I was surprised and a little unsettled by the extreme emotive response he seems to trigger. Women fainting, men crying... clearly these people were moved on a deeply personal level by his speech.

What gives rise to this? What does it mean when people seem to consider politicians on such deeply personal terms? Do you think this is a new phenomenon, or has this long been the nation's mood?

For myself, the first reaction is a mixture of bafflement and disgust. I can't sympathize because I've never had a similar reaction to any politician. Perhaps these people feel very empty and purposeless in their daily lives. I believe the "change" rhetoric strikes a chord with people who are frustrated with life in one way or another and have developed the idea that the presidency holds sway over their daily happiness.

Nearly every Obama supporter I've spoken with repeats the "change" mantra. Thing is, I'm confident most of them don't have the slightest clue what changes he is proposing. Further, I'd bet 10 cases of beer that 90% of Obama supporters can't articulate the current policies that so need the changing.

I don't intend this to be an anti-Obama rant and I apologize for the foray into some very amateur pop-psychology. I don't plan to move to out of the country if he wins... I just can't shake the worry that many people view the federal government as a gateway to personal fulfillment.
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Old 02-19-2008, 09:39 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Well, uhh... I think you're being rather harsh. People are wary of the war, corporate influence, our crappy foreign policy, the free-spending budget, and this eerie sense of impending doom that the Bush administration seems to be ushering in. If you're liberal, you're probably exhausted from the tension of what you believe to be the end of freedom. Obama, to them, represents a reprieve from all of that. I wouldn't assume these people don't know the issues because he's made it rather clear what his stances are on these things. Yeah, its a whole lot of change.
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Old 02-19-2008, 09:42 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Yesterday it was the zeal of Ron Paul's supporters. Today it's Obama. The rise has to do with charisma more than anything else. Obama has more charisma in his left foot than Hillary and McCain have in their whole bodies.

I happen to agree with him more than Hillary or McCain, so I'll probably vote for him (unless someone else jumps in the race late).

The "change" thing? I could give a shit. It's meaningless rhetoric. What matters to me is Obama's voting record, which is similar to the way my voting record would look had I been serving in the Senate. I'm not sure why one would be disgusted by the "change" rhetoric, but to each their own.
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Old 02-19-2008, 09:51 PM   #4 (permalink)
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i think you're right halx, but then i don't think we totally disagree... why would people have a sense of doom? i hear rhetoric about the "politics of fear", but it seems if people feel doomed as you say... Obama seems to be the beneficiary.

if we made it through the carter administration, i think we can weather any storm. my point is that there is nothing the president alone can do to make me feel my doom. i'm concerned that so many people are personally invested enough to feel doomed. as to freedom, there's nothing Bush has done that is without the approval (tacit or expressed) of the democratic congress. if that's the issue, i don't think they should expect change.

will, it's plain from my OP that the disgust is rooted in the emotional response to the rhetoric, not that i'm disgusted by "change".
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Old 02-19-2008, 10:06 PM   #5 (permalink)
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honestly, i'm scared for Obama. If he wins, there are enough nutty white supremacist types to be in absolute revolt and would probably denounce america right then and there to the point of doing something very stupid (even more stupid than being a racist!?!) YEAH!

I dunno, I know it's not related but I just wanted to go on record and say, I wouldn't be surprised at all if someone tries to assassinate him out of racial motivation. People can be fanatics FOR Obama, or against Obama.

Extremism isn't good in either scenario really.
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Old 02-19-2008, 10:23 PM   #6 (permalink)
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I am disheartened by emotional responses to any political campaign. When people make decisions based on their heart rather than their head there is rarely a good result.

I am not sure how much weight you should give to these sort of reports though. While I am sure there are quite a few that are quite excited by Obama I don't feel that the majority of Obama supporters are like this.

People are excited at the prospect of change, but what change means is very likely different from person to person. The biggest change many of these people want is a change from Bush. It doesn't matter if congress supports him or not. It doesn't matter if he actually did even half of what he's been accused of doing. The fact is, he is not liked. He has used fear to build his mandate (from 9/11 and the axis of evil to the war on terror). Add to this, the economic uncertainly that many are experiencing.

It doesn't matter who is responsible (if any one person can be held responsible). What matters is that the leader is the person people look to for solutions. Bush isn't giving them what they want and Obama seems to be saying the right things.

For some people this is enough.

For others, they've read his policy papers and scrutinized his voting records and listened to what he is saying... and that is enough.

The thing is, if the media has to choose between which type of Obama support they want to focus their story on they are going to choose the fanatic over the one that has done his or homework... every time.
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Old 02-19-2008, 10:34 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlatan
The thing is, if the media has to choose between which type of Obama support they want to focus their story on they are going to choose the fanatic over the one that has done his or homework... every time.
I don't think media slant is the sum total in this case... but, as a general rule, i think that's a wise perspective.
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Old 02-19-2008, 11:10 PM   #8 (permalink)
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<object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/_UOk5m8fS3E&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/_UOk5m8fS3E&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>

As a side note, I didn't know people post 100's of youtubes of themselves playing guitar hero. Took me a while to find a version of this that was not offical (aka can't embed) yet wasn't some idiot playing GH3.

Hehehe this is funny....

<object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/x3J4b-NWKYA&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/x3J4b-NWKYA&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>
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Old 02-19-2008, 11:23 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by irateplatypus
... I just can't shake the worry that many people view the federal government as a gateway to personal fulfillment.
Can you consider that the mindset you describe above is the opposite of the narrow participation of a privileged and connected few in an admiistration catering to "crony-capitalism", as in "kenny boy" Lay, Allbaugh/Brownie, the Califoria power crisis....etc...etc...

It seem to be about govenment "of the people, by the people, and for the people", instead of by an oligarchy, for an oligarchy. There is a hope that government can be driven by the will and concerns of the many, at the expense of the privileged few who can afford to lobby and contribute to campaign coffers to counter that will and those concerns.

I don't buy it because Obama commits to the opposite of reducing the money flow to the military industrial complex, but I think that many people ignore that shortcoming.

I also don't buy his "unity" message, as there will be no "unity" on any issues with Bush-Cheney supporters, and since there are only two major political parties, both skewed to the right, in varying degrees, there is Obama's "right lite" message, vs. "McCain-we'll-be-in Iraq-for-50-to-100-years", not much will change in an Obama presidency and with the current make up of the US senate.....45 republicans, and 29 'let's give the president retroactive immunity for domestic spying and unlimited future authority to continue to do so"....democrats....

So relax, irate.....Obama's supporters don't seem to know it yet, but same old, same old....count on it!
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Old 02-20-2008, 12:13 AM   #10 (permalink)
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3 things scare me about Obama and this whole election process his year, but the last 2 lead to my biggest paranoidal, delusional, conspiratorial, fear.

#1 is how fast Obama has risen, it seems either he has extreme charisma and leadership capabilities or someone in the shadows is guiding him. I tend to believe it's the charisma and leadership abilities.... I just don't see them. But he is better than Hilary..... but he did turn his back on Fla. and Michigan voters because they chose to freely choose their election date and the DNC couldn't handle it. (PS.... this is NOT an inivtation to threadjack telling me about the hows and whys... do that in a different thread, please.) I truly do not know what to think of this man yet.... but something about him scares me.

So the rise in the primary could just be he was the anti-Clinton candidate... but that doesn't explain the youth's fascination with him so I have to say it's charisma.

#2 I echo the feelings from Shauk... someone will get to him and he'll be martyred. I am also scared of this whole superdelegate thing. If he wins the majority of regular but Hilary pulls the supers out and takes the nomination.... we could see riots. we could see riots from either of these situations and possibly a true race war.

#3 I have been around and watched many primary seasons, I remember as far back as 80 (not too far back I guess). I have never seen such hostility and revolt that is occurring in BOTH parties. I believe it is because Obama and McCain are seriously stirring up change, a change that will take us from hate politics to "Let's get things done, stop fucking around and let's work together to find answers." This change is what the leaders of the parties and corporate America fear because should either be elected and they won't let that happen. It could be an assassination for McCain, then who gets the nod for the GOP. Or McCain could just be a good old boy fooling everyone... and it'll be hate mongering, fear and business as usual while he divides the country further. I just don't think McCain is that good of an actor... I think he is sincere and means it when he says he will work with Dems to find solutions.


My biggest paranoidal, delusional, conspiratorial, fear: If we have riots because of the superdelegates or an assassination (even an attempted one) against Obama, we may see President Bush put into action Martial Law and suspend elections period. If Corporate America and the old leaders realize their days are numbered and change is coming... we could see multiple faux terrorist attacks which lead to Bush calling Martial Law and suspending the elections.

I will be very happy come Nov. 5th when we have the elections and all my fear and hopefully, gloom and doom in this area will cease the day the newly elected president (whomever he is... sorry Hillary fans I think she's done) stands up and swears the oath of office

We shall see, but one thing I do feel certain of, these are going to be seriously interesting times to live through. They could be great, re generative prosperity filled times or they could turn out to be the worst times this nation will have ever seen. I truly believe it'll be one or the other and there won't be any middle ground.
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Old 02-20-2008, 01:30 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Pan, respectfully, these three reasons don't make sense to me.

1. You don't like that Obama has risen quickly. It seems to me that if it is, as you suggest, his Charisma combined with the anti-Clinton vote that is making him popular amongst voters that this is not a bad thing. It's just the process. Elections are in large part a popularity contest combined with a smattering of who do you hate less. This is a product of the system rather than the candidates, no?

2. I too am concerned that he will be assassinated but again, that's not an issue with the candidate but rather the potential that someone would be insane enough to do this act. To not support someone because of this fear is the worst sort of prevarication I can think of. Yes, it will cause great upheaval if he is assassinated but IF you think he's worth voting for, it's all worth the risk (and ultimately, it's his risk).

3. This one I am a little unclear about... you fear change?

As for your final point... again, this is an issue with the process rather than the candidate. If the vote is split and Clinton pulls the superdelegates (something I don't see happening if Obama has the popular vote) it will cause problems for the Democrats. But so what? This could happen every time there is a primary. Why worry needlessly about something that is beyond your control?
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Old 02-20-2008, 02:02 AM   #12 (permalink)
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After 8 years of GWB, people are excited about the prospects who actually can command the English language.
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Old 02-20-2008, 04:20 AM   #13 (permalink)
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As I've posted elsewhere, Obamania scares me. It's no secret that I am a Clinton supporter, but I do respect Barak and what he stands for. Frankly, one of my turn-offs to his campaign is Obamania; that is the shear undaunted, and often times blind, support a great number of his supporters have specifically for 'his message'. Simply, and down to the core of my being, I feel that the democratic process was intended to be, and is best served by, an educated and objective populace electing their representatives based on rational self-interest in policy matters.

Now both democratic candidates have excellent policy ideas and respectable policy credentials. I prefer Clinton's, but I have no problem seeing that many rational self-interested individuals could prefer Barak's. My problem is that it seems that for most Obamaniacs (who are the loudest and most obvious of his supporters, if not the majority of them) his policy ideas come in a distant second to the emotional appeal of his message.

This certainly is nowhere near all of his supporters or even, necessarily, something he specifically would endorse or intend in an ideal world. However, in my mind it is flirting with danger when a group of people respond so emotionally to a message that the plan becomes incidental. I have no doubt that Barak, and his supporters, have nothing but the best of intentions that I would likely agree with in the vast majority, but that doesn't overcome my uneasiness with Obamaniacs, much less reliances such sentiment for political gains.


Quote:
Obamania: Curb Your Enthusiasm
by Charles Marowitz

(Swans - February 11, 2008) The pro-Obama video making the rounds of the Internet at the moment is entitled "Yes We Can" attributed to "Will I Am," which I assume is some kind of inspirational nickname for those avidly supporting the candidacy of the senator from Chicago.

It is a fervent, hypnotic chant assuring its listeners that change is definitely in the offing if the right forces combine to bring it about. Obama's words are counterpointed by the incessant and hypnotic drone, "YES WE CAN" and there are shots of various celebrities from the world of entertainment individually intoning the message to those who may have any doubts that Obama can effect the social and political reversals he has so eloquently described in debates and stump speeches throughout the country.

The din of that mesmerizing chant is highly reminiscent of the kind of pro-Nazi collective mania we associate with the Nuremberg Rallies; an attempt by the National Socialist Party and its charismatic leader to sway the general populace towards the marvels the Third Reich would bring to a troubled Germany.

I don't mean to suggest there is any polemical resemblance to Barack Obama and the insane leader who conquered Europe, murdering millions of Jews, gypsies, and homosexuals in the process. There is none. Obama is a civil, sensitive, intelligent, and, to many, inspiring candidate whose greatest asset is his desire to dismantle the brutal partisanship that has crippled America almost as long as there have been political parties competing for electoral office.

My objection to the video is that it resorts to whipping up a kind of emotional frenzy for a deputed leader rather than applying ratiocination and cool-headed evaluation to determine whether or not that leader's message may well be the most salutary in the upcoming election.

By turning Obama into "a mystical force" who is rushing to a Meeting with Destiny, his supporters are threatening a process that should be rooted in objective analysis and cool-headed evaluation. Too much is at stake in the next election, too many horrors have been unleashed in the land for us to suggest that some avatar has arrived who will make everything "magically right"; will transform the brutalizing Present into a benevolent and congenial Future.

It is true (as I've been suggesting two weeks ago) that character counts for more than policy pronouncements in a political election, but unless we apply our unshakeable, Yankee-bred skepticism to each of the candidates and the ballyhoo of the electoral process, we will be swayed like audiences are in the theatre -- another instance in which contrived emotions are marshaled in order to produce a specific state of mind and a certain semblance of character in those to whom they are directed. Here politics, like the theater, is rigged in very much the same way in order to achieve a premeditated effect. It may look spontaneous but it has been assiduously contrived.

If we turn up for Obama on election day, it mustn't be because we believe there is some inescapable, messianic desire that must be fulfilled by placing the tenor of his idealism against his ability to operate that elaborate political machine, which, though he would like to transform it, is an immensely powerful juggernaut sustained by deeply entrenched forces that have a vested interest in keeping it just the way it is. Should he try to re-tool that machine, the antagonists that he would encounter are formidable. They comprise some of the wealthiest and most impregnable corporations in America and they will not be joining in the chorus of "Yes We Can," but quietly murmuring, "No They Won't." To underestimate the forces already massing against an Obama victory, we, the voters, should be considering, as finitely as we can, the strengths and weaknesses of what an Obama presidency would imply. And we should be doing that now -- during the months leading up to the election and in a critical and probing frame of mind in order to gage what counterforce can be mustered to rout the demagogues who have winkled their way into every branch of government and industry reducing a democracy into an oligarchy and one that will fight to the death to retain its privileges and its profits.

The Obama video and its worked-up crowd mania had the same appalling reaction on me as Bush's final State of the Union address when a great phalanx of cheering Republicans rose up regularly (like spasmodic erections) to cheer some sickening conservative mantra like "No tax increases" and "The Iraqi situation is definitely improving." At moments such as these, human beings were transformed into marionettes and their fusillades of applause into signal reactions that belied their humanity. They could just as well have been shouting "Heil Hitler!" What is unnerving about such uniform outbursts of aggressive enthusiasm is the suspicion that politicians were cajoling themselves into a solidarity that belies their own individuality and makes them appear like brainwashed androids. The maniacal insistence behind such outbursts is the essence of dogmatism and the antithesis of reasoned approval.

The Nuremberg echo behind "Yes We Can" is a troubling sound -- not so much because of its Hitlerian overtones, but because that kind of frantic enthusiasm can only blur the clarity we need in the tangled circumstances that now beset our nation. If we ever needed cool heads and sound judgment to extricate ourselves from the quagmires of Iraq, a faltering economy, and corporate thievery in order to restore dignity to a nation that is rightly despised in so many parts of the world, we need it now. The last thing we need is mass-hypnosis and a rallying cry behind a charismatic leader who may or may not be able to scale the heights into which the presidency may thrust him. A leader rapidly becomes a hero to those who uncritically support him. In the early l940s, Bertolt Brecht fled Germany when he saw Hitlerism destroying his country. In Galileo written in exile, Andrea, the astronomer's apprentice, remarks: "Unhappy is the land that breeds no hero." To which Galileo replies: "No, Andrea. Unhappy is the land that needs a hero."

There is more to chew on in those eight words than all the slogans of both the Democratic and Republican parties combined.
http://www.swans.com/library/art14/cmarow98.html
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Old 02-20-2008, 04:43 AM   #14 (permalink)
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plat: I invite you to consider that passion is a necessary component of politics. Politics is way too dirty and ugly a game for anyone to play if they weren't passionate about it--and I don't mean a passion for politics itself (although, Karl Rove), but passion for the difference that can be made through true leadership.

The only thing that ever EVER changed the world was people who were passionate about that change. Think of MLK and his immediate supporters. Highly emotionally charged bunch, wouldn't you say? And they made (or at the very least least instigated) a profound change in American culture. You think Gandhi wasn't passionate? You think people being dispassionate and detached will get us anything other than more of what we've got right now?

Quote:
Originally Posted by irateplatypus
Nearly every Obama supporter I've spoken with repeats the "change" mantra. Thing is, I'm confident most of them don't have the slightest clue what changes he is proposing. Further, I'd bet 10 cases of beer that 90% of Obama supporters can't articulate the current policies that so need the changing.
Arrogant much? I wonder how many Obama supporters you've actually talked to, to base this opinion on? Or is it based on a three minute segment you saw on the news? Because we all know how reliable the news is.

I support Obama because of his tech policy, which is the only candidate's policy that's actually developed from 21st Century reality and looks to the future. I support him because of his education policy, which begins with actually FUNDING No Child Left Behind, and also includes initiatives to recruit, prepare, retain and reward educators. I support his intention to have us out of Iraq within 16 months while pressuring Iraqi leaders to reconcile, coupled with a historically unprecedented level of diplomatic outreach across the Middle East. He's the only candidate who can possibly turn around American's piss-poor image in the rest of the world. (Think McCain would be more approved of abroad than Bush? Or that even Clinton would be? I don't think so.) I support his economic policy, which is about strengthening the middle class, improving trade relations (including revising NAFTA so it works), labor rights, domestic industrial stimulus, and reforming lending and bankruptcy.

All the policy details aside, I support him because he's the only candidate I can imagine bringing people together across party lines. He has a long history of bipartisanship--and he's worked in some of the most bitterly divided bodies in American history. His charisma, his ability to hear people and speak to what's important to them... I'm also happy with the way he's been able to draw the indifferent, the young, the disillusioned into the political process. I honestly believe that if there is ANY chance to unify America, it's Barack Obama. And yeah, the guy inspires and moves me.

That specific enough for you?

EDIT: MuadDib: Marowitz shows his shocking lack of research in the first paragraph by assuming that "Will I Am" is a pseudonym for Obama Supporters Industries, Inc. will.i.am is a brilliant R&B performer and producer, front man for the Black Eyed Peas. That Marowitz doesn't bother to find this out sets a sad tone for this piece. Then he Godwins himself in the third paragraph and then throughout the piece. I have a hard time getting with much of anything he says after that--his thesis is: inspiration BAD--because of the NASTY polemic the thing is couched in, INCLUDING the ludicrous and hypocritical appeals to emotion embedded throughout.

Look, folks: people get SCARED by others' inspiration. Change is scary. And the natural human reaction when you see other people inspired by something is cynicism. It's a very normal reaction, and it's also VERY conservative. The thing that sets the left apart is that we're willing to work through that cynicism because we see something possible on the other side of it. The right climbs up on top of their cynicism and makes it their platform, but on the left, we know there's something more, something bigger on the other side of it. A the VERY least, I urge you not to give in to your natural urge to shut down something inspiring that you don't have your own personal hands on.

Who the hell SAYS cool-headed objectivity is better than inspiration and emotion? As if absolute objectivity was even possible! I'll bet I could whip up some heated emotion from the objectivity camp, and I wouldn't even have to try too hard. And what objectivites don't notice is... it's an emotional reaction to inspiration that has them saying what they're saying.

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Old 02-20-2008, 05:02 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by irateplatypus
i think you're right halx, but then i don't think we totally disagree... why would people have a sense of doom? i hear rhetoric about the "politics of fear", but it seems if people feel doomed as you say... Obama seems to be the beneficiary.

if we made it through the carter administration, i think we can weather any storm. my point is that there is nothing the president alone can do to make me feel my doom. i'm concerned that so many people are personally invested enough to feel doomed. as to freedom, there's nothing Bush has done that is without the approval (tacit or expressed) of the democratic congress. if that's the issue, i don't think they should expect change.

will, it's plain from my OP that the disgust is rooted in the emotional response to the rhetoric, not that i'm disgusted by "change".
While I don't imagine I share you're exact political bent, your notion about "the politics of fear" has struck me as well. I believe it was around a week ago that I was reading a post in this forum from an Obama supporter that used the phrase "our only hope". That is a red flag to me and really got me to thinking about the mindset of those who seriously believe it. I'm sure, or at least hope, that the member who posted that statement didn't honestly believe so strong a statement, but there are many, especially first time voters, who do. I really don't know which is more frightening to me; the prospect of a large segment of fervent ideologues coming to dominate both parties or what happens to my party, and the future, if those same ideologues become disillusioned, possibly permanently so, were their candidate to not win. That is the danger that Bush's politics of fear (of terrorism) has put his party and this nation in, I can't see another politics of fear (of the political process) ending much better. Differently, because it is focused inward at how we run our own nation, but no better for the spirit of our nation.
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Old 02-20-2008, 05:07 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rlbond86
After 8 years of GWB, people are excited about the prospects who actually can command the English language.
...and doesn't have his finger on the "DEPLOY THE TROOPS!" button.
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Old 02-20-2008, 05:32 AM   #17 (permalink)
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ratbastid,

i've personally spoken with plenty of obama supporters. that 90% of them couldn't articulate current policy is just my guess, but why would that surprise you? i doubt that figure varies much with the general population. i'm not saying obama supporters are dumber than other people, only that their demand for "change" loses legitimacy when they're not sure what they're changing from.

at any rate, you've made the mistake of displaying your own level of knowledge and projecting it on the electorate. if you want to respond to my post, either post factual information or simply deny my bald/unfounded/anecdotal/unscientific assertion with one of your own. you could even trump me by betting 20 cases of beer! i don't doubt you've made your decision with more care than the average voter.
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Old 02-20-2008, 05:45 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by ratbastid
EDIT: MuadDib: Marowitz shows his shocking lack of research in the first paragraph by assuming that "Will I Am" is a pseudonym for Obama Supporters Industries, Inc. will.i.am is a brilliant R&B performer and producer, front man for the Black Eyed Peas. That Marowitz doesn't bother to find this out sets a sad tone for this piece. Then he Godwins himself in the third paragraph and then throughout the piece. I have a hard time getting with much of anything he says after that--his thesis is: inspiration BAD--because of the NASTY polemic the thing is couched in, INCLUDING the ludicrous and hypocritical appeals to emotion embedded in it.

Look, folks: people get SCARED by others' inspiration. Change is scary. And the natural human reaction when you see other people inspired by something is cynicism. It's a very normal reaction, and it's also VERY conservative. The thing that sets the left apart is that we're willing to work through that cynicism because we see something possible on the other side of it. The right climbs up on top of their cynicism and makes it their platform, but on the left, we know there's something more, something bigger on the other side of it. A the VERY least, I urge you not to give in to your natural urge to shut down something inspiring that you don't have your own personal hands on.

Who the hell SAYS cool-headed objectivity is better than inspiration and emotion? As if absolute objectivity was even possible! I'll bet I could whip up some heated emotion from the objectivity camp, and I wouldn't even have to try too hard. And what objectivites don't notice is... it's an emotional reaction to inspiration that has them saying what they're saying.
Rat: I'm not claiming Marowitz to be a Noam Chomsky, nor does his knowledge (or lack thereof) of the Black Eyed Peas give me any reason take pause. To be quite honest, I have had no respect for their music since 2004 & 'Where is the Love', but that's a conversation best kept out of the Politics forum. His credentials withstanding, he is not writing a law review note but an op-ed about his take Obamania. A take which speaks to my concerns in a real way. As for the "NASTY polemic thing", I do believe that all the venom in the analogy is lost when he immediately recants that very connection then goes on to refer to Barak as civil, sensitive, intelligent, and inspiring. Take it or leave it, I think that he at least points out that inspiration is blind to it's cause, that is neither inherently good or bad, but it's results are defined by the cause.

Now, about this "change scary" rap that the Obama campaign tries to paint on every non-supporter out there. For Christ sakes, I return your own "Arrogant much?" plus interest. Don't philosophize about the nature of man and change to me or assume just because I don't hop on board the Barak bandwagon that I'm some terror-stricken primate who runs back into his cave for fear of the light. That is the very labelling and fear-mongering that I'm saying is repugnant and scary. Change is the natural order of things, life is nothing less than constant change which is why the Obamaniac "only hope" attitude is simply ridiculous. Neo-conservativism has run it's course, this was readily apparent in the 2006 election season and if not then certainly by the Republican primary campaigns this year. Hell, every candidate is change, it's merely a matter of areas, degrees, and abilities.

Listen, if you'd read my previous post you should have gotten that I am not anti-inspiration, anti-emotion, or anti-passion. As if you couldn't tell, you've invoked my ire by your response despite your quaint labelling of me as an "objectivite". What I am against is placing inspiration, emotion, and passion on a pedestal and letting oneself get swept away by sentiment. You say change only ever happens when people are passionate, but I say lasting real change only happens when people are passionate about an issue, an idea, or a plan that they connect with on it's merits. The reason objectivity, actually attainable or not, should be the goal that one strives for in decision-making is because ends reached in that manner are more likely to weather the test of time and actually be effectuated. Passions are fickle and flighty, one can be let down as easily as uplifted and just as swiftly. What I argue for is temperance and placing the horse before the cart. There is nothing wrong with being inspired by a man's vision, there is something wrong with being inspired by a man without a clear grasp of his vision.

Addendum: It is not my intention to lump you, Rat, into a group with the man before merit supporters. Whether you are or not isn't known to me, nor does it make any real difference one way or the other. I realized while typing that last paragraph that I had been weaving in and out of responding to you specifically and re-making my general argument about such supporters and, rather than delete the entire post and try to hurdle possible misinterpretation. So just know that, while I disagree with your assessment of my position, it is not necessarily my intention to make you the object of that position.
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Old 02-20-2008, 06:19 AM   #19 (permalink)
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MuadDib--I didn't make this clear in my above post, but I was responding to Marowitz and those who think like him in general much more than I was responding to you personally... Sorry if it seemed otherwise.

We're ALL terror-stricken primates, by the way, our veneer of culture notwithstanding.
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Old 02-20-2008, 06:38 AM   #20 (permalink)
 
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Originally Posted by Shauk
honestly, i'm scared for Obama. If he wins, there are enough nutty white supremacist types to be in absolute revolt and would probably denounce america right then and there to the point of doing something very stupid (even more stupid than being a racist!?!) YEAH!

I dunno, I know it's not related but I just wanted to go on record and say, I wouldn't be surprised at all if someone tries to assassinate him out of racial motivation. People can be fanatics FOR Obama, or against Obama.

Extremism isn't good in either scenario really.
I've been feeling much the same thing lately. I'm alright with Obama, but I'm afraid that either during the campaign, or after (if) he gets elected, there's going to be at least one assassination attempt. I think I mentioned that in another political thread... he's just so different from what a significant portion of America is ready for. That's not personal at all... I'd like to see what he could do for the country. But I'm just wondering if the US is ready for it, despite the enthusiasm of his supporters.

Being in Iceland, I am kind of insulated from all the campaign mania (on all sides), and I have never, ever felt particularly "emotional" about politicians. I'll vote as I want to, when the absentee ballot comes to me here, but it won't be a "fervent" vote.

I don't like the uber-enthusiasm of any campaign, for any candidate. I'm not going to "endorse" anyone before voting day, on this election... I'll cast my vote when the time comes, and that's it.
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Old 02-20-2008, 06:42 AM   #21 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by irateplatypus
at any rate, you've made the mistake of displaying your own level of knowledge and projecting it on the electorate. if you want to respond to my post, either post factual information or simply deny my bald/unfounded/anecdotal/unscientific assertion with one of your own. you could even trump me by betting 20 cases of beer! i don't doubt you've made your decision with more care than the average voter.
My point isn't that I'm typical. What I'm trying to get to is this: people outside an inspiring phenomenon frequently make the mistaken assumption that those INSIDE the phenomenon are woolly, glassy-eyed cultists who are swept up in thoughtless abandon. This mistaken assumption is commonly made about any inspiring phenomenon, not specifically the Obama movement. It's called cynicism, and as I note above, it's THE common human reaction to other people's inspiration. They're not part of it, they don't get it, so they have to assume there's nothing to it. My point is: that's a MISTAKEN assumption.
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Old 02-20-2008, 08:45 AM   #22 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by ratbastid
MuadDib--I didn't make this clear in my above post, but I was responding to Marowitz and those who think like him in general much more than I was responding to you personally... Sorry if it seemed otherwise.

We're ALL terror-stricken primates, by the way, our veneer of culture notwithstanding.
Then let me doubly apologize for getting a little snippy with you. First, for misunderstanding your target and, second, just in general, I've been up for over 24 hours doing BS work and I may have allowed myself to take a portion of that frustration out in my post.

That said though, I think you are mis-characterizing Marowitz's critique of Obamania if you're shoring him up as, essentially (and sorry for letting my inner-nerd show), a closet Vulcan. I suppose it's possible that I'm the one projecting onto him and not you, but my reading reveals him to be arguing for the primacy of objectivism, but by no means to the exclusion of inspiration/passion/emotion.
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Old 02-20-2008, 09:40 AM   #23 (permalink)
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I totally agree with the OP. But who else are we going to swoon for?

Barack Obama



John McCain



oops... that's not Senator McCain, it's a picture of Bob Dole (same thing)
Sorry for the stereotypes, but they sometimes ring true.
Besides, history has proven that an empty suit can beat a Bob Dole every time.

Obama '08! yeah!
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Old 02-20-2008, 11:21 AM   #24 (permalink)
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I'm not more worried about Obama getting shot at than any other President. Ford was shot at, Reagan got shot, and I believe there have been plots against Clinton and GWB as well (I can't remember anyone going after Carter other than a killer rabbit). There are bad people out there, and every president is at risk. We just have to have confidence in our Secret Service that they know what they're doing and can protect the people they are supposed to protect.

But I am troubled by this messianic aura many people seem to perceive around Obama. That's dangerous. The government can't give you fulfillment or personal salvation - only you can do that. The adulation and exaltation, to me, are dangerous. That's the sort of reverence for the leader that people have in a fascist state. Obama is certainly no fascist, but that impulse in his devotees is a dangerous one. He is just a politician. Yes, a very gifted speaker and, so far as I'm able to tell, a genuinely nice person - but still, just a politician. I don't adore any politician, and I don't think anyone else should either, except the politician's spouse, kids and parents.
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Old 02-20-2008, 11:29 AM   #25 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by abaya
I've been feeling much the same thing lately. I'm alright with Obama, but I'm afraid that either during the campaign, or after (if) he gets elected, there's going to be at least one assassination attempt. I think I mentioned that in another political thread... he's just so different from what a significant portion of America is ready for. That's not personal at all... I'd like to see what he could do for the country. But I'm just wondering if the US is ready for it, despite the enthusiasm of his supporters.

Being in Iceland, I am kind of insulated from all the campaign mania (on all sides), and I have never, ever felt particularly "emotional" about politicians. I'll vote as I want to, when the absentee ballot comes to me here, but it won't be a "fervent" vote.

I don't like the uber-enthusiasm of any campaign, for any candidate. I'm not going to "endorse" anyone before voting day, on this election... I'll cast my vote when the time comes, and that's it.
I'm isolated from the campaign mania because I limit my intake of media. I'm cautious of what news I read online and Tivo buffers me from most if not all of the campaign advert drivel.

It's a personal choice. I see a headline or two as I walk from the subway station into the office. That's about it until I decide I have a moment or time for the rest of the news. And when I do have time to read about stuff, it's not about the election process.
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Old 02-20-2008, 12:25 PM   #26 (permalink)
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I'm isolated from the campaign mania because I limit my intake of media. I'm cautious of what news I read online and Tivo buffers me from most if not all of the campaign advert drivel.

It's a personal choice. I see a headline or two as I walk from the subway station into the office. That's about it until I decide I have a moment or time for the rest of the news. And when I do have time to read about stuff, it's not about the election process.
I know a lot less about what is going on, than you probably think that you do, after one of your "have a moment or time for the rest of the news", yet I am spending several hours a day, attempting to keep informed.

How do you wade in, in the middle of a sequence of events, and satisfy yourself that you are "up to speed", on current events and political happenings? Tell me how you do it, so I can benefit from your methods, so I can spend much less time trying to stay informed.

Much of my time is devoted to reading reporting and commentary about the same events, or issues, from eight to ten different sources. I keep the car radio, during my commute, on SRN talk radio, so I can keep abreast of the political POV and reactions to current events of christian evangelicals.

I don't think I could participate in this forum with any confidence, if I wasn't fairly certain, that, at least in a few areas, I have a thorough grasp of the details.

It's ironic that I perceive myself to have so little credibility here, based on response and lack of responses from so many of my fellow tfp members, considering the time I do spend trying to stay informed, and post from an informed perspective.

I would feel out of place, participating here, if I routinely kept myself closed off from daily news reporting and commentary.
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Old 02-20-2008, 12:32 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Yes, it would be nice if more of Obama's supporters were also at least somewhat aware of his policies. I suspect there are a ton of Clinton supporters, though, who are equally lacking in knowledge. It wouldn't make for as interesting a news story, but there are plenty of people who will reference things like Clinton's "35 years of experience" as why they support her over Obama.

As for Obama being a "rock star"...part of why people got so crazy about The Beatles is because they were genuinely great and new and exciting for their time. When it comes down to it, I'd rather have people get so excited that they faint over a politician than a musician.

Oh, and btw, personality matters in a president. A lot.

It's almost impossible to accurately predict what a president will be like, based on their policy proclamations (that's not to say they're not worth paying attention to). Our most recent example, Bush, ran in 2000 saying that we should be less involved as the world police. Now look at us.

I really like a lot of Obama's policies: they're rather similar to Clinton's, but where they're different I think they're much better (technology is an issue I'm particularly concerned about). Where Obama comes out far ahead of Clinton, though, is his personality. Obviously it's impossible to truly know the man from my vantage point, but from what I can tell he is much more the kind of person I want in the White House, leading this country, putting a team of advisors together, etc, than Clinton.
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Old 02-20-2008, 05:12 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Irate, it's good to see you in Politics again. You were missed by this Liberal Loon.

You have presented a number of observations that are worthy of discussion. I believe that "Obamania" reported by the press is mostly of their own creation. It is far easier to attract eyeballs for a "cult of personality" story rather than a wonkish study of his policies. I also learned recently that all three campaigns of the frontrunners carefully orchestrate who will be within camera range of the candidate. In Obama's case, there are predominately white faces behind him for the camera to imply broad support, and the very raucus supporters directly in front of him for the enthusiastic cheers. McCain and Clinton do the same for the emphasis they wish to make. Manipulation of voter perception would appear to be Politics 101.

I have an anecdoctal experience that may explain the "swooners". A good friend of mine went to see Obama speak about two years ago. She arrived early and stood in the hot sun without water for two hours before he arrived and began speaking. She dropped like a stone from dehydration and Obama called out to get help to her. I suspect that heat and exhaustion are more the cause of the faintings that have occurred, than an emotional swoon. But once again, the press has a "story" to sell.

I think there may be several things that have given rise to the enthusiastic response to Obama. Others have already described what it feels like to feel hopeful of change in the policies of our government. I think you underestimate the feeling of despair that many citizens have experienced since the premptive war on Iraq and the escalating threats to Iran. I agree with you that Congress and the Judiciary should have been able to check the universal presidency, but don't forget that we had a single party in charge for the majority of the Bush administration.

You have probably heard of Obama being compared to JFK by some of the Kennedy family. That same enthusiastic hope for change existed then, as well. My mother saw something very new and hopeful in JFK after living through the depression and the sacrifices of WWII. I would never underestimate the power of American's who have become optimistic about the future.
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Old 02-21-2008, 08:37 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by irateplatypus
I was surprised and a little unsettled by the extreme emotive response he seems to trigger.

-What does it mean when people seem to consider politicians on such deeply personal terms?

-For myself, the first reaction is a mixture of bafflement and disgust.

-I believe the "change" rhetoric strikes a chord with people who are frustrated with life in one way or another and have developed the idea that the presidency holds sway over their daily happiness.

-Further, I'd bet 10 cases of beer that 90% of Obama supporters can't articulate the current policies that so need the changing.

-I just can't shake the worry that many people view the federal government as a gateway to personal fulfillment.
Curious observations. I wonder if you've been paying attention to the state of this country over the past 5-7 years, and if you have you must have noted a certain dissatisfaction with the way the current boss is running the country.

Why would it strike you as peculiar that ordinary, everday people stress out over what they perceive as hostile, belligerent, incompetent foreign policy emanating from their own government - and there can be no denying that they do in fact perceive it as such.

As far as the emotional connections people feel towards presidential candidates, what do you expect? People have strong emotional connections to all sorts of unlikely things: stamps, animals, plants, food, guns, jewelry, computers, cellphones, dildos, cars. Presidential candidates are symbols of official, national stances on everyday issues affecting the lives of human beings, not robots. To dismiss these people's opinions as somehow not fully realized or misguided is patronizing at best, outright ignorant at worst.

Look back at the days of JFK's presidency, with talk of a New Frontier, a renewed sense of national confidence, voyages into space, the intelligent handling of the cuban missile crisis. Look at the effect Reagan's policies and optimism had on lifting a sagging economy ("Reaganomics") the fall of the berlin wall, the end of the cold war, and the restoration of respectability to the United States.

Substitute the word "optimism" for "change" and maybe thats what Obama represents.
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Old 02-21-2008, 09:26 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Substitute the word "optimism" for "change" and maybe thats what Obama represents.
Actually I agree with this, it is what is creating his popularity, and optimism is great. Shame is going to be served with a shit sandwich of new taxes and a side of class warfare.

As for the fainting though, I'd attribute that more to whatever makes some people swoon so easy, be it the beetles, elvis, or apparently obama.
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Old 02-21-2008, 11:00 PM   #31 (permalink)
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Actually I agree with this, it is what is creating his popularity, and optimism is great. Shame is going to be served with a shit sandwich of new taxes and a side of class warfare.

As for the fainting though, I'd attribute that more to whatever makes some people swoon so easy, be it the beetles, elvis, or apparently obama.
We experienced a federal debt increase of $399 billion in the last full year of the Bush '41 presidency:


09/30/1992 $4,064,620,655,521.66
09/30/1991 $3,665,303,351,697.03
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/r...ebt_histo4.htm

A program of modest tax increases, by historical comparison, aimed to tax the highest incomes disproportionally, beginning in 1993, resulted in, even with the loss of the stimulative effect to the economy of a prior era of large annual federal debt increases, a dramatic change by the last full year of the Clinton prsidency; a decline in the annual federal debt increase, from $399 billion, just 8 years earlier, to just $18 billion:

09/30/2000 $5,674,178,209,886.86
09/30/1999 $5,656,270,901,615.43
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/r...t/histdebt.htm

In the last full year of the Bush '43 presidency, just 8 years after the US experienced an annual federal debt increase of $18 billion, and after a period marked by tax decreases disproportionally favoring the wealthiest and those with highest incomes, as well as two "rounds" of tax rebate economic stimulation campaigns (as if the stimulative effect to the economy of increasing annual federal debt, so dramatically, needed or could be further enhanced by such rebate checks.....) the annual federal debt increase in fiscal year 2008 <h3>will be $700 billion:</h3>

02/20/2008 $9,294,461,192,747.05
09/30/2007 $9,007,653,372,262.48
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/BPD...application=np

You post as if you are so certain that you have a clear understanding of what it is you object to, in the proposals advanced by the democrats, so
I've read and reread your post, and I cannot figure out, considering recent fiscal history and tax policy in the US, what the fuck you are talking about.

The record demonstrates that the policies you support continuance of have been a fiscal disaster for the country, or are the numbers I've posted not indicative of a disaster, a destructive monumental reversal of the sound taxation and spending policies of the last administration, wedged in between the destructive imbalances of 19 years of Reagan/Bush/Bush debt increases?

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Old 02-22-2008, 04:50 AM   #32 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Ustwo
As for the fainting though, I'd attribute that more to whatever makes some people swoon so easy, be it the beetles, elvis, or apparently obama.
Or heat, or standing around for a long time, or being in a large crowd, or not eating breakfast that morning...

This whole fainting thing is COMPLETELY a media creation. People faint at political events all the time, and the accepted practice is for the speaker to pause and compassionately make sure that person is okay. It looks great for the speaker to take care of their fallen supporter like that. I've seen video of both Clintons AND McCain doing it. It's totally no big deal, until somebody in the media latches onto it and makes a video of several instances of it happening and turns it into a phenomenon.
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Old 02-27-2008, 08:56 AM   #33 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
Or heat, or standing around for a long time, or being in a large crowd, or not eating breakfast that morning...

This whole fainting thing is COMPLETELY a media creation. People faint at political events all the time, and the accepted practice is for the speaker to pause and compassionately make sure that person is okay. It looks great for the speaker to take care of their fallen supporter like that. I've seen video of both Clintons AND McCain doing it. It's totally no big deal, until somebody in the media latches onto it and makes a video of several instances of it happening and turns it into a phenomenon.
I agree with your point. But don't you think Obama plays it up really well? "Oh, I see we have someone who may have fainted, here give them my water. Let's get some help (back, over, down) here." He's the first person I've noticed doing this. Or is it just that when he does it it ends up on my TV?
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Old 02-27-2008, 09:13 AM   #34 (permalink)
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This is how I feel about Barack. I'm pretty sure that he's actually the second coming of Jesus.

Not only is a ridiculously good orator with pounds of charisma, but I actually believe his policies are sound and I 'trust' what he says is true, more than I've ever trusted a politician in my life.

Maybe it is Obamamania, but I think he'll be amazing WHEN he is elected the next POTUS. See my thread in Politics, "Obama the perfect candidate?" for more.

Also, since I just caught it:

Quote:
I support Obama because of his tech policy, which is the only candidate's policy that's actually developed from 21st Century reality and looks to the future. I support him because of his education policy, which begins with actually FUNDING No Child Left Behind, and also includes initiatives to recruit, prepare, retain and reward educators. I support his intention to have us out of Iraq within 16 months while pressuring Iraqi leaders to reconcile, coupled with a historically unprecedented level of diplomatic outreach across the Middle East. He's the only candidate who can possibly turn around American's piss-poor image in the rest of the world. (Think McCain would be more approved of abroad than Bush? Or that even Clinton would be? I don't think so.) I support his economic policy, which is about strengthening the middle class, improving trade relations (including revising NAFTA so it works), labor rights, domestic industrial stimulus, and reforming lending and bankruptcy.

All the policy details aside, I support him because he's the only candidate I can imagine bringing people together across party lines. He has a long history of bipartisanship--and he's worked in some of the most bitterly divided bodies in American history. His charisma, his ability to hear people and speak to what's important to them... I'm also happy with the way he's been able to draw the indifferent, the young, the disillusioned into the political process. I honestly believe that if there is ANY chance to unify America, it's Barack Obama. And yeah, the guy inspires and moves me.
Likewise. We're not all undereducated simpletons who like Obama because he's pretty.
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Old 02-27-2008, 11:02 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Jinn, if you put aside the fact that Obama is an unusually gifted speaker, very nimble in his public appearances, and charismatic as all hell, and focus solely on his positions and political history, what distinguishes his positions and activities from any other big-city leftish Democrat? His politics are totally conventional. Totally. You might agree or disagree, but he's hardly a groundbreaker or an original political thinker. He's just a plain old liberal Democrat who happens to be very gifted. That is probably good enough for most of the people here, who are liberal Democrats, and that's ok. But let's not make him into something he's not.

My question for all the people who think Obama is the messiah is this: what happens four years from now, when -- even if he is a fabulously successful president, which is far from unlikely given how good his people skills appear to be -- this world continues to be less than perfect, there is still violence and famine and nastiness in the world, there still are scandals and recriminations and poverty, not everything that hurts you has been healed and you still have unfulfilled desires? Will you be able to handle the disappointment? Maybe, step back a second and say -- as you likely will four years from now if Obama has a successful presidency -- he's a politician, he can accomplish some good things, there are limits to what politicians can do. This is the real world, we have to evaluate it rationally.

Messianism isn't rational. It's religious. When Obama starts doing laying-on of hands and healing people's sores, let me know so I can come watch.
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Old 02-27-2008, 11:45 AM   #36 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by loquitur
His politics are totally conventional.
I'm going to disagree with you here. His policies are relatively conventional (if such a word can be used to describe the "typical" progressive policies), but his politics are nothing short of radical.

The Democratic approach to bipartisanship that has been predominant since the early Clinton era is what's known as "triangulation". Basically, the candidate slides to the right to capture "the middle"--the moderate or even left-edge-of-conservative vote. That's what has passed for bipartisanship for the last twenty years.

Obama has an entirely different and new approach to bipartisanship and coalition building. He's perceived that even the most conservative Member of Congress (for instance) may be progressive on certain issues. By reaching out across the aisle on a specific, issue-by-issue basis, he's shown himself able to construct bipartisan majorities without sacrificing his own moral or political position.

This is absolutely NOT politics as usual. Look, the man has said it's not out of the question he'd put together a bipartisan cabinet! When was the last time that happened?

Last edited by ratbastid; 02-27-2008 at 12:28 PM..
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Old 02-27-2008, 12:08 PM   #37 (permalink)
 
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i dont understand anything about this word "obmania"
it seems like a silly one-dimensional television meme that speaks entirely to how the rallies look on camera.

i have talked to a fair number of obama supporters and find their range of informed-ness about his policies to be not too much unlike any other range--this being amurica after all, land of wholesale conflation of political choices with other types of consumer activity. so there are system problems, not obama-supporter problems, which are expressed in the levels of buying a politician for his image.

besides, no=one who supported george w bush EVER, AT ALL is in a position to complain about the power of image in dictating political choice.

on the last two posts:

i don't consider obama particularly left in policy terms--that he can be taken as such by our more conservative to extreme-right comrades is an index of how far to the right the center has drifted across the last 20 years--this is an effect of (rapidly imploding) conservative mobilizations, an index of the extent to which conservative memes have infected even the terminologies that get thrown around as indices of relative position

in political terms, i think the ways in which obama's campaign has worked are kinda interesting and at time innovative---but i think the main driver behind much of the enthusiasm that he generates is that many many many many people are quite excited about the possibility of the united states collectively ridding itself of the multi-variate disaster that has been the bush administration.
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Old 02-27-2008, 12:34 PM   #38 (permalink)
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Actually, ratbastid, it's not as unusual as you might think. I could give you examples, starting with McCain-Feingold, but there's also stuff where, say, Hatch and Kennedy (who are good friends) worked together. It's not that unusual to go issue by issue to build coalitions. That's how stuff gets done. The stark partisan splits tend to be on "hot button" high-visibility questions, and I really doubt that will change. So I do dispute that Obama's politics is a new phenomenon - he is just extremely good at articulating his vision, and he does it in an appealing way. Look, can we agree he is an extremely talented and attractive politician? I just don't think he is much more than that.
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Old 02-27-2008, 01:04 PM   #39 (permalink)
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Why are we afraid of people who inspire us? Obama is an articulate and inspiring speaker. Hopefully he'll use his ability to lead and inspire people to do go things. Martin Luther King was someone who did the same thing with a similar gift. Hitler apparently had the same gift - have you ever listened to one of Hitler's speeches? I don't speak a word of german, and obviously abhor what he stood for and what he did, but just the sound of his voice makes one sit up and take notice.

In a way, it *is* scary to think that one might be swept up by a powerful speaker. But, on the other hand, the 'narrative' seems to be that Obama's supporters are all brainwashed and charmed by his speaking skills, and are zealots following Obama as a quasi-religious figure. His oratory skills are certainly part of his appeal to some people, but the implication in these stories seems to be we *shouldn't* vote for him *because* he's a good orator. Doesn't make much sense to me.
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Old 02-27-2008, 01:13 PM   #40 (permalink)
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Quote:
Why are we afraid of people who inspire us? Obama is an articulate and inspiring speaker. Hopefully he'll use his ability to lead and inspire people to do go things. Martin Luther King was someone who did the same thing with a similar gift. Hitler apparently had the same gift - have you ever listened to one of Hitler's speeches? I don't speak a word of german, and obviously abhor what he stood for and what he did, but just the sound of his voice makes one sit up and take notice.
I'm impressed that you got the Hitler AND MLK Jr. comparison both down in one post.

Quote:
Jinn, if you put aside the fact that Obama is an unusually gifted speaker, very nimble in his public appearances, and charismatic as all hell, and focus solely on his positions and political history, what distinguishes his positions and activities from any other big-city leftish Democrat? His politics are totally conventional. Totally. You might agree or disagree, but he's hardly a groundbreaker or an original political thinker. He's just a plain old liberal Democrat who happens to be very gifted. That is probably good enough for most of the people here, who are liberal Democrats, and that's ok. But let's not make him into something he's not.
You can't seperate "gifted speaker" out, I'm sorry. It's a very important part of his personality, and personality is all that makes a "conventional speaker" into a life-changer. If you've ever met someone who had NATURAL charisma and leadership skill, you know that their "power" in terms of realizing goals is ten-fold the power of someone who identical ideals who fails to convince and convey. I'm a firm believer that you can get just about any sane person to do just about every reasonable thing you can come up with if you have the charisma and knowledge to cater the message to them. I'm no master of convincing, but a powerful voice and stature take you a LONG way in the world of people. I've met people who didn't even speak my language that made me want to do whatever they said; not out of fear, but out of physical presence.

Even if I somehow abstract an essential part of what makes him a good person and politician, as you pre-suppose, I don't find any 'traditionalism' to his politics. Sure, he's got to hold some mainstream leftist opinions, like "tax cuts for the middle class and no tax cuts for the rich," but that doesn't make him traditional. Did you know that part of his economic stimulus plan includes things like implementing cost-effective 'next generation' broadband? I can't think of any candidate past or present who knew as much about our dependence on high-tech infrastructure as Obama, nor do I see ANY current one who includes the same level of technology improvement in their economic plan as he does. That's one facet of many, but it's enough for me to say that you're not very familiar with Obama's policies if you think they're the same thing that we've been seeing in 'modern' politics.
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