![]() |
|
Tags for This Article:
Obama-Barack (4552) Media (3291) Clinton-Hillary (1110) Ethics (1013) Elections And Campaigns (541) Presidential Campaign Democratic (344) Hillary Clinton (297) Campaign Finance And Reform (202) Obama And Wright (179)
|
Add to My Group
Hillary's vast experience in politics should inform her that there is a more popular Democratic candidate in this election. To win now, she'd need unprecedented landslides in the remaining primaries exceeding 60% of the vote, while all polls suggest otherwise. Hillary's whatever-it-takes desire for the presidency is greater then any philosophy or ideology. Like an upside-down American flag, we have it wrong when our president decides to get elected first and figures out how to do so second. Especially our next president, who will need to "right the ship". He or she should have some semblance of actual public service as a calling, attracting willing support because of common aims instead of wheeling-dealing in favors, influence, appointments, co-sponsorships and endorsements as currency. We are very specifically told by Hillary and her supporters that we needher, to combat the tough, entrenched forces in Washington. She tells us Obama's populist agenda is idealistic and naïve, and that he won't be able to fend off the bad guys. But the majority of Democrats disagreed, rallying against Hillary's presumed iron grip on the Democratic nomination, to demonstrate exactly this ability and intention. For example, his podcast pages were straining servers months before his exploratory committee was announced. Many who heard these policy intentions committed to Obama early and seeded a well-run volunteer collective which is a testament to Obama's executive skill. To inspire and organize a body of no-pay workers, communicate a political message and achieve wins in early primaries against the DLC/DNC's well-equipped darling - and a power-packed field representing the full breadth of the party - was no small feat. Hillary persisted though. Her win in Texas* was helped by a dose of the same type of "3 AM" fearmongering Bill Clinton denounced in his 2006 Democratic Convention address, and Hillary's win in Ohio came amidst the fast-moving NAFTAgate yarn, in which Obama was purported to have promised Canadian officials economic favor despite his anti-NAFTA campaign rhetoric. If you were paying close attention, it was a non-starter: the comments were not his, rather taken from a staffer's memo, way out of context and proportion. After primary day, it actually came out that Hillary's camp was guilty of exactly that which she accused Obama of. She similarly "went there" on the Reverend Wright firestorm, only to have her own dubious religio-political ties exposed in the press. So Hillary is polarizing, but also bi-polarizing. First she told us she was proud to be sitting next to Obama on national TV and within 24 hours we saw the opposite in front of a Texas crowd - "Shame on you, Barack Obama". Did she change her mind, or did her strategists? This was only one of many varietal tactics and approaches floated throughout the campaign. If you want "change", just watch Hillary shifting and retooling right in front of our eyes. A backlash against her negative campaigning produced the promise of a truce, but when it didn't propel Hillary, she went even more negative. She tried the confident, self-actualizing winner's strut, she tried the sensitive, wounded lamb, she tried sarcasm with "the skies will open...", she tried the staff reshuffle. We've seen every almost move in the book. But Hillary's bestBernaysian campaigning appealed to the helplessness in people, promising answers to all of our problems but providing less detail then the candidate she complains is "all talk". But her most glaring waffle is also her biggest criticism - her support for the Iraq Authorization for Military Force.
GW is a proud American from NY State, concerned about media manipulation and overconsumption. He believes in fiscal responsibility, small government and strict ethics. He recently changed careers to become an inner city schoolteacher. A firm proponent of international adoption and curbing overpopulation, he hopes to adopt a third child and enjoys history, "honest" music and art and obscure vinyl records.
Copyright © OpEdNews, 2002-2008 |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||