In honor of today, I Gave Barack $50 (50 reasons why)
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:53:19 AM PDT
My wife is at the convention and I'm at home. She stopped in Denver on Tuesday night after having to be at her company headquarters in Salt Lake. She was a big Hillary supporter and I was a big Barack supporter. We had many interesting debates and arguments, but we both made a deal that if Hillary won I would go to the convention and support her and if Barack won that she would go to the convention and support him.
What's even more interesting is that I am a white male and she is a black female.
Enough family history, I'm asking you to join me in raising some money for Barack today. I'll match another $50 if you donate at my Act Blue page. Read below to read my reasons
Obama needs your help here and NOW
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:50:02 AM PDT
Obama's e-mail about WGN-AM
Text of the e-mail the Obama campaign sent to supporters:
Obama...Money in the Bank w/poll
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:45:04 AM PDT
Obama's speech tonight will be profound. That's the basic difference between Obama and all others this year. He has the ability, at certain crucial moments, to reach us all. I could have titled this diary entry "No Fear", because lack of fear is what Obama brings to the table on a daily basis. It's an interesting contrast to the Republican party and it's new puppet, John McCain.
Obama has no puppet master. That concerns just about everyone. "How can we rein this guy in?" You can't. Obama's gonna do what Obama's gonna do. And every day is a breakthrough day for all involved.
Obama is being punished for messing with people's control issues.
John McCain is No Hero
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:43:07 AM PDT
Watching Joe Biden's speech, it got to me last night, how respectful everyone is being to John McCain. He's always described as "a friend" or a "respected colleague" or a "hero.' And finally it just got to me. Jon McCain is no hero.
Follow me below the fold, as I explain in more detail how I came to my conclusion that John McCain doesn't deserve to be considered a hero.
(also posted at Booman Tribune)
History Being Made - A Tip for Obama's Speech - Updated
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:33:50 AM PDT
Bill Clinton is pissed-off, but not at Obama - w/poll
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:27:17 AM PDT
Reports have been circulating for weeks that Bill is pissed off. The suggestion was that Bill felt the Obama people had not shown the proper deference toward him.
Everyone was worried about Bill’s speech - would he really embrace Obama? Or was Bill still to so upset about being slighted that his support would be merely lukewarm.
Pawlenty shows his fangs
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:15:50 AM PDT
According to thepage.time.com, Pawlenty gets "super tough" on Obama and the Democrats...
Drilling for Solar Power and Mining the Winds
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:11:21 AM PDT
I've been thinking about George Lakoff's ideas on framing the debate, as presented in "Don't Think of an Elephant" and I think about solar power and wind power more than I think about food.
I just heard that there was a big fight in Minneapolis over drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge, ANWR. The rank and file and the "machers" of the Republican Party, the people I call "Republicanista," want to drill in ANWR. John McCain, their presumptive standard bearer, wants more offshore drilling. He wants to drill in Alaska, and in California, Florida, New Jersey, and everywhere else. McCain, however, is opposed to drilling in ANWR "at this time." (Be very careful when a politician says "At this time." This phrase, "At this time" when used during a political campaign, means "At this time during a political campaign.")
They Are Misrepresenting The Truth... (poll)
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:08:37 AM PDT
We are all quite aware of just how amazingly disciplined the Republicans seem to be when it comes to memes and talking points. It's almost as though someone sat them down and explained to them at length why it is so important for them to constantly repeat the same negative characterizations over and over again if they want to successfully 'define' the Democrats as defective and undesirable. It is my sincere hope that we Democrats will be able to do something similar during the next couple of months. I am convinced that we will be able to win a big, BIG victory this November if we can find a way to persuade the vast majority of politically informed Democrats all across the country to repeatedly say the words, "They [the Republicans] are misrepresenting the truth..." as something of a mantra between now and election day.
Where does John McCain go for spending money?
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:04:42 AM PDT
Yesterday, I posed this riddle as a comment, and the response was quite positive. It was suggested that it get greater exposure, and so I am making it a diary. This was going to be a short diary, because there's a simple answer to this riddle. However, I like to put some content in the diary like one is supoosed to do. You will have to go below the fold for the answer while I go off on a tangent.
On Tuesday, Paul Begala posted an article on the Huffing Post (that's what I call it because that's often what I think they must be doing over there), in which he called for the Democrats to go seriously negative on McCain. Now I don't have much of a problem with that, but he said something else that struck me as odd. He claimed that after Hillary suspended her campaign he sent a check to the Obama campaign with the memo "FOR NEGATIVE CAMPAIGNING ONLY" on it.
Hmmmm
Barack Obama vs John McCain vs media
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 08:01:33 AM PDT
I remember, way back at the end of January, when John Edwards had dropped out, wondering who to support. And I supported Barack Obama. The reasoning was more cynical than I would like, but I do want to win - it was because his relationship with the media was going to be better than anything Hillary could hope for. Not a very bold prediction there, but there you go.
However, I made some further predictions based on who was the most viable in each party. Let's revisit the one that matters now, shall we...
Warm-up for tonight: Obama's 2004 convention speech (w/video and text)
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:48:34 AM PDT
Tonight will be a watershed moment in U.S. history. Let the GOP try and spin this as "Obama the celebrity". Let the pundits go on and on about his white problem, about his Clinton problem, about the fact he's running against a POW/Maverick/Saint. Tonight is bigger than all of them. Tonight we'll see history, and I have no doubt Obama will give a speech that will top the many, many excellent speeches we've seen so far this week.
Why the hell are there columns at Invesco Field? [Updated with new images]
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:46:59 AM PDT
Now that the Clinton-Obama divisiveness line has been definitively laid to rest, the MSM's story du jour -- flogged incessantly, of course, by Republicans -- has shifted to Obama's presumptuousness in staging his acceptance speech tonight at, horrors, a football stadium.
Why, oh why, our oh-so-concerned journalists want to know, would he even risk turning off voters by appearing as a
vanity candidate with charisma and a heavy dose of arrogance, but little substance and not enough seasoning for the White House?
And, to top it all off, Obama has gone and outfitted a stage set on the football field that have become
the fodder for much merriment yesterday, as aerial photos of the stage set made them look like a papier-mache Acropolis.
Republicans, who have taken to ridiculing Obama as "The One," mocked the "Temple of Obama," and advised reporters on what styles of togas they might wear to the event.
More on the flip...
Are You Willing To Win This?
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:33:57 AM PDT
I've been a Democrat for my entire adult life. Maybe you haven't. Heck, maybe you're STILL not. You sure don't need to pay party dues to want what's best for the country and your family. Even among those of us who share party labels, we have far more powerful things in common. That said, whether you're a Democrat or not, it's obvious to me that most of us here have been following the convention pretty closely... and speaking only for myself, I've been doing so with escalating enthusiasm as we've seen home run after home run from Michele Obama, Hillary Clinton, President Bill Clinton, and now Joe Biden. Tonight I'm expecting no less from Vice President Al Gore and of course...batting cleanup...the Next President of the United States Barack Obama.
So then what happens?
I gave $25 to Barack Obama's Campaign Today
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:25:48 AM PDT
I gave $25 to Barack Obama's campaign today. For me, at my level right now, just having had to buy a car, glasses for my kid and deal with the rise in prices for almost everything on a single parent's salary, I still gave. And every time I have an extra $25 from conserving food, energy and foregoing non-essentials, I'm going to give it to him, too.
Why?
See below.
Use Gustav as an advantage
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:18:01 AM PDT
I generally do not like using bad events as campaign fodder, but I think passing on this opportunity would be a huge error by the Obama Campaign.
Homework: Watch This ... Before Obama's Speech Tonight
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:12:53 AM PDT
There's much tadoo about why Obama is surrounding himself in "Greek Temple" decor for the Democratic Nomination Acceptance Speech tonight, September 28 2008.
The Forgotten Minority in the 2008 Vote
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 07:09:44 AM PDT
Nationwide there are 2.1 million American Indians of voting age. Native Americans make up only one percent of the total U.S. electorate.
Historically, American Indians have had very low rates of voter registration and turnout. On some American Indian reservations in the western United States as few as 10 percent of all eligible voters are registered.
But in several states the American Indian vote, if mobilized by the Obama campaign, could give a good boost to Obama's efforts to carry the state.
• The biggest target is New Mexico. There are 60,000 registered American Indian voters in the state of New Mexico, making up 9.5 percent of all voters. More than two thirds of those American Indians are registered as Democrats. Only 15 percent are registered Republicans.