https://www.liquidpoker.net/


LP international    Contact            Users: 563 Active, 2 Logged in - Time: 03:15

Bad Week Already (Vid)

New to LiquidPoker? Register here for free!
Forum Index > Poker Blogs
k2o4   United States. Oct 13 2008 17:29. Posts 4803
Things aren't going so well for McCain this week as the polls in my last post suggested, and it's only Monday!

This morning Obama took charge and laid out an awesome rescue plan for the middle class and overall economy. Instead of wallowing in smears like McCain, Obama focused on the economy and came up with this comprehensive plan. He's focusing on helping small businesses, creating jobs and helping people who are facing foreclosure. It's a great speech with specifics. Check it out:

<iframe height="339" width="425" src="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/27165502#27165502" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"></iframe>

Funny thing is that this weekend there was a bunch of talk about how McCain was going to unveil a big new economic plan today, but it fell apart in the discussions amongst advisers so they decided not to do anything. UPDATE: Now it seems that they WILL set a new plan, tomorrow, lols. They can't decide!

At the same time we're seeing Republicans and conservatives across the board turning against McCain and echoing what us liberals have been saying for a while about McCain's tempermant, stunts and erratic behaviour:



Lastly Christopher Hitchens (conservative leaning Slate writer) wrote a ringing endorsement of Obama today that really nails why Obama is the right choice:

  McCain lacks the character and temperament to be president. And Palin is simply a disgrace.

I used to nod wisely when people said: "Let's discuss issues rather than personalities." It seemed so obvious that in politics an issue was an issue and a personality was a personality, and that the more one could separate the two, the more serious one was. After all, in a debate on serious issues, any mention of the opponent's personality would be ad hominem at best and at worst would stoop as low as ad feminam.

At my old English boarding school, we had a sporting saying that one should "tackle the ball and not the man." I carried on echoing this sort of unexamined nonsense for quite some time—in fact, until the New Hampshire primary of 1992, when it hit me very forcibly that the "personality" of one of the candidates was itself an "issue." In later years, I had little cause to revise my view that Bill Clinton's abysmal character was such as to be a "game changer" in itself, at least as important as his claim to be a "new Democrat." To summarize what little I learned from all this: A candidate may well change his or her position on, say, universal health care or Bosnia. But he or she cannot change the fact—if it happens to be a fact—that he or she is a pathological liar, or a dimwit, or a proud ignoramus. And even in the short run, this must and will tell.

On "the issues" in these closing weeks, there really isn't a very sharp or highly noticeable distinction to be made between the two nominees, and their "debates" have been cramped and boring affairs as a result. But the difference in character and temperament has become plainer by the day, and there is no decent way of avoiding the fact. Last week's so-called town-hall event showed Sen. John McCain to be someone suffering from an increasingly obvious and embarrassing deficit, both cognitive and physical. And the only public events that have so far featured his absurd choice of running mate have shown her to be a deceiving and unscrupulous woman utterly unversed in any of the needful political discourses but easily trained to utter preposterous lies and to appeal to the basest element of her audience. McCain occasionally remembers to stress matters like honor and to disown innuendoes and slanders, but this only makes him look both more senile and more cynical, since it cannot (can it?) be other than his wish and design that he has engaged a deputy who does the innuendoes and slanders for him.


Read the rest in the spoiler: + Show Spoiler +


Bill Kristol, a super conservative, called for McCain to fire his campaign. His column today actually laid out the only strategy I think has a winning chance for McCain. You can read it here.

So overall bad start to the week for McCain.

0 votes

Facebook Twitter
InnovativeYogis.comLast edit: 13/10/2008 18:28

traxamillion   United States. Oct 13 2008 19:20. Posts 10468

republican = fail


cariadon   Estonia. Oct 13 2008 20:13. Posts 4019

This should be a featured blog.
Great blogging.


k2o4   United States. Oct 13 2008 21:19. Posts 4803


  On October 13 2008 19:13 cariadon wrote:
This should be a featured blog.
Great blogging.



haha <3, thanks

I dun think they want LP run over with politics on the front page though, especially since I post like 2-4 times a day, lol

InnovativeYogis.com 

 



Poker Streams

















Copyright © 2025. LiquidPoker.net All Rights Reserved
Contact Advertise Sitemap