Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Aug 11th, 2008
There has been much made about how bad it is for John McCain to release several negative ads attacking the Democratic nominee, Barack Obama.
At some time earlier, I would have agreed that such ads like the “Celebrity” or “The One” ads were mean-spirited while lamenting the sad state of politics. But the reality is that politics have always been a rough game and, within limits, some negative ads can be effective to get a point across about your opponent.
Some have said that...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Aug 7th, 2008
Recently, my partner and I were walking around the Twin Cities Gay Pride Festival enjoying the day. We stopped at the Log Cabin Republicans booth just to say hello to folks. (I have been part of Log Cabin for years and staffed the booth at Pride for several years.) I ended up talking to this guy who had stopped at the booth to complain about the GOP. I expressed my support for McCain and he expressed his frustration with McCain and the GOP. He kept saying that he was undecided, but as he expressed...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Aug 5th, 2008
I have to say that both John McCain and Barack Obama are full of it when it comes to high gas prices.
Both men have to know that there isn’t much the government can do to drive gas prices down quickly, but because Americans want their gas cheap and fast, both are trying to pander as fast as they can with some very silly plans.
Drill Now? Okay, we should see that oil hit the market in about 10-20 years.
Windfall Profits Tax? Of course, because it worked so well in the 70s and 80s.
Rick Newman...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Aug 1st, 2008
It seems like the new rule for Republicans is to never, ever have a campaign ad with a black male candidate and a white woman.
The quip over John McCain’s “celebrity” ad has raised a lot of ruckus. Now, I think it is in very poor taste to paint Barack Obama as an empty-headed celebrity ala Britney and Paris, but I don’t get the charge of racism coming from some. Some Barack supporters see a picture of a black man and two white women and it conjures up the belief that the...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 31st, 2008
Let’s face it: John McCain’s “Celebrity” ad is having an effect- mostly negative. I have to agree with former McCain aide, John Weaver, that the ad appears childish. Has Obama become sort of a celebrity? Yes. Is there a lot of hype concerning his campaign? Yes. But frankly, that shouldn’t concern McCain as much as trying to formulate a political narrative that trumps Obama’s. (And I don’t agree with liberals who think that showing the faces of Britney...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 30th, 2008
The following is definitely in the “man bites dog” department.
Deroy Murdock, a writer at the conservative National Review, wrote an op-ed calling for the retirement of the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” regarding gay Americans serving in the military. Murdock notes the irony of the Army lowering its standards to allow convicted thieves, child molesters and murderers, while axing several linguists who happen to be gay.
Murdock notes that times have changed,...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 29th, 2008
In a post this morning, blogger Alan Stewart Carl, discusses his backing off of supporting John McCain. He writes:
…outside of certain issues of morality, I am not a man of absolutes. Which is why I’ve drifted away from McCain – he has acted too much like a man of absolutes, not just convinced of his own understandings of the world but also too willing to simplify complex matters in order to win votes. Obama has appeared more flexible but I don’t yet know if that is crafty political...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 22nd, 2008
In a recent post, Donklephant’s Alan Stewart Carl’s correctly takes down the McCain campaign for their latest ad which blames Senator Obama for high gas prices. I don’t have a problem with going after McCain for an ad that was grossly unfair. What piqued my interest was his last point:
Increasing domestic drilling is definitely an issue we need to debate and McCain used to be a guy you could trust to talk about such matters seriously. Now he sounds like any other politician looking...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 20th, 2008
In the Blogosphere, issues tend to come and go. People tend to react to something rather quickly and move on.
Now I am a little late on commenting on the whole New Yorker cartoon with Barak Obama in somekind of Muslim-type dress, giving a fist bump to his wife Michelle who is dressed up as a modern-day Angela Davis, with a flag burning in the fireplace and a picture of Osama bin Laden. We all know how the resulting debate, so I won’t bore you with that- I just want to share my view.
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jul 10th, 2008
Ross Douthat has a worthy analysis of Phil Gramm’s unwise words today about our nation being a “nation of whiners” when it come to the current economic outlook. Douthat notes that Republicans tend to be economic optimists, while Democrats tend to be economic pessimists. Too much of either and you have problems.
That was the problem with Gramm’s comments today. In some case, the GOP has focused too much on the positive without seeing there are some major factors affecting...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 30th, 2008
I’ve been trying to read Reclaiming Conservatism, by former Congressman Mickey Edwards. It has been a difficult read. It’s not because it is hard to read. What has bothered me so far is page after page of Edwards’ rants against the Bush Administration and the feckless Republican Congress that let the President get away with so much. After a while it gets a bit tedious. It’s not that I am a fan of President Bush or the GOP Congress of 2000-06, it’s just that it gets...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 25th, 2008
Sorry, but I had to use a version of that Simpsons quote (and I basically copied it from a writer).
Piggybacking on yesterday’s post, I found this article by Reihan Salam about the doomed McCain Presidency. It’s not as much his problem, but it is the problem of the GOP not being able to notice that the times they are a-changing. As I said yesterday, the nation is moving towards a new liberal era as the conservative era ends. He notes that Britain is in its own liberal (or more precisely,...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 24th, 2008
John McCain can’t get a break.
In 2000, he ran up against the Bush machine that slimed him and ran his campaign off the rails. Eight years later, he is now makes it to the top spot as the GOP nominee and has to run against someone that seems to be more popular than Jesus.
While I support John McCain, there is a sense that this is a losing battle. He is a good man stuck with a party in disarray and a movement that was run off the rails by the same man he faced in 2000.
Allan Lichtman has a...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 14th, 2008
I stumbled across this Associated Press article in today’s Minneapolis Star Tribune about how black conservatives are considering voting for Obama, because he is the first serious black candidate for the White House.
Now, I understand their feelings as a black man. I don’t want to vote for someone just because they share the same skin color that I do, and there is a lot I disagree with in Obama’s plans for governing this country. There are a lot of Obama’s policy positions...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 9th, 2008
In an earlier post, Michael Stickings comments on comments.
He talks about some bigoted comments left on the McCain website, and while he doesn’t say this reflects on McCain, he say the website is an outlet for “straight-talking bigotry.”
Earlier in the day, there were reports of a person who left a note on the Barak Obama website that talked about how the Jewish Lobby works. The offensive comments have since been removed, but that didn’t stop Rick Moran from wondering what...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 6th, 2008
The New York Times is reporting that an adviser close to GOP nominee John McCain says the Senator now supports warrantless wiretapping, which would signal a shift to the expansive view of the presidency championed by President Bush. Here is what the article says:
In a letter posted online by National Review this week, the adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, said Mr. McCain believed that the Constitution gave Mr. Bush the power to authorize the National Security Agency to monitor Americans’ international...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 4th, 2008
Note, this post is just the facts. I’m not making any editorial comments.
The McCain campaign invited several bloggers to take part in a conference call with the presumptive Republican nominee Senator John McCain. Here are some of the highlights:
First, Senator McCain congratulated Senator Hillary Clinton saying she “inspired women all over America.” He also congratulated Senator Barack Obama and then invited the Illinois Senator and presumptive nominee to 10 town hall meetings...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | Jun 3rd, 2008
Like my blogmate, Patrick Eadburn, I have not been a fan of Barak Obama. But, speaking not as John McCain supporter or a Republican, tonight, June 3, 2008 is moment in American history.
Whatever one thinks of the Senator from Illinois, he has broken a barrier that did not ever seem possible. Tonight we saw a major party claim an African American as its presumptive presidential nominee. Mind you, as I heard on the radio tonight, it was only 1964 when the Democrats were dealing with Fanny Lou Hamer...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | May 19th, 2008
Now that a few days has passed over the uproar of President Bush’s remarks where he implicitly slammed Barak Obama on negotiating with some of America’s less than savory neighbors, I think it’s time for me to weigh in.
Michael Tomansky of the Guardian has a good piece up on how Obama has been able to blunt criticism from the Republicans on foreign policy. The gist is that Obama is going to present a very different vision of American foreign policy that is centered on diplomacy...
Posted by DENNIS SANDERS | May 9th, 2008
Several years ago, I took part in a workshop after church. The members of the congregation were gathered and watch a video about race and American society. We were then asked to talk about our experience with race. Now, I was the only African American in the room and most of the people there were in their 60s and 70s. Most talked about how they had good relations with Blacks and had many friendships. However, one person who was middle aged, said that things for African Americans and other persons...