(no subject)
Sep. 6th, 2008 06:14 pmInteresting link that I found on Facebook and oddly reassuring, teachs me not to make generalizations about people, although I already knew that - being surrounded by people who do not agree with me on everything has a funny way of keeping me honest.
Arianna Huffington's new book entitled "RIGHT is WRONG - or How the Lunatic Fringe Took Over and Made Us Less Safe": http://www.randomhouse.com/kvpa/rightiswrong/
Here I always thought Arianna Huffington was a right-wing conservative.
I think at least when we look at things historically, that the danger comes when we go to extreems. Too far in any one direction. You should never give one group of people, no matter how great they seem, total power. And you should never give into fear. I think fear has a tendency to bring out the "monster" in people, fear and frustration and rage.
Arianna Huffington's new book entitled "RIGHT is WRONG - or How the Lunatic Fringe Took Over and Made Us Less Safe": http://www.randomhouse.com/kvpa/rightiswrong/
Here I always thought Arianna Huffington was a right-wing conservative.
I think at least when we look at things historically, that the danger comes when we go to extreems. Too far in any one direction. You should never give one group of people, no matter how great they seem, total power. And you should never give into fear. I think fear has a tendency to bring out the "monster" in people, fear and frustration and rage.
no subject
Date: 2008-09-07 01:30 pm (UTC)now (now that you've explained it twice and it finally got through to me) I think I can see it. It actually helps me to understand that people don't believe McCain has changed; they really believe in the 'maverick'. Just because I personally believe that McCain has been protected by the media for decades (hiding his affairs, errors in judgement, lapses of memory) and think that his current behavior is in line with what has always been there, doesn't mean that anyone else agrees with me. People see what they want to see (including me).
And you are 100% right about Obama's smart campaign to win the nomination (the Clinton knew all the rules, but somehow strategized as though they were running in the Republican primaries... Close wins in NY and CA only get you a tiny majority of delegates, not the whole shooting match. And too many losses in too many caucus states costs you the whole ball game. Of course, to be fair, I think Hillary was confident that she could win with the super delegates, she was very frustrated to find them switching to Obama.
Obama is playing VERY smart now, look at this electoral map,:
http://www.pollster.com/
see how close Obama is to pulling out the needed 270 electoral votes: McCain is fighting for his political life in states that should be his with ease...
Obama has almost sewn this up, and he is currently recruiting as hard as he can to get people from his base states (ie from California) to go and work on the ground in the battleground states (you get trained and then they take you to Ohio, Indiana, Florida, or wherever). I would totally go if I was younger, but I know it means sleeping in bad hotels and working really hard for next 2 months... I'm really too old, but I wish I wasn't!