Chatter, Chatter

- Michael Barone proves self to be a complete tool in front of the whole country. Shorter Barone: John McCain's ads have made Obama's good performances with crowds a liability for him, and also, driving home slowly from the hospital with a new infant doesn't really make you a protector figure.

- From soon-to-be-homeless to taxpaying homeowners, the story of how Washington State decided to invest in people who live in mobile home parks that were being sold off to developers.

- How we know that the wingnuts know that the goal in attacking abortion is really attacking women's rights.

- Oregon tribe to recognize same-sex marriages. (via)

- Health care has been a big focus of the convention, as it has been of the public, though the media at large is perhaps uninterested.

- As usual, Juan Cole brings a comprehensive roundup of Iraq-related news, but as much as the constant violence and the Iraqi government's desire to have the US out by a date certain, the lack of water and basic services stand out as serious concerns in Iraqis' lives. How much sand do conservatives have to bury their heads in to think that Iraqis are on the verge of a peaceful future?

- Shorter Norah O'Donnell: Because I didn't watch C-SPAN, I dinged Democrats for not doing something that my network had simply refused to air them doing.

- As several speakers at the Democratic Convention have noted, a sensible energy policy would be a new jobs bill. Though if those jobs are going to be in the renewable energy sector, there's plenty of work to do revamping the energy grid.

- Random science thing ... grazing animals often align north-south.

- Two Sudanese airplane hijackers who landed in Libya, surrendered, and freed their hostages there have asked for asylum.

- Thai police have arrested demonstrators as protests around the Prime Minister's compound continue. The government is dealing with the protests as a police matter, where applicable, and the military has said they won't get involved.

- John McCain forgets 1989.

- Finally, a note to commentators who don't deserve links (because they're just garden variety tools of no particular interest), re Hillary Clinton's speech: It is, in fact, common practice for politicians to talk about their life story and political history in speeches. Someone who didn't know this, perhaps someone tuning in to their first political speech after not listening to any primary stumping or the rest of the convention, might have heard Mark Warner's keynote last night and said that it sounds like he was still holding on to his 2006 presidential ambitions because he told stories about needing student loans, failing in business before succeeding, and his legislative record, but that would just be stupid. Though when the speaker is a Clinton, all manner of stupidity is excused.

If politicians don't talk about their lives, they're distant. If they do, it's 'all about them.' Blame a fish for swimming, why don't you. And get a grip. Or a room. That sort of wanking should be done in private.



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Forgetting 1989 (none / 0)

I was laughing so hard at the news this morning on my way to work that I had to slow down, when they played John McCain saying "the Cold War ended not because the world stood as one, but because the great democracies stood together..."

Thinking: ur doin it wrong.


Tim Wolfe

John McCain is not pro-choice!

by bruorton on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 01:26:15 PM EST

Re: Chatter, Chatter (none / 0)

It's funny, I had no problem with Clinton talking about her own story (to the extent that I really didn't notice that she was doing that), but I thought Warner's story about his failed businesses and how he got luck and started a cell phone business in the early days of cell phones was pretty pointless and inexplicable in his telling of it. I actually like the point I think he was trying to make (Democrats are the party who support second and third chances for Americans, everyone should be able to fail and have society help them get back on their feet and try again), but he didn't make that point effectively, he just told us about how he failed at law and business, and then lucked out and became rich.

Clinton's speach, on the other hand, was excellent.


by letterc on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 01:56:50 PM EST


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