Friday, March 23, 2007

No Question We Are Drones, but Who Is the Real Big Brother?

As a new media satirist, I have to give kudos to Philip de Vellis for his much publicized YouTube video attacking Hillary Clinton, although I disagree with the insinuation that she is an Orwellian Big Brother figure leading masses of brainless drones. The video was well made, and the concept very clever. However, I can think of at least a dozen faces, including Barack Obama's but most from the current White House administration, that would have been more appropriate to edit into that screen from the classic Apple commercial.

A frequent refrain of Obama's on the campaign trail is that he has not been in Washington long but that he has been there long enough to know that Washington needs to change. Newsflash: I have never worked in Washington, and I also know Washington needs to change. Where Obama has failed so far in my opinion is in convincing me that he is capable of effecting the needed change in Washington.

I would liken Obama's campaign to an 18 year-old with a blank credit record applying for a million dollar mortgage. The lender cannot cite any negative items in the youngster's credit history when denying the loan application because there is no credit history at all. At the same time, the lender would need to see a history of positive items before mustering enough confidence to make the loan.

Barack Obama is extremely charismatic. His idealism and stated decision to avoid slinging mud are refreshing. But in the unlikely event he were actually to be elected, it is inevitable that he would falter. He may in fact set a record for the fastest drop in popularity ratings of any President ever (that is the fastest drop - not the lowest popularity. No one could beat Bush on that record). As hard as he tries to please all people all of the time, this is not realistic and will ultimately lead to dissatisfying most of the people within months of taking office. I hope Obama does not disappear after this election. I would like to see him keep up his good work in the Senate, build a strong credit record if you will, and perhaps run again in 2020 or 2024.

Hillary Clinton has experience. Many have said, usually only half-joking, that she ran the White House and the country for 8 years already while her husband held the title of President. She has a good track record of getting results for her state of New York in the Senate, not the least of which came after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. She is also a somewhat divisive figure however, who has made perhaps as many enemies as friends along the way. Ironically, she has also been criticized for taking overly safe stances on controversial issues like gay rights. Nonetheless, I believe this is realistically going to happen with any effective leader but that she will have her work cut out for her to get elected President if she does in fact win the Democratic nomination.

While I support Senator Clinton's bid for the nation's highest office, I stop short of committing my vote at this juncture. Two so-called second-tier candidates also merit mention.

Senator Joseph Biden (D-Delaware) is the only Democratic candidate, and possibly the only candidate on either ticket, that has presented a concrete and realistic plan to end and win the war in Iraq. Biden makes the point that we keep hearing people say, "the war cannot be won militarily. We need a political solution." He is the only candidate however who has actually presented a realistic political solution to win (and end) the war. He has also won points with me for his suggestion that a President needs to constantly be asking, "then what?" For instance, "Let's invade Iraq and topple Sadaam Hussein." "Then what?" "Now let's pull our troops out of Iraq and bring them home." "OK, then what?"

Senator Biden is an adept and somewhat charismatic speaker who is not afraid to piss off people who disagree with him, and he frankly just comes off as the most presidential of all the candidates. With the war as the top issue in the 2008 campaign, Biden is lightyears ahead of anyone else in the race, although he has not managed to gain the same visibility as the top-tier candidates. His stance and credentials on important domestic issues such as the economy and healthcare are not as strong in my opinion, but I hope to learn more about him as debate season picks up.

New Mexico governor Bill Richardson has arguably the strongest foreign policy record of any of the Democratic candidates, and also the best record of uniting Democrats and Republicans to achieve results. He can readily tick off a long laundry list of changes he has enacted to benefit the people of New Mexico as governor. Anecdotally though, he also comes off as the least presidential when he speaks, and he may lose favor with some Democrats for opposing gun control. Richardson served in the cabinet of former President Bill Clinton, as well as in a number of other high profile positions, and boasts the highest-margin win of any governor in the history of New Mexico with 69% of the vote in 2006. That is impressive for a Democratic candidate in a famously red state.

Richardson also captured my attention when President Bush selected him to travel to Sudan to negotiate with murderer/dictator Omar Al-Bashir over the government-sponsored genocide against blacks in the Arab-ruled African nation. The humanitarian crisis in Sudan's Darfur region (and Chad, and the Central African Republic, and Somalia, and Zimbabwe) is extremely important to me, and I am disappointed that none of the other candidates has made mention of this issue, not to mention the current administration turning a blind eye to it. I hope to hear more from Richardson during debates in the months ahead as well.

We are still some 8 1/2 months away from the first primaries, and 9 1/2 months from what is shaping up to be "super duper Tuesday," when I will cast my vote in California. I am encouraged for once that I believe we have a number of highly qualified candidates to choose from. I hope once the primaries are over that I will still feel that way, although I have to say: Given Cheney's repeated promise that he will not run for President, whoever is elected in November, 2008, is sure to be better than what we have now.

2 comments:

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