Who won the week?
The Obama Campaign provides some clarity on their agenda.
Obama Aide Concedes 'Dollar Bill' Remark Referred to His Race
Obama Strategist Calls.Sen. Barack Obama's chief strategist conceded that the Democratic presidential candidate was referring to his race when he said Republicans were trying to scare voters by suggesting Obama "doesn't look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills."...
Playing the Race Card
...Obama's camp initially denied the remark was a reference to Obama's race.Obama is poised to become the first black man to be the presidential nominee of a major political party when he claims the Democratic nomination on Aug. 28 -- the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech.
"He was referring to the fact that he didn't come into the race with the history of others," Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs said Thursday. "It is not about race."
But Obama's chief strategist, David Axelrod, acknowledged on "Good Morning America" Friday that the candidate was referring, at least in part, to his ethnic background.
When pressed to explain the comment, Axelrod told "GMA" it meant, "He's not from central casting when it comes to candidates for president of the United States. He's new to Washington. Yes, he's African-American."
That seemingly obvious reference sparked the first real fireworks between the two camps as backers of both candidates accused the other of trying to subtly inject race into the presidential contest.
The Obama Campaign states the obvious, after the McCain Campaign called them on it.
With Celebrity, The Race Card and Energy Policy being the main themes of the week, the call on who won the week is rather easy.
Note: Timmy will soon be changing his name back to Timmy the Wonder Dog, er a change back to quick bites and long chews.
--
“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Timmy's blog
- Login or register to post comments
Conservative
Liberal
Moderate/Mixed/Non-Partisan
Non-Political/Reference
Related Sites -
Polisci Applied (Aaron)
Intrepid Liberal Journal (Intrepid Liberal)
Obsidian Wings (Bird Dog)
Open Hand/Open Eye (locutas)
Red State (Bird Dog)
Swords Crossed (brendanm98)
Wagster Speaks (Wagster)
WatchingAmerica (BlaiseP)
The Social Pathologist (TSP)
Foreign Affairs -
Abu Aardvark
'Aqoul
American Footprints
Council on Foreign Relations
CSIS
Democracy Arsenal
Intel Dump
The Fourth Rail
War and Piece
Politics -
Ace of Spades HQ
Andrew Sullivan
Balloon Juice
Belgravia Dispatch
Captain's Quarters
Crooked Timber
Curmudgeonly & Skeptical
Daily Kos
Democracy Arsenal
Eschaton
Firedoglake
Glenn Greenwald
Global Guerrillas
Hugh Hewitt
Instapundit
Jawa Report
Lawyers, Guns and Money
Liberals Against Terror
Matt Yglesias
Michael J. Totten
Michelle Malkin
Moon of Alabama
New America
OxBlog
Patterico
Political Animal
Political Wire
Publius Pundit
QandO
Reality Based Community
Talking Points Memo
The Agitator
The Belmont Club
The Corner
Truman Project
Winds of Change.net
War -
Counterterrorism Blog
Iraq the Model
Jihad Watch
Small Wars Journal Blog
Economics and Business -
Angry Bear
Brad DeLong
Daniel Drezner
Mahalanobis
Marginal Revolution
Roubini Global Economics
The Big Picture
Science and Tech -
Bad Astronomy
New Scientist
Real Climate
Science Blogs
Scientific American
The Panda's Thumb
Legal -
Balkinization
Conglomerate
Ideoblog
Jurisdynamics
Law and Letters
Overlawyered
ProfessorBainbridge
ScotusBlog
Talk Left
The Becker-Posner Blog
Volokh Conspiracy
Sports -
Baseball Crank
Baseball Musings
Baseball Reference.com
ESPN.com
NFL.com
Only Baseball Matters
The Sports Economist
Books, Film and Music -
Amazon.com
Internet Movie Database
All Music Guide
News and Aggregators -
Asia Times
Boingboing
CNN
Digg
English Russia
Fark
Los Angeles Times
Memeorandum
MSNBC
Politico
Poynteronline
Slashdot
The New York Times
The Washington Post
References -

He's backed McCain into a corner. The only way John McCain can win this election is to make Barack Obama completely unacceptable in the eyes of voters. Trouble is, McCain is terrible at delivering that kind of sleaze, and Obama is very good at deflecting it. Twelve more weeks of this and Obama will unquestionably be President.
By the way, did anyone take my advice and buy Intrade shares of Obama during the primary? I think I predicted that he'd be a 2-1 favorite by September. It's 62-37 right now.
--The other day I heard that ignorance and apathy are sweeping the country. I didn't know that, but I don't really care.
- Login or register to post comments
)Bingo.
--To think is not enough; you must think of something -- Jules Renard
- Login or register to post comments
)i've missed Obama's statement that he exhibited faulty judgement on "The Surge".
simply put, Obama send your political operatives to the hotel and then visit the troops. it is a simple matter of priorities.
i am surprised that Sully didn't mention patriotism.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )But the above comment has nothing to do with the surge. At some point, it almost becomes comical.
Question: So, McCain supporter, what do you think about the candidate's support of off-shore drilling?
Answer: Obama was wrong about the surge!!
Question: Duly noted. On another topic, Senator McCain has recently stated he supported the Martin Luther King holiday in his home state of Arizona. Is this an accurate statement?
Answer: Surge. Surge, surge, surge, surge, surge.
Question: Thanks for your time, McCain Supporter.
Answer: Surge.
--To think is not enough; you must think of something -- Jules Renard
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Timmy writes diary. Heh.
--To think is not enough; you must think of something -- Jules Renard
- Login or register to post comments
)It'll be cool having Timmy the Wonder Dog back again, like old times.
My hope is the McCain campaign stays focused on "winning the week", while the Obama campaign continues to remember there's only one win that counts.
--Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you criticize them, you're a mile away and you have their shoes. -JH
- Login or register to post comments
)nt
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Less press availability and reading comments from a lectern, even in town hall formats, have cut down his gaffes. It's no longer one a day.
Still, there is a growing acknowledgment in the press that the McCain campaign is almost exclusively negative. The "he didn't visit the soldiers because they wouldn't let him come with cameras" lie blew back on McCain badly early in the week.
Further, the Paris HIlton/Moses line of attack risks making McCain seem not just negative, but petty too. Even long-time stalwarts like Weaver and Brooks are a bit embarrassed. When people are hurting they resent this sort of childish antics.
On the Obama side, yes, the dollar bill comment was a gaffe, and the McCain brushback won't win him too many points yet, but it placed a marker.
So the answer to your question is... it wasn't a massacre like last week, but count this one slight advantage to Obama.
--More Wagster!
- Login or register to post comments
)there is a growing ackonwledgement by the general public that the press is in the bag for Obama.
So how has this all worked out, I'll let Armando point out the obvious.
The very brief summary,
Ouch!
Armando's Summary
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )LA Times cites ...
Or, to paraphrase yourself: Apparently, whimpering (like a litter of puppies) appears to be the Republican constant campaign strategy.
--Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )notwithstanding, the public appears to have an idea of what is going to happen this Fall.
One might wonder how much of that coverage dealt with Obama's failure not to pursue public financing.
And who can ever forget the NYT failure to run McCain's OP-Ed.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Gee, I went looking and all I found was this:
And UFOs don't even have every Republican president from Nixon to Bush whining in their favor!
Though they do have that redhead-seducing elf, Kucinich, arguing for them. Who knew he had such impact on public opinion?!
--Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )a cleansing breath, then hit the link and hold your breath
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )that's a higher percentage that believe in Bush.
--I blame it all on the Internet
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )but never forget, Bush has better numbers than Truman and Lincoln in August of 1864.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Indeed, running McCain's op-ed would have been the strongest blow imaginable for the soft bigotry of low expectations.
--It's impossible to debate if people simply hold beliefs that have no grounding in reality.
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )"The Surge" must be a bubbling boil on your....
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )I'm sorry to have dignified one of your statements with a response, as it implied that there was a value to it in the first place. It is not my general policy to give such false impressions.
--It's impossible to debate if people simply hold beliefs that have no grounding in reality.
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )It's like hitting a tennis ball against a wall. Yes, the ball comes back. This does not mean the wall is playing tennis.
--To think is not enough; you must think of something -- Jules Renard
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )but it's like a missing tooth, you know there's nothing there but you keep checking it out.
--I blame it all on the Internet
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )just press your lips and blow. but not too hard, we don't want you to hurt yourself.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )everyone knows you're the only one who blows around here.
--I blame it all on the Internet
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )and the fun
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )The thought of you posting daily Obama diaries until Election Day is yet another sign that this is going to be the dreariest election in many, many years.
And dreary is, of course, the only way for McCain to win.
--To think is not enough; you must think of something -- Jules Renard
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )i've missed six weeks. i have to catch up. changing the name appears to be problematic.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )it is amazing how the editor decided to take a vacation, left during the dark of night.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )didn't run it, just one of their many games they play on both the front page as well as the Op-Ed section.
Since you probably didn't have a chance to read it, the following may prove helpful.
“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )I blame it all on the Internet
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )If he wins, I'm sure he'll be glad to return the favor by giving their reporters seats in the back row at press conferences so they don't feel crowded. For their own good, of course.
--- Login or register to post comments
| parent ). . .is the "W" in "GBCW" now short for "week"? I like to be up on new developments in the English language.
--- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Damnit, Timmy! I was holding onto that info, waiting for some of the Obama partisans to fiercely insist that Obama was not saying that, and others to get all evasive rather than admitting it. THEN I was going to present that info. But ya' ruined it, man! ;)
Well, ya' got my vote anyway for bringing important, pertinent info to everyone's attention.
- Login or register to post comments
)Just want to point out what I said on Thursday where I got all evasive and fiercely insisted Obama didn't say that:
Repeating old post that seems to have been ignored because it wasn't inflammatory enough:
Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )So you say
I don't think McCain is going down and dirty in the race thing.
Then you refer to
the McCain camp playing a little too much with the subtext having the black man juxtaposed against young blonde hotties.
How do you reconcile those two statements?
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Quite easily -- my race-card volume knob has settings in between 0 and 10.
For instance, Terry Nelson's Harold Ford ad:
Maybe a 5.
Terry Nelson's Celeb ad -- just a little touch to draw Obama into a trap:
Why is it always Mandingo with blonde hotties?! Poor redheads don't get any love.
Anyway, very subtle, I'd rate it a 1. But it's not a 0.
Obama's riff:
Pretty light, but not as light as Celeb, I'd rate it a 3 on the race-card volume knob.
Rick Davis's response:
-- parroting Mr. Shapiro talking about the O.J. trial:
Dialing it up again, a little reminder of black men screwing and killing our blonde chickies -- I'd score it about a 3 on the volume knob.
These are all probing attacks -- both campaigns testing their limits and trying to make sure that their opponents know they can't push too hard.
Regardless, I live in a world of continuous functions. That's how I reconcile those two statements.
--Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )As can be seen here.
*--I'm not even tempted to throw in an insult here. I mean, my God, just look at that woman. Mad props, Congressman.
--- Login or register to post comments
| parent )...until he turned into such a slut.
--Me: We! -- Ali
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )So what's your bottom line: McCain WAS stoking racist fears, but not doing it AS MUCH as some others have? And Obama WAS accusing McCain of doing so, and Obama DID believe that accusation was valid, meaning his spokesperson was completely misrepresenting Obama's belief?
Help me out here.
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Why do I have to repeat myself?
a) Yes -- rating 1
b) More precisely, the McCain camp and various unnamed conservative operatives -- rating 3
c) give me his quote and I'll give you my rating/interpretation
Are you saying that there is only two possibilities, yes or no? That there are no differences of degree? That differences of degree don't matter?
--Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )I just wanted to make sure my understanding was clear that you WERE saying, first of all, that McCain WAS stoking racist fears. (unless your "ratings" refer to probabilities rather than degrees, which I don't think is what you're saying). Your rating system apparently addresses degree of "subtlety", which I take to mean how obvious the racist message is, not how bad the racist message is (for example, the Harold Ford ad and the Obama "Celeb" ad could intend to communicate the same message, but one veils it more). That's a matter of tactics, not a measure of how inappropriate and unethical/immoral a particular ad is. In fact, I find it hard to think of ANY degree of deliberately stoking racist fears as a "1" in terms of ethics/morality/appropriateness. Do you agree? And if the McCain campaign were deliberately stoking racist fears, wouldn't that be deplorable, whether done in a "subtle" way or not?
Here's the quote you requested (I had linked to it previously on this thread)
So now you can answer that last question.
Are you saying that there is only two possibilities, yes or no? That there are no differences of degree? That differences of degree don't matter?
No, I'm not saying that, although I don't think I agree with (and I think there may be some confusion over) what "matters of degree" should be the focus here. You seem to be focusing on level of "subtlety". I think the level of severity of a racist message (e.g., how ugly the premise) certainly matters, but that ANY deliberate stoking of racist fears is deplorable, even if some cases are even worse than others.
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )I don't agree.
And I think that playing around at the edges of race-carding/baiting isn't exactly nice, but isn't deplorable either. Even the Harold Ford ad doesn't strike as "deplorable" -- I'd more say egregious or too much.
I'll save "deplorable" for stuff Ahmenidjad says.
I don't know what Barack Obama believes, but I suspect the above is strictly speaking a lie, or a white lie, or some little bit of fudging -- the intention of which is to de-escalate the situation, which both sides appear to be doing now.
Like I said, race is being used as an issue, but not a major one. It would also be misleading to say that "race is being used as an issue" when it's such a minor one (at least so far from the major camps) -- and especially in a culture so sensitive to both racism, and being called racist.
I do think how loudly or how "in your face" you say something matters. I think that if you disagree with this, you'll have a hard time in the world -- that, in fact, you'll find every human to be deplorable.
For instance, are you now going to say that the Celeb ad is deplorable, or instead argue that Terry Allen's inclusion of two young blonde hotties didn't have any hint of the meaning it did in his previous ad?
Or that Rick Davis' comment had nothing to do with O.J.?
Is this world composed of nothing but monsters?
--Steven Palmer Peterson
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )I blame it all on the Internet
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )And I may as well spill this one, too:
http://theforvm.org/diary/harley/stay-classy-senator-mccain-part-iii-a-continuing-series#comment-107195
Verrrrrrry interesting news.
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )but I have not yet changed over to Timmy the Wonder Dog.
Good Point btw.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )Four years of POTUS John McCain will crush the Republican Party far more thoroughly than POTUS Barack Obama could possibly accomplish. Especially when McCain withdraws from Iraq because (a) Maliki wants him to and (b) his own budgets require it.
After the damage George W. Bush has done to the GOP (as a party) these last four years, its hard to imagine it getting much worse. But POTUS McCain would be perfect for doing just that.
--Fence post turtles -- They don't get up there by themselves, some moron had to put 'em there.
- Login or register to post comments
). . .to be sewing together those silver linings, isn't it? The problem with your scenario is that experience from the last two presidential elections suggests that the Democratic response to a loss will be hyperbolic hatred directed at the winning Republican. McCain is stubborn, but he isn't a masochist--he'll end up allying closely with the Republican minority to barricade whatever Pelosi and Reid (or their successors) are up to. It's a formula that worked nicely for Reagan in the 1980's.
--- Login or register to post comments
| parent )then projecting.
It must have been a really, really, really big week.
--“Let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s work must truly be our own.”
John F. Kennedy
January 20, 1961
- Login or register to post comments
| parent )