View Full Version : All About McCain
Tenigma
09-03-2008, 04:21 PM
*Pops in*
Nope, no Alex here...
*Pops out*
Hahahaha. He said he wanted to last more than a day.
Oh by the way, Mike Murphy and Peggy Noonan got caught on a live mic over at MSNBC...
"It's over." "Insulting to Kay Bailey Hutchinson" "Political b*llsh!t." "Gimmicky."
Ouchies!!
[You can read the transcript here (http://talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/212920.php) if it's hard to tell what they're saying.]
Morrigoon
09-03-2008, 06:22 PM
Hah haw!
scaeagles
09-03-2008, 06:37 PM
Tenigma, who was speaking when they were saying that? Palin?
Never mind....Palin hasn't actually spoken yet.
scaeagles
09-03-2008, 06:41 PM
Reading some prereleased exerpts of the speech....I liked this one.
"And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves. I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a 'community organizer,' except that you have actual responsibilities."
Cadaverous Pallor
09-03-2008, 06:48 PM
Reading some prereleased exerpts of the speech....I liked this one.Ok, all I've seen is that line, and I'm disgusted that she'd put down the work Obama did in the seriously stricken communities of Chicago. Tasteless. Go ahead and describe your public service but to spit on another's? This is the quote you liked? :rolleyes:
scaeagles
09-03-2008, 08:40 PM
It was clearly a barb related to them slamming on her experience or lack there of, particularly with Obama now proclaiming that he has more experience than Palin - as if it matters if he does or not. She's the VP candidate, he's the candidate for President.
I do believe the dems (and don't expect me to believe that things happen in the campaign without Obama's approval) were mocking her experience as a small town mayor before she said that.
Betty
09-04-2008, 06:21 AM
I do believe the dems (and don't expect me to believe that things happen in the campaign without Obama's approval) were mocking her experience as a small town mayor before she said that.
Much like the Rep's were doing to Obama about 2 weeks ago and prior?
scaeagles
09-04-2008, 06:33 AM
Exactly. I don't deny it at all, nor will I be shocked at politicians being political. I don't live in a world where I think my side doesn't play politics.
Strangler Lewis
09-04-2008, 06:41 AM
With Palin's selection and the related events of the past week, the campaign has taken a strange turn. Where once it was Christian morality vs. Hollywood debauchery, now it seems that you're not a real American unless you're life is, well, Springeresque. I predict we'll hear more tawdry personal revelations about her family in the coming weeks that will be exploited towards this end. I expect McCain will appear on the platform tonight with his first wife and his old girlfriends.
The Democrats will try to respond in kind, but they won't get it right. Obama will start smoking more in public, but he'll look more like a 60's intellectual smoker than a working class smoker. He'll yell at his wife in public. Beau Biden will agree to come out as gay--even though he's really not--and Joe Biden will show up at debates drunk talking about how much he loves his gay son.
Gemini Cricket
09-04-2008, 04:30 PM
For those interested, Sarah Palin has a vlog on YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qEW12XLUM7A).
innerSpaceman
09-04-2008, 04:59 PM
Beau Biden will agree to come out as gay....
From your post to God's email address. ;)
tracilicious
09-05-2008, 08:45 PM
I've been thinking about McCain and the whole torture thing. He brings it up at every possible opportunity, but I think it's possible that it makes him significantly less qualified to be pres. He was there for what...four years? That is bound to damage the psyche in a profound and irreparable way. He has my respect for enduring it, but no way do I want that kind of experience anywhere near the red button.
Tenigma
09-06-2008, 01:17 AM
I've been thinking about McCain and the whole torture thing. He brings it up at every possible opportunity, but I think it's possible that it makes him significantly less qualified to be pres.
Not to pick nits but what he brings up is his time as a POW, but he is very careful never to use the word "torture" because what happened to him, if we use the Bush definition, is "advanced interrogation techniques" that are approved by the White House for GITMO detainees.
Tenigma
09-06-2008, 05:51 AM
Holy moly -- Just heard about some woman named "Ann Kilkenny" on NPR -- she grew up in Wasilla with Palin and they attended meetings together and such... she apparently decided to "tell the truth" and sent out an email to her acquaintances who wanted to know more about Palin's years there...
She said she sent bulk email to everyone with a promise to please not forward it "to the Internet" and of course it's hit the blogosphere.
All I can say is YIKES this woman is bad news (http://stupidcelebrities.net/2008/09/05/ann-killkenny-palin-email-photos/)!!
She was a TERRIBLE mayor!!
scaeagles
09-06-2008, 06:26 AM
Honestly, that could so easily be a hoax that I'm not even going to read it.
Moonliner
09-06-2008, 06:31 AM
Honestly, that could so easily be a hoax that I'm not even going to read it.
But dude, it's on the Internet. Posted and forwarded by random people. How much more vetted do you need your dirt?
Plus I even like the name. Isn't "Kenny" the character they always kill on South Park? Kilkenny.
scaeagles
09-06-2008, 06:33 AM
I know. My bad. After all, I have a picture of Palin in a bikini holding a scoped rifle by a swimming pool as my background.
Honestly, that could so easily be a hoax that I'm not even going to read it.
I'm weak.
Snopes did confirm (http://www.snopes.com/politics/soapbox/kilkenny.asp) that the letter does originate with a long-time Wasilla resident named Ann Kilkenny. So it isn't a hoax in that regard.
Whether the content of the letter is accurate is, of course, mostly a matter of opinion.
scaeagles
09-06-2008, 08:05 AM
You're way stronger than me. I've privately sworn off political threads at least a dozen times to be back in less than an hour.
Not Afraid
09-06-2008, 08:11 AM
It sounds like normal City Council shyt to me. (I should've written an exposee on Larry Agran while I had the chance. ;))
tracilicious
09-06-2008, 09:59 AM
Heh. Arctic meth princess. (http://wonkette.com/402545/wasilla-is-meth-capital-of-alaska-of-course)
Chernabog
09-06-2008, 10:09 AM
That link doesn't work :(
And I do like the "Caribou Barbie" moniker the best ;)
tracilicious
09-06-2008, 12:16 PM
It works for me. Here it is on it's own:
http://wonkette.com/402545/wasilla-is-meth-capital-of-alaska-of-course
Tenigma
09-06-2008, 01:41 PM
Honestly, that could so easily be a hoax that I'm not even going to read it.
Kilkenny can be easily verified -- her name is on public records for testifying in front of various government entities as part of her community work.
They interviewed Kilkenny on NPR. She really exists. And she sounded like a pretty ordinary person.
Also, if you read her email, a lot of that information can be vetted, since she talks about things that happened, stances that Palin took, etc. and the way they are presented in Kilkenny's email, they should be easy to verify from local newspapers and council meeting minutes.
Motorboat Cruiser
09-06-2008, 02:29 PM
Heard this on Real Time last night...
What's the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull?
You can take a pit bull in to be neutered.
Not that I would ever laugh at anything like that. :)
If they want the pit bull moniker, they can have it.
LSPE and I were out yesterday morning and saw a pit bull nearly kill another dog. We walked into a little cheese store and there were some dogs with their owners milling around outside. After being inside for a few minutes, one of the dogs outside, a pit bull, attacked one of the other (smaller) dogs there, latching its jaws onto the dog's face and NOT letting go. It took several minutes of several people struggling with the two dogs (the smaller dog yelping in pain and terror the whole time) before someone was able to pry the pit bull's jaws open and free the other dog. LSPE and I were seriously afraid that the smaller dog was going to have it's face ripped off, or worse. Luckily, the only damage I saw after they were separated were some puncture wounds on it's snout, but we were literally shaking for a long time afterward.
I hadn't thought of Sarah Palin calling herself a pit bull until I logged in to this thread this morning, and it was jarring. Now it sounds to me like Sarah Palin is calling herself someone who viciously attacks the weak and helpless. Someone who will explode into violence with little or no provocation. And someone who is psychotic and needs to be put down. I know she didn't mean any of these things, and I don't think them of her, but wow, that line took on a whole new meaning for me this morning.
scaeagles
09-07-2008, 11:20 AM
I'm not thinking her campaign was quite meaning it in that way.
Cadaverous Pallor
09-07-2008, 11:27 AM
I'm not thinking her campaign was quite meaning it in that way.Hmm, I wonder how she defines "pit bull"...
LSPoorEeyorick
09-07-2008, 11:33 AM
I'm not thinking her campaign was quite meaning it in that way.
Neither does he.
I know she didn't mean any of these things, and I don't think them of her, but wow, that line took on a whole new meaning for me this morning.
But, yeah, when considering a pit bull, what other definition is there?
flippyshark
09-07-2008, 11:50 AM
I assume that Palin's pit bull comparison is meant to tell the world "if you're one of the bad guys, don't mess with me, I'll kick your ass, even though I am pretty and nice." There is a tendency that I seem to notice coming more from conservative figures (though I am sure this happens both ways round) to couch things in "good guy white hat vs. bad guy black hat" terms. For moderately wimpo/leftish types like me, this sort of rhetoric makes the speaker sound a) guilty of oversimplification and b) potentially dangerous.
Most of my family are conservative, and they are wonderful, compassionate, caring people to whom I owe my life. But I really don't get why they are so fond of political "don't mess with me, shoot the wounded, you bad guys better run" talk. Mostly just a matter of style, I guess. (i am often kidded by them for being a Mr. Softee.)
Ghoulish Delight
09-07-2008, 11:58 AM
Most of my family are conservative, and they are wonderful, compassionate, caring people to whom I owe my life. But I really don't get why they are so fond of political "don't mess with me, shoot the wounded, you bad guys better run" talk. Mostly just a matter of style, I guess. (i am often kidded by them for being a Mr. Softee.)I recently had an interesting conversation with my father in law. The subject of Bill O'Reilly's "We'll do it live!" rant came up. He said that what it showed is that he's an honest man, and that eventually everyone has that kind of blow up at work sometime in their career. I said that no, I'm pretty I can say with a high degree of confidence that I will never in my entire professional life act like that. His response? "Well, any great man will." :rolleyes:
Some people think that the only way to go through life is to attack your opponents viciously and decisively. Anything else is weakness, timidness, and dishonesty. It saddens me to think that someone would look at that video and think it's something to admire. It saddens me to think that someone would look at a VP candidate compare herself to a viscious animal and admire her.
Not Afraid
09-07-2008, 11:59 AM
From my dog-knowledge perspective, I interpret the definition and meaning of her pitt bull description as someone who latches on to things and doesn't let go.
From my own perspective, I don't find this an admirable quality at all. But, I subscribe to the philosophy that it's better to bend a bit then to break. While I can be tenacious about things at time, I don't believe in the blanket statement that it is better to stand for something than to fall. Life is about compromises most of the time. That and one can only spend so much time imposing one's own ideals on others.
scaeagles
09-07-2008, 12:16 PM
My interpretation is that she is not someone to be messed with.
I find it amusing that such a reference would be analyzed to find some deeper meaning. As if it really matters?
flippyshark
09-07-2008, 12:21 PM
Of course it matters, just not very much.
alphabassettgrrl
09-07-2008, 12:41 PM
"Well, any great man will." :rolleyes:
Some people think that the only way to go through life is to attack your opponents viciously and decisively. Anything else is weakness, timidness, and dishonesty. It saddens me to think that someone would look at that video and think it's something to admire.
While I can be tenacious about things at time, I don't believe in the blanket statement that it is better to stand for something than to fall. Life is about compromises most of the time. That and one can only spend so much time imposing one's own ideals on others.
I agree completely. Pres Bush is also one to attack, and to never back down (even when you're wrong) and that leaves no ground for changing information. When you learn new information, and that changes your decision, but your personal worldview says that changing your decisions is a weakness, we get the current administration, who will never back down even when it becomes clear they are wrong. "I decided, and I'm always right, so anybody else is wrong". I'm not ok with this.
I don't think changing your views and changing your mind to suit new information is a weakness. Changing your views due to polling is quite likely a bad thing, but when the information says your initial analysis is wrong, please feel free to change it.
I find it amusing that such a reference would be analyzed to find some deeper meaning. As if it really matters?
But that's the name of the game with politics! Politicians throw out veiled statements, and everybody interprets (and misinterprets) at will. Especially in our sound-bite culture, one has to say many things with few words.
I prefer a non-sound-bite world, where I can express myself at will.
scaeagles
09-07-2008, 12:59 PM
But that's the name of the game with politics! Politicians throw out veiled statements, and everybody interprets (and misinterprets) at will. Especially in our sound-bite culture, one has to say many things with few words.
I prefer a non-sound-bite world, where I can express myself at will.
Oh, certainly. I don't pretend that my side of the aisle doesn't play politics, too, I just think this is particularly funny....I don't know if this is being played up in the media anywhere, but I could just see Chris Matthews playing this bite repeatedly with various left leaning analysts talking about her deep psychological darkness and desire to hurt the weak as demonstrated by this comment.
Not Afraid
09-07-2008, 01:26 PM
I think it is an attitude in many cultures that is fundamentally damaging. Fundmental Islam or fundamental Christianity are both two glaring examples of the lack of desire to let others have differing beliefs while living harmoniously with these differing beliefs.
My own rancor against fundamental Christians stems from being forced, coerced or legislated to act in a way that "they" feel is the right way, completely dismissing my own beliefs, as if I'm not American enough to matter. Islamic ideals influence my world in much lesser fashion, but usually on the greater world stage (and certainly presented in a more "evil" light).
Cadaverous Pallor
09-07-2008, 01:29 PM
Great compilation video. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q848slRCcF8)
scaeagles
09-07-2008, 01:53 PM
I think it is an attitude in many cultures that is fundamentally damaging. Fundmental Islam or fundamental Christianity are both two glaring examples of the lack of desire to let others have differing beliefs while living harmoniously with these differing beliefs.
The major difference being that fundamentalist Islam has a tendency to try to blow up the infidels. With rare exception, this is not the case when it comes to fundamentalist Christianity. Unless we have completely differing ideas of what that is.
flippyshark
09-07-2008, 02:14 PM
The major difference being that fundamentalist Islam has a tendency to try to blow up the infidels. With rare exception, this is not the case when it comes to fundamentalist Christianity. Unless we have completely differing ideas of what that is.
It's certainly true that fundamentalist Christianity hasn't got nearly the ferocity and destructive power of fundy Islam. But, per the present discussion, American evangelical Christians with strong conservative political leanings often use language that is warlike, filled with militaristic metaphors, and that conveys unshakeable certainty. To some, this is a show of strength. To others, it comes off as bullying, hard-nosed and averse to reasoning.
(edited to add - yes, I know, the reverse is often true. I've been called bullheaded and reason-averse, among other things - and I hardly ever discuss politics. Of course, there is nothing I love debating more than religion, but that's not this thread.)
LSPoorEeyorick
09-07-2008, 02:30 PM
I find it amusing that such a reference would be analyzed to find some deeper meaning. As if it really matters?
I think it wasn't analyzed so much as the phrase popped out at him. After our experience yesterday, watching that poor little dog yelping in pain, feeling terrified and certain that he was about to have his face ripped off, the words "pit bull" take on a different meaning to us today. While he was posting, I asked him the topic. As soon as he said "Palin's pit bull comment," I immediately knew what he was going to say about it. We thought nothing much of her joke until we saw a pit bull in action. And then, upon seeing the words again a day later, neither of us could help but think about what we'd seen. Because our experience yesterday was absolutely NOT an amusing one and is still fresh in our minds.
And, yes. It matters what Palin and/or her speech writers use to describe her. It's of interest when considering their perspective and potential campaign direction.
Strangler Lewis
09-07-2008, 02:46 PM
My interpretation is that she is not someone to be messed with.
I find it amusing that such a reference would be analyzed to find some deeper meaning. As if it really matters?
In the endless series of "If the shoe was on the other foot," if Obama had compared himself to a pitbull, bet the farm that we'd see ads with split screens of him and Michael Vick and his dogs.
scaeagles
09-07-2008, 03:31 PM
And everyone on the left would be talking about how ridiculous it was.
Honestly, I hope this becomes a huge media issue and the Obama campaign picks up on it.
While campaigning in small town America, Biden portrayed himself as a labrador puppy, loyal and fluffy, contrasting himself against Pit Bull Palin.
"I was taken aback, really, " Biden said to his supporters. "Our government shouldn't be a pit bull. We should be the new yellow lab puppy that every child wants to open on Christmas - soft, cuddly, and loyal to the end. Who could resist that? Certainly not Ahmadinjed. It would be the key to our diplomacy."
CoasterMatt
09-07-2008, 04:04 PM
Brilliant :D
Leo, PLEASE consider writing your own political column- you seem more in touch with the "Real World Conservatives" than any of the faces/voices/bloggonauts I've seen anywhere.
flippyshark
09-07-2008, 08:35 PM
I'll second that. I get a lot more from his posts than many a talking head out in the media.
Tenigma
09-07-2008, 09:18 PM
I think it is an attitude in many cultures that is fundamentally damaging. Fundmental Islam or fundamental Christianity are both two glaring examples of the lack of desire to let others have differing beliefs while living harmoniously with these differing beliefs.
I saw reference this weekend to Sarah Palin's form of religion as "Christianism" and she a "Christianist" just like the Islamic fundamentalist extremists are called "Islamists" and not "Muslim." Interesting.
Tenigma
09-07-2008, 09:18 PM
In the endless series of "If the shoe was on the other foot," if Obama had compared himself to a pitbull, bet the farm that we'd see ads with split screens of him and Michael Vick and his dogs.
I see Obama as a golden retriever.
BarTopDancer
09-07-2008, 09:35 PM
I want a puppy!
Not Afraid
09-07-2008, 09:43 PM
I am currently sleeping with 3 pugs.
sleepyjeff
09-07-2008, 11:39 PM
And everyone on the left would be talking about how ridiculous it was.
Honestly, I hope this becomes a huge media issue and the Obama campaign picks up on it.
That was awesome:snap: :snap: :snap:
Ghoulish Delight
09-08-2008, 10:59 AM
It looks like Palin's got as firm a grasp on the economy as McCain does.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/08/palin-makes-her-first-gaf_n_124792.html
But hey, perhaps we should just be happy she didn't try to distract us by mentioning Iraq.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 04:49 AM
Newsweek debunking many Palin myths, even some discussed here. (http://www.newsweek.com/id/157986)
Strangler Lewis
09-09-2008, 04:55 AM
I could be wrong, but doesn't the Buchanan response simply repeat what Palin said on the subject? Maybe that's the best answer we can get. (And I know you wouldn't like it if she wore an Ahmadinejad button if he ever visited Washington.)
Also, I'm not sure that the response to the librarian issue is satisfactory. Perhaps our board librarians can tell us if getting asked such questions by one's mayor or university president is a sad reality of the job. Plus, after continuing in her job, the librarian was fired. Not convinced on that one.
Perhaps our board librarians can tell us if getting asked such questions by one's mayor or university president is a sad reality of the job. Plus, after continuing in her job, the librarian was fired. Not convinced on that one.
I'm not a librarian but I voted on a tenure issue for the librarians at the University of Wisconsin and also sat on a review board which reinstated a fired librarian. At many university libraries, librarians can earn tenure, even though they mostly do not teach. Tenure is a license to tell the truth. Librarians need tenure to allow them to do their job, which, in part, is to put controversial materials on the shelves.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 07:27 AM
Tenure can also be a license to be lazy and do nothing. I had some tenured professors who thought that it was a license for academic ineptitude and/or dishonesty.
Depends on the individual.
Tenure can also be a license to be lazy and do nothing. I had some tenured professors who thought that it was a license for academic ineptitude and/or dishonesty.
Depends on the individual.
How could you possibly judge academic ineptitude/dishonesty unless you have the qualifications to do so? We'll talk when you have a Ph.D.
Until then, you have no informed opinion.
Moonliner
09-09-2008, 07:36 AM
How could you possibly judge academic ineptitude/dishonesty unless you have the qualifications to do so? We'll talk when you have a Ph.D.
Until then, you have no informed opinion.
Since when does it take a Ph.D. to spot dishonesty?
Since when does an inept faculty member only reveal themselves to the elite?
Seems like most of the time they are the last to know.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 07:51 AM
How could you possibly judge academic ineptitude/dishonesty unless you have the qualifications to do so? We'll talk when you have a Ph.D.
Until then, you have no informed opinion.
HA! The arrogance! "I'm not a librarian, but I vote on issues for librarians, blah, blah, blah". Please tell me your qualifications to vote on these issues. Have you studied library science? Or are you just "informed"?
While we're at it, please refrain, then, from expressing your opinion on the President, the war in Iraq, or any other such issue, because your opinion, by your own ridiculous definition, means absolutely nothing.
What incredible audicity.
HA! The arrogance! <snip!> Have you studied library science? Or are you just "informed"?
It's boring but here goes. The vote was whether or not to continue tenure for librarians. The committee was comprised of tenured people from a wide array of disciplines. The issue was tenure and its meaning.
Tenure allows librarians to shelve books on evolution and still keep their jobs, for example. Too many librarians have been the victims of witch hunts.
While we're at it, please refrain, then, from expressing your opinion on the President, the war in Iraq, or any other such issue, because your opinion, by your own ridiculous definition, means absolutely nothing.
What incredible audicity.
Not audacity, just reality-based, scaeagles. Unless you have a background I am not aware of, you do not have the academic qualifications or experience to pass judgement on the competence or intentions of tenured faculty. You can say whether you liked them or agreed with them but that's it.
When I say something outrageous about whatever you do for a living, I will listen.
Now, back to something much more interesting: Sarah Palin. Time has summed her up so well:
Sarah Palin thinks she is a better American than you because she comes from a small town, and a superior human being because she isn't a journalist and never lived in Washington and likes to watch her kids play hockey. Although Palin praised John McCain in her acceptance speech as a man who puts the good of his country ahead of partisan politics, McCain pretty much proved the opposite with his selection of a running mate whose main asset is her ability to reignite the culture wars. So maybe Governor Palin does represent everything that is good and fine about America, as she herself maintains. But spare us, please, any talk about how she is a tough fiscal conservative.
The rest of the article is here (http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20080909/us_time/sarahpalinsalaskonomics;_ylt=AucBNdboj37WbI0vi0xxl mWs0NUE).
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 08:15 AM
Well, 3894, when you show me that your education and experience includes political science, running for office, holding the office of senator, representative, mayor, President, then please feel free to express your political opinion. In fact, most journalists and pundits should then also withhold comment. What are the qualifications of the person who wrote that opinion piece of Time? Do they have degrees in psychology, or is Palin's superiority complex obvious enough that they can state those opinions with such veracity? Or because you agree with them it's OK? Perhaps they are psychic and can see into the deepest recesses of her mind. Yeah, that's it.
My statement still stands. You are perhaps the most arrogant and condescending poster here. How dare you suggest - to anyone! - that it requires a certain degree or qualification to criticize what you view as ineptitude or laziness.
flippyshark
09-09-2008, 08:19 AM
Interesting that this McCain thread has become 100 per cent Palin. I don't remember another VP pick ever prompting this kind of total media attention takeover. I hope McCain shows up for office if he wins.
Snowflake
09-09-2008, 08:29 AM
Interesting that this McCain thread has become 100 per cent Palin. I don't remember another VP pick ever prompting this kind of total media attention takeover. I hope McCain shows up for office if he wins.
Heh! Spot on observation Flippy! :snap:
Morrigoon
09-09-2008, 08:45 AM
*Pours a bucket of water over this thread*
Gettin' hot in here...
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 08:45 AM
Eh, she's an easy target and the more likely of the two to falter under the scrutiny as she's never dealt with it before.
Morrigoon
09-09-2008, 08:47 AM
Interesting that this McCain thread has become 100 per cent Palin. I don't remember another VP pick ever prompting this kind of total media attention takeover. I hope McCain shows up for office if he wins.
Before Darth Cheney and his running mate took office, the VP was considered "mostly harmless" and beneath our scrutiny. Not so anymore.
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 08:52 AM
Before Darth Cheney and his running mate took office, the VP was considered "mostly harmless" and beneath our scrutiny. Not so anymore.To which the obvious response is, then why isn't Biden getting this kind of attention?
Despite her immense experience protecting meth labs, she's brand new to the game of federal government. More people are sampled for poll numbers every day than total votes she's ever received in an election. She's never been put on the spot in front of a national audience before and her opponents are trying to lay as much pressure on her as quickly as possible in hopes she'll stumble.
It's not a complex tactic.
Morrigoon
09-09-2008, 09:29 AM
To which the obvious response is, then why isn't Biden getting this kind of attention?
...Because he's not Republican?
(I don't actually know, heheh)
My statement still stands.
Only a fool argues with a skunk, a cook, or a mule
-Old Cowboy Saying
You are perhaps the most arrogant and condescending poster here.
Then it's a darn good thing I speak such good French, n'est-ce pas?
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 09:51 AM
scaeagles, with all due respect, i think you should have stopped when you laid out your case for 3894 not being qualified to pass judgment. She was attempting to do the same with you as to qualifications for tenure, and she laid out hers.
You countered that she has no such rigorous qualifications for many of the other areas in which she offers an opinion, and neither do many of us.
It should have stopped there. Calling her "the most arrogant and condescending poster here" crosses the border into name-calling and personal insult.
I'm not a mod here anymore, but this would have tripped my radar. I know things got a little heated, and an errant insult that slips into the political debates is to be expected from time to time. Fortunately for the good graces of the LoT, it RARELY does.
Chernabog
09-09-2008, 09:52 AM
Ugh the anti-gay rhetoric of Palin and her church... makes me sick. I've met people who have tried to be "reprogrammed" and it's a sad, miserable existence.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/po/20080908/co_po/palinschurchpromotesexgayconference
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 10:05 AM
I'm disturbed by the use of Palin's church in the discussion.
I considered it irrelevant to Obama's campaign when he was attacked for his church's rhetoric and I consider it equally irrelevant to hers. The only reason I would bring it up myself is to counter anyone Rev. Wright, and only to say that it shouldn't be brought into it.
I'm not saying she doesn't hold the views, but until SHE makes a statement about what SHE believes, I don't really care what someone else she has listened to says.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 10:07 AM
It should have stopped there. Calling her "the most arrogant and condescending poster here" crosses the border into name-calling and personal insult.
Yeah, you're right, and for what it's worth, I offer my apologies to 3894 and to all here. Sincerely. I did indeed cross a line.
I do, however, take great offense at being told that my opinion is uninformed because of a lack of experience or education directly related to the topic at hand. I suppose I made that fairly obvious and indeed should not have written what you quoted above.
You are also right in saying that for the most part, no one here typically has the qualifications to offer "informed" opinions.
Again, I apologize.
And I'd been trying so hard to tone it down. :(
Chernabog
09-09-2008, 10:16 AM
I'm not saying she doesn't hold the views, but until SHE makes a statement about what SHE believes, I don't really care what someone else she has listened to says.
But in Obama's case, from what I recall it was one reverend making inane comments.
The ex-gay movement is a church-wide program. She has made her views on gay people quite clear. She has voiced opposition to domestic partnership, and only vetoed a bill which would deny rights to domestic partners in this fashion:
"The Department of Law advised me that this bill... is unconstitutional given the recent court order... mandating same-sex benefits," Palin said in a statement. "With that in mind, signing this bill would be in direct violation of my oath of office."
The statement added, "The governor's veto does not signal any change or modification to her disagreement with the action and order by the Alaska Supreme Court. It is the governor's intention to work with the Legislature and to give the people of Alaska an opportunity to express their wishes and intentions whether these benefits should continue.""
Her views are clear, and are clearly defined by her statements and actions. And sorry, but sometimes you can judge a member of the group by the group's actions (especially when they aren't doing anything to contradict it, either internally or to the public).
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 10:18 AM
All Pro-Lifers should have their citizenships revoked and be deported to the Holy See in Rome, Italy to swell its population by millions.
The right to reproductive freedom has been the law of the land for long enough. The debate over such freedom still rages and that's fine, but how long must it take to realize the debate will NEVER end and therefore the obligation of the United States of America is to come down on the side of LIBERTY, and not on the side of religious belief if there is a permanent conflict between the liberty of our citizens and the religious beliefs of our citizens?
Similarly, it doesn't matter of it's genetic or not, I have a RIGHT to be homosexual if I so CHOOSE.
I hated it when they said it about the Reds and Commies, and I hate becoming that generation. But all you Fundie Christians who want to squelch the rights of all women and all gays and all the people who don't look and act just like you SHOULD GET THEFUK OUT OF AMERICA. NOW!
Go to some Christian Nation of Intolerance and Fear, and leave behind the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave that you have nothing but disdain for.
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 10:20 AM
Like I said, I don't doubt she believes and has acted on that, but bringing her church into it is an invitation to do the same to Barack, and it's invalid either way.
People will, and have (correctly) said that the anti-American, anti-white sentiments expressed by Wright are prevalent throughout the church, not just limited to Wright. But Obama has never himself exhibited those sentiments, so why does it matter?
Palin does happen to share some of her church's more hateful views, and those views should be brought forward. Not based on what other people in the church have said and done, based on what SHE has said and done.
1. I offer my apologies to 3894 and to all here.
Well, shoot. You've taken away my badge of honor.
2. Sarah Palin is scheduled to give her first interview Thursday to ABC's Charles Gibson. Politico.com is asking (http://www.politico.com/arena/) politicos What single question would you be sure to ask if you were him?
I'd ask: Talk about a mistake in office you have learned from. Palin seems far too black/white, unwilling to learn. I'd like her to prove me wrong. What would you ask?
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 10:24 AM
And I'd been trying so hard to tone it down. :(
And you've been mostly succeeding. I'm sure the apology is appreciated.
I've been ranting up a storm in the political threads this morning, so believe me I understand how this stuff gets hot under the collar.
Moonliner
09-09-2008, 10:29 AM
Thanks Scaegales for being the bigger party on this one. Despite suffering a totally uncalled for personal attack you were able to make amends, something the original offending party seems unwilling to do.
Thanks Scaegales for being the bigger party on this one. Despite suffering a totally uncalled for personal attack you were able to make amends, something the original offending party seems unwilling to do.
Wait, I'm supposed to apologize to scaeagles? For what?
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 10:54 AM
Thanks Scaegales for being the bigger party on this one. Despite suffering a totally uncalled for personal attack you were able to make amends, something the original offending party seems unwilling to do.
Was that really necessary?
"Hey look, a nasty exchange that I'm not really a part of seems to be coming to a level headed reasonable end. Lemme throw a sucker punch at one of the parties!"
I'm a degree carrying librarian (though I probably will never again work in the profession). Therefore if I make a pronouncement on that issue I will automatically win. Yay.
But I'm not participating. But I will.
Public librarians deal with this kind of thing all of the time, queries from the public (and even government) about removing books. So far I have seen no evidence that Palin made any significant attempt to get books removed from the library beyond asking about how it would be handled.
I have no idea if the "librarian" in question is actually a librarian or just someone hire to run the library (not necessarily the same thing, especially in small towns) so I don't know how "political" of a position it might be in that situation. But that is moot until such time as I see evidence that Palin made an actual attempt to get books removed.
Besides, when it comes to small town libraries (and even large town libraries) there is a much simpler way to get a book removed from the collection. Check it out, "lose it," pay the fines for "losing" it. Odds are good that it will be years before the volume is replaced in kind.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 11:41 AM
Wait, I'm supposed to apologize to scaeagles? For what?
You don't owe me one, per se - You owe an apology to everyone here who has ever offered an opinion without vast expertise or university sanctioned knowledge of the subject in question. Even to yourself.
If you stand by what you said, I have no problem with that. Of course, it then means what you have to offer on pretty much any subject becomes moot because of the standard you have chosen to hold opinions to.
Chernabog
09-09-2008, 11:50 AM
*retrieves the half-eaten but still tasty bucket of popcorn he put into the trash, pops a few kernels in his mouth, and takes a seat*
Moonliner
09-09-2008, 11:51 AM
Wait, I'm supposed to apologize to scaeagles? For what?
Personally I found your use of the term "you have no informed opinion" patently offensive. It's tantamount to calling someone an ignorant fool. A personal attack. He apologized for responding in kind. You did not.
wendybeth
09-09-2008, 11:59 AM
I've been avoiding this thread because it was getting too personal and downright nasty in tone. We all have strong opinions about this subject and it's inevitable that things will get heated, but personal attacks are never cool- an ad hominem attack is usually the last refuge of someone who lacks any real substance in their argument yet wants to continue on. That is not debate, discourse or anything remotely productive, and I'd like to think we were better than that.
I also agree with GD with regards to others throwing gas on this fire.
Bootstrap Bill
09-09-2008, 12:07 PM
I'm voting for Alfred E. Newman.
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 12:16 PM
I also agree with GD with regards to others throwing gas on this fire.
She didn't frame it as such, but howzabout we consider that a Mod Warning ... and KNOCK IT OFF!
Gn2Dlnd
09-09-2008, 12:30 PM
It's not so much that we like our sh!t stirred on the LoT, we just like the *ka-BOOM* you get when you throw a cherry bomb into an outhouse.
The stank is bonus.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 12:35 PM
We all have strong opinions about this subject and it's inevitable that things will get heated, but personal attacks are never cool- an ad hominem attack is usually the last refuge of someone who lacks any real substance in their argument yet wants to continue on.
Please note that personal attacks do not have to be ad hominem. Yes, I resorted to that, admittedly and unfortunately, but certainly not because it was my only thing to say to keep it going. However, I was indeed personally attacked without it being ad hominem. This is not fishing for an apology - I honestly do not need one nor do I care - I just want to point out while I participated I certainly did not start it.
mousepod
09-09-2008, 12:37 PM
Gotcha. Let's get this thread back on topic, OK?
wendybeth
09-09-2008, 12:42 PM
I read the posts. You crossed the line when you personally attacked, whereas all other posts seemed to be (while hostile in tone) in line with the conversation that was taking place. You apologized, and while it might not have been met with quite the reception you may have expected, it was done and should have been over with. Then Moonie pipes in with his opinion and you were off and running again. Let it go. (And iSm is right- this is a warning.) I shouldn't have to phrase it as such, seeing how we are all adults here, but I'm getting tired of the personal nature of some of the comments in this thread.
For the record, I am the most arrogant poster here. But that's only because I'm better than all of you.
Tenigma
09-09-2008, 12:56 PM
I'm a degree carrying librarian (though I probably will never again work in the profession). Therefore if I make a pronouncement on that issue I will automatically win. Yay.
Hey, me too.
Public librarians deal with this kind of thing all of the time, queries from the public (and even government) about removing books. So far I have seen no evidence that Palin made any significant attempt to get books removed from the library beyond asking about how it would be handled.
She didn't try to actually get books removed. Instead, when the librarian said her collection development policy was based on professional criteria and that she would do all she could to fight any efforts to remove some books from the collection, Palin asked for her resignation (along with a bunch of other public employees whom she felt wasn't "on her side"). How conveeeenient. The librarian fought the request to resign, and the townspeople apparently made a fuss and didn't want her fired.
Prudence
09-09-2008, 01:20 PM
Are there more librarians or lawyers on LoT at the moment? The answer to that will dictate my position on these significant issues.
John McCain says "I want to win in Iraq".
So what is that, exactly? If it's regime change, we already did that.
Edited to add: Washington Post reports Palin claimed over $40,000 in per diems she was not entitled to. (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080909/ap_on_el_pr/palin_travel_expenses;_ylt=An0roGFikBfp9L0T3vbphxO s0NUE) She's a crook.
BarTopDancer
09-09-2008, 02:16 PM
No, no. She's a politician.
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 02:19 PM
Here's my feelings on Iraq right now:
1) We went in under dubious circumstances at best. Congress may have been for it and may have been presented with an intelligence case that was at least partly convincing, but I personally was against it from beginning to end. The story was changing daily, the evidence the public was presented was never convincing and reeked of tailoring, and it was a major distraction from a far more important matter, dismantling Al Qaeda.
2) My suspicions were born out when, over the ensuing 5+ years, the administrations distortions, lies, willful blindness, and incompetence leading up to, and running, the war were revealed. In the best cases intelligence was wrong. In the worst cases, intelligences was falsified. In most cases, intelligence was filtered through a intense desire to find an excuse for war, cherry picking the scraps that supported the case and ignoring the counter points that tempered it. "We found some metal tubes. They're not really designed to be parts for weapons of mass destruction, but could in a pinch be used as such," became, "We've found parts for weapons of mass destruction!" Generals, on the ground in the theater, were routinely ignored, their assessments and requests pushed aside because they didn't paint the picture the administration wanted, and in some cases were fired for trying to disagree.
3) The result of all of the above, plus a distressing amount of ignorance regarding what we were going to face (who the hell goes into Iraq not expecting MASSIVE sectarian violence) was a war that could not be won outright, and a country in disarray and a huge step backwards in goal-du-jour of weakening terrorism.
4) I DO think we bare a responsibility of mending the mess we made. I have never been in favor of a summary pullout of troops and I do expect that we are going to have am effectively permanent military presence there for the foreseeable future.
5) That said, I can NOT take this administration's word, or the word anyone who is as in line with this administration as McCain is, at face value. I can NOT trust anyone who still cannot tell me the difference between Suni and Shia to know the right course. I can NOT put someone in charge who is okay with continuing the lie that fighting in Iraq=fighting Al Qaeda.
If Obama gets elected, looks at the situation in Iraq, looks a the data that intelligence and the military hands him, and decides, "Okay, we are making progress in cleaning up the disaster, and we need to see that through," people will be quick to brand him a hypocrite and to say that it vindicates what we've done over the last 5+ years. Bullsh*t. If he goes in there, and that's his analysis, fine. But just because they've by chance got it right now does not change the fact that Bush and company have been lying to us and screwing it up until now and does not change the fact that they have squandered ALL credibility in my eyes on matters foreign.
That is what I mean when I say I don't want a Hillary, who to me appeared likely to go in and blindly just start reversing everything she could just because it's the opposite of what Bush would have done. I do NOT want that. I want someone who is going to look at facts and make rational decisions, even if it happens to mean that some of those decisions would be the same.
Gemini Cricket
09-09-2008, 02:19 PM
She's a crook.
No, no. She's a politician.
Same thing.
:D
Motorboat Cruiser
09-09-2008, 02:23 PM
John McCain says "I want to win in Iraq".
So what is that, exactly? If it's regime change, we already did that.
I've yet to hear a specific definition of winning from anyone who uses the term in regard to the Iraq War or the War on Terrorism.
Tenigma
09-09-2008, 02:40 PM
If Obama gets elected, looks at the situation in Iraq, looks a the data that intelligence and the military hands him, and decides, "Okay, we are making progress in cleaning up the disaster, and we need to see that through," people will be quick to brand him a hypocrite and to say that it vindicates what we've done over the last 5+ years.
Actually, Obama's already started revising his stance over the course of the past year (from "pull out now!" to "we would weigh it carefully and pull out slowly"), and the right has already called him on it. I think it shows that Obama is up on the situation and is able to be flexible and adjust based on moving targets.
I've yet to hear a specific definition of winning from anyone who uses the term in regard to the Iraq War or the War on Terrorism.
This may sound stupid but that is the best question I've heard in a long time. If McCain is so desirous of "winning the war in Iraq," I would like him to define what that means.
Mostly, I am afraid that a McCain presidency will result in the U.S. fighting in FOUR wars by 2012 (Iran, Iraq, Russia, Afghanistan). And skirting around with China and Pakistan. And Palin would just say it's God's will. Oy vey.
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 02:41 PM
... or the War on Drugs for that matter.
As for librarian flap. I think Palin loses that one. So she didn't actually request that books be removed, but then tried to get the librarian fired when she was told there was no way to do that? Um, that seems to be Palin's M.O. Her brother-in-law, her brother-in-law's boss.
(hmmm, not unlike the treatment certain generals received in Ghoulish Delight's excellent Iraq post above.)
Palin makes me ill.
BarTopDancer
09-09-2008, 02:48 PM
It does seem she has a record of I don't like you and/or the choices you've made, so I'm going to have you fired. Sounds like a boss we'd all be venting about.
I was reading it this morning and found it an interesting time warp. A pre-war discussion on MousePad (http://mousepad.mouseplanet.com/showthread.php?p=164178) about Iraq with many people here laying out their early views on the matter (though it eventually devolved into a "patriotism" pissing match).
iSm is really the only one opposing the war on the simple ground that Iraq and Saddam Hussein was of absolutely no real threat to the United States.
GD opposes on geopolitical grounds but did say
On the other hand, Saddam is a threat. He needs to go. He's a freaking lunatic. If we don't do something to nip it in the bud, he will start WWIII.
Lots of others.
Unfortunately, I didn't post in the thread (which is what I was looking for; examples of me expressing my pre-war view of things so that I could check against my memory).
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 03:01 PM
This all then leads to what people believe was deliberate misleading or falsification of intelligence by Bush. While it is true that the intelligence was bad, I do not believe it was intentionally falsified, which is the major argument of those who were for "doing something" now base their opposition on.
Gemini Cricket
09-09-2008, 03:07 PM
I was reading it this morning and found it an interesting time warp. A pre-war discussion on MousePad (http://mousepad.mouseplanet.com/showthread.php?p=164178) about Iraq with many people here laying out their early views on the matter (though it eventually devolved into a "patriotism" pissing match).
Here's what I posted towards the end of the thread:
I think everyone is entitled to their opinions on this thread and everywhere else. But the name-calling has to end. It's uncalled for. It works against having a clear, mature, concise discussion.
btw~
I was going to post something political, but I decided to delete it. I don't plan on discussing things on this thread any more.
Nerd!
:D
Jeepers H. Crackers! That thread was started almost 6 freakin' years ago! Gak! I've been a discussion board geek for over 7 years.
BarTopDancer
09-09-2008, 03:07 PM
Wow, I had some good points.
sleepyjeff
09-09-2008, 03:09 PM
I've yet to hear a specific definition of winning from anyone who uses the term in regard to the Iraq War or the War on Terrorism.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ibnuyusuf/1271119853/
Fierce fighting lasted for 10 plus years followed by sporadic fights and riots right up into the late 1980's...........now this Nation is one of if not the most powerful economy in SE Asia.
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 03:27 PM
GD opposes on geopolitical grounds but did say
I don't think I've said anything since inconsistent with my statements there. I said we were in Afghanistan for legitimate reasons and were turning our attention toward Iraq for illegitimate reasons.
I still think Saddam was someone that needed to be dealt with, but that was not the way to go about doing so. "Do something to nip it in the bud" never equated to military aggression in my mind.
I'm a little appalled at myself for suggesting assassination.
This all then leads to what people believe was deliberate misleading or falsification of intelligence by Bush. While it is true that the intelligence was bad, I do not believe it was intentionally falsified, which is the major argument of those who were for "doing something" now base their opposition on.The Senate Intelligenc Committe (http://www.democrats.com/node/16770) disagrees with your belief.
Statements and implications by the President and Secretary of State suggesting that Iraq and al-Qa’ida had a partnership, or that Iraq had provided al-Qa’ida with weapons training, were not substantiated by the intelligence. Ø Statements by the President and the Vice President indicating that Saddam Hussein was prepared to give weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups for attacks against the United States were contradicted by available intelligence information. Okay, so there's just a small sample of the willful misleading of the public. Ah, I can hear you say, but what of the Congress members who saw the itnelligence and drew their own conclusions? Surely they could not have been duped...
Additionally, the Committee issued a report on the Intelligence Activities Relating to Iraq conducted by the Policy Counterterrorism Evaluation Group and the Office of Special Plans within the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. The report found that the clandestine meetings between Pentagon officials and Iranians in Rome and Paris were inappropriate and mishandled from beginning to end.Potentially important information collected during the meetings was withheld from intelligence agencies by Pentagon officials.Finally, senior Defense Department officials cut short internal investigations of the meetings and failed to implement the recommendations of their own counterintelligence experts.This is just he summary report. It rather bleakly shows a concerted effort to justify war, not to collect facts. It shows that Congress did not just see faulty information and come to the same faulty conclusion, they were fed a distorted picture of the intelligence, purposefully shielded from the full picture, and willfully influenced by Cheney and the Pentagon into drawing conclusions that weren't even supported by the bad intelligence.
All from a President who, almost 2 years before 9/11, was sitting in cabinet meetings talking about finding a way to depose Saddam.
Zero credibility.
I don't think I've said anything since inconsistent with my statements there.
It wasn't my intention to imply that you have. I was just differentiating your position opposing the war from iSm's and highlighting the more substantive positions stakes out there by people now here.
Tenigma
09-09-2008, 03:41 PM
Well, I didn't participate in any discussions here back then but I was one of many silent masses who didn't say peep about our invasion of Iraq. While I was pretty sure Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11, I was also pretty tired of his flouting of UN requests to inspect his nuclear facilities, and I felt like it was OK for us to step in and stop the bully.
Of course, I was also still relatively pro-Bush at the time.
I just chose to keep listening to talk radio and dismiss the anti-war people as kooks and hippies.
Boy was I wrong.
innerSpaceman
09-09-2008, 03:57 PM
I love when I'm right from the very start.
I can't get too worked up about it though, since it's always been that way and always will. :p
:iSm:
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 04:14 PM
Hey, that thread is the birth of General You! :D
Morrigoon
09-09-2008, 04:31 PM
Old threads are fun! I'd forgotten about my provocation idea. Still would've been a better plan. Wouldn't have changed the outcome any, however. But might've been better for our place in world politics.
scaeagles
09-09-2008, 05:47 PM
All from a President who, almost 2 years before 9/11, was sitting in cabinet meetings talking about finding a way to depose Saddam.
Zero credibility.
Please forgive my lack of understanding here....how was Bush sitting in cabinet meetings for 2 years when he hadn't taken office until 9 months before it happened? I'm not trying to pick, I just didn't know if he had been privy to cabinet meetings as a Presidential candidate.
While not wishing to go through stuff again that we have debated before without anyone swaying anyone, just would like to say that yes, he was sitting in cabinet meetings (for at least 9 months) discussing how to depose Saddam. I would figure this is because the intelligence coming from the prior administration was talking up the threat Saddam posed. At that point in time, I doubt that he had the pportunity to manufacture or misrepresent the intelligence coming to him. Some cry "vengence for his father!", but I've never bought into that.
Strangler Lewis
09-09-2008, 06:45 PM
I just chose to keep listening to talk radio and dismiss the anti-war people as kooks and hippies.
Mom?!?
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 09:12 PM
Please forgive my lack of understanding here....how was Bush sitting in cabinet meetings for 2 years when he hadn't taken office until 9 months before it happened? I'm not trying to pick, I just didn't know if he had been privy to cabinet meetings as a Presidential candidate.
Brain fart.
Ghoulish Delight
09-09-2008, 09:23 PM
Brain fart.
F*ck, I must have been listening to Giuliani too much. 2 years before the invasion of Iraq, not 9/11. Yikes.
Gn2Dlnd
09-10-2008, 10:51 AM
Re: Palin's eBay story (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/10/palins-ebay-story-what-ac_n_125361.html):
From Sam Stein on Huffington Post
Twenty days after putting the jet online, the Palin administration had to reissue the listing. The minimum bid had not been met. By April, the jet still had not sold despite three additional attempts. Eventually, Palin signed a contract with an Anchorage aircraft broker to help succeed where eBay couldn't. In August 2007, eight months after it was first put on sale, the jet was sold to an Alaskan businessman for $2.1 million -- $600,000 shy of the purchasing price.
"The eBay thing didn't work out very well," Dan Spencer, director of administrative services for the Department of Public Safety (the individual charged with trying to get rid of the plane) told the Anchorage Daily News in April 2007. "I am [tired of dealing with it]," he added. "I don't know about anyone else."
Palin's stories of high ethics and virtue are melting away faster than the polar ice caps.
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 10:57 AM
Re: Palin's eBay story (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/10/palins-ebay-story-what-ac_n_125361.html):
Palin's stories of high ethics and virtue are melting away faster than the polar ice caps.
I thought the point was that she sold the jet rather than using it. I don't see how the mechanics of the sale matter that much. She said she put it up on ebay and she did.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 11:00 AM
Being that I work in the property tax industry, including personal property, I'd like to point out that aircraft is a depreciating asset. The aircraft in question was purchased in 2005 and sold in 2007. While there are varying depreciation tables for aircraft, a common one in our system is 20% the first year, and 32% the second year. Considering they sold the plane for 22% less than the original purchase price, that's actually better than depreciation tables might suggest it should have sold for.
Also, I don't think she clained to have made a profit. It was that she got rid of it.
Edited to add - Now I see that Moonliner is beating me by mere minutes in terms of posting basically the same thing.
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 11:03 AM
Yes, but she did tout it as her idea when, in fact, the article points out that the state had been doing that with large items for several years before she was in office.
Gn2Dlnd
09-10-2008, 11:08 AM
The rest of the article says that it was common practice to put big ticket items on eBay, previous governors had done it before her. By not hiring an agent to sell this particular white elephant, the state of Alaska incurred $62,492.79 in payments every three months during the eight months the jet didn't sell.
Shall we talk about "Thanks, but no thanks," next?
Gn2Dlnd
09-10-2008, 11:12 AM
Being that I work in the property tax industry, including personal property, I'd like to point out that aircraft is a depreciating asset.
Just wanted to acknowledge this. I have zero professional expertise in the matter. It's just that unconfronted lies and hyperbole irritate the living sh!t out of me.
innerSpaceman
09-10-2008, 11:18 AM
The jet sale is a meh. But what about her billing the state something like 216 days for staying in her own home?
I think the issue is not the individual items that keep cropping up on a daily basis ... rather it's the very fact that items keep cropping up on a daily basis.
I've never seen a vice-presidential candidate dominate the news so much. And it's potential scandal after potential scandal. Maybe the Republican base will see Palin as beleagured, but I think Johnny Voter is going to see her as Trouble.
Perhaps it was just plain stupid to pick a nobody, whom the press is just discovering. Biden likely has just as many skeletons, but those bones have long been picked over and the press doesn't care. Palin may be no more or less crooked than any politician, but the media is having a field day digging up stuff on a new pol.
McCain is a moron. And I think this evidence of his poor decision making ability is one of the worst markers for him making a good president.
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 11:18 AM
I guess I'm just slow. With all the crap there is on Palin: Anti-choice, Draconian views on sex education, and on and on....
Why are you focusing on a good thing she did? She got rid of a costly albatross.
She had the idea to put the plane on Ebay. No, it was not the first item ever offered on ebay. So what?
OK, it did not sell there. If it had how much would that have saved in broker fees?
How much per month was the state saving by not using the jet? I'll be it was more than the ~20k monthly payment.
Edited to add - Now I see that ISM is beating me by mere minutes in terms of posting basically the same thing.
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 11:19 AM
Being that I work in the property tax industry, including personal property, I'd like to point out that aircraft is a depreciating asset.You know, unless you're in the selling-airplanes-on-ebay business, your uninformed opinions are meaningless.
Gn2Dlnd
09-10-2008, 11:26 AM
Like iSm says, it's just another example. I'm not focusing on the damn plane any more than her taking all the ear-marks she can get, then bemoaning ear-marks, or her per-diem scam, or her, to me at least, frightening personal religious views. It's a package. A sexy, bespectacled cinemax librarian of a package.
Don't look at what I've done, look at what I say I've done! (blows kiss)
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 11:51 AM
Like iSm says, it's just another example. I'm not focusing on the damn plane any more than her taking all the ear-marks she can get, then bemoaning ear-marks, or her per-diem scam, or her, to me at least, frightening personal religious views. It's a package. A sexy, bespectacled cinemax librarian of a package.
Don't look at what I've done, look at what I say I've done! (blows kiss)
At the risk of looking like I'm defending the barracuda...
When she was mayor of a small town she went for all the ear-marks she could get. That is part of a mayors job. I don't fault her there.
As Governor of the state she killed the bridge-to-nowhere. A $200,000,000+ pork barrel project. You can't argue with that. From what little I can see she at least attempted to use federal funds wisely rather than taking a gimme all I can get mentality.
Tenigma
09-10-2008, 12:02 PM
Palin's stories of high ethics and virtue are melting away faster than the polar ice caps.
To give her credit I believe she said she "put it up on eBay" but she never said she actually managed to sell the thing, or at a profit. McCain said that (because I don't know, someone fed him incorrect information, he just assumed it, or he's, oh I don't know, addle-minded).
innerSpaceman
09-10-2008, 12:11 PM
As Governor of the state she killed the bridge-to-nowhere. A $200,000,000+ pork barrel project. You can't argue with that.
Yes I can. She's on record supporting the project before it became nationally infamous as the biggest pork-barrel project in history.
Then, and only then, did she turn against it.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 12:16 PM
You know, unless you're in the selling-airplanes-on-ebay business, your uninformed opinions are meaningless.
I think I already got in trouble for calling someone arrogant and condescending, so I'll avoid that this time. :)
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 12:23 PM
Yes I can. She's on record supporting the project before it became nationally infamous as the biggest pork-barrel project in history.
Then, and only then, did she turn against it.
In the end she did the right thing and killed it. So for me that makes it a weak argument to use against her. Especially when there are so many other good ones to use.
One of the problems I have discussing politics with people here or IRL is the black and white viewpoints people often have. If they don't like a candidate (ie Palin) then EVERYTHING about them has to be bad. Hell George Bush is in solid contention for worst president in the history of the United States but even he has his good moments. No one (except perhaps Rove) is all evil.
So I feel quite comfortable patting Palin on the back for killing a $200,000,000 bridge project or selling a unnneeded jet while at the same time blasting her for her views on abortion, sex education and scores of other topics.
mousepod
09-10-2008, 12:55 PM
I think the reason the Palin "bridge to nowhere" comment is discussed so much is because her "Thanks, but no thanks" line has become a staple of her speech - and the McCain/Palin ads. The context in which the Republicans are framing her comment is not rooted in the truth.
However, I agree that it's silly for the Dems to be focusing on this. It's clearly bait that's been laid out by Rove, er Palin, er McCain... (no... I probably mean Rove) to steer the argument away from the issues that are actually part of the two parties platforms.
bleh.
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 01:02 PM
I think the reason the Palin "bridge to nowhere" comment is discussed so much is because her "Thanks, but no thanks" line has become a staple of her speech - and the McCain/Palin ads. The context in which the Republicans are framing her comment is not rooted in the truth.
However, I agree that it's silly for the Dems to be focusing on this. It's clearly bait that's been laid out by Rove, er Palin, er McCain... (no... I probably mean Rove) to steer the argument away from the issues that are actually part of the two parties platforms.
bleh.
Hummmm...
Yup. That sounds like Rove. "Ok guys, the Dems are going to attack whatever we say. So let's harp on something that actually has a positive element about it. That way their argument sounds weaker."
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 01:09 PM
So I feel quite comfortable patting Palin on the back for killing a $200,000,000 bridge project or selling a unnneeded jet while at the same time blasting her for her views on abortion, sex education and scores of other topics.She didn't kill sh*t. The money still went to Alaska, the money never went back, and she continued to fund the other infrastructure projects that are designed to link in to the bridge. She was for it, she paid lip service to being against it when she realized it would be politically expedient to do so, and never did squat to prevent that money from being funneled from Washington.
And spending/waste/porkbarrel is most certainly a platform issue.
Snowflake
09-10-2008, 01:10 PM
Hell George Bush is in solid contention for worst president in the history of the United States but even he has his good moments. No one (except perhaps Rove) is all evil.
I dunno, I think Cheney is 100% evil, too. :)
Tenigma
09-10-2008, 01:13 PM
In the end she did the right thing and killed it. So for me that makes it a weak argument to use against her. Especially when there are so many other good ones to use.
You're only seeing half the picture, Moonliner. She didn't say "Thanks but no thanks" until AFTER the Feds said no (and it because obvious this was a bad stance to take), but SHE KEPT THE MONEY. She just used the money earmarked for the bridge porkbarrel project for OTHER stuff in Alaska.
If she was REALLY sincere she would've not taken the money.
PS: I think part of what I find so annoying is that they've decided just to blatantly lie, and keep lying. They think Americans are stupid enough to eventually believe the lies.
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 01:25 PM
She didn't kill sh*t. The money still went to Alaska, the money never went back, and she continued to fund the other infrastructure projects that are designed to link in to the bridge. She was for it, she paid lip service to being against it when she realized it would be politically expedient to do so, and never did squat to prevent that money from being funneled from Washington.
And spending/waste/porkbarrel is most certainly a platform issue.
So she took $200,000,000 and rather than spend it on a useless bridge she used it on other projects for the state? That bitch.
If the infrastructure projects where needed on their own then fine. However if the cash was used for trash then I'm with you. Do you have a cite for where the money went?
I expect the list of Governors who gave back big bucks ear-marked for their state is fairly small. If you include those that took the cash and then found a better use for it, it's still a short list, and adding in Governors who waited until it was politically correct to use the money for a better use probably still lands her in a better than average demographic.
innerSpaceman
09-10-2008, 01:34 PM
They think Americans are stupid enough to eventually believe the lies.
And, unfortunately, they are right.
Tenigma
09-10-2008, 01:34 PM
So she took $200,000,000 and rather than spend it on a useless bridge she used it on other projects for the state? That bitch.
If the infrastructure projects where needed on their own then fine. However if the cash was used for trash then I'm with you. Do you have a cite for where the money went?
I expect the list of Governors who gave back big bucks ear-marked for their state is fairly small. If you include those that took the cash and then found a better use for it, it's still a short list, and adding in Governors who waited until it was politically correct to use the money for a better use probably still lands her in a better than average demographic.
If your parents tell you they're willing to give you $1000 to get some new furniture for your place, but after a lot of people complain that your place is already fully furnished and you don't need any new furniture, should you then take that $1000 and spend it on whatever you want?
But the main point here is that one of her huge campaign slogans is "thanks but no thanks," not "thanks, I'll spend your money on something else."
If she is trying to pass herself off as a reformer, then yes. I believe she should've not taken the money.
Moonliner
09-10-2008, 01:50 PM
If your parents tell you they're willing to give you $1000 to get some new furniture
Pisshaw! Now you are just in the realm of total fantasy.
But the main point here is that one of her huge campaign slogans is "thanks but no thanks," not "thanks, I'll spend your money on something else."
Point well made and I guess if the McCain camp is going to make "Thanks but no thanks" a rally cry then the facts you have presented are a good counter to it.
Tenigma
09-10-2008, 01:58 PM
Hmmmm... going through Snopes, there is an "iffy" entry for Sarah Palin where she is purported to have said, "So Sambo beat that b!tch (http://www.snopes.com/politics/palin/sambo.asp")" when Obama clinched the nomination.
I must admit I didn't run into many Black people on my trip to Alaska but one would have to wonder if she is that racist/sexist.
Morrigoon
09-10-2008, 02:14 PM
Isn't that a governor's job, to protect the best interests of their state? By, for example, grabbing as much federal funding as they can for their state?
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 02:18 PM
I say keep the half truths and rumors coming. I have no doubt that I could find or even make up hundreds of unsubstantiated things I heard that Obama has said. Or even true things. Talking about "white mans' greed" in the audacity of hope.
Honestly, to even post that is laughable.
I read on a blog that someone heard Obama say that he goes out at night and kills puppies and eats their livers in a Satanic ritual. Wow.....that's just aweful.
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 02:21 PM
Isn't that a governor's job, to protect the best interests of their state? By, for example, grabbing as much federal funding as they can for their state?That could be one definition. However, to do so and then claim you fought against it is generally called "lying".
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 02:31 PM
I think she said "Thanks but no thanks for that bridge to nowhere". She didn't say "I sent the money back because there was nothing valuable we could do with it". I think there is a distinction. She was against the wasteful spending aspect, bit using the federal funds to do necessary things to improve her state.
Tenigma
09-10-2008, 03:12 PM
I think she said "Thanks but no thanks for that bridge to nowhere". She didn't say "I sent the money back because there was nothing valuable we could do with it". I think there is a distinction. She was against the wasteful spending aspect, bit using the federal funds to do necessary things to improve her state.
I think there is a distinction between opposing a project that becomes overwhelmingly unpopular, and then deciding on your own what to do with the money that was ear-marked for said pork barrel project. The money came from the feds--was it really kosher for her to be taking money that was approved for one project BY SOMEONE ELSE, and then taking that money and deciding on your own to spend it on something else?
Come on scaeagles, she is trying to campaign as a reformer, ergo spendthrift. Saying no to bloat. Cutting taxes. Not diverting tax money for your OWN pet projects.
I'm not saying governors can't take money earmarked for one thing to use on other projects. Well, I don't know if that's illegal... but my point is that it's something she is heavily campaigning on and I find it pretty hypocritical.
OK folks you are hearing this from me... whatever happens if it's Hillary vs. Palin in 2012 I will vote for Hillary (good lord I didn't think I'd ever say that).
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 03:18 PM
I wouldn't expect anything else than you voting for Hillary, particularly if hypocrisy is such a turnoff.
Morrigoon
09-10-2008, 03:21 PM
Hillary vs. Palin? Scary thought indeed.
Two floaters in the bowl, which do you pick?
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 03:44 PM
I think she said "Thanks but no thanks for that bridge to nowhere". She didn't say "I sent the money back because there was nothing valuable we could do with it". I think there is a distinction. She was against the wasteful spending aspect, bit using the federal funds to do necessary things to improve her state.She said neither of those.
So, it isn't that she's opposed to earmarks it is just that she was opposed to that particular earmark?
(And yes, I seem to be really off the wagon today.)
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 04:09 PM
Except for the time she spent in favor of that particular earmark.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 04:19 PM
She said neither of those.
She did indeed.
Directly from her speech at the convention -
I told the Congress, "Thanks, but no thanks," on that Bridge to Nowhere.
Now, I do think she was making the point that she was against earmarks, so the very next line of her speech is problematic for me -
If our state wanted to build a bridge, we were going to build it ourselves.
The first quoted line? Clearly saying they didn't need that bridge. Second quoted line? Certainly implying that she wasn't going to take the money.
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 04:21 PM
She did indeed.
Directly from her speech at the convention -
She said that she said it, but she didn't say it when she says she claims to have said it. See what I'm saying?
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 04:27 PM
Yes. Got it.
BarTopDancer
09-10-2008, 04:36 PM
http://punditkitchen.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/political-pictures-sarah-palin-abstinence-education.jpg
sleepyjeff
09-10-2008, 05:05 PM
http://punditkitchen.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/political-pictures-sarah-palin-abstinence-education.jpg
Funny except:
1) She doesn't support abstinence only education. She's on record as saying teaching students about condoms and other forms of birth control is ok provided abstinence is emphasized more.
2) Her daughter went to a school that did teach sex ed not abstinence.
But don't let the facts get in the way of a good joke;)
Gemini Cricket
09-10-2008, 06:09 PM
1) She doesn't support abstinence only education. She's on record as saying teaching students about condoms and other forms of birth control is ok provided abstinence is emphasized more.
And, as we can see, her daughter didn't pay attention at school.
:D
Cadaverous Pallor
09-10-2008, 06:43 PM
1) She doesn't support abstinence only education. She's on record as saying teaching students about condoms and other forms of birth control is ok provided abstinence is emphasized more.Do you have a link for that? This (http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/09/01/palin-backed-abstinence-education/?eref=ib_politicalticker) is the widely-cited quote that shows that she is not a fan of teaching condoms in class.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 07:38 PM
She said that she said it, but she didn't say it when she says she claims to have said it. See what I'm saying?
By the way, I was being ocmpletely thick headed earlier. I don't know why I couldn't see what you were saying earlier than I did.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 07:41 PM
I'm curious....does BTD get chastized for posting something she (and I) found amusing? I am, of course, referring to being raked over the coals for posting something I found amusing about Biden.
Cadaverous Pallor
09-10-2008, 08:01 PM
I'm curious....does BTD get chastized for posting something she (and I) found amusing? I am, of course, referring to being raked over the coals for posting something I found amusing about Biden.I assume you're referring to the "priceless" joke above. It's a joke, in photoshop form, no less. Hell, if you have a joke to make about Biden, I'd love to hear it, as long as it's funny :)
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 08:05 PM
I suppose funny is in the eye of the beholder.
wendybeth
09-10-2008, 08:41 PM
They only charge $75 for highlights in Alaska?
sleepyjeff
09-10-2008, 08:45 PM
Do you have a link for that? This (http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/09/01/palin-backed-abstinence-education/?eref=ib_politicalticker) is the widely-cited quote that shows that she is not a fan of teaching condoms in class.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-sexed6-2008sep06,0,5768481.story
http://www.redstate.com/diaries/redstate/2008/sep/09/democratic-fables-about-sarah-palins-positio/
A lot of Palin's critics jumped on her supposed support for abstinence-only programs like a starving man on a sandwich to justify their continuing interest in the pregnancy of her 17-year-old daughter. But they seem to have skipped the step of actually looking carefully at Gov. Palin's position - again, this LA Times piece comes from Walker's article at Reason:
In July of [2006], she completed a candidate questionnaire that asked, would she support funding for abstinence-until-marriage programs instead of "explicit sex-education programs, school-based clinics and the distribution of contraceptives in schools?"
Palin wrote, "Yes, the explicit sex-ed programs will not find my support."
But in August of that year, Palin was asked during a KTOO radio debate if "explicit" programs include those that discuss condoms. Palin said no and called discussions of condoms "relatively benign."
"Explicit means explicit," she said. "No, I'm pro-contraception, and I think kids who may not hear about it at home should hear about it in other avenues. So I am not anti-contraception. But, yeah, abstinence is another alternative that should be discussed with kids. I don't have a problem with that. That doesn't scare me, so it's something I would support also."
Strangler Lewis
09-10-2008, 08:49 PM
When I was in high school, I had to choose between drama or physics, and I chose drama. However, if they had offered "explicit sex" at the same time, I'm sure I would have taken that.
Hell, (snapping suspenders) I would have taught it.
sleepyjeff
09-10-2008, 08:51 PM
They only charge $75 for highlights in Alaska?
Yes, but an Orange cost $5.95....;)
wendybeth
09-10-2008, 08:55 PM
I wonder how much pineapples are?
sleepyjeff
09-10-2008, 08:56 PM
I wonder how much pineapples are?
Well, I hear they offer financing:D
Ghoulish Delight
09-10-2008, 09:18 PM
I'm wondering where these sex-ed classes that don't mention abstinence exist. Every single sex-ed thing I've ever been presented start with, "The only 100% guarantee to avoid pregnancy and STDs is abstinence."
BarTopDancer
09-10-2008, 09:20 PM
I'm curious....does BTD get chastized for posting something she (and I) found amusing? I am, of course, referring to being raked over the coals for posting something I found amusing about Biden.
Funny except:
1) She doesn't support abstinence only education. She's on record as saying teaching students about condoms and other forms of birth control is ok provided abstinence is emphasized more.
2) Her daughter went to a school that did teach sex ed not abstinence.
But don't let the facts get in the way of a good joke;)
Scaeagles, I'd say yes, yes I did.
scaeagles
09-10-2008, 09:31 PM
Every single sex-ed thing I've ever been presented
Dude, how many presentations do you need? I caught on after the first.:)
sleepyjeff
09-10-2008, 09:37 PM
Scaeagles, I'd say yes, yes I did.
:D
See my post (#243) in the convention thread......even I, a stuffy old repbuclican can get a kick out of some creative anti-Palin media;)
Not Afraid
09-10-2008, 10:32 PM
lipstick.
Pig.
NPR.
:)
Ghoulish Delight
09-11-2008, 12:29 AM
Dude, how many presentations do you need? I caught on after the first.:)With the cheerfully illustrated books my parents kept in my room from pretty much the moment I could read, I could have conducted the first one. Believe me, it was not my choice to attend those assemblies.
wendybeth
09-11-2008, 12:33 AM
You guys had Sex Ed assemblies? Geesh, I think I remember some dumb film in a darkened classroom with half the students absent because their parents objected. I'm fairly certain the film was from the WWII era.
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 04:58 AM
I'm proud to say I got "the talk" before my school sex ed class.
innerSpaceman
09-11-2008, 06:50 AM
I'm proud to say I got "the sex" before my school sex-ed class. ;)
Betty
09-11-2008, 07:11 AM
With the cheerfully illustrated books my parents kept in my room from pretty much the moment I could read, I could have conducted the first one. Believe me, it was not my choice to attend those assemblies.
Was it the one I had - with the 2 overweight cartoon people? Can't remember the name of it though...
Ah - Here it is. (http://books.google.com/books?id=auEsxjxTu70C&dq=where+did+I+come+from+book&pg=PP1&ots=wGioXSpiP-&sig=zvS2pSJq-G8MBwUa8Ykjob80kF0&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result)
Cadaverous Pallor
09-11-2008, 08:24 AM
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-sexed6-2008sep06,0,5768481.story
http://www.redstate.com/diaries/redstate/2008/sep/09/democratic-fables-about-sarah-palins-positio/Now I'm really confused. What kind of "explicit" programs was she referring to, if she's pro-contraception?
Eh, whatever, veep. :)
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 08:32 AM
I can't really speak for Sleepy, but perhaps the kind promoted by Jocelyn Elders, who wanted masturbation taught in school to help prevent the spread of STDs. Now, I don't really know any young male that really needs to be taught it, but I think teaching masturbation (which I don't know, but in terms of stopping the spread of STDs might include mutual masturbation) might involve discussion of techniques or any other number of explicit issues.
"Oh, little Johnny, if you can't seem to excite yourself enough, you can surf the net for some porn or use any number of toys....".
BarTopDancer
09-11-2008, 08:34 AM
Now I'm really confused. What kind of "explicit" programs was she referring to, if she's pro-contraception?
Eh, whatever, veep. :)
Sadly, people are voting for her and not McCain. What a shock they will have if he wins and she's, you know, the VP and not the Prez.
Ghoulish Delight
09-11-2008, 08:34 AM
I can't really speak for Sleepy, but perhaps the kind promoted by Jocelyn Elders, who wanted masturbation taught in school to help prevent the spread of STDs. Now, I don't really know any young male that really needs to be taught it, but I think teaching masturbation (which I don't know, but in terms of stopping the spread of STDs might include mutual masturbation) might involve discussion of techniques or any other number of explicit issues. Masturbation was discussed in my sex ed class. Nothing explicit, it was mentioned as, "It's a natural thing that people like to do and nothing to be embarassd about."
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 08:36 AM
It may be a distinction without a difference, but I think "discussing" that it exists and is pretty common and "teaching" it are two different things.
Again, just theorizing.
Ghoulish Delight
09-11-2008, 08:43 AM
Here's the thing. If you look just look a the rhetoric, you'd think that there are sex ed classes that somehow hide the concept of abstinence.
But, yeah, abstinence is another alternative that should be discussed with kids.
That statement is ridiculous. It's a straw man. Complete straw man implying that people are not just teaching kids how to protect themselves should they make the choice, but are teaching them that not having sex isn't an option. What utter horsesh*t. And so yeah, I find it hard to take the same people's word on the implication that there are classes out there showing kids how to stroke it, teaching them the joys of "the stranger", or instructing girls on the most effective use of The Rabbit.
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 08:57 AM
Elders did resign soon after her statements, and I think that was because she meant for it to become pretty explicit. Just my thinking though. I'm not suggesting there are or are not classes like that. I have no idea, really.
I'll even strengthen my statement regarding Elders....I'm positive she wanted much more explicit stuff than was out there.
However, this is not a thread about Elders. I merely suggesting what I think Palin might have been referring to in her "explicit" comments.
Strangler Lewis
09-11-2008, 09:09 AM
Only in England. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDoQFcQEpOQ)
BarTopDancer
09-11-2008, 09:09 AM
I think the most explicit our sex-ed assembly in high school got was demonstrating putting a condom on a banana.
They did also covered that the only 100% way to be sure to not get pregnant was to not have sex but if you're going to have sex here are some things you should think about before hand - and then went into emotional readiness, peer pressure and diseases.
Chernabog
09-11-2008, 09:15 AM
That statement is ridiculous. It's a straw man. Complete straw man implying that people are not just teaching kids how to protect themselves should they make the choice, but are teaching them that not having sex isn't an option. What utter horsesh*t.
Exactly. I remember in my 6th grade sex ed class being taught abstinence in addition to everything else. In fact, I remember them saying that abstinence was the only 100% sure way to avoid pregnancy, STDs, etc. But they also taught proper use of a condom, what masturbation was, etc. and didn't say that waiting for marriage is what Jesus wants you to do. It was a more clinical thing that our parents were involved in, homework-wise. And they certainly didn't talk about best methods to straddle your vibrator, how to control your gag reflex, or what those holes in the bathroom stalls were. :rolleyes:
Everything I know about sex I learned from the episode of Happy Days where Fonzie has to teach the sex ed class.
mousepod
09-11-2008, 10:01 AM
Meanwhile, the conversation of Sex-Ed makes me think not about what Sarah Palin (not currently running for President) might think about it, but how John McCain (currently running for President) intentionally mischaracterized Obama's plan for "age specific sex education" - y'know... telling kids how to avoid "inappropriate touches" - as "sex education for kindergartners".
Please, John... you know you don't have my vote this time... but if you want my respect, please tell Rove "Thanks but no thanks" to his disgusting tactics.
sleepyjeff
09-11-2008, 10:28 AM
Here's the thing. If you look just look a the rhetoric, you'd think that there are sex ed classes that somehow hide the concept of abstinence.
From what I recall of my 10th grade sex ed classes they pretty much did hide the concept of abstinence.....yeah, they told us about it; they did say it was the best way to avoid pregnancy etc; but they spent all of two minutes(or about 1/20 the time they spent explaining how to buy a condom) on the idea.
Two minutes on abstinence out of a total of 9 weeks of sex ed to me might as well have been hiding the concept; but that's just my 2 cents.
Ghoulish Delight
09-11-2008, 10:42 AM
I don't get it. What's more to say about it?
"Abstinence is not having sex until you get married. It's the only guaranteed safe choice. 100% guarantee you will not get pregnant and 100% guarantee you will not catch a disease from having sex. The decision to have sex is an important one not to be taken lightly and will have lifelong consequences no matter how safely you do it."
That's what I remember from my sex ed classes. What else is there? Do you need a textbook to illustrate how not to have sex? A scientific analysis of exactly why not having sex prevents pregnancy? Discussion of clinical trials that measure the likelihood of contracting an STD while not having sex?
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 10:44 AM
John McCain (currently running for President) intentionally mischaracterized Obama's plan for "age specific sex education" - y'know... telling kids how to avoid "inappropriate touches" - as "sex education for kindergartners".
As I have understood it and looked into the exact language of the bill in question, here is the exact language from the bill itself that was passed.
Here (http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=&SessionId=3&GA=93&DocTypeId=SB&DocNum=99&GAID=3&LegID=734&SpecSess=&Session=) is the bill itself.
Each class or course in comprehensive sex education offered in any of grades K through 12 shall include instruction on the prevention of sexually transmitted infections, including the prevention, transmission and spread of HIV AIDS.
Originally the language was for 6 though 12, but that was crossed out and the bill was passed with the K in stead of the 6.
As I read that, this means that sex ed taught to kindergarteners SHALL include what followed.
mousepod
09-11-2008, 10:48 AM
As I have understood it and looked into the exact language of the bill in question, here is the exact language from the bill itself that was passed.
Here (http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=&SessionId=3&GA=93&DocTypeId=SB&DocNum=99&GAID=3&LegID=734&SpecSess=&Session=) is the bill itself.
Originally the language was for 6 though 12, but that was crossed out and the bill was passed with the K in stead of the 6.
As I read that, this means that sex ed taught to kindergarteners SHALL include what followed.
scaeagles - please don't insult everyone's intelligence by refuting my post with another partial quotation.
How about this part of the same document:
All course material and instruction shall be age and developmentally appropriate
I stand by my original statement.
Keep reading, it emphasizes age appropriateness:
12 (2) All (1) course material and instruction shall
13 be age and developmentally appropriate.
(a) If any school district provides courses of
8 instruction designed to promote wholesome and comprehensive
9 understanding of the emotional, psychological, physiological,
10 hygienic and social responsibility aspects of family life,
11 then such courses of instruction shall include the teaching
12 of prevention of unintended pregnancy and all options related
13 to unintended pregnancy, as the alternatives to abortion,
14 appropriate to the various grade levels; and whenever such
15 courses of instruction are provided in any of grades K 6
16 through 12, then such courses also shall include age
17 appropriate instruction on the prevention of sexually
18 transmitted infections, including the prevention,
19 transmission and spread of HIV AIDS. However, no pupil shall
20 be required to take or participate in any family life class
21 or course on HIV AIDS instruction if his parent or guardian
22 submits written objection thereto, and refusal to take or
23 participate in such course or program shall not be reason for
24 suspension or expulsion of such pupil.
It also doesn't say that sex ed will be offered in those grades, just requirements if it is.
Tenigma
09-11-2008, 11:00 AM
I can't really speak for Sleepy, but perhaps the kind promoted by Jocelyn Elders, who wanted masturbation taught in school to help prevent the spread of STDs. Now, I don't really know any young male that really needs to be taught it, but I think teaching masturbation (which I don't know, but in terms of stopping the spread of STDs might include mutual masturbation) might involve discussion of techniques or any other number of explicit issues.
Joycelyn Elders was a real champion for education, and I think she had some incredibly great ideas.
Unfortunately for her, she could never articulate things quite right. That masturbation thing was really the last straw; after that the White House never really supported her. But you know she did mean that "masturbation as a form of sexual pleasure/release should be taught as a viable alternative to direct-contact activities." Remember that she was in office in the early '90s during Clinton's first term. With Clinton in office we were finally looking at AIDS seriously, and we were trying to figure out a way to teach comprehensive sex education to kids within that context. Her suggestion would've helped prevent of a whole host of fluid-exchange problems, from pregnancy to HIV transmission.
...as it turns out, with Clinton's second term, that first problem kind of took care of itself in an unintended way, when Clinton swore up and down that "that" was *NOT* sex. Kind of sad... there's a whole generation of kids who think that's "not sex." :rolleyes:
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 11:01 AM
I fully admit to not reading the whole bill. I did not have the time to in the context of this discussion and posted a link to the full document. I was not trying to hide anything, nor did I intend to insult anyone's intelligence.
As I have posted here before, it is simply NOT possible with the thoroughness of so many people here to try to mislead by leaving out information.
Gemini Cricket
09-11-2008, 11:07 AM
I fully admit to not reading the whole bill. As I have posted here before, it is simply NOT possible.
Leaving out stuff can make someone sound a certain way...
:D
BarTopDancer
09-11-2008, 11:07 AM
I'm not sure what link started the sex-ed topic but this story (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/11/us/politics/11checkpoint.html?bl&ex=1221278400&en=139555dd265b8c71&ei=5087%0A) is covering an ad McCain's campaign is running.
I am curious why Obama is called Mr. Obama while McCain is called Senator McCain.
Tenigma
09-11-2008, 11:08 AM
As I read that, this means that sex ed taught to kindergarteners SHALL include what followed.
What's wrong with teaching kindergarteners about age-appropriate information regarding sex, relationships, and reproduction?
Dr. Laura started talking to her son, Derek, about sex-related things VERY early on, just as part of his growing up. As a really young kid, when he was learning about body parts and about his normal bodily functions, she didn't mask words related to certain body parts, she just used normal words. And as he grew up she helped explain to him about how babies are created, and what happens during pregnancy, etc. and I believe he was probably only around 7 or 8 when he learned that some women have their pregnancies terminated (she let him come to his own realization that a woman ending a pregnancy meant she was having the "baby inside the mother" killed)... learning about sex and reproduction as part of life and growing up, as part of a whole, and understanding how integral relationships are to sex, was the way she chose to teach her son.
So no, if it's age-appropriate I don't have any problem with teaching kids early.
Seriously, if we are thinking of teaching kids "sex ed" for the first time when they are 14, it is often too late for many of them. Same with drug education. These things need to be introduced very early on while they are still forming their opinion about life.
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 11:11 AM
Age appropriate? Nothing wrong at all. My kids were well versed in the "these are my privates and you don't mess with them" very early on.
I am at fault for not reading the whole text of the bill. I read the first paragraph and not the rest. I do believe there is a deliberate attempt to mislead the electorate by not citing the rest of the bill.
Mousepod, I do not claim to know everything, and come here in part to learn from many, many intelligent people with opposiing viewpoints. It is not my desire to simply associate with lie minded individuals. I hadn't heard much about the whole thing, and a Google search on SB0099 (easy enough to find the number) allowed me to find and read the first portion in about 2 mins. I am glad I know now that there was more to the bill than what I read, and also do agree that there is an attempt to deceive.
Gemini Cricket
09-11-2008, 11:11 AM
I'm not sure what link started the sex-ed topic but this story (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/11/us/politics/11checkpoint.html?bl&ex=1221278400&en=139555dd265b8c71&ei=5087%0A) is covering an ad McCain's campaign is running.
I am curious why Obama is called Mr. Obama while McCain is called Senator McCain.
They're both called "Senator" at the beginning of the article and both are called "Mr." for the rest of the article...
Moonliner
09-11-2008, 11:21 AM
What's wrong with teaching kindergarteners about age-appropriate information regarding sex, relationships, and reproduction?
The problem is who decides "age appropirate information"
My experince, as a parent with kids this age, is that school administrators almost always take the path of least resistance for them. At our local high school there is a "zero tolerance" for alcohol. It takes away any discretion the staff might use and the responsibility that comes along with it. For example, someone who brings a bottle of NyQuil to school would receive the same punishment as someone that brings a half dozen bottles of Jack Daniels to pass out on the school bus during an extracurricular event. (Note: That is a real example not a hypothetical).
So allowing these same administrators to determine "age appropriateness" is troublesome to me. If they make a decision on what to teach and not to teach based on age they are opening themselves up to criticism for teaching the wrong thing. If they ignore the issue and just teach everyone whatever the bill says no matter how wrong it is for a given age group they feel safer because they can sidestep responsibility by saying "It's in the mandate".
sleepyjeff
09-11-2008, 11:24 AM
I don't get it. What's more to say about it?
"Abstinence is not having sex until you get married. It's the only guaranteed safe choice. 100% guarantee you will not get pregnant and 100% guarantee you will not catch a disease from having sex. The decision to have sex is an important one not to be taken lightly and will have lifelong consequences no matter how safely you do it."
That's what I remember from my sex ed classes. What else is there? Do you need a textbook to illustrate how not to have sex? A scientific analysis of exactly why not having sex prevents pregnancy? Discussion of clinical trials that measure the likelihood of contracting an STD while not having sex?
They seemed to not be shy about showing scary movies about what happens if you don't use protection.....why not show some scary movies about what happens to some kids who did use protection but somehow it failed? That could ballance out things a bit......plus, they didn't seem to mind repeating themselves over and over again about safe sex, why not repeat themselves over and over again about abstinence?
My point is....the way it was presented made it pretty clear that the adult world pretty much expected us to be having sex and that the whole "abstinence" speil might as well have been told with a wink wink.
BarTopDancer
09-11-2008, 11:24 AM
It is not my desire to simply associate with lie minded individuals.
Freudian slip? ;) :p
BarTopDancer
09-11-2008, 11:25 AM
They're both called "Senator" at the beginning of the article and both are called "Mr." for the rest of the article...
Thanks. My eyes must have missed that.
Betty
09-11-2008, 11:26 AM
From what I recall of my 10th grade sex ed classes they pretty much did hide the concept of abstinence.....yeah, they told us about it; they did say it was the best way to avoid pregnancy etc; but they spent all of two minutes(or about 1/20 the time they spent explaining how to buy a condom) on the idea.
Two minutes on abstinence out of a total of 9 weeks of sex ed to me might as well have been hiding the concept; but that's just my 2 cents.
You had 9 WEEKS of sex ed? Wow. We had a 1/2 session I think twice - once in elementry and once in jr. high.
Ghoulish Delight
09-11-2008, 11:29 AM
My point is....the way it was presented made it pretty clear that the adult world pretty much expected us to be having sex and that the whole "abstinence" speil might as well have been told with a wink wink.
While the message I got out of sex ed was, "Promiscuous sex is risky. It's really risky. My god it's risky. So risky that we're going to spend hours and hours explaining what you'd need to do to protect yourself. Look, here's some horrific pictures of what happens if you fail to protect yourself. If you have sex, no matter how hard you try to be safe, this will always be a risk."
What better promotion of abstinence can there be?
They were both first referred to as Senator on first mention and then Mr. on all later mentions (of the individual, when talking about the campaign of either no title is used).
It is standard Times style.
For example, this sentence:
In another part of the advertisement, Mr. McCain maintains that Mr. Obama’s sole achievement in education was the sex-education bill.
ETA: Whoops, missed the next page.
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 11:39 AM
Freudian slip? ;) :p
HA! Must be that somewhere in the deep dark recesses of my mind you guys are getting through to me.
RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY!
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 11:43 AM
While the message I got out of sex ed was, "Promiscuous sex is risky. It's really risky. My god it's risky. So risky that we're going to spend hours and hours explaining what you'd need to do to protect yourself. Look, here's some horrific pictures of what happens if you fail to protect yourself. If you have sex, no matter how hard you try to be safe, this will always be a risk."
What better promotion of abstinence can there be?
Being that this involves high school males, speaking from experience, what they hear is
"blhblha SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h ."
Gemini Cricket
09-11-2008, 11:46 AM
I remember being taught pretty young, about bathing suit zones and what was appropriate touching and what was not appropriate touching. It was definitely in the 1st grade, kindergarten, pre-school days. AND this was at a strict Catholic school.
And when we were taught the bird and the bees in grade school, there was always the caveat of "If you're having sex..." before everything. Abstinence was taught as well as condom use. AND this was at a strict Catholic school.
Just sayin'.
:)
Tenigma
09-11-2008, 11:50 AM
Being that this involves high school males, speaking from experience, what they hear is
"blhblha SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h ."
http://amybrennan.blogs.com/Ginger.jpg
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 11:54 AM
I am offended at your blatant linkage of teenage males to dogs! Are you equating teenage males with dogs?
OK, maybe it's not that much of a stretch.
I withdraw my outrage.:)
Snowflake
09-11-2008, 12:03 PM
Being that this involves high school males, speaking from experience, what they hear is
"blhblha SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h SEX sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h ."
I'm actually shocked any adolescent male would hear
blhblhasblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h sblahbakhbkl. blaablhbhabba bablb bahlb labhlhblhb ablhlhbah blbhbla blabhblb ablh h
;)
sleepyjeff
09-11-2008, 12:08 PM
You had 9 WEEKS of sex ed? Wow. We had a 1/2 session I think twice - once in elementry and once in jr. high.
5th grade it was a half day;
7th grade it was 2 or 3 weeks
10th grade it was an entire term(although it wasn't, I must admit, just about sex itself, there was the whole miracle of birth stuff in there too)
Oddly enough, drivers ed was only 2 weeks......you would think that, seeing how for every teen who has their life destroyed by sex there are hundreds more who have it snuffed out by driving that the schools would concentrate their efforts a little more on that(if saving lives really is their primary motivation)
While the message I got out of sex ed was, "Promiscuous sex is risky. It's really risky. My god it's risky. So risky that we're going to spend hours and hours explaining what you'd need to do to protect yourself. Look, here's some horrific pictures of what happens if you fail to protect yourself. If you have sex, no matter how hard you try to be safe, this will always be a risk."
What better promotion of abstinence can there be?
Well, my sex ed was right during the early stages of AIDS, different times and different schools. I am sure most people have different 1st hand accounts unless they were in the same class together(and even then...)
tracilicious
09-11-2008, 12:14 PM
What's wrong with teaching kindergarteners about age-appropriate information regarding sex, relationships, and reproduction?
Dr. Laura started talking to her son, Derek, about sex-related things VERY early on, just as part of his growing up. As a really young kid, when he was learning about body parts and about his normal bodily functions, she didn't mask words related to certain body parts, she just used normal words. And as he grew up she helped explain to him about how babies are created, and what happens during pregnancy, etc. and I believe he was probably only around 7 or 8 when he learned that some women have their pregnancies terminated (she let him come to his own realization that a woman ending a pregnancy meant she was having the "baby inside the mother" killed)... learning about sex and reproduction as part of life and growing up, as part of a whole, and understanding how integral relationships are to sex, was the way she chose to teach her son.
As much as I can't stand Dr. Laura, I completely agree. At five and half, Indi is very well versed in sex because he showed an interest early on. He knows how people have sex, that sometimes men and women have sex, sometimes men and men, sometimes women and women, etc. We've talked about the difference between love and lust, some of what happens during puberty, etc. It's always been very casual and has come up naturally.
I hold no delusions that he'll wait until adulthood to start having sex. But I am pretty confident that when he's a teen we'll still be able to talk openly about sex and all that comes with it.
I'm wondering when the right will start thinking of these things in terms of solutions to problems and not what fits into their moral code that they somehow feel justified in inflicting on our whole society.
Snowflake
09-11-2008, 03:15 PM
Palin Ready to Step in as President (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080911/ap_on_el_pr/palin_interview;_ylt=ArFrST6_dmfA84wj5suHetOs0NUE)
Palin says she's ready to step in as president
FORT WAINWRIGHT, Alaska - Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said Thursday that she didn't blink when Republican John McCain asked her to be his running mate, a surprise selection that shook up the presidential race.
"I didn't hesitate, no," she told ABC's Charlie Gibson in her first televised interview since accepting the Arizona senator's invitation to be on the Republican ticket two weeks ago.
"I answered him 'yes' because I have the confidence in that readiness and knowing that you can't blink, you have to be wired in a way of being so committed to the mission, the mission that we're on, reform of this country and victory in the war, you can't blink. So I didn't blink then even when asked to run as his running mate," said the 44-year-old Palin, a governor who has been in office less than two years.
Asked if she felt ready to step in as vice president or perhaps even president if something happened to the 72-year-old McCain, Palin said: "I do, Charlie, and on January 20, when John McCain and I are sworn in, if we are so privileged to be elected to serve this country, we'll be ready. I'm ready."
Moonliner
09-11-2008, 07:44 PM
Great news! Vote for McCain and you get the exciting Ms. Palin absoultly free. But Wait! There's more. Act now and you can also get Mr. Barack Obama! That's right three fine candidates for the price of just one! Act now this offer is limited....
John McCain offers Barack Obama a cabinet post (http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/toby_harnden/blog/2008/09/12/john_mccain_offers_barack_obama_a_cabinet_post)
This is one promise that Senator John McCain might struggle to keep if he does win in November. When asked by Time's Rick Stengel, moderating the 9/11 anniversary forum on national service here at Columbia University in uptown New York city, whether he would give Barack Obama a cabinet job, he responded that he would.
sleepyjeff
09-11-2008, 08:15 PM
Great news! Vote for McCain and you get the exciting Ms. Palin absoultly free. But Wait! There's more. Act now and you can also get Mr. Barack Obama! That's right three fine candidates for the price of just one! Act now this offer is limited....
Oh great, will they call themselves the 3rd Triumvirate:eek:
scaeagles
09-11-2008, 08:28 PM
Is that a bad thing? He was asked. Should he have said no? Avoided it?
JWBear
09-11-2008, 09:25 PM
I think if McCain wins (curse the evil day!), Obama should ask for AG. :evil:
The answer was an obvious joke, because the next thing he said was that he wouldn't make National Service a cabinet position. Therefore the post wouldn't exist to give it to Obama.
tracilicious
09-12-2008, 01:01 AM
Republicans, seriously...why are you voting for this asshole? How can it not bother you that he picked Palin to be VP?
sleepyjeff
09-12-2008, 01:32 AM
Republicans, seriously...why are you voting for this asshole? How can it not bother you that he picked Palin to be VP?
This may be shocking to you but I actually find it easier to vote for McCain now because of the Palin pick.
Does it bother you that Obama chose a running mate who pretty much has said that Obama is not ready to be President?
;)
Moonliner
09-12-2008, 04:01 AM
The answer was an obvious joke, because the next thing he said was that he wouldn't make National Service a cabinet position. Therefore the post wouldn't exist to give it to Obama.
So was my post about it, or did that not come through?
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 04:48 AM
So was my post about it, or did that not come through?
I didn't get it. But I've been pretty dense lately.
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 04:51 AM
Republicans, seriously...why are you voting for this asshole? How can it not bother you that he picked Palin to be VP?
Democrats and Obama supporters, really...why are you voting for this inexperienced and arrogant newby? Oh, wait....we're not supposed to use ad hominem attacks. My bad.
In the same manner as sleepyjeff, I think it was a brilliant choice politically that has also made me more inclined to vote for McCain, as it has with his key constituency. This shored up his base.
Strangler Lewis
09-12-2008, 05:12 AM
In the same manner as sleepyjeff, I think it was a brilliant choice politically that has also made me more inclined to vote for McCain, as it has with his key constituency. This shored up his base.
Are you part of the base that has been shored up by his selection of her, or are you simpy admiring an astute gesture on his part?
Is there a point at which the personal would become political for you and at which you/the base would be adrift once again? Her alleged affair? The stories about her children's drug use? The suggestion--that I knew was coming--that Track joined the military because he was a screw-up with no other options, etc.
Stan4dSteph
09-12-2008, 06:14 AM
Palin says "nuke-u-ler"
Betty
09-12-2008, 06:24 AM
I'm curious if there is anything at this point, that could be revealed, that would cause you those of you that ARE voting McCain / Palin to NOT vote for them?
If a scandal came out - that was atrocious and seemed likely but couldn't be proved before the election, would you reconsider?
Or is it a democrat/republican thing and you would never in a million years vote for "the other side".
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 07:35 AM
Are you part of the base that has been shored up by his selection of her, or are you simpy admiring an astute gesture on his part?
Is there a point at which the personal would become political for you and at which you/the base would be adrift once again? Her alleged affair? The stories about her children's drug use? The suggestion--that I knew was coming--that Track joined the military because he was a screw-up with no other options, etc.
I am part of the republican base that has been shored up by her for two reasons.
First, I have doubts about the sincerity of McCain's recent move toward more traditionally conservative stances. Palin is much, much more so.
Secondly, I have been upset with the corruption in the party of which I am a member. She rose to governor in part because she took on incredibly corrupt republican politicians. Please note I believe corruption exists on both sides, so the corruption in my party is not enough to make me switch. I'd consider switching to libertarian if they ever had candidates that weren't....well, bordering on insane.
To address your questions, Strangler and Betty, of course there are things that could make me not vote for them. I have only recently become solidly McCain, and I have made that pretty clear over the last serveral months.
Nothing "alleged", no matter how believable some might find it, will sway me. As an example, there have been rumors that Obama is secretly Muslim. He made two misstatements about visiting all 57 states (and there's the whole thing about there being 57 Muslim states or somethig like that), and then saying "my Muslim faith" when he meant Christian. To some, that makes the rumors all the more believable, but I still don't buy it. For those offended by me bringing this up, I am saying this in direct response to questions about if of rumors (particularly the alleged affair) and if they would sway me and it is not an attempt to further spread this one in particular. No one here believes it anyway.
So, if it is proven she had an affair, I would have HUGE reservations, once again, about casting my vote for McCain. As I have admitted one of the factors in my new support for McCain is his selection of Palin, if she was shown to have had an affair and it was proven absolutely, my support would wane. I say this with one caveat....let's say the affair was 20 years ago. Not much of an impact for me. People change and no one is perfect. If it was 6 months ago, big impact.
As far as anything having to do with her children and their behavior? Nothing will make an impact there. As a high school coach I know plenty of great kids with screwed up parents, and just as many screwed up kids with great parents. As a parent, I do my best, but I know that my influence is limited and short of caging my children in the house 24/7 I cannot control every aspect of their lives.
A follow up question I'd ask (there's one bit in your response that I consider outright false but it isn't that relevant so I'll leave it be): Without engaging in comparisons to Barack Obama, I'd ask you to answer the following: Palin has no power to do the things that you like about her unless she becomes president (she may be a partner to McCain or at the first sign of disagreement he could put her in a closet to not be seen again for four years). If John McCain dies the day after inauguration, would you consider the country in capable hands?
BarTopDancer
09-12-2008, 09:15 AM
Let's see where everyone is. The majority of LoTters are in CA.
Arizona is going to McCain
CA is going to Obama.
I think Moonie is in MD (but I may be wrong)
Steph is in NY
Couple people in WA
Where do those three states typically trend?
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 09:26 AM
If John McCain dies the day after inauguration, would you consider the country in capable hands?
Short answer - No.
Slightly extended answer - No. However, I do not consider Obama capable either.
A bit more extension - This is why I love the comparisons constantly made between Palin and Obama in terms of experience.
Ghoulish Delight
09-12-2008, 09:28 AM
Short answer - No.
So she can't actually follow through on the things that make you want to vote for McCain and her. And you don't think she's capable of doing the one thing she might actually have to do. And yet it makes you more likely to vote for McCain. I don't quite understand.
So, my follow up question is: If Palin is not capable leadership for the country, and she really doesn't have any power to do the things you like unless she is put in that position, why does she bolster your support for McCain? Why does "not a good president" get trumped by "says she'll root out corruption"?
Again, Barack Obama is irrelevant to the question because we already know that even if he'd spent 20 years as the governor of Alabama you'd still not consider him an acceptable choice for president for policy reasons.
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 09:36 AM
Why do you hate Cheney? Please don't answer - it is intended as rhetorical. I ask because I know he is one reason that you hate the Bush administration.
Cheney, like Palin, is a counselor to the President. Someone who, yes indeed, needs to be ready, and I truly do not think it is going to take long for her to be so. McCain has chosen someone who I view to be anti corruption and a solid conservative. It encourages me, just as if he had chosen Leiberman, whom I respect immensely but is no conservative, would discourage me. I suspect Obama will surround himself with liberals. This helps be believe that McCain will surround himself with conservatives.
In terms of capability, I also do not think Obama is capable to do the things he will have to do if elected from day one. So to me, the issue of doubting readiness of Palin vs. doubting the readiness of Obama is a slam dunk in favor of voting McCain.
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 09:39 AM
So, my follow up question is: If Palin is not capable leadership for the country, and she really doesn't have any power to do the things you like unless she is put in that position, why does she bolster your support for McCain? Why does "not a good president" get trumped by "says she'll root out corruption"?
Again, Barack Obama is irrelevant to the question because we already know that even if he'd spent 20 years as the governor of Alabama you'd still not consider him an acceptable choice for president for policy reasons.
Oh, indeed. Hopefully my answer above may shed some light on your follow up a bit.
Yes, Obama is irrelevant to the question, but if the issue is experience and readiness of Palin, I cannot help but makes comparisons to the Presidential side of the dem ticket.
I would not have voted for Bill Clinton for policy reasons. I did not doubt his readiness.
Strangler Lewis
09-12-2008, 09:43 AM
I'd like to think I could stop--or preempt--my high school kids from doing some of the things the article says they do habitually, but that road lies ahead.
Also, if the article is true, then Track's military engagement has been presented in a false light, i.e., that he's answering the call to service and putting "country first" as opposed to being dumped there so someone could get him under control.
I assume that once it's revealed that it's all true, Palin will adjust her stance and say something like, "He had to join up to become a man," and all the solid citizens with pregnant teen daughters and out of control sons will nod knowingly and give her a pass on that, too--the same pass they probably wouldn't give a black family in the same position.
It sheds light. It doesn't seem particularly rational to me in that the logic seems very circular (I like her therefore I like her), but I do understand where you're coming from.
sleepyjeff
09-12-2008, 10:04 AM
I'm curious if there is anything at this point, that could be revealed, that would cause you those of you that ARE voting McCain / Palin to NOT vote for them?
If a scandal came out - that was atrocious and seemed likely but couldn't be proved before the election, would you reconsider?
Or is it a democrat/republican thing and you would never in a million years vote for "the other side".
Ultimately, it is a Dem/Rep thing........some scandal, whether it be personal or not, won't change the fact that I believe McCain/Palin will do a better job advancing my concerns for this nation then Obama/Biden. Now, I suppose, if the "scandal" was something along the lines of McCain is secretly planning on pulling the US out of NATO or raising the tax on the top tax bracket to 50%.....then yes, I would change my vote;)
Btw: The media has shown that they will indeed "uncover" some story that can't be proved right before the eleciton......I'd bet money on it....thankfully, the public is quite use to it now and unless they really can prove it they won't fall for it.
A follow up question I'd ask (there's one bit in your response that I consider outright false but it isn't that relevant so I'll leave it be): Without engaging in comparisons to Barack Obama, I'd ask you to answer the following: Palin has no power to do the things that you like about her unless she becomes president (she may be a partner to McCain or at the first sign of disagreement he could put her in a closet to not be seen again for four years). If John McCain dies the day after inauguration, would you consider the country in capable hands?
More capable on the domestic side of things(imho).....on foreign policy, I would assume McCain will already have his team in place(unless he like dies before Christmas...in which case Bush already has people she can use) and can lean on them until she can swim on her own----worked so well with our current President.
Let's see where everyone is. The majority of LoTters are in CA.
Arizona is going to McCain
CA is going to Obama.
I think Moonie is in MD (but I may be wrong)
Steph is in NY
Couple people in WA
Where do those three states typically trend?
Maryland usually goes to the Dems(I think Reagan took it in 84' but no rep since)
New York usually goes to the Dems(I think Reagan took it in 84' but no rep since;) )
Washington has gone to the Dems the last few times but the race is usually close.
Oregon(hello:) ) has gone dem since 92' I think.
Here's a good site:
http://www.electoral-vote.com
I would not have voted for Bill Clinton for policy reasons. I did not doubt his readiness.
Exactly!
Cadaverous Pallor
09-12-2008, 10:04 AM
http://www.comics.com/comics/getfuzzy/archive/images/getfuzzy2008016303912.gif
sleepyjeff
09-12-2008, 10:09 AM
^That was funny I hate to admit:)
scaeagles
09-12-2008, 10:13 AM
all the solid citizens with pregnant teen daughters and out of control sons will nod knowingly and give her a pass on that, too--the same pass they probably wouldn't give a black family in the same position.
Why did this turn to racism? You could have stopped at the giving them a pass, but then had to make the implication that conservatives are racists, and I find that offensive.
Strangler Lewis
09-12-2008, 10:21 AM
I certainly don't think all conservatives are racist. However, the breakdown of the black family is viewed as a major social problem, a root cause of black crime--toughness on crime being more of a conservative issue--and a problem that blacks are expected to fix themselves.
I said it before, if it came out that right after the Democratic convention that Barack Obama had a teen daughter pregnant by a boyfriend who talked tough in a black way on his MySpace page, or that he had a hypothetical teen son who smoked crack, I doubt that all the Republican grandmothers who were sympathetic to Bristol's human plight at the Republican convention would have said similarly nice and forgiving things about Obama's family.
And we know that O'Reilly, Hannity, etc. wouldn't have.
JWBear
09-12-2008, 10:22 AM
A lot of the conservative base is racist (among other things).
Snowflake
09-12-2008, 10:28 AM
and can lean on them until she can swim on her own----worked so well with our current President.
:eek:
All about perception, I guess! I'm not finding or remembering much of the Bush presidency that has worked so well. But, that's me, ymmv. ;)
innerSpaceman
09-12-2008, 10:31 AM
Really, scaeagles. Know the company you keep. Conservatives have made themselves infamous for being racist. Don't blame the rest of the world for noticing it ... or the rank hypocrisy that's greeted Palin's family problems by the Republican base.
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