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Next round of primaries and making my own choice
If you live in a Super Tuesday state and haven't already voted: please don't forget to go and vote!
For the first time since I started voting at age 18, I might cast a presidential ballot that counts -- assuming that the Democratic party primaries go as expected today. I might have to choose between Hillary and Obama. Since neither lines up more directly than the other with my politics, I'll probably end up choosing based solely on electability.
For now, I think Obama is more electable. He seems to wear well with the electorate (the more time he can spend with a group of voters, the more his poll numbers go up) and he doesn't inspire the rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth opposition that Hillary does. It annoys me greatly that the latter is a concern but I'm nervous about running Hillary. I really, really, really don't want another round of Republican presidents, their Supreme Court nominees, their judges, their handling of the economy, their profligate spending and graft, or their flavor of foreign policy.
Happily the Democrats have an amazing wealth of talent. I'd have preferred to vote closer to my morals and had the chance to vote for Kucinich but he has withdrawn. I think Obama would make an excellent Democratic president so, as much as it annoys me that I have to consider the unreasoning and unrelenting hate of the talk radio/right winger branch of the opposition in my vote, it isn't as if I'm having to choose someone I have serious reservations about.
I know a lot of people said they were turned off by the way the two campaigns went at each others' throats in South Carolina but I'm one of those voters who wants to see some toughness in a candidate. I don't ever want to send out a candidate against the Republican machine who refuses to fight or correct gross mischaracterizations. I *liked* seeing Obama stand up for himself. He challenged the much liked former president when he got it wrong. I don't want another guy who will stand for president rather than run. I don't want another Swiftboat election.
I'm still livid at Bill Clinton for injecting race as an issue -- and incredibly disappointed in him -- but I'm glad Obama got the chance to show me the stuff he's made of as a candidate.
For the first time since I started voting at age 18, I might cast a presidential ballot that counts -- assuming that the Democratic party primaries go as expected today. I might have to choose between Hillary and Obama. Since neither lines up more directly than the other with my politics, I'll probably end up choosing based solely on electability.
For now, I think Obama is more electable. He seems to wear well with the electorate (the more time he can spend with a group of voters, the more his poll numbers go up) and he doesn't inspire the rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth opposition that Hillary does. It annoys me greatly that the latter is a concern but I'm nervous about running Hillary. I really, really, really don't want another round of Republican presidents, their Supreme Court nominees, their judges, their handling of the economy, their profligate spending and graft, or their flavor of foreign policy.
Happily the Democrats have an amazing wealth of talent. I'd have preferred to vote closer to my morals and had the chance to vote for Kucinich but he has withdrawn. I think Obama would make an excellent Democratic president so, as much as it annoys me that I have to consider the unreasoning and unrelenting hate of the talk radio/right winger branch of the opposition in my vote, it isn't as if I'm having to choose someone I have serious reservations about.
I know a lot of people said they were turned off by the way the two campaigns went at each others' throats in South Carolina but I'm one of those voters who wants to see some toughness in a candidate. I don't ever want to send out a candidate against the Republican machine who refuses to fight or correct gross mischaracterizations. I *liked* seeing Obama stand up for himself. He challenged the much liked former president when he got it wrong. I don't want another guy who will stand for president rather than run. I don't want another Swiftboat election.
I'm still livid at Bill Clinton for injecting race as an issue -- and incredibly disappointed in him -- but I'm glad Obama got the chance to show me the stuff he's made of as a candidate.
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Or he just screwed up. ;-)
I, too, would have preferred Kucinich or at least Edwards. Clinton and Obama are both far to conservative for my tastes, but I could vote for either one without feeling like I'm grossly violating my principles.
Of the two, I'd rather see Clinton stay in the Senate... and I agree with you on her electability. I fear Rethugs who might stay home if Obama was our candidate might move heaven and earth to get to the polls to vote against Clinton.
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I'm with you in that both Clinton and Obama are too conservative for me but neither pings a political distress alarm for me. It's just weird to consider the possibility that my vote might actually count for something. The candidates might have to come to town and ask for my vote. Huh.
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Hey... you interested in working on a campaign? I was just thinking I might be up for it. I worked on my now-state reps campaign and it was fun. (Who knew there were all those Democrats over in West U!)
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I'm never adverse to helping a campaign I believe in, though I won't ever do phone calls because I hate talking on the phone. What campaigns do you have in mind?
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After the candidates have been chosen, I figure I'd try to do the same for the regular election, regardless of who the democratic candidate is.
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**I've been voting against "George Bush" since I came of age politically.
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Listening to people talk about voting for Bush in 2004 because he was such a good leader made me feel like I was from Venus.
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I must have reread "The Marching Morons" a dozen times during that election cycle. It was so fitting.
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I miss Miz Molly.
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Yeah, we need 'em now.
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But I'm moving to Canada for real this time if my fellow contemporary yokels elect Huckabee (if he ends up being the Rep. candidate, that is).
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Our elections are nasty, aren't they? They don't reflect well on any of us: the candidates for behaving as they do, the media for failing to parse the campaigns and their attacks, or the electorate for falling for it. I keep my eye on the end - who it is I want choosing our bureaucracy heads and justices - and try to ignore a lot of what happens. I vote based on issues and the Republicans are so far from my beliefs that I have no hope of ever voting for one for president.
But yeah, the electoral process is very ugly.
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The weirdest thing has been watching my very militaristic, very Republican step-father (former Air Force officer) morph into a global warming expert and passionate advocate for conservation.
I haven't generally discuss politics with them, either, although I'm coming to have more in common with him than with her. That is extremely odd for me.
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I'm almost sorry he doesn't stand a chance of getting the Republican nomination because his being on their side of the ballot would mean we could run Jiminy Cricket and win. ;-):-)
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I wish I could agree with you but we're talking about a country that re-elected Bush so I have no faith that people would run from him.
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The only good thing about it is that he apparently even scares the rabid evangelicals (as opposed to the normal folks who happen to be evangelicals).
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In the meantime, I hope the Dems are storing up clips of these guys fighting to see who can stay in Iraq the longest.
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http://www.ronpaul2008.com/issues/life-and-liberty/
and know that this is not the candidate for me. My fundamental issue is *always* respect for other people's rights to control their bodies. Consenting adults should be in charge of themselves. A lot of other issues I consider important grow out of whether or not a person owns his own body. It's a fundamental philosophy as far as I'm concerned and it's essentially why I don't spend much time listening to Republicans.
I also disagree with his take on many economic issues. I support his stance to cut spending and to stop throwing away money, but we tend to define "throwing away" in different ways. Of all the Republicans in the debate I watched, he made the most sense on some issues. I find him a breath of fresh air in some ways -- his appeal to returning to our Constitution when it comes to declaring war is in line with mine -- but on too many issues that are non-negotiable to me his philosophy isn't something I can vote for.
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And I totally missed out on this Bill and racism issue, whatever it is, and I'm glad I did.
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I'm not adverse to either Clinton or Obama. I like both Dems equally and I'd really like to see both of them on the same ticket, too. As of tonight, it looks like McCain might have trouble getting the Repub base to the polls in November and I fear that Hillary might because some of those folks are frothy *insane.* :)
I'm going to be happy no matter who wins.
Missing Bill's idiocy was lucky. He only cheapened the dialog and did nobody a service.