How do you feel about the New Yorker? upd w/ Poll
Mon Jul 14, 2008 at 09:35:09 AM PDT
Then get to work.
Barack Obama Action Center
Donate to Barack (4.99 is the cost of an issue and 39.95 is a subscription if you'd like to donate those to the campaign).
0b4m4
Fri Jul 11, 2008 at 09:26:17 PM PDT
l33t tim3 for uz 0b4m4 fans.
Kos' Goal: Electoral Victory?
Thu Jul 10, 2008 at 08:21:03 AM PDT
Taken straight from the FAQs:
This is a Democratic blog, a partisan blog. One that recognizes that Democrats run from left to right on the ideological spectrum, and yet we're all still in this fight together. We happily embrace centrists like NDN's Simon Rosenberg and Howard Dean, conservatives like Martin Frost and Brad Carson, and liberals like John Kerry and Barack Obama. Liberal? Yeah, we're around here and we're proud. But it's not a liberal blog. It's a Democratic blog with one goal in mind: electoral victory. And since we haven't gotten any of that from the current crew, we're one more thing: a reform blog. The battle for the party is not an ideological battle. It's one between establishment and anti-establishment factions. And as I've said a million times, the status quo is untenable.
E Pluribus Unum
Tue Jun 03, 2008 at 08:33:06 AM PDT
Not quite 4 years ago, the country saw a leader emerge onto the national stage. A state senator, who had just scraped out a win against a tough primary field to take on Jack Ryan, spoke on the one night the MSM didn't cover the convention. And he said:
All I can do is tell you my story
Mon May 05, 2008 at 09:04:48 AM PDT
I'd appreciate you reading this all the way through - reccing and spreading.
I'm a pretty strong Obama supporter - have been since before the announcement. I donated (first time), phone-banked (not first time) and until this weekend - hadn't canvassed. IL didn't really need it and I missed out on both WI and OH for a variety of reasons. I didn't make it though and I felt bad. I've been working on NC voters the whole time - since I'm from there (and cast an absentee ballot there).
Hey, PA: Thanks
Wed Apr 23, 2008 at 07:03:57 AM PDT
By now, your mind is clean from all of the spin cycles we've seen. She lost a 20% lead, so he did better. She held on and has momentum. The mainstream media sucks (OK, that's not so much spin but truth). And that's a fun game to play sometimes. We had an election - now we can all play Wednesday morning quarterback. We can watch Hardball and Countdown like sports fans do SportsCenter and Baseball Tonight. But at the end of the day, we should all gather to say:
McCain is BREAKING Our Bank
Tue Apr 22, 2008 at 07:09:14 AM PDT
Oh yeah. I went there. While Barack and Hillary are finishing up PA today and Guam, Indiana and NC are in the next two weeks, it's time to start focusing on the Republican nominee.
Senator John Sydney McCain.
What makes him any worse than a normal Republican? Plenty, but today I'll focus on this.
BREAKING: "This fight goes on!"
Mon Apr 21, 2008 at 10:02:58 AM PDT
Tomorrow is the Pennsylvania primary and we appreciate their votes to help decide the Democratic nominee. I say Senator Clinton wins by 11.8 - 55.9-44.1 or so, as late deciders have historically gone for her.
But here's the real deal - the BREAKING news of it all - what do we do about her momentum? Sure, Barack's got a lead in NC and who knows what's going on in IN (with it's different polls). What about Guam? Is she going to try to swing this victory into an IN win and a Guam victory - pulling it close in NC?
...Just lost 1,000,000 supporters
Sat Apr 19, 2008 at 11:47:44 AM PDT
Holy crap - is this the way to win an election or what? Senator Clinton just lost 1,000,000 supporters in order to gain a few more votes in a state she was already going to win handily.
Clinton has been leading Obama by anywhere from 5-20 points over the last few weeks. Most people expect that the really close polls are outliers and that the margin of victory lies somewhere around 12 points (especially with the amount of undecideds and how they generally go for her in the last couple of days). (The only way this margin changes is if we call and donate, btw.)
Vetting Senator Clinton (+a few updates)
Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 08:00:21 AM PDT
I must admit that the junior Senator from Illinois is far nicer than I am. I am not a part of his campaign; however, I have (and will continue to) volunteer to support his candidacy. With that said, I hope to include as much vetting in this diary as I can about Senator Hillary Clinton. Suggestions welcomed.
Just to be clear - this was Senator Clinton's idea - during tonight's debate she said:
...there were so many different variations on the explanations that we heard. And it is something that I think deserves further exploration...
It is clear that, as leaders, we have a choice who we associate with and who we apparently give some kind of seal of approval to. ...
And so this is a legitimate area, as everything is when we run for office, for people to be exploring and trying to find answers.
Know who won the debate?
Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 07:09:17 PM PDT
John McCain.
Neo-conservatives. George W. Bush. Fox News.
Rep. Boehner, Sen. McConnell, Justice Roberts/Scalia/Alito.
Least Private Ballot Ever
Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 12:42:16 PM PDT
My first primary vote was in 2004 - John Kerry had sewn up the nomination by the time NC got to vote, so I voted for the person I thought had the best policies on GLBT folks.
My first presidential general election was for Kerry - I was there when the doors to the precinct opened and cast ballot 67. Later, I stood outside holding umbrellas when the rain came in the afternoon. That election was hard for me - everyone I voted for, including the one Republican (local state rep who opposed privatizing mental health in NC - a big issue to me), lost.
(My absentee ballot, mostly filled out):

Bitter is the wrong word
Sat Apr 12, 2008 at 02:17:21 PM PDT
Barack needs to come out and say, simply, "Aren't you pissed? Aren't you mad as hell and not taking it anymore?"
We have CEOs making millions per month with families unable to pull in enough for health insurance and prescriptions.
We have defense companies making billions while the actual soldiers have piss-poor conditions in Walter Reed and VA hospitals around the country.
When I said people were bitter - I'm sorry. Bitter isn't the right word. Angry, fed up, tired, struggling, pissed off - that's better.
Let's play Clinton Clue
Fri Apr 11, 2008 at 10:39:47 AM PDT
The past 4 months has felt, at times, like we've been playing games (especially compared to the real life issues that face most Americans).
I recounted weeks ago of how Senator Clinton was losing 28-14 (now 30-14) as though this was sports. But now let's turn to board games. First, I want to point out that this race looks a bit like a Monopoly game. Right now, it's down to Senator Obama and Senator Clinton - everyone else has gone bankrupt.
Obama owns the majority of the properties, has a ton of money and has houses on most of that property.
Clinton got to Boardwalk (NY/NJ) and Park Place (PA) first so she keeps hoping that he lands on that property to bankrupt him - but he has too much money. Meanwhile, her other properties are basically the Baltic/Mediterranean and he's wracking up money all over the place - landing on free parking, etc while she has, technically, gone bankrupt but is banking on the 200 dollars she gets from "Passing Go".

Actually, Hillary has this sewn up.
Tue Mar 25, 2008 at 09:13:18 AM PDT
Weeks ago, we found out that Hillary had said that this would be over by February 5. Since Barack Obama has come out ahead in delegates in almost every contest since then, it's hard to imagine why Hillary Clinton still feels the need to be in the race. Let's be honest - if the roles were switched and Barack Obama had lost 30-14 (contests), had fewer delegates, less votes in the popular vote, less money and she had won all over the country - the DNC and everyone would demand that he step back, for the sake of the party.
"A Brief For Whitey" -Why MSNBC needs to lose Buchanan (Updated)
Mon Mar 24, 2008 at 02:59:15 PM PDT
Note - I know that some of this has been brought up before, but obviously I don't think it's been dealt with.
In case you missed it:
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Trinity UCC senior minister for 30+ years, said things that were stupid and offensive to some. To others, especially those who watched the videos of the whole thing, these comments were (1) accurate, (2) sensical and (3) taken out of context.
Sen. Barack Obama, his parishioner and front-runner for the Democratic nomination, denounced the words but not the man. He gave a speech on race in America entitled, "A More Perfect Union," which talked openly and honestly about race - something not really done before.
Pat Buchanan, who has never been elected to anything and is even on the outs with the Republican leadership, is a commentator for MSNBC and regularly spouts arch-conservative ideas that almost certainly are representative of about 10% of the US population.
Feeling Hopeless?
Wed Mar 19, 2008 at 01:47:09 PM PDT
Start making calls.
Start emailing friends.
Use Facebook to add information to people's walls, inboxes, etc.
Use Myspace to post bulletins to get attention.
If you want your candidate to win - regardless of who it is - get to work. Personally, I've started engaging all of my NC folks (I'm from NC and live in IL at the moment).
For me, it's about getting people to engage in the speech about race. I have a BA in Race and Gender Studies and for the moment - that's the most important thing. As I've recounted, I told someone last week, who was complaining about Wright, that if Obama had to pick between winning the Presidency and pretending race didn't exist and talking about it, he'd talk about it.
Mustard and Relish
Tue Mar 18, 2008 at 08:22:38 AM PDT
When I was in High School, I competed in the American Legion oratorical contests. As a relatively good public speaker and writer - I loved it, for the most part. Each year, you had to write on some passage of the US Constitution and its importance. Each year, I wrote on the preamble to the Constitution.
I used to know it by heart, could recite it to anyone. And so, you can imagine my thrill when Senator Obama, in his major speech on race and American politics, entitled the speech, "A More Perfect Union." We MUST work for the general welfare of all of our citizens, even those that we took 300 years to fully recognize.
We do need this union to perfect itself, we need to deal with the hurt we face and have experienced through this country - because of gender/sex or race.