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Posts Tagged ‘republican’

On the Recent Unemployment Numbers

Republican Congressman from Michigan, Thaddeus McCotter, gives a powerful speech on the recent unemployment numbers and what they mean to our society. As you listen to him think about the following questions:

  • What can each of us do to release our own entrepreneurial spirit in these troubled times?
  • What must we demand of our government as unemployment rises and economic news worsens?
  • Who do we want to be at the other end of this economic downturns?

The Bobby Kennedy Quote in the Speech:

“Even as the drive toward bigness [and] concentration . . . has reached heights never before dreamt of in the past, we have come suddenly to realize how heavy a price we have paid . . . in loss of the values of nature and community and local diversity that found their nurture in the smaller towns and rural areas of America. And we can see, as we enter the last third of the twentieth century, that the price has been too high. Bigness, loss of community, organizations and society grown far past the human scale-these are the besetting sins of the twentieth century, which threaten to paralyze our very capacity to act, or our ability to preserve the traditions and values of our past in a time of swirling, constant change. . . . 
 

Therefore, the time has come . . . when we must actively fight bigness and over concentration, and seek instead to bring the engines of government, of technology, of the economy, fully under the control of our citizens, to recapture and reinforce the values of a more human time and place . . . 
 

It is not more bigness that should be our goal. We must attempt, rather, to bring people back to . . . the warmth of community, to the worth of individual effort and responsibility . . . and of individuals working together as a community, to better their lives and their children’s future . . . if this country is to move ahead

. . . it will not be by making everything bigger, not by piling all our people further on top of one another in huge cities, not by reducing the citizen to the role of passive consumer and recipient of the official vision, the official product.” 

Doing Whatever it Takes: How the Presidential Campaigns Have Blown an Opportunity

September 17, 2008 6 comments

 

Barack Obama “Honor” Ad

John McCain “Education” Ad

 
Barack Obama and John McCain approve of their respective ads and their campaigns have spent money to produce and air them in keys states. To me, these ads demonstrate what has become the motto of this campaign season “do whatever it takes.” In Obama’s ad he uses journalistic publications to refute unfair claims made by the McCain campaign. The paradox here is that Barack Obama is using a negative campaign ad to combat a flury of negative campaign ads from John McCain’s campaign. McCain’s negative ad misrepresents an Obama policy position. Both of these ads take this election cycle to a new low as Kven Karl Rove observes in the video below.

In sitting down to write this I feel like every other political observer who says “stop the negative attack ads” because they are eating away at the essential fibers of our democracy. The bottom-line is that, as someone who has worked a number of campaigns, negative campaigning is effective in doing two things 1) solidifying a base 2) suppressing voter turnout. Both of these candidates are coming out swinging hoping to get their base in line, keep the other party’s people at home, and convince a few key swing voters to vote for them.

At the end of the day the negative tone of the campaign undermines the core messages of both candidates. John McCain is running as a maverick who will reach across party-lines to “shake up Washington.” Barack Obama is running a a post-partisan figure who doesn’t see people in terms of Democrat and Republican he sees people as Americans (also note that John McCain has also used this line). What is alarming to me in all of this is that it seems that, particularly the John McCain campaign, neither candidate cares that much about running a campaign with a focus on governing.

When I set out to complete a project I take a look at the desired outcomes. I do that by imagining what it will be like to have fulfilled all of my commitments. From there I work backwards to the present, outlining along the way each step that must be completed. The way that I see it, presidential campaigns should also function this way. Candidate should in a”place of success” having fulfilled all of their commitments at eight years as President and work backwards from there. My belief is that if campaigns were planned this way that they would not take on the vitriolic tenor that is currently the norm in presidential elections. Again, to restate my assertion, if campaigns worked backwards from what the candidate wanted to accomplish while in offce then campaigns would look 100% different. I believe that the negative tone of campaigns further reinforces partisan ideologies and identifications, which in turn leads people to feel alienated from one another when they put on their political hat. This idea is similar to what happens when a happy, loving, family sits down for a large family dinner and starts talking about politics. I’ve heard countless stories from friends about family dinners that have gone awry because of disagreements about politics. My opinion is that the reason for this phenomenon is the way in which we run our campaigns. The Democratic and Republican parties air ads that demonize the other side both during election seasons and during off-years. Organizations like MoveOn and the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth  have made people cynical about the process and have played off of emotions as opposed to policy. We use wedge issues like abortion, immigration, and gay marriage to play people against each other. Campaigns take on a “do whatever it takes” strategy and when they get elected they have to govern.

The problem with running campaigns this way is that it creates a more polarized electorate. Elected representatives are responsible to those who elect them and if the electorate is more polarized then it means that the representative will have to appeal to that base in order to get re-elected. This turns into a cycle of pandering and negativity that becomes difficult to break. This campaign season could have been the time where we asked people to put country over party. This could have been an election about issues, about qualifications, about who will do a better job governing, NOT a slug fest over who said what, when, and how.  Because of the tone the two presidential campaigns we have lost an opportunity to create a stronger, more vibrant, collaborative democracy. We will all hear over the coming 49 days that we need to put country before party and we will also hear a lot of hateful and negative accusations being thrown across both sides of the aisle. One thing though is clear to me: slogans and promises of America first are hollow because you need to back up your words with actions. Neither candidate is doing what it takes to truly put country overy party. 

Maybe if the two candidates had truly laid out a comprehensive strategy for governing both would have seen the impact that their campaigns can have on the political system. While we don’t know who will be sworn in on January, 20 2009 we do know that the political climate will not change much from the last eight years.

The next video is the full interview with Karl Rove. It really drives the point home.

Politics: What is this campaign about?

September 16, 2008 1 comment

*Note: These word clouds take all of the text from the candidate’s speeches and give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the text. You can tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes. Please visit Wordle if you are interested in learning more or creating your own.       

Barack Obama Convention Speech       

                
 

 

 

 

John McCain Convention Speech        

 

 

 

 

Joe Biden Convention Speech                                 

 

 

 

 

Sarah Palin Convention Speech

 

 

 

 

What do these word clouds say to you? What do they say about the folks who gave these speeches? What do these word clouds say about our political process? What do these word clouds say about our political parties?

Would you look good in army fatigues?

August 20, 2008 Leave a comment

Here is an excerpt from a townhall meeting that Senator McCain attended recently. He appears to be insinuating that he would not be opposed to reinstituting the draft. The idea is a little bit scary for someone who is under the age of 26. What do you think, are there circumstances where we reinstitute the draft?

Categories: Uncategorized

Nuance vs. Brute Force

August 19, 2008 Leave a comment

The fact that people respond to brute force and taglines over nuance, reason, and reflection MADDENS me. If we are to forward the conversation together we must be willing to engage in a dialogue that is informed by common commitments and a willingness to act in tandom. What we cannot do is stick to slogans, taglines, and talking points that have no meaning. Both Presidential campaigns are guilty of the latter, though there is a significant difference. This difference was highlighted at Rick Warren’s Faith Form last week.

Rick Warren’s Faith Forum: Does Evil Exist?
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