One more vote for Obama
By MICHAEL HALEY
October 28th, 2009
September 23rd, 2009
August 31st, 2009
August 20th, 2009
Recently I was looking at all the comments after an article on Obama’s tax plan, and noting how over the top the Republican commenters were about Obama. I thought of writing something sarcastic, like "Obama is going to use his Marxist social engineering policies to support domestic terrorism through an oppressive tax code on teeny tiny business owners while promoting both Muslim terrorism and black liberation theology, thereby installing Bill Ayers as the Secretary of Defense yada yada yada...."
But then I realized, it was not that much different from what I was actually reading. Do Republicans really believe this tripe? The Republicans have become a self parody, and their "technique" of exaggerated or outright character assassination of their opponent, in this case Obama, has reached such a low in this campaign that I don’t think it is working anymore.
Nobody but themselves are suckering for this stuff any more. I know that they have lost all the moderate Republicans like myself and Colin Powell. I hope they can find their way back. I can’t even make up stuff worse than what they are saying if I try.
So against that backdrop I have tried to stay focused on policy issues, and was able to until about two weeks ago but the negativity spewing from the McCain camp has rendered any further evaluation impossible. I suppose that in the end it comes down to an emotional decision anyway.
For the first time in my life I was truly an undecided voter, which was very interesting to me and something that frankly I thought people lied about before now. Turns out, not so. It did give me a chance to be more objective than usual, and to evaluate policies. And on that basis Obama and McCain are about even for me, although I trust Obama that he is actually going to try to do most of what he is promising.
McCain has seemed to live up to his reputation of shooting from the hip, which gives you the feeling that he is just going to say whatever seems to poll well that day. Obama has been steadfast in most of his major positions throughout the primary to today. One example is universal health care, and though I have some fears that it may not produce the desired savings that its advocates claim it will, we have to do something. I also like McCain’s idea of working toward eliminating the employer tax subsidy on healthcare, it would be nice to do both. But when did McCain decide that, last week?
Despite what McCain’s supporters are saying, Obama’s income tax plan is overall a tax cut. That is a positive. He also has one of the brightest and most innovative economic advisors around in Austen Goolsby. And McCain has who, Phil Gramm? I don’t think so.
The most important reasons for me come down to two things, however. One is Obama’s incredible even temperament and remarkable leadership skills. This guy is as cool as a cucumber and thinks through what he is doing. He actually listens to people who disagree with him, which is one thing that the Bush White House didn’t even know was possible.
One of the biggest failings of the Bush administration has been its lack of flexibility, its inability to change horses when the one you are on has dropped dead. The way Bush held on to Rumsfeld when it was obvious he handled the war incompetently was a disaster.
The world is far too complex now to just grab an ideology, hold on and hope for the best. The extremes of both parties tend to do that, but the Bush Republicans take the cake. We desperately need someone who is thinking and awake as events unfold and takes action responsive to the facts on the ground, and not let ideology guide them. I sense that about Obama.
The other important issue is that we just need a change. The libertarian free market go to war everyone is a terrorist model of governance has run its course, and we need something new. It is not to say that all that is totally wrong, but we sure have seen the limits of it. It is a time for some balance and some new directions, and Obama certainly is that.
I am one more for Obama.
The goal of the story comments section at NapaValleyRegister.com is to have an open, thought-provoking, civil community forum for all issues.
What gets your comment posted?
• Staying on topic
• Keeping your comment to 300 words or less
• Avoiding name-calling
• Addressing your comments to the message rather than the messenger
What gets your comment deleted?
• Personal attacks
• Derogatory remarks
• Name-calling of any sort
• Going off-topic
• Hate speech
• Racially-insensitive comments
• Implying guilt of a subject in a crime story before there is a court verdict
• Posting e-mail addresses
• Posting comments of a commercial nature
• POSTING WITH ALL CAPITAL LETTERS
• Linking multiple comments together with "to be continued..." to get around the 300 word limit.
The fine print
- Comments are either approved or denied. We do not edit comments.
- You are welcome to modify and resubmit a denied comment.
- Comments may take several hours to be posted.
- Comments posted are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of NapaValleyRegister.com, its employees or its parent company.
- Do you have information on a story? Please go to our
virtual newsroom to send us a news tip.
- If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact
online@napanews.com or add a comment indicating you have an issue and our moderators will review the comment in question.
Hear Ye wrote on Oct 24, 2008 1:11 PM:
I wonder if Obama wins if the Republicans will change their technique next time around. This lie, smear, and distract strategy doesn't seem to be working so much anymore. "
Ruff Limblog wrote on Oct 24, 2008 4:44 PM:
You can be pretty slippery on tax issues, so come right out and say it - I Do/Do NOT support a middle class tax cut.
Let's cut the taxes of the 'little people' for a change, eh?
You KNOW you want to do it!!! You've already lost the last few Knights of Outer Wingnuttia, NB!
Set yourself free by sticking with tax cut ideology but aiming them at the consumer side for a change. Let's raise demand and watch things take off again.
An impoverished middle class upside down in their home mortgages with no spending money makes for a lot of 'Hard Candy Christmases', NB.
~Ruff "
misfit wrote on Oct 24, 2008 6:48 PM:
kevin wrote on Oct 24, 2008 7:16 PM:
(When's the last time a Democrat actually cut taxes? Kennedy?) "
napablogger wrote on Oct 24, 2008 9:01 PM:
Another example of the inflexibility and lack of leadership I am talking about above. "
napablogger wrote on Oct 24, 2008 10:11 PM:
I am ok with Obama's tax plan, but it is hard for me to give a yes or no answer to you.
If it were up to me I would increase taxes on everyone if, IF it went to reducing the deficit and the debt. I think that anyone who benefits from the system should have to pay at least something into it.
I may seem slippery because I think there is some truth to both sides positions.
A small increase on the wealthy of 4.5% is not going to hurt them or the economy. Raising taxes in general can hurt the economy.
We have to deal with our debt or we are going to have another financial blow up, a big one.
Obama's middle class cut will stimulate the economy in the short term, so it is good. It won't solve the diminishing wages problem however, and the deficits continue.
MCCain's plan is worse, he will increase the deficit even more than Obama with his health care plan's tax breaks, even though I think taxing health care is a step in the right direction.
Things are complicated. But as I have indicated, overall I have decided to support Obama. "
napablogger wrote on Oct 24, 2008 10:15 PM:
They remind me of the way the Democrats went on about Bush's National Gaurd attendance record. "
Ruff Limblog wrote on Oct 25, 2008 10:43 AM:
I think the economic situation is actually going to be 'the driver' behind the reforms coming, some taxes are going up and some down.
I believe that Obama will attempt to get rightwing 'buy in' to reforms, but will use the enlarged Democratic majorities in the House and Senate to force reforms even if Republicans object, much the way Bush did.
I think a lot of sacred cows are going to be slaughtered, no matter if they have been branded 'R' or 'D' in the past.
I actually prefer regulated market solutions to government driven solutions.
For instance I believe that the government should not 'run' banks, but I believe that the government should use a combination of tax and regulation to re-separate investment banking from commercial banking.
The current financial flameout has been used by Bush-Paulsen-Obama-McCain to further giving the crooked investment bankers more access to commercial bank deposits than Phil Gramm did and nobody, so far, is talking about the separation that served the nation so well since the 1930s.
Taxcuts have their place. So do 'loopholes and tax increases' when it comes to putting our financial house in order.
Many people discuss past high marginal tax rates as inhibiting 'growth' but fail to recall that the deductions were many, and targeted towards investment in plant and equipment.
We have also seen that removing the 1/4% stock transaction tax has resulted in Wall Street Weasels taking ever larger risks for tiny percentages of 'paper profits'.
We have a lot to discuss in the next few years, NB, and I'd like to see a positive discussion ensue.
~Ruff "
steph wrote on Oct 25, 2008 1:05 PM:
bleackkkk!
Good riddance, GOP!
If Obama does a good job in his first term, I'm gettin' me one of those cool Obama tee-shirts and I'll vote for his second term. I hope I get to do that. "
kevin wrote on Oct 25, 2008 6:48 PM:
Fast forward to today and I have had great satisfaction in saying "I told you so" to the many Democrats who finally saw the "real" Bill during the recent campaign.
I predict I will be saying "I told you so" again regards B.O... "
napablogger wrote on Oct 25, 2008 10:29 PM:
Ruff, I agree, time for some thinking and complexity instead of fear mongering. Of course, that could apply to energy and global warming as well.
Kevin, we will see, Clinton was a grifter and I couldn't stand him, but he stayed out of the way of policy and had some good advisors, like Bentson, Rubin and yes Greenspan. "
hinnis wrote on Oct 26, 2008 7:34 AM:
misfit wrote on Oct 26, 2008 8:22 AM:
kevin wrote on Oct 26, 2008 1:33 PM:
I want nothing but the best for the country (that's why I support McCain). But I have also evaluated B.O.'s lack of qualifications and his inexperience and it is obvious to me that if he is elected, the country is in for some rough times ahead.
Even Biden admitted as much by his admission that there will be a "generated crisis" to challege B.O.'s lack of experience. It doesn't bode well.... "
Raven wrote on Oct 26, 2008 7:00 PM:
kevin wrote on Oct 27, 2008 5:04 AM:
Do we REALLY want to go through that again if we elect an inexperienced candidate?
And somehow, with all John's women, I don't think a philandering President would play very well today... "
Ruff Limblog wrote on Oct 28, 2008 1:42 PM:
George W. Bush by all accounts is honoring his marriage after an dissolute youth, yet has been a disaster at running the USA.
Clinton was never somebody I wanted to meet my female relatives, but did a great job with our economy.
I find it odd that you bring up John Dubya McCain's poor sexual history while failing to give Barack Obama credit for being a decent family man and father.
It's kinda schizophrenic moralizing about some folks you wish to promote without mentioning the less-than-stellar moral background of so many Republican hypocrites.
In any case, sex has less than nothing to do with bankrupting the country as Bush has done.
Can we quit peaking through the Clinton's bedroom windows yet?
Yes, We Can!
~Ruff "
Ruff Limblog wrote on Oct 28, 2008 1:48 PM:
Put in the Eisenhower tax rates until the deficit is paid to zero, then the Kennedy tax rates until the government is running in the black.
Then put in the Clinton tax rates and institute 'Pay-as-You-Go' with the sole exception that all taxes required to balance the budget come from those who make $1 million or more per year.
Or, the APT Tax which would do away with the need for the IRA and accomplish all of the above in jig time!
~Ruff "
post-it wrote on Oct 31, 2008 10:53 AM:
How do you make a contribution to reduce the debt?
Make your check payable to the Bureau of the Public Debt, and in the memo section, notate that it is a Gift to reduce the Debt Held by the Public. Mail your check to:
Attn Dept G
Bureau Of the Public Debt
P. O. Box 2188
Parkersburg, WV 26106-2188 "
post-it wrote on Oct 31, 2008 11:55 AM:
One more comment, if you do happen to go to the link on historical government debt, you will find that the deficit has never been "zero". Our country's first fiscal year shows a 75 million dollar debt. Doesn't sound like much, but of course that was 1791 dollars.
The debt trend has almost always has been up. In the last century it only went down in the 20's. Go figure. "
post-it wrote on Oct 31, 2008 12:29 PM:
Link to US Govt web site detailing federal debt thru our country's history:
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/histdebt/histdebt.htm
Of note:
While your hero Pres Clinton had a "Budget surplus", none of that was used to pay down the debt, public debt actually increased during his 8 years in office.
Neither candidate is promising any action on reducing public debt. Both candidates promise more spending. Fact of the matter is, no one can get elected telling their constituents they have to tighten their belts and the government will not be able to provide them with more in the future. Nor can anyone stay in office if they in fact do reduce the largess of the teat the public suckles from. "
Ruff Limblog wrote on Oct 31, 2008 12:45 PM:
Also the words debt and deficit are really slippery words unless they are considered in terms of a 'National Balance Sheet' which has deteriorated badly under the last eight years of mismanagement.
~Ruff "
misfit wrote on Oct 31, 2008 6:08 PM:
glenroy wrote on Nov 3, 2008 5:10 PM:
glenroy wrote on Nov 3, 2008 5:33 PM: