I think George Will was correct to watch Missouri on Super-Tuesday. Maybe this is a "homer" mentality, but Missouri showed more courage than either "liberal" bastions California and Massachusetts. Illinois and New York don't count, given the "favorite son/daughter" dynamic. (See "It Isn't Easy Being Purple").
I am wary though of seeming to bash Hillary too much. I just worry she'll just unite the Republicans in a stroke, while Obama won't. So to all the Hillary voters who read this blog, I respect the choice you made--if you went by the debates alone, it is hard to make a case that she should not get the nod, hands down. I just don't think that's the end of the story. Looks like she is in a pickle and no consensus from the talking heads about what her campaign strategy moving forward should be--and they're not disagreeing on the edges but on fundamental approaches. No matter what happens, that Obama momentum appears it is going to be hard to slow.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
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I don't know what an Obama-McCain battle would look like. Could be ugly; could inspire Americans to be their best selves.
My mental image of a Democratic convention where Hillary gets the nomination is of a sailboat at sea, where all the wind gets sucked out of the sails and we are becalmed. There is so much energy coming from Obama supporters - "Yes, we can" - and such a feeling of plodding earnestness with Hillary's campaign.
The young, I feel, would desert the field if Obama doesn't prevail. And, as you say, the Hillary-haters on all sides would come out of the woodwork, and feel free to give vent to all their worst inclinations.
I like Obama's theme that there comes a time for each generation to rise and take hold and turn the country in a new direction. So it was with FDR and JFK and the people of those eras responded as called upon. The positive response is not a given of course, but it will be fascinating to watch and see what happens in the next few months. Gobama!
Looks like McCain v. Obama might be ugly--interesting piece in today's NYTimes that they don't like each other. In 2006, McCain wrote an open letter to Obama that was very snarky and mean-spirited. He said he could see why a freshman senator would want to hijack an issue over ethics that his party was exploiting, but went on to "forgive" Obama for his earlier "disingenuousness" on the issue. What a guy. Straight talk indeed.
Enquiring minds want to know: what did you make of Texas, Ohio, et al?
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