"Finally, I suspect that it is by entering that deep place inside us where our secrets are kept that we come perhaps closer than we do anywhere else to the One who, whether we realize it or not, is of all our secrets the most telling and the most precious we have to tell." Frederick Buechner
Come in! Come in!
"If you are a dreamer, come in. If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, a Hope-er, a Pray-er, a Magic Bean buyer; if you're a pretender, come sit by my fire. For we have some flax-golden tales to spin. Come in! Come in!" -- Shel Silverstein
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Who won? "That one!"
Well, the polls have been tabulated and the pundits are having their say, and they say that Obama won.
Okay. I'll take that. But, you know, I really, really want the next one to be a more formal debate. You know? Like Presidential candidates.
Here's a good perspective (well, if you're a Democrat, I suppose) from Huffington Post.
While you're over there, check out Gwen Ifill's interview on Meet The Press where she talks about her frustration with Sarah Palin at last Tuesday's VEEP debate.
"She didn't ignore me," says Ifill, "she blew me off."
Arianna Huffington
Posted October 8, 2008 01:19 AM (EST)
The Winner of Debate II? "That One"
In Debate II, John McCain twice laid out the criteria for how the American people should judge the candidates: In tough times, we need someone with a steady hand on the tiller.
By that measure, Obama was the clear winner. He was centered where McCain was scattered. Forceful where McCain was forced. Presidential where McCain was petulant.
In the first debate, McCain wouldn't look at Obama. In this one, he referred to him as "that one." The contempt was palpable, and unpalatable.
In the run-up to the debate, McCain lowered himself into the sewer in a desperate attempt to portray Obama as dangerous, untrustworthy, a risk too big to take.
But Obama's measured reasonableness totally countered that caricature. You could fault Obama for not being particularly inspiring, but you could not miss the rock steady competence he exuded -- authoritatively delivering substantive answers to questions on the economy, health care, taxes, and foreign policy.
He scored with his history lesson, reminding voters of the economy the Republicans inherited, and how they squandered that inheritance.
He scored with his reminder of how much the war in Iraq is costing America and the enormous strain that puts on our economy -- as well as our national security.
He scored when he declared that affordable health care is a "right" of every American and not, as McCain put it, a "responsibility" of... he actually didn't specify who.
And Obama scored big when he gave voice to the vast gulf between the two candidates' -- and the two parties' -- position on the role of government in our lives, invoking JFK's commitment to put a man on the moon in 10 years as an example of what can be done in fueling a new alternative energy-based economy, and pointing out how government investment played a key role in developing the tech advances that have driven our economy for the last two decades.
McCain, like Palin last week, couldn't decide if government is the enemy or the deep-pocketed benefactor that is going to buy up all the bad mortgages in America.
Is "a government-bought house on every lot" the 21st century equivalent of "a chicken in every pot"?
McCain also provided the debate's strangest moments, twice chiding Obama for backing an "overhead projector" in a planetarium, and raising the idea of "gold-plated Cadillac" insurance policies that pay for hair transplants. Huh?
McCain also told us he knows how to fix the economy, knows how to win wars, and knows how to capture bin Laden. Is there a reason he's keeping all these a secret?
The debate ended on a question Tom Brokaw described as having "a certain Zen-like quality": "What don't you know and how will you learn it?"
Both men used the opportunity to pivot from the Moment of Zen into impassioned but familiar stump speech stories about single moms (Obama) and absent fathers (McCain), about the American Dream (Obama) and the country put first (McCain), about the need for fundamental change (Obama) and the desire for another opportunity to serve (McCain).
At the end of the debate, Brokaw asked McCain to get out of the way of his Teleprompter, so he could sign off.
Brokaw might as well have been speaking on behalf of the future: Senator McCain can you please get out of the way so we can get on with it?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
CafePress.com already has "That One" buttons, T-shirts and bumper stickers up on their website.
Since the debate was supposed to be about the economy, more of the questions should have been about the economy instead of a re-hash of some of the foreign policy questions from the firsy debate. I wasn't that impressed with some of the question Tom Brokaw asked, especially the last one. (It sounded as though he was chaneling Jon Stewart who end the Daily Show with "Your moment of Zen.")
I wish Obama would show a little more emotion and passion but his coolness is his persona. As one reporter said last night when talking about Obama's calmness, "We may have our first Vulcan president." (I wonder if That One can do Spock's hand greeting. Remember too that Spock was only half Vulcan.)
I loved James Carville's comment after the debate last night. He said, "You can call the dogs in, wet the fire, and leave the house. The hunt's over."
LOVE IT!! LOVE IT!!!
Post a Comment