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In the movie "The Sting" part of an elaborate con game involves a staged horse race with a  pre-determined outcome.  The 'mark', a wealthy gangster is  tricked into placing a huge bet "to win" on the horse  that  will  actually come in second.
Lately,  it's been hard not to feel like as  Democrats we are being conned into betting on a non-existant  horse race that the media keeps telling us is a sure thing.
The pundits are loving the Clinton - Obama horse race.  Watching CNN, MSNBC or even the  un-reality show that is Fox News,  you  would think the  contest for the Democratic Presidential nomination  was effectively over. All that is left is a super Tuesday coin toss between  Hillary or  Barak.
There is a two horse race going on.  But it is a race to see who can  spread the most  horse dung  out for  Democratic primary voters and call it  "change".
Now  dont get me wrong, I like  Hillary Clinton. I think she is  brilliant.  But to say  she is the candidate of change is like buying a Hummer to combat global warming.  Senator Clinton is the very embodiment of "establishment". A well-intentioned and accomplished  establishment. But  establishment never the less.
I will also confess to liking  Barak Obama as well.  He was my State Senator when I lived in Illinois, and I was thrilled when he was elected to the U.S. Senate.  But to be honest, I keep  wating for Senator Obama say what  he would actually  DO if elected.  His speeches are stirring, uplifting and almost completely  devoid of details.
I come away from  listening to Senator Obama inspired, but no better informed  than I was before.  After nearly eight years of  "we're making progress", and "doing hard work",  I find Obama's generalities, stirring though they may be,  more that a little disturbing.
I guess as a voter I need more than just  "trust me, I am ready  from day one", or  "trust me,  I stand for change."
The challenges  facing the next  President of the United States will be massive.  The GOP, slow to come to  terms with reality, is still far too invested in their collective denial of the complete failure of the Bush Presidency,  to allow for real bipartisan cooperation.  
So for any real change to take place,  we will need to nominate someone who not only can win the White House, but will have big enough coat tails  to give the next adminstration a filibuster proof  majority  in both houses of Congress.
Meanwhile, surrogates of  Hillary Clinton  try to quietly suggest  support for Obama makes you opposed to a woman President, and surrogates of Barak Obama try to gently  assert that support for Clinton makes you uncomfortable with an African American President.
What I want to know is who is going to repair the damage of the last  7 plus years.  Who is going to address the impending bankruptcy of our nation due to the costs of health care?  Who is going stop writing  checks  from an overdrawn account and then asking countries with very different agendas than ours,  to  lend us money to cover the debt?
Guess what?  I don't just want "change" I want  competence.  I don't just want someone with experience,  I want someone  with courage.  I don't just want a nominee  with  ambition,  I want one with vision.
I don't just want to win,  I want all of us  to move  forward.
I don't care  what  demographic a candidate can claim to be "connected to".  I just want a President who is connected to  reality.  I want a President who can address the root causes  of our problems, not just  try to affix blame for them.
And I really don't care  how you  voted on, felt about  or  expressed yourself regarding the war in Iraq back in 2003.  I just care about how you will END this war in 2008, not 2010, 2012 or 2020.  
I want to watch a State of the Union Address and  feel proud  of our democracy, engaged in our Republic's national debate  and confident in my President's committment  to preserve, protect and defend our nation, our laws  and our hopes and dreams. 
I have  tremendous  respect for both Senators Clinton and Obama.  But  I honesty don't see either of them able to look past their desire to  become President, and clearly  articulate  what  they would  hope to  achieve  AS President. 
For the last 3 years, I have been listening to  all of those  who would  be our next President.  I have  read their websites. Heard their  stump speeches,  and even attended their rallies.    The only candidate who was been able  to answer my question  "What will you do to fix  my country?",  was John Edwards.
We cannot  afford  to  get stung betting on a false horse race.  There is simply too much at stake. 
On Tuesday, February 5th  I had hoped to vote for the future, I had hoped to vote for solutions, I had hoped to vote for possibilties, not just  probabilities. 
I had hoped to vote for John Edwards.   
That is not going be case next Tuedsday.  John Edwards has withdrawn from the race saying it was time for him to "step aside and let history blaze its path."
I honestly don't know who I am going to vote for now.  I know friends of mine who are very passionate about Barak Obama, say the natural alternative for an Edwards voter is Obama.   I am not so sure.
Part of me worries that  the Democratic Party may have just handed the White House to  John McCain
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Monday, January 21, 2008
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Parting thoughts on the Iowa Caucus...
"Oh, there's nothing halfway about the Iowa way to treat you,
When we treat you which we may not do at all.
There's an Iowa kind of special chip-on-the-shoulder attitude.
We've never been without. That we recall.
We can be cold As our falling thermometers in December
If you ask about our weather in July.
And we're so by God stubborn We could stand touchin' noses
For a week at a time And never see eye-to-eye."
- "Iowa Stubborn" From "The Music Man"
The overall importance of the Iowa Caucus is rightly a matter of some debate. After all, fewer people voted in Iowa in total than live in city of San Francisco. Iowa in general could hardly be considered a demographic representation of , well anything besides mainly white anglo-saxons. The media frenzy that decends on the Hawkeye state every four years not withstanding, the overall importance of who won or who lost in Iowa is largely symbolic.
Having grown up on the other side of the Mississippi River in Wisconsin, I have heard all manner of Iowa jokes and puns. Yet once every four years Iowa in all its Hawkeye wierdness takes center stage in our nation's poltical drama. My Grandmother on my mother's side was a native Iowan, her youngest brother my Great Uncle, still is. Iowans tend to be a slightly cantankerous bunch. If I was running for President, my Uncle Dale, a retired hog farmer from Waterloo, Iowa would frankly be the last voter I would want have to try to win over.
I recall once visiting his farm when I was a young boy. We were going to ride one of his horses. His daughter was having little luck getting the horse to raise his head up out of the grass so the bit and bridle could be put on. Dale, walking by saw this, promptly walked over to the horse and kicked it sqaure in the jaw. the horse jerked its head up and became very cooperative after that. Dale's only explanation was "You hafta get their attention first."
By giving the first primary vote victory of the 2008 election to Barak Obama and second place to John Edwards, Iowa collectively kicked two American politicians square in jaw. With the clear purpose of getting their attention.
The first was George W. Bush. The lopsided turn out of Democrats versus Republicans, including the number of Republicans who changed ranks and caucused for a Democrat is something that, were I a GOP strategist, would have me awake nights with worry. Mike Huckabee can say he "won" Iowa all he wants. But the fact is he simply was the Republican who lost the least. Iowa clearly told the GOP, the next President of the United States will not be from your party, you folks are done for a while.
The second person to get an Iowa footprint to the jaw was Hillary Clinton, and by proxy her husband, former President Bill Clinton. To a certain extent Iowa sent a kick through the national leadership of the Democratic Party. The word "change" is in many ways almost a cliche' in poltics. But with one swift kick, Iowa let it be known that just becuase the next President isn't going be a Republican, it doesn't mean it's going be just any Democrat.
Iowa clearly articulated what is exptected of the next President; Ending the war, sooner rather than later, the beginings of universal heath coverage next year, rather than 4 years from now. Addressing the global climate change crisis now not ten years from now. The recognition that there IS a difference between Free Trade and Fair Trade.
I have come away this week with a new found respect for those cantankerous Iowa voters. The American political horse needed a good swift kick to let it know that 2008 will be a year of change. For the Democrats, you can't run for President, because you think it's your turn. For the Republicans, you can't expect not to be held accountable for mess your party has made over the last 8 years.
But most of all, for both parties you will not be able to ignore the will of the American People, because Iowa has clearly shown the rest of the nation, a great way to get your attention.
When we treat you which we may not do at all.
There's an Iowa kind of special chip-on-the-shoulder attitude.
We've never been without. That we recall.
We can be cold As our falling thermometers in December
If you ask about our weather in July.
And we're so by God stubborn We could stand touchin' noses
For a week at a time And never see eye-to-eye."
- "Iowa Stubborn" From "The Music Man"
The overall importance of the Iowa Caucus is rightly a matter of some debate. After all, fewer people voted in Iowa in total than live in city of San Francisco. Iowa in general could hardly be considered a demographic representation of , well anything besides mainly white anglo-saxons. The media frenzy that decends on the Hawkeye state every four years not withstanding, the overall importance of who won or who lost in Iowa is largely symbolic.
Having grown up on the other side of the Mississippi River in Wisconsin, I have heard all manner of Iowa jokes and puns. Yet once every four years Iowa in all its Hawkeye wierdness takes center stage in our nation's poltical drama. My Grandmother on my mother's side was a native Iowan, her youngest brother my Great Uncle, still is. Iowans tend to be a slightly cantankerous bunch. If I was running for President, my Uncle Dale, a retired hog farmer from Waterloo, Iowa would frankly be the last voter I would want have to try to win over.
I recall once visiting his farm when I was a young boy. We were going to ride one of his horses. His daughter was having little luck getting the horse to raise his head up out of the grass so the bit and bridle could be put on. Dale, walking by saw this, promptly walked over to the horse and kicked it sqaure in the jaw. the horse jerked its head up and became very cooperative after that. Dale's only explanation was "You hafta get their attention first."
By giving the first primary vote victory of the 2008 election to Barak Obama and second place to John Edwards, Iowa collectively kicked two American politicians square in jaw. With the clear purpose of getting their attention.
The first was George W. Bush. The lopsided turn out of Democrats versus Republicans, including the number of Republicans who changed ranks and caucused for a Democrat is something that, were I a GOP strategist, would have me awake nights with worry. Mike Huckabee can say he "won" Iowa all he wants. But the fact is he simply was the Republican who lost the least. Iowa clearly told the GOP, the next President of the United States will not be from your party, you folks are done for a while.
The second person to get an Iowa footprint to the jaw was Hillary Clinton, and by proxy her husband, former President Bill Clinton. To a certain extent Iowa sent a kick through the national leadership of the Democratic Party. The word "change" is in many ways almost a cliche' in poltics. But with one swift kick, Iowa let it be known that just becuase the next President isn't going be a Republican, it doesn't mean it's going be just any Democrat.
Iowa clearly articulated what is exptected of the next President; Ending the war, sooner rather than later, the beginings of universal heath coverage next year, rather than 4 years from now. Addressing the global climate change crisis now not ten years from now. The recognition that there IS a difference between Free Trade and Fair Trade.
I have come away this week with a new found respect for those cantankerous Iowa voters. The American political horse needed a good swift kick to let it know that 2008 will be a year of change. For the Democrats, you can't run for President, because you think it's your turn. For the Republicans, you can't expect not to be held accountable for mess your party has made over the last 8 years.
But most of all, for both parties you will not be able to ignore the will of the American People, because Iowa has clearly shown the rest of the nation, a great way to get your attention.
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