« Poll: More Voters Think McCain Would Raise Their Taxes | Home | Election Central Morning Roundup »

Jim Webb Cuts Ad For Obama, Strongly Defends Him On Guns, American "Greatness"

The Obama campaign goes up in Virginia with its first ad featuring Senator Jim Webb, who offers a strong and personal defense of Barack Obama on guns and assures Virginians that Obama will protect our country's "greatness."

We obtained the radio spot, and it's a strong one, starting off with an "important message to Virginia sportsmen and working families":

In the ad, Webb, a Vietnam vet and gun enthusiast, recounts his own gun history -- his dad gave him his first rifle when he was eight -- and goes on to explain that gun-love runs in his veins.

"Our family tradition of hunting and shooting are a way of life to me, and no government will ever take that away," Webb says. "I am an NRA member and I know that my friend Barack Obama will protect our second amendment rights. So don't be misled about Barack Obama...I trust him to protect our right to keep and bear arms."

The repetition of the word "trust" is interesting, as is Webb's description of Obama as "my friend." Webb's military and gun cred are being pressed into service to deflect attacks on Obama as a risky unknown, and Webb is personally vouching for his fellow Senator.

Indeed, guns are really a proxy for the ad's meta-message, which is that Obama can be trusted to honor patriotic values and to keep America strong and great. "I trust him to stand with me to protect American jobs and our greatness as a nation," Webb says. "He's a good fit for me."


78 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic

Personally, I hope if he shows up at my door, it is without a gun. Ok, if the secret service have them, but I like my Obama coming in peace.

user-pic

Well, I'm not crazy about guns myself, having never owned one and living in an urban area with handgun violence: San Francisco and the Bay Area. Someone was just killed in a BART station the other day in fact.

But, having said that, I'm sick to death of gun control and other cultural wedge issues. Our local handgun ban was a moronic waste of time.

Handgun bans and such are foolish, unconstitutional, and don't help anyone. Criminals still get s guns, and law abiding gun enthuiasts are just PO'ed end encouraged to vote Republican.

Gun control creates a cultural wedge issue, dividing urban and rural middle-class working people, weakening them both. The economic policies resulting from this divide and disempowerment of working people without a doubt creates more suffering and kills more people than guns.

It's no coincidence the biggest gun control advocates are smoke-screening Republican economics with Liberal social issues. Like Dianne Fienstein for example.

user-pic
Handgun bans and such are foolish, unconstitutional, and don't help anyone.
They're only "unconstitutional" under the recent decision of the RightWing Roberts Court. Previously there were many decisions that agreed with the idea that "the right to bear arms" was only in terms of the "well-regulated militia" mentioned in the amendment, and that the enactment of the National Guard Act of 1902 made it perfectly okay for municipalities to prevent local gun ownership, should they so choose.

As for "don't help anyone", do you have statistics on handgun-related crime/deaths before and after the imposition of local gun bans? Me, neither. But I would bet there was at least some decrease, relative to population/national trends.


Criminals still get guns,

Yes, a local handgun ban does not completely prevent criminals from obtaining firearms. It does make it harder, though. That's a good thing.

More importantly, it decreases the number of households with a gun in the house. And since the vast majority of gun deaths are NOT from Scary Strangers killing honest citizens, but from drunken spouses settling arguments by serving their partner hot lead, curious kids being fatally rewarded for playing with big boy toys, or suicides availing themselves of an instantaneous and easy way out, removing the handguns from this equation saves real, preventable, numbers of lives. JMO.

user-pic

I'm as progressive and peaceful as you can get but I have NO illusions about the troubles we are going thru.

The R wackos (as well as a new Army outfit designed to quell civilian "unrest" in country) have weapons. Prudence dictates at least some of us be prepared to man (and woman) the ramparts and come to the aid of our country.

It's long past time we abandoned the soft headed urban libs who have bleated about guns and killed our chances with the hooks and bullets crowd who are aligned with us on most other issues, particularly the environment and economics.

user-pic

Clever campaign. Like online bloggers for Obama, this is another area where MSM failed to acknowledge the impact.

MSM have utterly failed to recognize Obama efforts below the national radar and keep wondering why Obama is doing well in VA or MT or NC.

user-pic

Wow! Olbermann just tore McLame up and set the pieces on fire with one angry special comment about the crowd incitement -

This one will go in the Classics file

user-pic

I just saw that as well. That one may get him a call in the principles office. That was a tongue lashing. Whooooa.

Politico is reporting that McCain is basically cash strapped.
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14572.html

user-pic

Good news re McScum money (the only minus would be that probably means more Failin fascist rallies for free air time).

user-pic

Keith should chill. Let them look like irresponsible hot heads.

user-pic

Strongly disagree.

user-pic

Couldn't disagree more.

user-pic

Obama is winning out because he's the cool one in the economic crisis, etc. We don't need anyone adding any heat here. People don't need Keith shouting outrage. People already get it. McCain's poll numbers show they get it.

user-pic

But the key for Obama is that HE'S the calm guy. His surrogates don't need to be, and the commentators in the media that support his candidacy don't need to be.

McCain's problem is that HE is the one who constantly puts his anger on display for the country to see.

user-pic

O come on dude - talk about guilt by association -

Olbermann doesn't work for Obama. Olbermann has his own axe to grind.

And every right to grind it.

user-pic

Bluebell, if you're not outraged by what's going on over on their side, what the hell WOULD you consider worthy of outrage?

I hope I never have to depend on the likes of you to defend my country, her liberties, or my loved ones.

user-pic

I agree. I love Keith, but he is beginning to employ the verbal bullying of OReilly. I would like him to continue to say what he says, only in a calm tone of voice. Much more effective, I think.

user-pic

I agree. I love Keith, but he is beginning to turn me off with his theater. He is outraged, and with good reason, but his words lose their intended effect with me as he gets louder and louder. I would like him to continue to say what he says, only in a calm tone of voice. Much more effective, I think.

user-pic

Yeah, there are things that feel good, and things that help...

user-pic

And nature makes sure that they are often the same thing.

user-pic

Let Keith be Keith! He says the things like they're.

user-pic

Bullshit. Keith channels indignation appropriately, and there's nothing extraneous about his statements. He may be a maniac but he's OUR maniac.

user-pic

Agreed Tena.

But if I have to see or hear one more piece about the Bradley Effect!

Oy!

user-pic

Obama is leading McCain by about 30 points on the economy I think. Why would you want to change the subject?

user-pic

I didn't realize that Olbermann had enough power to change the MSM's entire narrative. I don't recall his other special comments having such an amazing effect.

user-pic

Awesome, Sen. Webb! Go, go, go!!

user-pic

This is a great ad for Virginia. I live in VA, and Webb is really popular, and so are guns (outside of the Northern VA). Excellent, excellent ad.

user-pic

Things we've gratefully heard less about this election cycle:

1) Guns

2) Abortion

3) All of those alleged to be "Second in Command" to Bin Laden, captured or killed continuously during the last few months of the 2004 election

Please feel free to add!

user-pic

Make no mistake, Palin is on the ticket solely because of the abortion issue.

user-pic

But I don't have to hear about it, it just is. And that saves me valuable brain and emotional space.

user-pic

Gay marriage! The Connecticut decision, three weeks before the election, and it sinks like a stone.

Miraculous!

user-pic

Obama is making this look so easy, election day is gonna be a like a nationwide Mardi Gras celebration.

user-pic

The media is really pushing the ACORN meme, though.

user-pic

You know, that doesn't phaze me cause I'm used to it.

The Republicans in Dallas Co. have been fighting ACORN every election for years. It's like a fixture - just part of the election process in Dallas Co.

They did this in '04, too, and it didn't get any traction.

user-pic

This is awesome. We can take Virginia. I'm not certain, but I think McCain has all but abandoned Northern VA. I guess it makes sense, that he would try to mobilize the southern half of the state, but it's surprising nonetheless.

I live pretty close to DC, in Maryland, and get all of the DC/Northern VA channels. For at least the past two weeks, I've seen nothing but Obama ads-- it's been Barack TV. Tonight during a Seinfeld rerun, for instance, I saw the ad attacking McCain's healthcare plan during one break, and the biography spot during another. Over the summer, on the other hand, any time I'd see an Obama ad, I'd see the "Celebrity" ad soon after, and vice-versa.

user-pic

This is a great ad.

They were just talking Bradley Effect on Olbermann and the fact is that in states with high numbers of African American citizens, the white voters are stronger for Obama than they are in states that don't have significant numbers of African Americans.

I find that interesting inasmuch as it goes counter to what I've heard forever about us racists in the south. The fact is that African Americans have been part of my daily life my whole life - it's weird to me to be someplace where I don't see much but white in the population - I start thinking: Whoa - too many white people here. ,

I feel so good about the fact that a lot of the snotty shit that has been thrown from some liberals at the south was totally unjustified. And that's especially true of any liberals who decided that in the south, racism is based on sex, whereas up north y'all are civilized and it's about money and jobs.

Yes that one liberal blogger who made that stupid statement in '06 ought to eat those words.

OK, my moment of schadenfreude is over and I return you to your regularly scheduled thread.


user-pic

Always appreciate this passion in you for Texas, Tena.

I lived for 10 years in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, in an area that was a mixture of Vietnamese, Dominicans, Haitians, African-Americans, a large gay population, many yuppies, Polish, and a lot of Irish hold-outs from white flight. That covers about a tenth of the population, I'm sure.

I got used to hearing my liberal friends from the suburbs say "Jeez, isn't that a pretty dangerous neighborhood?", without even thinking about what they were implying. No reflection, no consideration that it is the most diverse and largest neighborhood in the city and that in a city like Boston, neighborhoods can change block by block. Just pure reflex.

In that they were typical of many Americans, no matter their political stripe. Not all, not even a majority of Americans. Just the kind who fail to think very deeply about the issue of race.

user-pic

It's not just Texas. You know what did this to me? Two things: Katrina - when I realized what we had lost when it really sunk in me what has been going on in the south and how the liberal myth about us feeds it - and my incredible addiction to Dirty South hip hop. I started seeing the south through slightly different eyes - it's a love-hate thing with me, but some things that have been said by some liberal intelligentsia over the years about the south and the people who live there have been egregiously stupid shit from people who never spent more than 4 days in a southern state in their lives.

user-pic

Well, I hear you. And on Katrina, I've never heard it put quite that way, but I think you're right.

I'm from Boston, where it is just assumed by outsiders that if you're white and Irish, you must be racist. They know nothing of the subtleties of busing, for example, how it pitted extremely poor black folks against extremely poor white folks. A liberal experiment that failed. (Even as a liberal, even as a teenager, I knew it was a horrible idea, as did many others). When people started acting badly, the rest of the country feigned surprise. Not making excuses for the Irish tribe, but unless one's suburb had to undergo a major change that involved changing the entire look of your school overnight, can one really understand how badly planned this otherwise well-intentioned decision was?

What pisses me off are the same liberals you speak of looking down at the city from their high perches in the suburbs and simply saying, "Look at those animals on tv!" The city to them is nothing but a place to come make money and have meals in the "nice" sections."

Wow, what a rant!

Going to think good thoughts for awhile. Oh yeah, 14% in the NYT/CBS Poll!!!!!!

user-pic

WOW! your name...is so...powerful.
i'd do that but i'd strangle myself trying to say...well, maybe not: luckyhusseinsitsinback.
it's easy!!

user-pic

Anybody can play, dearest. LOL!

user-pic

I am so glad to hear this - I know A LOT of Dems in the Southeast who are Blue as Blue can be except that they are gun owners. Most, like me, will never be members of the NRA and don't like their misrepresentations.

user-pic

There are people all over the western US who feel just the same.

That's why I gave up on the idea of American getting rid of its guns any time soon - I just can't see it -

user-pic

I was born in Wichita Falls, TX. Been making my way north my whole life. TX->NE->IL->MI->MN. I hate guns (and am incompetent in their use) but my 12-year old son is an enthusiast. Got a perfect score on his gun safety class. It freaks me out but I'd rather openly support his interest and debate our respective POVs than suppress his interest and find a SNS under his mattress.

Racism in Minnesota is subtle. We're like 90% white; you have to be willing to explore to find diversity; we do have a vital GLBT community. It's pretty cool to live here but the racist undercurrent is strong; perhaps the combination of a huge white majority coupled with Minnesota's historical "isolationism" (we were the last state in the union to support the US entry into WWII; it was literally called the 'Isonlationist Movement') is what makes it less visible. Racism plays out more often as a silent discomfort (and unstated barrier to opportunity) than an overt display. Although we do got some rednecks for sure.

user-pic

There are rednecks everywhere. In fact, the most redneck place I've ever been is Tacoma, Washington.


user-pic

Yep. Many of my friends out West are hunters. It's part of the culture out here and nothing to be ridiculed, I think.

One thing that we can do to ensure that we--knock on wood--have a lasting progressive/Democratic/liberal majority is to remove the stigma that we are anti-gun. Doing so would make it much easier for rural western and southern Democrats to appeal to their constituents without sacrificing core values. Frankly, if the Republican party loses the rural west and the south, it's lights out.

And from an animal rights perspective, I'd wager that a typical deer or elk that gets shot by a hunter suffers far, far less than any steer or hog raised for slaughter.

user-pic

OT, but I'm currently watching PBS' Frontline Special "The Choice" about McCain and Obama. It's really good. If it hasn't shown in everyone's area yet, you should try and check it out.

user-pic

I'm watching it too. Anyone who missed it but is interested, you can watch the whole program online.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/choice2008/view/

user-pic

Yeah, you're right. They are talking about how Keating 5 killed McLame's VP prospect back then, and other details about Keating-Gate, which is all good.

user-pic

Good ad. Webb doesn't strike me as the sort who likes hitting the stump but I'm glad he cut this ad. He certainly has "street cred" on the issue. The guy had his aide carrying his pistol around the Hill, for chrissake.

user-pic

I love this comment from a blogger on NYT reacting to 14 point Obama lead in their latest pol:

Everyone should relax. It's still early - anything could happen. For example, in the remaining 3 weeks it could come to light that Obama is erratic in a crisis, or that he wants to teach kindergartners about sex before learning to read, or that he pals around with terrorists. Anything can happen. It's not over yet.

user-pic

I thought DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA et al. v. HELLER mooted this as an issue.

Anyway, props to Webb.

user-pic

Great ad. Now we need Mark Warner--who is far more popular here in Virginia than Webb--to do the same thing.

user-pic

i guess i'm stuck being the default clay pipe smoking gent, unless someone has a tip re which pic format to use. not getting change w/bmp, gif or jpg. no biggie. still like the new formats, and will figger it out as i go.
jets use up a lot of energy taking off and climbing, but the main part of the trip is just going. then things get knitted back up for the landing part: descending, steady approaches, 3-point touch-downs, nice smooth deceleration.
everyone should have a good, safe flight, enjoy the views, the thrills/excitement, the "new."
this election is already brand new.
as in historical. i'm so glad to be here now.

user-pic

Jon Stewart has just raped John McCain on his re-hashed recycles speech.

user-pic

Do you have a link? I'd like to see that. Thanks.

user-pic

And with Webb you know he looked Obama in the eye and got his word about the guns issue before Webb would ever consider endorsing him.

user-pic

I think this is good news :)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27172326/

user-pic

(But I believe that CO number is an outlier...)

user-pic

All these commenters with the same avatar are messing with my head.

user-pic

And I just realized that one of my heads is cut. Dang! Not fair, not right.

user-pic

Yeah, what happened to your middle head?

user-pic

Ari Fleischer - once a douchebag, always a douchebag.

He looks even more like a douchebag these days than he did when he was Press Secy.


user-pic

My sister dated him for about a minute in the late '90s in D.C. They ran in the same young Repug crowd. According to her, he wouldn't marry anyone who wasn't Jewish (we were raised Catholic).

Tha was appropos of nothing, really...LOL!

user-pic

I know he's Jewish - I think his parents are liberal Democrats.

user-pic

I really enjoyed hearing someone w/ horsepower PERSONALLY vouch for Obama. That was awesome! I'd like to hear a lot more of that type of advertising.

user-pic

Another 5 point net move on Intrade for Obama, he's broken 80, and McCain is about to crash through 20.

user-pic

http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/237110.php

The Dems need to push through a National Voter Registration Act by June 2009. They need to get in on the books ASAP for two reasons:

* to create the federal agency/administration to oversee this prior to the 2010 election

* to allow the Act to get through the Republican court challeges in time for 2010

I'm sure there already exist quality plans out there for National Voter Registration for National Elections, so perhaps someone can link to some. But this really needs to be taken out of the hands of the States for Elections involving Federal Offices. And tied into something as simple to verify as Social Security Numbers to generate Voter ID Cards or something along those lines.

It will force the Repubs to make a single challenge at a Federal Agency/Administration rather than play these games all over the country.


John

user-pic

I was wondering just how low a candidate of a major party could go in the national polls. It seems McCain may have hit that mark in the CBS poll today.

user-pic

To be, or not to be,,,,,,, able to post. That is the (ongoing) question.

Ohio is getting nastier by the hour, according to the local news this am on NPR. The Republican leading the charge,,,, again, is certainly not a credit to his species.

user-pic

Oh, be still my panting heart,,, Oh joys, oh raptures, oh delights unforeseen,,,, the long night of yearing is over. The comment went through.

Must be the overlapping effect of Joe Biden being scheduled to do some barn burning at the county fairgrounds this morning.

user-pic

Isn't it great to have suitable nodes?

I really expect fireworks and nastiness from McCain tonight. What they haven't figured out is that their base is smaller than Obama's and the middle has got much more important things on their minds than culture war stuff.

user-pic

OT/ To celebrate the renewed and invigorating ability to post, I will share this delight:

Why I'd Be a Better VP than Sarah Palin
(Or, The Bridge to New Zealand)
By Rosanne Cash

October 10, 2008
AP Images

I'd like to formally submit myself to replace Sarah Palin on the GOP ticket. I feel confident that John McCain will see that the very attributes he desired in his VP choice can be met, and even exceeded in some areas, by me. For your consideration, my big, fat résumé:

1. Focus on the Family


I am the mother of five children, just like Governor Palin. I have known the demands of managing a full-time career and motherhood at the same time. I have juggled a breast pump and a BlackBerry, and I know when to put the BlackBerry down. (To be perfectly honest, I did once send a text to the baby and tried to nurse my bass player. You learn from your mistakes.)

2. Reproductive Issues

I also believe that a teenager's pregnancy is a "private family matter." In fact, I believe that every woman's pregnancy is a "private, family matter." (I bet the GOP never thought of making that leap!)

3. Church and State

Like the Governor, I now also believe that my will is perfectly aligned with God's will. When Governor Palin said that it was God's will for the Alaska pipeline to be built and asked for people to pray for that to happen, I was really inspired by her confidence in the absolute, seamless integration of her will and God's will. I have begun practicing this kind of supreme confidence on a smaller scale, but I am sure that I can quickly move to national issues. Starting with the sartorial, I know that it is God's will that I have the entire Chanel collection for the fall season, including those adorable high-heeled booties that were all over the runway shows.

(A couple things I'm still having trouble with regarding the will of God: I knew it was God's will that I win the Grammy in 2007 for my last record, but Bob Dylan won. This is clearly the work of Satan, but shouldn't my will/God's will have been strong enough to override that? And this Alaska pipeline--if it is God's will to have the pipeline built, then why isn't it built already? On a related topic, I don't own a single piece of Chanel.)

4. Environment

Along with Governor Palin, I don't believe that humans cause climate change.

(Okay, that is a bold-faced lie, but I've been paying really close attention to the campaign stump speeches, and I feel certain I am allowed a generous allotment of bold-faced lies.)

5. Foreign policy

Here's where I really shine. Governor Palin got her first passport in 2007. I got my first passport in 1970, when the Governor was only 6 years old! Not only do I have a passport, I have actually been outside of the United States, dozens of times. I have had relationships and conversations with real foreigners, in their own countries, in restaurants, shops, flea markets, museums, nightclubs, spas, hotels, all modes of public transportation, and even in their own homes. My foreign policies are fair, inclusive and sensitive to cultural differences. I don't ask for English Breakfast tea when I'm in France. I never call foreign currency "funny money" (even though it does look funny.) I don't shout at people to help them better understand English and, finally, I act on God's will when in Paris by going to Chanel, and to all the great boutiques, which is just an extension of God's will, as you can surely extrapolate by the above explanation of my will/God's will.

I know Governor Palin has one distinct advantage in living so close to Russia, in that she can keep a close eye on nefarious activity across the Bering Strait, but I, too, live very close to a foreign country. Canada is less than 400 miles from my home in New York City, and you never know when it might become necessary to invade a sovereign nation that has not attacked us, as we learned the hard way. Not only that, I have a girlfriend in Austin, Texas, whom I'm going to ask to keep an eye on Mexico.

6. Legal Experience

My understanding of the law is extensive, but here are a couple of cogent points: a photographer who thought I had used his photograph of me without his permission sued me. (I absolutely didn't use the photo without permission. When McCain does his meticulous vetting and background checks on me, I will explain the whole story. It was all a big misunderstanding.)

More importantly, I renegotiated my contract with the Sony Corporation in 1987. That was huge. You should have seen my legal bills. I negotiated an all-new contract with Capitol Records in 1995 and that, too, was an exhausting, contentious, but ultimately lucrative enterprise. Entertainment law is a blood sport, people. (Speaking of blood sports, I have to give it up to the Governor on the hunting issue. I have never shot a wolf from a helicopter, but I have thrown my cat off the bed. Hundreds of times.)

7. Higher Education

Governor Palin went to five different colleges to get her BS in journalism, but none of the colleges had entry requirements, whereas I went to a university that required a trigonometry credit before they would admit me. I had to take it the summer before school started. I don't remember a frigging thing, but I got a B. The other disparities in education are too numerous to mention, but suffice to say that I bet she never met Lee Strasberg.

It is true that I have no background in constitutional law, but I have read the Constitution, except for the amendments that don't have anything to do with me, and I watched the entire John Adams mini-series on HBO. Twice.

8. Ethics

I really think this whole investigation into the firing of the top state law enforcement official in Alaska, who wouldn't fire the state trooper who was mean to the Governor's sister, is just overblown. I once fired my assistant for making a pass at my husband, so I can totally understand this! And I would have fired an assistant who made a pass at my sister's husband, too. I love my sisters. Governor Palin loves her sister. People need to get over it.

But speaking of family, I've also had my fill of no-good boyfriends to my daughters, and boy, do I sympathize with the Governor over this Levi fellow and his MySpace page, with the guns and the cursing. My husband once took a broken chair out into the street to chase away a no-good boyfriend of my oldest daughter, and we didn't see the likes of him anymore. I have a zero-tolerance policy for miscreant youth, and I know I could help the Governor sort out her obviously conflicted feelings about setting limits for teenagers, just for her own peace of mind.

9. Iraq

The Governor says she hasn't "focused" on the war in Iraq, but I think she's just joshing us. No person in an executive position in the government of the United States could be so lazy that they would not familiarize themselves with every angle of what is potentially the greatest American debacle since the nation was founded, including all the terminology, like "Bush Doctrine."

If she's not kidding, then I respectfully submit the hate mail I received in 2003, at the beginning of the war, which came after my press conference with Musicians United To Win Without War, as proof of my "focus."

10. Executive Ability

Governor Palin was the mayor of a real town of 5,000 people. I have never been mayor of anything, but I have performed for crowds bigger than the population of Wasilla, Alaska, and I can tell you it's no picnic getting the monitors just right, working with cranky and egotistical musicians, changing clothes in dirty dressing rooms and eating bad backstage food, handling the hecklers and technical problems during a show, and then getting on the bus to go somewhere else and do it all over again the next night. Also, my last record sold about the population of Wasilla times forty, and they all seemed to like it. But dealing with the public is really difficult and they all have opinions about you, which are usually all wrong, so I've developed a thick skin, another requirement for life as the VP. Lastly, and the importance of this cannot be over-emphasized, the guy's head on the tail of the Alaska Airlines planes looks like my dad.

11. Maverick personality

Finally, there is one subject in which I find I am even more conservative than the Governor, and that is in the area of neo-natal responsibility. The Governor was eight months pregnant and in Texas to give a speech, when her water broke. She reportedly made her speech and then traveled eleven hours, dripping amniotic fluid, bypassing Seattle and Anchorage (major cities with world-class hospitals) to travel to a small hospital in Wasilla that had no neo-natal intensive care unit, and gave birth there. Call me a wimp, call me insecure, but you had better also call me a maverick, because I would have said "Damn the schedule! Damn the speech and the airline ticket!" If this had been me, as soon as my water broke, I'd be at the closest hospital and that baby would have been born in Texas! Just like my mom!

In summation, I present myself to the GOP as a woman, and I repeat, woman, who has held a passport for thirty-eight years, a lip gloss-wearing soccer-volleyball-softball-gymnastics mom of five, who can carry a six-pack home to her husband like nobody's business, whose will is firmly aligned with God's will, a neo-natal conservative and legally savvy public figure, a border-watching, trigonometry-credited, breastfeeding, BlackBerry-tapping, cat-throwing maverick whose daughters are out of their teens, therefore immune to teenage pregnancy (although this is a private, family matter), and whose dad's head (or an eerie facsimile) adorns a state airline.

I could offer more to recommend me to the job of vice president, but one last special quality that I share with Governor Palin is the fact that I also have a husband who wants his state to secede from the Union. Ever since the 2000 election, my husband has been all for the secession of not only New York, but the island of Manhattan! And I have to tell you, if Sarah Palin becomes vice president of the United States, he says we have to personally secede from the whole country. So please, people, write me in on the ballot in November, or write me in New Zealand, where I'll be making my new home.

Rosanne Cash is a singer-songwriter, and even though she has met Presidents Bush and Clinton (who appeared to note her décolletage with great appreciation), the ambassador to the Czech Republic and George Stevens, who produces the Kennedy Center Honors awards show, she does not think her knowledge of world leaders should be held against her, because her experience in Washington is limited to three days during the Million Mom March.

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20081027/cash

user-pic

I saw frontline last night, what struck me from the show is that obama's campaign mirrors his biography, while mccain's campaign rejects his biography. He was a centrist, an independent, an anti christian right, anti torture, anti bush republican, but he rejects all that around 2004 and starts his pivot to the right and becomes the man we know today. Make no mistake about it, he wasn't this man in 2000. I think the 1st move towards the darkness was when he endorsed Bush in 2000. Thats the day his backbone started to leave him.

user-pic

I agree with you that the McCain of 2008 is not the same McCain of 2000 - a complete 180 degree reversal in character.

user-pic

guns. how good are they?

user-pic

I would suggest that this ad could be effective in a number of rural areas in other swing states. Just alter Senator Webb's introduction as "United States Senator Jim Webb" instead of "Virginia Senator Jim Webb" and switch the last line in the spot.

I might also add a mention of Senator Obama's support of our troops and veterans as another measure of his support of America's "greatness" since Senator Webb is respected for his military service and his subsequent work for American servicemen and women and their families.

user-pic

"Our family tradition of hunting and shooting are a way of life to me, and no government will ever take that away," Webb says. "I am an NRA member and I know that my friend Barack Obama will protect our second amendment rights. So don't be misled about Barack Obama...I trust him to protect our right to keep and bear arms."
_____

When will the Democratic Party get the guts to chalenge and refute the gun industroy-front NAR's lies against the Constitution, instead of backing a far-right estremist anti-Constitutionalism?

For those who buy into the lie that the Second Amendment protects an "individual" right -- and therefore implicitly protects a "right" to have one's own private anti-gov't militia: READ Art. I., Sec. 8., C. 15 and 16. The "Declaration of Indepedence" has never been law; those clauses make clear that there is no "right" of "revolution," or to "defend against" the rule of law.
.

user-pic

"Our family tradition of hunting and shooting are a way of life to me, and no government will ever take that away," Webb says. "I am an NRA member and I know that my friend Barack Obama will protect our second amendment rights. So don't be misled about Barack Obama...I trust him to protect our right to keep and bear arms."
_____

When will the Democratic Party get the guts to chalenge and refute the gun industroy-front NAR's lies against the Constitution, instead of backing a far-right estremist anti-Constitutionalism?

For those who buy into the lie that the Second Amendment protects an "individual" right -- and therefore implicitly protects a "right" to have one's own private anti-gov't militia: READ Art. I., Sec. 8., C. 15 and 16. The "Declaration of Indepedence" has never been law; those clauses make clear that there is no "right" of "revolution," or to "defend against" the rule of law.
.

Leave a comment

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address