Campaign 2008: Biden Solid Strategic Choice

The strengths that former 2008 Democratic presidential aspirant Biden brings to an Obama White House run were manifested in Biden's initial effort after being selected, with salient points being raised in his Springfield, Illinois speech that need to be drummed home to the electorate between now and the November election.
By choosing Biden, Obama trumped the major point being relentlessly raised by John McCain and surrogates from the outset, that of the Arizonan's experience. Biden has been in the U.S. Senate most of his adult life after having been elected by the people of Delaware at the age of 29.
While McCain talks the game, Biden has delivered in the experience sweepstakes in a manner that the Arizonan has not, by retaining a touch with reality and growing in office while the Republican solon has dodged, swerved, and ultimately vegetated.
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Sitting On the Fence Is Creasing My Activist Butt


The topic below was originally posted in my blog, the Intrepid Liberal Journal, as well as the Independent Bloggers Alliance, the Peace Tree, Wild Wild Left and Worldwide Sawdust.
Warning, this is a long post. It's long because supporting a presidential candidate for me is deeply personal. It's not simply deciding which candidate I will pull the lever for in the privacy of a voting booth. Rather I approach the decision as an activist and ask myself: after weighing all the virtues and flaws of the declared candidates on whose behalf am I willing to devote my free time?
In my darker moments I'll ask myself, "Do any of these lying corporatist whores deserve my support? Why bother with any of them?" The ship has long sailed on my days of being a "true believer."
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Losing the Janes


The topic below was orignally posted in my blog, the Intrepid Liberal Journal.
Just prior to Election Day I did a post about my volunteer activism entitled, "Turning On the Janes and Phone Banking." I described my experience talking to a struggling single mother from Cuyahoga County, Ohio I called "Jane." Jane didn't want to vote due to frustration and cynicism. During our conversation Jane told me,
"I'm not waiting online all day like last time. Screwed up my whole day and my vote for Kerry didn't count anyway. It was stolen."
For good measure Jane added that I was,
"Wasting my time with these calls. It's fixed and the politicians never care about people like me."
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Reminiscing About the Future: Al Gore's Announcement Speech


The topic below was originally posted in my blog the Intrepid Liberal Journal.
Working through whom to support for president in 2008 has been cathartic for me. Typically I try candidates on for size by writing hypothetical speeches in their voice and occasionally post the results. I did this with Russ Feingold several months ago and liked how it felt but alas he isn't running. Recently I did the same for Barack Obama and enjoyed the challenge but it required writing in heavy religious overtones and felt uncomfortable. As I review the prospective field in the Democratic Party I neither see nor feel a president among Joe Biden, Wesley Clark, Hillary Clinton, Chris Dodd, John Edwards, John Kerry, Dennis Kucinich, Barack Obama, Bill Richardson and Tom Vilsak.
Each has merits and flaws. From my vantage point however, the right candidate must combine maturity, gravitas, experience, intellect, authenticity, foresight and desire to serve a cause bigger than themselves. Al Gore has flaws of his own but is best suited for the job. We don't need a nominee who sticks their finger to the wind and follows the politics of expediency. Now is also not the time to nominate a pretty face or sound bite machine with a glass jaw. The real question is will Gore run? So I decided to compose a hypothetical announcement speech in Gore's voice and try him on for size. Looking at 2008 I like how Gore fits.
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Inside John McCain's Brain (satire)


The diary below was originally posted on my blog the Intrepid Liberal Journal.
Anyone have the feeling John McCain's political star is declining but nobody has caught on yet? Certainly not the mainstream media or the Republican Party establishment. So I thought I would have some satirical fun and take a peak between his ears.
This is my time. I'll be damned if that crew of chickenhawks in the White House is going to screw it up for me. If I had my way, 4 million troops would land in Iraq tomorrow. What's the big deal? Bunch of sissies in that White House!I'm older than dirt and nobody is going to stop me. Who else in the Republican Party can pander to conservative nuts but still appeal to the vital center of bipartisanship?
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The Politics of War: Then and Now

They all told him the administration's policies were working and a premature withdrawal was tantamount to weakness. The war was of course Vietnam. LBJ was in the White House. And a Massachusetts congressman named Tip O'Neill was on a collision course with President Johnson after years of steadfast support.
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Brain Fingerprinting and Civil Liberties

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) otherwise known, as brain fingerprinting will revolutionize how governments worldwide administer security and criminal justice. The potential repercussions for privacy rights are devastating. In years to come governments as well as corporations will possess the tools to examine an individual's brain waves and attempt to determine if they're lying.
In effect, FMRIs are neural imaging of one's brain waves. The technology allows researchers to map the brain's neurons as they process thoughts, sensations, memories, and motor commands. Since debuting a decade ago, brain fingerprinting has facilitated transparency with the cognitive operations behind behavior such as feeling stimulated by music or recognizing a familiar face in a crowd.
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Senator MBNA Breaks Ranks on Alito

Whatever it is that Democratic leaders are planning behind the scenes, what they absolutely do not need are stories like this one, entitled "Democrat Says Alito Unlikely to Face Filibuster." (Or this one: "Biden: Alito Should Get Up-or-Down Vote.")
"My instinct is we should commit" to an up-or-down vote by the full Senate, said Biden, a member of the Judiciary Committee. "I think the probability is that will happen."I think that judgment won't be made ... until the bulk of us have had a chance to actually see him and speak to him," Biden told ABC's "This Week."
Why is this seemingly innocuous comment and the resultant headlines so irritating? Well, let's count the ways.
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