The Real Reason Hillary Should Not Be Veep

Originally posted at Huffington Post.
With all the talk of Hillary Clinton becoming Barack Obama’s running mate, let’s pause for a moment to push out the brain fog. Although I find Senator Clinton worthy of respect and admiration for her finer qualities of character and for what she has been able to accomplish in her political life, the sane truth is: she should not be vice president. Here’s why:
First, of course, are all the usual arguments against it, e.g., her Iraq war vote; her assassination comment; her old-style politics in a year when the presidential nominee will be running as the candidate of change; her divisive, politics-of-destruction campaign strategy in the primary; her “most hated politician” ranking in the polls; the past Clinton scandals waiting to be dragged out of the closet, her husband’s loose cannon-unpredictability, etc. Despite the advantages touted by Clinton supporters (If you don’t pick her, we’re going to make you lose the November election!), Hillary’s baggage would end up being a distraction to the Obama campaign. In the end, Hillary in the VP slot on the ticket would do Obama and the Democratic Party more harm than good.
But all that aside, the real reason not to put Hillary in the VP position is because Obama has steadily and repeatedly shown that he is a dignitarian—defined as someone who values and chooses to live by principles of dignity for all—and he aims to run his campaign and his administration on such principles. Clinton, in contrast, has shown the opposite; what, in the parlance of dignity, would be termed rankist. Rankism is abuse of the power that comes with rank. It includes a wide range of behavior, such as: common snobbery, bullying, sexual harassment, verbal abuse, using political status for personal gain, segregation, torture, or pressuring smaller nations to serve the best interests of a larger nation. It is also the “ism” that encompasses all other “isms”—in
cluding racism, sexism, classism, and ageism, all of which have been present in this year’s primary campaigns. Rankism is currently so pervasive in our culture—and so unrecognized as a concept—that it goes largely unnoticed. The way to unify the party and the country is to target rankism, thereby simultaneously addressing the other “isms” currently at play on the political scene.
Wait... There's more! (1 comment, 1080 words in story)
Gym Pundits Worry About Obama Nomination

My apologies to the Author for this unauthorized posting of his entire article in this site's diary section.
Discuss (1 comment)
After Hillary, Voting With Conscience and Pride

Of course, a McCain presidency that pursues much of the same policies and values of the totally inept and morally bankrupt Bush administration is something to loathe. But lesser-evil voting sustains our corrupt political system.
Many say they are voting for Barack Obama in a most enthusiastic and positive way. For me, this does not work. I see no compelling evidence in Obama's history that he has what it takes to be a true, solid reformer. All I see is a young, inexperienced terrific talker that has used slick rhetoric to sell himself. With intellectual and ideological elitism and an aura of superiority and academic smugness, he has successfully fooled millions of people who are so disillusioned with our corrupt political system that they have let themselves be manipulated by poetic promises of change. In reality, he is just another super-ambitious, lying mainstream politician that has taken considerable money and support from all sorts of corporate and other special interests.
Wait... There's more! (1 comment, 1194 words in story)
Rush Limbaugh's Operation Chaos Cross-voting is Anti-American & Illegal

Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos" encourages willful violations of the law, and he as well as his followers should be called on this fraudulent undermining of our democracy. Voting is a privilege and a right for which Americans have fought and died in order to obtain. Operation Chaos isn't funny or clever. It's illegal and traitorous; and should be treated as such.
Indiana election law IC 3-10-1-6 Eligible voters
Sec. 6. A voter may vote at a primary election:
(1) if the voter, at the last general election, voted for a majority of the regular nominees of the political party holding the primary election; or
(2) if the voter did not vote at the last general election, but intends to vote at the next general election for a majority of the regular nominees of the political party holding the primary election; as long as the voter was registered as a voter at the last general election or has registered since then.
BTB Review--May 11, 2008

Wait... There's more! (1 comment, 1426 words in story)
How to Get Universal Health Care

Wait... There's more! (1 comment, 708 words in story)
How Hillary Can Knock-Out Obama

Wait... There's more! (5 comments, 780 words in story)
I'm A Member of Moveon.org & A Terrible Bowler

The topic below was originally posted in my blog, the Intrepid Liberal Journal and x-posted at The Wild, Wild Left, Out of Iraq Bloggers Caucus, The Independent Bloggers Alliance, The Peace Tree and World Wide Sawdust. As many of you know by now, The Huffington Post reported yesterday that Senator Clinton slammed the activist organization Moveon.org at a fundraiser in February:
Wait... There's more! (1404 words in story)
A Few Gems Shining from the Abyss of the Pennsylvania Debate

Wait... There's more! (1 comment, 645 words in story)
Promising Purple state lead for Democrats (cool chart!)


Reading further tells you that Clinton would also better McCain in the purple states. However, it is Obama who has the larger margin in be trusty stalwart blue states. (Obama ahead of McCain by 14 points, Clinton ahead of McCain by 11.)
So all together that beats down the idea that Obama's not our electable candidate. The numbers show it's he who's the one who is more electable.
Wait... There's more! (272 words in story)
Rescuing the 2008 Presidential Campaign

Wait... There's more! (4 comments, 1658 words in story)
Brotherhood of Man

Wait... There's more! (487 words in story)
This Three A.M. Call Says: "Hillary, it's time for you to go."

Hillary Clinton began with a big war chest and significant name edge on Obama, whose biggest national moment was his brilliant speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention.
So how did this major turnabout occur? Apart from Obama's oft-mentioned gifted speaking style, which gives him a fresh and vibrant dynamism reflective of John F. Kennedy circa 1960, the big factor was having the correct message for the time.
Obama's major support has come from a group much akin to Howard Dean's supporters in 2000, frustrated citizens, in Obama's case among younger voters in the under-30 range, who believe that the political system is broken and that we need a fresh beginning.
Wait... There's more! (803 words in story)
Fairness and Inclusion for Florida & Michigan Voters

It's likely that no matter what the DNC does at this point they won't please everyone, but since we're seeing an unprecedented response from Democratic voters this year the DNC needs to move forward quickly to ride the wave of public engagement this primary has already engendered.
Wait... There's more! (2 comments, 1373 words in story)
Hillary's surprise strategy fallacy

But the numbers that came out since mid-March, though overshadowed by Obama confronting the controversy of his pastor, expose the Clinton big-state falsehood. Obama bests her against McCain . . .
. . . in the very biggest states.
Wait... There's more! (5 comments, 489 words in story)
| Next 15 >> |



