Today on The Lionel Show - Thursday August 21st.
In the wake of Erica Payne’s
razor-blade, ray-of-sunshine appearance on our program this past Tuesday, I’m
making a conscious effort to be less cynical. Not surprisingly, it’s not
working out very well.
It’s these polls. These
Godforsaken, never-ceasing, often misleading and usually unsettling polls.
Rather than letting me know which candidate the country is getting behind,
these polls are starting to feel like
something I’m on all fours in front of, if you catch my drift. Take the
recent Zogby poll that shows John McCain leading Barack Obama by 5%. Even
more unbelievably, the
I’ve had casual conversations
with colleagues who assure me that polls mean nothing, that the results are
often baked in to the cake, and that by paying attention to the demographics
and numbers of people surveyed, one can usually find a way to make the numbers
mean anything.
This doesn’t make me feel any
better.
American elections are all
about public perception. I tend to think that those mysterious “swing voters”,
those coveted but ill-defined phantoms of independence, are going to end up
getting behind the guy who looks stronger. For at least the past two weeks,
that guy has undeniably been John McCain.
Take his verbal coup
yesterday regarding Obama’s refusal to acknowledge the success of the surge.
McCain looked strong, Presidential, secure in his beliefs and muscular in his
commitment to American supremacy at all costs. People buy that sort of thing.
In bulk.
This places Obama in yet
another hard-to-define, subtle and somewhat nebulous position. His overwhelming
point, of course, is that we absolutely never should have been there in the
first place; he fundamentally opposed creating the mess that John McCain pats
himself on the back for cleaning up. And
he’s right. Trouble is, the nation seems to have accepted the war in
John McCain reminds us that
he was not attacking Barack Obama’s character or patriotism (although he very
plainly was), but was instead questioning his judgment. Ooooh. Good one. Lots of applause after he said that.
Sounds good. Sounds strong. So do McCain’s constant reminders that Obama voted
against troop funding, even though they
are totally inaccurate and calculatedly mischaracterized. You think that
matters? Yeah, I provided a link to a Media Matters story right there about
McCain’s mischaracterization – you think the voting public at large would
bother to click on it? You will, and for that I applaud you. Most people
wouldn’t, and they’re out there applauding for John McCain and his “Papa Don’t
Take No Mess” oratory.
The obvious rebuttal, and the
correct one, is that John
McCain is the last person who should be talking about judgment. He threw
himself behind the war in
And like so many of our
politicians, he could easily sail in to the White House on a ship of perceived
strength and uncomplicated, salt-of-the-earth appeal.
The next time I see a poll, I’ll
be hard pressed not to hang myself from it.
Good morning!
Best,
Derm
P.S. I already linked to this
story above, but please do give it a read. If Barack Obama could make this
case as strongly as McCain makes his, he could probably win.
- August 21, 2008








The Surge-Viagra Connection
From here on out, please change the word "surge" and replace it with "erection."
Though that could give McCain a rise in the polls.
heh heh heh?
No? … sigh … OK …
- parent
By The Mighty ThorAugust 21, 2008 - 9:18am