You all know that I am a supporter of McCain in the upcoming election. Besides not liking many of the policies Obama is proposing, the man just gives me an uneasy feeling about the future with him in charge. I think that many McCain supporters feel the same way but have no way to articulate this feeling. Its not something they can easily describe.
Daily, I read Scott Adams blog. He is the genius behind the Dilbert comics. I will post his blog from today and the response from one of his readers. The response I feel does an incredible job of putting to words my uneasy feeling. What do you think?
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The Blog Post
by Scott Adams
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http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/vague_feelings_of_discomfort/
Yesterday I was talking to some McCain supporters about how they arrived at their preference. We don’t see many McCain supporters in my neighborhood, so I always take time to hear their views. Admittedly my sample is not large, but of the dozen or so McCain supporters I have spoken with, there is a common thread: Obama gives them a vague feeling of discomfort that they can’t quite identify.
When I ask about this vague feeling of discomfort, the answer has something to do with how his views got formed, his past associations, how quickly he rose to prominence, and how charismatic (slick) he is.
The risk, as I understand it, is that once in office Obama would start sporting a turban and begin each speech with WAHLALALALALALAL!!!! He would appoint Supreme Court justices who favor a redistribution of wealth to unborn gay babies, and he’d legalize crack. It would all be part of his master plan to destroy America. I might have the details wrong, but it goes something like that.
It’s hard to argue against someone’s vague feeling of discomfort. After all, studies have shown that people are actually quite good at determining character and intelligence from nothing more than photographs. I just found it interesting that the people I spoke with described a vague feeling of discomfort in forming their preference. That is not something I ever heard in other elections.
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The Response
by User Phantom II
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Scott, I don’t think you actually understood what the McCain supporters were telling you. The problem with Obama is that nobody (or only his closest associates) knows what he really thinks. I heard a PBS recording of some fairly well-known news folks saying, just yesterday, that they didn’t know what Obama was really like - that they didn’t know how he’d handle foreign policy, they didn’t know how he really felt about capitalism versus socialism, and so on. They were saying that the only things they know about him come from the books he’s written and the speeches he’s given.
Now, these are members of the same press that was supposed to be finding out for us what he’s really about. They have had almost twenty months, and they didn’t do their job, for whatever reason. Only just now do they seem to be admitting it.
My problems with Obama are many, but I’ll try to boil them down here. The reason for that vague unease your neighborhood McCain supporters have is that his current words don’t fit his past actions. He has associated with an unsavory, by most standards, group of people, including Tony Rezko, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, William Ayres, Bernadine Dohrn, Rashid Khaladi, and more. Yet he says, in effect, he really didn’t know any of them very well. I don’t believe him. He’s either being disingenuous, or he’s too oblivious to be president (which would seem to fly in the face of that great intellect he supposedly has).
He says that he’s a big believer that we are our brothers’ keepers. Yet his half-brother George, whom he has met, lives in a hut in Africa on $12 per year. His paternal aunt is currently living in the slums in Boston (it took a UK newspaper to find that out, again showing what a poor job our press corps have done), and says she can’t really talk about him (Obama) until after November 4th. Does that kind of thing concern anyone else?
There’s a big blank in everyone’s knowledge of what he did in one important part of his past: his time at Columbia University. It’s as though that time didn’t exist - no one knows what he did during those four years.
He also has, in the past, supported socialism through the redistribution of wealth. He now says that that really isn’t what he’s going to do, but again, I don’t believe him. His work with Bill Ayers in Chicago, particularly his work with the Annenberg Challenge, seems to have been pointed, at least in part, to building curricula to teach teachers how to indoctrinate children in how to become radicals. I don’t think this is appropriate for children. I would rather have the schools teach them how to think, and then present them with both sides and let them talk it out. Obama does not seem to support that kind of free exchange of ideas.
Obama is running on a feel-good platform of “change.” Yet his ideas pretty much mirror those of Franklin Roosevelt. Take Obama’s desire for a “new Bill of Rights,” for example. That was proposed by Roosevelt back in 1944. Liberals always accuse conservatives of somehow wanting to take us back in time. When you peel away the onion of what Obama is saying, it leads right back to the New Deal and the Great Society. I’m not for that.
The bottom line, for me, is that he lacks experience and has had a somewhat radical past. I don’t feel it makes sense to hand the most powerful job in the world over to someone who not only lacks experience but also is largely an unknown.
At the same time, look at what his supporters say about him. Charismatic. A great orator. Gives them hope. OK, that’s a bunch of great feelings, but where is the substance to back them up? If I tell you what you want to hear, you’ll feel good - for a while. But then what happens when the words turn out to be just that: words? To whom will you complain then?
If you’d like an interesting intellectual exercise, then take a look at the major cities that are most out of control in the US. Those that have the highest crime rates, the highest poverty rates, the lowest high school graduation rates, the worst schools; and then ask yourselves how long it’s been since they’ve had a Republican mayor.
My point is that rhetoric, by itself, is meaningless. Take a look at the results. Are the candidates you are supporting proposing solutions, or short-term, feel-good actions that put band-aids on the problems? If you are intellectually honest, the very least you can do is demand of your legislators that they show results. If they don’t, then you should seriously consider evaluating, on an intellectual rather than emotional basis, what it’s going to take to get those problems solved, and who is proposing those solutions, regardless of their party.
As long as you let politicians keep getting elected because they make you feel good, rather than because they prove they can solve problems, the politicians are going to continue to do make you feel good. I believe, for a lot of people who look to feelings rather than realities, it’s time to grow up.