Tag Archive | "Presidential Debate"

A Defining Moment

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 Columnist - John Sammon
Columnist - John Sammon. Click to view larger picture.It was one of those defining moments.

During the final debate, John McCain said, in a response to a statement Obama had made about the importance of protecting the health of a mother in an abortion case, that the “health of the mother” is just a buzz phrase to promote an extreme, leftist, pro-abortion position.

The health of the mother EXTREMIST?

This comment will no doubt haunt McCain’s post-election nightmares.

A callous slip of the tongue. It says a lot about McCain, as does his by-now famous smirk, a smirking guy who thinks destiny has chosen him for greatness, and who also thinks that he’s done more for America than anyone else and is more of a “hero” (a constantly abused word) than anyone else.

McCain psychologically suffers from Joan of Arc Disease. This is a malady in which the sufferer sees himself or herself as too good, too pure for an evil traitorous world of subversives, a noble, chaste, heroic person locked in a struggle with ignoble people who are undeserving of the nobility the noble person is offering.

McCain can barely tolerate dissent, and often shows it in his mannerisms.

Obama on the other hand, actually seems to pleasantly embrace the right to have a different opinion.

The real Joan of Arc, a heroic girl, died in a fire, pure, free of the taint of the human foibles of failure, or sin. When you have Joan of Arc Disease, it’s easy to get carried away, to see the world in terms of, it’s them against me. You think that, except for a few cronies, I’m the only heroic man in town, the only good man in town, the only brave man in town, the only self-sacrificing man in town, the only intelligent man in town, the only holy man in town.

And on and on…ad nausea.

Richard Nixon had a major case of Joan of Arc Disease.

Look at the way McCain smirked during the debates. That’s another window into his soul. The smirk. That painful little bogus smile he gets when he grits his teeth and closes his eyes when his opponent says something. At other times, his eyes darted around nervously from side to side, and up and down.

Obama, on the other hand, offered a wide, full and genuine-looking grin.

This election will be decided not just on what the candidates said, but how they said it. Obama appeared confident and relaxed, or alternately thoughtful and reflective. McCain appeared as he often is, angry, erratic, and fearful.

Yes, fearful. McCain is capable of physical courage. But anger is driven, generated primarily by fear. What if I don’t get the upper hand? What if I don’t measure up to being the man? What if I don’t put you in your place, you, who are not as good as me?

What if?

For all his boning up on the issues, spinning it verbally his way, McCain never bothered to study his acting style on camera, how he comes across. He was reminiscent once again of Nixon during the Nixon-Kennedy debate in 1960. John Kennedy looked charming and relaxed, and handsome. Nixon looked haggard, nervous and dishonest. He refused makeup, and had just come out of a hospital treatment.

His eyes blinked like McCain’s.

McCain will always be remembered for the smirking little smile that was a not-very-convincing imitation of a smile, but was easily spotted for what it was, anger, a grimace.

Obama, regardless of political philosophy, came across as an inclusionist who is not threatened by other people. McCain seemed to view the world as white or black, good or bad; everybody who is not with me is against me. I think McCain sees life as a Darwinian contest in which a man to be a man has to measure up to a heroic struggle of some kind. Not the kind of painful, boring tolerance, the give and take, so necessary for progress in a two-party system where freedom of speech and the right to disagree is a center pillar of our Constitution..

Fear is what drives McCain, even though the persona he projects is one of physical courage.

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Round 3 — McCain the ‘Six-Pack Plumber’ snorts & hisses like a Cockroach in debate 3

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Pre-Debate, McCain promised to “Whip Obama’s Ass.

Come Wednesday, when Bob Schieffer, the moderator, blew the whistle, McSAME came out charging, snorting like a wounded Buffalo, eyes shimmering and darting — like those of a Predatory Ferret.

I thought I was watching Al Gore “hissing” in the 2000 debates.

The FULL Debate Video

The Debate’s Unspoken Answers

| Decision 08 DashBoard |

The difference in tone was striking. While Obama was calm, cool, collected, soothing and candid, McCain “Made Faces” like an exasperated little kid, ….the body language was “‘Autistically’ Tortured” …strange …horrible.

Was old-man McCain over-medicated?

McCain Makes Faces -- Debate 3

| The Many Faces Of John McCain At Wednesday Night’s Debate (SLIDESHOW) |

McCain threw punches and clawed desperately, but Obama smoothly sidestepped like a boxer safely ahead on points.

In one astonishing exchange, McCain acted as though he was the truly aggrieved party, insisting that he had repudiated all of the attacks on Mr. Obama by surrogates and “some fringe people” at rallies. He didn’t mention that his running mate, Sarah Palin, is one of the loudest attackers, and he certainly didn’t repudiate her absurd, repeated charge that Mr. Obama has been “palling around with terrorists.

Even more incredible, was McCain’s demand that Obama admonish civil-rights icon and Georgia congressman John Lewis, who rightly accused John McCain and Sarah Palin of stoking hate, likening the atmosphere at Republican campaign events to those featuring George Wallace, the segregationist former governor of Alabama and presidential candidate.

“What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history,” Lewis said in a statement issued a few days ago. “Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse.”

McCain’s rigmarole peaked into absurdity when he warned; that a group called ACORN is “on the verge of maybe perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history” and “may be destroying the fabric of democracy.

Based on the information that has come to light so far, the charges appear to be wildly overblown — and intended to hobble Acorn’s efforts.

In spite of McCain’s manufactured fury about vote theft (and similar claims from the Republican Party over the years) there is virtually no evidence — anywhere in the country, going back many elections — of people showing up at the polls and voting when they are not entitled to….[MORE]

Sincerely, in this debate, McCain looked more like the “Terrorist” to me. An angry, snickering, snorting and hissing terrorist — armed with “ingested medication,” …if any.

McCain Makes Faces -- Debate 3

NOTE: At an Oct. 6 rally. “Who is the real Barack Obama?” McCain asked. “A terrorist!” a man bellowed. McCain seemed to wince, roll his eyes, retreat. He didn’t admonish the man, but the incident was unsettling, and several days later, at a town-hall meeting in Minnesota, he did begin to push back against the ugliness of his crowds. A woman said, “I can’t trust Obama. He’s an Arab,” and McCain replied, “No, ma’am. No, ma’am, he’s not. He’s a decent family man — citizen — that I just happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues.”

In the end, John McCain a.k.a Joe “Six-Packa.k.a Joe “The Plumbera.k.a the “Fidgety Ferret” failed miserably to claw the “Cool Cat” — Mr. Barack Obama.

Barack Obama has proven beyond any doubt that he is of more “Presidential Timber” than John McCain. Period! Case Closed!

Obama can only lose if people like these prevail [see video below]

John McCain calls JFKs assassination an “intervention”?

References:

1. McCain Throws Sink, and Plumber, But Obama Isn’t Rattled
2. The Many Faces Of John McCain At Wednesday Night’s Debate (SLIDESHOW)
3. McCain’s last standThe Republican senator’s final debate performance was marked by oddball characters and marginal attacks, as hopes of his political resurrection appeared to fade.
4. Thinking About ObamaThrough some deep, bottom-up process, Barack Obama has developed strategies for equanimity, and now he’s become a homeostasis machine.

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ER…’Mr. McCain, you are only allowed to take off your gloves!’

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ER...'Mr. McCain, you are only allowed to take off your gloves!'
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FactChecking Debate No. 2 — ‘Nonsense in Nashville’

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McCain vs Obama

McCain and Obama debated for the second time, in Nashville. FactCheck.org noted some misleading statements and mangled facts

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Round 2 — Obama Gets A ‘McBush Hug’ Then Mauls McCain

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“It’s too early to declare victory because Barack Obama’s black.” — David Gergen, CNN AnalystMore comments by Mr. Gergen below

What impressed me most about this debate is the level of maturity Obama has attained during this presidential election season.

He was almost “Clintonesque,” but still needs some polishing in the “connecting with voters” aspect of debating. I don’t think anyone has ever done it better than Bill Clinton in the last couple of decades. Slick-Willy is(was) a master at connecting with voters (see video below). He man-handled and completely destroyed Republican candidates Bush Snr. in 1992 and Bob Dole in 1996. Obama is not at that level yet, but he will get there. For now, McCain’s ineptitude helps.

Clinton vs. Bush in 1992 Debate

The mark of a brilliant man is how he adjusts to conditions around him, and the Obama of now is better, sleeker and crispier than the one I saw in the first few debates during the Democratic primaries.

   Obama gets the McBush Hug
Obama gets the McBush Hug

This was not a knockout for Obama, but he surely mopped the floor a couple of times with McCain’s butt.

It was not a game changing performance for McCain either.

Obama outclassed McCain to an extent that he doesn’t need a knockout in the next debate. He is ahead on points and will stay on top barring a major blunder.

He(Obama) owned both the foreign and domestic policy discussions, and McCain should feel blessed for Obama not accepting the “ten townhall meetings” he proposed earlier in the campaign, because Obama owned this meeting too — he was quick on his feet and moved around with athletic ease while hammering in point after point.

Obama was comfortable walking the stage and interacting with the questioners, while McCain wandered around stiffly, microphone in hand like a peeled banana ready for eating.

John McCain has a large collection of very pretty ties, but in this debate as in the previous one, he seems to have chosen the worst out of his closet. What happened to the nice suit and tie he wore when accepting the nomination at the Republican convention a month and a half ago?

McCain looked old, cranky and erratic — sometimes pacing aimlessly around the stage while Obama was talking. He was tense and uneasy, and the big difference in age showed.

I think the biggest mistake McCain made was when he proclaimed that healthcare is a “responsibility” and not a right of every American. Obama countered by saying that healthcare is a “crushing burden” for small businesses and is “breaking family budgets,” and is a RIGHT of every American. This was a very effective answer — and one of the “Butt-Mopping” episodes I mentioned earlier.

Full Debate Video

CNN Debate Analysis

David Gergen, CNN Analyst and respected aide to presidents for 30 years had this to say:

I give McCain a ‘B’ and Obama a ‘B+’

A few hits, some runs and no major errors — that was the way this second debate struck me. The format was far too confining so that neither candidate could answer in depth and viewers were left with a sense of disappointment that they hadn’t heard enough about specifics. Too often, we heard the same arguments we heard in the last debate.

John McCain was more effective on domestic issues than he was on the second debate but flatter on national security. Periodically, he made an excellent argument and he was more composed than earlier. Interestingly, he never went as negative as feared (e.g., he never talked — as Sarah Palin has on the stump — about the past associations of his opponent).

Barack Obama showed once again that he is more articulate and a better debater, able to weave together arguments and themes with great skill. Once again he was also steady. But he was hardly on fire and he didn’t give us much more insight — or new ideas — about the economic crisis now gripping the country.

So, my scores tonight are lower than last week:

McCain — B
Obama — B+

Politically, this debate strikes me as good news for Obama and bad news for McCain. With two straight victories under his belt, Obama has established in the minds of many voters that he is as qualified to be President as McCain –and given the economy, that means he should have strengthened his position.

Obama made no mistakes, connected better with voters. McCain’s condescending reference to Obama as “That One,” while probably un-intentional, might be viewed as racist by African Americans. During the years of slavery, blacks were often de-personalized by their slave masters in similar fashion.

“That One!”, could be as bad as ….“Boy!”

Obama was unruffled, consistent, had a thorough grasp of his policy prescriptions and McCain’s “bad ones,” so to speak. He looked more presidential.

In contrast, John McCain seemed agitated, looked grumpy and was sometimes unnecessarily aggressive, and in many instances didn’t answer questions clearly and succinctly.

“I’ll get Osama bin Laden, my friends. I’ll get him. I know how to do it!” ……. — is not good enough.

VERDICT: Obama mauls McCain, but got a free “McBush Hug” at the beginning of the debate. I found that funny after the “No Look” treatment by McCain in the first debate.

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Time.com — Grading the Second Presidential Debate
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References:

1. Memorable Debate Moments

2. Arianna Huffington: The Winner of Debate II? “That One”

AfterMath of the debate — Typical “GOP Assholery”

The McCain-Obama Post-Debate “Handshake”

Sean Hannity — The Sickest ‘Son-of-a-bitch’ on TV
Robert Gibbs and Sean Hannity go at it on Ayers

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