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You Thought 2009 Was Bad?
Obama himself said it better tham I can:
We can accept a politics that breeds division, and conflict, and cynicism. We can tackle race only as spectacle - as we did in the OJ trial - or in the wake of tragedy, as we did in the aftermath of Katrina - or as fodder for the nightly news. We can play Reverend Wright's sermons on every channel .... We can pounce on some gaffe by a Hillary supporter as evidence that she's playing the race card... That is one option. Or, at this moment, in this election, we can come together and say, "Not this time."
I'm as guilty of the strained outrage as the next guy or gal who reads political blogs, and occasionally it is deserved.
But not this time.
It's time for the Superdelegates to put an end to this. Obama showed he could handle the Wright issue with class and dignity. Bill Richardson noticed. It's time for the other party elders to do the same. Hillary's camp thinks there's only a 10 percent chance she can win. So why is she still in it?
The Democratic Party needs to work on unifying for the general election. There are, understandably, a lot of hard feelings and bitterness among HRC supporters. I don't blame them. This was a very hard-fought race and it got ugly down the stretch. But it's time we rally around the nominee.
And what is equally puzzling is how Barak Obama thinks he is going to put the party back together again and make the republicans forget their agenda and adopt his.
This is the most cornball Election I have seen in my near 60 years of life on this planet. It is not driven by rational thought. It is driven by two power hungry partisan groups who are using surrogate battles to inflict hate upon each other in the true and sincere belief that only their side has any hope of uniting the country.
The problem with analyses arises when they categorize politicians, separating the usual suspects (everything they do is suspect and/or malicious) from the honest brokers (everything they say and do is apolitical and ethically pure).
Hillary did not invent nasty politics; she is a survivor of it. That's context. What does one learn in the school of hard knocks?
Bill is a husband as well as a politician. It's quite possible, IMO, that he is driven by a feeling htat he owes Hillary for the pain he cuased her and the damage the Monica episode did to her political aspirations. That's context.
These are human beings we are assessing during the elction process.
None of them can escape the limitations and flaws of being such.
BTW, how is this different from Obama's praise of Republican success in producing ideas? Couldn't that be seen as a swipe at Hillary's 'old' politics?
I thought Hillary's criitcism of that was misguided , and I think seizing on every word Bill speaks is equally misguided.