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On the trail in Wyoming, May 2008
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June 2008

11:09 am Monday
June 30, 2008

2 talked back!

The Shape of Things to Come, if Obama Is Elected
by McGehee
78°F. and partly cloudy in Coweta County, GA
 

Back in the ‘70s, when “Doonesbury” was still occasionally funny, Garry Trudeau had fun with Jimmy Carter by imagining him with a Cabinet-level “Secretary of Symbolism.”

In keeping with the notion that Barack Obama would be a second Carter term…

Unity, N.H., is not just small, it’s small and out-of-the-way. The town has no major roads, just winding country ones. It has a single school, the elementary school, no large retail center and no parking. It is an hour and a half from the nearest sizeable airport, and hotels for traveling press are nowhere to be found. Who in the world would hold a political rally for several thousand people here? Barack Obama would.

Unity might be one of the worst towns in America in which to hold a major political rally, but symbolically it was ideal for the Obama campaign. Where better to have Hillary Clinton join Obama on stage in a display of party loyalty, showing her supporters that there are no hard feelings for her loss to Obama and urging them to work hard to make him President, than in a town named Unity, where in the New Hampshire primary in January the vote for Obama and Clinton was evenly split—107 apiece?

For the attendees, the choice of location would be a nightmare. For the Obama campaign, a campaign based entirely on symbolism, it was perfect.

» Used in Unity

If America is going to elect its first black president, don’t you think he should be good for something besides symbolism? How is he not making a token of himself here?

[People] [Here's Your Sign] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


8:58 pm Sunday
June 29, 2008

Only 1 ever talked back

I Take It Back
by McGehee
68°F. and thunder in Coweta County, GA
 

I’m not gonna vote for the backstabbing, media-whoring son of a bitch after all. Instead, the Get Offa My Lawn Party will be nominating and supporting an entirely different son of a bitch.

[Me] [Humor?] [People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008] [Get Offa My Lawn!]

   


12:54 pm Friday
June 27, 2008

No backtalk

DeGeorge for Coweta County Commission
by McGehee
87°F. and partly cloudy in Coweta County, GA
 

To paraphrase Don Rumsfeld—and as proved yesterday—sometimes you have to choose your candidate for the reasons you have, not necessarily the reasons you want or wish you had.

I mentioned last month that I didn’t know enough about the two candidates for county commissioner in my district, to really have any idea which to vote for. Well, I think I’m probably going to vote for Gary DeGeorge.

First (and least substantively), he was the one who contacted me seeking my support. That’s one of those little things that make a lot more difference than they should, and which John McCain could stand to think about. Now, DeGeorge admitted that he sought me out because I have this blog, which apparently has some local readership—but his opponent, Rodney Brooks, didn’t even respond to a League of Women Voters survey. DeGeorge, being younger, has some grasp of the possibilities of the “new media” in politics, and is trying to use them. (I do kind of wish he weren’t using MySpace for his campaign site, but at least he has one.)

Two other things have tipped me toward preferring DeGeorge, one being:

Brooks said he doesn’t understand why the county commissioners stopped a Wal-Mart from coming to Ga. Hwy. 154 at Interstate 85.

“We lost a large tax base,” Brooks said. Many residents of the fourth district are going to Peachtree City’s Wal-Mart and taking their sales tax dollars with them.

» Candidates oppose passenger jets here

That Wal-Mart issue was as close as I’ve come in a long time to an outright NIMBY position, but others also opposed it who live nowhere near that interchange. The Times-Herald editorialized against it, citing its proximity to a considerably larger, existing Wal-Mart, and the need for massive road and intersection improvements to handle the traffic—improvements that the developers weren’t offering to cover. The cost of making that location workable for high-impact retail would have eaten a huge chunk of the sales-tax benefit Brooks envisioned. Furthermore, sales tax revenue contributes a great deal to government spending; not necessarily so much to residents’ standard of living. Coweta needs a wider and more balanced range of economic development. Minimum-wage retail has its place, but we’re not exactly hurting for those jobs as it is.

And for the record, if people who live in my part of the county are shopping at a Wal-Mart in an adjacent county, it may be due in part to the fact that so many of my neighbors’ jobs are not in Coweta. Priorities, people.

One more matter that enters into my thinking on county politics is the commission chairmanship. Of Georgia’s 159 counties, only Coweta County does not have a chairman specifically elected to that post by the voters. Rather, each year the chairman is elected by the members of the commission itself. There is some talk of bringing Coweta into line with the rest of the state, and I tend to agree—but it’s not a major issue to me.

This issue has had its profile raised a little bit after Commissioner Leigh Schlumper, the incumbent in my district who is not seeking re-election, was passed over for the chairmanship this year and sued for discrimination. The lawsuit raises other complaints besides the chairmanship, which I think deserve to be aired if they have any basis—but on the chairmanship itself I’m fairly confident what a court would have to rule.

The claim is that the county has a rule prescribing a sequence of rotation that essentially made 2008 Schlumper’s “turn” for a second term as chairman. However the chairmanship remains the subject of a commission vote. The rotation sequence, if binding, essentially dictates the outcome of a commission vote, which I think a court would rule the commission cannot do merely by ordinance. As long as the commissioners elect their chairman, they should be free to use their own best judgment from year to year in making that choice. For his part, DeGeorge agrees. Brooks would prefer that the chairman be elected countywide, so that the power now held by a non-elected county administrator would be wielded instead by an elected official, directly accountable to voters.

As I said, I think the voter-elected chairmanship is probably a better way to go than the current, rotating chairmanship—but a lot would depend on how the powers of the office are balanced against those of the other commissioners. Lacking a definite plan for such a transition I am not inclined to give that issue alone a great deal of weight in deciding my vote.

I think DeGeorge deserves a chance.

[People] [Coweta County] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


6:16 pm Thursday
June 26, 2008

3 talked back!

5-4?
by McGehee
88°F. and mostly cloudy in Coweta County, GA
 

Damn. Five-four!?

<long string of profanity>

Okay, McCain. You’ve got my vote.

You backstabbing, media-whoring son of a bitch.

[People] [Government] [Courting Disaster] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


1:42 pm Monday
June 23, 2008

2 talked back!

A Story Four Years in the Making
by McGehee
87°F. and partly cloudy in Coweta County, GA
 

Barack Obama is “of the system. He’s going to be in the system,” Steele told a morning gathering of the Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials.

“Why are they attacking Michelle Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, and not really attacking, to that degree, her husband?” Steele asked. “Because he has no slave blood in him. He does not have any slave blood in him, but Michelle does.

“This system is an issue. I don’t care what you say. You can’t expect the system that enslaved you save you,” Steele said.

» SCLC head: Michelle Obama treated more roughly than
her husband, because of her slave heritage

This view of Obama isn’t new. Limbaugh has been talking on the radio about how this is the grievance lobby’s effort to ensure that an Obama victory doesn’t eliminate their influence.

I think it could also be a way to not “own” an Obama defeat; after all, he’s not really authentic.

[People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


9:31 pm Sunday
June 22, 2008
» McGehee
...it was only a matter of time

Stolen from D.C. Thornton.

[Me] [Asides] [People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


7:52 pm Wednesday
June 18, 2008

No backtalk

Halfway Decent
by McGehee
82°F. and sunny in Coweta County, GA
 

Okay, anybody who favors building new nuclear power plants is actually almost potentially in danger of being considered for my vote.

Sen. John McCain called Wednesday for the construction of 45 new nuclear reactors by 2030 and pledged $2 billion a year in federal funds “to make clean coal a reality,” measures designed to reduce dependence on foreign oil.

In a second straight day of campaigning devoted to the energy issue, the Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting also said the only time Democratic rival Barack Obama voted for a tax cut was for a “break for the oil companies.”

McCain said the 104 nuclear reactors currently operating around the country produce about 20 percent of the nation’s annual electricity needs.

“Every year, these reactors alone spare the atmosphere from the equivalent of nearly all auto emissions in America. Yet for all these benefits, we have not broken ground on a single nuclear plant in over thirty years,” he said. “And our manufacturing base to even construct these plants is almost gone.”

Even so, he said he would set the country on a course to build 45 new ones by 2030, with a longer-term goal of adding another 55 in the future.

» McCain calls for building 45 new nuclear reactors

He’ll need a Congress controlled by Republicans, whose livers lack any similarity whatsoever to lilies, to pull it off.

Getting them elected to support his program is kinda sorta his job…

[People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


7:45 pm Wednesday
June 18, 2008

No backtalk

These Are the People Running America into the Ground
by McGehee

 

Democrats in Congress want to nationalize oil refineries.

House Democrats responded to President’s Bush’s call for Congress to lift the moratorium on offshore drilling. This was at an on-camera press conference fed back live.

Among other things, the Democrats called for the government to own refineries so it could better control the flow of the oil supply.

[...]

“We (the government) should own the refineries. Then we can control how much gets out into the market.” [said Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-NY).]

» House Democrats call for nationalization of refineries

So they’re going to address skyrocketing oil prices by ... what, restricting the flow of oil? How is confiscating existing refineries going to bring prices down?

These are the people who took control of Congress after the 2006 elections. The people whose votes made that possible have no one to blame but themselves.

[People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008] [Wackadoodle]

   


11:23 am Saturday
June 14, 2008

8 talked back!

You Know What?
by McGehee

 

I’m starting to think Bill Engvall was wrong. We don’t need for stupid people to carry signs warning us who they are. We need for people who do actually have two working brain cells to rub together, to carry signs letting us know they’re not stupid.

Ever since John McCain clinched the GOP nomination, I’ve been watching as otherwise intelligent-seeming Republicans have been trying to come up with his ideal running mate. Almost every one has been either a woman or someone with other than European heritage.

As a short-term, pandering response to Barack Obama’s nomination, it makes a kind of cold-blooded, winning-is-the-only-thing kind of sense—but as just one more rabbit-punch to the idea of America as a cohesive society, it’s the kind of attitude that makes me think the Founding Fathers were wrong, that we have failed them irreversibly and perhaps were fated to do so.

It wouldn’t bother me so much if so many of those whose names have been floated, were not already out of the running for one reason or other, either because they don’t want it or because McCain would never risk being overshadowed by such an attention-getting choice.

Today I saw one too many “it’s not rocket science” arguments for Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to be McCain’s running mate, completely ignoring that SHE HAS A NEWBORN SON WITH DOWN’S SYNDROME and therefore more important things to do than gallivant all over the country on a speculative bid for an office she doesn’t want, and where she will never be as effective nor as popular as she is right there in Juneau where her constituents overwhelmingly want her to stay.

I’m content to wait for McCain to make his choice. I’ll give him one last chance to impress me and make me think maybe I’ve been too quick to reject him. If there’s one positive thing I can say about him it’s that he’ll make his own damn choice regardless what anybody else says. Hell, he could potentially earn my vote by choosing a running mate that just totally pisses me off. Or, you know, he could just totally piss me off and make me more determined than ever to avoid voting for him.

But if he panders—to identity politics or to me—I definitely wouldn’t vote for him.

Come on, you people: we conservatives didn’t get in this fix by being smart. We got here because somewhere along the line we stopped being smart.

Unrelated: And the past tense of “wreak” is not “wreaked,” it’s wrought! Seeing “wreaked” in place of “wrought” overwreaks me something fierce. Not to mention, it reeks.

[People] [Here's Your Sign] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   


11:14 pm Saturday
June 7, 2008
» McGehee
...…O! what a surprise

Most election years, people watch for an “October Surprise.” I suspect that if Barack Obama is elected, people should watch out for a December Surprise.

After which, the election outcomes in 2010 and 2012 should be no surprise at all.

[Me] [Asides] [People] [Government] [Politics] [Elections] [Election 2008]

   

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