joobz
Tergiversator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 17,998
I thought it was because Obama had the most campaign money.
/cynical response
Actually, It's because he won the most electoral votes
/blatantly obvious response
I thought it was because Obama had the most campaign money.
/cynical response
5. A good amount of Americans are very ignorant.
I'd add an item 1a. McCain's response to the crisis was clueless. He announced how sound the economy was, before deciding it was "cratering", whereupon he "raced back to Washington" by hanging around doing TV interviews about how important he was racing back to Washington, in which he thrust himself into the limelight by claiming to put country before politics, he bounced Obama by claiming it before he did, he suspended his campaign by continuing it, and he wasn't going to debate ... until he blinked. The effect he gave (to me at any rate) was of a man playing politics with a crisis and doing it very badly.
Now up to that point I had strongly believed that McCain, if put to the test, would turn out to be a good President; and also that the argument from experience was salient (though not enough to sway me personally). At that point I started thinking that maybe "maverick" meant "erratic", and began to contemplate how much executive experience McCain had as compared to his opponent. And once you start thinking like that, and considering the quality of the two campaigns as evidence of who shows better judgement ...
There then followed the first debate, in which Obama managed to come across as reasonable, level-headed, calm, and moderate, whereupon the McCain campaign actually put out a video of clips of Obama saying: "John is right". Who were they targetting there? Obama debated perfectly: he appealed to moderates and to the many people who said that they weren't going to make their minds up until the debates.
Barack HUSSEIN Obama, the scary MUSLIN TURRIST who you hadn't heard of this time last year, managed to come out of this looking like the reliable pick and the safe pair of hands to anyone who didn't already think that he was the Antichrist.
Yes, it is hard to catagorize. Nonetheless, with respect, I think that's a bit of a stretch of the word "charisma".This goes to the difficulty I had putting the reasons into categories. There was overlap and ambiguity about what things went where. I was thinking of this as more part of item 3, Obama's charisma, by which I meant to include things like his calmness in difficult times and the fact that McCain wasn't.
5. A good amount of Americans are very ignorant.
There then followed the first debate, in which Obama managed to come across as reasonable, level-headed, calm, and moderate, whereupon the McCain campaign actually put out a video of clips of Obama saying: "John is right". Who were they targetting there? Obama debated perfectly: he appealed to moderates and to the many people who said that they weren't going to make their minds up until the debates.
Yes, it is hard to categorize. Nonetheless, with respect, I think that's a bit of a stretch of the word "charisma".
Showing character and making the right choices isn't "charisma", Obama didn't do it by being all sparkly while riding on his rainbow-colored unicorn.
3. Obama's thoughtful charismatic style more appealing than McCain's bluster. Also included here are McCain's various verbal gaffes.
McCain kept recycling his stump speech.My main impression of the first debate was of McCain repeatedly saying, "Senator Obama doesn't understand... "
He certainly is an excellent speaker. Even when it is non rehearsed. My father says one reason he won was because he is an excellent orator.I can tell you why I voted for him: It'll be good to have someone in the White House who can speak.
~~ Paul
McCain may have indeed won..or at least come close to winning..if not for two simple words:
Sarah Palin.
there are plenty of informed intelligent voters who wanted McCain and plenty of uninformed voters who wanted Obama.Yes, and they voted for McCain.
McCain kept recycling his stump speech.
He kept saying: "Senator Obama doesn't understand ..." this, that, and the other, and also saying "I know how to ..." this, that, and the other, and it so made people clap at his rallies.
It didn't go down so well with undecideds.
My main impression of the first debate was of McCain repeatedly saying, "Senator Obama doesn't understand... " and Obama giving responses that showed he understood perfectly well; he just didn't agree with John McCain.