Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Thoughts on this September 11th


Yes, we’re in the middle of a pretty heated Presidential election campaign.  Yes, the campaign has become quite divisive where the lines between the truth and the not-so-truth have become blurred.  Yes, there are a lot of things a blog like this could write about today – but it won’t.  Today is the 11th anniversary of one of the most game-changing days in the modern history of the United States.  Today is September 11th.  So, today is not the day for bitter party
divisions and arguments over health care reform, tax returns and where
someone was born.  Today is a day to remember the almost 3000 people
that needlessly lost their lives, unbeknownst to them that this particular morning as they left for work and said goodbye to their family, they would be doing that for the last time.

I won’t spend much time on the attack themselves, we all remember
them, watching them in most cases unfolding live on TV (I was on my
couch in a small apartment near Dallas, TX starting my 2nd year of
grad school watching it all).  The day unfolded like this:

•       8:46 am:  American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the north tower
         of the World Trade Center
•       9:03 am:  United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the south tower of
         the World Trade Center
•       9:37 am:  American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon
•       9:58 am:  The south tower of the World Trade Center Collapsed
•       10:03 am:  United Airlines Flight 93 crashed into a field in Shanksville, PA
•       10:28 am:  The north tower of the World Trade Center Collapsed

The United States changed that day – for the first time in modern history the people actually felt vulnerable, felt that the US was no longer this fortress that could repel anything.  Terrorism didn’t happen here – it was something that happened ‘over there’ in Europe, in Israel, wherever.  But now it could and it did happen here – America was no longer impervious, or so it seemed.  These attacks launched the modern security apparatus in this country – giving birth
to the Department of Homeland Security, the Transportation Security
Administration (the TSA) and other such things.  This day also launched two long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the latter of which is still being fought some 11 years later where thousands more died.

It did have other interesting effects on this country – it brought people together.  I remember the days after the attack the difference in the spirit of the people I came across; nice, accommodating, brotherly.  I’m sure we all remember that.  We also all remember that from that day and for many more after that, we all felt a little uneasy but knew that while we got kicked around, it wasn’t over.

America also learned who her friends were; countries like Canada.  No discussion about 9/11 can happen without noting the actions of Canada.
In the moments after US airspace shut down, Canada took hundreds of
planes bound for the US.  Not only did the Canadians provide safe harbor but hundreds of stories abound of the generous hospitality and accommodations of the northern neighbor, hosting those bound for the US until the airspace opened some days later.

I’ll never forget that day and the feelings I had and the eeriness of the few days following the attacks – how quiet everything was.  How shell-shocked everyone was.  I lived on the flight path for DFW airport – one of the busiest airports in the United States.  I remember sitting in front of my apartment with my neighbor and remarking how no planes were overhead (when we usually saw one every 10 minutes or so) and how surreal it felt knowing the reason why.  I could go on and on but I only have so much bandwith.

Needless to say, September 11, 2001 will be a day no one ever forgets
– and quite frankly no one should.  Not because it happened to the United States but because something like this can happen again.  It can happen anytime and anywhere and we all (all as in the citizens of the world) need to be vigilant and reject extremism and irrationality in all its forms and from every place.

That’s it – that’s my soapbox thoughts about this.  Tomorrow we go back to the ‘bloodsport’ that is the Presidential campaign and be happy that 11 years after the attack we can talk about an election campaign.  That while a lot of things have changed, a lot of things have also remained the same.  Thank God.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Romney Campaign: Don’t Panic But, Maybe, you Should Keep that Resume Updated


So the Romney campaign put a memo out earlier today urging it’s people not to panic, everything is fine and their boys R&R and going to bring it home in November.  Memo’s like these usually signify that the campaign is, in fact, panicking.  The memo:

ROMNEY/RYAN
MEMORANDUM
TO: Interested Parties
RE: State of the Race
DATE: September 10, 2012
Don't get too worked up about the latest polling.  While some voters will feel a bit of a sugar-high 
from the conventions, the basic structure of the race has not changed significantly.  The reality 
of the Obama economy will reassert itself as the ultimate downfall of the Obama Presidency, and 
Mitt Romney will win this race.
In his acceptance speech, President Obama did not offer any solutions for the millions of 

Americans unemployed or underemployed.  But his convention speech was not the only big 

letdown to voters, as Americans also dealt with yet another dismal jobs report last week.

The latest CNN / ORC polls show Obama up at 52% over Romney’s 46%.  Obama’s likeability is up to 57%, the highest it’s been in over two years and 59% of Democrats are excited to go vote as opposed to 47% of Republicans (those ‘excitability’ numbers last week were 52% for the Democrats and 62% for the GOP.)

The memo is attributing the polling numbers to a ‘sugar high’ felt by the country after the DNC and that the dismal performance by the President with his speech, as well as a bad jobs report tempered this bump.  So, jobs report was bad (and yes, it was) and his speech wasn’t that good but still Obama leads in the polls has increased by 6 points since the bad speech and the bad job numbers.  Is the bad speech and bad numbers part of the sugar high?  Did people ignore the bad stuff and still get high?  Shouldn’t the bump be significantly lower based on what the memo is saying, or are we just confused? 

A good rule in life is always, if someone tells you not to worry, you should.  If we were Romney campaign staffers, this memo wouldn’t be giving us the warm and fuzzies.  But that’s just us.

Larry Flint: Mitt, Show us Your Tax Returns. Romney: Why Won’t This Go Away?


The illustrious publisher of Hustler Larry Flint (also known as ‘the smut peddler who cares’) is looking to give up to $1 million dollars to one lucky person, and it could be you, if you have information about what Mitt Romney is hiding in his tax returns.   In a full page advertisement taken out in this past Sunday’s Washington Post, Flint and Hustler Magazine are offering money for  “…information about Mitt Romney’s unreleased tax returns and / or details of his offshore assets, bank accounts and business partnerships.  What is he hiding?”

Courtesy:  Washington Post
Romney hasn’t released anything aside from his 2011 and 2010 tax returns and Flint wants to know what he’s got there.  Flint feels that all of this should be public record for a man running for the most public of offices.  Flint will be running the ad again on September 11th in USA Today. 

This call from Flint comes only a few days after an alleged leak from the Tennessee offices of Romeny’s accountants, Price Waterhouse Cooper.  PwC of course disputes any leak occurred and that Romney’s and everyone else’s records are safe and secure.  RT.com reports that an encrypted file containing Romney’s tax information will be distributed to the media this month.  “The person allegedly in possession of the files… has said that they will provide the material to any source willing to pay $1,000,000,” including the Romney campaign.  The Secret Service has stated that they are in fact investigating the unverified claim of the leak and alleged blackmail.  It seems Flint is willing to pay if the information is good.

While this may turn out to be simply rumor, it remains one more example of how people still don’t feel they know Romney enough.  The fact that he is refusing to show tax returns prior to 2010 makes him look culpable of something in the eyes of America – something that is not helping his cause.  Looking at his poll numbers today, with as much as he has slipped, just the publicity surrounding this escapade could be enough to have him trail Obama even more.  It would behoove Romney to release a bit more information about himself so that people can move on from this issue at least.  If not, this will hang over his head until election day.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Help Us Raise the Funds We Need

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Saturday, September 8, 2012

Post-Convention, Who’s Winning? Who Knows.

Round and round she goes, who will win, nobody knows

The convention season is over and neither candidate really has anything to show for it.  Romney got his 1% bounce in the polls but that was short lived as it got cancelled out by Obama’s 3% jump.  That jump was stifled by less than satisfactory jobs report that was released yesterday.  North Carolina, a state that was a Republican lock a few weeks ago now might be leaning Obama.  Ohio, a state that was leaning Obama is now leaning Romney.  After all is said and done neither candidate is any closer to claiming victory then they were three weeks ago.  So what’s a candidate to do?  Hit the campaign trail hard and start getting ready for the debates.

Obama spent yesterday stumping in New Hampshire then Iowa but went to bed last night in Florida.  Romney spent the day in Iowa with both candidates hitting those swing states hard.  The Romney camp has also released a set of ads based off of the conventions targeted at all the swing states but no tangible results from them have shown up in the polling numbers yet.

The debates are going to be crucial.  They are being held in the last few weeks of the campaign and have the opportunity to shape the undecided voters opinion.  Whether it will happen, given how this campaign has gone, is anyone’s guess.  The most probable scenario is that there will be a good number of voters on election day that will decide who to vote for in the voting both and hold their nose as they drop their ballots in the box.  Even Obama’s closest advisors feel that this campaign will go right down to the wire.

Both candidates only have a few more opportunities to get in their final digs.  By just comparing speaking style, Obama should have the debates in the bag but again, the way this campaign has been going, Romney may very well come out on top.  If after the debates the poll numbers come up within 3 points of each other, at that point the only definitive way to know who the winner will be is to wait until election night.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Barack Obama's 2012 DNC Acceptance Speech

For those that missed it last night - here are the words that Obama used to accept the Democratic Party nomination and outline his plan for the next four years.  The speech itself was good but no where near as strong as the one Bill Clinton delivered the night before - though this was better than his 2008 acceptance speech.

What to watch for today is the release of the official unemployment numbers for August in the next few hours.  Those numbers will be crucial to see what sort of polling bounce (if any) the Obama campaign gets out of their convention - the timing of their release ties both of these issue in completely.

Next major campaign activity:  the debates.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Obama's Speech Tonight - Sneak Peek


The Obama campaign has released a teaser of sorts in advanced of his speech tonight (which is at 10:00 eastern time by the way).  

President Barack Obama will lay out the presidential election as a stark choice in his speech to the Democratic National Convention. 

"The path we offer may be harder, but it leads to a better place. And I'm asking you to choose that future. I'm asking you to rally around a set of goals for your country - goals in manufacturing, energy, education, national security, and the deficit; a real, achievable plan that will lead to new jobs, more opportunity, and rebuild this economy on a stronger foundation.  That's what we can do in the next four years, and that's why I'm running for a second term as President of the United States."