Daily Archives: November 1, 2008

When Will It End? Has it Hit Bottom Yet?

Probably not.

Video below the fold.

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Filed under Politics, snark

10 Reasons to Vote for John McCain

David Frum:

10) No elected official in American life has contributed more to the security of the nation than John McCain. Latterly, McCain was the most senior and most forceful advocate of the strategy that has saved the day in Iraq. For that reason alone, he deserves your vote.

9) Over a quarter-century in public life, John McCain has defended the interests of the taxpayer, not only speaking for lower taxes (that’s easy) but fighting for the essential precondition of lower taxes, less government spending.

8) McCain’s healthcare plan is the first and essential step toward a market-based approach. If competition is to work, individuals must buy their own care. Barack Obama praises the employer-based system. But Obama knows full well that the employer-based system is dying – he’s just propping up its carcass until the time is ripe to insert full government control in its place.

7) McCain is more pragmatic and more open to compromise in substance (and not just in verbal formulas) than Barack Obama. It’s a bad reflection on the McCain campaign that it has allowed the less ideological candidate to be depicted as the hot-head – and the more ideological Obama to position himself as the moderate. But the failures of the campaign are reasons to punish the campaign managers, not the country.

6) The combination of a Democratic president, a Democratic Senate, a Democratic House and federal control of the nation’s financial system is dangerous to prosperity and freedom. Even if I weren’t a conservative, I’d believe that this government bailout makes balanced government indispensable.

5) To borrow an argument from Mona Charen: The best thing about a president with a military background is that he has learned not to show too much deference to generals. Let’s not forget: The brass hats were against the surge!

4) This country hungers for moderate answers on social questions from abortion to stem cells to same-sex marriage. McCain’s split-the-difference instincts offer the hope of social peace. Obama’s 100% down-the-line social liberalism will provoke reactions that will aggravate and sustain these social controveries, when we need to find compromises that can allay them.

3) McCain’s victory would be the most surprising come-from-behind victory in American political history. It would prove that money and endorsements are not everything. That is healthy for American democracy.

2) McCain has never compromised on free trade. Never. Not to win a primary, not to win a vote. Never.

1) John McCain is white, the son and grandson of admirals, married to a wealthy heiress – and yet he has experienced degrees of suffering, despair, and defeat that not one in a million of us can imagine. Barack Obama wears a black skin and carries an exotic name. In the United States, people of darker color have faced oppression and discrimination for centuries. But in Barack Obama’s own life, he has known nothing but an easy and welcoming path to success since he was 18 years old. Privileged John McCain has known more absolute degradation than any man ever to contest the presidency. Obama was born in adversity, but he has smoothly risen to a place where he is most comfortable with those for whom things are most easy.

I do not fear Barack Obama. I even rather like him. I certainly feel I have much more in common with him than I do with John McCain. To lead this country, though, I prefer the man who has seen more and suffered more and felt more. For all his faults, it is John McCain who is the more universal man.

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Thigpen Getting More Press; Chiefs New QBOTF?

Adam Teicher starts the article with the same sort of information in his Vlog I linked earlier, but goes to quote a few players saying good things.

Brian Waters:

If there were three games left in the season, I wouldn’t say that’s enough time to qualify him as that. With nine games left, if he can continue to grow and have solid performances like last week, you have to respect that and think he could be our quarterback. In my mind, I’m not hoping all of a sudden he’s a great performer. I just want him to be consistent. If he can do that, you have to take that into the evaluation of whether he’s a guy you can stick with.

Ronde Barber:

He’s impressive for a guy nobody knows about.  He obviously got better when he knew he was going to be the guy. You could tell he had a week of practice under his belt against New York. He played with some confidence. He definitely has control of the offense.

To me, he looks like an option. He looks like somebody they could use long-term there.

Now, I know I’m repeating myself, and I know I’m egotistical about my analytical ability (especially regarding football), but I still think that everyone in sports journalism has missed this point:  Even if Thigpen is unable to consistently be that good, and so is unable to secure the starting QB job, his emergence still helps the team continue its rebuilding by giving other offensive skill positions the chance to work with a QB who is good at least part of the time.  That is vital. If you get slightly-below-average or better play from your QB, you are getting good experience in for your WRs, RBs, and O-line.  If you get significantly below-average play from your QB (like we got from Thigpen in much of the game against the Falcons and Raiders), then you not only cannot execute well enough to develop young players, you also discourage young players and even worse: you accustom them to not just losing, but being humiliated on a regular basis.

Tyler Thigpen’s emergence helps the entire team, no matter whether he proves to be the QBOTF or not.

QBOTF: Quarterback of the Future, for those of you who aren’t hard-core football fans, but still care enough to read this article.  Probably a pretty small intersection in a Venn diagram, but you are stil important to me.

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Filed under Chiefs/NFL Analysis

True Then, True Now

..c’mon, lighten up.  It was a joke.

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Filed under humor, Politics