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Treatfest.

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B-IRAQ HUSSEIN OSAMA.

I was originally going to call this post, 'McCAIN: NOT ABLE', which was the most cleverest pun of BIBLICAL proportions I have ever come up with. And I was going to blog about what a terrible president John McCain would be for the United States of America, and how sad that made me - because once upon a time, back before John McCain morphed from a pragmatic and easy-going 'Mr Fix-It' to an angry walking metaphor for the disaster that it is American conservatism, I actually believed in, and supported a President McCain. But while I am happy to defend 'primary-era McCain' in a different post, should the reader of 'a word on failure' demand it, that post would now be sort of redundant. McCain's poll numbers are dismal, and short of Barack Obama tatooing a '666' into the back of his head and urinating over the American flag live on CNN - he will be the next President of the United States.

So this post isn't about what an epic fail a McCain presidency would be. But it is about the epic fail of the McCain campaign - a campaign that when it was out of fresh ideas to help the Republican party ruin America resorted to disgraceful, evil attacks on the character of Barack Obama, and in doing so have created a very,very divided and very very dangerous America.

I'm not the best person to try and explain this, cos its late and I'm tired .So I'll let someone with less foreign policy and economic experience, and only a little bit more executive experience than me give a first hand account of what a McCain campaign rally looks like.



Apart from looking a little bit like a lynch mob, I think this video is even scarier than it looks.
The real issue here isn't Bill Ayers, who is now a relatively respected Chicago community organizer and his education initiatives are supported by Republican and Democrat alike. (btw, the 'weather underground' stuff occured when Obama was 8). There are three far greater, and far scarier things if we scratch the surface of Palin's rhetoric.

1) 'not a man who sees America as you and I see America' - here she is attempting to potray Obama, as different, not just unAmerican, but actively antiAmerican
2) 'palling around with terrorists' - notice the 's' at the end of terrorists. The McCain campaign doesnt want Americans to associate Obama with Ayers, they want to associate Obama with terrorists in general
3) 'terrorists who made plans to attack the pentagon'....hmm, does this conjur up any memories in people? any specific dates?

Why is this a problem? Well, there is still a sizeable chunk of the American electorate that believes that Barack Obama is a Muslim. That Barack Obama, if elected, will be a sleeper for some terrorist master plan that will wreak the final destruction upon the land of the free. There is also a sizeable chunk of the electorate that still harbours deep misgivings about a black president in general, on the despicable grounds that black people are racially inferior to white people.

Don't believe me. Well, ill let the fruits of my late-nite Youtubing do the talking for me.






Pretty sickening stuff, huh - especially the second video. (For the record, the guy is at a Sarah Palin rally, holding up a MONKEY with an Obama sticker on it). I don't for a second want to tar any American with the same brush as this fucktard, but I show it to make the point that there are people out there for who the Obama presidency is a very 'scary' thing indeed. A thing that some crazy racist xenophobe may be willing to prevent.

The McCain campaign has actively promoted the idea, in speeches and in rallies, that Barack Obama is anti-American, is only a couple of steps removed from the monsters who bought down the world trade center, and who is just not a person who we should accept in our society. Should he, and I paused before deciding to continue typing here, be assassinated by some madman who is motivated by these views....then the responsibilty, to an extent, would fall upon John McCain and Sarah Palin. It is not a claim I make lightly, but this is the extent to which they have played upon the irrational fears of the lowest common denominator.

Perhaps realising the irrational and nasty flames he had fuelled among his supporters, McCain to his credit, attempted to pull his campaign out of the depths. Here is the last video I will show you, promise! But its a good one...



In my view, McCain did not go far enough. His response 'I am scared of Obama, because he is an Arab' was 'No m'aam Senator Obama is not an Arab, he is a good man'.
A far, far more effective victory for race relations in America, a response that could have fundamentally changed the discourse on race in America would have been - ' Ma'am, Senator Obama is not an Arab, or a Muslim. And if he was an Arab, or a Muslim - so what?'

The best way to defeat racial predjudice is to challenge the racists assertions, force them to justify their core assumptions, beliefs and predjudices. McCain was faced with a golden opportunity to change the way America thought and talked about race, asking 'what is wrong with being different' rather than ' i know he looks different, but trust me - hes one of the good guys really'

McCain blew it. Happily, McCain is also blowing the election. And while I remain deeply worried for Obama's safety, I am cautiously optimistic that a 'President Obama' could be the catharsis that destroys any lingering legitimacy of the idea of a 'superior white-race' in the eyes of a shrinking minority. The McCain-Palin campaign will be remembered, I hope, as a 'never again' moment in world history.

Now that would be change I could believe in.

Alex.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Have you seen Al Jazeera's coverage of a Palin rally?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRqcfqiXCX0

Alexandra said...

Obama is looking pretty likely A-Nel, but let's not forget the Bradley effect, amongst many other potential effects. I don't think it's a foregone conclusion, yet. Wheee!

Alex said...

Kapil - Oh man, I never knew it was that bad. I mean you know theres some nutboxes out in the Amreekan heartland, but its not till you actually here that you realise just what Obama is up against....

Alexandra - do you think the 'Bradley effect' (the idea that a black candidate will always have greater support in polls than on election day, because white people dont want to sound like they are racist to a opinion pollster) is still as valid as it once was...

I mean I know theres a lot of racists still running in America, and that race is still a divisive and difficult issue in American politics, but there are a lot more black community leaders, mayors, state legislators etc than there was in Bradley (and Dinkin's) time...people may be more comfortable with the idea of 'black people running for things' and not so eager to either mask their racism, or not wanting to appear racist by showing they support the black guys.

Am I making sense here? In other words, I want to say that for all but a small and insignificant minority, Barack Obama's race will not be a significant issue on November 4th. But does anyone know if there was a 'bradley effect' during the primaries? Id be keen to find out.

Also, noted- I do get pretty excited about calling elections for candidates long before the election. Remember how I called the American election for McCain back in February?

Alexandra said...

Yes I do (think it is still valid). You're right of course, that the passage of time and increase of general tolerance has eroded its severity somewhat.

However, as someone who worked as a market researcher Alex, you (like me) know how disappointing the populace can be. I remember you once expressing your horror at some of the views that come out of "mainstream" New Zealand, and I think America can only be as bad, if not worse due to the isolated nature of a large amount of the country. I think the more severely racist contingent of America is not so much an insignificant minority out in the heartland, but just more effectively masked "these days" by most of the media's new reluctance to condone their viewpoints. The woman who called Obama an "Arab" - using it as a synonym for "evil terrorist" - at the McCain rally is not a lone voice in the wilderness. I think she and her ilk will be out in force on the 4th.

And that is my case for the bigoted minority.

Alex said...

Hmmm....I'm not convinced.

I'm not denying there are bigots in America (watch the video that Kapil linked to in his comment, Its bloody scary.) But...do you think that these people were EVER going to vote Democrat, even if the candidates name was Whitey McOrdinaryAmerican?

I'm going to make the assertion that people who have these views associate the Democratic party with pushing some sort of 'pro-black' (and pro-baby killing too!) agenda, and they would never vote for a Democrat anyway. So,I cant see how the 'bigoted minority' is going to win the election for McCain. McCain already HAS this demographic in his column.

Alexandra said...

I'm not saying it's going to win it for McCain. This was just in response to your "OBAMA HAZ WUN, YEYTIMES!" which I thought was a bit optimistic - yes he's ahead in the polls, yes it's likely, I just wanted to point out that it's not yet a foregone conclusion. And the Bradley effect was just one possible factor that sprung to mind.