Monday, September 29, 2008

high on caffeine and chocolate cake

the other night i was at arabica in downtown willoughby. the coffee and cake were superb. the locals, not so much. anyway, while i was in chocolate heaven, i got to thinking about politics. i couldn't post this blog right away because i couldn't connect to their wi-fi. now that the stage is set, let's begin...


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so last night i watched the debate. i noticed that when mccain got to talking, i felt as though i was about to fall asleep. here's why: listening to mccain is not unlike listening to a grandfather, but in a much worse sense. grandfathers are very adept at telling stories of old - you know, the ones that begin with "when i was your age..." or "back in my day..." or even, "i can remember a time when..."


normally i enjoy and cherish these stories. indeed, i wish there were more. my grandfather is a living encyclopedia - as long as the topic of interest is one of the following: abysmal first dates, being in the navy but never leaving shore, college days studying chemistry, fixing a broken down car macgyver style on the way to PA, etc.


but these are not the kind of things that i like to hear from the leader of my country, your country, our country - the world's country. mccain focused too much energy on telling tales of old and how he is going to take care of our veterans. now, don't get me wrong, i am forever grateful for all those who have fought on a battlefield, even more so for those who made it back alive from WWII. those who have served our country have every right to free healthcare, pensions, etc. (within reason). it got me wondering about how many people in the US are veterans. now, i need to do some fact checking, but is it greater than the 12.5% who are living below the poverty line? mind you, veterans aren't starving children, women trying to work two jobs to feed and take care of their kids, lacking any form of education. well at least generally they aren't.


i'll admit that my response may be biased, but i can't seem to see how mccain will do even a half-assed job running this country. and don't even get me started about the alaskan idiot who takes liking to her russian landscape outside her bedroom window.


simply put, obama has vision. he doesn't just know what to do, he actually tells us what he is going to to. since when is that a bad thing? - to tell your citizens what you are going to do to help them out.


obama could have been a little stronger though. he was a little too... intelligent. i say intelligent because in order to listen - especially listen to a conflicting viewpoint - you have to be somewhat intelligent. and that's what he did. he listened. he listened to what mccain was saying. he let mccain walk all over him with conservative slander and such. obama wasn't stumped - he was just frustrated. frustrated at mccain's unwillingness to debate but instead attempt to squander the other side.


obama wants to help us - ALL of us. not just the veterans, not just the poor, not just the wealthy. everyone. that right there should be reason enough to win the election.


you might not like obama because he wants to raise taxes. however, $250,000 is a lot of money. my parents house is barely half that much. maybe a little more than half to be fair. i know plenty of people that make $80,000 and they are very well off. so if those who make more than 250-grand need to fork over another grand or two, what's the big deal? did you ever think that it just might help the economy? do you know that over 450 economists (10 of which were nobel laureates in the subject) not only disliked bush's tax cuts, but told him it was a bad idea.


in a recession people don't need money. people need jobs. the unemployment rate in ohio alone is 7.5%. nationwide it's 6.5%. 4% is the porridge that's just right. if businesses keep shipping jobs overseas this will definitely increase. this is where it gets interesting. as our economy heads south, so does the rest of the world. we live in an age of economic globalization, the likes of which we have never seen before.


i wish that people would get rid of the mentality that you need a college education to get a good job. you don't! factory jobs are very respectable. they are integral to the economy. somebody needs to make the stuff that everyone buys. why should that somebody live in china? or india? or jordan? malaysia? mexico? venezuela? indonesia? why not the united states? ha. ha. sorry. i'm joking about that last one... 

1 comment:

  1. Sorry it took me so long to write any kind of comment, mcmahon. Lately life's been school, work, exams, and bars on the weekends, so I haven't had much time to drop by here much less post anything myself.

    I essentially agree with everything you wrote, and strongly agree with nearly everything. The one thing I varied in opinion on somewhat was in regards to the veterans. I agree children and single parent families should be first and foremost in terms of receiving health care. However, I checked the census bureau (sorry for the long url: http://factfinder.census.gov/jsp/saff/SAFFInfo.jsp?_pageId=tp12_veterans ) and apparently in 2000 something around 12% of the nation were veterans. Apparently a lot of these are veterans from Korea and Vietnam, who are undoubtably in poorer health every day. I feel that health care should be something everyone has, and also that private insurance should be available for those who want the absolute best. However, I guess the thing I differ from you on slightly is that with so many of the Vietnam veterans coming home in the 60s and 70s to a country where they had essentially been left behind (and often wrongly blamed for the war), I can see why some people would feel the need to focus on them as the first priority for health care, especially with so many new veterans from Iraq coming home within the next few years.

    Anyway, it's not really that we even disagree on the issue; we both agree veterans deserve health care. And I'm not even sure if this was anything close to McCain's reasoning, I'm just saying that from some standpoints the argument is understandable. Regardless, it may be a moot point anyway if Obama is elected and gets his plan through. One can only hope.

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