She Was Fine

Marc didn’t see Clinton lose her cool at all. Focus group video here. Actual alleged flash of Clinton anger here. I think "infuriated" is a better description. I think she’s actually offended that anyone is challenging her for the Democratic nomination, after all she’s gone through and all the hard work she has put in. And she must be amazed that he has now knocked her instantly onto the ropes in the first round. What I saw in that flash of the eyes was: "How dare you do this to me?"

I do think she has worked extremely hard for the things she believes in over the years. She is diligent whatever else you want to say about her. But when you examine Obama’s career, it is no flight from social responsibility and hard work either. She’s right to be proud of her own efforts. She’s wrong to dismiss those of others’.

Getting It Now

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A reader writes:

I read your essay, studied his campaign, and just did not see it. How could a conservative get behind Barack Obama?  Well after he won in Iowa, I saw it. His victory speech in Iowa was the purest example of William F. Buckley’s words of standing "athwart history, yelling Stop" that I have heard out of any of the candidates running for office. 

I most likely will not vote for Obama but I can’t help but think since Thursday night that if he were elected President, it would be a breath of fresh air that the likes of George W. Bush, Al Gore, and John Kerry did their damnest to pollute the last few Presidential elections. 

Obama has definitely won my respect.

Another writes:

I thought some more about Obama’s speech(es), and a thought occurred to me. I’m an educated, politically savvy, 24 year-old college graduate who should not be prone to "the moment."  I have my fair share of cynicism in me.  Why, then, do I get sucked in by Obama?  Whatever it is, my wall of cynicism falls down whenever I hear a speech like Thursday’s. I go from being a cynical liberal, to an idealistic liberal, waiting for the possibility of the future.

I know, my "rational" part tells me, "You’re being hopelessly romantic." Yet, I don’t care.  I like feeling idealistic, on occasion. I like feeling this way. I don’t want it to stop. Not now, not yet.

Me neither.

The Healthcare Trade-Off

Some candor from Tyler Cowen:

Health care has a murky relationship to human health, pharmaceuticals and broken limbs aside.  A version of the single-payer system, as might be adopted in the United States, would not lower costs.  We would be raising taxes and lowering medical innovation to give poor people a good deal more financial security and a slight bit more health; that is the relevant trade-off.

Clinton Isn’t The Only One Who’s Angry

A reader writes:

Obama won’t earn my vote until he stands up to his boorish supporters, the boorish "Hillary Haters" of the Right, and the media. Substituting "generational war" for "culture war" doesn’t get us anywhere toward "unity" or a better America. Especially when that "generational" war appears to just be a new name for the same old thing; hostility and disrespect toward the women who, bearing the brunt of massive social change over the last 40 years, stepped up to the plate, accepted new responsibilities, and worked to create new and better conditions and opportunities for their sons and daughters. Obama would not be where he is today without 40 years of commitment from the liberal women, black and white, of Hillary’s (and my own) generation. That unique "biography" that you claim as Obama’s advantage isn’t Obama’s alone — it is his mother’s, too, and perhaps most of all.

I’d like to see Obama, if he gets the nomination, choose a woman VP. My vote would be for Janet Napolitano of Arizona. She’s a very successful and popular 2-term governor from a Mountain West state — a region in which Democrats need to make more gains in order to balance their loss of support in the South. In terms both of her personal qualities and experience, and the party’s strategic best interest, it makes real sense.

It would also help convince life-long Democratic women, like me, that Obama really is seeking to lead the country past the old politics of "culture war" — so much of which has always been based in fear of the changing role of women in our society and economy — rather than just exploiting that fear in new and more subtle ways.