Friday, 31 October 2008
Four Days To Go!
The race tightens ( we knew it would)
No polls in the USA put McCain ahead of Obama currently, but the swing states are too close to call.
McCain's camp have issued a memo this week saying, 'All signs say that we are headed to an election that may easily be too close to call.'
Gains for Obama among young and black people may be rivalled by McCain's appeal to rural and less educated voters.
Obama has, in the last few days tried to offest this possibility in bringing in his two biggest guns.
1. A 30 minute infomerical which delayed the holy grail of American culture.
The advert drew in over 26 million viewers and is a mark of his relentless campaign up until Tuesday where he has chosen to make full use of his campaign's bucket of cash.
2. Bill Clinton.
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
Obama's Reaction to Death Threat
Is this the state of things to come? If Obama's presidency is to become dominated by racism, what sort of president will he be allowed to become? The video below, sheds light on some real fears of Ohio citizens concerning Barack Obama's intentions as president.
The 'black' are going to take over?! By 2040, white people will be in the minority in America.
Frankly, he's got a lot to do if he wins on Tuesday without having to worry about being assassinated. I'm glad he has confidence in the Secret Service, and it does reassure me that in every picture he is surrounded by six or seven men in dark sunglasses.
As an Obama supporter I am under no illusion that he is actually, 'Superman.' For any president this will be very tough.
1. The US currently faces an immediate financial crisis.
2. The question of a sustainable source of oil. America's paradox of relying on the Middle East as a source of oil, and at the same time viewing it as a security threat.
3. Taliban and al - Qaeda insurgents are thriving in Afghanistan. Will the 'War on Terror' be rendered a futile exercise? How can it end? Iraq remains volatile and unstable.
Sunday, 26 October 2008
Back to the point...
How much has the Republican campaign spent on Sarah Palin's outfits? WHO CARES? We get it, its clear, she's totally incapable of running America and was an appalling choice on behalf of McCain.
So she has allegedly spent '$150, 000' on clothes. Surely that's politics!? You've got to look good. Remember the public rinsing Boris Johnson received from the press when he didn't button up his jacket at the Beijing Olympics? First impressions count.
This story wouldn't have been such a big deal if Palin had had the first clue as to what she was talking about. The fact that she was an 'attractive face in politics' and a 'hockey Mom' are the only cards she had to play.
Obama didn't need to reiterate why he was going to visit his Grandmother in Hawaii, it was all unsaid. It was private.
Her initial allure is over, but she has been a terrific bonus for the media in the 2008 election. It was good without her, now its sublime.
Trevor McDonald's American Road Trip
Personally I think Sir Trevor has nailed it, in eight days time America will vote for the economy or for racism. Read the whole article here.
McDonald cites an opinion poll by the New York Times and CBS News which found that third of voters said they knew someone who would not vote for Obama because he is black. Nobody is prepared to be openly racist, and so the colour of Obama's skin is the proverbial 'elephant in the room.'
Obama's alter ego, 'Barack Hussien Osama the Muslim' is still prevalent. And not just through spiteful yet clever Republican campaigning, but as a desperate excuse for racism.
An aside...
McCain has realised that dragging Obama's name through the mud has not helped him gain anymore votes. I'm rather sorry for that, as it was quite entertaining. The Daily Telegraph notes that McCain is frustrated at his campaign aides for giving up the fight too soon, here he is looking angry, oooh ANGRY McCain, (note the "Rocky" music, where was the montage?!) compared to calm McCain...all in the space of a couple of days.
I'm being facetious of course, even with the polls talking of a 'landslide victory' the race will be very very close. The media can't write McCain off, while the educated elite indicate Obama's lead in the polls, the voters are regular Americans and you cannot predict how they will all vote. Just look at the last eight years.
Anyway Guy Ritchie and Madonna are keeping me entertained with their own mud slinging circus. Ritchie has said, 'cuddling up to Madonna was like cuddling up to a piece of gristle.' Shame...
Friday, 24 October 2008
Mum, Heroin and Me
The case was in reference to a young girl accused of shop lifting. The prosecution determined that the girl was a 'known heroin addict' and a 'court resident.'
Her appearance was pitiful, she was dressed in a grey tracksuit, her hair, unwashed and scraped back. She listened confused to the prosecution, trying to deny any involvement, almost as if it wasn't her they were talking about.
Before she came out, the court usher who has seen this charade a thousand times muttered, 'any moment now and she'll start crying.'
Part of me wanted to help this girl and to release her from her addiction, but having had a close relative experience alcohol addiction, I knew that more often than not, becoming personally involved is no help at all. 'Getting clean' can only be achieved with the individual's own determination.
Just look at Kate McKenzie. Her daughter Hannah has been addicted to heroin for five years. In a film last night for Channel 4, 'Mum, Heroin and Me' Jane Treay sought to depict an unhappy child who in an attempt to feel better had stumbled into alcohol and heroin addiction.
Everything that mother and daughter did together, coffee, lunch, birthday treats was sadly marred with Hannah's addiction.
Kate and her husband had separated during the course of this film over the couple's disagreement on how to cope with Hannah's addiction. Her father believed in the 'tough love' principle, but Kate could not cut Hannah out of her life, not knowing if she was safe.
Kate even took solace in the fact that Hannah would not be alone on the streets looking for drugs as she would be with her boyfriend Ricky who was also an addict.
The film captured excellently the futile squalor that heroin addicts live in. It juxtaposed Hannah's former 'middle class' life with her current state of happily 'bumbling along the bottom.'
The film opened with a scene in a block of flats. On the stone ground Hannah and Ricky were trying to inject themselves. There was an intense silence as all they could worry about was getting the heroin inside them. As the camera panned down we were able to see another addict, through the stairwell 'cooking up' alone on the ground.
Sat on a park bench together, Kate asked Ricky, "What have we got to do today?" Ricky replied, "Nothing really." Kate then replied, "I don't feel too bad today, I just need one more hit before bed time."
At the end of the film we were told that Hannah had left for a rehab clinic in South Africa for five months, in an effort to free herself from heroin's enslavement.
The devastation heroin had caused on family was unimaginable. The film captured the truth of heroin addiction, and it was 'gritty and grimy with precious little hope of salvation.'
Tuesday, 21 October 2008
Toot
Powell and Palin
Saturday Night Live is crucifying her.
The sketches themselves have been drawing in an audience of 8.3 million, and 9.3 million online. For Tiny Fey the mimicry has been all too easy, a 'hockey Mom,' an 'outsider.' But hey, she was brave, and desperate to appear on the show.
Perhaps it is Tina Fey who has weekly publicised how ill equipped for presidency Palin is, but it has been the woman herself who has torpedoed her own public image in a series of terrible interviews. See here.
And now, Colin Powell, the only man to walk out of the Bush presidency with some decency intact* agrees. He condemned McCain for attacking Obama's past, emphasising a link with the terrorist Bill Ayres. Powell said that Obama was a 'transformational figure...a new generation coming' where McCain was 'narrow and unsure.'
*Times Online (See link for Colin Powell)
Red Rocks
What am I going to do with this blog if McCain wins? Maybe I could just go back to his house in Sedona, Arizona seeing as he won't be needing it. I need some vortex healing.
Monday, 20 October 2008
Tuesday, 14 October 2008
Fickle Times
For example today, it seems as if the press have suddenly turned on Obama again. When McCain looked strong five weeks ago, Obama was the unseeded underdog; a role he seemed to relish. The press foresaw a depressing vision of isolated America, turning it on itself, continuing the Bush administration.
Cut to five weeks later, and Obama is riding high on the back of the economic crisis. McCain is presented as alienated from Bush, as the most 'democratic' Republican President America could ever hope for and Obama is rendered with a double page spread in the Times examining his 'terrorist filled past.'
This evaluation is at least what my tutors at Westminster would be proud of. A constant analysis and criticism of the media is required for a distinction I'm sure.
So the power of the press can change the outcome of an election? Of course, turning to British politics as an example, when Jonathan Aitken was revealed to be accepting gifts from a Saudi business man, his political career was ruined by the Guardian and he failed to become the Prime Minister.
Or perhaps Obama is leading in the polls because of his relentless campaigning? Let's compare the facts:
1. Barack Obama and Joe Biden have made 95 appearances in the battleground states over the past five weeks. John McCain and Sarah Palin have made only 55.
2. Ohio and Pennsylvania have received 14 visits each from the Democrats' 'big Three' compared with only nine each from the Republicans.'
Wednesday, 8 October 2008
Ignorant America
However my knowledge of Washington, I'm ashamed to say a bit more 'Sarah Palin' and a bit less 'Joe Biden' and initialising a 'world vote' isn't something I want to encourage.
Obama is suffering then from the proliferation of false rumours. The voting American public it seems, believe what they want to believe. Although not explicit Obama’s race promotes him as being different, an outsider, un-American. Channel 4 last night used statistics that Obama would be six points ahead if he was white. Obama’s lack of identification with the people who worship ‘god and guns’ could be his downfall.
It is preposterous to me that McCain is seen as intrinsically American because he fought for his country. While this in itself is admirable I’ll admit, it in no way qualifies him as a great 21st century leader. It is war and greed that has rendered America isolated and in chaos. War and greed; how many cars does McCain have? Thirteen. How many houses? Sorry I’ll just call his people to find out.
Eight years ago Obama was unable to attend the Democratic Convention in L.A because his car was towed when he was unable to keep up the payments on it. And this man doesn’t know the struggles of the American people? Please.
It is difficult not to surrender to the mud slinging that seems to be so familiar in American politics, perhaps it is less obvious within the British parties, or perhaps our politics is boring. Obama needs to defend himself, but at the same time rise above the negativity to channel a crystallised transparent image of an educated American who is able to represent his country nationally and internationally.
Tuesday, 7 October 2008
McCain in Pain
Recently I was in despair after Sarah Palin, “Miss September” looked to sink Obama’s campaign, and I wasn’t the only one to lose the faith; my house mate has bet £200 against Obama becoming President. Ha! More fool him because the tide has turned.
One month to go…
Obama must thank his lucky stars for the financial crisis and more specifically the messy $700 billion bailout. The chaos George Bush will leave the American economy in has nicely slurred McCain’s Campaign and damaged the Republican Party as a whole. McCain can no longer rely on the all American ‘I fought in ‘nam nonsense' he has propagated for so long.
As Michael Tomasky of the Guardian wrote yesterday, ‘the Republicans can’t win on substance. Most of their positions are too unpopular. They know this, and this is why they lie.’
The Republican Strategy 2008:
1. Be vague on all policies. Polls have indicated the swing state of Florida turning Democratic due to McCain looking to tax healthcare and privatise social security; policies which are alienating older Floridians from the Republican Party.
2. Stain Obama’s name as much as possible by associating him with the terrorist Bill Ayers.
3. Continue to report how much al-Quaida want Obama to win in November.
4. Continue winking, to identify as much as possible with empty symbolism such as ‘Joe Six-pack,’ and being a ‘hockey Mom.’
The morphing of the American Dream…
Who can afford a yacht, three kids at college and an annual family skiing holiday with such an uncertain financial economy? Hasn’t the American Dream become having a peaceful nights sleep, safe in the knowledge that your money is secure and you are debt free? McCain places emphasis not on reassuring the American population of his commitment to a better economy but on tearing the Democratic campaign down, rendering his own campaign empty. Obama and Biden merely have to remain substantive and strong in their policies to win…surely…?
Wednesday, 1 October 2008
Art Today
I remembered the innocence of his programme, and how much I used to look forward to Morph, his little plasticine friend coming on the screen. His use of cheap art materials such as lentils and rice meant his art was accessible to all, so 'credit crunch' friendly. His drawings are of a stark contrast to the final Turner Prize exhibits.
I wonder what he would make of a woman alone on a toilet bowl with some porridge at her feet. I rather like Cathy Wilkes' work, a frantic woman in a mess, all very Tracy Emin, but it makes me feel like I'm less of a mess myself. I'm dressed at least.
