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OBAMA 2012

TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existenceSamsara Veteran
edited January 2012 in General Banter
Not an endorsement just my prediction after the Iowa caucus.
Here is my thinking in this regard:
Romney and Santorum tied.
Paul came in a close third.
Everyone else you can forget about.
Romney: Will probably get the nomination, he has the money, staff and ground game to be highly competitive. He looks the part, plays the part and has been running for president for the last five years.
Problem: He doesn't excite his base. After all, his conservative credentials can be called into question, he has "flip-flopped" on many issues and his heathcare reform mirrors the dems. He actually did worse, albeit slightly, in this caucus than in 2008. The fact that Santorum and Paul did so well against him speaks of the republican disatisfaction with him and are still looking at other options.
Santorum: His tie with Romney is gonna be nothing more than that. This I believe will be a Santorum "bubble". After all Ohio has a history of picking evangelical candidates in its caucuses. Unlike Romney, Santorum has no money, really no ground game or staffing. He also was not vetted in this caucus, he will be and will have some 'splaining to do.
Paul: That fact that he is so out of mainstream Republican views (whatever those happen to be anymore) he will never get the nomination. I believe he will remain competitive due to his money staffing and grassroots support but in the end will not get the republican nomination. He might then take his supporters and go third party, possibly libertarian.
So Romney it is.......but:
He doesn't attract independents, probably not dems either (although I would hard pressed to find any real differences between the republican and democratic machines except where they conveniently disagree on lame wedge issues. Both are in love with big government and its largess)and worse of all among his base feelings are tepid.
He may get some Santorum people but his positions are so diametrically opposed to Paul's, I doubt he'll get much support in that regard. It's even worse for Romney if Paul goes third party and splits the republican vote.
Obama on the other hand has the advantages of an incumbent, will most likely still recieve the support of the dems by and large and will, given the Romney alternative, will attact independents and swing voters.
Will it be a landslide? No.
But Romney, IMO, is gonna be another McCain or Dole.
THIS WRITING IS ONLY MY OPINION. IT IS NOT FACT. IT IS SUBJECT TO DEBATE AND CERTAINLY IS NOT INTENDED TO INFLAME OR ANGER ANYONE. JUST DICUSSING POLITICS.
All the best,
Todd

Comments


  • THIS WRITING IS ONLY MY OPINION. IT IS NOT FACT. IT IS SUBJECT TO DEBATE AND CERTAINLY IS NOT INTENDED TO INFLAME OR ANGER ANYONE. JUST DICUSSING POLITICS. All the best,Todd
    :lol: So it's come to this, on NewBuddhist--disclaimers? Aww, swing, we haven't had a good flame in ages! Everyone's been getting along so nicely. Can't we have one little flame? :rarr: Just to let off some steam?

    Come to think of it, though, we're coming close to that on the gun thread. OK, never mind. :nyah:
  • Being an atheist and a (first time) voter, I can say that alot of the candidates are not good choices based on their religious stances. I good image that I have found to be useful is what is called the "atheist scorecard". Found here -> http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2011/12/22/the-2012-presidential-candidate-scorecard-for-atheists-2/

    The problem that I see is that there is no diversity, all of the canidants (except for Obama) are middle-old age white Christians who are "very" religious. Having a country run by people like that is not good for the public and will not bring around good change. How can we expect a leader who will take us into the future if half do not believe in evolution or use and accept science or someones personal rights to choose? (in regards to abortion and gay marriage)
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    edited January 2012
    :lol: So it's come to this, on NewBuddhist--disclaimers? Aww, swing, we haven't had a good flame in ages! Everyone's been getting along so nicely. Can't we have one little flame? :rarr: Just to let off some steam?
    Come to think of it, though, we're coming close to that on the gun thread. OK, never mind. :nyah:

    Dakini,
    The gun thread has been great!! By all means let off some stream tell me what you really think! After all what's the point in having a discussion if one can't be open and honest. The problem comes when we reify a position or idea-something we Buddhist strive not to do, I am certainly guilty of that. :D
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    @Arjquad:
    I wasn't trying to advocate for a candidate one way or the other, just some post-caucus analysis. Personally I see very little substantive difference in either group, there are superficial differences of course but superficial they are.
  • edited January 2012
    I agree with everything you said. I have been thinking that for months, now. I have always known Romney will be the candidate.

    I would also like to add that there is another thing that could happen: there is a chance Ron Paul will go third party and then steal votes away from Romney, getting Obama more votes. Winner winner chicken dinner.
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    "It's even worse for Romney if Paul goes third party and splits the republican vote".
  • edited January 2012
    Guess we are completely on the same page then. :)
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    I think Paul will split it.
  • @Theswingisyellow I didn't mean that your advocating, I was just putting the thought out there that all of the candidates are basically the same with the same view points, same platforms and same beliefs, but with a few differences in wording so it looks different.


  • here is how American politic function. Obama, Romney... all the same.

    There is no way on earth they let Paul win. My guess is they give him a third place position so not too many people suspect it was rigged and enough people believe that voting for him is wasting your vote.

    it sucks to learn how American politic work because all of our hopes and desires dissipate, but after we go through the mourning phase for our lost hopes, it can is liberating because we can stop getting angry about "why didn't he do this or that?" type of things, stop paying too much attention to it and this liberate energy for better things in our life.
  • Odd to see a political discussion here, but, while I ('80s and '90s) seriously inquired into the Latter Day Saint faith (and both times found it not to my liking even when I considered myself a Christian), still I can empathize a bit with Mitt Romney's distinctly minority Faith. He's true to it, "lives" it (rather than just talks it) and does not run away from it (though he does not promote it, either). No endorsements, but this attribute makes me admire him a bit.

    Ohhh, just imagine if a Buddhist ever ran for President..... I don't think the Country could handle it.

  • edited January 2012
    @Theswingisyellow & @Dakini lol. We're behaving on the gun thread...Notice how we all went from over there to over hear....
    I Like Paul out of the whole lot, Because he is honest. He's just not very articulate, which gets him in trouble. But he speaks the truth. Which is why people don't like him. The truth is not always an easy pill to swallow. Ultimatly, this is what makes him unelectable. Santorum...uh, that man. He'll never make it in NH. We're too liberal In the New England region to accept that. I agree it will Be Romney in the End, but I don't think he has what it takes to beat Obama. (Especially is Paul runs on the 3rd party ticket) Why vote Obama out, just to vote Obama in?
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    I agree with your take. I thought the three republican canditates really shows the different wings of the party. You've got Santorum (google him, if you dare :eek: ) representing the social conservatives. Ron Paul representing the libertarian wing. And Mitt Romney with the business conservatives and the establishment.

    I think the nominy will be Romney for the same reasons you do and I think Obama will beat him. Obama is vulnerable but the republican candidates are weak. The wildcard in all this is the economy. If things take a turn for the worse things would change.
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    @pattb-
    Thanks for the insightful video! Just went to amazon to pick up Hedges book.
    @pattb said "here is how American politic function. Obama, Romney... all the same"
    I couldn't agree with you more.
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    @craigpoff said "Odd to see a political discussion here"
    Maybe not so odd. Maybe buddhism is again changing and adapting, as it always has, when it has come to a new place. Batchelor said in "Buddhism without Beliefs"
    (I am paraphrasing here) that as Buddhist we are very good at using our practice inwardly to cultivate and grow ourselves but outwardwardly we are not engaged /don't engage with the world ( :banghead: I don't have the book in front of me for a direct quote)He found that as a failing and I would agree with him; not that we have to "spread the Dharma" but through our practice, our conduct and our lives we remain engaged with the world and hopefully positively impact it. That's at least my thinking.
    @craigpoff said "Ohhh, just imagine if a Buddhist ever ran for President..... I don't think the Country could handle it"
    Your right, they couldn't! You know 'cause were essentially Satanists, at the very least we are going to hell :rarr: :rarr: :rarr:
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    I think Paul will split it.
    Let me change my mind on that. Upon reflection I think he will remain consistent and stay with his party and not pull a Nadar (being a spoiler that is) I doubt the people voting for Paul will throw thier weight towards Romney, if Paul drops out.
  • edited January 2012

    The problem that I see is that there is no diversity, all of the canidants (except for Obama) are middle-old age white Christians who are "very" religious. Having a country run by people like that is not good for the public and will not bring around good change. How can we expect a leader who will take us into the future if half do not believe in evolution or use and accept science or someones personal rights to choose? (in regards to abortion and gay marriage)
    This brings back memories of the Kennedy and Carter campaigns and presidencies. For those who weren't there at the time:
    Kennedy was considered by many to be unelectable, because he was a Catholic. The kinds of concerns arjquad raises were raised then. I suspect that to a certain extent, "Catholic" was a euphemism for "Irish", which raised similar prejudices for some people as the term/ethnicity "Negro" did. (The Irish used to be slaves/indentured servants in America, before Black slavery was invented. ) But even without ethnic prejudice, the religion issue was a big one. But Kennedy's presidency had nothing to do with religion, so that worked out fine.

    Carter was a born-again Christian. I think he was elected only because he was running after the "Tricky Dick" disaster of the Nixon presidency, and the electorate was looking for someone ethical, a radical change. During his presidency, the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision was handed down, and had to be implemented as federal law. Carter was against abortion, but he wrote in one of his books that he was bound to uphold the law of the land, and he did. As a Christian, he worked to support the Christian position in other ways, he said, by supporting adoption, I forget the details of that side of it. The point is, he didn't allow his religious beliefs to interfere with his duty as President.

    I wouldn't trust today's ultra-Christian candidates to have that kind of integrity.

    Did anyone notice during the Bush-Kerry election, how Kerry was compelled to stress his church-going? Because Bush was touting his religious values, family values, etc., so Kerry had to compete to some extent on that score? That was sad, a sad commentary on how skewed politics has become in recent decades, rife with fundamentalism. A little scary.

  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    "Barack Obama will be re-elected not as a vindication of his policies but because the Republicans are incapable of providing a reasonable challenge to his flawed performance"

    @pattb said "here is how American politic function. Obama, Romney... all the same"

    "Not only has Obama been a savior of the banking conglomerates that so generously financed his campaign, but he also has proved to be equally as solicitous of the needs of the military-industrial complex. He entered his re-election year by signing a $662 billion defense authorization bill that strips away some of our most fundamental liberties and keeps military spending at Cold War levels, and by approving a $60 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia"

    http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/arms_dealer_obama_will_win_by_default_20120105/?ln
  • Evil vs. Crazy - 2012
  • The President isn't the problem. Congress is the problem. The legislative branch needs a thorough house cleaning followed by a total revamp of its entire structure. The only possibility of beginning to see a change in the way things work in America is term limits for Congress. Two terms for senators and three terms for representatives. That way we do away with career politicians and (hopefully) lessen the hold of K Street lobbyists.
  • B5CB5C Veteran
    I am voting for Obama because he is the lesser evil.
  • @compassionate_warrior You know, I was wondering just the other night, after the Iowa caucus how and why all the politicians are spewing out so much religious jargon? This has been the theme for the past several elections. And I always have the same response: Who cares? I don't care if you are Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Atheist, or Alien. What are you going to do about the economy? The jobs? The taxes? I don't care that you want to thank god for your success. Save it for church and grace at dinner. Leave it off the platform. This is supposed to be a country where church and state are separate. This religious manipulation is really an undesired distraction from the real issues at hand.
  • shanyinshanyin Novice Yogin Sault Ontario Veteran
    I am voting for Obama because he is the lesser evil.
    are you sam harris? lol
  • shanyinshanyin Novice Yogin Sault Ontario Veteran
    Well I'm not Ajahn Chah
  • How about current events???
  • edited January 2012
    It's not about religion per se. "Family values" is a Republican code word for anti-abortion and anti-gay. That's what's so worrisome about the Religious Right. They have a coded agenda they shouldn't be allowed to implement. Going back to my Carter example, I would worry that unlike Carter, some of these candidates wouldn't uphold the law of the land, they'd try to undermine it. Remember when Bush somehow blocked the teaching of contraception in public school sex ed classes, and mandated an abstinence-only curriculum? Internationally, he prevented US development aid from supporting any health center that even spoke about abortion, no matter what other crucial services were being provided. Foreign policy more generally came to be more about religion (and oil) than terrorism, or there was an anti-Muslim subtext. Clinton, on the other hand, came to the rescue of Muslims, in Kosovo, on humanitarian grounds.
    @compassionate_warrior Save [religion] for church and grace at dinner. Leave it off the platform. This is supposed to be a country where church and state are separate. This religious manipulation is really an undesired distraction from the real issues at hand.
    I agree 100%. It's undesired and alarming, and really pretty inappropriate, I'd say.

    I read an article that said Bush Jr. discovered the Religious Right when he was managing his father's campaign, and started to court them, realizing they were a potentially strong, untapped electoral force. It worked, so after that, he really played it up, and cultivated those contacts, and fed that sector, helping them come to power (they took over Congress part way through the Clinton admin). So it's due to G.W. that this has become such a big focus in our politics today. Before his involvement in national politics, it was irrelevant and off the table. I'm not even sure the Reagans were church-goers at all. Nobody cared whether they were or not.

  • Can I even begin to convey how wonderful it was to spend a blissful week in Belize and not hear, read, or otherwise take in a single syllable about politics in the US? Bliss, I tell you...
  • @Mountains. Lol. Don't worry, only another 11 months until the election is over. I hope you had a nice vacation. :)
  • B5CB5C Veteran


    are you sam harris? lol
    lol, he is one of my favorite scholars.

  • @Mountains. Lol. Don't worry, only another 11 months until the election is over. I hope you had a nice vacation. :)
    And people thought the mayans would ruin 2012.

  • shanyinshanyin Novice Yogin Sault Ontario Veteran
    @Arjquad :clap:
  • B5CB5C Veteran
    edited January 2012
    @Mountains. Lol. Don't worry, only another 11 months until the election is over. I hope you had a nice vacation. :)
    And people thought the mayans would ruin 2012.

    I hope the Mayans are wrong. I pay off my car in December 2012! :P

  • I think Libertarian paints me best, but I probably won't vote for Ron Paul unless he is still in the race when it comes time for Hawaii to vote, or the election has already been decided which is normally the case... If it is a close race though between Obama and Romney at ballet time, I will have to pick one, and I honestly do not know who is worse.
  • Can I even begin to convey how wonderful it was to spend a blissful week in Belize and not hear, read, or otherwise take in a single syllable about politics in the US? Bliss, I tell you...
    And people thought the mayans would ruin 2012.
    ROFL! Madhouse that it is, at least it gives us some good laughs. ^_^ Thanks, guys!

  • I'm not even amused by it anymore (well, okay, Michelle Bachmann was pretty funny). The whole process just makes me sick to my stomach. Like everything else in America, it's just a big show with no substance behind it. It's all about money, getting and keeping power, and getting reelected. It's not about governing or doing the right thing for anyone but themselves. I never imagined I could be so cynical about America after living through the Bush years, but if anything I'm more cynical now than I was then.
  • Mts., ya gotta have a sense of humor, or you'll go batty. I know what you mean, but at least we have each other here on NB for a little comic relief.

    You're right, though. Who expected Obama to turn out to be a Bush in sheep's clothing, or something?
  • I'm not even amused by it anymore (well, okay, Michelle Bachmann was pretty funny).
    image
  • GROSS!! :p
  • DaltheJigsawDaltheJigsaw Mountain View Veteran
    I think this is great that we have different threads like this one. Keep it up!:)
  • TheswingisyellowTheswingisyellow Trying to be open to existence Samsara Veteran
    I'm not even amused by it anymore (well, okay, Michelle Bachmann was pretty funny).
    image
    God that so wrong!

    :lol:
  • personperson Don't believe everything you think The liminal space Veteran
    I live in Minnesota, its mindboggling to me that my representative Keith Ellison, the only muslim member of congress is from a neighboring district to Michele Bachmann.
  • Keith Ellison, the only muslim member of congress
    that poor man! I wonder what it's like for him?

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