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Libertarian Saturday
Author: TriSec    Date: 10/11/2008 13:04:26

Good Morning!

Well, the Red Sox have won game 1 at Tropicana field. I don't know about you, but last night really showcased everything that's wrong with baseball today. A dome with strange field rules, artificial turf, designated hitters....and of course the ludicrous 8:30 start. I've said it many, many times before....during the regular season, the games start at 7:05. Why not during the playoffs? I hardly think there's any interest in these games outside the team cities, at least until the World Series. But even then, 8:30 on the East Coast is just 5:30 out west...who's going to watch a game during rush hour? (And isn't all the money and most of the ratings points on the East Coast, anyway? Come on MLB, how about a little common sense?)

Ah, but I digress. TriSec tends to bloviate about baseball incessantly...


Speaking of bloviation, have we all been keeping up with the debates? Well, so has Bob Barr, and like it happens every four years, the third-party candidates are getting tossed a few crumbs by the media in the hopes they'll go away. But don't you think everyone running for high office should get an equal chance? It certainly would make things more interesting, and maybe even knock a few scales away from some eyes. Bob's written a column, originally posted over at HuffPo about it...




The presidential and vice-presidential "debates" are awful. The bloviating is excessive; the substance is minimal; and the moderating is bush league.

Virtually no one has been satisfied with the debates so far--except perhaps Barack Obama's campaign staff. The less substantive and contentious the debate is, and the less interesting the discussion--the better it is for the political front-runner, but not for the American people.

Obviously, part of the problem is procedural. We have moderators who seem more interested in squelching than in promoting real disagreement. We have formats that rule out the genuine give-and-take of an organic debate.

Imagine, for instance, how Sarah Palin would have performed if she had been called for ignoring questions and challenged for her repetitive canned generalities. Or, imagine if the presidential candidates each had 15 minutes to make their respective cases, followed by five-minute rebuttals and a question and answer period in which both could respond to each other. We might actually learn something about the candidates, other than their skill at dodging controversy. Rather than seeing these prospective presidents be forced to operate outside their own comfort zones, all the voters see are candidates doing their best to stay within their debate preparations--hardly "presidential!"

However, the biggest failing of the three contests so far is substantive. For all of the noise and fury of the campaign, Senators Barack Obama and John McCain agree more than they disagree. Both support the $2 trillion succession of federal bailouts of anyone remotely connected to Wall Street or the housing industry. Both support an expensive, imperial foreign policy, in which the U.S. subsidizes its wealthy friends and attempts to remake failed societies.

Additionally, both support massive regulation in the name of fighting climate change. Both backed warrantless surveillance of Americans' phone calls and email. Both believe in endless energy subsidies and regulation. Both spent most of their careers opposing increased drilling for oil and natural gas at home. Both want to increase the size and expense of the military--at home and abroad.

Even their differences are distressingly small. Both would stay in Iraq for a time; they just argue whether the occupation should continue two or four years, or some other longer period of time. Sen. McCain used to join Sen. Obama in opposing tax cuts. Now, as a candidate for president, Sen. McCain says he is for them. To his credit, Sen. McCain wants to cut pork, but that is only about $18 billion in 2008, compared to the $2 trillion worth of bailouts that he supported.

There is one more debate scheduled, and it desperately needs another voice: An alternative candidate to challenge the false, but shared, assumptions of Senators Obama and McCain. The political establishment has bungled America's foreign policy and wrecked America's economy, but refuses to accept responsibility for its mistakes. The conventional wisdom has failed, but the two establishment candidates will talk about nothing else.

Add Bob Barr to the upcoming debate and open up its format, and I promise that the American people will enjoy a real debate that is focused on the issues. We will talk about substance, not fluff. And the American people will learn that they do have a genuine choice on November 4th--a candidate committed to making real change in Washington.




The good news for the LP though, is ballot access. In recent years, they have been blocked at every turn by the restrictive rules set up by the two major parties. Bob Barr might not be getting much traction nationally, but the herculean effort taking place behind the scenes to get in all 50 states is yielding real progress. As of this morning, the LP is on the ballot in 45 states. The last five are: Connecticut, Louisiana, Maine, Oklahoma, and West Virginia. Alas, Bob has had little traction, even in his home state of Georgia. I doubt there's any hope for any vote siphoning from the Republicans, but if the McCain campaign continues to implode, you never know...


Changing gears just a bit, we'll check in on the bailout rescue package that we all can't seem to get enough of these days... It should probably come as no surprise that those legislators friendly with the banking industry voted yes, while those without such ties were more likely to vote no. Of course, those bankers had some extra grease for the palms of their pet legislators....up to 54% more, in fact. And it cuts across party lines, too.


BERKELEY, CA—Members of the U.S. House of Representatives today voted against a $700 billion financial system bailout. MAPLight.org has found that, over the past five years, banks and securities firms gave an average of $231,877 in campaign contributions to each Representative voting in favor of the bailout, compared with an average of $150,982 to each Representative voting against the bailout--54 percent more money given to those who voted Yes. 205 Representatives voted Yes and 228 voted No, with 1 Not Voting.

House Democrats split their votes on this bill, 140 voting Yes and 95 voting No. Democrats voting Yes received an average of $212,700 each, about twice as much as those voting No, $107,993.

House Republicans also split their votes on this bill, 65 voting Yes and 133 voting No (and 1 not voting). Republicans voting Yes received an average of $273,181 each, 50% more than those voting No, $181,688.

“Profit-driven companies wouldn't be making campaign contributions if it didn't buy them influence or access," said Daniel Newman, MAPLight.org's executive director. “Votes in Congress align with the river of money that flows through our political system.”



Lastly, since we're all in need of a chuckle these days, "Cracked" magazine (remember them?) has posted a handy list of the 5 most clearly insane public figures endorsing John McCain.


 

46 comments (Latest Comment: 10/12/2008 03:33:46 by Mondobubba)
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