A Malaise
By Johnny Roosh
“I will win. Don’t worry about that,” he said to the crowd of about 1,300.
He May Not Be Trailing McCain, But He’s Trailing Kerry (from Power Line)(Currently) Obama (has a) projected 275 (electoral) votes to McCain’s 250, with 13 up for grabs. Four years ago — Kerry 317, Bush 202, and 19 tied.
Glenn Reynolds adds:
Of course, Kerry was hurt by an overly grandiose performance at the Convention, and by media bias that backfired. Obama should be safe from that, right?
The Audacity of Nope?
“John McCain, all he wants to do is talk about me. They know they can’t win on the issues. So what they’ll do is they’ll try to scare people. He’s risky. He’s risky. We’re not sure.”
Which might make a good argument, if it weren’t actually true. And it may actually be Democratic voters weighing in to that effect as they find issue after issue wearing through the veneer that is Obama’s campaign, leaving his followers with a general malaise.
One might advise Barack to worry more about his constituents and what they are saying and less about McCain.
Will McCain knock Obama off his post or will Hillary and the rest of the Democrats? Does McCain offer a safer choice to likely voters in the middle or will they just stay home?
From an Obama supporter:
Obama And Closing The Deal (from Althouse)
I keep digging into his biography, and finding places where what he says doesn’t line up with what he did. That’s not striking – welcome to politics – but since he’s selling us in no small part his own beliefs rather than his accomplishments, it would be nice to see those beliefs more deeply in the context of his biography.
Allow me to paraphrase: “He’s risky. He’s risky. We’re not sure.”
For the women, the animosity over Hillary is not at the top, but simmers somewhere underneath. For the men, a feeling that Obama is a brilliant man, but a distrust – of what, no one could completely say.
A non-specific malaise then.
A large number of mainstream Democrats simply confess a disquiet. The Howard Wolfson story – that Hillary would have won Iowa and hence the election if Edwards’ affair had come out – has been repeated enough that it got my attention. I can only call it buyer’s remorse.
A non-specific remorseful malaise.
I’m feeling it as well. I’m still a solid vote for Obama, but when I sit down and write checks, somehow I just never bring myself to write one for him.
Obama’s Credibility Gap –Large and Growing: Obama also had on display yesterday a very troubling slipperiness that is increasingly defining him.
He has also managed to slip into a “reformer” shtick that has zero connection to his hyper-partisan voting record.
But yesterday he tried to slip past at least two issues on which such obfuscation shouldn’t work –same sex marriage and Senate ethics reform.
My point here is not to argue the policy positions Obama takes, but to point out his firm denial of his real positions on both issues. He flat out distorted his positions, and did so without even an arched eye-brow from the MSM.
A slippery non-specific remorseful malaise.
How might that manifest itself come November?





August 19th, 2008 at 10:41 am
McCain is playing rope a dope perfectly. It seems his idea (which I didn’t think much of) of staying positive and not doing hit pieces on Obambi is working very well.
Obambi has been hanging himself and McCain is selling him the rope.