One Choice: Obama


October surprise?
October 7, 2008, 7:09 pm
Filed under: One Choice: Obama | Tags: , ,

    

     As Obama surges ahead in the polls, knowing the tactics used by the GOP in the past, I’m just waiting for the other foot to drop. That is, when will they produce the October surprise?
     Remember the last presidential election? Everytime John Kerry had a boost in the polls, there would be a rise in the terror alert color code. The most heinous example of this was right after the Democratic National Convention when Tom Ridge raised the alert based on information that was several years old. It worked, of course, and Bush’s numbers improved.
     These fluctuations followed by terror alarms were documented by Keith Olbermann. With his signature savvy, Olbermann dubbed it The Nexus of Politics and Terror.
     Well, there is worldwide buzz gathering that another major terror attack is imminent. Concern is so high in Great Britain that it is being called “at the severe end of severe.” 
     And now today, the anniversary of the start of the war in Afghanistan, we learn on Jim Popkin’s post at NBC’s Deep Background that the FBI and Department of Homeland Security issued a message yesterday to “U.S. law-enforcement officials cautioning that al-Qaida terrorists have in the past expressed interest in attacking public buildings using a dozen suicide bombers each carrying 20 kilograms of explosives.” Popkin adds “Authors with the U.S. Office of Intelligence and Analysis added that they have ‘no credible or specific information that terrorists are planning operations against public buildings in the United States.’ The FBI and DHS analysts said they were releasing the note because ‘it is important for local authorities and building owners and operators to be aware of potential attack tactics.’”
     How is this not unlike the Ridge terror level raise after Kerry and Edwards got a big boost in the polls back in 2004?
     It’s another thing that makes you go hmmm about this administration and the GOP in general. Isn’t frightening the bejesus out of citizens to give your candidate a boost in the polls a form of…. how did Sarah Palin put it?… domestic terrorism?



‘This isn’t politics, this is personal’

(NOTE: This is the first on-scene report from a One Choice: Barack Obama blog reader. If you have seen the candidate live and would like to write about your experience, or would like to add your opinions or links to our mix, send it in an e-mail to One4Obama@gmail.com.)

By Virginia Hope  

     I saw Barack Obama speak in Newport News, Virginia on Saturday. Okay, let me get over my rock star crush moments first. We waited in line for two hours, heard some bad and not-so-bad warm up acts, and he finally came on the stage at one. OMG!!! He’s so good looking! Such presence! Funny! Entertaining! And I bet he can totally tear it up on the dance floor! OK – rock star crush is now in check.  
    
Obama gave a speech I was not expecting. The chants of “Yes We Can,” though energetic and proud, were a little forced. Because he wasn’t really interested in inflating his ego; he was there to talk policy, specifically health care. He began with a story that touched me on a personal note. He spoke of his mother dying of cancer. He spoke about how, rather than focusing on getting better and taking comfort in the presence of family and friends, she was fighting with the people at the insurance company who didn’t want to pay her medical bills because they claimed that cancer was a pre-existing condition. Having lost my own mother to cancer two years ago, I realized that, despite everything, we were lucky. Losing my mother was the hardest experience of my life, and I can’t imagine if mom, dad, or any of us kids also had to deal with the stress of paying for her care. As Obama said himself, “This isn’t politics, this is personal.”
     He spent about half the time criticizing McCain’s proposed health care plan, respectfully and honestly. McCain and Palin are quick to mention the $5,000 health care credit, per family, but fail to emphasize that their administration plans to tax health care for the first time in history. We’d never see that $5,000 (which would go straight back to the insurance company), and we’d be taxed on our healthcare benefits as salary, so we’d end up losing more than that tax credit. McCain and Palin are all about de-regulating the health insurance industry and letting the free market take care of it. Well, we see how well that worked on Wall Street.
     Obama got specific about his own plan.  He’d negotiate with insurance and pharmaceutical companies, driving down the price of prescription drugs and the availability of cheaper generics. He’d require hospitals to switch over to computer-based record keeping, instead of relying on pen and paper, thereby saving money and lives. He’d reduce premium costs for those that have health insurance, and he’d make sure that those who don’t have it can afford to get it. And he’d pay for it (beyond the savings of bringing health care record-keeping into the 21st century), by repealing Bush’s tax cuts for people making over $250,000 a year.  He closed with the story of a sixteen-year-old boy named Devon with a heart ailment, whose mother can’t afford to pay for the treatment he needs (and their insurance company won’t pay, again claiming “pre-existing condition”). As a result, Devon can’t participate in any physical activity.  Can you imagine being a sixteen-year-old who can’t be active?  Devon’s mother sent Barack an email that urged him to keep going when it’s tough – for Devon. That story moved me to tears. And made me more committed to do what I can to get Barack Obama elected.    
    
Being at the speech, I felt like I was floating in a sea of unity. We all want a better America, and in that time, and in that place, I felt that we had the power to make it happen. And the leader to guide us. As the country has become increasingly polarized, I hope that Barack’s message will reach as many as possible. He knows that we may disagree on some important issues, but he also knows that there are many more ways in which we agree.  We can work together to make this country great again. We can do it. Yes we can.