Not Why, Why Not?

A Blog About Relevant World Wide Issues

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Defining Moments

As I was driving back from Colorado Springs, CO last night I had a chance to listen to AM talk radio. I guess it shouldn't surprise me that "church leaders" and "doctors" on nationally syndicated talk shows were asking callers to answer questions like, "Do you think it is a good idea to elect a Socialist like Barack Hussein Obama?" It seemed like every channel on the dial was railing, yelling really, about "liberal media bias," "forced abortions," and "Communism in America." I couldn't turn it off. It was amazing, and that's when I thought, "Is this real? - Is this the same country that gave women the right to vote and later passed the Civil Rights Act?" Then I heard Conservative radio host Don Wade inviting listeners to describe their greatest fears of an Obama Presidency, and there it was. Did you know Barack Obama is the anti-Christ and will bring about the End Of Days?

Then a rather calm feeling came over me as I switched off the radio. This IS the same country that ushered in great movements of necessary progress and social justice. I think the sometimes violent reaction to the idea of our first African-American President is proof positive that we are on the cusp of something GREAT again.

These are my final thoughts, and I leave the rest to you, the voter.... we are at a defining moment. These are exciting times.

Friday, October 17, 2008

What I See On The Ground





Colorado Notes:
I have been trained three times. Barack Obama’s get-out-the-vote effort is so sophisticated that each time I volunteer to work the phone banks, a new script has been refined and developed as necessary.

For example, the first time I made calls, I contacted new Democrats or registered Unaffiliated voters and asked them for their support of Barack Obama. Many of the calls reached answering machines, so we didn’t waste voter’s time with left messages. When a live voice did pick up, the conversation always seemed to go well. If the voter was an Obama supporter, I tried getting voters to commit to a mail-in ballot. This is one option in Colorado, and it encourages early voting. Obama is banking as many of these early votes as possible because the campaign expects massive irregularities and “voter exclusions” due to long lines and or actual planned voter exclusion on election day.

The second time I arrived, I was trained to only contact new voters who had already received a mail-in ballot. My goals were three-fold: identify supporters and remind them to send-in that ballot. Most importantly, Colorado requires newly registered voters to mail in a copy of their Colorado Driver’s License or a U.S. Passport, or a statement that includes the last four numbers of their Social Security Number. So I informed them.

Indeed, Colorado has a lot of confusing requirements for new voters. Twice in the last two years, different Republican Secretary of States (the first retired to the oil and gas industry), have purged what the NY Times estimated as up to a third of all Colorado registered voters due to identification technicalities or possible matches on illegal voters (immigrants or felons). The possible match concept is wonderfully vague and dubious. If you are a citizen with a name of Jose Martinez, there is a pretty good chance you were purged because another Jose Martinez got bounced off the voter roles for having improper ID, and heck, you just can’t be sure which Jose Martinez is improper, so you better remove them all. Voter purges and the voter exclusions by Republican operatives on election day are so back-channeled and secretive that only insiders see the magnitude (they make “voter fraud” and the Acorn mess look paltry).

Obama has countered this of course by registering hundreds of thousands of new voters. I did my part in Oregon by registering many of my students. I think in the end, Hillary did wonders for the Obama campaign by staying in as long as she did. Her participation also registered thousands of new Democrats, and despite what the media might suggest, most of her votes will go to Obama.

My third training was the most intensive. I had to leave messages if no one answered. This was the day I called people to tell them that the Secretary of State had removed them from the voter ranks on a technicality, and if they still wanted their vote to count, they had just one week to correct the error. Fortunately, maybe two/thirds of the people I reached were willing to go to the State website and download a correction form or had already received a letter and acted on it. My wife found out there was a glitch in her registration (mysterious wrong zip code) and also had to go through this process. I am left to wonder though how many people are willing to register, re-register, and then vote. It can be difficult when life is happening, right?

On Canvassing: our get-out-the-vote-effort includes the same door-to-door work you saw Obama himself doing in Ohio (yes, when he ran into Joe The Not-Really-A-Plumber). Last weekend and again tomorrow, I will knock on doors of the Unaffiliated voters and try to get their support. At one apartment I met an Obama supporter and her live-in boyfriend who was one of those mysterious Undecideds. I asked the Undecided Voter what he wanted in his candidate, and he was just really proud of not knowing who he wanted to vote for, that he was really independent, and said he didn’t really have time to “research” all the issues. I left by joking to the Obama supporter, “Work on him for us will you?”

I am not alone in my pilgrimage from a Blue State to a Swing State. Everyday more volunteers show up at the Obama office, many like me, coming from a State that doesn’t seem to matter. People are pouring in from out-of-State. I have met women from Texas and Georgia, a man from New York, and more, always from non-Swing States. I make calls sitting next to retirees and college kids. Here is a confession. The Obama campaign has some demographic information about each person we call. I do notice that I hesitate before picking up the phone when the Unaffiliated voter is a male over the age of 34. I am always worried to reach a staunch Conservative like Joe The Not-Really-A-Plumber who is afraid of “Obama the Socialist.” I guess these people dream of the day they will be in a higher tax bracket, so they vote against their own interest (and with Obama’s plan - lower taxes), because they are against class welfare. Then I realize that I am a male over the age of 34, and that new data shows that men are starting to lean Obama. I am also reminded that I have actually only reached one such man who thought Obama was a socialist. I am polite. I thanked him for his time. Then I picked up the phone and dialed again.


Yesterday the phone rang at our rented apartment. A robo-call from the Republican National Convention telling me that Obama has a buddy named Bill Ayers that bombed America. Later on television I saw a 504-Group Ad for McCain starring Reverend Wright. I keep thinking, thank goodness Obama did not take public financing. McCain’s swift-boat-like proxies are making-up the money-gap, but Obama’s individual donors have remained steady. Yet for all McCain’s attempts to blast Obama’s character, when I reach a voter who wants to chat, it is then I believe, most encouragingly, that Obama will win. Most people I talk to are worried about the economy. They want new energy sources and worry about inflation. They are concerned about their retirement. They want to bring an end to spending money on war. It has never been about associations and character (although you know Obama's character is impeccable).


The endgame. In volunteering so much time for Obama, I just cannot conceive of a McCain victory, unless there is something particularly corrupt about our election procedures OR if we are as racist a nation as some would have you believe. I know, I know, the poll numbers are shifting again. Today (Friday) most of the networks have a new narrative. The focus is on a McCain comeback. The polls are narrowing they will tell you. Etcetera. Yet this is what I see and know: I now admire the candidate Obama so much more because I can document the efforts and leadership his campaign has maintained. I realize what an organized and expert President he will be. Obama has 40 offices in Colorado like the one I work for; I know he has similar efforts all across the country. His volunteers outnumber McCain’s by the thousands. He has offices in Red States like Georgia and Louisiana, and will be competitive in Red States like Indiana, North Carolina, and even West Virginia. This will make all the difference on election day. I found out that at each polling place we will have coordinated poll watchers to defend the voter’s right to vote. I also am privy to our election strategy to get people to the polls once early voting begins here is Colorado and of course, on election day. This is all very good news…

This is what I see on the ground …

An Obama victory in November.

Friday, October 10, 2008

This Is What You Get

To “turn the page” on the bad news of the economy, the McCain campaign announced they would only run negative ads against Barack Obama and Joe Biden. One hundred percent negative ads.

John McCain and Sarah Palin followed suit, attacking Obama’s character on the campaign trail, and as you probably know, Palin even told a crowd that Obama was “palling around with terrorists.”

In response John McCain supporters have grown more and more enraged while McCain or Palin rally their troops.

“Socialists are going to take over the country,” said an angry supporter to McCain. McCain seemed to agree with the man.

Later, “Terrorist,” shouted someone with more anger.

“He’s an Arab,” – said one woman.

And finally, “Kill him!”

Well, I guess this is what you get.

John McCain is trying really really hard to win the election. Let’s just hope he doesn’t incite his supporters into violence against Obama voters before this is all over.

Most of these comments have been overlooked by the McCain campaign, even encouraged by the lack of response, especially by Palin. Today, in an abrupt 180, McCain told the woman who called Obama an Arab, "No ma'am, no ma'am. He's a decent family man...[a] citizen that I just happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues. That's what this campaign is all about."

I can’t believe I even have to write this; Obama has been a Christian his entire life. He is not Muslim. Arab is an ethnic distinction, not a religious one. And for the record, McCain didn’t correct the woman on her Arab claim. In his statement, McCain basically punted.

I am not sure how any of you feel about the economy tanking, your healthcare, your debt, our troops abroad, energy costs, the environment, etc. etc. But I know how I feel about the McCain campaign’s new strategy. It is criminally dangerous. And it reeks of fear-mongering to stir up hatred for Obama.

Here is my plea to all of us:

If you need to blame, that is fair. If you seek different perspectives, that is even better. And expressing your discontent simultaneously with your most precious hopes for the future is downright American. But please, please, too many people already spend too much time hating and fearing what they perceive to be different than themselves. Do not incite hate. We need to try to understand ourselves as Americans, all of us, and use our freedom of speech for constructive dialogue, and of course, by voting our hopes and our beliefs.