Still No Good Explanation for Obama's Plan For A State Security Apparatus
Our good friends on the far left have plenty of snark to drop in this post, suddenly finding an aversion to Third Reich analogies after seven years of BushHilter and comparisons of the RNC to Nazis.
What they have not done, nor even seriously attempted, was to explain the comments the media so carefully edited-out of a speech that Obama recently gave, where he advocated a "civilian national security force" that is "just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded" as the nation's military. As I noted in my last comment to that post, "national" means United States, or domestic in nature, not a international force. Security means "police." Unless Obama was uttering "just words," he was advocating domestic state security. That he would make plain his intentions to make his SS "just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded" as the strongest military in the history of Planet Earth should be a cause for concern for everyone, and not just because he's talking of creating another massive bureaucracy and colossal tax burden. Why does a free nation that already has the FBI, ATF, and DHS on the federal level, SBIs, state police, and highway patrols on the state level, in conjunction with local sheriffs and police agencies, with the backing the Army and Air Force National Guard and Coast Guard units for the most extreme emergencies, need an additional national domestic security apparatus dwarfing all current federal law enforcement agencies, equal in power and scope to the military? How does the Democratic frontrunner make a call for such an alarming organization, and the media not report it. Worse, how do they get a way with erasing those words from transcripts of the speech? I'm getting a lot of snark from those on the political left for stating that I didn't like Obama's plan any better in the original German, but precious few explanations of why a free nation would need such an imposing force, one only useful against it's own citizenry. Update: closing comments due to surge in comment spam.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 12:41 PM
Comments
Please?
Seems to fit will with his other ideas.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Protective_League
Or maybe The Assault Detachment
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturmabteilung
Jon's got more on this over at our blog,
http://exurbanleague.com/2008/07/07/dont-worry-mr-godwin-has-been-notified.aspx
Posted by: ExUrbanKevin at July 18, 2008 01:42 PM (ppKzH)
Posted by: Zelsdorf Ragshaft III at July 18, 2008 02:41 PM (J5AYY)
Posted by: diogenes at July 18, 2008 02:48 PM (PMlL4)
"We cannot continue to rely only on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives that we've set," he said Wednesday. "We've got to have a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as strong, just as well funded."
He doesn't say anything about diplomacy here (defined as negotiations between foreign states or groups), and speaks only about his national security force.
You have a problem with reading comprehension; Obama may have a problem with speaking comprehension (saying what he actually means), but what he actually said is unambiguous.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at July 18, 2008 03:14 PM (xNV2a)
Not to mention the fact that just-as-well-funding this force would require additional expenditures by the federal government equal to those of the military. He's already on record proposing hundreds of billions of dollars in additional spending before this announcement. Where's the money for that just-as-well-funded force going to come from?
Posted by: Diffus at July 18, 2008 03:20 PM (MR/ge)
Posted by: Zelsdorf Ragshaft III at July 18, 2008 03:44 PM (J5AYY)
"As President, I will expand AmeriCorps to 250,000 slots, and make that increased service a vehicle to meet national goals like providing health care and education, saving our planet and restoring our standing in the world, so that citizens see their efforts connected to a common purpose. People of all ages, stations, and skills will be asked to serve. Because when it comes to the challenges we face, the American people are not the problem - they are the answer.
"So we are going to send more college graduates to teach and mentor our young people. We'll call on Americans to join an Energy Corps to conduct renewable energy and environmental cleanup projects in their neighborhoods all across the country. We will enlist our veterans to find jobs and support for other vets, to be there for our military families. And we're going grow our Foreign Service, open consulates that have been shuttered, and double the size of the Peace Corps by 2011 to renew our diplomacy.
"We cannot continue to rely on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives we've set. We've got to have a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded."
It's right there, if anyone wants to take the time to listen and try to understand, instead of listening to find ammunition against the man.
Now, if you want to switch horses in midstream, you have every reason to wonder where the $$$ will come from. THAT'S a valid issue and a valid concern. But quoting words out of context won't advance that debate one iota.
Posted by: Diogenes at July 18, 2008 03:46 PM (PMlL4)
Posted by: Snooper at July 18, 2008 04:38 PM (D1GTw)
Posted by: Snooper at July 18, 2008 04:42 PM (D1GTw)
Sorry, Diogenes, Obama is truly calling for a national security force. Spin all ya want, you won't change that.
But, don't worry... he'll soon flip-flop on that one, just like he has on the Surge, FISA, public financing of campaigns, etc...
Posted by: C-C-G at July 18, 2008 06:40 PM (e+Bm0)
Posted by: Zelsdorf Ragshaft III at July 18, 2008 06:56 PM (J5AYY)
Posted by: Capitalist Infidel at July 18, 2008 07:02 PM (kNqJV)
Posted by: C-C-G at July 18, 2008 07:46 PM (e+Bm0)
Your grandchildren will be Muslim.
Allahu akbar!
Posted by: American Muslim at July 18, 2008 08:29 PM (QL2F8)
Posted by: Johnnie at July 18, 2008 09:48 PM (onLkk)
You people are just...man, I don't know what you are, but it's bad. Look at the words. Look at what he actually said. He's talking about a civilian force helping the goals of our Armed Forces --- not the police, not the FBI, not the friggin' Coastguard, the military. You know, the people we send overseas to do the things we need done? That's who he plainly intends this force to augment. The military is damned effective at what it does, but it doesn't do everything. Obama thinks that we need another organization to fill in those gaps. If you don't think we need something like that, fine. But don't just make up a bunch of silly paranoid stuff just because you don't like the man.
Sheesh.
Posted by: Sophist FCD at July 18, 2008 10:52 PM (zJ1py)
We need to be able to deploy teams that combine agricultural specialists and engineers and linguists and cultural specialists who are prepared to go into some of the most dangerous areas alongside our military.
He thinks that we need to do more than just blow the bad guys up. He thinks we also need people who have the sort of skills and training that will allow them to fix things afterwards. You know, that whole hearts and minds thing. Winning the peace, etc. I seem to remember that sort of thing being important.
Posted by: Sophist FCD at July 18, 2008 11:01 PM (zJ1py)
Posted by: Scrapiron at July 18, 2008 11:18 PM (GAf+S)
Why don't you just give it up, admit that you don't really have a reason why you hate the guy so much, and that you don't need a reason to hate him and mock him? It'd be a lot more intellectually honest than what's going on here!
(Besides, bottom line, we all know what your real objection to Obama is, don't we? You're just coming up with all this other crap for "cover.")
Adios, dimwits!
Posted by: diogenes at July 18, 2008 11:48 PM (PMlL4)
A "civilian national security force"??!!
Posted by: Ed at July 19, 2008 03:38 AM (STi8t)
Posted by: Dr Zen at July 19, 2008 03:39 AM (xSW6n)
A 'civilian national security force', whether an extension of diplomatic agencies or a separate agency entirely, is neither warranted or necessary. We already have diplomatic agencies. Sophist pointed out that 'He's talking about a civilian force helping the goals of our Armed Forces --- not the police, not the FBI, not the friggin' Coastguard, the military.' and 'He thinks we also need people who have the sort of skills and training that will allow them to fix things afterwards.' - Ever hear of the State Department? That's their job. Creating a separate agency to fulfill this role will only expand government unnecessarily. Of course that may be what he wants - he's a socialist and the answer to any problem is more government. Change we can believe in.
Diogones pulled the previous segment of the speech to provide 'context'. You might be able to parse it to read that his call at the end of the quoted section as one to expand the agencies he referenced earlier (and thus the correct 'context'). But he doesn't. The man has professional speech writers for heaven's sake. They know that if he wanted to imply that agencies like the Peace Corps, AmeriCorps and the Energy Corps needed to be expanded then that last line would read something like "We cannot continue to rely on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives we've set. We've got to have *THESE* civilian national security force(s) *BECOME* as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded.".
He said 'a' civilian national security force. This implies a separate organization and not an expansion of existing agencies. This is an unnecessary expansion. Change we can believe in.
As CY already pointed out - we already have 'civilian national security forces' at both the Federal and State levels. Is he calling for a reorganization of these agencies? Combining state and federal agencies into one cohesive force? I don't parse his words that way. Maybe I just don't 'understand'. I do know that it's a poor carpenter that blames his tools.
Posted by: Dan Irving at July 19, 2008 07:25 AM (Kw4jM)
You better let the US Air Force know this. When I was in, we had what were called SPs. That stood for security police. But, if they mean the same thing, isn't that redundant?
Posted by: fauxmaxbaer at July 19, 2008 08:04 AM (llghH)
Now, if you want to ignore some of his words, that's your right... you can be just as ignorant as you want. But you can't force us to ignore them just because you want us to.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 19, 2008 08:15 AM (e+Bm0)
Redundancies abound in American English.
One obvious one is "ATM machine." ATM itself stands for "Automatic Teller Machine," so "ATM machine" really means "Automatic Teller Machine machine."
Posted by: C-C-G at July 19, 2008 08:17 AM (e+Bm0)
If you had 18 July at 11:48 PM in the "When will the lefties finally play the race card" pool, please come to the ticket window to collect your prize.
Posted by: TheGonz at July 19, 2008 08:44 AM (HoHg+)
Posted by: fauxmaxbaer at July 19, 2008 09:21 AM (llghH)
He said 'a' civilian national security force. This implies a separate organization and not an expansion of existing agencies.
Seriously? You're going to base your paranoid fantasies on the use of "a" rather than "these"? Doesn't that seem a little, um, thin? From the Military Times interview:
I mean, we still have a national security apparatus on the civilian side in the way the State Department is structured and [Agency for International Development] and all these various agencies. That hearkens back to the Cold War. And we need that wing of our national security apparatus to carry its weight. When we talk about reinventing our military, we should reinvent that apparatus as well. We need to be able to deploy teams that combine agricultural specialists and engineers and linguists and cultural specialists who are prepared to go into some of the most dangerous areas alongside our military.
You people frothing about fascism are aware that we have civilian agencies working in national security, right? That we have a State Department? If you don't read it with the intent of finding phrases to misrepresent, Obama is fairly clearly stating his plans to reemphasize the role of State and associated agencies in contrast to the current administration's emphasis on Defense. It's pretty simple, actually. If you're looking for an explanation of why nobody else has noticed Obama's plan for an American Gestapo, it's because it's a figment of your imaginations. Nobody who read his statements without a strong bias against Obama would see anything like what you're talking about. Get a freaking grip.
Posted by: Larv at July 19, 2008 09:39 AM (k8PBw)
Come back when you decide to dispense with the ad hominem attacks and maybe I'll deign to read what you write.
Posted by: Dan Irving at July 19, 2008 11:25 AM (Kw4jM)
Obama said what he meant and meant what he said. And anyone is entitled to debate whether or not more $$$$ needs to be spent in the civilian areas (State Dept, etc); I've not argued against that, and it's a legitimate difference of opinion. What most of us who don't see things your way are saying is that this drivel about Obama Gestapo Brownshirts is pure fantasy, driven by an innate bias against all things Obama.
And, sorry, but one step removed is deciding that "these" would have been the correct choice instead of "a". See, Dan, you don't get to write Obama's speeches, and neither do I. As a matter of fact, if you bother to look at the prepared text of the speech, the two sentences that bother you so damn much aren't even in the text.
What I for one would like to see is, if we can ever get past this meaningless quibbling over fantastical nonsense, why you guys feel that McCain is a better choice. Taking potshots at anybody who's on TV 24/7 isn't that tough. Tell us why McCain is the better choice... and don't weasel out with "Well, ANYBODY would be a better choice than Obama."
On Iraq alone, the events of yesterday and today seem to indicate that both Bush and al-Maliki have, in their own ways, conceded that Obama's insistance that U.S. troops be removed within 16 months is, well, correct.
Posted by: diogenes at July 19, 2008 12:59 PM (PMlL4)
Why would I interpret Obama's words to be so fascist? Twenty years with Wright, unrepentant terrorists friends, communist associations, his wife, his parental influences, his other writings proving his liberal totalitarian belief,.... Mostly, it's my forty plus years experience picking truths from tiny data points of evidence. That experience was gained from some years working for NSA, where I interpreted Russian and did some cryptography stuff. Later, I got more personal experience with the human organism going to medical school, where solving puzzles is still the game. Obama is not a puzzle to me, not as a political animal nor as a human being. He is a danger to American liberty and to The Republic. Did I mention, he's black?
Posted by: twolaneflash at July 19, 2008 01:14 PM (05dZx)
Posted by: Larv at July 19, 2008 01:20 PM (k8PBw)
Posted by: Elle at July 19, 2008 01:44 PM (9H/Re)
" 'Just as powerful, just as strong' means this 'civilian national security force' will have guns, bombs, rockets, ships, planes, satellites, a Pentagon size building, bases around the world, and be willing to project and utilize that power against American enemies."
Uhhh, not necessarily. Part of our problem is believing that the ONLY thing we need to protect American security is guns, bombs, rockets, ships, etc etc etc Somewhere in that mix, many of us might argue, are things like "brains", "diplomacy", "logic", "reason", "cooperation with Allies", etc. It's kinda been a forgotten option after eight years of Bush/Cheney, but history has shown that it is, in fact, sometimes achievable.
"I'm thinking baby-blue helmets, which would clash with brown shirts, but not red ones."
Uhhh, keep thinking. Do you see any flying monkeys in the mix? Great big guys with black fur hats and long-tailed coats, wielding battle axes? A melting witch?
And, in your incredible NSA-trained political mind, you were able to determine that Obama is (1) a terrorist, (2) a fascist, (3) a communist, and (4) a totalitarian. Wow. Could it be that after examining all those "tiny data points" you've developed an extreme case of myopia?
And no, you didn't mention that Obama is black, until you did.
Posted by: diogenes at July 19, 2008 01:58 PM (PMlL4)
What Obama said: "I should add, by the way, that part of the change that I want when it comes to Army and Marine structures is the mix of training that we’re providing and mix of personnel that are in these forces.
"I believe, reconfigure our civilian national security force. In a way that just hasn’t been done...
"That also means, by the way, that we’re going to have to, I believe, reconfigure our civilian national security force.
"I mean, we still have a national security apparatus on the civilian side in the way the State Department is structured and all these various agencies. That hearkens back to the Cold War.
"And we need that wing of our national security apparatus to carry its weight. When we talk about reinventing our military, we should reinvent that apparatus as well. We need to be able to deploy teams that combine agricultural specialists and engineers and linguists and cultural specialists who are prepared to go into some of the most dangerous areas alongside our military."
Notice, please, the importance of the function of the word, "THAT," in the last paragraph. "We need THAT wing of our national security apparatus to carry its weight" and "we should reinvent THAT apparatus as well."
Source is that Obamamaniacal left-wing rag, the Military Times, link is http://tiny url.com/57do9o
Is that the SS? Is that the SD? Is that the NKVD?
No. According to the National Security Act of 1947 and its 1949 amendment, which created it, it comprises all of the civilian agencies that perform national security missions.
That Act created, among other things, the Defense Department (uniformed national security) and the Central Intelligence Agency (civilian national security), and the National Security Council (civilian national security).
In the Act we read that the goal of the Act "is to provide a comprehensive program for the future security of the United States" through the "establishment of integrated policies and procedures for the departments, agencies, and functions of the Government relating to the national security."
For further discussions of civilian national security agencies, please see National Security Presidential Directive 1, "Organization of the National Security Council System," (February 15, 2001), which says "national security includes the defense of the United States of America, protection of our constitutional system of government, and the advancement of United States interests around the globe."
Those interests are advanced by uniformed and civilian national security agencies alike. Among the members of President George W. Bush's National Security Council is the Secretary of the Treasury (not in uniform).
Now, is that easy enough to understand?
Posted by: Hemlock for Gadflies at July 19, 2008 02:22 PM (seDRE)
However, the interview reported on by the Military Times is not--I say again, is NOT--the speech (which was public, not given solely to one publication) that CY is referring to. The speech CY is writing about can be found at two sources, here and .
You can stop swirling the red cape, we won't charge at it.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 19, 2008 03:09 PM (e+Bm0)
Posted by: C-C-G at July 19, 2008 03:10 PM (e+Bm0)
Of course, if he cuts the military budget in half then that money could be applied to the Obama-force.
Posted by: Arthur at July 19, 2008 03:13 PM (X+B2A)
No.
"National Security" means nothing more than making our nation secure, and believe it or not there are methods beyond blowing people up.
"Just as powerful, just as strong" means this "civilian national security force" will have guns, bombs, rockets, ships, planes, satellites, a Pentagon size building, bases around the world, and be willing to project and utilize that power against American enemies.
Also no.
"Just as powerful, just as strong" has nothing to do with tanks and aircraft carriers and laser-guided whatevers. It's about the kind of soft power that can sometimes make using tanks and aircraft carriers and laser-guided whatevers unnecessary.
By "civilian", I take it to mean that this "force" could or would be used where the American military cannot, inside The United States.
For the last time, no!
Seriously, in what sort of fever-dream state do you have to be read "civilian" as code for gestapo? As other posters (posters on you side of the debate, I might add) have already pointed out, we already have some civilian branches of the national security apparatus who do their work outside the country. "Civilian" simply means "non-military". I mean, duh.
Posted by: Sophist FCD at July 19, 2008 03:15 PM (zJ1py)
That did sound rather elitest I'll admit. See? Already I'm miles ahead of Obama - I didn't accuse you of misunderstanding me!
"Obama said what he meant and meant what he said. And anyone is entitled to debate whether or not more $$$$ needs to be spent in the civilian areas (State Dept, etc); I've not argued against that, and it's a legitimate difference of opinion. What most of us who don't see things your way are saying is that this drivel about Obama Gestapo Brownshirts is pure fantasy, driven by an innate bias against all things Obama."
I'm not the one enspousing the Brown Shirt meme. Simply posting on this site does not mean I agree with other posters nor the author. My bias isn't against all things Obama, rather all things socialist. I'd be doing the same thing with anything Hillary said (and getting beat up by my wife for doing so).
"And, sorry, but one step removed is deciding that "these" would have been the correct choice instead of "a". See, Dan, you don't get to write Obama's speeches, and neither do I. As a matter of fact, if you bother to look at the prepared text of the speech, the two sentences that bother you so damn much aren't even in the text."
This somehow makes it better? That he would be so inarticulate when he went off copy? Words mean something. In this particular speech he wasn't talking about enhancing existing agencies - he was talking about a seperate agency altogether. Do I think it will devolve into Schutzstaffle propotions? No. Do I think it's the wrong action to take, creating another unnecessary government agency? Yes.
If this isn't what he ment to say. I am indeed 'misunderstanding' his postion then he hasn't done a very good job and explaing said position in a clear and articulate manner. This is exacly the thing our current PoTUS gets slammed for on a regular basis and if it isn't good enough for a Republican President then it isn't good enough for a potential candidate.
"What I for one would like to see is, if we can ever get past this meaningless quibbling over fantastical nonsense, why you guys feel that McCain is a better choice. Taking potshots at anybody who's on TV 24/7 isn't that tough. Tell us why McCain is the better choice... and don't weasel out with "Well, ANYBODY would be a better choice than Obama."
Why should we have to defend McCain? Why is it automatically assumed that someone attacking Obama is automatically FOR McCain? What if I endorsed Bob Barr? Nadir? Cynthia McKinney? How about this - McCain is a better choice because he's less of a socialist than Obama.
"On Iraq alone, the events of yesterday and today seem to indicate that both Bush and al-Maliki have, in their own ways, conceded that Obama's insistance that U.S. troops be removed within 16 months is, well, correct."
Off Topic but does show his lack of foreign experience. You don't tell the bad guys when you are going to raid their building just like you don't tell them when you're not going to patrol their streets or eat your chow. The words Maliki spoke and what was realeased to the press have already been shown to be dissimilar. What both Bush and Al-Maliki have concurred on is that there needs to be a plan in place for withdrawl. I agree with that assessment. I also think it shouldn't be linked to a specific timetable but rather to certain milestones. Having 10 of your 18 provinces fully under your control is a good start for the Iraqi government. Having Al-Anbar, once decried a lost to Al Qaida, almost ready to be turned over is a significant point in their favor as well. Having a government that has made progress on 15 of 18 benchmarks, while not a success, is definately a significant point. In fact, that's an improvment on 13 additional benchmarks in the last year - they got more done than our own Congress.
Now on to Larv:
Dan, you might want to look up just what ad hominem means. It doesn't cover the labeling of paranoid fantasies as such, particularly when an explanation of that labeling is offered. An ad hom would've been something like "Don't listen to anything Dan says, he's a raving nutbar with Obama Derangement Syndrome." See, it doesn't engage with anything you said, just calls you names and diverts the argument to whether or not you are in fact a raving nutbar. That's not what I did. I said that your interpretation of the remarks in question was ludicrous and disingenuous, and quoted material to support a contrary interpretation. I realize that it's easier to just dismiss all opposition as illegitimate instead of engaging with it, but it's pretty damn weak.
Alright, I concede your point. You were just being insulting not actually conducting and ad hom - my mistake you sniviling sack of refuse with the congnizant capacity of a moldy rock. I actually did read what you wrote and maybe you just misunderstood me. (see I can do it too).
'You people frothing about fascism are aware that we have civilian agencies working in national security, right? That we have a State Department? If you don't read it with the intent of finding phrases to misrepresent, Obama is fairly clearly stating his plans to reemphasize the role of State and associated agencies in contrast to the current administration's emphasis on Defense. It's pretty simple, actually. If you're looking for an explanation of why nobody else has noticed Obama's plan for an American Gestapo, it's because it's a figment of your imaginations. Nobody who read his statements without a strong bias against Obama would see anything like what you're talking about. Get a freaking grip.'
For one, I'm not 'you people' and yes I am aware that there are already existing agencies to fill the role that Obama outlines. My point is that Obama doesn't seem to think there is an existing agency in place to fill this role. Quibbling an 'a' for a 'that' is thin? Have you lost what small capacity for understanding you had left after the labotomy? The man aspires to be President of the United states. If what Diogones said is true, then he went off copy and spoke from the hip, or his mind or from wherever it is he pulls these gems from. Words mean something as you were so gracious to point out to me - you can't sling one then say later that you actually ment something else. You can't go on record saying others are misunderstanding. You take your lumps, say 'my mistake, what I ment was ..' and drive on. Obama, instead, choose to obfuscate. Classic politician.
BTW - I actually did read the Military Times piece. I agree with a lot of what he says in it. I also disagree with a lot of what he said. I also agree with C-C-G: it's entirely beside the point.
Posted by: Dan Irving at July 19, 2008 03:37 PM (Kw4jM)
Posted by: David at July 19, 2008 03:57 PM (9jD2J)
For the record, the second part of my post wasn't directed specifically at you, so apologies if you took it to be. Both the host and several commenters are making ludicrous accusations of fascism, and that was directed at them. But I should have been more clear about who I was referring to.
If you wish to limit yourself to the rather odd argument that Obama's use of "a" instead of "these" in unplanned remarks indicates a desire to create some mysterious new agency, I suppose I can't stop you. But yes, it's thinner than tissue paper. His specific citation of several existing agencies, notably the State Department itself, in the immediately preceding remarks would seem to undercut it, for one thing. The fact that you're able to squint and see what you want to see in his words doesn't mean that they're careless or obfuscatory either, just that you're reading for ammunition rather than comprehension.
BTW - I actually did read the Military Times piece. I agree with a lot of what he says in it. I also disagree with a lot of what he said. I also agree with C-C-G: it's entirely beside the point.
How so? It's Obama speaking to exactly the same issue as in the speech. Between the two, it is utterly inescapable that he's talking about reemphasizing or extending the roles of existing civilian diplomatic agencies. He specifically references State, USAID, and the Peace Corps. There is nothing in either about Stasi-esque national security squads or new agencies to supplant the existing ones. Except that "A", of course, which as we all know proves that Obama is a socialist. QED.
Posted by: Larv at July 19, 2008 04:44 PM (k8PBw)
I don't understand what the hell he's talking about.
What does he mean by "a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as strong, just as well funded [as our military]?" I know how conservatives interpret it, I know how liberals interpret it, but I don't have any idea what he actually meant by it. I personally do not connect "national security" with diplomacy or technical-assistance teams. Nor do I connect it with ordinary police functions. "National security" to me means one thing and one thing only: the active defense of our sovereignty and vital interests at home and around the globe. That is and always has been the job of our military. A "civilian national security force" appears to me to be a contradiction in terms.
Posted by: wolfwalker at July 19, 2008 06:54 PM (yjUAw)
When a speaker says a whole bunch of things on the same topic, and then kinda wraps it up at the end, it's perfectly OK to connect the thoughts. You don't have to go "Well, where did THAT come from?"
It's like watching a guy drop a red water balloon from ten stories up, then going to street level and finding a wet spot splattered all over the sidewalk, with little bits of red latex scattered in the area. And saying, "Well, we didn't see exactly what happened... how can we be sure that this is from the water balloon that we just saw getting tossed?"
(And, if I really wanted to get snotty, they would wonder "Do you think some Commie-Fascist-Democrat types did this when we weren't looking?"
And if any of you truly don't understand what Obama was trying to say, then I apologize. And I understand why you're voting for McCain or whatever splinter candidate you wanna vote for. When you finish 894 out of 899 at the Naval Academy and you take your policies from Bush's playbook, it's a lot easier to offer "Straight Talk" because you're not really capable of nuanced differentiation... or words exceeding two syllables.
Posted by: diogenes at July 19, 2008 09:15 PM (PMlL4)
Or don't explain them, your constituency of brain-dead fanatics won't care either way.
Obama for Big Brotha 2008!
Posted by: Saltine at July 19, 2008 10:45 PM (MQVqX)
Posted by: diogenes at July 19, 2008 11:10 PM (PMlL4)
Thanks for being an adult. I take back all the mean things I said about you.
The MT piece came after his speech. He used it as an opportunity to clarify on what he had said previously. So in the context of his entire stance, yes he isn't going Schustaffle on us.
I don't mean to bemoan the *a* for *that* argument but it's telling that a candidate for high office doesn't get the same flack given to the current incumbent. If you can't articulate what you really mean when you go off copy then what are you going to do when meeting with foreign powers? Obama has made a lot of boneheaded comments these past few months and yet he's given a pass and it's our fault for 'misunderstanding'. If he can't say what he really means maybe he should just stay on copy.
And no, the 'a' doesn't prove he's a socialist. His policy does.
Posted by: Dan Irving at July 20, 2008 07:28 AM (Kw4jM)
An excellent point, Dan. Can you imagine the media uproar if Dubya said that there were 57 states, or that we didn't have interpreters in Afghanistan because they're all tied up in Iraq?
If you're not sure how the MoveOnMedia would react, see Quayle, Dan.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 09:02 AM (e+Bm0)
Uhnnnnhhh...
I do not see the Department of State listed here. Clearly, the PSD includes Defense, arguably it includes NSA/CIA. I could live with AID, Ex-Im, etc. as part of "...US...interests..."
But State?
The O-and-Savior's problem is now, and always has been, "off-script" comments. He says stuff that is ....jolting?.....astounding?....completely inane? (take your pick). In the case at hand, he said something that clearly meant OTHER than what he meant--and even the "clarification" you cite is a stretch, at best.
Can't wait for him to have no-precondition "chats" with Ach me I'm a nutjob--or Putin.
Posted by: dad29 at July 20, 2008 12:56 PM (OryIh)
It's apparent that few of you are diplomats in waiting. You're warriors! (I Am Xena, Hear Me Roar) Nobody makes good diplomacy movies; everybody loves a good wartime blood-and-gutser. But hang in there, you definitely have your place. Sooner or later we usually release the hounds of war.
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 01:34 PM (PMlL4)
Posted by: Zelsdorf Ragshaft III at July 20, 2008 01:52 PM (jseGi)
I mean, I believe that there was a second shooter on the grassy knoll, but your paranoia greatly exceeds mine.
(Cue: This is where you avow that only God-fearing patriots like yourself, with clear thoughts and cogent insights, can save truth, justice, and the American Way.)
Have a begl and another cup of coffee.... decaf this time.
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 02:11 PM (PMlL4)
I mean, I believe that there was a second shooter on the grassy knoll, but your paranoia greatly exceeds mine.
(Cue: This is where you avow that only God-fearing patriots like yourself, with clear thoughts and cogent insights, can save truth, justice, and the American Way.)
Have a bagel and another cup of coffee.... decaf this time.
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 02:11 PM (PMlL4)
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 02:15 PM (PMlL4)
The State Department already has its own security apparatus -- the DSS.
Posted by: Purple Avenger at July 20, 2008 03:31 PM (loWAm)
Just pointing that out for those who aren't capable of seeing the obvious due to their ideological/partisan blinders.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 04:16 PM (e+Bm0)
You want to talk about leadership, I will concede that Obama doesn't have a proven track record. But take a look at McCain? What has he led in his political career? No, I'm not diminishing his service as a Navy pilot, but c'mon, that was forty years ago. What has McCain led in the last four decades? Answer: nothing. He hasn't even been a leader of the Republican Party, as he's always made his reputation as a "maverick." The only time he's really been center stage is when he was implicated as one of the Keating 5. As a result, he championed campaign reform, and got McCain-Feingold passed.... which most Republicans now vilify as an unconstitional restraint on rich Republicans' ability to buy elections.
There's risks in electing ANYBODY President; you never know for sure what's gonna happen down the road. But, given McCain's anger management issues and his already confessed willingness to have American troops remain in Iraq for a hundred years, I'll take my chances with Obama and the extremely thin possibility of him taking down a Democratic Congress with an AK-47 and a Molotov cocktail.
"And they all lived happily ever after."
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 07:13 PM (PMlL4)
It may have been over 30 years ago, but that's still more leadership than Obama has shown in the 46 years of his life.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 07:30 PM (e+Bm0)
A Meritorious Unit Citation for getting all of the unit's planes to do what planes are supposed to do (i.e., "fly") forty years ago????
McCain can't tell Sunnis from Shias, and he thinks it's a problem that Russia is currently dissing Czechoslovakia, a country that hasn't existed in 15 years! He panics when a reporter asks him about Viagra, and he needs to be reminded how he voted on any given issue. He's against Bush's tax cuts until he isn't anymore, and he disdains evangelicals until he needs them to get elected, whereupon any evangelical preacher who wants to give him a "Say Hallelujah!" is A-OK in McCain's book.
McCain in 1988, I would have voted for. McCain in 1992 , I might have voted for. McCain in 2008, when he is sadly clueless about where he even is half the time? No way.
And all you guys can see is how OBAMA might pose a threat to our existence? What if McCain starts a war with Czechoslovakia?
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 08:05 PM (PMlL4)
So what organization has Obama ever fixed that was broken?
Posted by: Purple Avenger at July 20, 2008 08:10 PM (loWAm)
Doesn't even get a "nice try," Diogenes. If you had half a brain you would have seen that question coming a mile off.
Oh, and 1976 was 32 years ago. Not 40. At least get your math straight.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 08:21 PM (e+Bm0)
And Purple Avenger, that's the point: if you want to step back and be honest, none of these guys show that much more leadership than the next guy. If you ain't the lead dog, the view's the same.
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 09:04 PM (PMlL4)
Even if I concede that, WHY in Hell didn't The O-and-Savior SAY THAT? What's so damn hard about saying "..civilian entities such as State, AID, etc.,..." instead of "civilian security [whatever]"?
Back to Square One. The guy opens his mouth and inserts his foot, or both of them.
Not ready for prime-time, Diogenes.
Posted by: dad29 at July 20, 2008 09:13 PM (OryIh)
Precisely, Diogenes.
So why are you in the Party of the Donkey continually pushing candidates with no leadership experience? Senator Gore had never led anything in 2000 (though it could be argued that he has done so since, we're talking about what he had done at the time of the election), Senator Kerry had never led anything in 2004, and now Senator Obama has never led anything in 2008.
Maybe that has something to do with why you lost in 2000 and 2004, hmmm?
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 09:23 PM (e+Bm0)
But, again, this post started with ridiculous wild-eyed accusations of incredible proportions against Obama. NONE OF US will be able to make this country one iota better if we insist on pursuing Karl Rove politics. It IS okay to debate issues without using every dirty trick to totally destroy the opposition.
Posted by: diogenes at July 20, 2008 09:49 PM (PMlL4)
I believe it less than I believe those folks that call into Hannity and Levin with the same story. It's clearly what Rush would call a "seminar call," now we have a "seminar commenter."
You may now attack me for listening to talk radio. I'm ready for it.
Posted by: C-C-G at July 20, 2008 10:01 PM (e+Bm0)
One thing I heard him say that I do believe is that people project their desires onto him. The presidential candidate equivalent to a television green screen. The most unqualified (serious) candidate to run for the office in my lifetime.
Posted by: RicardoVerde at July 20, 2008 10:15 PM (PBTsv)
From your response to Larv posted at 9:15 PM on 19 July:
"…And if any of you truly don't understand what Obama was trying to say, then I apologize. And I understand why you're voting for McCain or whatever splinter candidate you wanna vote for. When you finish 894 out of 899 at the Naval Academy and you take your policies from Bush's playbook, it's a lot easier to offer "Straight Talk" because you're not really capable of nuanced differentiation... or words exceeding two syllables"
You're headed for a cliff on this one. Can you name the Union Civil War general who placed first in his class at West Point, who lost every major battle, and was willing (as a presidential candidate in the election of 1864) to let the Southern Confederacy, slaves and all, secede from the United States? Can you name the Union Civil War general who placed dead last in his class at West Point and never lost a major battle? Oh, and yes, this last individual took his policies out of which failed US President's playbook? Be careful when you use "nuance versus straight talk", diogenes, because you're not very good at it.
I say this as a defector from the Obama camp. My wife and I were favorably impressed by Obama's stand against the leftist railroading of three innocent Duke University students on the Lacrosse team for rape. In fact, he was the only presidential hopeful to do so at the time. We were also impressed with his call for fairness in the racially-hyped Jena, LA case where Hillary Clinton, thinking she had the black vote in the bag, declared the Jena situation to be a "teachable moment". At this point in time we felt that Obama showed real leadership potential. Hillary, obviously, did not.
Then came the other news, about Obama's more than casual involvement with unrepentant terrorists Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn, his association with the highly anti-Semitic Professor Rashid Khalidi, now of Columbia University, his association with (now deceased) Prof. Edward Said, the individual who literally turned Middle East Studies at American Universities into a bad joke, and then his association with the racist pastor Jeremiah Wright. A person is known by the company he keeps, and Obama is no different. Obama may have thrown some of these folks under the bus for now, but will he go back and bring them on board in his administration if he is elected president? I don't know, you don't know, and neither does anyone else participating in this blog thread know. I was not satisfied with his obfuscation on his involvement with these individuals as were millions of other Americans. Now we literally don’t know where he stands on any of the major issues facing Americans in the upcoming presidential election, hence our obvious concerns about his comments on 2 July.
Bob Owens brought up a legitimate question that the Obama camp needs to answer. Perhaps making complete analogy to the Nazi SS is extreme, at least that's how I see it for now. The fact is that Obama is advocating a parallel organization that in the end will be a major rival to the U. S. Department of Defense for budget, areas of responsibility, influence and God only know what else. The analogy to the SS is relevant in this context in that the SS competed with the German Army for influence and weapons and did not report up the same chain of command as the German Army. Hitler’s contempt for his Army generals is well known. Anybody even remotely familiar with the history of World War II knows that cooperation between German Army and SS combat divisions was not the best. God only knows how many communication walls existed between these two organizations at that time.
In your response to Zelsdorf posted at 2:11 PM on 20 July you state:
"...Have another begl (sp?) and another cup of coffee...decaf this time."
My suggestion to you diogenes is stay off coffee, any coffee, period! In fact stay away from booze and bottled water as well. We know what Obama said, and it is up to Obama, not his acolytes like you, to explain what he meant by “a civilian national security force that’s just as powerful, just as strong, just as well funded”, on 2 July.
Posted by: Mescalero at July 20, 2008 10:20 PM (CHpGi)
I got a good laugh at his lie last week when he said he didn't speak a foreign language when he stated in 2006 (recorded interview) that he spoke Arabic and a little Spanish. Was he lying then or lying now? Probably both, he's a natural born liar and has mooched off the taxpayers all of his adult life. I still don't hate him or any other person on earth, but I trust a rabid skunk more than I trust him.
Posted by: Scrapiron at July 21, 2008 12:03 AM (I4yBD)
Posted by: 钢托盘</a at March 06, 2009 09:46 AM (rRj/C)
Processing 0.01, elapsed 0.0351 seconds.
18 queries taking 0.0256 seconds, 78 records returned.
Page size 74 kb.
Powered by Minx 0.8 beta.