Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Being Dick Cheney

Being one Richard B. Cheney means the following: living in a place where your view of the world—and those of your daughter Liz—trump reality itself, and where no one understands what’s best for the United States of America except you and your closest neo-con pals.

Everyone else is a mealy-mouthed Pollyanna living in ignorance who inwardly crave—although they’ll never admit it—being led by a superior, unwavering authority who knows no regret.

Silver Mining

Here’s another example why I believe FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver is among the brightest political number-crunchers in America today (e.g. he’s almost always level-headed, and usually right in his predictions).

By the bye, Happy Election Day.

Beatification

In regard to Sarah Palin lending her voice to the governor’s and House races (e.g. three only) going to the polls today, Andrew Sullivan had an interesting observation on what Palin may be morphing into following her departure from office last summer:

In a way, Palin is more effective as some kind of cultural talisman than as an actual, you know, politician, who has to know things, govern states or countries, and hold press conferences. She's being turned into a kind of Marian figure, a blessed icon whose mere touch bestows some kind of aura on a candidate or race. Her book will become some kind of touchstone in this firmament of religious Republicanism.

I think that Sullivan isn’t far off here. Although I feel that Palin’s impact on, say, the NY-23 race has been way overblown by the media and her followers at Fox News, I agree that the ex-governor seems to fancy herself as a would-be messianic figure that the heart and soul of conservatism should follow into the future.

The only problem with this theory, however, is that Sarah Palin still polls poorly within the bulk of her own party. Yet this may change one day if Palin’s appeal as a popular figure—among conservative voters--begins to swell over the next year, and Republicans begin openly seeking her blessing in 2010.


Monday, November 2, 2009

Jesus Talks

Is it me or does Conservative Party guy Doug Hoffman—who is running for a House seat in a district he doesn’t even reside in--resemble an extremely creepy Sunday School teacher?