Wednesday, December 19, 2012

White Collar Crime is Not Really Crime

It amazes me constantly, the judgment that our government, and other westernized governments, apply to countries that aid and abet corruption.  We demonize them, we publicly eviscerate them for their behavior, we have applied sanctions on the occasional country that has been an accomplice to crime.

It amazes me, because our government, and many like us, are the most hypocritical on the planet when it comes to policing our own house.  Just last week, HSBC Bank was found to have laundered money for terrorists, banks with connections to terrorists (Saudi Arabia's Al Rajhi Bank), and drug cartels.  So prolific and long standing were the laundering habits, that the Mexican cartels had long ago created specially designed boxes, whose dimensions were EXACTLY the measurement needed to pass the boxes through the teller windows without having to open them, allowing the cartel to pass hundreds of thousands of dollars a day quickly, and without inspection.  The heads of HSBC are now known to have been complicit in these corrupt functions, sometimes facilitating the functions themselves.

If I had laundered so much as $100 for a friend, I would have the book thrown at me in our justice system.  But HSBC criminals - and let's say it way out loud, leaving no doubt - THEY ARE CRIMINALS, in every sense of the word, are being slapped with a $1.9 billion fine, and no prosecution, in any capacity.  They have been deemed "too important" to be disrupted in their management of the bank with criminal prosecution.  I did not just make that up - the word "disrupted" was particularly galling to me.  They claimed that criminal prosecution would have dire repercussions on the stability of the bank:
"Had the US authorities decided to press criminal charges, HSBC would almost certainly have lost its banking license in the US, the future of the institution would have been under threat and the entire banking system would have been destabilized."
Uh... what?  Better put the hip-boots on, it's getting deep up in here.  No one ever prosecutes the BANK when someone launders money, because it's not the bank that launders it.  It's the people.  Let's be clear about that.  PEOPLE launder money.  Banks are simply the mechanism.  A bank has no way of knowing when money is illegal, it's simply an institution.  We've never prosecuted a bank for laundering, we go after the guy who did the laundering.  So when we say we are not prosecuting the bank, what we really mean is we're not prosecuting the people.  No bank would destabilize because of a prosecution of criminals within the bank.  Banks change CEOs, CFOs, CIOs, and upper management people all the time, without the banks crashing.  That's all that would happen here.  Prosecute the people involved, they lose their job, new people are brought in to replace them.  Really not that complicated.  But not for us - we make decisions in legalese that make it sound like we put a great deal of thought into this, when the simple reality is that these bankers are rich and connected.  And our government doesn't put it's friends in prison, no matter what they do.  We already know this to be true, with the obvious looking of the other way with the Wall Street bank brokers and managers who willfully broke the law in deceiving their own customers about the stability of funds they sold, while secretly executing credit default swaps, hedging their bets against the failure of those same funds.  What did we do?  Nothing.  Spewed a lot of rhetoric, but ultimately, we bailed them all out with billions of dollars - that they kept and invested on their own, bolstering nice profits - and the subsequent bonuses that come with them -  but not repaying any losses to the customers they swindled.  Just the cost of doing business...

Our government has become one of the largest accomplices to white collar criminal conduct, yet no one holds anyone accountable for it.  This is largely due to the fact that many of the people connected with these institutions transition into high level government positions.  It's no coincidence that Goldman Sachs got away with a paltry fine for some of it's fraud - their former CEO, Henry Paulson, was Bush's Treasury Secretary.  If you prosecute anyone, Paulson would have to be at the top of the list, since he was running things when all this began and, for what it's worth, Paulson's Goldman Sachs stock was valued at over $600 million when he became the Secretary.  There's no way a Treasury Secretary is being prosecuted, if for no other reason than it indicts the federal government for their hiring of criminals for top tier positions - that will NEVER happen.

HSBC is just the latest in a long string of corruption that our government pats on the back and allows to operate unscathed.  The $1.9 billion fine is about one month's revenue.  The bank barely blinked at it, nor did their stock price.  Just the cost of doing business.  And so it continues...

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Lessons from Sandy Hook

So unless you've been living under a rock, you have heard about the Sandy Hook school massacre.  I was no where near a television or radio when it happened, so I didn't hear about it until mid-late afternoon that day.  Of course, once I found out, I couldn't get away from it.  Even now, I struggle with a multitude of feelings.  First, I shook my head in disappointment, thinking "What the hell is wrong with people...?"  Later, I was passing by the television in the living room where my wife was just finding out about it, watching in shock.  The anchor was pontificating about what would cause someone to do such a thing.  I thought, "Well of course he took to mass murder!  He was unhappy, so everyone must share in his misery.  That's how it is!  No one has the guts to just deal with their own shit, they have to drag innocent people into it..."  Obviously, I was getting angry and cynical.  I made sure to NOT watch any coverage of the event, no longer having the stomach for it.  The next morning, I went online, and saw a headline on one of my news sights, saying that almost all the children had been shot multiple times, leaving some of them almost unrecognizable.  Right then, for the first time in my life, I knew what a truly broken heart felt like.  Killing them wasn't enough, he had to mutilate them with bullets - as if he was getting off on it.  I almost cried as I read the article: Victoria Soto, the teacher who was killed shielding the children from the bullets with her body as she funneled them into a closet.  And that's how they found her - dead on top of the children she was protecting;  Dawn Hochsprung, the principal who went after the gunman, and gave her life in the attempt to overtake him;  Twenty children, who knew nothing about life except enjoying it - the ultimate perk of youth.

Then I was flipping through channels and passed by the group of news networks.  I stopped on FOX News for a moment, to see Mike Huckabee offering commentary, in the vein that the shooting happened because we've taken God out of the schools.  And I just wanted to throw something through the TV.  Whether you believe in Jesus Christ or not, YES - believing in something bigger than yourself, that instills a respect for the world you live in, would make the world a better place.  But to blame the removal of school prayer and the refusal to teach religion as science as reasons for... what, God's punishment, in the form of a massacre?  That's wholly irresponsible, and it underlines a major contributor to these types of coverage:  the sensationalism of tragedy.

These networks are beyond the pale.  Something horrible happens, and within an hour, they have gripping headlines, a tragedy moniker, a theme song, and the anchors look as if they're masturbating while covering it, just enraptured at the sound of their own voice.  They have psychologists lined up for "official" opinions, reporters on the scene eagerly asking every person they can get there greedy little paws on how they are feeling right now, as if they are expecting different answers five people in.  They have photographers snapping photos of everyone, just itching for that one shot that wins them a Pulitzer - cause if you can't capitalize on a tragedy, why are you in the job, yes?  And if there's one thing people in that situation want more than anything, it's having the entire planet seeing a gut-wrenching photo of them in the most vulnerable and heart-broken state they've ever been in their entire life on the cover of TIME, Life, or NewsWeek for eternity.  There is truly nothing more heartless in this country than the media, and they are proud of it, wearing the label like a badge of honor.

The argument has been made that the media is one of the ones to blame for tragedies like this, because they encourage the downtrodden and depressed to one-up the guy who did it two weeks ago - you too can be famous!  There's some merit to that, although it's a bit broad for my taste.  And for the ever-popular claim that a gunman had a mental illness, this argument assumes a great deal of clarity being capable of the mentally ill.

I think there's more merit to the argument that gaming and social media do a great deal more to contribute to someone's thinking than the media.  Games, especially the exceptionally violent and graphic ones, desensitize kids to violence and bloody, gruesome images.  Do they make people violent? No, not if they are of sound mind.  But if they are mentally unbalanced?  Yes, I can see a contribution to the state of mind occurring.  And people spend so much time on social media now, they barely interact with other actual people.  Gamers are more likely to feel connected to their avatar than real people these days.  And if you're already an introvert, or "socially awkward," as they like to call it, you already lack the connection to people that would have you feeling something for them, so imagine how detached social media and gaming can increase that widening gap between them and reality.  Many people call this a cop-out argument, but it's actually much stronger than you think - especially if we're so ready and willing to blame the media for the same thing.

Gun control.  Let's face it, we need it.  It won't stop events like this, where the guns were legally owned by his mother.  But we have to get tested and licensed for a variety of things - in some cases, like driver's licenses, you have to do it every so many years - something as dangerous as guns should definitely be on the list.  The goal of regulation is to make it more difficult for criminals to have access to black market weapons, but it should also be to make sure that weapon ownership is legal and safe.  Everyone wanting to purchase a gun, should have to disclose the number of children and mentally challenged in their home, so they can be advised of the strongest measures to take in securing the weapon and ammunition in the home.  In cases like this (although, sadly, the mother was a victim here), the owner should not be allowed to own a firearm anymore if a child, or mentally unbalanced person, gains access to it and hurts themselves or someone else - clearly responsibility is not being exercised.  And doing nothing, or worse, brushing it off because it's too political of an issue, is simply not acceptable anymore.

There are many factors that contributed to this tragedy, and we will hear about some of them in the weeks to come.  But we, as a nation, need to take mental health and gun/ammunition regulation more seriously.  And the media seriously needs to stop glorifying every tragedy that occurs.  A mass murder isn't your giddy answer to Sweeps week.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Benghazi Matters

I have been a bit disappointed in both parties lately, in regards to the embassy attacks in Benghazi, Libya.  The Republicans are looking for every bogeyman in every nook and cranny, in a desperate attempt to paint Barack Obama as a traitorous heathen.  Democrats have made every attempt to blow over the attack, and the resulting post mortem that was destined to follow, dismissing any questions of mishandling or impropriety as a partisan witch hunt.   

Now, whether you care about the attack or not - don't be surprised that people wouldn't, the decade-long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have made Benghazi "just one of many" attacks that have cost Americans their lives, in many people's eyes - there is a serious problem with the attack and the response to it.  For starters, security measures had been dialed back at the embassy, despite smaller attacks in previous weeks, including a mortar round blowing a hole in one of the outer walls.  Requests for increased security measures were denied, including one by Lt. Colonel Andrew Wood to maintain a special security team in LibyaThere was enough danger in the area that other countries, including Britain, closed their embassies, deeming them unsafe - a claim highlighted by the Red Cross finally pulling out for the same reason.  So why were we even still there?  The embassy attack lasted almost seven hours.  Many people don't realize that.  They think it was just a hit-and-run, and people were killed.  Not so.  And in the process of a seven-hour attack, the Americans pleaded for help several times, with no help given.  This included soldiers in nearby camps begging to be allowed to go in and assist them, to be told to "Stand down" by their commanders.  Even worse, the Navy Seal who was killed thought he WAS getting help, in the form of an air assault.  So he went out to the perimeter of the building to point a laser at mortar rounds that the air support could hit.  Doing this exposed him - using the laser gave up his position.  When the help never came, he was doomed.  "Dying in vain" doesn't even do it justice.

After the attack, Washington D.C. was in an uproar.  Over the next couple of weeks, the Obama administration spent a great deal of time blaming the attack on a anti-Islam video, called "Innocence of Muslims," produced and directed by a former porn director in California, which did indeed spur some protests in Cairo, Egypt at the same time as the Benghazi attack.  Many people will mostly remember Obama, during the presidential debates, say he called it a terrorist attack the very next day, in a speech given in the Rose Garden.  In the transcript, he clearly uses the phrase "acts of terror," and two sentences later, says "... our commitment to see that justice is done for this terrible act."  Many have argued that it was a general reference to acts of terror, not specified to Benghazi.  It's a very loose, but not entirely wrong argument, although the second phrase does hint at the first.  But Obama insists he knew it was a terrorist attack from the beginning, and his Rose Garden comments reflected that fact.  So I'm willing to give Obama the benefit of the doubt, but if he's telling the truth, insisting on that has painted him into an awfully ugly corner, for a number of problems exist:
  • If the president knew it was terrorism, why would he send White House Press Secretary Jay Carney out the next day to blame the attack on a video protest that got out of hand?  Carney is the President's and White House's face and voice to the nation on a daily basis.  And nothing comes out of Carney's mouth that hasn't already been vetted by the WH Director of Communications, especially on such a sensitive subject.  So are we really to believe Carney did this on his own?
  • Why was U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice chosen to go on talk shows and give interviews over the next couple of weeks to discuss Benghazi when, according to herself, the CIA, the FBI and the White House, she knew nothing about it?  They all say she was simply using intelligence info given to her, that she had no knowledge of her own about it.  And since her intelligence info was compiled by the State Department, and they say they never concluded that the attack was the result of a demonstration about the video, then how did she have that info in her talking points?
  • Furthermore, why were the words "al Qaeda" and "terrorist" removed from the talking points before she gave her first interview?  They've given several different answers to this, none of which has a consensus.  Hell, they can't even come to a consensus on WHO actually edited them out...
  • And if we accept Obama's claim that he knew all along it was terrorism, how does he reconcile giving a speech to the UN and a visit on tv's The View, where he himself blamed the video?  Was he lying about what he knew, to avoid looking incompetent?  Or was he telling the truth, and decided to just run with the cover up story anyway, hoping to get through the election before having to answer for any of it?  This is the issue I actually care the least about, the other issues are far more important.  But this is one part that will haunt him for a while, if the witch hunters have any say...
Obviously, everyone involved in this is full of it, and that includes the president.  He had an election to win, and the Benghazi attack could not have come at a worse time, especially when his campaign was declaring al Qaeda "decimated," despite well known growth of the terrorist organization in Syria and Yemen, and knowledge that al Qaeda had been making inroads in Libya after Moammar Gadhafi's expulsion and death.  Clearly, this all was an attempt to defer dealing with another al Qaeda terrorist attack until after the election.  Susan Rice was chosen because she's as far away from Obama's White House as possible, while still being an "official" of the administration.  And handing intelligence to a person with no knowledge of anything offers a plausible deniability buffer.  This is serious enough to have derailed Obama's re-election, if Mitt Romney hadn't bungled it all up with that ridiculous "Gotcha!" attempt at catching Obama in a lie during the 2nd debate.  Romney's people were so ignorant, they didn't even realize that believing Obama's story makes what happened even worse - instead they wanted to trip him up, and ended up looking like fools in the process - and worse, made Obama look sympathetic.  They couldn't have gift wrapped it any better.  And Obama, to his credit, said nothing - he just encouraged Romney to continue, allowing Mitt to hang himself.  Never let it be said that Obama isn't very slick and bright.

Where this leaves us is with Susan Rice, who Obama wants to replace Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State.  As America's top diplomat, she would have to exhibit a measure of independence and political savvy, that this incident shines a sour image of.  And it has many people, some Democrats included, doubting her ability to to the job - especially if she's willing to walk in blind and just push the White House agenda - something she's made abundantly clear she's willing to do.  For us citizens, we may never get closure on this event, because Democrats in Congress have been stalling the process as much as possible, to get to the end of the session.  By the time the next session starts, they're hoping we'll have let it wade out of our minds, in favor of other things.  Let's hope that's not the case.  Regardless what anyone believes, this situation has become twisted enough that we at least are owed closure on it, so everyone can move on.  I'm tired of watching the president tap dance.  He has a job to do, and we need him to do it well, which means this needs to be finished - sooner rather than later.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

No Ground to Stand On

Many years back, I lived in Tampa, Florida, one of the few white guys in a predominantly black neighborhood, not far from the USF campus.  I started playing pickup basketball games in that neighborhood's local park, the only white guy that played there regularly.  I never minded this - I'm a Miami boy.  Thanks to public schools and sports, I had been friends with most of the black kids I knew.  I made friends pretty quickly at this park in Tampa, aided by the fact that I'm a pretty good basketball player.  I acquired the nickname "Bird" - the white boy who doesn't miss, as my friends teased.  Being THE white guy, meant a lot of "white boy" and "cracker" jokes.  I didn't mind much because, despite the teasing, they included me in everything.  And it did become a running joke to rag on the team that gets beat by the slow white boy.  So my first six months in Tampa were thoroughly enjoyable, if uneventful.

One day, we were playing a full court game, where my team was about to lose, down a couple of points.  One of my teammates had his pass intercepted by this guy - not a particularly good player, but he was 6'-6", good for rebounding - who turned and ran down the court.  As we would lose if he made a basket, I tore down the court after him as fast as I could run.  As he went up in the air for a layup, I jumped and smacked the ball as hard as I could, smashing his hand against the backboard in the process.  I fell to the ground as I landed, laughing - let's just say I was impressed with myself for jumping so high - at the fact that I even caught up to him, let alone made such a great play.  I don't think he appreciated my laughing, because when I got up off the ground, he punched me square in the chest - hard.  So hard, I went right back down.  He looks down at me and says, "You fouled me, motherf---er!"  I jumped up and shoved him.  "Just call the foul then!  Quit acting like a b--ch, just cause your hand got hurt!"  I didn't foul him, but I wasn't about to argue about it eitherEverybody starts laughing, presumably at my willingness to go toe to toe with a guy that had 6 inches and at least 50 pounds on me.  Hindsight being 20/20, it wasn't exactly the brightest of ideas.  

My buddy Jermaine runs over laughing, playfully head locks me, calls time out, and we all go to the bench for a minute.  I grab a Gatorade, pull a wet towel from the cooler to wrap around my neck and try to relax.  As my head is resting in my hands, I feel something hard pushed against the left side of my head.  "Say something funny now, motherf---er..."  I look up and turn my head, to see this guy pointing a gun at me.. Everyone around me froze.  I gasped for a breath and, God save me, I started laughing.  I could not stop.  The guy looked pissed, saying "You think you're funny, b--ch?"  And that made me laugh even harder.  "No dude, you're funny.  You're going to shoot me head and go to prison for the rest of your life - cause you got fouled.  That's the dumbest sh-t I ever heard of!"  Behind the laughter, I felt like I was about to have a heart attack, but I think the logic started to sink in with him.  The guy started to lower the gun, upon which 3 or 4 others jumped him and got the gun away from him.  One of the guys in the bleachers said he called the cops, so pretty much everyone cleared out of the courts and went home.  To this day, I still don't know who took the gun home.  The police showed up, the few remaining stragglers gave them the guy's name, I told them what happened, and the rest of us then filed out of the park for the night.  I later found out that the guy had a criminal record for armed robbery and had been in prison all of a few months earlier.  And he knew where I lived, right near the entrance to the park.  And this was just the first of two times in my life I've had a gun pointed at me...

That summer, I went back to Miami.  I had decided to buy a handgun to keep at my apartment in Tampa.  My best friend Josh went with me to look around, and I left the shop with a Makarov .380, a hyper-accurate Russian gun made primarily for the KGB.  We would go to an outdoor range on Tamiami Trail so I could learn to shoot.  And I was really good at it, really accurate to about fifty yards.  I took a class to get my concealed weapons permit.  It was here that I learned some odd rules about guns.  The one that jumped out at me the most was the rights of criminals in your home:
  • You have to announce that you are armed, to allow the intruder a moment to leave your house peacefully and quickly.
  • If you decide to shoot, you must announce that you are in fear for your life.
  • If the intruder tries to run, you MUST shoot him from the front.
  • If he has his back to you, you can not legally shoot him.
  • If he is exiting a window or door, he is no longer legally a threat, you can not shoot him.
  • If he is in your yard, and not advancing in your direction, you can not legally shoot him.
  • If at any point you determine he is not armed, you can not legally shoot him unless you can demonstrate imminent threat.
To say these rules dismayed me a bit would be an understatement.  How can someone invading your home be afforded such protections?  If you violate any of these rules, YOU could go to jail.  I never thought I could be more flabbergasted  at a nonsensical set of rules, that seemed to be against the ones being threatened and protecting the criminals, to an extent.  And then I read the Stand Your Ground law.  It seems that, only in America, would we go from one extreme to the other, ignoring moderation entirely.

I've never been a fan of the NRA.  Don't get me wrong, I support people's rights.  But the NRA has taken their argument to extremes over the years, and has absolutely no credibility.  There's no argument you can make that will convince me that a hunter requires an arsenal of various weaponry to shoot a duck.  Or a deer.  Or a moose.  Or a quail.  And making that argument in vain, with a straight look on your face, makes me no longer want to hear anything you have to say.

So we went from not being able to engage a criminal in your home unless certain parameters are met, to being able to shoot anyone, anywhere, at any time, for any reason - so long as the official "reason" is that you were in fear for  your life.  How could we allow such a blanket rule to ever become law?  How could politicians that proposed the law really make a sound argument that would convince enough people to pass such a law?  Obviously, the NRA was behind it, but how did anyone wanting to be taken seriously allow it to even reach committee, let alone the floor for debate?  Once again I point to US.  We allow these idiot politicians, with absolutely no scruples or values, to take over our legislatures.  As bad as it is in Washington D.C., it is often worse in the state legislatures.  These are our states, and we need to wrest back control of the people who politic in it.  This recent case about Michael Dunn shooting a black teenager in an SUV is just the latest example of a law that has run amok.  Everyone needs to start leaning on their representatives to overturn this ridiculous law.  It needs to be loud, so that political hopefuls in the future will include it in their campaign platforms.  We need enough people in place to overturn such laws.  And for Heaven's sake, we have GOT to get lobbyists out of our capital buildings, and their money out of campaign coffers.  Because this will not be the last killing like this, and it will take a James Brady - type incident for any eyes to be opened otherwise.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

No Eating from This Buffett...

Back in February, I wrote a piece called Congressional Lifers Are Killing Us, where I laid out what I thought the biggest challenge for this country was: ridding ourselves of the lifelong members of Congress who have corrupted our legislative and economic systems, with no term limits to help us.

I've recently seen a thread running around Facebook, highlighting an idea proposed by the Oracle of Omaha himself, Warren Buffett.  He discussed the then-pending debt ceiling increase in an interview with CNBC's Becky Quick on July 7, 2012, in which he said, "I could end the deficit in 5 minutes.  You just pass a law that says that anytime there is a deficit of more than 3% of GDP, all sitting members of Congress are ineligible for re-election."  

I am not a fan of Warren Buffett.  He's hypocritical and inflated with a self-importance that defies comprehension (and this is coming from a guy who, some might say, is bathed in intellectual arrogance).  Buffett is the guy who said his secretary paid more in taxes than he did.  He revised the statement to correctly reflect that her tax RATE was higher than his.  He does earn a $100,000 annual salary, and $300,000-$400,000 in a securities based compensation package, that he does pay the top rate on as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway.  If you take that alone, his claim is false.  But his $46 million total income is mostly investment related, aka Capital Gains, of which the current rate is 15% - which dropped his overall adjusted rate to 17.7%.  His secretary's $60,000-$70,000 salary netted her a 30% WAGE rate.  Because of this disparity that dismayed him so, Buffett came out in support of raising the income tax rate of the wealthiest Americans, saying he should be paying so much more than the government demands.  And Obama, giddy as a schoolgirl, proposed "The Buffett Rule" as  the lynchpin to eliminating the Bush tax cuts, bringing the top rate back up to 39.6%, and an additional 3% on the über-wealthy.  And the crowd goes wild!.....

Well, not so much.  To begin with, Buffett skips over the part that he - and all Americans - can pay as much as they want to the Treasury Department - there is no limit.  And I'm a big believer in putting your money where your mouth is.  Set the example you wish of other people.  But nay, Buffett has no interest in that.  He'll only pay more if the government makes him.  Like most people, big on words, not so much on actions.  And the other thing that's generally glossed over is the fact that, even if Obama managed to raise the wage rate to 80%, he STILL wouldn't get much more out of Buffett.  Remember, Buffett's income is mostly investment based.  So aside from the tiny sliver of income that is his Berkshire Hathaway compensation package, Buffett would pay not much more now at the higher rate than he does at the current one.. And that goes for all the billionaires in this country.  As long as they pay mostly CapGains, they'll pay just as much wage tax after the increase as they do now - which is next to nothing.

And this is how you know Obama is full of it when he talks about making the wealthy pay their fair share.  If he really meant that, he would jack up the CapGains rate, not the wage rate, since that's where all the money of the wealthy resides.  He's mentioned doing that, but only mentioned bumping the rate up to 20%.  Not exactly a barn-burner.  This may or may not have something to do with the fact that Obama's millions from his two books are invested in a blind trust (as all presidents' investments are when they take office - essentially, a fund manager takes over the Obamas' investments until they leave the White House, the term "blind" meaning that they don't know where the money is invested, and so can't try to influence markets in a way that they knowingly benefit from).  This is also how you know that, for all his rhetoric about sticking it to the rich, Obama knows where his bread is buttered.  It makes great lip service, but if he raised the CapGains rate too much, the wealthy will simply move more of their money overseas and invest more heavily in foreign markets, rather than our own.  Obama's not dumb enough to play that gamble.  So what we end up with is the grandest of empty gestures, with little real impact on anyone except the small business owners, who are, naturally, the loudest voices of opposition.  That's why Buffett can shout his support to the heavens - he gets to sound prophetic and benevolent, the masses ignorantly cheering his name, because he knows it will have little actual impact on him.

And this is why his quote in that CNBC interview rings hollow.  He makes a good sound bite, but Warren Buffett contributed over $100,000 to campaigns and PACs for this election cycle, just one of many big money donors to the people whose jobs he's threatening.  For what it's worth, his idea has merit.  I wrote an op-ed a couple of years ago, pushing an idea to tie legislators' incumbencies to performance incentives, the deficit, debt, unemployment rate, and GDP growth being key barometers.  If parameters were not met, they wouldn't be allowed to run for re-election for a minimum of two terms.  I proposed it as an end-around to the term-limits we all know Congress would never, ever vote for.  They would never vote for my idea either, but if enough states were in favor of some form of it (15 states currently have term limits), they could push for an amendment by constitutional convention, bypassing Congress altogether. 

I admire Buffett's business acumen - he's an investment genius, and all due credit to his many decades at the top of the food chain.  But when it comes to politics, I take him in the same vein I take Donald Trump: amusing caricatures, but not people I take seriously, once you put a little thought into what they say.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Why Would I Be a Republican?

I posted a Facebook status about Tea Party Republican darling Allen West yesterday.  A good friend of mine mused that I didn't strike him as a Republican much anymore, based on many of my recent position pieces.  I wrote him a reply, after which I re-read my response to him, and it seemed like a good blog post, as several of my friends had observed something similar in me.  And Lord knows the GOP hasn't given many people reason to support them in the last couple of decades.  So why would I still be a Republican?

For starters, the Republican party isn't what it used to be. I believe in generally small government. Big government has dipped its wick in too many unnecessary wells (usually as a means of appeasing those selling their vote), and charged us for their misadventures - or stole outright from other wells (Social Security, for example), putting our financial security at risk.  The party differences have historically been mostly fiscal. In recent decades, social issues have taken the forefront, when they really don't belong there, and that has largely been at the behest of the religious right. I have never agreed with this, because too much of the country isn't of the same religion, and our constitution forbids catering to one religion or establishing one on a national scale. Yet here we are.

Despite my belief in smaller government, I do believe in helping those in need, even though the scope and breadth of our system has gotten completely out of hand. We could very easily support those in need and not fiscally squeeze the life out of our economy. It may hurt people's access for a year, but we could fix it. I am in favor if fixing the system so people aren't abandoned, but our fiscal health is protected.

As social issues go, I hate the hypocrisy of my party. Republicans preach about freedom - everything they fight so ruthlessly against is in defense of liberty and freedom... unless you are a woman, in which case your freedom is how we dictate to you how it will be. You WILL submit yourself to your rapist and birth his child. You WILL NOT use contraception, lest you are a whore who enjoys sex.  Sex is for your husband's pleasure and reproduction purposes only.  You are a receptacle and an incubator.  Live with it.  GOP pols will swear to their dying breath that's not what they mean, but let's face it - unlike Democrat politicians, who wave one hand in your face while stabbing you in the back with the other, Republicans just punch you in the mouth with their attitudes.  No hiding, no misdirection, just straight up misogyny, and they really don't care whether you like or agree with it.  Gays should be sequestered to an island where we don't have to look at them, because they are gross. Unless it's two gorgeous women in our favorite lesbian porn - and so long as they don't want to get married. Cause how will they have children? Unless God blesses their happy home with a rapist - as God sometimes wills...  
The gay argument is particularly hilarious, considering the most ardent supporters of the anti-gay movement seem to have a habit of turning out to be gay.  Love the Catholics, but just once I'd like to hear a GIRL say a priest molested her...

I guess my point is that the Republican party is barely Republican anymore. They are greedy hypocritical bastards who want big government when it's THEIRS.  I believe government's role is supposed to be for the fiscal and military security of the nation, while the states and localities can manage the rest.  Welfare, Social Security and Medicare are not anti-Republican programs.  Their operations and management are, and they need to be fixed. But they should be part of the fiscal purview of the federal government, because their financial needs are too big for state to state management. The party has become a bastion of absolutes, with compromise and pragmatism being blasphemous. These days I would probably be chastised as a RINO (Republican In Name Only), but I'm waiting for my party to re-acquire the asylum from the inmates... otherwise I'll end up an independent. I voted Green party this year because Jill Stein is my kind of pragmatist, even if she's a little more liberal than I would like.  I've never believed that absolutes were a good way to run a country, so my party affiliation is peripheral at best, maintained solely for the ability to vote in the primaries.  I am probably more center-right than true right, and I vote based on who I think exhibits the best combination of ideas, methodology, and judgment.  I wasn't sure if Barack Obama was that person in 2008, but in 2012 I was more sure that he was not.  But I sure as heck know Mitt Romney wasn't, and he was never going to get my vote.

Things are going to change for the GOP in the next four years, because they have no choice.  They are so close to permanent insignificance that they can't afford the same old outdated thinking.  Whether I remain a member of the party will be dictated largely by what I see in the next two years.  In the meantime, I will be dedicating some time to trying to eliminate the electoral college that has completely corrupted out political system and pushing for the emergence of a third and, possibly, fourth party, and eliminating soft money that has rendered smaller parties in this corrupt system insignificant.  It is pure corruption, sanctioned by the Supreme Court, and it will ruin this country if we are not careful.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Where did the GOP Go Wrong?

So it's been three days, a much needed decompression from the two year onslaught of presidential campaigning for all Americans.  Candidates get a nice cocooning by their staff, even as busy as they are.  The citizenry just gets pounded from every direction - it wouldn't be hard to argue that the people are more emotionally exhausted than the candidates.

But in the end, Barack Obama won another term as president.  For Obama supporters, unrestrained jubilation.  For Romney supporters, shock and confusion as to how this happened.  For third party supporters (full disclosure:  I voted for Jill Stein, but would have been satisfied with Gary Johnson as well), disappointment at the continued marginalization by the major party structure that leaves smart, strong candidates with their fingers and noses pressed against the window, licking their lips in hunger for real contention.

So what happened?  Romney was going so strong that it seemed almost inevitable to end with a close call and a victory.  And while the popular vote count was close-ish (a few points is a reasonably tight race), the electoral count was less than anticipated.  A few things played into Romney's surprising slide on election day:

1.  Turnout.  Obama had it, Romney didn't - at least not what he thought he was going to get.  Polling suggested otherwise, but I think something wasn't taken into account.  The strong independent support reflected in the polls may have been suspect, because a lot of Republicans have shifted to independent, and that knowledge would skew the numbers from true independents who don't really lean toward any party, and are often where the undecideds are found.  The GOP thought that in 2008, Obama got a huge showing by voters because they didn't know him yet, and could make him anything they wanted to - it's why Hope and Change was effective, despite having almost no platform except taxing the über-wealthy.  In 2012, with four years of a record to judge, especially since the Democrat citizenry was disappointed with Obama failing to deliver on almost all his campaign promises, the GOP was sure the door was wide open to take back the White House because, surely, the voters wouldn't turn out in such vast numbers again.  And they were right.  But usual GOP voters didn't turn out either, and in greater numbers.

2.  Hurricane Sandy.  Like it or not, the incumbent has an advantage for a reason.  Obama had been lagging, while Romney was building momentum.  Something had to break for Obama, because they were not slowing Romney down, no matter how hard they tried.  Then Sandy hit.  Obama called everyone affected, looking for someone to allow him to be presidential.  He had been turned down a couple of times, most notably by Michael Bloomberg in NYC, who did not want his relief efforts derailed by having to accommodate the resource and security needs of the president.  So he told the president to stay away from New York.  Then came the shock that shook the GOP.  New Jersey governor, Republican Chris Christie, took him up on his offer to come survey the damage in his state.  They spent most of the day together, after which they held a press conference, where Christie poured the love on Obama so thick, NRA members were loading rifles across the country, just wanting to shoot something.  Did Obama do anything of substance on that little excursion?  No.  He needed a free campaign ad of him doing the one thing Romney couldn't - be presidential during the aftermath of a disaster - and he got it.  Anyone thinking it was not political should find a mirror, look into it, point at themselves and laugh themselves to tears.  It was a deft campaign move on Obama's part, and a sorely needed one.  And to add insult to injury, this all came on the heels of Romney having already said that he thought we should get rid of FEMA.  The timing could not have been worse.  And with the juxtaposition of Sandy vs. Bush's handling of Katrina, Obama couldn't have looked better going into the election.  Sucks to be Romney, but the incumbent has an advantage for a reason.

3.  Women.  I put this out there last week, and I don't know that it really influenced anyone's thinking - or that people around the country would put such thought into it - but the fact that the next president could feasibly have to replace a Supreme or two is an extremely important consideration that was not emphasized by either party.  Simply put, the GOP has hammered women over the past four years, forcing women's reproductive and contraceptive rights to the forefront of hot-button debate topics - and THAT made the selection of the next president much more critical as far as I'm concerned.  One Supreme vote swing to the right throws Roe v. Wade into dangerous territory.  It also puts gay rights heavily in the mix.  Romney swung way to the right to win the nomination and campaigned there for much of the run.  Add to that Todd Akin and Richard Murdock opening their holes in as stupid a manner as I've ever seen, and there's just no way Romney was going to win the women's vote.  Obama took it 55% to Romney's 44%.  Among single women, the ones most affected by reproductive and contraceptive rights, it was even more so - Obama 67%, Romney 31%.  You can not insult women and expect to win an election.

4.  Minorities.  As much as the GOP may not like it, blacks are here to stay, and the Hispanic population swells by the year.  Whites were 87% of the population in 1992, they're 72% now in 2012.  The party of old white men have to pop the bubble their heads float around in and realize you can't insult blacks by telling them they're worthless welfare leeches and Hispanics that you'll make life for them so difficult that they'll self-deport.  Our demographic mix muddies the water more and more by the year.  Obama got 93% of the black vote, and 71% of the Hispanic vote - a minority that is usually more conservative, making it all the more a slap in the face.  The muddier it gets, the closer the GOP will inch toward extinction if they don't learn to include everyone in their endeavors.

5.  "Flip-Flopping."  Mitt Romney is a moderate, and always has been.  If he had been himself during the Republican primaries, he would not have been the nominee.  He went way to the right to cater to the Tea Party, who had proven to have some real power building up in the 2010 mid-term elections.  The problem with campaigning today is that the media are everywhere.  So Romney would give a speech to Tea Party faithful one day, hitting all the hard right points they love to hear.  Then he would give a speech the next day to regular Republican supporters, where he would say something a little closer to what he really thinks.  Then the media plays both and calls him a flip-flopper.  It's a hard lesson for all prospective candidates.  Just be yourself, and let people decide what's important to them about you.  Romney came off as completely disingenuous and out of touch, people not knowing what to believe with him.  Obama slammed him several times in the first two debates for being completely opposite from everything he campaigned on to that point.  Normally that would be an amateur move, and Obama may have blown the first debate for the most part, but that one point may have stuck with voters, who started paying more attention from that point on.

These are just some of the main points that stick out.  I think a big question a lot of people ask themselves is:  do I believe the challenger is enough of an improvement over the incumbent, to make it worth replacing one with the other?  I don't care for Obama, but I never believed for a second that Romney would be an improvement.  I called him the Republican John Kerry several times - an empty suit lacking substance.  So even if I hadn't supported a third-party candidate, I still wouldn't have voted for Romney, even being a registered Republican.  And I imagine there has to be some Republicans that felt the same way.  Learn some lessons, GOP, or your beeline to insignificance will be a quick one.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Is it Just Me, or Is the Religious Right Really Obsessed with Rape?

So Richard Mourdock, GOP Senate candidate from Indiana, decided to add his two cents to the rape/abortion debate last week, saying "...  and I think even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that God intended to happen."  He, of course, amended his comment later to clarify that the rape was not what was intended, but the pregnancy, and that all life is precious.  And while we all know full well that's not what he intended, it doesn't make his argument any less dumb.  And it should be noted that, in proclaiming divine providence on pregnancies, you are, in fact, at least implying that the rape was God's will, since the result was God's will.  And I'm sure that God, with all His omnipotence, appreciates people like Dick reaching out to help those of us lesser people truly understand God's will - as if that's actually possible.

The problem with the abortion debate is that, to have it, you have to split a lot of hairs.  I don't support abortion, I wouldn't want my wife to have one unless there was a specific need to.  But I'm sorry, the argument against abortion is a religious one.  Even for those who shoot for secular, only debating when life begins, the origination of that argument has always been a religious one.  I'm Christian, but I also think God doesn't need me telling anyone what their life is or should be, or the decisions they make for themselves.  And it sure as hell isn't my right to legislate beliefs onto the whole of the country, especially when a good portion of the country doesn't share in that religious belief.  So I would fall into the pro-choice category - as would my wife.

God's greatest gift was his Son, Jesus Christ, who died for our sins.  His second greatest gift was the freedom of choice - even the choice to not believe in Him.  God doesn't force belief - omnipotence being what it is, He already knows the end result - so He patiently waits, with His hand out, for His children to find that belief in their own time.  We can't ever really know God, only ascribe to a relationship with Him, try to live in His light.  So as God gives us choice, the religious right have decided to circumvent God and dictate people's lives to them, knowing, for an indisputable fact, that this is what God wants, whether those people are believers or not?  

Right to lifers say the same thing about abortion that they do about gays - that they don't want gay rights and abortion rights forced upon them.  Aside from the fact that they're not (any of you been pulled into a Justice of the Peace office and forced to marry someone of your own gender lately?  How about women?  Been yanked into a back room, tied down, and had your baby aborted lately?), they all have no problem forcing what they want onto everybody else.  Could it be more disingenuous?   I'm not sure there's a more two-faced approach in our legal system.  Splitting hairs about cells vs. developed human bodies is an argument that goes nowhere, and it completely sidesteps the root issue:  should any person have a say in what someone else does with their body, if that person is of sound mind and spirit? 

Religious beliefs do not belong in legislation unless the entire country the legislation serves believes the same thing.  Christians want every other non/religion to bow to their whim.  It's the greatest of hypocrisies - the religious right complains that guys like Obama believe they know better than you what's best for you, and they chastise him for that attitude - and full throatedly campaign against that attitude.  At the same time, they wag the naughty finger at abortion rights groups and gay rights groups, saying they know better than you what's best for you, and you should just do as they say - after all, this is about what God wants, and they are God's enforcement officers here on Earth.  They could be more wrong, I suppose, but I'm not sure how.

Friday, October 12, 2012

VP Debate: A Review

VP debate at Centre College in Danville, Kentucky:

So Joe Biden and Paul Ryan had their debate last night.  Generally speaking, the VP debate has virtually no impact on the outcome of elections.  They usually are just a drumbeat of what the top of the ticket pushes in their own debates.  What you do have the opportunity to get is a feel for the intellect and temperament of the potential presidents, poised to assume power should the unfortunate happen to the man on the throne.  So how did the evening go?

Joe Biden’s job in this debate was primarily to energize the base of the Democratic party, who are still fuming over Obama’s abject failure to project a pulse in the first presidential debate.  The party was offended by the failure, and Biden was the punch back, and Biden was happy to comply.  He was aggressive, commanding, and did his best to keep Ryan on his heels.  He did tell some whoppers, particularly about the terrorist attack in Libya.  Not sure Biden paid much attention to the news of the day before the debate, because the State Department flatly contradicted everything he claimed last night.  Someone should have told him, because anyone who knew of the SD statements watched the lie snowball with every sentence.  The White House had to execute the requisite spin and roll it back after the debate, saying that Biden was only referring to himself and Obama, not the administration.  But he also was shockingly rude, unprofessional and condescending – not something I expected, even with Biden’s propensity for running his mouth without using his brain.  I thought Biden would be what made the debate fun to watch, but I found myself more put off and offended the longer the debate went on.  The non-stop interruptions, the condescending laughter while shaking his head, the retorts that flirted with being obnoxiously loud, all of it made Biden look unprofessional.  And that may have backfired for him, as independents and women tend to despise that exact attitude.  It’s fortunate that the VP debate has little impact on the election.  That said, Biden was successful in accomplishing his goal, which was energizing the base.  No tangible impact will come of it, but he did what was expected.  Grade:  B+

Paul Ryan is clearly the novice in these circumstances and, as such, Biden did his best to smack him around.  Ryan never got flustered, he was even tempered and measured, even when Biden was overpowering him and talking over him loudly.  He seemed to consciously restrain himself a few times, when it appeared he was going to run over Biden for interrupting him AGAIN.  But he kept his cool, and just plugged along.  He was at a distinct disadvantage, with the moderator Radditz interrupting him as well, and allowing Biden free reign in his treatment of Ryan.  As for his substance, I will say I was pleasantly surprised at Ryans’s competence on military issues and foreign affairs.  His specialty is economics, finance and taxation, so a deft touch with foreign affairs is a definite plus for Romney.  But he still wouldn’t give specifics in his economic plan, and that’s been a sticking point with independents.  I don’t think it hurt him, but it didn’t help.  In general he did a good job, and he was respectful of everyone, which is more than can be said for Biden.  Grade:  A

Martha Radditz is ABC's Chief Foreign Correspondent for the State Department, who specializes on national security and foreign affairs, who spends most of her time overseas with the military.  Her moderation was appropriate, being that she probably knows more about foreign affairs than Biden and Ryan combined.  I  laud her ability to keep the debate moving along, something Jim Lehrer had difficulty accomplishing.   But she is very liberal, and she appeared to favor Biden most of the night.  She did nothing to stop Biden from belittling and interrupting Ryan, never even trying to quiet him down when he was overly loud with his interjections.  She also interrupted Ryan herself several times, demanding a specificity she never demanded of Biden.  And with her foreign affairs acumen, she mostly focused on her specialty, the Middle East.  She never talked China or Latin America, and only tapped domestic policy sparingly, covering Medicare and Social Security under the same topical segment.  It was generally hit and miss with her.  Overall she was okay, but she will never moderate another debate.  Republicans were angry with her tactics and free reign allowed to Biden’s behavior, so she’ll likely never get approval from the GOP to moderate again.  Grade:   B-

The debate was mostly a wash.  I graded Ryan a little higher than Biden, mostly on attitude grounds, but I give a sliver of an edge to Biden as the winner - barely.  The simple fact is that, while Biden's behavior was poor, Democrats wanted to see some fight in their candidates.  Biden went overboard, but he did what they wanted, making his night a success.  Ryan had nothing to really gain, but plenty to lose on Romney's success last week.  He really just needed to maintain, and he did that very well.

The next presidential debate is October 16, 2012 at Hofstra University in New York.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Debate #1: Domestic Policy - A Review



OKAY!  Debate #1 was last night.  How did it go?

Well for starters, full disclosure:  I am a registered Republican, but not a fan of either candidate.  I have not been happy with some of President Obama’s policies, in particular his handling of foreign affairs.  I don’t like his playing with our civil liberties as if he’s King of the Mountain.  Asserting his right to order the death of any and all Americans he deems “terrorists,” with no due process (bad precedent to set, yes?), is right at the top of the list.  He is also killing thousands of innocent women and children with his massively under-reported drone war in Waziristan (NW territory of Pakistan).  And the calamity that is his botched handling (some say outright lies) of the terrorist attack on the US Embassy in Benghazi makes me want to punch something.  There are a number of moral issues in play with the president's foreign affairs, and that pretty much makes him a no-go as far as I'm concerned.  I have already discussed the health care situation in previous posts, so please feel free to peruse them if you have any interest.

Mitt Romney has been an empty shirt.  I have referred to him several times as 2012’s John Kerry.  Essentially a suit with a spray tan, great smile, and not much else.  I’ve never doubted his business acumen, he has a reputation of strong business skills, knowledge and intellect - if he were not a Mormon, he would have been the VP candidate for McCain in ’08.  I generally ignore the Bain Capital garbage because anyone who’s ever invested in any company has contributed to the closing of failing businesses and lost jobs.  I will say Bain’s willingness to support a failing company long enough to secure loans and extended financing – and then let the failing company fail anyway, pocketing the difference as profit on the failure – does give me some pause, but it’s not an uncommon business tactic for corporate raiders.  Sad but true.  But on the whole, I haven’t seen anything from Romney that tells me I should vote for him – rather, I’m wishing in general that both candidates would stop giving me reasons to NOT vote for them.  My candidate would be a cross between Jill Stein (Green Party, Mass.) and Gary Johnson (Libertarian Party, NM).  But neither of them will win, so we’ll just move on.  On to the debate…

Jim Lehrer retired from doing debate moderating after the 2008 debates, only to be lured back by the prospects of a different, not often used format:  Six segments on separate-but-related topics of domestic policy.  2-minute answer, 2-minute response, and then an 11-minute free flow discussion, with the candidates handling the discussion on their own – with Lehrer cutting into to move the discussion along or move on to the next segment.  Nice idea, gives the candidates a chance to riff off of each other.  But ultimately we got a back and forth of repeating themselves like broken records, and each one cutting off Lehrer when he tried to manage the time.  Lehrer liked the format because he likes “officiating,” rather than dictating the discussion.  So he did give them leeway when they cut him off, provided they stayed at least in the ballpark of “on topic.”  The problem with this, is it limited his ability to inject new questions into the discussion, often only asking how one candidate's view differ from the other one.  And because they focused so heavily on the fiscal, domestic social issues were left out, like gay marriage, abortion, contraception, and immigration (hopefully, the town-hall format on the 16th at Hofstra will allow audience members to inject some of these topics into the debate).  The free discussion was just asking for the time to get away from them, and it eventually did.  They ended up with only THREE total minutes between both candidates to discuss their views on partisan gridlock.  I personally think this was the most important issue on the docket, as it has frozen our country in it’s tracks – if they can’t fix that, their views on anything else are irrelevant, because the next four years will be the same as the last four, and we can’t afford that.  So I’m sure I’m not alone in thinking that 90 seconds apiece usually gets you nothing of substance.  So Lehrer, while relatively successful in keeping them talking, let the time get away – the only real “failure” in his moderation.  For a format that was sure to cause this problem, he did okay.  Grade:  B-

Barack Obama did not want to be in the room last night.  I’ve always gotten the impression from him that he just tolerates people – he doesn’t want to justify himself to anyone, and his attitude betrays that.  You can see this same attitude in many of his press conferences.  He just looks offended that someone calls him out to account for anything.  I’ve often wondered if he likes the power and title and of President of the United States, but doesn’t really want the job.  He spent most of the debate looking down at his podium, appearing to take notes.  But as predictable as most of the answers were going to be, I suspect he may have just been doodling… or playing Sudoku… or a crossword.  He was completely disengaged, and he kept giving that now very well known smile of condescension he gives while looking down, when he disagrees with something someone says.  You know, that “Oh-aren’t-you-cute-with-the-thinkin’“ smile.  He did the exact same thing to John McCain in the 2008 debate.  That attitude didn’t hurt him in 2008 because people didn’t know him yet, and McCain wasn’t going to win the election.  Bush had soured so much of the country on the Republican party that all Obama had to do was not give them ammunition that could be used against him.  Very little vetting of him was done in ’08, and so little was known about who he really was, that they didn’t have much to go after him with.  How do argue against “HOPE and CHANGE”?  There was simply no where to go, and McCain was fighting a losing battle, unable to shed the coattail of Bush.  But it’s 2012, there’s now 3½ years of his decisions and policies and actions (and inactions) to hit him with, and he simply doesn’t want to justify himself.  Instead of attacking Romney on philosophical things that were supposed to hang him out to dry (Bain Capital, the 47% comment, etc.), Obama kept bringing up the same "$5 trillion in tax cuts, $1 trillion in extending the Bush tax cuts, and $2 trillion in military spending “that the military didn’t even ask for.”  Even when Romney rebutted him, he just kept saying the same thing over and over.  With every repetitive rebuttal, Romney’s position bolstered.  He couldn’t have helped Romney more.  Major debate no no – try it once, but never give your opponent a chance to strengthen his position.   Ironically, that last 3 minutes, that normally would give no room for substance, was the only substance (albeit minimal) to come out of the debate, because it was about philosophy and mindset.  Romney stated that, as Governor of Massachusetts, 87% of his legislature were Democrats – but he still managed to accomplish a lot by getting them to work with him and the Republicans to move the state forward.  What was Obama’s response?  After saying he listens to all suggestions that come his way, and another 45 seconds about the handful of successes, he said “…occasionally you have to say no.”  He quickly added “…to folks, both in your own party and in the other party.”  The sentiment reminded me immediately of his first State of the Union, when he told the country that if he doesn’t get what he wants from Congress, he’ll issue executive orders.  He has said he’ll go it alone many times, and that attitude has cost him in his first term.  His obvious disinterest in this debate showed, and he angered even his own party with it.  This was supposed to separate the men from the boys.  He was supposed to run Romney over and end the election right now.  In that endeavor, he could not have done worse.  Grade:  C-

Mitt Romney was not supposed to even be in this, let alone perform well.  In the last two weeks, I heard and read many comments from the DNC and Obama himself, attempting to pump up expectations for Romney (calling him a masterful and skilled debater) and lower them for the president (saying he was an okay debater, and was practicing hard to compete well).  Not caring about either candidate, I laughed it off as posturing for the sake of gamesmanship.  I was wrong.  Romney came out swinging and swinging hard.  His points also lacked the same substance as Obama’s, but in presentation of canned rhetoric and live stump speech and ad quotes, he could not have performed better.  While the president looked down at his podium dismissively, Romney maintained consistent eye contact, attempting to engage the president over and over, despite Obama’s unwillingness to be engaged.  Romney did dismiss Lehrer a couple of times when Lehrer tried to move along – likely unintentional, but no less unprofessional, and easily corrected before the next debate.  He clearly relished Obama gift-wrapping him those repetitive rebuttals, growing more confident, pointed and determined with each one.  He lucked out, Obama never forcing him into discussions about Bain or the 47%, although it probably good that Obama left the 47% thing alone.  Giving Romney another rebuttal to knock out of the park (and you know he had one) would have just bitten him in the rear again – and Obama’s too slender for that many bites.  If he wins the election, Romney owes a Director of Communications job to whoever is schooling him, especially if he can deliver in the next two debates.  Not a fan of his, but Romney owned Obama last night – one hell of a job, and his polls and money will likely reflect that.  And worse for Obama, the Foreign Policy debate will give Romney a Gallagher-size Sledge-O-Matic to hammer him with.  This election was supposed to be over last night – clearly, it just started.   Grade: A

Debates are never a place to go for substance.  If you’ve seen their advertising campaigns, you generally have already seen the debate.  The hitch in this year’s set up is the format.  The 11-minute discussion period gives a hefty load of leeway for riffing off each other and jabs.  The substance overall will likely still lack, but they’ve found a way to possibly make it interesting.  I wasn’t looking forward to this debate – I had to convince myself to watch it, in fact – but I am looking forward to the next one.  And I am really looking forward to the VP debate next week (nine 10-minute segments) – who knows what comes out of Joe Biden’s mouth with this open format…