When reality bites back…

It’s done. It’s over. The historic election has come and gone. And I congratulate Barack Obama and his supporters on their ground-breaking success. I know they’re ecstatic right now.

But there’s a fly in the ointment. A big fly. Here’s what it is: 48% of the country, myself included, did not vote for Barack Obama. 48% of the country disagrees with him on major issues. Did this number change simply because he was elected? No. 48% of the country will continue to disagree with Barack Obama.

That’s a lot of people. A lot, a lot, a lot of people.

Obama did indeed promise that he hears the voices of the people who did not vote for him. This is a speech every president makes. There’s nothing new about it. Remember Bush talking about how he would be a “uniter, not a divider”? Did it happen? No. Will it not happen again? Probably.

Obama now faces the real prospect of governing the country. He’s promised just about everything under the sun, so now he’s in a little bit of trouble. He either keeps his promises and appeases his liberal base, or he moves to the center (as he has been doing recently), and governs center-right, which is where the majority of this country lies. Reports are that he’s studying up very carefully on the disastrous first two years of the Clinton administration, when they tried to push through too many fringe ideas too quickly, and crashed and burned. Barack Obama is not a stupid man.

We are not a united people. We will not all get together and sing “Kumbaya” simply because Obama was elected. Those of us who disagree with Mr. Obama will continue to disagree with Mr. Obama, until he shifts positions.

And for those of you conservatives in the dumps over the election — just wait. The GOP could use some wilderness time to rediscover their Reaganite roots and think about how badly they screwed up by going drunk with spending binges. Just…wait. Jimmy Carter was elected in 1976 and was “Saint Jimmy” to many people; the world was going to be saved. Instead he was a disaster and in 1980 the world got Ronald Reagan. Bill Clinton was elected in ’92 and two years later accomplished something that had not been done in almost fifty years — he lost control of the House and Senate to Republicans.

So, again, for you 48%, along with me, who do not agree with Mr. Obama, simply have some patience. Either Obama will move to the center, in which case we start to get what we’re looking for, or he falls prey to the liberal agenda he ran on in the primaries, in which case he becomes a spectacular failure and a one-term president.

Time and reality have a way of taking care of things, even such platitudes as “hope” and “change”. Even when it’s Change You WILL Submit To. Even when it’s watered-down Socialism.

Take heart, and wait. When Obama becomes president, he is going to find it very hard to be all things to all people, and he will have to choose his path.

And 48% of us will we watching very, very closely.

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Congratulations…

…to President-elect Obama and his supporters.

I mean that. They ran a very good campaign.

On the bright side for the Rs, we can still filibuster.

But for now, congrats to the Obama supporters…

…but in a couple of months, I’m going to start up the ranting against The Obamanation…

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Feelin’ Fine for ’09

I’ve been getting a lot of sympathy — real, actual, heartfelt sympathy — from some of my liberal friends over the state the election is in.

I don’t need it. I don’t care.

First, let me preface this by saying we have two weeks to go and two weeks in politics is a lifetime. So Barack shouldn’t be measuring the drapes quite yet.

But, mostly, I just want the election over. Over. It’s times like these when I wish we had a parliamentary system and this whole thing could be done within two weeks, instead of having to suffer through virtually two years of this crap.

Anyway, here’s the thing. The Republicans are idiots. Yes, I just said that. The Democrats are idiots, fools, and dangerous, but the Republicans are idiots. And a loss for them in November can do two things.

First, in the wilderness years, they can ponder what went wrong, and stage a comeback. Remember Bill Clinton getting elected? Remember how it led to a complete takeover of Congress by Republicans two years later? That could easily happen. I doubt Obama is going to keep that coveted “supermajority” for very long. It just doesn’t work like that.

Second, the Republicans can realize why things went wrong, and that is because they strayed from their conservative roots. The base was pissed off during the primaries, and the base had every right to be pissed off. We were given a bunch of moderate bumblers who all tried to make the case they were Reagan. None of them are Reagan. Reagan was dubbed “too conservative” to win in 1980. Nobody is ever going to accuse this bunch of jerks of that.

There’s actually a third reason I’m not so upset. If Obama wins, I get the chance to blame him for everything for the next 4-8 years. Playing defense for the eternally-defensive Bush camp has been a pain in the ass. It’s much easier to on the offense and blame everything on Obama. And I mean everything. After what the libs have blamed Bush for (“My damn car won’t start — fucking Bush!”), I’m not going to pull any punches if Obama is elected. I’m going to blame him for everything. Especially the inevitable failure of his own agenda, which I don’t even support.

But let us conservatives hope that if Mr. Obama wins this election, that in our “wilderness” years, we take some serious time for introspection. We remember that we’re not supposed to be the party who spends like there’s no tomorrow.

The expectations for Obama are so high that there’s no possible way he can live up to them if he’s elected. So fine, elect him.

My computer had some problems this morning. Fuckin‘ Obama.

Muhahahaha.

Either way, let us take solace in this fact: in less than three weeks, this will all be over, and we’ll have a couple of years of breathing room before the ’12 election gets underway.

Thank God for small favors.

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The Pats suck

There, I said it. That’s off my chest.

It was a divine joke. Seven minutes into the first game of the season, Tom Brady goes down and so does any hope for the Patriots.

This is not to say that it’s all Brady’s fault. First, we don’t have a backup QB worth anything. Cassel just ain’t it. I mean, Romo goes down, and you get Brad Johnson, who’s got a championship ring on his finger. Brady goes down, and you get Cassel.

Somebody get on the phone to Drew Bledsoe, or something, for the love of God.

And there’s our defense. What defense? The Chargers cut through us like a hot knife through butter. Sure, with Brady at the helm, maybe we could have turned the thing into a shootout, but a team tha’ts letting up that many points on the field — something’s wrong.

It’s just depressing. Only one real question remains: Can the Patriots make the playoffs? Given the crappiness of the AFC East, the chances are actually fairly good. Although not if they played the way they did last Sunday.

Oh, and on one other note, if I have to hear about “Joe the Plumber” anymore, I am going to become “Kip the Foot-up-your-ass Guy”.

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Sather Gate

Sather Gate (at UC Berkeley) is being restored.

Word.

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Cowards

You fucking cowards. You cringing fucking cowards. You won’t pass a bill that is desperately needed because of election year politics.

A pox on both your houses.

Cowards.

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A Necessary Evil

I hate the bailout plan. You hate the bailout plan. We all hate the bailout plan. But we need the bailout plan.

Listen. For those of you who think this is something recent, think again. This thing has been in the offing since the 1970s. It began during the Carter administration. Suburban whites were getting more mortgages than urban blacks. So, under pressure from the lefties, we started slacking off on the strictness of mortgage lending.

We’ve been doing two things. We’ve been giving mortgages to people who can’t afford them, and we’ve been overvaluing properties. Which means, in some cases, people are taking out mortgages that are higher than the actual market value of the property.

What happens? You know what happens. People can’t pay their mortgages. In many cases, the mortgage, as I said, is more than the house is worth, so they simply just abandon the house and the bank that lent the property owner the money is stuck with a loss.

How does this translate into a financial meltdown? I’ll oversimplify. Banks lend money. A lot of the money they lend is in housing. Suddenly, the housing loans are going bad. This means the banks have less money to lend. More important, no matter how good a shape the bank is in, the bank doesn’t want to lend money. The market hates uncertainty. Hates it. Loathes it. So a bank may say, well, even though we have the money, we’re not going to lend it — it’s just not prudent right now. We’re going to wait.

This affects you very simply. Suddenly you need a hell of a lot of a better credit score to get any kind of loan. The banks themselves lend to themselves and the same happens there — they’re more reluctant to lend.

Here’s another oversimplification. Most Americans don’t have the money to buy a $20,000 car. So they take out a car loan and put a certain amount of money down. Five years ago, say, your credit score needed to be 650 to qualify for that loan. Now that the banks are reluctant to lend, let’s say it’s 720. That means a vast number of people can no longer buy that car.

And the auto company can’t sell the car. Their profits decline. They’re not making as much money. They have to cut corners. They have to lay people off. Same goes for small companies that operate with credit. They can’t get the small business loan anymore, so they can’t pay their employees.

It goes on like this, spiralling and spiralling and spiralling. Now. What’s Uncle Sugar going to do? Uncle Sugar is going to step in and say, listen, we will cover these bad mortgages. You don’t have to worry. They are not automatically bailing everybody out. They’re just saying, look, if worse comes to worse, we’ll buy that mortgage out from under you. You don’t have to worry.

You have certainty.

And, as I said, the one thing the market can’t stand is uncertainty.

I understand the urge to say, let ’em fail. Let ’em all fall apart. But the reason the government steps in in situations like these is to try to make sure a downturn in the economy, a medium-level recession or something, does not turn into a depression (now, do not confuse what we are going through with the Great Depression — the problem there was liquidity in the markets, not credit, although there are some similarities).

If the government did nothing, credit would freeze up. Money would not be moved around. You would ultimately suffer.

This is a vast oversimplification of what is going on, but I’m stating it anyway. The most obvious parts. There is no one person who understands how the market works. The market is a beast of its own. There are people who spend decades studying certain parts of the market, and understand those, but there is no one person who understands completely how the market works. It’s simply too vast and complicated. It’s been around too long. If you think you know how the market works, you don’t. Period. End paragraph.

I’m a conservative. I hate to see government solutions to private sector problems. But government does exist for a reason, and this is one of them. They will cushion the fall, and hopefully instead of crash-landing, we’ll just thud somewhat heavily onto the ground.

You should, however, stay pissed off. Just try to remember who you should be pissed off at. You should be pissed off at the liberals in the 1970s who insisted that mortgages be given to people who simply couldn’t afford the mortgages, and every person who followed that reasoning up until the present date.

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A toothless attack

If Obama wants to win, going after McCain for saying “the fundamentals of the economy are strong” is not how he’s going to do it.

I just don’t think that Americans…after witnessing a rebound from the dot-com bubble…really feel, by and large, like the economy itself somehow is broken. It’s an argument over management of the economy. That’s what people want to hear: “I will manage this economy so we will all be better off.”

Not “America sucks”, which is what is basically what Obama is saying. I also happen to personally disagree, as well. The American workforce is the American economy and I think the American workforce is strong.

What happened to the politics of hope…? If Obama’s going to go negative, he sure as hell has to do a better job than this. Even going back to bitching about gas and talking about inflating your tires would be better than this.

Get off this message. Get back on the “renewal” thing, Barack. It surprises me that the original Obama has so much disappeared, that so much vitality seems to have leaked out since the primaries. He has a historic run. He should be making historic speeches, not lame potshots at the US economy. We all know he can orate immensely well.

The Obama campaign has not, I think, found its groove, while meanwhile, the McCain camp kinda has. They’re both on message, both now “pro-hope” and “reform”. Their stumping actually looks more fiery at this point, which is scary. And anyone who says the Obama campaign has found its groove has to explain to me why Obama is where he is in the polls despite George W. Bush being immensely unpopular and the rest of the Rs teetering in the House and Senate (although the Dems have horrid poll ratings in Congress).

The McCain campaign is energized and Obama needs to do something to throw them off message. Quickly. The debates will actually matter for once (which proves we still have people simply too stupid to figure out which candidate they want).

Is Obama losing his lustre? It remains to be seen, I guess.

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Genius playlists coming to iPod Classic?

Despair not, ye who hold the iPod Classic! Rumors are afloat that Apple will give the old baby a software update that will let it use Genius playlists on the go. Which would be nice.

Information over here at Gizmodo…

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Madden Roster Update #3 Details

Courtesy of pastapadre.com:

Transactions

FB Reagan Mauia – Signs with Bengals

LB Jon Corto – Added to Bills

LB Blake Costanzo – Added to Bills

DT Alvin McKinley – Released by Broncos

DT Josh Shaw – Signs with Broncos

LB Antwan Peek – Released to Free Agents (IR)

WR Paul Hubbard – Released by Browns

WR Steve Sanders – Signs with Browns

LB Shantee Orr – Signs with Browns

C Pat Ross – Signs with Cardinals

FB Andrew Pinnock – Released by Chargers

FB Mike Tolbert – Added to Chargers

RT James Marten – Released by Cowboys/Signs with Raiders

QB Brooks Bollinger – Signs with Cowboys

SS Tyrone Culver – Signs with Dolphins

CB Joey Thomas – Released by Dolphins

FB Boomer Grigsby – Released by Dolphins

FB Casey Cramer – Signs with Dolphins

FS Jamaal Fudge – Signs with Falcons

DE Brent Hawkins – Released by Jaguars

G Milford Brown – Signs with Jaguars

TE Dan Campbell – Released to Free Agents (IR)

LB Chris Chamberlain – Added to Rams

RT Willie Anderson – Signs with Ravens

RG Adrien Clarke – Released by Ravens

C Matt Lehr – Released by Saints

QB Ingle Martin – Added to Titans

QB Daunte Culpepper – Retires

Ratings Up

HB Matt Forte – Bears – 80 to 82 – Looked like the real deal week 1 vs. the Colts.

LG Josh Beekman – Bears – 74 to 76 – Got the start and at LG and was able to pave the way for Forte on the ground.

HB Andre Hall – Broncos – 75 to 77 – Looked very explosive against the hapless Raiders.

WR Eddie Royal – Broncos – 77 to 80 – Made us remember why we call him DeAngelo “Fall”. Torched DeAngelo repeatedly and looked very good doing it.

LB Jamie Winborn – Broncos – 75 to 79 – Started over the oft injured Boss Bailey and made plays vs. the Raiders.

LB Matt Roth – Dolphins – 76 to 80 – Could have found his niche as a 3-4 OLB. Had 2 sacks in the opener.

WR DeSean Jackson – Eagles – 79 to 80 – Has made the most of receivers going down with injuries in Philly. Tye Hill was benched after attempting to cover him.

LB Stewart Bradley – Eagles – 79 to 80 – The new man in the middle for the Eagles, this one might stick.

HB Michael Turner – Falcons – 88 to 89 – If I had a nickel for every time someone blew up on the Lions defense…A good start none the less for the Burner Turner.

LB Parys Haralson – 49ers – 74 to 76 – Recorded 2.5 sacks getting the start for the Niners in Week 1.

HB Brandon Jacobs – Giants – 87 to 88 – My mother could average 3 yards a carry behind the Giants O-Line. But he sure is powerful.

WR Matt Jones – Jaguars – 77 to 79 – Maybe Garrard’s guy after a tough offseason. Injuries to the supposed starting WR’s have helped also.

QB Aaron Rodgers – Packers – 84 to 85 – Made it look simple vs. one of the top defenses in the NFL. Once the coach takes off the diapers watch out.

TE Dante Rosario – Panthers – 74 to 77 – Blew up in a big way in Week 1 vs. the Chargers. Caught the game winner in the back of the end zone as time expired.

Ratings Down

DE Jarvis Moss – Broncos – 81 to 77 – Inactive the 1st week in his second season for the Broncos.

LB Tully Banta-Cain – 49ers – 79 to 76 – Came to the Niners with high hopes, now he has been replaced at OLB.

CB DeAngelo Hall – Raiders – 93 to 91 – Yes after only one week. Reminded us why some people confuse speed with ability. He has speed, isn’t much of a corner though.

Injuries

FB Jeremi Johnson – Bengals – Knee IR

LB Angelo Crowell – Bills – Knee IR

WR Joe Jurevicius – Browns – Knee (PUP)

HB Carnell Wililams – Bucs – Knee (PUP)

C Al Johnson – Cardinals – Knee IR

QB Brodie Croyle – Chiefs – Shoulder (3 weeks)

C Jeff Saturday – Colts – Knee (8 weeks)

G Ryan Lilja – Colts – Knee (PUP)

DT Trey Lewis – Falcons – Knee (8 weeks)

LT Guy Whimper – Giants – Foot IR

K Lawrence Tynes – Giants – Knee (7 weeks)

LG Vince Manuwai – Jaguars – Knee IR

RG Maurice Williams – Jaguars – Arm (12 weeks)

DT Justin Harrell – Packers – Back (PUP)

QB Tom Brady – Patriots – Knee IR

G Stephen Neal – Patriots – Shoulder/Knee (PUP)

WR Drew Bennett – Rams – Foot (8 weeks)

QB Kyle Boller – Ravens – Shoulder IR

CB Dunta Robinson – Texans – Knee (PUP)

QB Vince Young – Titans – Knee (4 weeks)

Contracts

LB DJ Williams – Broncos – 6 years

WR Plaxico Burress – Giants – 5 years

RT Eric Winston – Texans – 5 years

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