User profile: mm
Joined: Jan. 18, 2008
Contact mm (log-in required)
Recent Comments
Total Comments: 46 (view all)
wow!!! i was proud of obama last night for standing up for his record. he really set the record straight. he made them look like idiots.
the tough bill that they claimed obama voted present for was initially sponsored by obama. somehow, there was some added clauses in the bill that obama had some reservation about; so obama could not either vote for or reject the bill in its modified form.
this is somehow equivalent to not answering yes or no to a non-applicable question on a federal form.
tom, you really got it, the sun-editors must have been under the influence of the unconscious mind when they chose this very operational and descriptive word for the clintons' camp.
obama has been doing something for the democratic party that many democrats could not do. he ventured into the hard and untouchable parts of northern nevada and convinced rural and northern nevadeans to vote democratic. that is revolutionary. his next move is with the evangelicals. he believes that the evangelicals have a lot in common with democrats, and for too long we have let right-wing politicians take advantage of them on the issues of obortion and gay marriage. in fact, he argues that evangelicals have some very important things in common with democrats; things such as poverty concerns, and other social problems such drug rehabilitations centers insteas of prisons for drug-addicts and so on.
obama can win this all the way to the white house!!!
it may not be that racially polarized if we look deeper.
the majority of blacks in nevada is relatively young. many blacks come here to work in the counstruction and entertainment industry; and because young voters tend to gravitate toward obama, this huge turn-out in favor of obama may have a lot to do with generational differences that appear to be racial polarization only superficially; similarly, the large percentage of the white vote that went for hillary may have more to do with educational level and older age rather than race. for instance, the vegas strip workers are in majority blue-collar democrats, and a significant portion of that percentage is hispanic. since there seems to be pattern of blue-collar democrats gravitating toward clinton, the huge hispanic support for clinton may not be that ethnic-based as suggested by many commentators.
we have to remember that it was not easy to campaign in nevada, and the caucus thing is vey new here; and we also know that hispanics here watch a lot spanish television. neither obama or clinton have had enough media coverage here prior to their speedy campaigns in latin television stations. so, given the fact that obama is a new comer in term of national politics, and has had insufficient time in terms of campaigning, the hispanic support for hillary may reasonably be viewed as a choice for a better known candidate with a popular ex-president as a husband rather than as an ethnic rejection of obama.
for example, in california clinton only has a nine-point lead; in light of that, obama would not be that close to clinton unless he had some significant hispanic support there.
so, it may well be a myth that hispanics do not support obama or blacks do not clinton.
many blacks are very young, so the generational gap be a bigger factor for their support of obama. in fact, when it comes to older blacks particularly women, clinton and obama are quite even.
so, i believe that the media may be tapping into our historical racial obsessions in order to increase ratings. in conclusion, the statistics when viewed in their proper context suggest that race is quite a minor issue in this presidential race.
i agree with you on the unity part. i support obama, and denounce clinton bad tactics; i may consider to vote for hillary if she wins the nomination, but she has to stop the mischaracterization of Obama. if she continues in that manner, i am done with her whether she wins the nomination or not.
she has so far distorted obama's record very efficiently; and i am getting pissed off with the obama strategists for not counter-attacking as efficiently.
for god's sake, bill clinton should be the last person in politics questioning the moral standards of others.
by the way, walden, what happened to bill's argument. after all, the people that he claimed that would be undercounted in the caucuses overwhelmingly voted for obama-- that is the people of northern nevada.
does he still believe that the people of the vegas strip have had un unfair advantage after they handed her wife the victory in nevada? not at all, because union bosses are great leaders when they endorsed the clintons but arm-twisting dictators when they defy the clintons.
walden, you are denouncing affirmative action while hillary is in full support of it. this is kind of hard to apparently support someone with such a zeal that you disagree with on such a major issue. your double coat somehow leads me reconsider my reverse psychology hypothesis. could it be that you are supporting hillary behind a screen, but in fact waiting to vote against her in the general election coming november? that is not an unreasonable question; after all, you disagree with her on a major socio-political hot-button. i would not be able to support obama if i disagreed with him on a major socio-political hot-button. by the way, hillary went to yale on the basis of a gender-based affirmatime action structure.
by the way, hillary supports affirmative action as it is whereas obama would support more of a class-and-income-based affirmative action. but either, you are intentionally ignoring those facts for your own hidden agenda, or you are vastly misinformed.
my social observation of the past ten years suggests that people that would fervently denounce affirmative action tend to be conservative republicans.
walden, we do not need to be personal. my fellow obama supporter did not have to insult you; let's keep our exchange civil; but you are wrong in assuming that obama's educated support is solely among the college teens. i may be slightly off, but the number of graduate students that has so far supported obama would triple that of clinton.
walden, it is not paranoia! you are using the full name of obama for the opposite reason that you would use the shorter version of hillary's full name.
you omit the hillary's maiden name to intentionally create a much closer link to the former president.
come on!!!!
let's not get personal, let's analyze the candidates'record!!!
- Most Read
- Discussed
- Editors’ Picks
- With that pay, no way, many would-be graduate students tell UNLV
- Toni Braxton’s Las Vegas show remains dark
- Brian Greenspun has a proposal for a ticket to unite Democrats
- Las Vegas Billboards Advertise Fast Cash, Cheap Thrills
- State now facing still more cuts
- After public misfire on polygamy, Reid acts to help those he blasted
- Eye-to-eye ends with the economy
- Keeping the heat on OSHA
- A class’s varied views of Vegas
- Several games of political chicken converging at one intersection
Blogs
Culture Blog
Rush makes time stand still at Mandalay Bay
Bloggity, Bloggity, Bloggity
Observations from Saturday’s Dodge Challenger 500 at Darlington Raceway (7 Comments)
Elsewhere
Las Vegas Billboards Advertise Fast Cash, Cheap Thrills
Toni Braxton's Las Vegas show remains dark
Politics: The Early Line
State now facing still more cuts (1 Comment)
Culture Blog
Services set for comedian David Swan
Gaming and Business
No surprise: visitor numbers continue to soften (5 Comments)
Gaming revenue, especially slots, continue their decline (3 Comments)
Calendar
Las Vegas 51s vs. Memphis Redbirds
It's "Dollar Beer Night" at Cashman Field ( Cashman Field Center Stadium)
- Open mic comedy (9 p.m.)
- The Bargain DJ Collective (10 p.m.)
- Louie Anderson (7 p.m.)
- The Vision Band (9 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.)
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.

did any of you notice the strange pattern following the narrow wins of mrs clinton?
with two straight wins, her national lead is still dwidling. she is the only candidate in recent presidential primaries whose national polls do not improve overall even after two wins.
there is something else going on here. the party elders want her to stop criticizing obama so harshly. why? because even if she wins more delegates prior to convention, she may not get the nomination. the party leaders are concerned with her lack of appeal to independents, and in contrast very pleased with obama's strong showing in northern nevada, a traditional republican stronghold. so, the superdelegates may swicth their votes to obama even if after clinton manages to win more delegates from the primaries. after all, superdelegates are more loyal to the party than to hillary.
after the showing in northern nevada, many democratic leaders are starting to think that they may be better off with obama in the national elections.
there is now real concern with the electability of hillary in november. the superdelegates were invented exactly for that kind of scenario-- in which one candidate appears to be a strong primary, but consistently fares very weakly in national match-ups.
she does get support beyond the very core and reliable and traditional democratic voters.
this is a real concern!!!