Ian wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Ian wrote:Warren Dew wrote:Ian wrote:Concur. Which is why I'm hoping beyond realistic hope that she (or Mike Huckabee) gets the nomination in 2012. Unless Obama came down with explosive diarrhea during the debates, he'd walk away with a landslide.
Huckabee would likely beat Obama handily. He's got as good or better a grasp of the issues, plus he's got much greater appeal to the religious right. The only thing that could stop him would be lack of sufficient funding due to lack of support from the business community.
Unfortunately, he'd have similar policies to Obama - big government and support for religion - both of which are things I'd want to be getting away from.
Not sure where to start, except that I disagree with every word of that other than Huckabee having support from the religious right. He wouldn't stand a snowball's chance in hell against Obama.
You overestimate Obama's appeal. Obama won because of the "independents" were not going to vote for Bush's successor. He's lost the independents, probably for good. Those are folks who are not economically or politically savvy, didn't really pay attention to exactly what he was promising them other than to hear what they wanted to hear (that it would all get better), and are now seeing Obama do what he promised to do domestically -- and they don't like it at all. That's why Obama's approval rating is awful right now, and dropping.
The latest economic news doesn't bode well. We are NOT coming out of this recession, and in fact some economists have rumbled that it is now a depression, not just a recession. One Democratic Congressman today or yesterday, Bennett I think his name is, said that for the $1 trillion we spent on "stimulus" we got "nothing."
The wheels are starting to come off the bus...
Says you, Mr. The Economy Has No Hope Whatsoever. It's like your
thing.
It has hope. It's just tanking, and the administration is making it worse. Have you visited the evidence I posted in the "Here's the other economic shoe dropping" thread? Just yesterday, economists came out opining that we are in a depression, not a recession, now. New home sales are now at their lowest level ever recorded. The Dow is predicted to drop to 5,000, and the guy who developed the "Hindenburg Omen" regarding stock market crashes pulled all his money out of the stock market and said that we have a very high likelihood of a stock market crash. But, yeah, it's just my "thing...."
Maybe I should just put on some red shoes and click my heels together and wish us all to economic prosperity....
Ian wrote:
Congressman whatshisname said that, but the CBO also just said that the stimulus saved over 3 million jobs and kept the economy from a negative growth rate.

Have you read beneath the numbers? Do you have an understanding of how the CBO came to that conclusion? It was fed the information that it was forced to use by the Administration and the Congresssional leadership. Garbage in - garbage out. "Saved or created" jobs is, quite simply, a bullshit, fanciful statistic that is based on not much more than hot air. You don't have to tell me. I'll just ask you to think to yourself what you'd think of that number if Bush was President.
Ian wrote:
And the stimulus was but a fraction of the debt incurred with Bush's tax cuts, costing us $2.3 trillion over ten years, btw, also for little gain. Feel free to second-guess that, but I think you know there's reason to second-guess all your doom-and-gloom talk as well.
Doom and gloom talk? Doom and gloom talk? Every statement I've made was backed up with citations and links.
The economy is fucked sideways. Call it doom and gloom, but it is. This administration has racked up 2.3 trillion in debt in TWO years (or, at least that's the pace their on). So, they're doing in 2 what you are complaining took Bush his entire term.
Ian wrote:
I'm not saying Obama's guaranteed to win in 2012. I'm just saying that neither Huckabee nor Palin can possibly beat him.
Both Huckabee and Palin make me want to vomit. So, I say this with no love at all for them. But, the last polls that I saw said Obama loses to ANY Republican candidate, if the election is held now. I do not know what the future holds.
Ian wrote:
Look at it from a reverse perspective - imagine Dennis Kucinich getting the 2004 nomination instead of John Kerry. Would the election still have been close, even though Bush had his own popularity problems? Nah, that would've been a Republican blowout on the order of 1984. Well, Palin and Huckabee are the GOP's versions of Kucinich.
They aren't, though. Kucinich isn't even all that popular among Democrats across the board. Palin is, for some reason that I have yet to fathom, wildly popular among Republicans. Even friends that I consider to be otherwise above-average intelligence like her, and would vote for her.
Ian wrote:
Which is why they won't even get the nomination: the conservative Base likes right-wingers, but they like electability even more, which is why Huckabee got whupped in the 2008 primaries by a couple of relative moderates (McCain and Romney).
In my view, Obama would have a better chance of beating Huckabee than Palin. Huckabee is a dufus. Palin, though, has this popularity base that a lot of people on the Democrat side discount due to their own visceral hatred of her. The country is broken right down the middle almost 50/50, and 1/2 the country doesn't mind Palin. The other half hates her.
Ian wrote:
You think Obama's lost the independents for good? I say that's hogwash. "A week in politics is a long time", as they say, and an election cycle is an eternity.
That is my opinion, yes. Obviously, he could prove me wrong by winning them back.
Ian wrote:
It's 2010, and making predictions about Obama vs Generic Republican Candidate are useless right now. I'm not doing that, I'm just making predictions about Palin and Huckabee. There's a huge range of possibilities on the other side of the ticket. And focusing only on how Obama and the economy are doing right now is kinda futile. Again, I'll just go to history. In 1982 and 1983 the economy was in shambles and Reagan was suffering from lackluster popularity and looking like a goner for re-election.
I'm old enough that I followed the news and politics in 1982 and 1983. Reagan was never viewed as Obama is being viewed right now.
Ian wrote:
Then came economic recovery, coupled with a not-very-appealing opponent and, well, you know the rest.
Sure, economic recovery would help Obama. The problem is, there are no signs of a recovery right now, and everything the Democrats are doing are, according to most economists I've heard, not going to help private enterprise. From listening to the administration, helping private enterprise is not even their goal or desire.
Ian wrote:
Same with Slick Willy in '96: in 1994 Clinton's administration was looking unorganized and incompetent, the GOP took back congress, and then... the economy kept growing, the GOP nominated a boring old geezer, and that was that.
Clinton was quite different than Obama. Clinton was a conservative southern Democrat. And, he worked with the Republicans, and did many "conservative" things, like his "ending welfare as we know it" and actually working with Congressional Republicans. If we had a Clinton in the White House now, I would be singing a very different tune.