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Best Presidential Candidate, Democrats

Posted by CmdrTaco on Mon Feb 04, 2008 09:26 AM
from the someone-resurrect-zombie-kennedy dept.
This story is to discuss the remaining democratic candidates for president. Please keep discussions limited to talk about Hillary and Obama. Keep discussions of the other party in the other story.
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story

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[+] McCain vs. Obama on Tech Issues 877 comments
eldavojohn writes "Ars is running a brief article that looks at stances from Chuck Fish of McCain's campaign and Daniel Weitzner from Obama's in regards to technical issues that may cause us geeks to vote one way or the other. From openness vs. bandwidth in the net neutrality issue to those pesky National Security Letters, there's some key differences that just might play at least a small part in your vote. You may also remember our discussions on who is best for geeks."
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  • by Aurisor (932566) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:28AM (#22290304) Homepage
    support whomever posts first.
    • Re:I personally (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 04 2008, @10:00AM (#22290932)
      Obama has certainly taken the crown in the Democratic campaign as "the candidate making best use of the internet." Take, for example, this clip I saw yesterday. Not sure exactly who is behind it, but the message is inspiring and - frankly - can melt through the icy cynicism of the Grinchiest Clintonite.

      I would have liked more singing from Scarlett Johansson.

      Watch and enjoy.

      http://www.dipdive.com/ [dipdive.com]
      • Re:I personally (Score:5, Insightful)

        by eonlabs (921625) on Monday February 04 2008, @01:26PM (#22294554) Journal
        Personally, I'm not very impressed with either candidate in terms of maturity. Both are mudslinging pretty hard. If I wanted to hear that, I could watch a kindergarten class.

        To choose one, I'm liking Obama at the moment.

        Right now, the country has lost the majority of its international image. This will probably result in our economy crapping out the deep end. Without a standard to tie our money to a value, the stuff isn't worth the paper its printed on, unless someone is willing to take it. If we lose international interest in what we do, we're screwed.

        He's been exposed to other cultures outside of politics, he talks well, he carries himself well, and I've liked some of what I've heard him campaigning for. He's also been pretty up front about a lot of his past. How many candidates admit to pot and cocaine use without being asked. He's come clean and that has a lot of value.

        I can't help feeling that Clinton's twisted, the more I hear her speak. Does anyone have any links to her stuff, because I'd honestly like to know more about why so many people are interested in her. I don't want to just shoot her down without more on what she's trying to run for.
      • Re:I personally (Score:5, Informative)

        by rrhal (88665) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:16AM (#22292508)

        Another salient FACT is the FACT that the next President will be Republican. Both Obama and Clinton have far too many people who hate them for either of them to win the General Election.

        Capitalization doesn't change your opinion to fact.

        Certainly you can find an equally large number of McCain haters - just listen in to Brother Rush some morning. And the Baptist base of the moral majority think that Romney is a heretic. And these are people inside the power base of the republican party.

        The people that hate either Obama or Clinton aren't likely Democrat voters anyway.

          • by Snocone (158524) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:43AM (#22293006) Homepage
            So St. Peter is at the Pearly Gates checking up on the people waiting to enter Heaven, and asks the next one in line "So, who are you, and what did you do on Earth?"

            So the fellow says "I'm Barack Obama, and I was the first black to be elected President of the United States."

            St. Peter says "The U.S.? A black President? You gotta be shittin' me! When did this happen?!?"

            And Obama says "About twenty seconds ago."

  • by FuzzyDaddy (584528) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:33AM (#22290410) Journal
    I live in DC. We get three electoral votes for president, but since we are overwhelmingly democratic, our general election vote always goes to the democrat. Our primary is after super Tuesday, at which point there is usually a clear "winner" for the democratic nominee.

    My political friends from both camps assure me that super Tuesday is NOT going to seal the democratic nomination one way or another. Unlike the general election, delegates are not assigned all to one candidate based on the state total (for the democrats, anyway. Republican rules are different). The exact formula varies by state, but the delegate assignment is roughly proportional to the number of votes.

    Personally, I'm leaning towards Obama myself. He seems principled and energetic, and I like his principles. Clinton seems a bit more cynical. I think he'd have a better chance against McCain. McCain won't bring out the republican base; Hillary Clinton will.

    Policy wise, though, I think they're similar enough that I wouldn't mind either of them in the white house.

        • by Nimey (114278) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:12AM (#22292398) Homepage Journal
          That's because most under-30s are, in fact, a worthless demographic that doesn't vote.

          Maybe that's a chicken-and-egg thing, but FFS most of my peers just can't be bothered to vote, let alone research candidates. I've voted in every election since I turned 18 (I'm 28) and try to be informed about candidates and issues. I think it would help if elections were held on weekends or if Election Day was a national holiday, but I still think that most people in their 20s just can't be bothered.
  • by ktappe (747125) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:33AM (#22290428)
    I've not decided which of the two to vote for, but I do agree with something I heard John Grisham say last week: That having them pair up for a "super ticket" would probably be more negative than positive. Any voters who would not have voted for a woman AND any voters who would not vote for a black would BOTH be turned away and McCain would slide into the presidency.
  • by Liberaltarian (1030752) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:34AM (#22290444)
    "Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job."
  • by monschein (1232572) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:35AM (#22290464)
    Who can win against a white male - a black man or a white woman?
  • obama@google (Score:5, Informative)

    by Deanalator (806515) <pierce403@gmail.com> on Monday February 04 2008, @09:36AM (#22290492) Homepage
    Someone posted part of this clip last time, where Obama talks at google about the future of technology. This is the full 64 minute clip, complete with Obama's joke about sorting algorithms :-)

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=m4yVlPqeZwo [youtube.com]
  • by Random BedHead Ed (602081) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:38AM (#22290536) Homepage Journal

    Please keep discussions limited to talk about Hillary and Obama.

    Let's be consistent: you meant Clinton and Barack.

    • Re:Hillary and Obama (Score:5, Informative)

      by pierced2x (527997) <pierced2x@hotmail.com> on Monday February 04 2008, @09:46AM (#22290676)
      Hillary consistently refers to herself as 'Hillary', not 'Clinton' (go to her website, or see any of her campaign swag). The same goes for Obama. I see nothing wrong with calling them their preferred campaigning name. I am especially tired of the people that say Hillary is being 'disrespected as a woman' because she is called by her first name. Let it go already.
  • by arkham6 (24514) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:39AM (#22290554)
    "She is highly intelligent, has real experience and is an attractive candidate. But she is terrified to act on her beliefs. In fact, she seems so conditioned by what she sees as political constraints that one can barely tell where her beliefs begin and where those constraints end."
    • by ScentCone (795499) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:48AM (#22290738)
      one can barely tell where her beliefs begin and where those constraints end

      I don't know. Sometimes she says what she really thinks. Just yesterday, she talked about garnishing the wages of people who don't buy health insurance. Now that's letting her colors show.
    • by gaspar ilom (859751) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:53AM (#22291970)
      The "lack of experience" accusation against Obama is a Republican/Clinton "talking point" that is widely circulated, and many people have apparently bought into it. It is also false.

      EXPERIENCE
      Obama is a scholar of Constitutional law, and has more years of experience as an elected official, in the Illinois state senate. The fact that much of his advocacy and legislation experience are "local" is an asset, not a liability -- one that has probably kept him closer to understanding regular folks' concerns. (it is not the board of WalMart.) This has also kept him less susceptible to the cumulative impact of the vast corruption that is occurring on the national scale.

      Hillary, if anything, has the *wrong* type of experience - e.g.: taking lots of corporate money in the form of lobbyist campaign donations and her many "consulting" gigs. (many people call this "bribery.") ...Saying "every politician does it" is no excuse: Obama has stuck by his pledge to refuse corporate lobbyist PAC money in his presidential bid.

      ISSUES
      Many people assert that there is only a razor-thin difference between Clinton and Obama's policy proposals.

      First of all, I don't think Clinton and Obama are interchangeable: There are many policy proposals from Obama where practically *nothing* is forthcoming from Clinton. For example, Obama will (and already has, as Senator) take steps to:
            * limit the influence of corporate lobbyists
            * increase transparency of government
            * Technology and Communications: safegaurd privacy, "net neutrality", prevent consolidation of media, support open standards...

      None of the above items are even on Clinton's radar. (The last one involves a complicated set of "21st century" issues that every politician should be taking a stand on, because they affect: our economy, job creation, privacy, ... as well the functioning of democracy, itself.)

      Secondly: where Clinton and Obama's policy initiatives do coincide, it is often because of compromises each candidate has made. The difference is that Clinton has moved to the "left" -- trying to make herself marginally "electable" while attempting to maximize benefit to her corporate sponsors. Obama, on the other hand, is trying to maximize benefit for real, living people -- and he has to make comprises to get legislation passed by a sea of politicians who operate like Clinton. Clinton's policies are a swarm of disconnected proposals -- with few unifying themes save that some donor's interests are being protected -- while sounding "liberal" enough to maintain electability within her party. I think Obama, on the other hand, is actually applying principles to organize and apply his policy details.

      CHARACTER
      Most of Obama's presidential campaign contributions have come from a large number of small donors. (He has far more donors that Clinton -- while Clinton has relied on a smaller cadre of big-time donors.) Clinton, on the other hand, has actually said that taking lobbyists' cash is acceptable because they "represent real Americans." (Although you might wish it were otherwise, you cannot deny that "where you get your money from" indicates in the strongest possible terms whose interests you will be looking out for. )

      I strongly urge you to support Obama over Clinton on Tuesday.
  • Provenance and Iraq. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Average (648) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:44AM (#22290638)
    Policy differences between Clinton and Obama? Minor.

    Leadership?

    I worry about provenance with Clinton. Why was she the head of the Healthcare task force? A recognized health expert? A well-known elected official? Wife of a guy who got 43% of the vote? That 'mandate', plus too much secrecy, doomed a not-so-bad health care plan and has cost us a lot of jobs and bankrupt Americans in the last 14 years.

    Then again, why was she on the board of Wal-Mart? We mention that (well, she doesn't mention on her website that she was the first female board member of America's #1 retailer). But, why? Was she a business expert? Run a corner store? Worked her way up from the mailroom? Was she the wife of the governor of Wal-Mart's home state?

    Obama has taken every step. He's sprinted to the top, no doubt. But, he's gone from knocking on doors in the projects to fighting a political machine in his district to convincing both rural and urban Illinois to inspiring a generation. No shortcut.

    Not to say she's been a bad senator. But, the Iraq vote is very troubling. Only six Senators are on record as checking in to the locked room to read the full (96 page) intelligence report. Yes, it was full of lies. But, John Edwards *did*. Clinton? McCain? Neither. They believed.

    And thinking of Iraq. The *only* way out of Iraq is to offer a new deal to the Iraqis. Clinton? The wife of a man whose crippling sanctions and annual bombing runs caused a whole lot of misery and entrenched the regime? Sure, from here we can say the sanctions were a good thing. But, for the man on the street who lost a child to deprivation? We need a president who is not connected to that legacy.
  • Barack (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Edward Ka-Spel (779129) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:10AM (#22291126)
    Chances are, despite growing up Republican, I will vote democrat this election no matter who it is. Bush ran the republican party into the ground. But not all candidates are created equal.

    Hillary is a strong traditional candidate. She is carrying out a textbook campaign. She appears to me to be very power hungry and is willing to do whatever it takes to win, but sometimes you want that in a president. I think she would make a decent/good president. I really didn't like Bill Clinton as president, but compared to Bush, the 90s look like the golden years.

    Barack, though, is something different. He looks like he is honestly and thoughtfully trying to do what is best for the country. He tries to understand the issues, think through the issues, and come up with the best answer to the issue. That is something very rare. I noticed in the California debates that Hillary would say "this is my answer, it's the best! Your idea is dumb!" Barack would say "I have considered your idea and think that this would be the result of your idea, so I have another idea that doesn't have the disadvantage your idea has." He is the only candidate I have seen that actually thinks an idea through. Everybody else (Republican and Democrat) seem to just throw ideas out that sound good, without thinking about it. Obama has the potential to be one of the top presidents ever. (He may fail of course, you never know...)

    I have been voting since 1992, and this is the first time I ever had a candidate that I wanted to win, as opposed to picking the lesser of two evils. (of course, I haven't voted for the winning candidate yet...)
  • by GodWasAnAlien (206300) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:26AM (#22292700)

    Clinton's campaign, when asked about supporting free/open debates, said:

    "Calling for free debates might be seen as opposing copyright."

    Also note that B.Clinton signed DMCA, URAA, and the Sony Bono Copyright Extension Act.

    Comparing that to Obama, who met with Lessig, and signed a letter saying the the debates should be in a Creative Commons license.

    Who Disney would vote for?
  • "As president, I will order an immediate review of our overseas deployments - in dozens of countries. The longstanding commitments we have made to our allies are the strong foundation of our current peace. I will keep these pledges to defend friends from aggression. The problem comes with open-ended deployments and unclear military missions. In these cases we will ask, "What is our goal, can it be met, and when do we leave?" As I've said before, I will work hard to find political solutions that allow an orderly and timely withdrawal from places like Kosovo and Bosnia. We will encourage our allies to take a broader role. We will not be hasty. But we will not be permanent peacekeepers, dividing warring parties. This is not our strength or our calling."

    - George W. Bush
    Thursday, September 23, 1999
  • by Squirmy McPhee (856939) on Monday February 04 2008, @01:25PM (#22294542)

    Awhile back I was leaning toward Clinton, but she said a few things that lost me pretty quickly. First, at one of the debates the candidates were asked why people should vote for them. Each candidate responded in turn, talking about the things they would do for the country and why they were the ones for the job. Then they got to Clinton, who said "because I'm the one with the experience to win." I'm paraphrasing, of course, but there was really not much more to her response than that (in either content or word count). Voting for the candidate who can win for the sole reason that he or she can win is monumentally stupid, and when I heard Clinton urging voters to do just that I had to put my hands over my ears to keep IQ points from falling out of my head.

    That made me wary, but I chalked it up to the inevitable campaign trail gaffe. But then she started picking fights with Obama over nothing in an effort to get him off-message. Not only did he stay on-message, for the most part, but he did it with poise. When Clinton not only wasn't wise enough to stop, but got her husband involved, her whole campaign began to look like a group of playground bullies picking on the smart kid. Had Obama gone negative along with her then I might still be a Clinton supporter, but as it was he came off looking like a guy who genuinely cares about the country and wants to do the right thing while Clinton and her camp now look to me like a pack of trolls who see the White House as their birthright.

    So in a pretty short span I've gone from leaning toward Clinton and hoping for a Clinton/Obama ticket to being a strong Obama supporter hoping for an Obama/Anybody But Clinton ticket. I know a handful of other voters that Clinton lost over the course of the last month, so I'm hopeful and cautiously optimistic that Obama will wrap it up tomorrow. Then maybe Clinton will stop shredding the few tatters that remain of Democratic party unity.

        • From my limited understanding of human psychology, I detest polls or referring to them as evidence at all. The wording of the question as well as the order in which the questions were asked affect it too much.

          Gravel is at less than one percent in every single poll ever taken, which would discount issues of bias in a particular survey. You may not like polls, and it's true that you can create an individual poll that drives responses in one direction or another. But it's hard to discount the enormous pile of evidence that we have that Americans don't see Gravel as a serious candidate (and for good reason).

              • The issue is that Gravel and Kucinich both polled fabulously on the issues/votes/ideas, when divided from their names.

                I'm going to write in Gravel, in any case.

                I live in Illinois, and I think that the state will go with our home-town guy. HRC isn't exactly the best candidate either, as far as unifying the party and moderates. If there's something that has blown the election for the democrats the past two times, it's been two "meh" candidates. Obama, even if I disagree with him, is not merely "meh."

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Pojut (1027544) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:46AM (#22290674) Homepage
      As technology grows and becomes a more regular part of the everyday citizen's life, this next election will have a MASSIVE impact on us all, including from a technology standpoint. The next president will play a role in dictating funding, telcos, ISP's, piracy...you name it, this election is going to dictate quite a lot in terms of technology (not to mention everything else, of course)

      In that sense, discussing this election (ESPECIALLY considering Hillary is a technological idiot) is very on-topic.
    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by kent_eh (543303) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:53AM (#22290816)
      Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters


      Doesn't the process of selecting the leader of the (for better or worse) one of the most powerful and influential nations on the planet have some relevance to the phrase "stuff that matters"?

      Even if you live in another country, the US government and it's actions have some amount of influence on your existence. (whether it should have as much influence as it does is another topic for another thread).

    • Re:meh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by airship (242862) on Monday February 04 2008, @09:59AM (#22290930) Homepage
      She's not a lunatic - she's a cold, calculating machine politician. We don't need another Clinton or Bush in the White House. Enough of the dynasties.

      Obama is naive, compassionate, charismatic, and idealistic - just the kind of change in leadership this country needs.
      • Re:meh (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Pojut (1027544) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:22AM (#22291336) Homepage
        Have you actually watched the woman talk for more than 2 minutes? That's all the example that you need.

        Hillary is the epitome of saying whatever it takes to get the most votes. Running to become the next leader of the free world while spouting off boilerplate sayings just to look good in the polls is frightening. I don't know about you, but I don't want my leader to do their best to appeal to the masses...I want them to focus on running the fucking country.

        Not to mention she is a backstabber. Did she or did she not agree with Obama to not sling crap at each other any more? And what is she doing now? Slinging shit again. Fuck that. I do NOT want the leader of my country to be trying to make others look bad so I will vote for them. You tell me why I should vote for YOU, not why I SHOULDN'T vote for someone else. This applies to all the other candidates as well.
      • Re:Gravel? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by MightyYar (622222) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:02AM (#22290978)

        The uneducated masses pick the candidates who get the best press rather than bother to research what the candidates' positions and records are.
        Unfortunately, you must let the uneducated masses have an equal voice if you hope to call this a democracy. The best tack, then, is for the educated elite to push for better education... which for some reason they tend not to see as obvious.

        On the other hand, our founding fathers didn't trust the uneducated masses, either. We have a largely unelected judiciary, and even the Senate was not originally elected. The popularly elected House then was only given a term of 2 years vs 6 in the Senate! Even the presidential election is slightly skewed from true democracy by the electoral college.
        • Re:Gravel? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by dave420 (699308) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:40AM (#22291716)
          No, his chances are so slim because he's a bad candidate. How much he's discussed this late into the game has absolutely NO chance of changing that.
    • Re:Obama (Score:5, Interesting)

      I half-way agree. I am pro-Obama, but I think I have every reason to hate Hillary. The fact of the matter is that we've got a republican in the democrat field looking to cock-block progress by using a well-known "democrat" name.

      If Hillary wins the nomination, it will be impossible to have a real progressive democrat president for four years. If she wins the presidency, then it will be impossible to have a real progressive for eight years.

      Imagine another eight years of Bush politics. Remember, Hillary is pro-censorship, security, war, executive power, and secrecy. I think she's more like Bush than McCain.
        • by wurp (51446) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:14AM (#22292472) Homepage
          I actually agree with your conclusion (given the false dichotomy you've given) to prefer Bob to have to pay for insurance. That said...

          What kind of heartless asshole thinks only people who have money should get treated at a hospital? Money is far from the best measure of the worth of a person. Yes, there is a disproportionate number of worthless people who have no money. HOWEVER, there are also a disproportionate number of worthless people who are stinking rich. And there are a disproportionate number of wonderful people who are a great boon to humanity who have almost no money. People much better than I: all of the people out there teaching Head Start, all the people out there volunteering in the Peace Corps, working at rehab centers, and just plenty of normal people working the job within their abilities that helps the most, while raising decent children. If I don't have the fortitude to take the loss of income to go do the right thing, at least I can work towards a society that supports those who do.
            • by PinkyDead (862370) on Monday February 04 2008, @01:07PM (#22294188) Journal
              I have to say I'm appalled by your (plural) callousness in regard to this issue. I do not live in the US and my point of view is completely from the outside - but where I live we pay 1 half of 1 percent of our salary to pay for healthcare for everyone. Granted our public system isn't the plushest of stays, but you get what you need and no questions asked. And when you think about it, what are you out? $50 a month? Are you that greedy and obsessed with amassing your little cash pile that you'd miss such a paltry sum?

              You talk of freedom of religion as more important than healthcare, but healthcare (and education) has got to be a fundamental of human dignity, a dignity without which that religion are just a hollow clamour. The last time I looked the US was pre-dominantly a christian nation - what does this christian thing mean, is it just some kind of country club that only the rich are entitled too and where you are not required to pay any heed to the basic tenets of the faith. (Insert other religions as required - they're all pretty much the same on this issue).

              I'm sure you'll say that my point of view is communist or some other bullshit - but if it is then call me comrade, because what you've got makes a mockery of the basics of human decency. "One nation indivisible" my arse.
    • by omeomi (675045) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:17AM (#22291250) Homepage
      They all want the job, which should be enough in itself to disqualify them.

      Not a bad idea. The electorate should just choose some random person to be president every 4 years, and surprise them with the news at work one day.
    • by DesScorp (410532) <DesScorp@nosPam.Gmail.com> on Monday February 04 2008, @11:02AM (#22292164) Homepage Journal
      "I don't trust any of them. They all want the job, which should be enough in itself to disqualify them."

      Funny you should say that. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan tells people he'd like to propose a Constitutional Amendment, stating that "anyone willing to do the ridiculous things necessary to become President is hereby banned from that office".
    • by Shining Celebi (853093) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:12AM (#22292406) Homepage

      I don't trust any of them. They all want the job, which should be enough in itself to disqualify them.

      So what, we should just give up and go home, and let come whatever may? Even if you are right, being apathetic and cynical about it isn't going to change anything. It brings to mind learned helplessness [wikipedia.org] -- the idea that it sucks, and there's nothing we can do about it, so let's just give up, even when there is a chance to make things better. I think it's a little too cynical to say everyone that ever ran for President or wanted to be President did so for nefarious reasons. I'm sure plenty of them just wanted the fame and power, but I think at least a few wanted to try and do something good for the country.

      Why should I believe that he won't be warped and corrupted by the power of the President's office?

      Maybe he will, but that doesn't mean that he, or any other Presidential candidate, won't do anything good while in office.

      By the same token, why should you trust anyone, ever? Politicians are just people capable of violating trust on a grander scale.

      Clinton has no principles, she panders to any voting bloc she thinks can help her, and not only did she not divorce her adulterous asshole of a husband, but she can't keep his mouth shut during her campaign.

      I don't necessarily disagree about HRC, but I don't think you and I know enough about about their relationship to make judgments. Maybe she didn't divorce him because she loved him and could forgive him? On the other side, perhaps it was political. Maybe it was a mixture of both. I don't think it's fair to judge someone on speculation about their personal life; maybe she was just being a really kind person, or maybe not.

      Maybe I'm just too naive and optimistic, though. ;)

      • by rudeboy1 (516023) on Monday February 04 2008, @11:01AM (#22292132)
        While I am generally fixed on the idea of voting for Barak, I wanted to bring up a point here about Hillary that I think needs some consideration.
        In an ideal democracy, decisions are not left up to one person, but decided by the public. When our country was being conceptualized, we decided that the best way to govern was a compromise on pure democracy, where an elected official makes up their own mind and votes according to their beliefs/conscience. The idea being that he is a representative of the majority of the public that voted for him.
        If the technology that we have now had been available in the 16th century, I believe that we might have sought a more pure version of democracy. While still complicated logistically (cost, fraud, etc.), it is now possible to put out a referendum on any given topic, so that a governing body can respond directly to the will of the people. It would be refreshing to find a presidential candidate the promised record numbers of referendums for this reason. It potentially represents a truer form of democracy, (assuming he/she votes accordingly).
            So, getting back to the point, if someone says that Hillary will pander to voters, it's spun negatively. However, I'd like to at least suggest that if she completely flips her stance on an issue, (or any candidate for that matter), and it is a result of voter appeal, that democracy has worked, and that she is voting the way her constituents would want. I could care less about her personal ideals. If she were there solely as a puppet, acting on the whims of the public, that would be ideal to me. I have yet to hear an elected official say something to the effect of, "Personally, I hate the idea of X. I find it to be the worst idea in the world. But, my constituents think it's a good idea, so I'm going to vote for it." when that day comes, I'll feel better about living in this country. Until then, I'm still hoping that Canada annexes Mexico, so I can move some place warm.
        • check your history (Score:5, Insightful)

          by joggle (594025) on Monday February 04 2008, @12:41PM (#22293790) Homepage Journal
          Dude, the founders never desired a pure democracy, even if the techonology were available. Why do you think we use the electoral college system? Why are the senate rules designed so that the minority may prevail? For details one what they considered when forming the Constitution, read the Federalist and Anti-federalist Papers. The last thing they wanted was mob-rule (which is what they considered pure democracy to be). I think the French Revolution gave a good example of why a pure democracy is not desirable.
        • Re:Barack Obama (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Shakrai (717556) * on Monday February 04 2008, @11:29AM (#22292734) Journal

          Obama, for all his talk of hope, won't be a better President than Clinton, Huckabee, McCain, Paul, et al. He's only human, and thus unfit to govern anybody but himself.

          I think your missing one of the key things that I happen to like about Obama though. A r/l friend of mine put it this way: Hillary knows what she wants to do and she knows what's best for the country. If she's elected she's going to run with her ideas and to hell with everyone else. Obama doesn't have all of his positions set in stone yet and he thinks that YOU know what's best for the country. Recall JFK's quote: "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country"

          Obama is the first candidate that I've seen in my lifetime that I actually believe can unite this country. Can he actually pull it off? It's a tall order -- I can't say for sure and neither can anybody else. What I am sure of is that Hillary can't unite this country. It doesn't matter if that's her fault or not -- it's the current reality. You know how most of us feel about Bush? That's how the other side feels about the Clintons. If she wins then we can look forward to four (eight?) more years of slash 'n burn politics, governing from the 51% majority and claiming a "mandate". That's the last thing we need.

        • Re:Well... (Score:5, Informative)

          by cduffy (652) <charles+slashdot@dyfis.net> on Monday February 04 2008, @10:23AM (#22291362)

          I'm not terribly fond of candidates who put a message of "I'm the only person who can bring us together" out there like Obama has
          Do you really think Hillary can? Consider her negative poll numbers; granted, they may not be entirely justified, but that doesn't change the fact that they're there. (I also think that "the only person" is a not-entirely-fair caricature of the message, as he strongly prefers to frame it in positive terms). Obama has a history of striking considered compromises (look at the death penalty legislation when he was a state senator for a prime example) and is equally at ease speaking to evangelicals (whose language he speaks fluently -- which not many Democratic candidates can do) and to the traditional left. His history as a constitutional law professor and civil rights lawyer is also encouraging.

          I certainly can't disagree that there are a lot of Obama supporters doing Hillary-bashing. Perhaps it's because a good number of those folks who are members of Hillary's negative numbers end up in the Obama camp? That's certainly the case for me, even though I'd still be supporting Obama if I didn't dislike Hillary. If she wins the nomination, I'll vote 3rd party, as I've had enough of her fearmongering, think-of-the-children, divisive, anti-tech, pandering politics; supporting even symbolic anti-flag-burning legislation and doing photo ops with Jack Thompson earned her a black mark in my book long before Obama became a household name.
    • by aug24 (38229) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:42AM (#22291742) Homepage
      Obama is black.
      Clinton is female.

      HTH ;-)
      Justin.
      PS Not in America.
    • by Pulzar (81031) on Monday February 04 2008, @10:53AM (#22291976)
      Can someone explain to me the real differences in these candidates? I've been following the primaries and I still can't find one issue where they actually differ.

      Policy wise, these are the differences as I understand them:

      Health care:
      - Clinton wants universal health care, and if you don't buy into it they'll penalize you
      - Obama wants cheaper health care, so everyone can afford it -- but if you can't, tough luck

      Iraq war:
      - Clinton was for it to begin with, but didn't expect Bush to screw it up so badly
      - Obama thought it was a bad idea, Sadam wasn't so bad, leave the guy alone

      Illegal immigration:
      - I couldn't figure out what the hell Clinton wants, she always goes into a long speech about middle class American families when asked about this
      - Obama wants to let kids of illegals attend school, and give illegals driver's licenses

      Violent games:
      - Clinton thinks Jack Thompson is right
      - Obama thinks parents should worry about what their kids play, as long as the games don't implement bubble sort

      That's about it, from what I've seen. But, it seems that most people will end up voting based on some intangibles, like charisma, ideals, inspiration, etc...

      I can't blame them, I'd vote for Obama for those reasons, too. Too bad I'm Canadian, so I just get to watch them duke it out on TV :).
    • by NeutronCowboy (896098) on Monday February 04 2008, @12:17PM (#22293460)
      Nonono - it'll be terrific. While I will vote for Obama in the upcoming election, here's what I will do if Hillary gets elected:
      - vote for her in 2012
      - vote for Jeb Bush in 2016 and 2020
      - and finally, I hope that either one of the Bush twins or Chelsea Clinton decides to run for president after that, so that I can vote for them.

      The end result? A beautiful series of Bushs and Clintons that will have lasted for over 40 years, putting to rest the notion that the US is some sort of democratic haven.

      Why yes, I do base my voting strategy on whether I can create some giant historical joke. Why do you ask?