a president who is baisically trying to buy the presidency for $605 million... Guarantee next election they will put limits on how much you can spend to campaign because he has wasted so much...
10/24/2008 3:17:25 PM
don't worry about silly things like buying the presidency. If it was good enough for the Chicago mayorship, it's good enough for amurrca
10/24/2008 3:22:48 PM
Face it, bitches.Obama is your president.WoooHoo!
10/24/2008 3:24:17 PM
hey if you like someone who spends money like that, more power to you
10/24/2008 3:25:36 PM
not only that, but he spends that money AFTER lying to you about taking public campaign financing
10/24/2008 3:27:37 PM
first you bitch that he sounds like a socialist, then you bitch that he's winning the capitalist way by letting people vote with their money.
10/24/2008 3:30:24 PM
^Thats a good point, Im pretty sure he doesnt even know what he is. What ever you have to say/do to get the votes right!
10/24/2008 3:31:30 PM
winning the capitalist way by letting people vote with their money? Are you fucking KIDDING me? You do realize that McCain has spending limits imposed on him, right? you are a fucking idiot
10/24/2008 3:32:51 PM
10/24/2008 3:38:27 PM
10/24/2008 3:41:18 PM
So I guess its safe to say that any hope for campaign finance reform during the next four years is dead?
10/24/2008 4:42:13 PM
10/24/2008 4:44:45 PM
10/24/2008 5:18:28 PM
10/24/2008 5:22:03 PM
10/24/2008 5:28:44 PM
still doesn't change the fact that Obama is buying the presidency, and it still doesn't change the fact that this is not an example of people "voting with their dollars." People are not able to contribute to McCain's campaign in the same way they are able to contribute to Obama's, so there is no comparison there.
10/24/2008 5:29:31 PM
this thread is ridiculous. You guys are crying so bad it's quite a bit of fun.
10/24/2008 5:35:04 PM
As I learn more and more about the US election system, the more I get intrigued. Someone explain this please:
10/24/2008 5:36:00 PM
The average contribution is what... $82?That's grassroots, bitches. Don't pout because the average Joe doesn't like your candidate enough to give him money.
10/24/2008 5:40:10 PM
10/24/2008 5:43:01 PM
According to Freakonomics spending more money has no correlation to winning an election. So if you believe in their statistics, which for that topic are extremely unbiased, Obama can't buy a win no matter how much he spends.
10/24/2008 6:08:21 PM
10/24/2008 6:10:10 PM
10/24/2008 6:14:55 PM
^^First of many no doubt.[Edited on October 24, 2008 at 6:16 PM. Reason : ^]
10/24/2008 6:15:40 PM
10/24/2008 6:16:23 PM
silly threadwe all know that if mccain COULD have raised that much, he would have not accepted gov money w/ the limitations
10/24/2008 6:17:15 PM
it was a bullshit move for him to flip flop on that....i wish he had stuck with accepting it....
10/24/2008 6:17:19 PM
^^^ you had already mentioned it 10x already, and you realize McCain has changed his mind on tons of things too? Or does it only matter when Obama changes his mind?[Edited on October 24, 2008 at 6:19 PM. Reason : ]
10/24/2008 6:19:45 PM
let's see... Obama SIGNS A LETTER, and then flip flops on it when it proves politically convenient. As in, he did something that would otherwise be legally binding, and you see no problem with him going back on his word.that's a little bit different than saying "oh, I was for this, but now I'm against it," and you fucking know it. And, btw, I will call McCain out equally for his flip flops. But the one that was being discussed was why Obama doesn't have spending limits. Namely, because he LIED, BROKE HIS PROMISE.
10/24/2008 6:22:03 PM
^ wait, so now you're saying Obama signed a legally binding contract for public financing?hahahaFirst you are making up fake black people to carve letters in to your face, now you're making up fake contracts that don't exist.Nice.
10/24/2008 6:26:19 PM
yep, he did sign a letter of agreement with McCain to take public financing. it's not a "legally binding contract," as you say, and I never said it was. thanks, once again, for the scarecrow. you are getting good at making them.]
10/24/2008 6:37:55 PM
10/24/2008 6:40:34 PM
care to address me calling out your strawman? of course not. Instead, you'll continue to ignore what I have posited here: that Obama LIED to the nation and the McCain camp.If I'm delusional, I'd hate to think of what that makes you. probably drowning in your own feces[Edited on October 24, 2008 at 6:43 PM. Reason : ]
10/24/2008 6:43:33 PM
^ It's not a lie if you change your mind.I'm sure Obama had every intention of taking public financing at the time, because he was still a small fish, and it wasn't clear he was going to win.He DID break his promise though, but it's obvious why he changed his mind on this issue.
10/24/2008 6:52:23 PM
yes, it's obvious why he lied to people. because it was politically convenient.
10/24/2008 6:53:42 PM
^ I understand that things are more comfortable for you when you imagine the world to be how you want it to be, but asserting these delusions to other people only make you look insane.
10/24/2008 6:55:58 PM
Just watching news on TV, and they had a report saying that McCain's 'gaming donations' (donations from people involved in casinos/gambling) amount to $2 million, whereas Obama's $50K-100K.
10/24/2008 7:47:42 PM
^ You can see more breakdowns here:http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/summary.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00006424 http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/summary.php?cycle=2008&cid=N0000963890% of Obama's are individual contributors vs. 54% for McCain.Obama also has a little higher rating on the quality of disclosure too.OMFG WHAT IS MCCAIN TRYING TO HIDE??? WE NEED OT KNOW THE REEL MCCAINQ!!!11[Edited on October 24, 2008 at 8:04 PM. Reason : ]
10/24/2008 8:03:00 PM
Somebody explain to me why this money isn't corrupting.Because the whole logic of campaign finance regulations has been that money is somehow intrinsically corrupting.But so long as there's a whole lot of it coming from "small donations on average" (let's not get into whether or not Obama's donation tracking system, which has already demonstrated to be poor at best and possibly enabling of campaign finance fraud at worst) is peachy-keen.I mean, I thought that was the whole argument - money is inherently corrupting to politics. I never believed it, and for some reason it doesn't seem to apply now that the Democrat is raising assloads of cash. Apparently exclusively because we are lead to believe that, assuming nobody is skirting the demonstrably flawed barriers to campaign finance limits (again - people have been throwing in fake addresses and showing these donations get through) - money is not corrupting as long as it's a lot of really small donations.
10/25/2008 3:05:20 AM
^ The idea behind that isn't too complicated. Assume that you are normally going to give special consideration to contributors- if you have a shit-ton of them from all over the place then it becomes harder to provide them any special treatment. If you have a shit-ton who've given you very little individually, then you also have very little incentive to give any of them special treatment.If you have 5 people who give you a shit ton of money each, you have a much larger incentive to give them special treatment and a much greater ability to do so. Even if those 5 people want completely seperate things, that's still just 5 things. Now, I'm not saying this is all correct reasoning, but it's not hard to understand at all.
10/25/2008 9:45:07 AM
My point is though that there are some - including, ironically enough, John McCain, that buy into the fundamental premise that money is in itself intrinsically corrupting in a campaign. (These are the people that call for complete public financing of campaigns, which is just a terrible idea.)In fact, this is the whole logic behind campaign matching funds - candidates accept a limit upon donations to receive matching funds in order to discourage "excessive fundraising." So, how does the premise that money is somehow intrinsically corrupting jibe with this? In other words, if money suddenly is no longer intrinsically corrupting at $20-$50 a pop even at $600 million, then what does this say about the whole premise behind matching funds altogether?Besides which, if access is the only issue that can be pointed to with regards to small donations, it still doesn't rule out the effect of "bundlers" and "organizers" using the proxy of donations to achieve inordinate access. Sure, it's not as grossly excessive as the Bush "pioneers" in 2000, but let's face it - I doubt if Obama is pulling as much money as he is that it's all due to somebody shelling out $20 a pop.But regardless - if access is the only thing that can be pointed to as the "corrupting influence" of money on campaigns, it's so easy to see that circumvented (again, through activities like organizing and "bundling") that it seems almost meaningless. Either money is "intrinsically corrupting" to a campaign or it isn't.My money's on the latter.[Edited on October 25, 2008 at 12:43 PM. Reason : .]
10/25/2008 12:43:01 PM
10/25/2008 1:38:50 PM
10/25/2008 1:53:42 PM
let's remember that the vast majority of Obamas money comes from individual donations of $100 or less.and whats funny is that the vast majority of McCain's money comes from Politcal Action Committees and Corporate Lobbyists.sorry, "MikeHoncho", the old geezer got owned.
10/26/2008 5:00:00 AM
Obama Opts Out of Public Financing
10/26/2008 5:17:52 AM
Again, I ask you... are you still mad?let it go dude. its just going to eat at you for the next 8 years, and it won't help you a bit. trust me
10/26/2008 5:21:08 AM
^ Obama's probably going to win, but I seriously doubt he's going to be a two-term president. Think Jimmy Carter.
10/26/2008 5:23:04 AM
yeah, whatever. right now the country cant get much worse. ~80% think "we're heading in the wrong direction" and that was BEFORE the financial meltdown.the next four years are going to see two wars resolved, and the financial stability of the country restored.obama's second term will be his to lose.
10/26/2008 5:29:03 AM
^ 1. If Obama had his way, we probably would have lost those wars already--Iraq for sure.2. U.S. Presidents don't control the economy. 3. Obama can't pay for everything he's promised.
10/26/2008 5:32:00 AM
still drinking the koolaid, i see.(1) if Obama had his way, we would have never GONE into Iraq. Iraq, by ALL intelligence and military analysis, posed ZERO threat to the US or our allies. In fact, all secular/Sunni Iraq actually did was act as a counterbalance to fundamentalist/Shi'a Iran. in hindsight, it's actually quite a bummer that we lost that.and if when Obama has his way, we will finally deliver the troops and material necessary to Afghanistan to squelch the resurging Taleban, and perhaps even root out the single person responsible for planning the 9/11 attacks.(2) the public votes otherwise(3) nobody ever does. but he has the sense to understand where cuts need to be made. the only ones who have EVER balanced the federal budget AND created a surplus has been the Democrats. George W. Bush ran his 2000 campaign on his presumed fiscal conservative roots and the fear that Gore would splurge and squander our historic surplus developed (amusingly enought) under Clinton. The irony of it all is that GWB blew our surplus and sent us further into debt than anyone could have imagined in their wildest nightmares.sorry for you conservo-nutcases, but the public isn't buying it anymore.dont let the door hit you in the ass on your way out, mmkay?[Edited on October 26, 2008 at 5:44 AM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 5:39:01 AM