Law in Contemporary Society

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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 43 - 12 Jan 2009 - Main.IanSullivan
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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 42 - 11 Jun 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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 First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing potential damage to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promise of leadership and Obama's promise of "One America."
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Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is somehow above the corrupting influence of politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This was a perfect attack on Obama's creed since it had the potential to a basic premise of his creed and therefore change the way voters perceived him. His supporters, enamored with a departure from politics as usual, were left questioning whether Obama was all that he claimed to be.
>
>
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is somehow above the corrupting influence of politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This was a perfect attack on Obama's creed since it had the potential to undermine a basic premise of his creed and therefore change the way voters perceived him. His supporters, enamored with a departure from politics as usual, were left questioning whether Obama was all that he claimed to be.
 Recently, Clinton shook the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer was Obama a fearless leader ready to move the country beyond its racial divide. Instead, his campaign became, as Bill Clinton argued weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" becomes many Americas again and the hole in the tent let votes escape. Obama's immediate damage control, including a major address on race, may have stopped the bleeding. Nevertheless, successfully wounding Obama invigorated Clinton's campaign and cleared a path for future attacks.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 41 - 21 May 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Combatting Obama's Creed

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Combating Obama's Creed

 -- By AdamCarlis - 4 April 2008
Line: 12 to 12
 

Introduction

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This season’s Democratic primary has showcased two gifted politicians, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to build and maintain creeds that captures the widest possible audience.
>
>
This season's Democratic primary showcased two gifted politicians, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall on their ability to build and maintain creeds that capture the widest possible audience.
 

The Emergence of Hope

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Edwards and Obama interrupted Clinton’s march to the nomination. By speaking forcefully about change, they forced Clinton to justify her candidacy, which she did by citing her experience and preparation for the job. Competing creeds quickly emerged.
>
>
Edwards and Obama interrupted Clinton's march to the nomination. By speaking compellingly about change, they forced Clinton to justify her candidacy, which she did by citing experience and preparation for the job. Competing creeds quickly emerged.
 
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Edwards would fight for change, championing the working-class and its unions. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While energizing many, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating voter animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
>
>
Edwards would fight for change, championing the working-class. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While energizing many, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating voter animosity towards big business, Edwards pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
 
Changed:
<
<
Simultaneously, Obama pitched a bigger tent. He campaigned for "One America,” arguing that change comes from collaboration and promising reconciliation. He opened the door wide enough for everyone to fit inside. Furthermore, his campaign, at least according to supporters, somehow "transcends race." Obama is a black man who is not angry at white America. Instead of demanding and confronting, he articulates a message of unity, healing, and progress. This message creates an opportunity to move past divisiveness, something both necessary to maintaining the "One America" creed and part of what makes it desirable to a broad audience (particularly white voters looking for redemption from sin).
>
>
Simultaneously, Obama pitched a bigger tent. He campaigned for "One America," arguing that change comes from collaboration and promising reconciliation. He opened the door wide enough for everyone to fit inside. Furthermore, his campaign, at least according to supporters, somehow "transcends race." Obama is a black man who is not angry at white America. Instead of demanding and confronting, he articulates a message of unity, healing, and progress. He represents an opportunity to move past racial divisiveness, something both necessary to maintaining the "One America" creed and part of what makes it desirable to a broad audience (particularly white voters looking for redemption from sin).
 
Changed:
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Additionally, by staying above detail-drudgery, Obama is able to maintain a creed that is against the things almost everyone is against and for the things almost everyone is for. Rather than policy initiatives, his tent is held aloft by promises of a different type of politics. While voters may disagree over the details of a healthcare plan or the capital gains tax, almost everyone supports broad themes of collaboration and inclusiveness. As a result, Obama is most effective when he speaks broadly of inclusive change and least effective when it appears, even for a moment, that he might not actually represent the transcendent campaign he seeks to run. Being off message undermines his creed.
>
>
Additionally, by staying above detail-drudgery, Obama has been able to maintain a creed that is against the things almost everyone is against and for the things almost everyone is for. Rather than policy initiatives, his tent is held aloft by promises of a different type of politics. While voters may disagree over the details of a healthcare plan or the capital gains tax, almost everyone supports broad themes of collaboration and inclusiveness. As a result, Obama is most effective when he speaks broadly of inclusive change and least effective when it appears, even for a moment, that he might not actually represent the transcendent change he calls for.
 

Clinton's Response

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 Clinton's early attacks failed to undermine the basic tenants of Obama's creed.
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First, Clinton mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words. While perhaps true, this amounted to arguing that the wizard was just a man, without first pulling back the curtain. She didn’t target the ideas that support Obama’s creed and so was unsuccessful.

Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but electing a woman proved less appealing than moving beyond racial divisions. Additionally, Clinton’s change appeared to be less about coming together than it was about being the first female president. While Obama doesn’t talk about being the first black president (such a claim would undermine his creed’s assertion that racial divisions are unimportant), Clinton trumpeted her gender as a rationale for her presidency. This tactic, while slightly broadening Clinton's appeal, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and, in fact, may have highlighted key differences in their respective approaches in a way that favored Obama. As a result, Obama remained unwounded.

>
>
First, Clinton mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words. While perhaps true, this amounted to arguing that the wizard was just a man, without first pulling back the curtain. She failed to target the ideas that support Obama's creed and so was unsuccessful.
 
Added:
>
>
Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but electing a woman proved less appealing than moving beyond racial divisions. Additionally, Clinton's change appeared to be less about coming together than it was about being the first female president. While Obama doesn't talk about being the first black president (such a claim would undermine his creed's assertion that racial divisions are unimportant), Clinton trumpeted her gender as a rationale for her presidency. This tactic, while slightly broadening Clinton's appeal, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama's creed and, in fact, may have highlighted key differences in their respective approaches in a way that favored Obama. As a result, Obama remained unwounded.
 

Holes in the Tent

Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the building blocks of Obama's creed.

Changed:
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing potential damage to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promise of leadership and Obama’s promise of "One America."
>
>
First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing potential damage to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promise of leadership and Obama's promise of "One America."
 
Changed:
<
<
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is somehow above the corrupting influence of politics. Despite her own shady land deals, she pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This was a perfect attack on his creed since it had the potential to change voters’ perception of Obama and undermine a basic premise of his creed. His supporters, enamored with a departure from politics as usual, were left questioning whether Obama was all that he claimed to be.
>
>
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is somehow above the corrupting influence of politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This was a perfect attack on Obama's creed since it had the potential to a basic premise of his creed and therefore change the way voters perceived him. His supporters, enamored with a departure from politics as usual, were left questioning whether Obama was all that he claimed to be.
 
Changed:
<
<
Recently, Clinton shook the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brought serious misgivings. No longer was Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its racial divide. Instead, his campaign became, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the hole in the tent let votes escape. Obama’s immediate damage control, including a major address on race, may have stopped the bleeding. Nevertheless, successfully wounding Obama invigorated Clinton’s campaign and cleared a path for future attacks.
>
>
Recently, Clinton shook the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer was Obama a fearless leader ready to move the country beyond its racial divide. Instead, his campaign became, as Bill Clinton argued weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" becomes many Americas again and the hole in the tent let votes escape. Obama's immediate damage control, including a major address on race, may have stopped the bleeding. Nevertheless, successfully wounding Obama invigorated Clinton's campaign and cleared a path for future attacks.
 
Changed:
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<
Since then, Clinton has continued to pick away at Obama’s creed and for the first time she has been able to increase his negatives. Unfortunately for Clinton, her negatives have increased as well. Perhaps voters, hopes dashed by Clinton’s attacks, have rejected her for bursting their bubble. Perhaps going negative, particularly outside of policy, has turned people off. Either way, Clinton will need to continue to undermine Obama’s creed without being seen as an avatar of divisiveness destroying a symbol of hope.
>
>
Since then, Clinton has continued to pick away at Obama's creed and for the first time she has increased his negatives. Unfortunately for Clinton, her negatives have increased as well. Perhaps voters, hopes dashed by Clinton's attacks, have rejected her for bursting their bubble. Perhaps going negative, particularly outside of policy, has turned people off. Either way, Clinton will need to continue to undermine Obama's creed without being seen as an avatar of divisiveness destroying a symbol of hope.
 

Endgame

Changed:
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<
Time is on Obama’s side and recent endorsements may re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines. Regardless, the battle between these two politicians with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us insight into what it takes to cobble together, defend, and maintain a sufficiently broad creed.
>
>
Time is on Obama's side and recent endorsements may re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines. Regardless, the battle between these two politicians with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us insight into what it takes to cobble together, defend, and maintain a sufficiently broad creed.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 40 - 20 Apr 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
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Introduction

Changed:
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This season's Democratic primary has pitted two gifted politicians against one another, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to create and maintain a creed that captures the widest possible audience.
>
>
This season’s Democratic primary has showcased two gifted politicians, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to build and maintain creeds that captures the widest possible audience.
 
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The Early Campaign

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>

The Emergence of Hope

 
Changed:
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A One-Way Race

>
>
Edwards and Obama interrupted Clinton’s march to the nomination. By speaking forcefully about change, they forced Clinton to justify her candidacy, which she did by citing her experience and preparation for the job. Competing creeds quickly emerged.
 
Changed:
<
<
Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Clinton was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was a simple promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.
>
>
Edwards would fight for change, championing the working-class and its unions. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While energizing many, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating voter animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
 
Changed:
<
<

The Emergence of Hope

>
>
Simultaneously, Obama pitched a bigger tent. He campaigned for "One America,” arguing that change comes from collaboration and promising reconciliation. He opened the door wide enough for everyone to fit inside. Furthermore, his campaign, at least according to supporters, somehow "transcends race." Obama is a black man who is not angry at white America. Instead of demanding and confronting, he articulates a message of unity, healing, and progress. This message creates an opportunity to move past divisiveness, something both necessary to maintaining the "One America" creed and part of what makes it desirable to a broad audience (particularly white voters looking for redemption from sin).
 
Changed:
<
<
John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, altered the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged.
>
>
Additionally, by staying above detail-drudgery, Obama is able to maintain a creed that is against the things almost everyone is against and for the things almost everyone is for. Rather than policy initiatives, his tent is held aloft by promises of a different type of politics. While voters may disagree over the details of a healthcare plan or the capital gains tax, almost everyone supports broad themes of collaboration and inclusiveness. As a result, Obama is most effective when he speaks broadly of inclusive change and least effective when it appears, even for a moment, that he might not actually represent the transcendent campaign he seeks to run. Being off message undermines his creed.
 
Changed:
<
<
Edwards would fight for change, championing the working-class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating voter animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.

Simultaneously, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for "one America" – a nation where divisions of political party, and, most strikingly, race are obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.

The race became Obama’s "One America" against Clinton's predictable stewardship.

Obamamania

One characteristic of Obama's campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow "transcends race." He is a black man who is not angry at white America. Instead of demanding and confronting, Obama articulates message of unity, healing, and progress. He purports to create an opportunity to move past divisiveness: a message that is both necessary to maintain the "One America" creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience (particularly white voters looking for redemption from sin).

>
>

Clinton's Response

 

Misguided Attacks

Changed:
<
<
Clinton's early attacks failed because they did not undermine the basic tenants of Obama's creed.
>
>
Clinton's early attacks failed to undermine the basic tenants of Obama's creed.

First, Clinton mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words. While perhaps true, this amounted to arguing that the wizard was just a man, without first pulling back the curtain. She didn’t target the ideas that support Obama’s creed and so was unsuccessful.

 
Changed:
<
<
First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, accomplish nothing. While perhaps true, this was like arguing that the wizard is just a man, without first pulling back the curtain. Her attacks played right into his argument that standing for change and unity causes resentment by the status quo. Because this attack failed to directly undermine the veracity of "One America," it was unsuccessful.
>
>
Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but electing a woman proved less appealing than moving beyond racial divisions. Additionally, Clinton’s change appeared to be less about coming together than it was about being the first female president. While Obama doesn’t talk about being the first black president (such a claim would undermine his creed’s assertion that racial divisions are unimportant), Clinton trumpeted her gender as a rationale for her presidency. This tactic, while slightly broadening Clinton's appeal, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and, in fact, may have highlighted key differences in their respective approaches in a way that favored Obama. As a result, Obama remained unwounded.
 
Deleted:
<
<
Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman proved less appealing than moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women, and the pain associated with it, does not rise to the same level. While this attack slightly broadened Clinton's appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn't wound his campaign.
 

Holes in the Tent

Changed:
<
<
Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the tent posts supporting Obama's broad creed.
>
>
Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the building blocks of Obama's creed.
 
Changed:
<
<
First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of "One America."
>
>
First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing potential damage to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promise of leadership and Obama’s promise of "One America."
 
Changed:
<
<
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama's creed with little cost to Clinton. She basically announced, "See, he is dirty like the rest of us!" This was an important move because it had the potential to change the way voter’s viewed Obama. His supporters enamored with a departure from politics as usual were left questioning whether Obama was what he said he was.
>
>
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is somehow above the corrupting influence of politics. Despite her own shady land deals, she pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This was a perfect attack on his creed since it had the potential to change voters’ perception of Obama and undermine a basic premise of his creed. His supporters, enamored with a departure from politics as usual, were left questioning whether Obama was all that he claimed to be.
 
Changed:
<
<
Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brought serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader who will move the country beyond its deep divisions. Instead, if her attack works, his campaign will become, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.
>
>
Recently, Clinton shook the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brought serious misgivings. No longer was Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its racial divide. Instead, his campaign became, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the hole in the tent let votes escape. Obama’s immediate damage control, including a major address on race, may have stopped the bleeding. Nevertheless, successfully wounding Obama invigorated Clinton’s campaign and cleared a path for future attacks.
 
Changed:
<
<
It is too early to tell whether Obama’s speech on race and subsequent campaigning mitigated the damage done by Clinton’s attack. The very fact that he give such a speech indicates that the campaign felt a major reaffirmation of the creed was necessary.
>
>
Since then, Clinton has continued to pick away at Obama’s creed and for the first time she has been able to increase his negatives. Unfortunately for Clinton, her negatives have increased as well. Perhaps voters, hopes dashed by Clinton’s attacks, have rejected her for bursting their bubble. Perhaps going negative, particularly outside of policy, has turned people off. Either way, Clinton will need to continue to undermine Obama’s creed without being seen as an avatar of divisiveness destroying a symbol of hope.
 

Endgame

Changed:
<
<
While Obama remains strong, Clinton has found a way to hurt him. The Richardson and Casey endorsements may re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines, but the question remains whether Clinton has enough ammunition to take Obama out. If so, we now know she can capably pull the trigger.

Regardless, the battle between these two politicians with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a sufficiently broad creed.

>
>
Time is on Obama’s side and recent endorsements may re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines. Regardless, the battle between these two politicians with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us insight into what it takes to cobble together, defend, and maintain a sufficiently broad creed.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 39 - 04 Apr 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"


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Paper 1 Re-Redux - Starting again (again), seeking feedback (see diffs for background). Comments encouraged.

Writer's Note: Comments seems to be centered on my supposed support of Obama. Frankly, I find him impressive, but deeply disagree with him on numerous issues of paramount importance to me.

Please Note that this is a Very Early Draft

 

Combatting Obama's Creed

Changed:
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-- By AdamCarlis - 30 Mar 2008
>
>
-- By AdamCarlis - 4 April 2008
 
Line: 24 to 18
 

A One-Way Race

Changed:
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Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Hillary was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was a simple promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.
>
>
Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Clinton was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was a simple promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.
 

The Emergence of Hope

Changed:
<
<
John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, changed the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged.
>
>
John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, altered the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged.
 
Changed:
<
<
John Edwards would fight for change, championing the working class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating American’s animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
>
>
Edwards would fight for change, championing the working-class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating voter animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
 
Changed:
<
<
Simultaneously, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for "one America" – a nation where divisions of political party, and, most strikingly, race become obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.
>
>
Simultaneously, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for "one America" – a nation where divisions of political party, and, most strikingly, race are obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.
 
Changed:
<
<
The race became Obama’s "One America" against Hillary's predictable stewardship.
>
>
The race became Obama’s "One America" against Clinton's predictable stewardship.
 

Obamamania

Changed:
<
<
One characteristic of Obama's campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow "transcends race." He is a black man who is not angry at white America, not demanding or confronting, but rather articulating a message of hope, unity, healing, and progress. His creates an opportunity for America to move past divisiveness. This message is both necessary to maintain the "One America" creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience, particularly white voters looking for redemption from historic sins.
>
>
One characteristic of Obama's campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow "transcends race." He is a black man who is not angry at white America. Instead of demanding and confronting, Obama articulates message of unity, healing, and progress. He purports to create an opportunity to move past divisiveness: a message that is both necessary to maintain the "One America" creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience (particularly white voters looking for redemption from sin).
 

Misguided Attacks

Changed:
<
<
Clinton's early attempts to derail Obama were either too ambitious or misinterpreted and therefore failed to directly confront his popularity. Since they didn’t undermine his creed, they failed.
>
>
Clinton's early attacks failed because they did not undermine the basic tenants of Obama's creed.
 
Changed:
<
<
First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, don’t get you very far. While perhaps true, the attacks played right into his argument that standing for change and unity, causes resentment by the status quo. Clinton asked voters enamored with hope to choose a steady hand and restrained expectations over a candidate promising the world. They chose Obama. Because her attacks failed to directly undermine the veracity of "One America," they were unsuccessful.
>
>
First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, accomplish nothing. While perhaps true, this was like arguing that the wizard is just a man, without first pulling back the curtain. Her attacks played right into his argument that standing for change and unity causes resentment by the status quo. Because this attack failed to directly undermine the veracity of "One America," it was unsuccessful.
 
Changed:
<
<
Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman has thus far proven less appealing than the idea of moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women in this country and the pain associated with it just does not rise to same level in the minds of voters. While this attack slightly broadened Clinton's appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn’t undermine his campaign.
>
>
Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman proved less appealing than moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women, and the pain associated with it, does not rise to the same level. While this attack slightly broadened Clinton's appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn't wound his campaign.
 

Holes in the Tent

Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the tent posts supporting Obama's broad creed.

Changed:
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that separate us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of "One America."

Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama's creed with little cost to Clinton. She basically announced, "See, he is dirty like the rest of us!" This was an important move because it had the potential to change the way voter’s viewed Obama. Those in his tent because he represented a departure from politics as usual were left questioning whether Obama truly was what he said he was.

Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether truly transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man who can't look beyond race. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its deep divisions. His campaign becomes, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.

Too Little Too Late?

>
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that divide us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of "One America."
 
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The race isn't quite over. Obama seems to have stopped the bleeding. If he can get off the defensive, he has a great chance of winning the nomination. Recent endorsement by Casey and, perhaps more importantly, Richardson, should re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines. Regardless, the battle between these two politicians, with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us some insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a creed sufficiently broad enough to win an election.
>
>
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama's creed with little cost to Clinton. She basically announced, "See, he is dirty like the rest of us!" This was an important move because it had the potential to change the way voter’s viewed Obama. His supporters enamored with a departure from politics as usual were left questioning whether Obama was what he said he was.
 
Changed:
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Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether he transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man, poised to spill the secret shame of racism in this country. For white voters, such a charge brought serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader who will move the country beyond its deep divisions. Instead, if her attack works, his campaign will become, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.
 
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- I think this might be moving in a better direction than your last paper. I think part of the danger with your topic is making it seem as if candidates are conspiring to put forth a racist argument. Obviously that's not only an inelegant summary of your point, but, well, not a summary of your point, since you make clear that you don't think any of this is (probably) some sort of evil master plan to play the race card. In any case, what I'm trying to say is that I think your paper rests on safer ground when it looks at what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear. Do other people agree?
>
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It is too early to tell whether Obama’s speech on race and subsequent campaigning mitigated the damage done by Clinton’s attack. The very fact that he give such a speech indicates that the campaign felt a major reaffirmation of the creed was necessary.
 
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Also, interesting sidenote: Clinton's "ready on day one" spiel? Allegedly stolen from McCain? 's website. -Amanda
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Endgame

 
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  • I really appreciate it, Amanda ... what do you think of the new draft? -- AdamCarlis 26 Feb 2008
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While Obama remains strong, Clinton has found a way to hurt him. The Richardson and Casey endorsements may re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines, but the question remains whether Clinton has enough ammunition to take Obama out. If so, we now know she can capably pull the trigger.
 
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  • I agree with Amanda, that you're focusing on "what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear." I also agree that arguing that folks are "conspiring to put forth a racist argument" comes dangerously close to mind reading. We law students lack the psychological sophistication to find subliminal mens rea, even in words spoken by politicians. We can only read the rhetoric that folks put forth, i.e. "what the voters are hearing," and take it at its word. -- AndrewGradman - 22 Mar 2008
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Regardless, the battle between these two politicians with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a sufficiently broad creed.
 
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[Adam, be patient for my sake -- I'll keep editing this critique because it forces me to re-evaluate my own writing -- I know I'm making all the same mistakes I claim that you do. -andrew]

It looks like you think 1) that one of Obama's weaknesses is that "inexperience" is an epithet, and 2) that it's hard for Obama to refute that epithet; but it also looks like you want to patch up Obama's weaknesses. It's okay to blend editorial and journalism in one document, but it looks like you're trying to hide that you're doing so:

  • Although you SHOW that you have certain opinions (e.g. vote for Obama (implied)/certain people who don't are evil (stated)) you never TELL us this.
  • Although you SHOW that you use "inexperience" to mean two different things (how most people arrive at calling Obama "inexperienced", versus how you do), you never TELL us this.
  • Although you distinguish between inexperience as a datum, a thing seen and attested to, versus "inexperience" as a synonym for "QED," i.e. appearing after a list of things relevant to experiences that we take for granted (e.g. citing a poll in which General Election call Obama "inexperienced," versus listing "experiences" McCain has that Obama lacks), you never tell us which is which.
  • Although you present both "objective" facts and "subjective" beliefs, you never defend a mechanism for distinguishing between the two.
    • examples: Given his thin resume/being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap/voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern/Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration ... the public wants/general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him/Obama is poorly positioned to [convince Americans that he has sufficient relevant experience, because 1. his resume has few experiences, 2. outside the resume, he doesn't remind people of an "experienced politician", 3. the media remind us of these facts/opinions]
  • You seem to be saying that when the public calls Obama "inexperienced," their reasoning is hopelessly subjective, i.e. unaccountable, i.e. vulnerable to abuse, i.e. mingled with race. But in posing as value-neutral, you miss the chance to "objectively" characterize Obama's experience level as appropriate to the presidency.
    • You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain's as well? In other words: take one step back and tell us why can't we defend Obama's on experience grounds to those who criticize him on experience grounds.
      • I suspect it's because all our information comes from identical outlets, so we can only account for our disagreements as differences in subjective preferences. Perhaps you could open up a wedge in which to redefine Obama, if you can characterize those outlets as biased or wrong. (Acknowledged: you do criticize the media and McCain's tactics.) But question-begging enters here too, because you are claiming to see bias that others can't. I suppose you'd want to portray yourself as somehow detached, which is hard to do, since you're clearly defending Obama.

It will always end in question-begging, because you're trying to characterize people who cite inexperience for not voting for Obama, by comparing them to people who are voting for Obama despite his inexperience; and yet the pro-Obama person you identify is yourself. Your essay is like a follow-up question to that poll of general-election voters: "What word do you think people who openly characterize Obama as "inexperienced" would use if they weren't afraid to be called racists?" I agree with you that a large proportion of people who answered "inexperienced" to the first question would probably answer "black" to the second. But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
-- AndrewGradman - 21 Mar 2008

  • Andrew, I appreciate your comments. I would love to hear your thoughts on the next round. --Main.AdamCarlis - 24 Mar 2008
 # * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, AdamCarlis

 
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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 38 - 30 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Combatting Obama's Creed

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-- By AdamCarlis - 24 Mar 2008
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-- By AdamCarlis - 30 Mar 2008
 

Introduction

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This season’s Democratic primary has pitted two gifted politicians against one another, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to create and maintain a creed that captures the widest possible audience.
>
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This season's Democratic primary has pitted two gifted politicians against one another, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to create and maintain a creed that captures the widest possible audience.
 

The Early Campaign

A One-Way Race

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Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Hillary was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was simply a promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.
>
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Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Hillary was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was a simple promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.
 

The Emergence of Hope

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John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, changed the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged: change v. experience.
>
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John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, changed the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged.
 
Changed:
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John Edwards would fight for change, championing the working class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn’t big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated many others. The party’s Wall Street crowd and many moderates were turned off. Perhaps overestimating American’s animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
>
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John Edwards would fight for change, championing the working class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn't big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated others. Moderates and the Wall Street crowd were turned off. Perhaps overestimating American’s animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
 
Changed:
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At the same time, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for “one America” – a nation where divisions of political party, and, and, most strikingly, race become obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.
>
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Simultaneously, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for "one America" – a nation where divisions of political party, and, most strikingly, race become obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.
 
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The race became Obama’s “One America” against Hillary’s predictable stewardship.
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The race became Obama’s "One America" against Hillary's predictable stewardship.
 

Obamamania

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One characteristic of Obama’s campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow “transcends race.” He is a black man who is not angry at white America, not demanding or confronting, but rather articulating a message of hope, unity, healing, and moving forward. His creed implies an opportunity for America to move past divisiveness. This message is both necessary to maintain the “One America” creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience, particularly white voters looking for redemption from historic sins.
>
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One characteristic of Obama's campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow "transcends race." He is a black man who is not angry at white America, not demanding or confronting, but rather articulating a message of hope, unity, healing, and progress. His creates an opportunity for America to move past divisiveness. This message is both necessary to maintain the "One America" creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience, particularly white voters looking for redemption from historic sins.
 

Misguided Attacks

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Clinton’s early attempts to derail Obama were either too ambitious or misinterpreted and therefore failed to directly confront his popularity. Since they didn’t undermine his creed, these attacks failed.
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Clinton's early attempts to derail Obama were either too ambitious or misinterpreted and therefore failed to directly confront his popularity. Since they didn’t undermine his creed, they failed.
 
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First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama’s creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, don’t get you very far. While perhaps true, the attacks played right into his argument that when you stand for something as powerful as change and a united country, the status quo will reject you out of hand. Clinton was asking voters enamored with possibility and hope to choose between a candidate promising them the world and one who promised a steady hand and more restrained expectations. Because her attacks failed to directly question the veracity of “One America” they were unsuccessful.
>
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First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama's creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, don’t get you very far. While perhaps true, the attacks played right into his argument that standing for change and unity, causes resentment by the status quo. Clinton asked voters enamored with hope to choose a steady hand and restrained expectations over a candidate promising the world. They chose Obama. Because her attacks failed to directly undermine the veracity of "One America," they were unsuccessful.
 
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Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman has thus far proven less appealing than the idea of moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women in this country and the pain associated with it just does not rise to same level. While this attack have slightly broadened Clinton’s appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn’t undermine his campaign.
>
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Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman has thus far proven less appealing than the idea of moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women in this country and the pain associated with it just does not rise to same level in the minds of voters. While this attack slightly broadened Clinton's appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn’t undermine his campaign.
 

Holes in the Tent

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Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the tent posts supporting Obama’s broad creed.
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Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the tent posts supporting Obama's broad creed.
 
Changed:
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, “You can have ‘change,’ feel good about bridging the chasms that separate us, and still vote for me.” Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of “One America.”
>
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, "You can have 'change,' feel good about bridging the chasms that separate us, and still vote for me." Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of "One America."
 
Changed:
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Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama’s creed with little cost to Clinton. Since she had been unable to get Obama dirty by lobbing shots at his campaign, she just grabbed on and dragged him down into the mud with her, basically announcing, “See, he is dirty like the rest of us!”
>
>
Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama's creed with little cost to Clinton. She basically announced, "See, he is dirty like the rest of us!" This was an important move because it had the potential to change the way voter’s viewed Obama. Those in his tent because he represented a departure from politics as usual were left questioning whether Obama truly was what he said he was.
 
Changed:
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Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama’s creed by questioning whether he truly can transcend race. By highlighting his pastor’s divisive words, Clinton has raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man who can’t look beyond race. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its deep divisions. His campaign becomes, as Bill Clinton sought to point out when he sowed the seeds of this argument many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson’s. Without racial unity and reconciliation, “One America” quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.
>
>
Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama's creed by questioning whether truly transcends race. By highlighting his pastor's divisive words, Clinton raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man who can't look beyond race. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its deep divisions. His campaign becomes, as Bill Clinton argued many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson's. Without racial unity and reconciliation, "One America" quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.
 
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Too Little Too Late?

 
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The race isn’t quite over. Obama seems to have stopped the bleeding. If he can get off the defense, he has a great chance of winning the nomination. Either way, the battle between these two politicians, with similar politics and very different creeds has given us some insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a creed sufficiently broad enough to win an election.
>
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Too Little Too Late?

 
Added:
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The race isn't quite over. Obama seems to have stopped the bleeding. If he can get off the defensive, he has a great chance of winning the nomination. Recent endorsement by Casey and, perhaps more importantly, Richardson, should re-entrench the idea that his appeal crosses racial lines. Regardless, the battle between these two politicians, with similar politics, but quite different politicking, has given us some insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a creed sufficiently broad enough to win an election.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 37 - 24 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Paper 1 Redux - Starting again, seeking feedback (see diffs for background).
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Paper 1 Re-Redux - Starting again (again), seeking feedback (see diffs for background).
 Comments encouraged.
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Writer's Note: Comments seems to be centered on my supposed support of Obama. Frankly, I find him impressive, but deeply disagree with him on numerous issues of paramount importance to me.
 
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Obama's Experience Problem

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Please Note that this is a Very Early Draft
 
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-- By AdamCarlis - 29 Feb 2008
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Combatting Obama's Creed

-- By AdamCarlis - 24 Mar 2008

 

Introduction

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Assuming he is the nominee, Obama will face amplified concerns about his experience. Given his thin resume, relative youth, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern, costing him potentially decisive votes.
>
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This season’s Democratic primary has pitted two gifted politicians against one another, providing insight into how campaigns rise and fall based on their ability to create and maintain a creed that captures the widest possible audience.

The Early Campaign

A One-Way Race

Early on, there was no Democratic primary. Hillary was running as the inevitable candidate; the one best positioned to beat the Republicans in the fall. Her creed was simply a promise to deliver what democrats most desired: a Democrat in the White House.

 
Changed:
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The Liability of Inexperience

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The Emergence of Hope

 
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In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him. This characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama's candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate, particularly if the current economic and political instability continues.
>
>
John Edwards and Barak Obama, however, changed the dynamic of the race. By speaking forcefully about change, they pushed Clinton onto the defensive. She pushed back, citing her experience and preparation for the job. For the first time, competing creeds emerged: change v. experience.
 
Changed:
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Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

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John Edwards would fight for change, championing the working class who, along with their unions, supported him in droves. That tent, however, wasn’t big enough. While representing a sizable share of Democratic Primary voters, it alienated many others. The party’s Wall Street crowd and many moderates were turned off. Perhaps overestimating American’s animosity towards big business, Edward’s pitched a pop tent and not enough voters could fit inside.
 
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Unlike McCain, Obama is poorly positioned to convincingly argue that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, his resume is not sufficiently robust to withstand attack. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, his adversary is an archetypal presidential candidate prepared to capitalize on this issue.
>
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At the same time, Obama pitched the biggest tent of them all. He campaigned for “one America” – a nation where divisions of political party, and, and, most strikingly, race become obsolete. Arguing that change comes from collaboration, he invited everyone in and promised reconciliation. Arnold himself couldn’t have created a broader, more appealing creed.
 
Changed:
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Inexperience

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The race became Obama’s “One America” against Hillary’s predictable stewardship.
 
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Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain? 's lengthy Congressional record, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain? as a "maverick" allows him to be seen as experienced without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.
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Obamamania

 
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Just as the Republicans turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 in state government, and 15 as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth necessary to make the charge stick and the Republican machine will provide the rest. The fact that Obama would neither be the youngest man elected president nor the least "experienced" – regardless of how the word is defined – will be lost in a chorus of "Do you want him answering the phone at 3a.m.?"
>
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One characteristic of Obama’s campaign, highlighted by the media and exalted by his supporters, is that he somehow “transcends race.” He is a black man who is not angry at white America, not demanding or confronting, but rather articulating a message of hope, unity, healing, and moving forward. His creed implies an opportunity for America to move past divisiveness. This message is both necessary to maintain the “One America” creed and what makes it desirable to a broad audience, particularly white voters looking for redemption from historic sins.
 
Changed:
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Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain? , Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain? 's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue. Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change public's perception of his experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even Obama's best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
>
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Misguided Attacks

 
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Age

>
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Clinton’s early attempts to derail Obama were either too ambitious or misinterpreted and therefore failed to directly confront his popularity. Since they didn’t undermine his creed, these attacks failed.
 
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When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is not easy to convince people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country (especially when standing next to their older brother). Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old. In fact, Obama's surgical use of "half century of service," while perhaps cementing the idea that age equals experience, has, at least, forced McCain? to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes his own experience. "Old" is the word voters most associate with McCain? and so he will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
>
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First, Clinton tried to bring the whole tent down in one blow. She mocked Obama’s creed, arguing that change and hope are just words, which, in the end, don’t get you very far. While perhaps true, the attacks played right into his argument that when you stand for something as powerful as change and a united country, the status quo will reject you out of hand. Clinton was asking voters enamored with possibility and hope to choose between a candidate promising them the world and one who promised a steady hand and more restrained expectations. Because her attacks failed to directly question the veracity of “One America” they were unsuccessful.
 
Changed:
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Race

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Next, Clinton argued that she, too, represented change. While obviously true, Clinton had to take a back seat on the issue. Not only was she late to show, but the idea of electing a woman has thus far proven less appealing than the idea of moving beyond racial divisions. Our long history of racial animosity makes the idea of coming together and transcending prior divisions more powerful than a female president: the past and present animosity between men and women in this country and the pain associated with it just does not rise to same level. While this attack have slightly broadened Clinton’s appeal, it, again, failed to undermine the basic premise of Obama’s creed and so didn’t undermine his campaign.
 
Changed:
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With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Therefore, at least subconsciously, Obama’s race both facilitates believing that he is inexperienced and makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
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Holes in the Tent

 
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Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American to cast a vote for McCain. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, some Democrats and Independents are searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times (including my own grandmother, a life-long Democrat, who remarked, after being pressed on her criticisms of Obama, that "we’re just not ready for a black president"), or the “Bradley Effect” voters, saying one thing and voting another, the experience issue can be used to justify an otherwise discriminatory vote. Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument.
>
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Since Texas and Ohio, however, the Clinton campaign has done a better job undermining the tent posts supporting Obama’s broad creed.
 
Changed:
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While Obama's race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.
>
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First, Clinton publicly discussed Obama as a potential Vice President as if to say, “You can have ‘change,’ feel good about bridging the chasms that separate us, and still vote for me.” Obama, sensing the damage that this would do to the central premise of his campaign, immediately rejected the VP job. Still, the seed was planted that perhaps Clinton could deliver on both her promises of leadership and Obama’s promises of “One America.”
 
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Conclusion

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Second, the Clinton campaign directly poked a hole in the idea that Obama is someone above politics. Despite her own shady land deals, Clinton pushed the Tony Rezko story, arguing that Obama is part of the same political muck that plagues Washington. This is a perfect attack on Obama’s creed with little cost to Clinton. Since she had been unable to get Obama dirty by lobbing shots at his campaign, she just grabbed on and dragged him down into the mud with her, basically announcing, “See, he is dirty like the rest of us!”

Recently, Clinton has shaken the very foundation of Obama’s creed by questioning whether he truly can transcend race. By highlighting his pastor’s divisive words, Clinton has raised the question whether, deep down, Obama is actually an angry black man who can’t look beyond race. For white voters, such a charge brings with it serious misgivings. No longer is Obama the fearless leader poised to move the country beyond its deep divisions. His campaign becomes, as Bill Clinton sought to point out when he sowed the seeds of this argument many weeks ago, in many ways indistinguishable from Jesse Jackson’s. Without racial unity and reconciliation, “One America” quickly becomes many America’s again and the whole in the creed lets votes escape.

Too Little Too Late?

The race isn’t quite over. Obama seems to have stopped the bleeding. If he can get off the defense, he has a great chance of winning the nomination. Either way, the battle between these two politicians, with similar politics and very different creeds has given us some insight into what it takes to cobble together and maintain a creed sufficiently broad enough to win an election.

 
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It is possible for Obama to turn the age issue against McCain? and even convincingly argue that good judgment trumps experience. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience. In what is likely to be a close race, this could cost him the election.
 
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 It will always end in question-begging, because you're trying to characterize people who cite inexperience for not voting for Obama, by comparing them to people who are voting for Obama despite his inexperience; and yet the pro-Obama person you identify is yourself. Your essay is like a follow-up question to that poll of general-election voters: "What word do you think people who openly characterize Obama as "inexperienced" would use if they weren't afraid to be called racists?" I agree with you that a large proportion of people who answered "inexperienced" to the first question would probably answer "black" to the second. But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
-- AndrewGradman - 21 Mar 2008
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  • Andrew, I appreciate your comments. I would love to hear your thoughts on the next round. --Main.AdamCarlis - 24 Mar 2008
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 Also, interesting sidenote: Clinton's "ready on day one" spiel? Allegedly stolen from McCain? 's website. -Amanda

  • I really appreciate it, Amanda ... what do you think of the new draft? -- AdamCarlis 26 Feb 2008
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  • I agree with Amanda, that you're focusing on "what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear." I also agree that arguing that folks are "conspiring to put forth a racist argument" comes dangerously close to mind reading. We law students lack the psychological sophistication to find subliminal mens rea, even in words spoken by politicians. We can only read the rhetoric that folks put forth, i.e. "what the voters are hearing," and take it at its word. -- AndrewGradman - 22 Mar 2008
 
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[Adam, I will continue to edit this comment, because it's partly for my own benefit: giving you advice forces me to question and re-evaluate my own advice -- be patient for my sake ... -andrew]
 
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Your message pretends that you're value-neutral. But your language implies that you have SOME opinions. It's possible to teach and argue in one place, but it's harder to build the reader's trust -- you must
  1. ) convince him that you can separate the news and the editorial
  2. ) i.e. both "show" and "tell" him that he can trust your ability to choose and define words
  3. ) i.e. tell a really invisible lie.
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[Adam, be patient for my sake -- I'll keep editing this critique because it forces me to re-evaluate my own writing -- I know I'm making all the same mistakes I claim that you do. -andrew]
 
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Under that definition (of how to teach and argue in one place), you could do more to win my trust:
  • Although you SHOW that "inexperience" mean two different things to you (how most people arrive at calling Obama "inexperienced", versus how you do), you never TELL us this.
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It looks like you think 1) that one of Obama's weaknesses is that "inexperience" is an epithet, and 2) that it's hard for Obama to refute that epithet; but it also looks like you want to patch up Obama's weaknesses. It's okay to blend editorial and journalism in one document, but it looks like you're trying to hide that you're doing so:
 
  • Although you SHOW that you have certain opinions (e.g. vote for Obama (implied)/certain people who don't are evil (stated)) you never TELL us this.
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  • Although you SHOW that you use "inexperience" to mean two different things (how most people arrive at calling Obama "inexperienced", versus how you do), you never TELL us this.
 
  • Although you distinguish between inexperience as a datum, a thing seen and attested to, versus "inexperience" as a synonym for "QED," i.e. appearing after a list of things relevant to experiences that we take for granted (e.g. citing a poll in which General Election call Obama "inexperienced," versus listing "experiences" McCain has that Obama lacks), you never tell us which is which.
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  • Although your words present both "objective" facts and "subjective" beliefs, (see examples), you never defend a mechanism for distinguishing between the two.
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  • Although you present both "objective" facts and "subjective" beliefs, you never defend a mechanism for distinguishing between the two.
 
    • examples: Given his thin resume/being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap/voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern/Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration ... the public wants/general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him/Obama is poorly positioned to [convince Americans that he has sufficient relevant experience, because 1. his resume has few experiences, 2. outside the resume, he doesn't remind people of an "experienced politician", 3. the media remind us of these facts/opinions]
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  • You seem to be saying that when the public calls Obama "inexperienced," their reasoning is hopelessly subjective, i.e. unaccountable, i.e. vulnerable to abuse, i.e. mingled with race. But in posing as value-neutral, you miss the chance to "objectively" characterize Obama's experience level as appropriate to the presidency.
    • You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain's as well? In other words: take one step back and tell us why can't we defend Obama's on experience grounds to those who criticize him on experience grounds.
      • I suspect it's because all our information comes from identical outlets, so we can only account for our disagreements as differences in subjective preferences. Perhaps you could open up a wedge in which to redefine Obama, if you can characterize those outlets as biased or wrong. (Acknowledged: you do criticize the media and McCain's tactics.) But question-begging enters here too, because you are claiming to see bias that others can't. I suppose you'd want to portray yourself as somehow detached, which is hard to do, since you're clearly defending Obama.
 
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Looking at your paper as an editor instead of as a reader, I'll speculate that you want people to vote for Obama, and you think that his greatest vulnerability is that 1) "inexperience" is an epithet, and 2) it's hard for Obama to refute that epithet. If so, you're smart to be saying that when the public calls him "inexperienced," their reasoning is hopelessly subjective, i.e. unaccountable, i.e. vulnerable to abuse, i.e. mingled with race. But I suspect that because you want to appear neutral, you miss the chance to "objectively" characterize Obama's experience level as appropriate to the presidency. You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain's as well? In other words: take one step back and tell us why can't we defend Obama's on experience grounds to those who criticize him on experience grounds.

I suspect it's because we all get our political news from similar sources, so it's hard to explain our political disagreements in terms of other than subjective preferences. But if you can stereotype our information sources as somehow biased (cf. all that critical theory mumbo jumbo about the mass media that Eben believes in), you can make an argument for against Obama out of it. (I acknowledge that you do this, by criticizing the media and the opponents' campaign tactics.) However, question-begging enters here too, because you have to show how you can see the bias that others can't. I suppose you'd want to portray yourself as somehow detached, which is hard to do, since you're clearly voting for Obama.

I think the question-begging is inevitable because you're using [the fact that you're voting for Obama despite his inexperience] to tell us something about [the people who aren't voting him because of his inexperience]. If that poll of general-election voters had asked a follow-up question, "What word do you think those people who openly characterize Obama as "inexperienced" would use if they weren't afraid to be called racists?", I, like you, suspect that a large proportion of people who answered "inexperienced" to the first question would answer "black" to the second. But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.

>
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It will always end in question-begging, because you're trying to characterize people who cite inexperience for not voting for Obama, by comparing them to people who are voting for Obama despite his inexperience; and yet the pro-Obama person you identify is yourself. Your essay is like a follow-up question to that poll of general-election voters: "What word do you think people who openly characterize Obama as "inexperienced" would use if they weren't afraid to be called racists?" I agree with you that a large proportion of people who answered "inexperienced" to the first question would probably answer "black" to the second. But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
 -- AndrewGradman - 21 Mar 2008

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 35 - 22 Mar 2008 - Main.AndrewGradman
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  • I really appreciate it, Amanda ... what do you think of the new draft? -- AdamCarlis 26 Feb 2008

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Adam,
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[Adam, I will continue to edit this comment, because it's partly for my own benefit: giving you advice forces me to question and re-evaluate my own advice -- be patient for my sake ... -andrew]
 
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It looks like you're using "inexperience" to mean two different things: why you think Obama is inexperienced, versus why other people do. Yet you don't show how you know there's a difference -- aside from the fact that they're not voting for him, and [you imply] you are.
>
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Your message pretends that you're value-neutral. But your language implies that you have SOME opinions. It's possible to teach and argue in one place, but it's harder to build the reader's trust -- you must
  1. ) convince him that you can separate the news and the editorial
  2. ) i.e. both "show" and "tell" him that he can trust your ability to choose and define words
  3. ) i.e. tell a really invisible lie.
 
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You might have settled for a different (equally fallible, but more relevant-sounding) breakdown in the way you see inexperience with respect to Obama:
  • allegations of inexperience whose causes you can't precisely account for, versus allegations whose causes you can;
  • inexperience as a datum, a thing seen and attested to, versus "inexperience" as a synonym for "QED," i.e. appearing after a list of "experiences" whose relevance to presidency the paper takes for granted;
  • "subjective" versus "objective" inexperience.
>
>
Under that definition (of how to teach and argue in one place), you could do more to win my trust:
  • Although you SHOW that "inexperience" mean two different things to you (how most people arrive at calling Obama "inexperienced", versus how you do), you never TELL us this.
  • Although you SHOW that you have certain opinions (e.g. vote for Obama (implied)/certain people who don't are evil (stated)) you never TELL us this.
  • Although you distinguish between inexperience as a datum, a thing seen and attested to, versus "inexperience" as a synonym for "QED," i.e. appearing after a list of things relevant to experiences that we take for granted (e.g. citing a poll in which General Election call Obama "inexperienced," versus listing "experiences" McCain has that Obama lacks), you never tell us which is which.
  • Although your words present both "objective" facts and "subjective" beliefs, (see examples), you never defend a mechanism for distinguishing between the two.
    • examples: Given his thin resume/being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap/voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern/Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration ... the public wants/general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him/Obama is poorly positioned to [convince Americans that he has sufficient relevant experience, because 1. his resume has few experiences, 2. outside the resume, he doesn't remind people of an "experienced politician", 3. the media remind us of these facts/opinions]
 
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This poor overlap could be a problem with my labels, but it is also could be a problem with your paper. Arguably, my labels successfully account for what you are doing half-successfully: since you support Obama, you're smart to be labeling persons who call him "inexperienced" as hopelessly subjective, in order to argue that their arguments are unaccountable, and thus vulnerable to abuse, such as being mingled with race. But, if that's your goal, you fail to recapture the authority to define Obama's experience in a way you prefer. You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain? has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain? 's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain? 's as well? In other words, why can't we defend Obama's experience?
>
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Looking at your paper as an editor instead of as a reader, I'll speculate that you want people to vote for Obama, and you think that his greatest vulnerability is that 1) "inexperience" is an epithet, and 2) it's hard for Obama to refute that epithet. If so, you're smart to be saying that when the public calls him "inexperienced," their reasoning is hopelessly subjective, i.e. unaccountable, i.e. vulnerable to abuse, i.e. mingled with race. But I suspect that because you want to appear neutral, you miss the chance to "objectively" characterize Obama's experience level as appropriate to the presidency. You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain's as well? In other words: take one step back and tell us why can't we defend Obama's on experience grounds to those who criticize him on experience grounds.
 
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And that itself is a meaningful question: why is it hard to defend Obama on experience grounds to persons who criticize him on experience grounds? My theory: it's because we all get our political news from similar sources, so it's hard to explain our political disagreements in terms of other than subjective preferences.
>
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I suspect it's because we all get our political news from similar sources, so it's hard to explain our political disagreements in terms of other than subjective preferences. But if you can stereotype our information sources as somehow biased (cf. all that critical theory mumbo jumbo about the mass media that Eben believes in), you can make an argument for against Obama out of it. (I acknowledge that you do this, by criticizing the media and the opponents' campaign tactics.) However, question-begging enters here too, because you have to show how you can see the bias that others can't. I suppose you'd want to portray yourself as somehow detached, which is hard to do, since you're clearly voting for Obama.
 
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But then, does the fact that you're voting for Obama really tell us anything about the people who aren't? Imagine again that poll of General Election voters (pro-Obama and anti-Obama) who used "inexperience" to "best describe Obama." If they'd also been asked, "What word do you think most OTHER people imagine best describes Obama?", I too suspect that a larger proportion of people, freed from political correctness, would say "Black." But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
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I think the question-begging is inevitable because you're using [the fact that you're voting for Obama despite his inexperience] to tell us something about [the people who aren't voting him because of his inexperience]. If that poll of general-election voters had asked a follow-up question, "What word do you think those people who openly characterize Obama as "inexperienced" would use if they weren't afraid to be called racists?", I, like you, suspect that a large proportion of people who answered "inexperienced" to the first question would answer "black" to the second. But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
 -- AndrewGradman - 21 Mar 2008
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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 34 - 21 Mar 2008 - Main.AndrewGradman
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  • I really appreciate it, Amanda ... what do you think of the new draft? -- AdamCarlis 26 Feb 2008

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Adam,

It looks like you're using "inexperience" to mean two different things: why you think Obama is inexperienced, versus why other people do. Yet you don't show how you know there's a difference -- aside from the fact that they're not voting for him, and [you imply] you are.

You might have settled for a different (equally fallible, but more relevant-sounding) breakdown in the way you see inexperience with respect to Obama:

  • allegations of inexperience whose causes you can't precisely account for, versus allegations whose causes you can;
  • inexperience as a datum, a thing seen and attested to, versus "inexperience" as a synonym for "QED," i.e. appearing after a list of "experiences" whose relevance to presidency the paper takes for granted;
  • "subjective" versus "objective" inexperience.

This poor overlap could be a problem with my labels, but it is also could be a problem with your paper. Arguably, my labels successfully account for what you are doing half-successfully: since you support Obama, you're smart to be labeling persons who call him "inexperienced" as hopelessly subjective, in order to argue that their arguments are unaccountable, and thus vulnerable to abuse, such as being mingled with race. But, if that's your goal, you fail to recapture the authority to define Obama's experience in a way you prefer. You might tell us: why aren't you put off by Obama's lack of experience? Why do we consider what McCain? has "experience"? If Clinton has experience, and it's so different from McCain? 's, why can't Obama be experienced in a way different from McCain? 's as well? In other words, why can't we defend Obama's experience?

And that itself is a meaningful question: why is it hard to defend Obama on experience grounds to persons who criticize him on experience grounds? My theory: it's because we all get our political news from similar sources, so it's hard to explain our political disagreements in terms of other than subjective preferences.

But then, does the fact that you're voting for Obama really tell us anything about the people who aren't? Imagine again that poll of General Election voters (pro-Obama and anti-Obama) who used "inexperience" to "best describe Obama." If they'd also been asked, "What word do you think most OTHER people imagine best describes Obama?", I too suspect that a larger proportion of people, freed from political correctness, would say "Black." But I wouldn't call that racism: you and I both just did it.
-- AndrewGradman - 21 Mar 2008

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 Assuming he is the nominee, Obama will face amplified concerns about his experience. Given his thin resume, relative youth, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern, costing him potentially decisive votes.
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Experience Matters

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The Liability of Inexperience

 
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The Liability of Inexperience

In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him. This characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama’s candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate, particularly if the current economic and political instability continues.

The General Election

Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain's lengthy Congressional record, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain as a "maverick" allows him to be seen as experienced without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.

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In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him. This characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama's candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate, particularly if the current economic and political instability continues.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

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Obama, on the other hand, is poorly positioned to make a compelling argument that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, for the purposes of this election cycle, "experience" has already been defined in years of service and that is something Obama does not have. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, his adversary is an archetypal presidential candidate prepared to capitalize on this issue.
  • I feel like there is some structure problem here. This paragraph feels like it belongs before the general election paragraph. I should look to see if there is a way to smooth this out
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Unlike McCain, Obama is poorly positioned to convincingly argue that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, his resume is not sufficiently robust to withstand attack. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, his adversary is an archetypal presidential candidate prepared to capitalize on this issue.
 

Inexperience

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As Karl Rove has shown, making a charge stick only requires three things: a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 in state government, and 15 as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth and the Republican machine will provide the rest.
  • Do I need more here? I am assuming that the public sees experience in number of years served or major accomplishments achieved without really justifying that. Obama would neither be the youngest man elected president or the least "experienced" (by pretty much any measure), but he is less "experienced" than McCain in almost every category that could conceivably matter to a large percentage of voters. What needs to be said, beyond what I have said, to make this work?
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Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain? 's lengthy Congressional record, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain? as a "maverick" allows him to be seen as experienced without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.
 
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Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain, Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue. Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change public's perception of his experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even Obama's best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
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Just as the Republicans turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 in state government, and 15 as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth necessary to make the charge stick and the Republican machine will provide the rest. The fact that Obama would neither be the youngest man elected president nor the least "experienced" – regardless of how the word is defined – will be lost in a chorus of "Do you want him answering the phone at 3a.m.?"
 
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Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain? , Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain? 's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue. Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change public's perception of his experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even Obama's best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
 

Age

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When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is not easy to convince people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country (especially when standing next to their older brother). Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old. In fact, Obama's surgical use of "half century of service," while perhaps cementing the idea that age equals experience, has, at least, forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes his own experience. "Old" is the word voters most associate with McCain and so he will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
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When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is not easy to convince people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country (especially when standing next to their older brother). Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old. In fact, Obama's surgical use of "half century of service," while perhaps cementing the idea that age equals experience, has, at least, forced McCain? to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes his own experience. "Old" is the word voters most associate with McCain? and so he will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
 

Race

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With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Race both facilitates believing Obama is inexperienced and makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.

Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, some Democrats and Independents are searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the “Bradley Effect” voters, saying one thing and voting another, the experience issue can be used to justify an otherwise discriminatory vote.

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With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Therefore, at least subconsciously, Obama’s race both facilitates believing that he is inexperienced and makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
 
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Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument. As evidenced in posts on the racist message board Stormfront and frank conversations with white voters (including my own grandmother, a life-long democrat, who remarked, after being pressed on her criticisms of Obama, that "we’re just not ready for a black president"), white fear of a black president is often hiding behind experience.
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Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American to cast a vote for McCain. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, some Democrats and Independents are searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times (including my own grandmother, a life-long Democrat, who remarked, after being pressed on her criticisms of Obama, that "we’re just not ready for a black president"), or the “Bradley Effect” voters, saying one thing and voting another, the experience issue can be used to justify an otherwise discriminatory vote. Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument.
 
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Obama's race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, however, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.
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While Obama's race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.
 

Conclusion

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Many other (possibly more important) issues will also determine who wins this election. However, given how close this race is likely to be, the candidate who best manages the experience issue, all else being equal, will likely wind up on top.

Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience, possibly costing him the election.

  • I use a lot of words to say nothing in this conclustion, that have to change
>
>
It is possible for Obama to turn the age issue against McCain? and even convincingly argue that good judgment trumps experience. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience. In what is likely to be a close race, this could cost him the election.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 32 - 20 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Introduction

Changed:
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Assuming he is the nominee, Obama will face amplified concerns about his experience. Given his thin resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
>
>
Assuming he is the nominee, Obama will face amplified concerns about his experience. Given his thin resume, relative youth, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern, costing him potentially decisive votes.
 

Experience Matters

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters not only see McCain as more experienced, but cite "inexperienced" as the word best describing Obama. As instability increases, this characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama’s candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate.
>
>
In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters cite "inexperienced" as the word that best describes him. This characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama’s candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate, particularly if the current economic and political instability continues.
 

The General Election

Changed:
<
<
Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain's lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain as a "maverick" allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to portray Obama as inexperienced and capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.
>
>
Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain's lengthy Congressional record, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain as a "maverick" allows him to be seen as experienced without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Changed:
<
<
Obama, on the other hand, is poorly positioned to make a compelling argument that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, for the purposes of this election cycle, "experience" has already been defined in years of service and that is something Obama does not have. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, he will be facing an adversary who is an archetypal presidential candidate, prepared to capitalize on this issue.
>
>
Obama, on the other hand, is poorly positioned to make a compelling argument that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, for the purposes of this election cycle, "experience" has already been defined in years of service and that is something Obama does not have. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, his adversary is an archetypal presidential candidate prepared to capitalize on this issue.
  • I feel like there is some structure problem here. This paragraph feels like it belongs before the general election paragraph. I should look to see if there is a way to smooth this out
 

Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
As Karl Rove has shown, making a charge stick only requires a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 more in the state Senate, and 15 years as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth and the Republican machine will provide the rest. Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain, Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue.
>
>
As Karl Rove has shown, making a charge stick only requires three things: a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 in state government, and 15 as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth and the Republican machine will provide the rest.
  • Do I need more here? I am assuming that the public sees experience in number of years served or major accomplishments achieved without really justifying that. Obama would neither be the youngest man elected president or the least "experienced" (by pretty much any measure), but he is less "experienced" than McCain in almost every category that could conceivably matter to a large percentage of voters. What needs to be said, beyond what I have said, to make this work?
 
Changed:
<
<
Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change the public’s perception of Obama’s experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
>
>
Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain, Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue. Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change public's perception of his experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even Obama's best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
 
Deleted:
<
<

Age

 
Changed:
<
<
When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. Convincing people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country is challenging. Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" has forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. "Old" is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain and comparisons to Dole are creeping into the race. McCain will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
>
>

Age

 
Added:
>
>
When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is not easy to convince people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country (especially when standing next to their older brother). Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old. In fact, Obama's surgical use of "half century of service," while perhaps cementing the idea that age equals experience, has, at least, forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes his own experience. "Old" is the word voters most associate with McCain and so he will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
 

Race

Changed:
<
<
With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Just as race facilitates believing Obama is inexperienced, it makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
>
>
With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Race both facilitates believing Obama is inexperienced and makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
 Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, some Democrats and Independents are searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the “Bradley Effect” voters, saying one thing and voting another, the experience issue can be used to justify an otherwise discriminatory vote.

Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument. As evidenced in posts on the racist message board Stormfront and frank conversations with white voters (including my own grandmother, a life-long democrat, who remarked, after being pressed on her criticisms of Obama, that "we’re just not ready for a black president"), white fear of a black president is often hiding behind experience.

Changed:
<
<
Obama’s race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, however, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.

>
>
Obama's race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, however, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience.

Many other (possibly more important) issues will go a long way to determine who wins this election. However, given how close this race is likely to be, the candidate who best manages the experience issue, all other things being equal, is likely to wind up on top.

>
>
Many other (possibly more important) issues will also determine who wins this election. However, given how close this race is likely to be, the candidate who best manages the experience issue, all else being equal, will likely wind up on top.
 
Added:
>
>
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience, possibly costing him the election.
  • I use a lot of words to say nothing in this conclustion, that have to change
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 31 - 18 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Introduction

Changed:
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During the general election, McCain? will amplify the concerns Clinton has raised about Obama’s experience. Given Obama's thin resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
>
>
Assuming he is the nominee, Obama will face amplified concerns about his experience. Given his thin resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
 
Changed:
<
<

The Experience Argument

The Meaning of "Experience"

"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. When Clinton raises her own experience as a foil to Obama, Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits, allowing Clinton to paint Obama as inexperienced. In fact, "inexperienced" is the word voters most commonly use to describe him.

>
>

Experience Matters

 

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, security concerns drummed up since September 11, and crumbling economy, the public want a president who steps into the office ready to lead. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see McCain as more experienced.
>
>
In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures of the Bush administration, concerns about national security, and our crumbling economy, the public wants a president who can step into the office ready to lead. Unfortunately for Obama, general election voters not only see McCain as more experienced, but cite "inexperienced" as the word best describing Obama. As instability increases, this characterization could lead many American’s who might have otherwise supported Obama’s candidacy to vote for the more tested candidate.
 
Changed:
<
<

Experience in the General Election

>
>

The General Election

 
Changed:
<
<
Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, position him to further entrench the nation’s questions about Obama’s readiness to lead. Moreover, McCain’s "maverick" persona allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. As a result, McCain is well-positioned to portray Obama as inexperienced.
>
>
Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain's lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, will allow him to further entrench questions about Obama's readiness to lead. Moreover, the perception of McCain as a "maverick" allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Therefore, he is well-positioned to portray Obama as inexperienced and capitalize on the uncertainty created by volatile circumstances without the usual baggage accompanying such attacks.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Changed:
<
<

Obama's Inexperience

>
>
Obama, on the other hand, is poorly positioned to make a compelling argument that he has sufficient experience to lead. First, for the purposes of this election cycle, "experience" has already been defined in years of service and that is something Obama does not have. Second, Obama's age and race do not fit the stereotype of an experienced politician. Finally, he will be facing an adversary who is an archetypal presidential candidate, prepared to capitalize on this issue.

Inexperience

 
Changed:
<
<
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job. Unfortunately for Obama, he lacks the "little bit of truth" necessary to effectively fight back. A head to head resume battle favors McCain? and could be Obama's undoing. His best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain’s attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue.
>
>
As Karl Rove has shown, making a charge stick only requires a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's unpreparedness. Obama’s relatively thin resume (3 years in the Senate, 8 more in the state Senate, and 15 years as a community organizer, attorney, and academic) provides the little bit of truth and the Republican machine will provide the rest. Since a head to head experience battle favors McCain, Obama’s best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain's attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue.
 
Changed:
<
<
Thus far, Obama has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes.
>
>
Thus far, Obama, perhaps "masquing treason," has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." However, this tactic does not change the public’s perception of Obama’s experience; it only mitigates its importance. If the long campaign forces the issue, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience, perhaps costing him votes.
 
Changed:
<
<

Obama's Age

>
>

Age

 
Changed:
<
<
When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was only eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead the country when you are their little brother’s age. Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voters' hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, fear of being portrayed as an aging Washington insider and Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" have forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. "Old" is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain? and pundits are beginning to draw allusions to Bob Dole.
>
>
When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. Convincing people old enough to be your parent that you are ready to lead the country is challenging. Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voter hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" has forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. "Old" is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain and comparisons to Dole are creeping into the race. McCain will have to find a way to focus on experience without looking his age, possibly reducing the potency of his attacks.
 
Deleted:
<
<
If Obama can stay ahead of McCain on the age issue, the experience argument will be less damaging. While voter’s may still elect the inexperienced (George W. Bush) or the young (JFK, Bill Clinton), they have yet to put someone in the white house perceived to be both.
 
Added:
>
>

Race

 
Changed:
<
<

Obama's Race

>
>
With embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Intelligent and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Just as race facilitates believing Obama is inexperienced, it makes it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
 
Changed:
<
<
In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Just as race makes it easier for voters to believe Obama is inexperienced, it will make it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
>
>
Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, some Democrats and Independents are searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the “Bradley Effect” voters, saying one thing and voting another, the experience issue can be used to justify an otherwise discriminatory vote.
 
Changed:
<
<
Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the “Bradley Effect” voters who say one thing and vote another, they can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote. Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument. As evidenced in posts on the white, racist message board Stormfront and frank conversations with white voters (including my own grandmother), white fear of a black president is sometimes hiding behind experience.
>
>
Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument. As evidenced in posts on the racist message board Stormfront and frank conversations with white voters (including my own grandmother, a life-long democrat, who remarked, after being pressed on her criticisms of Obama, that "we’re just not ready for a black president"), white fear of a black president is often hiding behind experience.

Obama’s race alone may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, however, by making it harder for white voters to picture Obama as ready to do the job and adding voices to the chorus questioning his experience, race makes the experience argument stick.

 
Deleted:
<
<
While, by itself, his race may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, when combined with his thin resume and the positive public perception of his opponent’s experience it helps sustain the argument. By making it harder for white voters to picture as ready to do the job and adding voices to the claims of inexperience, Obama’s race then makes that argument stick.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience. In what is shaping up to be a close election, this is one of many issues that could decide the race.
>
>
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Gandhi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible for him to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience.

Many other (possibly more important) issues will go a long way to determine who wins this election. However, given how close this race is likely to be, the candidate who best manages the experience issue, all other things being equal, is likely to wind up on top.

 

Deleted:
<
<
    • I am worried that I am no longer saying anything interesting in this essay ...
 

- I think this might be moving in a better direction than your last paper. I think part of the danger with your topic is making it seem as if candidates are conspiring to put forth a racist argument. Obviously that's not only an inelegant summary of your point, but, well, not a summary of your point, since you make clear that you don't think any of this is (probably) some sort of evil master plan to play the race card. In any case, what I'm trying to say is that I think your paper rests on safer ground when it looks at what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear. Do other people agree?


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 30 - 18 Mar 2008 - Main.IanSullivan
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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 29 - 05 Mar 2008 - Main.IanSullivan
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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 28 - 04 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Introduction

Changed:
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Concerns about Obama's experience introduced by Clinton during the primary will be amplified by McCain during the general election. Given Obama's resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
>
>
During the general election, McCain? will amplify the concerns Clinton has raised about Obama’s experience. Given Obama's thin resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' anxiety regarding his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
 

The Experience Argument

The Meaning of "Experience"

Changed:
<
<
"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. When Clinton raises her own experience as a foil to Obama, Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits. Despite legitimate questions about Clinton's experience, she has successfully painted Obama as inexperienced. In fact, "inexperienced" is the most common word voters use to describe him.
>
>
"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. When Clinton raises her own experience as a foil to Obama, Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits, allowing Clinton to paint Obama as inexperienced. In fact, "inexperienced" is the word voters most commonly use to describe him.
 

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
In any election cycle, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, that reality is heightened during this campaign. Security concerns drummed up since September 11 and a crumbling economy only increase the public's desire for an "experienced" candidate. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see McCain? as more experienced.
>
>
In this election, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, security concerns drummed up since September 11, and crumbling economy, the public want a president who steps into the office ready to lead. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see McCain as more experienced.
 

Experience in the General Election

Changed:
<
<
Unlike Clinton, who could reasonably argue she has more experience than Obama (and potentially McCain, given her eight years in the white house), Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months to hammer away position him to further entrench the nation’s questions about Obama’s readiness to lead. Additionally, McCain’s "maverick" persona allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. As a result, portraying Obama as inexperienced will be easier for McCain that it was for Clinton.
>
>
Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months on the attack, position him to further entrench the nation’s questions about Obama’s readiness to lead. Moreover, McCain’s "maverick" persona allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. As a result, McCain is well-positioned to portray Obama as inexperienced.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Obama's Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job. Unfortunately for Obama, he lacks the "little bit of truth" necessary to effectively claim the experience mantle. Unlike during the Democratic primary, where real questions could be raised about Clinton's readiness, a head to head resume battle clearly favors McCain and could be Obama's undoing. His best hope in the general election will be to mitigate the damage of McCain? ’s attacks by shifting the focus while deemphasizing the importance of experience.
>
>
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job. Unfortunately for Obama, he lacks the "little bit of truth" necessary to effectively fight back. A head to head resume battle favors McCain? and could be Obama's undoing. His best hope is to mitigate the damage of McCain’s attacks by shifting focus and deemphasizing the issue.
 Thus far, Obama has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes.

Line: 39 to 39
 Thus far, Obama has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes.

Deleted:
<
<
 

Obama's Age

Changed:
<
<
Voter focus on age, while an impediment to Obama during the Democratic primary, would be at least a draw during the general election; the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voters' hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, fear of being portrayed as an aging Washington insider and Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" have forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. Old is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain and pundits are beginning to draw allusions to Bob Dole. If Obama can stay ahead of McCain? on the age issue, the experience argument is likely to be less damaging. While voter’s may still elect the inexperienced (George W. Bush comes of mind) or the young (JFK, Bill Clinton), they have yet to put someone in the white house who is both.
>
>
When the 60 and over crowd was at Woodstock, Obama was only eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead the country when you are their little brother’s age. Nevertheless, the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voters' hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, fear of being portrayed as an aging Washington insider and Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" have forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. "Old" is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain? and pundits are beginning to draw allusions to Bob Dole.

If Obama can stay ahead of McCain on the age issue, the experience argument will be less damaging. While voter’s may still elect the inexperienced (George W. Bush) or the young (JFK, Bill Clinton), they have yet to put someone in the white house perceived to be both.

 

Obama's Race

In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Just as race makes it easier for voters to believe Obama is inexperienced, it will make it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.

Changed:
<
<
Additionally, voting on "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While most people who vote based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies in the first place, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the say one thing, vote the other way racists, these voters can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote. This is not to say that, without the cover of experience they would bite their tongue and vote for Obama, but that they now have an excuse to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote.

>
>
Additionally, "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for an African American. While most people voting based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the “Bradley Effect” voters who say one thing and vote another, they can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote. Without the cover of experience, these voters would not support Obama, but using experience to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote adds fuel to the inexperience argument. As evidenced in posts on the white, racist message board Stormfront and frank conversations with white voters (including my own grandmother), white fear of a black president is sometimes hiding behind experience.
 
Added:
>
>
While, by itself, his race may not spontaneously raise mainstream concerns about experience, when combined with his thin resume and the positive public perception of his opponent’s experience it helps sustain the argument. By making it harder for white voters to picture as ready to do the job and adding voices to the claims of inexperience, Obama’s race then makes that argument stick.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps lengthy experience and turn the age issue against McCain? . However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience.

While he was able to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain? campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove too high a hurdle.

>
>
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps experience or turn the age issue against McCain. However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience. In what is shaping up to be a close election, this is one of many issues that could decide the race.
 

    • I am worried that I am no longer saying anything interesting in this essay ...

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 27 - 03 Mar 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
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Introduction

Changed:
<
<
Clinton has raised questions about Obama's experience that will be amplified by McCain during the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern; potentially costing him crucial votes what will likely be a close race.
>
>
Concerns about Obama's experience introduced by Clinton during the primary will be amplified by McCain during the general election. Given Obama's resume, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern; costing him potentially decisive votes.
 

The Experience Argument

The Meaning of "Experience"

Changed:
<
<
"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced ying to their "ready on day one" yang.
>
>
"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. When Clinton raises her own experience as a foil to Obama, Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits. Despite legitimate questions about Clinton's experience, she has successfully painted Obama as inexperienced. In fact, "inexperienced" is the most common word voters use to describe him.
 

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, that reality is heightened during this campaign. Security concerns drummed up since September 11 and a crumbling economy only heighten the public's desire for an "experienced" candidate. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see both Clinton and McCain as more experienced.
>
>
In any election cycle, being viewed as inexperienced is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, that reality is heightened during this campaign. Security concerns drummed up since September 11 and a crumbling economy only increase the public's desire for an "experienced" candidate. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see McCain? as more experienced.
 

Experience in the General Election

Changed:
<
<
While Clinton's attacks couldn't prevent Obama from claiming frontrunner status in the Democratic primary, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months to hammer away give him an advantage Clinton lacked. Unlike Clinton, whose own experience has been questioned (and Here and Here), McCain, with nearly 30 years of Congressional experience, is assumed to be ready for the job. Also, his "maverick" persona allows him to acquire experience without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Finally, as a white male, he fits the mold of every former president. As a result, portraying Obama as inexperienced will be easier for McCain that it was for Clinton.

Additionally, as Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job.

>
>
Unlike Clinton, who could reasonably argue she has more experience than Obama (and potentially McCain, given her eight years in the white house), Obama cannot credibly claim the experience mantle in the general election. Instead, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months to hammer away position him to further entrench the nation’s questions about Obama’s readiness to lead. Additionally, McCain’s "maverick" persona allows him to acquire the experience mantle without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. As a result, portraying Obama as inexperienced will be easier for McCain that it was for Clinton.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Obama's Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
Obama's record is too thin for him to tackle the issue head on. Instead, his campaign has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters, thus far, have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense (a comparison to Lincoln) acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes. Unlike during the Democratic primary, where real questions could be raised about Clinton's readiness, a head to head resume battle clearly favors McCain and could be Obama's undoing.
>
>
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job. Unfortunately for Obama, he lacks the "little bit of truth" necessary to effectively claim the experience mantle. Unlike during the Democratic primary, where real questions could be raised about Clinton's readiness, a head to head resume battle clearly favors McCain and could be Obama's undoing. His best hope in the general election will be to mitigate the damage of McCain? ’s attacks by shifting the focus while deemphasizing the importance of experience.

Thus far, Obama has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense, a comparison to Lincoln, acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes.

 

Obama's Age

Changed:
<
<
When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters have looked beyond years in past elections, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they were elected. However, because of questions about his own age, McCain will have to deemphasize the issue as much as he emphasizes experience. Voter focus on age, while an impediment to Obama during the Democratic primary, will likely be at least a draw during the general election (the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperience is balanced by voters’ hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president).
>
>
Voter focus on age, while an impediment to Obama during the Democratic primary, would be at least a draw during the general election; the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperienced is balanced by voters' hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president. In fact, fear of being portrayed as an aging Washington insider and Obama's surgical use of the term "half century of service" have forced McCain to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. Old is the word voters most commonly associate with McCain and pundits are beginning to draw allusions to Bob Dole. If Obama can stay ahead of McCain? on the age issue, the experience argument is likely to be less damaging. While voter’s may still elect the inexperienced (George W. Bush comes of mind) or the young (JFK, Bill Clinton), they have yet to put someone in the white house who is both.
 

Obama's Race

Changed:
<
<
In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Assuming he has to face the experience issue head on, race will make it harder for Obama to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
>
>
In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Just as race makes it easier for voters to believe Obama is inexperienced, it will make it harder for him to convince voters that he is ready to lead.

Additionally, voting on "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While most people who vote based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies in the first place, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the say one thing, vote the other way racists, these voters can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote. This is not to say that, without the cover of experience they would bite their tongue and vote for Obama, but that they now have an excuse to justify their otherwise discriminatory vote.

 
Deleted:
<
<
Additionally, voting on "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While most people who vote based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies in the first place, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the say one thing, vote the other way racists present in every election that pits a person of color against a white, these voters can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps lengthy experience and point to popular presidents who were his age (or younger) when elected. However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, he is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to shed the cloud of inexperience that follows his campaign.
>
>
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps lengthy experience and turn the age issue against McCain? . However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, Obama is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to cast off the shroud of inexperience.
 While he was able to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain? campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove too high a hurdle.


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 26 - 29 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
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Obama's Experience Problem

Changed:
<
<
-- By AdamCarlis - 26 Feb 2008
>
>
-- By AdamCarlis - 29 Feb 2008
 

Introduction

Changed:
<
<
Clinton's attacks on Obama have raised questions about his experience that will be amplified by McCain throughout the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be very difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern.
    • So what ... there are many factors in a presidential campaign, why is this issue important?
>
>
Clinton has raised questions about Obama's experience that will be amplified by McCain during the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern; potentially costing him crucial votes what will likely be a close race.
 

The Experience Argument

The Meaning of "Experience"

Changed:
<
<
In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced foil to their "ready on day one."
>
>
"Experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing. Therefore, it is a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's vague. Its ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and the speaker benefits. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced ying to their "ready on day one" yang.
 

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
No one brags about their inexperience on the campaign trail. It is not a characteristic sought by voters choosing the next president. In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. That reality is heightened during this campaign because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures the Bush administration as well as heightened security concerns drummed up since September 11, 2001. Now, more than any time in recent memory, being pegged as inexperienced will cost a candidate votes.
>
>
In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. Because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failure of the Bush administration, that reality is heightened during this campaign. Security concerns drummed up since September 11 and a crumbling economy only heighten the public's desire for an "experienced" candidate. Being seen otherwise will cost votes. Unfortunately for Obama, voters see both Clinton and McCain as more experienced.
 

Experience in the General Election

Changed:
<
<
The RNC has released their talking points for the general election. They plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander in chief. While these claims didn't slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? is better positioned to raise these issues given his lengthy time in Congress, well-known military service, and nine additional months to hammer away. * This doesn't mean that he will be more effective. What risks are their in raising inexperience for McCain that did not exist for Clinton?
>
>
While Clinton's attacks couldn't prevent Obama from claiming frontrunner status in the Democratic primary, McCain’s lengthy time in Congress, popular military service, and nine additional months to hammer away give him an advantage Clinton lacked. Unlike Clinton, whose own experience has been questioned (and Here and Here), McCain, with nearly 30 years of Congressional experience, is assumed to be ready for the job. Also, his "maverick" persona allows him to acquire experience without being portrayed as a Washington insider or party crony. Finally, as a white male, he fits the mold of every former president. As a result, portraying Obama as inexperienced will be easier for McCain that it was for Clinton.
 
Changed:
<
<
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick against a Democrat is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a relentlessly focus and disciplined attack. Just as they questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job.
    • This reads like a partisan attack and an unfounded assertion, rather than a logic-based argument.
>
>
Additionally, as Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a disciplined attack. Just as the Republicans questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Deleted:
<
<

Current Perceptions

Obama starts behind the eight ball. Clinton earned 94% of voters in Virginia's open Democratic primary who cited experience as their top issue. While currently the economy, health care, and the war on terrorism rank as the top political issues of the campaign, recent polls and the past two presidential elections indicate that the race may come down to a few votes in a single swing state. If that is the case, the public's perception of Obama's readiness cold be the difference in the election.

    • This feels out of place. I need a transistion between this paragraph in the next or simply to cut this thing out. At the very least, it needs to be said in fewer words.
 

Obama's Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
Obama's record is too thin for him to take the issue head on. While his resume is comparable to Lincoln's, when standing next to John McCain? , who was in a POW camp while Obama was in grade school, it might be hard for voters to see the comparison. The Obama campaign has, instead, tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters thus far have seemed to buy it.
    • This doesn't seem to be giving enough deference to the very real questions about Obama's experience. It is true he was able to slide past those questions by averting the question, but will that continue to work? What happens if he is forced to tackle the issue head on?
>
>
Obama's record is too thin for him to tackle the issue head on. Instead, his campaign has tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters, thus far, have given him the benefit of the doubt. However, if the long campaign prevents him from dodging the issue altogether, even his best defense (a comparison to Lincoln) acknowledges his inexperience and could cost him votes. Unlike during the Democratic primary, where real questions could be raised about Clinton's readiness, a head to head resume battle clearly favors McCain and could be Obama's undoing.
 

Obama's Age

Changed:
<
<
When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters are often willing to look beyond years, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they ran for the president. Nevertheless, McCain will have to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. In fact, the more the public is focused on age, the better for Obama; McCain would be the oldest person ever elected to the presidency.
>
>
When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters have looked beyond years in past elections, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they were elected. However, because of questions about his own age, McCain will have to deemphasize the issue as much as he emphasizes experience. Voter focus on age, while an impediment to Obama during the Democratic primary, will likely be at least a draw during the general election (the issue's ability to entrench the perception of Obama as inexperience is balanced by voters’ hesitancy to elect a 72 year old president).
 

Obama's Race

Changed:
<
<
In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not.
>
>
In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Assuming he has to face the experience issue head on, race will make it harder for Obama to convince voters that he is ready to lead.
 
Changed:
<
<
Additionally, voting on "experience" can provide cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While certainly most people who wouldn't vote for a black person wouldn't support the policies that Obama advocates, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. These voters will likely cling to the experience issue.
    • I have to depict these voters more convincingly. Now they sound like someone I made up to further my argument.
>
>
Additionally, voting on "experience" provides cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While most people who vote based on race wouldn't support Obama's policies in the first place, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. Whether they are the elderly white voters highlighted by the Times or the say one thing, vote the other way racists present in every election that pits a person of color against a white, these voters can use the experience issue to justify their discriminatory vote.
 
Deleted:
<
<
These voters will be the hardest to persuade. While Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment is more important than lengthy experience or point to popular presidents who were his age and younger when elected, on the race issue he, to borrow from Ghandi, is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, he will be waging an uphill battle to shed the cloud of inexperience that follows his campaign.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Moving into the general election, Obama, if he is the Democratic nominee, will have an uphill battle convincing the public that he is ready to govern. While tackling the issue head on enabled him to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove to be too much for Obama.
>
>
Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment trumps lengthy experience and point to popular presidents who were his age (or younger) when elected. However, on race, to borrow from Ghandi, he is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, Obama will be waging an uphill battle to shed the cloud of inexperience that follows his campaign.

While he was able to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain? campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove too high a hurdle.

 
    • I am worried that I am no longer saying anything interesting in this essay ...


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 25 - 27 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
Line: 15 to 15
 

Introduction

Changed:
<
<
Clinton's attacks on Obama have raised questions about his experience and, assuming he is the Democratic nominee, those concerns will be amplified by McCain throughout the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be very difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern.
>
>
Clinton's attacks on Obama have raised questions about his experience that will be amplified by McCain throughout the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be very difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern.
    • So what ... there are many factors in a presidential campaign, why is this issue important?
 

The Experience Argument

The Meaning of "Experience"

Changed:
<
<
In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity allows the candidates' message to be interpreted in concert with the voter's own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain? and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced foil to their "ready on day one."
>
>
In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity allows voters to interpret the candidates' message according to their own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced foil to their "ready on day one."
 

The Liability of Inexperience

Changed:
<
<
No one brags about their inexperience on the campaign trail. It is not a characteristic sought by voters choosing the next president. In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. That reality is heightened during this campaign because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures the Bush administration as well as voters heightened concerns about national security drummed up since September 11, 2001.
>
>
No one brags about their inexperience on the campaign trail. It is not a characteristic sought by voters choosing the next president. In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. That reality is heightened during this campaign because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures the Bush administration as well as heightened security concerns drummed up since September 11, 2001. Now, more than any time in recent memory, being pegged as inexperienced will cost a candidate votes.
 

Experience in the General Election

Changed:
<
<
The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. They plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander in chief. While these claims didn’t slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? is better positioned to raise these issues given his lengthy time in Congress, well-known military service, and nine additional months to hammer away.
>
>
The RNC has released their talking points for the general election. They plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander in chief. While these claims didn't slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? is better positioned to raise these issues given his lengthy time in Congress, well-known military service, and nine additional months to hammer away. * This doesn't mean that he will be more effective. What risks are their in raising inexperience for McCain that did not exist for Clinton?
 
Changed:
<
<
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes for them to make a charge stick against a Democrat is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a relentlessly focus and disciplined attack. Just as they questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama’s readiness for the job.
>
>
As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes to make a charge stick against a Democrat is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a relentlessly focus and disciplined attack. Just as they questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama's readiness for the job.
    • This reads like a partisan attack and an unfounded assertion, rather than a logic-based argument.
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

Current Perceptions

Changed:
<
<
Obama starts behind the eight ball. Clinton earned 94% of voters in Virginia's open Democratic primary who cited experience as their top issue. While currently the economy, health care, and the war on terrorism rank as the top political issues of the campaign, both the recent polls and the past two presidential elections indicate that the race may come down to a few votes in a single swing state. If that is the case, the public’s perception of Obama’s readiness cold be the difference in the election.
>
>
Obama starts behind the eight ball. Clinton earned 94% of voters in Virginia's open Democratic primary who cited experience as their top issue. While currently the economy, health care, and the war on terrorism rank as the top political issues of the campaign, recent polls and the past two presidential elections indicate that the race may come down to a few votes in a single swing state. If that is the case, the public's perception of Obama's readiness cold be the difference in the election.
    • This feels out of place. I need a transistion between this paragraph in the next or simply to cut this thing out. At the very least, it needs to be said in fewer words.
 

Obama's Inexperience

Obama's record is too thin for him to take the issue head on. While his resume is comparable to Lincoln's, when standing next to John McCain? , who was in a POW camp while Obama was in grade school, it might be hard for voters to see the comparison. The Obama campaign has, instead, tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters thus far have seemed to buy it.

Added:
>
>
    • This doesn't seem to be giving enough deference to the very real questions about Obama's experience. It is true he was able to slide past those questions by averting the question, but will that continue to work? What happens if he is forced to tackle the issue head on?
 

Obama's Age

Changed:
<
<
When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince folks you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters are often willing to look beyond years, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they ran for the president. Nevertheless, McCain will have to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. In fact, the more the public is focused on the candidates age, the better for Obama, given McCain would be the oldest person ever elected to the presidency.
>
>
When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince people you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters are often willing to look beyond years, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they ran for the president. Nevertheless, McCain will have to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. In fact, the more the public is focused on age, the better for Obama; McCain would be the oldest person ever elected to the presidency.
 

Obama's Race

In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not.

Additionally, voting on "experience" can provide cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While certainly most people who wouldn't vote for a black person wouldn't support the policies that Obama advocates, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. These voters will likely cling to the experience issue.

Added:
>
>
    • I have to depict these voters more convincingly. Now they sound like someone I made up to further my argument.
 These voters will be the hardest to persuade. While Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment is more important than lengthy experience or point to popular presidents who were his age and younger when elected, on the race issue he, to borrow from Ghandi, is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, he will be waging an uphill battle to shed the cloud of inexperience that follows his campaign.
Line: 59 to 65
 Moving into the general election, Obama, if he is the Democratic nominee, will have an uphill battle convincing the public that he is ready to govern. While tackling the issue head on enabled him to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove to be too much for Obama.
Added:
>
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    • I am worried that I am no longer saying anything interesting in this essay ...
 

- I think this might be moving in a better direction than your last paper. I think part of the danger with your topic is making it seem as if candidates are conspiring to put forth a racist argument. Obviously that's not only an inelegant summary of your point, but, well, not a summary of your point, since you make clear that you don't think any of this is (probably) some sort of evil master plan to play the race card. In any case, what I'm trying to say is that I think your paper rests on safer ground when it looks at what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear. Do other people agree?


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 24 - 26 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"


Paper 1 Redux - Starting again, seeking feedback (see diffs for background).
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A second outline has been added to the bottom, thinking of going that way instead. Comments encouraged.
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Comments encouraged.
 
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Raising Race

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Obama's Experience Problem

 
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-- By AdamCarlis - 18 Feb 2008
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-- By AdamCarlis - 26 Feb 2008
 
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Introduction

In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity means the candidates' message will be interpreted in concert with the voter’s own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain? and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. During this campaign, Clinton has harnessed the power of "experience," casting an air of uncertainty around Obama. If he, nonetheless, prevails in the primary, that uncertainty will carry over to the general election, be compounded by McCain, and threaten his electability.

Part 1: Speaking Broadly Lets Voters Assume the Best (and the Worst)

When Clinton speaks about experience, she speaks in generalities. Her campaign website glosses over the 15 years she spent at a major corporate law firm in a single sentence, giving it the same treatment as her one year, part-time stint on the board of President Carter’s Legal Services Corporation. The average voter not deeply immersed in the campaign would have difficulty objectively analyzing her experience.

>
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This is not an accident. Generalities allow Clinton to capitalize on voters' positive association with experience and, without details, voters can assume she has the right experience for the job. This is a particularly powerful tactic since Democratic voters associate George W. Bush with inexperience, blaming (among other things) his lack of preparation for the war in Iraq, crumbling economy, and mismanaged bureaucracy.
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Introduction

 
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Clinton's attacks on Obama have raised questions about his experience and, assuming he is the Democratic nominee, those concerns will be amplified by McCain throughout the general election. Given Obama's actual experience, age, and race, it will be very difficult for him to assuage voters' concerns about his readiness to govern.
 
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Part 2: Obama the Foil

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The Experience Argument

 
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Clinton’s argument distinguishes her from Obama. The tactic is working, earning Clinton 94% of voters citing experience as their top issue. Since questions about Obama’s experience seek to stick, he has all but conceded the experience torch to Clinton, contrasting her “ready on day one” with his “right on day one.”
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The Meaning of "Experience"

 
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Obviously, there may be legitimate concerns about a one-term Congressmen and former state senator assuming the presidency (don’t tell Lincoln), but, given the media’s treatment of the Edwards campaign, other factors seem to be contributing to this characterization. Despite their remarkably similar background (both were single term senators and lawyers) Clinton can claim that Obama has not done enough to be president, but couldn’t make similar charges stick against Edwards. Perhaps Edwards’s eight additional years on this planet granted him immunity from the experience argument. There is certainly something in Clintons “35 years of change” that implies more is better. Maybe, Edwards’s prior run for the presidency cemented him as a candidate in voters’ mind and maybe, had Edwards achieved frontrunner stature, the criticism might have stuck to him as well. It is also possible that the charge of inexperience sticks to Obama because of his race. In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Either way, as the primary season draws to a close, the electorate is left with lingering questions about Mr. Obama’s readiness to assume the presidency and, if he is the nominee, those doubts will carry into the general election.
>
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In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity allows the candidates' message to be interpreted in concert with the voter's own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain? and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. Unfortunately for Obama, the experience mantle is being carried by Clinton and McCain, leaving him as the inexperienced foil to their "ready on day one."
 
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The Liability of Inexperience

 
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Part 3: Experience, the General Election, and Race

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No one brags about their inexperience on the campaign trail. It is not a characteristic sought by voters choosing the next president. In any election cycle, being the inexperienced candidate is a handicap. That reality is heightened during this campaign because of the perceived inexperience and subsequent failures the Bush administration as well as voters heightened concerns about national security drummed up since September 11, 2001.
 
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Obama After the Primaries

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Experience in the General Election

 
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“Obamamania,” the media tells us, is beginning to wane. After months of questions about Obama’s experience, there is a growing sense that washing into the white house on a wave of exuberance is not how one should become president. While Obama has laid rightful claim to the mantle of hope, it appears that a general election campaign will require an equal part substance. Since Clinton’s campaign highlighted her experience, and, by contrast, his inexperience, this will be a challenge for Obama. The voter’s have made meaning of Clinton’s words and will move into the general election with a vision of Obama’s inexperience ingrained in their heads.
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The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. They plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander in chief. While these claims didn’t slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? is better positioned to raise these issues given his lengthy time in Congress, well-known military service, and nine additional months to hammer away.
 
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McCain's Capitalization on Experience

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As Karl Rove has shown, all it takes for them to make a charge stick against a Democrat is a little bit of truth, a willingness to obscure the issue, and a relentlessly focus and disciplined attack. Just as they questioned Max Cleland's patriotism, convinced the American public that there was a pre-war link between Al Qaeda and Iraq, and turned John Kerry into a waffling opportunist, they will exploit the public perception of Obama’s readiness for the job.
 
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The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. The Republicans plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander and chief. While these claims didn’t slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? has more “experience” than Clinton and, after another nine months of raising the issue, it is possible that enough traction will be generated to make a dent in Obama’s popularity.
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Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

 
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Racism Will Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

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Current Perceptions

 
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The best politicians are able to reshape voters’ reality. Karl Rove convinced half the American people that there was a pre-war connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Saxby Chambliss convinced voters that Max Cleland, a triple amputee and decorated veteran was unpatriotic. All the skilled politician needs is a willing public, a little bit of truth, and a readiness to put political goals above common decency.
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Obama starts behind the eight ball. Clinton earned 94% of voters in Virginia's open Democratic primary who cited experience as their top issue. While currently the economy, health care, and the war on terrorism rank as the top political issues of the campaign, both the recent polls and the past two presidential elections indicate that the race may come down to a few votes in a single swing state. If that is the case, the public’s perception of Obama’s readiness cold be the difference in the election.
 
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The American people’s resistance to the war was eroded by misinformation, a crackdown on dissent, and honest fear generated by the attack on the world trade center. Those same factors …
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Obama's Inexperience

 
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To fight back …
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Obama's record is too thin for him to take the issue head on. While his resume is comparable to Lincoln's, when standing next to John McCain? , who was in a POW camp while Obama was in grade school, it might be hard for voters to see the comparison. The Obama campaign has, instead, tried to shift the argument from "experience" to "judgment." While perhaps "masquing treason," the voters thus far have seemed to buy it.
 
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Harder for Obama because an “inexperienced black man” being ready for the presidency is tough to swallow …
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Obama's Age

 
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Conclusion

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When the generation that votes in this country was at Woodstock, Obama was eight years old. It is hard to convince folks you are ready to lead when you are younger than their little brother. While voters are often willing to look beyond years, both John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton had longer resumes than Obama when they ran for the president. Nevertheless, McCain will have to deemphasize age as much as he emphasizes experience. In fact, the more the public is focused on the candidates age, the better for Obama, given McCain would be the oldest person ever elected to the presidency.
 
Changed:
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<

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Obama's Race

 
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Obama's Experience Problem

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In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not.
 
Changed:
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Topic: Clinton's attacks on Obama have somewhat succeeded in raising questions about his experience. Those concerns will be amplified by McCain during the general election and, given Obama's race, particularly difficult to overcome.
>
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Additionally, voting on "experience" can provide cover for people unwilling to vote for a black man. While certainly most people who wouldn't vote for a black person wouldn't support the policies that Obama advocates, there are some Democrats and Independents searching for a socially acceptable reason to justify their anti-Obama vote. These voters will likely cling to the experience issue.
 
Changed:
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Origin of the Problem

  • Clinton used “experience” to depict both her and Obama
  • Questions of readiness stuck to Obama
  • People predisposed to think inexperience is bad
    • Plane meaning of the word
    • Bush
>
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These voters will be the hardest to persuade. While Obama can plausibly argue that good judgment is more important than lengthy experience or point to popular presidents who were his age and younger when elected, on the race issue he, to borrow from Ghandi, is the change he wants to see in the world. As a result, it will be next to impossible to convince some voters that he is ready and capable until he does it and does it well. Until then, he will be waging an uphill battle to shed the cloud of inexperience that follows his campaign.
 
Changed:
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Experience in the General Election

  • McCain? will pick up where Hillary left off
    • More Experienced
    • Older
    • Veteran
    • More Time to Hammer
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Conclusion

 
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Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

  • Obama’s Inexperience
    • Lincoln
      • 2 potential considerations:
        • Obama and Lincoln had v. similar political experience. But what about other kinds of experience? I know very little about Lincoln's biography, other than that he, too, was a lawyer. But did he have any kind of "experience" that Obama didn't?
        • What about the fact that Lincoln and Obama come from very different times? Is experience more important now than then? Is a different kind of experience now than then? - Amanda
    • Voters are willing to look past inexperience (Bush)
      • But isn't part of the problem that people felt burned by Bush, and are now looking for someone with a little more experience (or intelligence, or something)? -Amanda
  • Obama’s Age
    • Voters are willing to look past youth (Kennedy, Clinton)
    • With McCain? as a too-old foil, youth might be an asset
  • Obama’s Race
    • Harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man – difficult to dig out of the hole.
>
>
Moving into the general election, Obama, if he is the Democratic nominee, will have an uphill battle convincing the public that he is ready to govern. While tackling the issue head on enabled him to stay afloat during the primary season, given the shifting demographics in the general election and the strengths of the McCain campaign, overcoming the experience question may prove to be too much for Obama.
 
Changed:
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Conclusion

>
>

 - I think this might be moving in a better direction than your last paper. I think part of the danger with your topic is making it seem as if candidates are conspiring to put forth a racist argument. Obviously that's not only an inelegant summary of your point, but, well, not a summary of your point, since you make clear that you don't think any of this is (probably) some sort of evil master plan to play the race card. In any case, what I'm trying to say is that I think your paper rests on safer ground when it looks at what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear. Do other people agree?

Also, interesting sidenote: Clinton's "ready on day one" spiel? Allegedly stolen from McCain? 's website. -Amanda

Added:
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  • I really appreciate it, Amanda ... what do you think of the new draft? -- AdamCarlis 26 Feb 2008
 

# * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, AdamCarlis \ No newline at end of file


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 23 - 26 Feb 2008 - Main.JulianBaez
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Racism Will Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

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The best politicians are able to reshape voters’ reality. Carl Rove convinced half the American people that there was a pre-war connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Saxby Chambliss convinced voters that Max Cleland, a triple amputee and decorated veteran was unpatriotic. All the skilled politician needs is a willing public, a little bit of truth, and a readiness to put political goals above common decency.
>
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The best politicians are able to reshape voters’ reality. Karl Rove convinced half the American people that there was a pre-war connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Saxby Chambliss convinced voters that Max Cleland, a triple amputee and decorated veteran was unpatriotic. All the skilled politician needs is a willing public, a little bit of truth, and a readiness to put political goals above common decency.
 The American people’s resistance to the war was eroded by misinformation, a crackdown on dissent, and honest fear generated by the attack on the world trade center. Those same factors …


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 22 - 25 Feb 2008 - Main.AmandaHungerford
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
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 The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. The Republicans plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander and chief. While these claims didn’t slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? has more “experience” than Clinton and, after another nine months of raising the issue, it is possible that enough traction will be generated to make a dent in Obama’s popularity.
Changed:
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Racism Wil Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

>
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Racism Will Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

 The best politicians are able to reshape voters’ reality. Carl Rove convinced half the American people that there was a pre-war connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Saxby Chambliss convinced voters that Max Cleland, a triple amputee and decorated veteran was unpatriotic. All the skilled politician needs is a willing public, a little bit of truth, and a readiness to put political goals above common decency.
Line: 74 to 74
 

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

  • Obama’s Inexperience
    • Lincoln
Added:
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      • 2 potential considerations:
        • Obama and Lincoln had v. similar political experience. But what about other kinds of experience? I know very little about Lincoln's biography, other than that he, too, was a lawyer. But did he have any kind of "experience" that Obama didn't?
        • What about the fact that Lincoln and Obama come from very different times? Is experience more important now than then? Is a different kind of experience now than then? - Amanda
 
    • Voters are willing to look past inexperience (Bush)
Added:
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      • But isn't part of the problem that people felt burned by Bush, and are now looking for someone with a little more experience (or intelligence, or something)? -Amanda
 
  • Obama’s Age
    • Voters are willing to look past youth (Kennedy, Clinton)
    • With McCain? as a too-old foil, youth might be an asset
Line: 83 to 87
 

Conclusion

Added:
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- I think this might be moving in a better direction than your last paper. I think part of the danger with your topic is making it seem as if candidates are conspiring to put forth a racist argument. Obviously that's not only an inelegant summary of your point, but, well, not a summary of your point, since you make clear that you don't think any of this is (probably) some sort of evil master plan to play the race card. In any case, what I'm trying to say is that I think your paper rests on safer ground when it looks at what the voters are hearing, not what the candidates are trying to make the voters hear. Do other people agree?
 
Added:
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Also, interesting sidenote: Clinton's "ready on day one" spiel? Allegedly stolen from McCain? 's website. -Amanda
 

# * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, AdamCarlis \ No newline at end of file


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 21 - 25 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"


Paper 1 Redux - Starting again, seeking feedback (see diffs for background).
Added:
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A second outline has been added to the bottom, thinking of going that way instead. Comments encouraged.
 

Raising Race

Line: 49 to 51
 

Conclusion

Added:
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Obama's Experience Problem

Topic: Clinton's attacks on Obama have somewhat succeeded in raising questions about his experience. Those concerns will be amplified by McCain during the general election and, given Obama's race, particularly difficult to overcome.

Origin of the Problem

  • Clinton used “experience” to depict both her and Obama
  • Questions of readiness stuck to Obama
  • People predisposed to think inexperience is bad
    • Plane meaning of the word
    • Bush

Experience in the General Election

  • McCain? will pick up where Hillary left off
    • More Experienced
    • Older
    • Veteran
    • More Time to Hammer

Barriers to Overcoming the Criticism

  • Obama’s Inexperience
    • Lincoln
    • Voters are willing to look past inexperience (Bush)
  • Obama’s Age
    • Voters are willing to look past youth (Kennedy, Clinton)
    • With McCain? as a too-old foil, youth might be an asset
  • Obama’s Race
    • Harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man – difficult to dig out of the hole.

Conclusion

 



AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 20 - 25 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"
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Introduction

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In a presidential campaign, "experience" could mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing; making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word’s ambiguity prompts voters to interpret the candidates’ messages in a way most in concert with their own worldview. Mr. Obama uses the term “quarter century of experience” to denigrate old man McCain? and some American’s picture an aging Washington insider. Mrs. Clinton raises her own “experience” as a foil to newcomer Mr. Obama and many of those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for oval office. In each case, the audience is left to define the word for themselves and, in each case, it is the speaker who benefits. During this campaign cycle, Mrs. Clinton has repeatedly attempted to harness the word’s power. As potential voters digest her message, they do so in uncontrolled and potentially destructive ways, particularly if Mr. Obama is the eventual nominee.
>
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In politics, "experience" can mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing, making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word's ambiguity means the candidates' message will be interpreted in concert with the voter’s own worldview. Obama uses the term "quarter century of experience" to denigrate old man McCain? and Americans picture an aging Washington insider. Clinton raises her own "experience" as a foil to newcomer Obama and those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for the oval office. Voters are allowed to define the word and they do so to the benefit of the speaker. During this campaign, Clinton has harnessed the power of "experience," casting an air of uncertainty around Obama. If he, nonetheless, prevails in the primary, that uncertainty will carry over to the general election, be compounded by McCain, and threaten his electability.
 
Changed:
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Part 1: By speaking broadly about her experience, voters can attach their own meaning to the word.

>
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Part 1: Speaking Broadly Lets Voters Assume the Best (and the Worst)

 
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When Clinton speaks about experience, she speaks in generalities. Her campaign does not provide a biographical sketch detailing her activities and accomplishments. Her campaign website glosses over the 15 years she spent at a major corporate law firm in a single sentence, giving it the same treatment as her one year part-time stint on the board of President Carter’s Legal Services Corporation. As a result, it is difficult to objectively analyze her experience.
>
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When Clinton speaks about experience, she speaks in generalities. Her campaign website glosses over the 15 years she spent at a major corporate law firm in a single sentence, giving it the same treatment as her one year, part-time stint on the board of President Carter’s Legal Services Corporation. The average voter not deeply immersed in the campaign would have difficulty objectively analyzing her experience.

This is not an accident. Generalities allow Clinton to capitalize on voters' positive association with experience and, without details, voters can assume she has the right experience for the job. This is a particularly powerful tactic since Democratic voters associate George W. Bush with inexperience, blaming (among other things) his lack of preparation for the war in Iraq, crumbling economy, and mismanaged bureaucracy.

 
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This is not an accident. Clinton presents her experience in generalities because everyone values “experience,” but some may not think that her particular experience prepares her for the presidency. Instead, voters are invited to broadly associate her campaign with the word “experience” and fill in the gaps themselves. This is particularly powerful because Democratic voters associate George W. Bush with inexperience, blaming his lack of preparation for the current war in Iraq, the crumbling economy, and mismanagement of the bureaucracy. Without details, we can all assume that she has the right experience for the job.
 

Part 2: Obama the Foil

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Clinton’s argument distinguishes her from Obama. As a result, she masks her own legislative shortcomings by raising his. The tactic is working. Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, 94% of those voters citing experience as their top issue voted for her.
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Clinton’s argument distinguishes her from Obama. The tactic is working, earning Clinton 94% of voters citing experience as their top issue. Since questions about Obama’s experience seek to stick, he has all but conceded the experience torch to Clinton, contrasting her “ready on day one” with his “right on day one.”

Obviously, there may be legitimate concerns about a one-term Congressmen and former state senator assuming the presidency (don’t tell Lincoln), but, given the media’s treatment of the Edwards campaign, other factors seem to be contributing to this characterization. Despite their remarkably similar background (both were single term senators and lawyers) Clinton can claim that Obama has not done enough to be president, but couldn’t make similar charges stick against Edwards. Perhaps Edwards’s eight additional years on this planet granted him immunity from the experience argument. There is certainly something in Clintons “35 years of change” that implies more is better. Maybe, Edwards’s prior run for the presidency cemented him as a candidate in voters’ mind and maybe, had Edwards achieved frontrunner stature, the criticism might have stuck to him as well. It is also possible that the charge of inexperience sticks to Obama because of his race. In a nation with embarrassingly few African Americans in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but, experienced, likely not. Either way, as the primary season draws to a close, the electorate is left with lingering questions about Mr. Obama’s readiness to assume the presidency and, if he is the nominee, those doubts will carry into the general election.

 
Deleted:
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Despite their remarkably similar background, the commentators who question Obama’s experience rarely questioned that of John Edwards. Both candidates were lawyers in the public interest and single term senators. Yet Clinton could claim that Obama has not done enough to be president, but couldn’t make similar charges stick against Mr. Edwards. Perhaps Edwards’s 8 additional years on this planet grant him immunity from the experience argument. There is certainly something in Clintons “35 years of change” argument that implies more is better and Edwards has eight more years than Obama. It is also possible that, had Edwards achieved frontrunner statute, the criticism might have stuck to him as well. It is also possible that the charge of inexperience stuck to Obama because of his race. In a national with embarrassingly few black leaders in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but experienced likely not. Either way, as the primary season draws to a close, the electorate is left with lingering questions about Mr. Obama’s readiness to assume the presidency and, if he is the nominee, those doubts will carry into the general election.
 

Part 3: Experience, the General Election, and Race

Changed:
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The State of Obama After the Primaries

>
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Obama After the Primaries

 
Changed:
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“Obamamania,” the media tells us, is beginning to wane. After months of questions about Obama’s experience, the voters, apparently, are beginning to demand more substance. Ignoring the fact that his stump speech includes more specific policy talking points than his rivals, there is a growing sense that washing into the white house on a wave of exuberance is not how one should become president. While Obama has laid rightful claim to the mantle of hope, it appears that a general election campaign woulr require an equal part substance.
>
>
“Obamamania,” the media tells us, is beginning to wane. After months of questions about Obama’s experience, there is a growing sense that washing into the white house on a wave of exuberance is not how one should become president. While Obama has laid rightful claim to the mantle of hope, it appears that a general election campaign will require an equal part substance. Since Clinton’s campaign highlighted her experience, and, by contrast, his inexperience, this will be a challenge for Obama. The voter’s have made meaning of Clinton’s words and will move into the general election with a vision of Obama’s inexperience ingrained in their heads.
 

McCain's Capitalization on Experience

Changed:
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The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. The Republicans plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander and chief.

    • Conservative elements in this country will not vote for a black man. By carrying the "experience" argument into the election, McCain can can raise the race issue without having to do so explicitly
>
>
The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. The Republicans plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander and chief. While these claims didn’t slow Obama down in the primary, McCain? has more “experience” than Clinton and, after another nine months of raising the issue, it is possible that enough traction will be generated to make a dent in Obama’s popularity.
 

Racism Wil Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

Changed:
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In order to win, the electorate will have to believe that Obama is ready to lead. … I want to say that people will less likely to believe he can lead because he is black and they are reminded of that/riled up about that every time the experience issue is raised … I just can’t figure out how to say it convincingly … Argh!
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The best politicians are able to reshape voters’ reality. Carl Rove convinced half the American people that there was a pre-war connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Saxby Chambliss convinced voters that Max Cleland, a triple amputee and decorated veteran was unpatriotic. All the skilled politician needs is a willing public, a little bit of truth, and a readiness to put political goals above common decency.

The American people’s resistance to the war was eroded by misinformation, a crackdown on dissent, and honest fear generated by the attack on the world trade center. Those same factors …

 
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To fight back …
 
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  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama's inexperience can be likened to calling him a "boy" and the underpinnings of racism will make it harder for him to defeat the argument
>
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Harder for Obama because an “inexperienced black man” being ready for the presidency is tough to swallow …
 

Conclusion


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 This is not an accident. Clinton presents her experience in generalities because everyone values “experience,” but some may not think that her particular experience prepares her for the presidency. Instead, voters are invited to broadly associate her campaign with the word “experience” and fill in the gaps themselves. This is particularly powerful because Democratic voters associate George W. Bush with inexperience, blaming his lack of preparation for the current war in Iraq, the crumbling economy, and mismanagement of the bureaucracy. Without details, we can all assume that she has the right experience for the job.
Changed:
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Part 2: Obama the Foil: If she is Experienced, He is Not

>
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Part 2: Obama the Foil

 
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  • He is young and new to politics so the mantle sticks
  • Masks her own legislative shortcomings by raising his
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Clinton’s argument distinguishes her from Obama. As a result, she masks her own legislative shortcomings by raising his. The tactic is working. Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, 94% of those voters citing experience as their top issue voted for her.
 
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Despite their remarkably similar background, the commentators who question Obama’s experience rarely questioned that of John Edwards. Both candidates were lawyers in the public interest and single term senators. Yet Clinton could claim that Obama has not done enough to be president, but couldn’t make similar charges stick against Mr. Edwards. Perhaps Edwards’s 8 additional years on this planet grant him immunity from the experience argument. There is certainly something in Clintons “35 years of change” argument that implies more is better and Edwards has eight more years than Obama. It is also possible that, had Edwards achieved frontrunner statute, the criticism might have stuck to him as well. It is also possible that the charge of inexperience stuck to Obama because of his race. In a national with embarrassingly few black leaders in government and backlash against affirmative action engrained into the psyche of white America, it is harder to picture an experienced black man than an experienced white man. Passionate, energetic, intelligent, and well-spoken, maybe, but experienced likely not. Either way, as the primary season draws to a close, the electorate is left with lingering questions about Mr. Obama’s readiness to assume the presidency and, if he is the nominee, those doubts will carry into the general election.
 

Part 3: Experience, the General Election, and Race

The State of Obama After the Primaries

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McCain? 's Capitalization on Experience

>
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“Obamamania,” the media tells us, is beginning to wane. After months of questions about Obama’s experience, the voters, apparently, are beginning to demand more substance. Ignoring the fact that his stump speech includes more specific policy talking points than his rivals, there is a growing sense that washing into the white house on a wave of exuberance is not how one should become president. While Obama has laid rightful claim to the mantle of hope, it appears that a general election campaign woulr require an equal part substance.

McCain's Capitalization on Experience

The RNC recently released talking points for the general election. The Republicans plan to pick up where Clinton left off, hammering Obama on experience and questioning his readiness to serve as commander and chief.

 
Deleted:
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  • Republican's have taken up the "experience" mantle in encouraging McCain? 's attacks on Obama.
 
    • Conservative elements in this country will not vote for a black man. By carrying the "experience" argument into the election, McCain can can raise the race issue without having to do so explicitly

Racism Wil Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

Changed:
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  • Few questioned John Edwards experience even though it is less than (or at least comparable to) Obama's.
    • In the 3-way race for Iowa, the experience tag stuck to Hillary and people questions whether Barack was ready. Edwards's experience was rarely questioned.
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In order to win, the electorate will have to believe that Obama is ready to lead. … I want to say that people will less likely to believe he can lead because he is black and they are reminded of that/riled up about that every time the experience issue is raised … I just can’t figure out how to say it convincingly … Argh!

 
  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama's inexperience can be likened to calling him a "boy" and the underpinnings of racism will make it harder for him to defeat the argument

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 18 - 23 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Paper 1 Redux – Starting again (see diffs for background, seeking feedback).
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Paper 1 Redux - Starting again, seeking feedback (see diffs for background).
 

Raising Race

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Introduction

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In a presidential campaign, “experience” could mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing; making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it’s versatile. The word’s ambiguity prompts voters to interpret the candidates’ messages in a way most in concert with their own worldview. Mr. Obama uses the term “quarter century of experience” to denigrate old man McCain? and some American’s picture an aging Washington insider. Mrs. Clinton raises her own “experience” as a foil to newcomer Mr. Obama and many of those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for oval office. In each case, the audience is left to define the word for themselves and, in each case, it is the speaker who benefits. During this campaign cycle, Mrs. Clinton has repeatedly attempted to harness the word’s power. As potential voters digest her message, they do so in uncontrolled and potentially destructive ways, particularly if Mr. Obama is the eventual nominee.
>
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In a presidential campaign, "experience" could mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing; making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it's versatile. The word’s ambiguity prompts voters to interpret the candidates’ messages in a way most in concert with their own worldview. Mr. Obama uses the term “quarter century of experience” to denigrate old man McCain? and some American’s picture an aging Washington insider. Mrs. Clinton raises her own “experience” as a foil to newcomer Mr. Obama and many of those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for oval office. In each case, the audience is left to define the word for themselves and, in each case, it is the speaker who benefits. During this campaign cycle, Mrs. Clinton has repeatedly attempted to harness the word’s power. As potential voters digest her message, they do so in uncontrolled and potentially destructive ways, particularly if Mr. Obama is the eventual nominee.
 

Part 1: By speaking broadly about her experience, voters can attach their own meaning to the word.

Changed:
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  • She purposefully uses platitudes because everyone likes “experience” but some might not like her experience
    • Intuitively, it sounds good to have someone in control who has some experience
    • Voters associate Bush with inexperience and that inexperience with severe costs to the country
    • Without details, we can all assume that she has the right experience for the job
  • Other authors have pointed out that her experience leaves much to be desired, forcing her, instead of speaking in specifics, to speak broadly.
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When Clinton speaks about experience, she speaks in generalities. Her campaign does not provide a biographical sketch detailing her activities and accomplishments. Her campaign website glosses over the 15 years she spent at a major corporate law firm in a single sentence, giving it the same treatment as her one year part-time stint on the board of President Carter’s Legal Services Corporation. As a result, it is difficult to objectively analyze her experience.

This is not an accident. Clinton presents her experience in generalities because everyone values “experience,” but some may not think that her particular experience prepares her for the presidency. Instead, voters are invited to broadly associate her campaign with the word “experience” and fill in the gaps themselves. This is particularly powerful because Democratic voters associate George W. Bush with inexperience, blaming his lack of preparation for the current war in Iraq, the crumbling economy, and mismanagement of the bureaucracy. Without details, we can all assume that she has the right experience for the job.

 

Part 2: Obama the Foil: If she is Experienced, He is Not

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  • Masks her own legislative shortcomings by raising his
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Part 3: Race has been explicitly raised by her campaign, opening up the door for connections between her other appeals and a racial appeal. The experience claim sticks because Obama is Black.

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Part 3: Experience, the General Election, and Race

 
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  • Few questioned John Edwards experience even though it is less than (or at least comparable to) Obama’s.
    • In the 3-way race for Iowa, the experience tag stuck to Hillary and people questions whether Barack was ready. Edwards's experience was rarely questioned.
  • Her supporters are predisposed to hearing such arguments (white, poorly educated)
  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama’s inexperience can be likened to calling him a “boy”.
>
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The State of Obama After the Primaries

 
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McCain? 's Capitalization on Experience

 
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Part 4: While raising race likely won't substantially help Mrs. Clinton's campaign, it will make it easier for republicans if Obama is the nominee

  • True racists wouldn't support her
  • She has already lost the black vote
  • Only benefit may be the comfort level increase from white voters that she gets anyway when showing her face
 
  • Republican's have taken up the "experience" mantle in encouraging McCain? 's attacks on Obama.
    • Conservative elements in this country will not vote for a black man. By carrying the "experience" argument into the election, McCain can can raise the race issue without having to do so explicitly

Added:
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Racism Wil Hurt Obama's Ability to Fight Back Effectively

  • Few questioned John Edwards experience even though it is less than (or at least comparable to) Obama's.
    • In the 3-way race for Iowa, the experience tag stuck to Hillary and people questions whether Barack was ready. Edwards's experience was rarely questioned.
  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama's inexperience can be likened to calling him a "boy" and the underpinnings of racism will make it harder for him to defeat the argument
 

Conclusion


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 17 - 23 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Raising Race

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Purpose Statement

Topic Sentence: When Hillary says “experience,” some people hear race

 -- By AdamCarlis - 18 Feb 2008

Introduction

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Part 1: By speaking broadly about her experience, people are left wondering what it means

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In a presidential campaign, “experience” could mean any number of things and so it means precisely nothing; making it a winning word for politicians crafting a message the masses can support. It works because it’s versatile. The word’s ambiguity prompts voters to interpret the candidates’ messages in a way most in concert with their own worldview. Mr. Obama uses the term “quarter century of experience” to denigrate old man McCain? and some American’s picture an aging Washington insider. Mrs. Clinton raises her own “experience” as a foil to newcomer Mr. Obama and many of those same Americans picture a young man not quite ready for oval office. In each case, the audience is left to define the word for themselves and, in each case, it is the speaker who benefits. During this campaign cycle, Mrs. Clinton has repeatedly attempted to harness the word’s power. As potential voters digest her message, they do so in uncontrolled and potentially destructive ways, particularly if Mr. Obama is the eventual nominee.

Part 1: By speaking broadly about her experience, voters can attach their own meaning to the word.

 
  • She purposefully uses platitudes because everyone likes “experience” but some might not like her experience
Added:
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    • Intuitively, it sounds good to have someone in control who has some experience
 
    • Voters associate Bush with inexperience and that inexperience with severe costs to the country
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  • Other authors have pointed out the her experience leaves much to be desired, forcing her, instead of speaking in specifics, to speak broadly.
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    • Without details, we can all assume that she has the right experience for the job
  • Other authors have pointed out that her experience leaves much to be desired, forcing her, instead of speaking in specifics, to speak broadly.

Part 2: Obama the Foil: If she is Experienced, He is Not

 
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  • He is young and new to politics so the mantle sticks
  • Masks her own legislative shortcomings by raising his
 
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Part 2: Race has been explicitly raised by her campaign, opening up the door for connections between her other appeals and a racial appeal

 
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Part 3: Race has been explicitly raised by her campaign, opening up the door for connections between her other appeals and a racial appeal. The experience claim sticks because Obama is Black.

  • Few questioned John Edwards experience even though it is less than (or at least comparable to) Obama’s.
    • In the 3-way race for Iowa, the experience tag stuck to Hillary and people questions whether Barack was ready. Edwards's experience was rarely questioned.
 
  • Her supporters are predisposed to hearing such arguments (white, poorly educated)
  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama’s inexperience can be likened to calling him a “boy”.
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Part 3: This has little effect on her actual campaign

  • True racists wouldn’t support her
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Part 4: While raising race likely won't substantially help Mrs. Clinton's campaign, it will make it easier for republicans if Obama is the nominee

  • True racists wouldn't support her
 
  • She has already lost the black vote
  • Only benefit may be the comfort level increase from white voters that she gets anyway when showing her face
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Part 4: Because it is no harm/no foul, she doesn’t have to do much about it now, but may need to do damage control in the black and anti-racist white community should she win the primary

>
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  • Republican's have taken up the "experience" mantle in encouraging McCain? 's attacks on Obama.
    • Conservative elements in this country will not vote for a black man. By carrying the "experience" argument into the election, McCain can can raise the race issue without having to do so explicitly
 

Conclusion


AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 16 - 18 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Paper 1 Redux – Starting again (see diffs for background, seeking feedback).
 

Raising Race

Purpose Statement

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In this paper I examine the "experience" argument used by Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign, revealing its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that she prefers to run on "experience." My purpose is descriptive. I leave the question of intent to classmates and colleagues.
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Topic Sentence: When Hillary says “experience,” some people hear race
 
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-- By AdamCarlis - 14 Feb 2008
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-- By AdamCarlis - 18 Feb 2008
 

Introduction

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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous "change" slogan ("Working for Change; Working for You"), Hillary's "experience" argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says "experience" she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
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Part 1: By speaking broadly about her experience, people are left wondering what it means

  • She purposefully uses platitudes because everyone likes “experience” but some might not like her experience
    • Voters associate Bush with inexperience and that inexperience with severe costs to the country
  • Other authors have pointed out the her experience leaves much to be desired, forcing her, instead of speaking in specifics, to speak broadly.
 
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Hillary's Experience

 
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As many writers have shown, (and here), Hillary's experience buckles under scrutiny. Her "35 years of change" include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson's Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
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Part 2: Race has been explicitly raised by her campaign, opening up the door for connections between her other appeals and a racial appeal

 
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  • This argument assumes that the only relevant experience is executive experience. If the assumption is questionable when directed against Obama, it is equally questionable when directed against Clinton. The President is not the Quartermaster General or the COO of General Electric. Most of the CEOs of publicly-traded companies I deal with spend far more time in advocacy--trying to persuade securities analysts to like their management and key customers to like their products and services--than they spend administering complex operations. The President is many things, which makes the job very difficult. Being the actual chief executive of the US Government, however, is rarely one of them. Determining what makes good experience for being President is non-trivial, but executive experience and capacity--which distinguished Hoover and Eisenhower above all other occupants of the office--might well not be the best place to start.
>
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  • Her supporters are predisposed to hearing such arguments (white, poorly educated)
  • The media continues to play up the race issue to a point where it is near central to the campaign.
  • Highlighting Obama’s inexperience can be likened to calling him a “boy”.
 
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Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such familiarity will make her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves her swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
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  • Two fallacies are joined here. If "being President" were a muscular skill like hitting major-league pitching, we wouldn't need a 10,493-game season before the World Series. Knowing how other Presidents have "been President" is the best training for the job we know about, which is why incumbents tend to spend much of their free time reading histories of other Presidencies and biographies of other Presidents. A. Lincoln--an exceptional intellect, no doubt--learned much military strategy in the first year of the rebellion from reading the military science collection of the Library of Congress, not in order to fight the war himself, but to meet what seemed to him the responsibility of the civilian commander in chief to choose and allocate his generals. Which brings us to your second fallacy, which is judging a general in the field by the result of the battle. If her task was to listen to all parties and produce good legislation, she didn't fail at all--those who judge her by the failure are not criticising the quality of her legislation. The very argument you advance above, that she was the President's Wife and not the President, means that the blame for the failure which did occur, the failure to pass the legislation that came from the Task Force, should be laid to her husband, whose job it was to get the plan through Congress.
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Part 3: This has little effect on her actual campaign

 
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Since leaving her husband's shadow, Hillary's time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Since being present cannot count as experience, absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary's time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency. Therefore, when Hillary speaks of experience, she is not inviting an analysis of her record. What, then, does Mrs. Clinton mean by experience? While it may just be empty rhetoric, it is, at least, rhetoric that has won her votes. Therefore, there is likely something more than style behind her words.
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  • True racists wouldn’t support her
  • She has already lost the black vote
  • Only benefit may be the comfort level increase from white voters that she gets anyway when showing her face
 
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  • This is a poor argument. There are many kinds of Senators in the complex little structure that is the 100-person Senate. There are foreign relations Senators, such as Mike Mansfield and John Kerry. There are the military-budget specialists, like John Warner and Carl Levin. There are "workhorse" legislators who are adept at really getting legislation through the body, like Edward Kennedy and Orrin Hatch, or like Lyndon Johnson, who was the best of them all. There are partisan cheerleaders, like Trent Lott and Dick Durbin. And there are specialists in working the system from the 30,000-foot down to top-of-trees level to get money and freedom-to-operate for the large municipalities, non-profits, and businesses that are the key engines in their home states. Some of these are appropriators like Ted Stevens, but the best are multi-specialized policy generalists with a good grasp of how policy details affect the whole socio-economic ecology of the sub-societies they represent, like Ted Domenici and Pat Moynihan. Big states like New York, California and Texas need these Senators intensely. New York is fortunate to have two at the moment. Texas has one in Kay Bailey Hutcheson. California has one and a half, because Senator Boxer--though an imbecile--has an exceedingly competent staff. You could debate of course whether having an exhaustive grip on policy in twenty different areas is a good acquisition for the US President. But to deny that Senator Clinton's career in that body proves she has one is to ignore the obvious.

The Age Issue

Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The candidates' generation gap is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her experience, Mrs. Clinton says to older voters that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.

This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party's pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton's reliance on her husband's success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous of her to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama's youth without forcing comparisons to two of history's most popular Democrats.

  • The Clinton campaign hasn't said Obama's too young--they've said he hasn't done enough yet to be President, which may or may not be true but is different. Your thesis requires you to show in the end that this argument (that he has trained himself to write and speak well, served a brief while in a state legislature without much effect, and has been running for President since the moment he arrived in Washington) is subtly racist. It's a poor argument (minus two years in the House of Representatives followed by a decisive electoral loss for opposing a popular war, Obama's is more-or-less the pre-Presidential resume of A. Lincoln himself), so you shouldn't need to stuff straw men in order to deal with it. But because you've claimed it's a racist argument, you need to find "boy" somewhere, and you are skirting the edge of inventing your evidence.

The Race Issue

If the age argument couldn't defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? Perhaps Mr. Obama's race gives the issue its teeth. Historically, white supremacy has used "son" and "boy" to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can't directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as "kid"), she can conjure that image in the minds of those who hear her "experience" argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don't recognize until it invades our subconscious. By uniting the issue of age with our history of racial subjugation, it becomes more powerful than the same force wielded against a white candidate.

  • This, in my view, is entirely unconvincing. There are many audiences a white Democratic politician with strong support in the black community can be addressing by sending a message that the other candidate is young and has been a drug user, including older, church-going socially engaged African-Americans. The Clintons have forgotten more about campaigning in the black community than you and I are likely ever to know, and they know now even better than when Bill used Sister Souljah as a fulcrum for leveraging his image in 1992, trusting that he could send his messages by criticizing a prominent African-American without alienating the community as a whole. And White Supremacy is never going to vote for Hillary Clinton, so she's no purpose whatever in appealing to anyone who positively receives messages addressed there. You needed to show, in order to make out your claim, not that this and the following passage contain messages that were sent, but that your reading is each case the intended reading, and not a possible reading adopted for the purpose of supporting an ad hominem of your own. That burden isn't being carried.

This is only one of Mrs. Clinton's many injections of race into the campaign. As a top campaign advisor spoke about Obama's past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as "the black candidate" in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama's campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary, after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers, confirmed her pollster's false claim that Latino voters have "not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates." These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters' subconscious leap from "experience" to "white."

 
Added:
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Part 4: Because it is no harm/no foul, she doesn’t have to do much about it now, but may need to do damage control in the black and anti-racist white community should she win the primary

 

Conclusion

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Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 93% of the voters who claimed that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was a POW while Mrs. Clinton was still an undergrad and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides "experience" when they say "experience." Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today similar emotions are being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way by a candidate who, by all other accounts, detests racism.

  • This Conclusion presents a new argument, which makes one feel rushed, as though a tackle were occurring after the down. And the argument itself is so showily bogus that it makes the reader very doubtful. Now we have premise: A voter seeking experience will nearly always choose McCain over Clinton. Premise: Nearly all such voters chose Clinton. Entailment: Therefore they must prefer Clinton for some other reason. Conclusion: Aha, "experience" means "whiteness." But this would require showing that Clinton is whiter than McCain, which is difficult, because McCain comes from the party that has been supporting preferential whiteness for the last two generations, is himself rather white and in fact has, to be rather generous in the estimate, fully one tenth the amount of support in the black community that Clinton has. Leaving aside for the moment how his many years in the Senate--each of them demonstrating in their fullness his bad-tempered, go-it-alone, never-mince-words, cut everybody else's pork while reaching for your own disposition--prove he has everything but the qualities one usually supposes to be optimal for an "executive" rather than a despot--which might not be too reassuring to the experience crowd--you forgot to mention the word "war." There is one, after all, which he is perpetually for and she is currently against, and which the "let's have someone experienced this time around" crowd abhors pretty completely. This probably explains why they overwhelmingly don't want to vote for the guy who says we should spend another 100 years in Iraq.
 
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  • Nothing I have mentioned so far was anything other than obvious. Your own editing should have picked up these objections and dealt with them, as no doubt you could do. I don't think your position is untenable, although I do think that the emphasis on racialist messaging to the exclusion of all other possible criticisms of the Clinton position is an unnecessary shackle you impose on yourself, but I do think you should reconsider any argument for which so little logical support can be summoned.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 15 - 17 Feb 2008 - Main.EbenMoglen
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 As many writers have shown, (and here), Hillary's experience buckles under scrutiny. Her "35 years of change" include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson's Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
Added:
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  • This argument assumes that the only relevant experience is executive experience. If the assumption is questionable when directed against Obama, it is equally questionable when directed against Clinton. The President is not the Quartermaster General or the COO of General Electric. Most of the CEOs of publicly-traded companies I deal with spend far more time in advocacy--trying to persuade securities analysts to like their management and key customers to like their products and services--than they spend administering complex operations. The President is many things, which makes the job very difficult. Being the actual chief executive of the US Government, however, is rarely one of them. Determining what makes good experience for being President is non-trivial, but executive experience and capacity--which distinguished Hoover and Eisenhower above all other occupants of the office--might well not be the best place to start.
 Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such familiarity will make her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves her swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
Added:
>
>
  • Two fallacies are joined here. If "being President" were a muscular skill like hitting major-league pitching, we wouldn't need a 10,493-game season before the World Series. Knowing how other Presidents have "been President" is the best training for the job we know about, which is why incumbents tend to spend much of their free time reading histories of other Presidencies and biographies of other Presidents. A. Lincoln--an exceptional intellect, no doubt--learned much military strategy in the first year of the rebellion from reading the military science collection of the Library of Congress, not in order to fight the war himself, but to meet what seemed to him the responsibility of the civilian commander in chief to choose and allocate his generals. Which brings us to your second fallacy, which is judging a general in the field by the result of the battle. If her task was to listen to all parties and produce good legislation, she didn't fail at all--those who judge her by the failure are not criticising the quality of her legislation. The very argument you advance above, that she was the President's Wife and not the President, means that the blame for the failure which did occur, the failure to pass the legislation that came from the Task Force, should be laid to her husband, whose job it was to get the plan through Congress.
 Since leaving her husband's shadow, Hillary's time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Since being present cannot count as experience, absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary's time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency. Therefore, when Hillary speaks of experience, she is not inviting an analysis of her record. What, then, does Mrs. Clinton mean by experience? While it may just be empty rhetoric, it is, at least, rhetoric that has won her votes. Therefore, there is likely something more than style behind her words.
Added:
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  • This is a poor argument. There are many kinds of Senators in the complex little structure that is the 100-person Senate. There are foreign relations Senators, such as Mike Mansfield and John Kerry. There are the military-budget specialists, like John Warner and Carl Levin. There are "workhorse" legislators who are adept at really getting legislation through the body, like Edward Kennedy and Orrin Hatch, or like Lyndon Johnson, who was the best of them all. There are partisan cheerleaders, like Trent Lott and Dick Durbin. And there are specialists in working the system from the 30,000-foot down to top-of-trees level to get money and freedom-to-operate for the large municipalities, non-profits, and businesses that are the key engines in their home states. Some of these are appropriators like Ted Stevens, but the best are multi-specialized policy generalists with a good grasp of how policy details affect the whole socio-economic ecology of the sub-societies they represent, like Ted Domenici and Pat Moynihan. Big states like New York, California and Texas need these Senators intensely. New York is fortunate to have two at the moment. Texas has one in Kay Bailey Hutcheson. California has one and a half, because Senator Boxer--though an imbecile--has an exceedingly competent staff. You could debate of course whether having an exhaustive grip on policy in twenty different areas is a good acquisition for the US President. But to deny that Senator Clinton's career in that body proves she has one is to ignore the obvious.
 

The Age Issue

Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The candidates' generation gap is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her experience, Mrs. Clinton says to older voters that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.

This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party's pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton's reliance on her husband's success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous of her to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama's youth without forcing comparisons to two of history's most popular Democrats.

Added:
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>
  • The Clinton campaign hasn't said Obama's too young--they've said he hasn't done enough yet to be President, which may or may not be true but is different. Your thesis requires you to show in the end that this argument (that he has trained himself to write and speak well, served a brief while in a state legislature without much effect, and has been running for President since the moment he arrived in Washington) is subtly racist. It's a poor argument (minus two years in the House of Representatives followed by a decisive electoral loss for opposing a popular war, Obama's is more-or-less the pre-Presidential resume of A. Lincoln himself), so you shouldn't need to stuff straw men in order to deal with it. But because you've claimed it's a racist argument, you need to find "boy" somewhere, and you are skirting the edge of inventing your evidence.
 

The Race Issue

If the age argument couldn't defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? Perhaps Mr. Obama's race gives the issue its teeth. Historically, white supremacy has used "son" and "boy" to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can't directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as "kid"), she can conjure that image in the minds of those who hear her "experience" argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don't recognize until it invades our subconscious. By uniting the issue of age with our history of racial subjugation, it becomes more powerful than the same force wielded against a white candidate.

Added:
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  • This, in my view, is entirely unconvincing. There are many audiences a white Democratic politician with strong support in the black community can be addressing by sending a message that the other candidate is young and has been a drug user, including older, church-going socially engaged African-Americans. The Clintons have forgotten more about campaigning in the black community than you and I are likely ever to know, and they know now even better than when Bill used Sister Souljah as a fulcrum for leveraging his image in 1992, trusting that he could send his messages by criticizing a prominent African-American without alienating the community as a whole. And White Supremacy is never going to vote for Hillary Clinton, so she's no purpose whatever in appealing to anyone who positively receives messages addressed there. You needed to show, in order to make out your claim, not that this and the following passage contain messages that were sent, but that your reading is each case the intended reading, and not a possible reading adopted for the purpose of supporting an ad hominem of your own. That burden isn't being carried.
 This is only one of Mrs. Clinton's many injections of race into the campaign. As a top campaign advisor spoke about Obama's past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as "the black candidate" in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama's campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary, after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers, confirmed her pollster's false claim that Latino voters have "not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates." These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters' subconscious leap from "experience" to "white."

Line: 41 to 52
 Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 93% of the voters who claimed that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was a POW while Mrs. Clinton was still an undergrad and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides "experience" when they say "experience." Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today similar emotions are being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way by a candidate who, by all other accounts, detests racism.
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  • This Conclusion presents a new argument, which makes one feel rushed, as though a tackle were occurring after the down. And the argument itself is so showily bogus that it makes the reader very doubtful. Now we have premise: A voter seeking experience will nearly always choose McCain over Clinton. Premise: Nearly all such voters chose Clinton. Entailment: Therefore they must prefer Clinton for some other reason. Conclusion: Aha, "experience" means "whiteness." But this would require showing that Clinton is whiter than McCain, which is difficult, because McCain comes from the party that has been supporting preferential whiteness for the last two generations, is himself rather white and in fact has, to be rather generous in the estimate, fully one tenth the amount of support in the black community that Clinton has. Leaving aside for the moment how his many years in the Senate--each of them demonstrating in their fullness his bad-tempered, go-it-alone, never-mince-words, cut everybody else's pork while reaching for your own disposition--prove he has everything but the qualities one usually supposes to be optimal for an "executive" rather than a despot--which might not be too reassuring to the experience crowd--you forgot to mention the word "war." There is one, after all, which he is perpetually for and she is currently against, and which the "let's have someone experienced this time around" crowd abhors pretty completely. This probably explains why they overwhelmingly don't want to vote for the guy who says we should spend another 100 years in Iraq.

  • Nothing I have mentioned so far was anything other than obvious. Your own editing should have picked up these objections and dealt with them, as no doubt you could do. I don't think your position is untenable, although I do think that the emphasis on racialist messaging to the exclusion of all other possible criticisms of the Clinton position is an unnecessary shackle you impose on yourself, but I do think you should reconsider any argument for which so little logical support can be summoned.
 

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AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 14 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Purpose Statement

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In this essay, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that she would rather run on “experience” than a populist message of change. My purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to investigate whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
>
>
In this paper I examine the "experience" argument used by Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign, revealing its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that she prefers to run on "experience." My purpose is descriptive. I leave the question of intent to classmates and colleagues.
 
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-- By AdamCarlis - 04 Feb 2008
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-- By AdamCarlis - 14 Feb 2008
 

Introduction

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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogan, “Working for Change; Working for You”, Hillary’s “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
>
>
Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous "change" slogan ("Working for Change; Working for You"), Hillary's "experience" argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says "experience" she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
 

Hillary's Experience

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As many writers have shown, (and here), Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
>
>
As many writers have shown, (and here), Hillary's experience buckles under scrutiny. Her "35 years of change" include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson's Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
 
Changed:
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<
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady have given her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves his swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
>
>
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such familiarity will make her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves her swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
Changed:
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Since leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Since being present cannot count as experience, absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency. Therefore, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
>
>
Since leaving her husband's shadow, Hillary's time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Since being present cannot count as experience, absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary's time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency. Therefore, when Hillary speaks of experience, she is not inviting an analysis of her record. What, then, does Mrs. Clinton mean by experience? While it may just be empty rhetoric, it is, at least, rhetoric that has won her votes. Therefore, there is likely something more than style behind her words.
 

The Age Issue

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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her “experience,” she says to older voters that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
>
>
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The candidates' generation gap is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her experience, Mrs. Clinton says to older voters that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
 
Changed:
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<
This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama’s youth without forcing comparisons to two of history’s most popular democrats.
>
>
This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party's pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton's reliance on her husband's success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous of her to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama's youth without forcing comparisons to two of history's most popular Democrats.
 

The Race Issue

Changed:
<
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If the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don’t recognize until it invades our subconscious.
>
>
If the age argument couldn't defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? Perhaps Mr. Obama's race gives the issue its teeth. Historically, white supremacy has used "son" and "boy" to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can't directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as "kid"), she can conjure that image in the minds of those who hear her "experience" argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don't recognize until it invades our subconscious. By uniting the issue of age with our history of racial subjugation, it becomes more powerful than the same force wielded against a white candidate.
 
Changed:
<
<
This is only one of Mrs. Clinton’s many injections of race into the campaign. As a top campaign advisor spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary – after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers – confirmed her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters’ subconscious leap from “experience” to “white.”
>
>
This is only one of Mrs. Clinton's many injections of race into the campaign. As a top campaign advisor spoke about Obama's past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as "the black candidate" in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama's campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary, after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers, confirmed her pollster's false claim that Latino voters have "not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates." These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters' subconscious leap from "experience" to "white."
 

Conclusion

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Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 93% of voters claiming that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still an undergrad and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides “experience” when they say “experience.” Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way by a candidate who, by all other accounts, detests racism.
>
>
Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 93% of the voters who claimed that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was a POW while Mrs. Clinton was still an undergrad and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides "experience" when they say "experience." Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today similar emotions are being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way by a candidate who, by all other accounts, detests racism.
 
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You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" on the next line:
 # * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, AdamCarlis
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Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of that line. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated list

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 13 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Purpose Statement

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In this essay, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that, given the choice, would rather run on “experience” than a populist message of change. My purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to judge whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
>
>
In this essay, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that she would rather run on “experience” than a populist message of change. My purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to investigate whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
 
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-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008
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-- By AdamCarlis - 04 Feb 2008
 

Introduction

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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogan, “Working for Change; Working for You”, Hillary’s “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
>
>
Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogan, “Working for Change; Working for You”, Hillary’s “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
 

Hillary's Experience

Changed:
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As many writers have shown, Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
>
>
As many writers have shown, (and here), Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
 
Changed:
<
<
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady have given her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves his swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
>
>
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady have given her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves his swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
Changed:
<
<
After leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency since being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
>
>
Since leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Since being present cannot count as experience, absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency. Therefore, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 

The Age Issue

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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her “experience,” she is saying to voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
>
>
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her “experience,” she says to older voters that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
 This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama’s youth without forcing comparisons to two of history’s most popular democrats.

The Race Issue

Changed:
<
<
If the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don’t recognize until it invades our subconscious.
>
>
If the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don’t recognize until it invades our subconscious.

This is only one of Mrs. Clinton’s many injections of race into the campaign. As a top campaign advisor spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary – after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers – confirmed her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters’ subconscious leap from “experience” to “white.”

 
Deleted:
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This is only one of Mrs. Clinton’s many injections of race into the campaign. As Hillary’s chief strategist spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary – after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers – confirmed her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters’ subconscious leap from “experience” to “white.”
 

Conclusion

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Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 96% of voters claiming that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still in school and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides “experience” when they say “experience.” Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way.
>
>
Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 93% of voters claiming that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still an undergrad and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides “experience” when they say “experience.” Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way by a candidate who, by all other accounts, detests racism.
 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 12 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
 

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 11 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

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Purpose Statement

Changed:
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In this article, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that, given the choice, prefers to run on “experience” rather than a populist message of change. Rather, my purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to judge whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
>
>
In this essay, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that, given the choice, would rather run on “experience” than a populist message of change. My purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to judge whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
 -- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008

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 Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady have given her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves his swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
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After leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time the Senate has prepared her for the presidency since being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
>
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After leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time in the Senate has prepared her for the presidency since being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 

The Age Issue


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Raising Race

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-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008

Introduction

Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. This issue is central to her popularity with the over 65 crowd and working class white voters, particularly in the South (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).

Unlike Mrs. Clinton’s equally ubiquitous “change” slogan (“Working for Change; Working for You”), her “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code – reassuring conservative Democrats that she is the traditional candidate for the job. It is an argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices regarding age and race in order to secure her base. In this essay, I will attempt to illuminate how her “experience” argument is designed to exploit the electorate’s insecurities about Mr. Obama’s race for the benefit of her campaign.

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Purpose Statement

 
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The Experience Argument

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In this article, I trace the validity and effects of the “experience” argument used by Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign in order to reveal its racial undertones. I am not suggesting that Mrs. Clinton is a racist or even that, given the choice, prefers to run on “experience” rather than a populist message of change. Rather, my purpose is descriptive. I only attempt to show the effects of her “experience” argument. I leave it to classmates and colleagues to judge whether the effects of her argument are purposeful or simply an unwanted byproduct of a campaign Mrs. Clinton wishes she wasn’t running.
 
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Outside of Politics

Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.

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-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008
 
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Clinton the First Lady

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Introduction

 
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Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in both Arkansas and the White House) gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming that experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
>
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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogan, “Working for Change; Working for You”, Hillary’s “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code; making an argument that preys upon the electorate’s hidden racial prejudices.
 
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Clinton the Legislator

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Hillary's Experience

 
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After leaving her husband’s shadow, Mrs. Clinton’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see why spending four additional years the Senate makes her more prepared than Mr. Obama for the presidency. Certainly being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
>
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As many writers have shown, Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
 
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Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

>
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Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady have given her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming such experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter improves his swing after covering the Red Sox or a historian studying the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
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Raising the Age Issue

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After leaving her husband’s shadow, Hillary’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see how Hillary’s time the Senate has prepared her for the presidency since being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 
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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. Perhaps – to sure up her senior base – she hopes to highlight Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience,” she may actually be saying to voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
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The Age Issue

 
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This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success in office, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can identify Mr. Obama’s youth without risking comparisons to two of history’s most popular democrats.
>
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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. By asserting her “experience,” she is saying to voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
 
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Raising the Race Issue

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This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his first presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can highlight Mr. Obama’s youth without forcing comparisons to two of history’s most popular democrats.
 
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However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why is Hillary using it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary, one most of us don’t recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.
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The Race Issue

 
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If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then offered confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign and make it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”
>
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If the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why use it now? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters and one most of us don’t recognize until it invades our subconscious.
 
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This is only one of Mrs. Clinton’s many injections of race into the campaign. As Hillary’s chief strategist spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. And, during the recent debate, Hillary – after announcing that immigrants were taking jobs from American workers – confirmed her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign, facilitating voters’ subconscious leap from “experience” to “white.”
 

Conclusion

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The result is that voters across the country, knowing little about her actual record, claim to support Mrs. Clinton based on her experience. They have been bamboozled into thinking they are voting based on experience, when in reality they are voting based on age or race. Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way. Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 96% of those voters who claimed that the candidate’s “experience” was the most important factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain? (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still in school and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something else when they say “experience.”
>
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Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 96% of voters claiming that candidate experience was the key factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still in school and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something besides “experience” when they say “experience.” Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way.
 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 8 - 13 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Prewriting Notes

 
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1. Her experience is weak experience. While she is older (14 years), the only real political experience she has had is her time in the Senate (4 more years than Obama) and her time as first lady of Arkansas (comparable to his time is state legislature) and of the United States (where her major policy initiative failed). Could one reasonably argue that 4 extra years in the senate somehow makes someone a better president?
  • Even during her time as first lady, she didn't hold security clearance, didn't receive Bill's daily intelligence briefings, and wasn't a major player (or even really a player) in any foreign affairs issue.
  • When she speaks of 35 years of experience, half of that was spent as a lawyer for the major establishment law firm in Arkansas where she defendent folks like WalMart? and Tyson Foods - hardly the experience she is trying to tout on the campaign trail.

Hole in argument #1: she really means "older" and using it to connect with the over 65 vote and the more conservative folks in the party

  • A fair point, but youth hasn't been a detriment to democratic presidential candidates (JFK, Bill - who was the same age as Obama is now when he became president)

Hole in argument #2: Adam, I think it's worth thinking about whether it's plausible that Hillary Clinton, running against a JFK-type (i.e., a white male with JFK-like credentials) would have been able to tout her experience as a positive. You hint at this in your "Hole in argument #1," but I'm not sure that the fact that youth hasn't been a detriment to presidential candidacies necessarily means that people actually believe it is not a detriment, at lease at the beginning and middle stages of a candidacy. Perhaps Hillary wants to prevent the electorate from making the leap that it was able to make for Kennedy and Bill? Do you think Hillary is creating an issue, or emphasizing (and perhaps distorting) an issue that's already there? -- MichaelBerkovits? - 08 Feb 2008

  • So, the question seems to be whether experience would work as an argument if Obama was white.
  1. If Obama was white, she could run on change (woman) and so wouldn't have to worry about an argument (experience) that is so flawed.
  2. If Obama was white, "experience" could only mean either "experience" or "old" and since old isn't a good thing in an election about change and, if reinforcing the "experience" argument wasn't so detrimental (it wouldn't be to a white Obama unburdened with the race issue), then white Obama would be able to go right at Clinton on her past failures (black Obama is doing this somewhat timidly with his "right on day one" argument).

Hole in argument #3: Hillary and Marc Penn didn't sit around and decide an underhanded way to attack Obama on race (well they might have/probably did, but assuming they didn't). Can we really blame Hillary for our own perceptions of her words or is she only responsible for their plain meening. At face value, she is just making an inconsistent argument, not a racist one.

Hole in argument #4: Hillary is just playing the game of politics, exploiting voters and opponents, and trying to win.

  • Fine. That is true. The analysis here is not that she is breaking any rules. In fact, she is playing by the same racially divisive rules we have had since this nation was founded. It isn't a question of whether what she is doing is right or fair or even within the bounds of modern politics. Rather, it is a question of how she is winning. It is like pulling the curtain off the wizard, but not condemning him for his actions.
  • Do you know to what extent she framed the terms of this election, and to what extent Obama did? If from the beginning of the election cycle Clinton cast herself as the candidate with experience, all your critiques are dead-on. But what if she used it as a rebuttal to Obama's message of change (since her Clinton-ness means she couldn't possibly beat him at the change game)? Does that alter your analysis at all, if she didn't pick experience, but rather realized that she couldn't be the candidate of change and so tried to embrace the role Obama had put her in by trying to convince the electorate that experience was better than change? I actually don't think it hurts your argument at all, because then your analysis becomes more about how she is using "experience" to beat "change" (and it's racial undertones, etc). I also don't know how you would prove who framed the terms of the debate, but it's interesting to think about. -- Amanda

Hole in argument #5: Hillary means "remember Bill" when she says "experience"

  • She doesn't need to code "Bill" . . . she refers to him and to his presidency with regularity.
  • It is possible for a coded word to have more than one purpose. For example, "urban" means both "black" and "dangerous".

Support for Argument:

  • She has been more than willing to be underhanded about race in other ways (debate comments about immigrant voters, Bill's campaigning in South Carolina, questionable statements by her surrogates)
  • Race is a deaply powerful subconscious motivator and a lot of traction comes from small hinting.
  • If I, as a white guy, sense it then either (1) I am over sensitive to race issues (2) am deeply racist or (3) she is doing it on purpose
  • Historically racists have infantalized black men . . . "experience" is a perfect modern codeword
  • Gandhi quote

Related Idea: Hillary's platform is a creed - internally contradictory to get as many folks in the tent as possible.

  • Change and experience in Washington seem to be contradictory
  • Change appeals to those seeking progression ... experience appeals to those seeking the status quo. The status quo is white-dominated.
 
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The Meaning Behind Clinton's Creed

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Raising Race

 -- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008

Introduction

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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by positioning herself as the most experienced candidate in the race (“Ready on Day One”). This issue is central to her popularity with the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).

Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogans, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, fails to live up to the rhetoric. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code – attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that tradition is safe. It’s an argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.

>
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Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by highlighting her experience. This issue is central to her popularity with the over 65 crowd and working class white voters, particularly in the South (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).
 
Added:
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Unlike Mrs. Clinton’s equally ubiquitous “change” slogan (“Working for Change; Working for You”), her “experience” argument fails the sniff test. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code – reassuring conservative Democrats that she is the traditional candidate for the job. It is an argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices regarding age and race in order to secure her base. In this essay, I will attempt to illuminate how her “experience” argument is designed to exploit the electorate’s insecurities about Mr. Obama’s race for the benefit of her campaign.
 

The Experience Argument

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Much of it Outside of Politics

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Outside of Politics

 
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Private Sector Experience is as a Corporate Attorney

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Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include fifteen working as a corporate attorney, defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented executive experience.
 
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Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented nor did it provide executive experience.
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Clinton the First Lady

 
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Similar in Kind and Quality to Obama

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Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in both Arkansas and the White House) gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming that experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
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Clinton the Legislator

 
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Clinton the First Lady

Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming that experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.

Clinton the Legislator

After leaving her husband’s shadow, Mrs. Clinton’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see why having spend four additional years the Senate makes her more prepared than Mr. Obama for the presidency. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.

>
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After leaving her husband’s shadow, Mrs. Clinton’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see why spending four additional years the Senate makes her more prepared than Mr. Obama for the presidency. Certainly being present cannot count as experience. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 

Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

Raising the Age Issue

Changed:
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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. Perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience,” she may actually be asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.
>
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Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. Perhaps – to sure up her senior base – she hopes to highlight Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience,” she may actually be saying to voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adults table.
 
Changed:
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This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, not to mention Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success in office, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk. It allows her to point out Mr. Obama’s youth without risking additional comparisons to two of the most popular democrats in history.
>
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This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, let alone Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success in office, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk: she can identify Mr. Obama’s youth without risking comparisons to two of history’s most popular democrats.
 

Raising the Race Issue

Changed:
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However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary; one most of us don’t recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.
>
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However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why is Hillary using it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used “son” and “boy” to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Mrs. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as “kid”), she can conjure up that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary, one most of us don’t recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.

If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in South Carolina, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then offered confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign and make it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”

 
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If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in the South Carolina primary, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then offered confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign and make it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”
 

Conclusion

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This results in voters across the country claiming to support her based on her experience, but who are unable to articulate which of her experience has prepared her for the presidency. They have been bamboozled into thinking they are voting based on experience, when in reality they are voting based on age or race. Gone are the days where segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Today, the same irrational fear is being stirred up in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way. The goals are the same: using the conservative wing of the Democratic Party to prevent change. Despite the party split, Harry Truman won the election of 1948 and history looks at the Dixiecrat movement with contempt. Perhaps the results will be the same this time around.
>
>
The result is that voters across the country, knowing little about her actual record, claim to support Mrs. Clinton based on her experience. They have been bamboozled into thinking they are voting based on experience, when in reality they are voting based on age or race. Gone are the days when segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Yet today the same irrational fear is being stirred up, albeit in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way. Despite losing almost every demographic in the recent Virginia primary, Mrs. Clinton carried 96% of those voters who claimed that the candidate’s “experience” was the most important factor in their decision. Given that Virginia has an open primary and John McCain? (who was in a POW camp while Mrs. Clinton was still in school and has three times her congressional experience) was also running, those voters must mean something else when they say “experience.”
 



AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 7 - 12 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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Prewriting Notes

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Possible Topics:

What does Hillary Clinton mean when she claims to be the most experienced? Is she sending subliminal signals to white voters regarding her race? Is she attempting to emasculate Obama, in the tradition of "boy"?

Is the rejection of McCain by conservative figureheads actually an attept to make him more palatable to the center, thus making him more electable or are they actually just being honest and, therefore, are either very very far right, disingenuous about their own politics, or confused about McCain's record?

Why did the US incarceration rate begin its precipitous increase directly following the Warren court, despite that courts general expanstion of the rights of the accused? (seems like it would take way more than 1000 words).

Is the structure of law school designed to ease one into a misrable future?

The criminal trial/criminal justice system as a means for controling radicals.

-- AdamCarlis - 07 Feb 2008

Clinton Is White

 1. Her experience is weak experience. While she is older (14 years), the only real political experience she has had is her time in the Senate (4 more years than Obama) and her time as first lady of Arkansas (comparable to his time is state legislature) and of the United States (where her major policy initiative failed). Could one reasonably argue that 4 extra years in the senate somehow makes someone a better president?
  • Even during her time as first lady, she didn't hold security clearance, didn't receive Bill's daily intelligence briefings, and wasn't a major player (or even really a player) in any foreign affairs issue.
  • When she speaks of 35 years of experience, half of that was spent as a lawyer for the major establishment law firm in Arkansas where she defendent folks like WalMart? and Tyson Foods - hardly the experience she is trying to tout on the campaign trail.
Line: 67 to 48
 

Introduction

Changed:
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<
Hillary Clinton makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”) to broaden her appeal and bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first female president and reminds us the ensuing departure from the politics of George Bush, thus exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).
>
>
Hillary Clinton targets potential voters by positioning herself as the most experienced candidate in the race (“Ready on Day One”). This issue is central to her popularity with the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).
 
Changed:
<
<
Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, is a myth that fails to live up to the rhetoric. When she says “experience,” she is speaking in code, attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that traditions are safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works
>
>
Unlike her equally ubiquitous “change” slogans, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, fails to live up to the rhetoric. When Mrs. Clinton says “experience,” she is actually speaking in code – attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that tradition is safe. It’s an argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
 

Changed:
<
<

Hillary’s Experience is Weak

>
>

The Experience Argument

 

Much of it Outside of Politics

Private Sector Experience is as a Corporate Attorney

Changed:
<
<
Hillary’s experience fails to live up to her hype. Her “35 years of change” includes 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented.
>
>
Hillary’s experience buckles under scrutiny. Her “35 years of change” include 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented nor did it provide executive experience.
 

Similar in Kind and Quality to Obama

Changed:
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<

Clinton the First Lady v. Obama state Senator

>
>

Clinton the First Lady

 
Changed:
<
<
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gives one insight into what an executive does on a daily basis, how to successfully govern, and what the motions of governing look like. However, claiming such knowledge makes one a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. Her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
>
>
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gave her insight into the daily life of an executive. However, claiming that experience makes her a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. In fact, her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 
Changed:
<
<

Clinton the Legislator v. Obama the Legislator

>
>

Clinton the Legislator

 
Changed:
<
<
After leaving her husband’s shadow, her time in the Senate has been similarly uneventful. There are no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and many of the stances she has taken (for example, supporting the War against Iraq and its continued funding) have proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major congressional issues, it is hard to see why spending for more years in the Senate than has Mr. Obama amounts to greater preparation for the presidency. When Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
>
>
After leaving her husband’s shadow, Mrs. Clinton’s time in the Senate has been similarly unremarkable. She has no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and her vote on the key issue of the past 8 years, authorizing the use of force against Iraq, has proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major bill, it is hard to see why having spend four additional years the Senate makes her more prepared than Mr. Obama for the presidency. This indicates that, when Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 

Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

Changed:
<
<

Raising the Age Issue (with racial undertones)

Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored in their supporters. Perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience” she is actually asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.

>
>

Raising the Age Issue

 
Changed:
<
<
This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 when he ran for president). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Bill Clinton, not to mention her own reliance on Mr. Clinton’s success as president, it would be both foolish and disingenuous for Mrs. Clinton to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk.

However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image up in the minds – or at least the subconscious – of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary; likely one most of us don’t even recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.

>
>
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored by their supporters. Perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience,” she may actually be asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.
 
Added:
>
>
This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John F. Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 during his presidential campaign). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Mr. Clinton, not to mention Mrs. Clinton’s reliance on her husband’s success in office, it would be both foolish and disingenuous to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk. It allows her to point out Mr. Obama’s youth without risking additional comparisons to two of the most popular democrats in history.
 

Raising the Race Issue

Added:
>
>
However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image in the minds of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary; one most of us don’t recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.
 If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in the South Carolina primary, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then offered confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign and make it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”
Added:
>
>

Conclusion

This results in voters across the country claiming to support her based on her experience, but who are unable to articulate which of her experience has prepared her for the presidency. They have been bamboozled into thinking they are voting based on experience, when in reality they are voting based on age or race. Gone are the days where segregationist Democrats loudly declare their racist ambitions from the steps of the statehouse. Today, the same irrational fear is being stirred up in a more secretive and perhaps more palatable way. The goals are the same: using the conservative wing of the Democratic Party to prevent change. Despite the party split, Harry Truman won the election of 1948 and history looks at the Dixiecrat movement with contempt. Perhaps the results will be the same this time around.

 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 6 - 11 Feb 2008 - Main.AmandaHungerford
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 39 to 39
 Hole in argument #4: Hillary is just playing the game of politics, exploiting voters and opponents, and trying to win.
  • Fine. That is true. The analysis here is not that she is breaking any rules. In fact, she is playing by the same racially divisive rules we have had since this nation was founded. It isn't a question of whether what she is doing is right or fair or even within the bounds of modern politics. Rather, it is a question of how she is winning. It is like pulling the curtain off the wizard, but not condemning him for his actions.
Added:
>
>
  • Do you know to what extent she framed the terms of this election, and to what extent Obama did? If from the beginning of the election cycle Clinton cast herself as the candidate with experience, all your critiques are dead-on. But what if she used it as a rebuttal to Obama's message of change (since her Clinton-ness means she couldn't possibly beat him at the change game)? Does that alter your analysis at all, if she didn't pick experience, but rather realized that she couldn't be the candidate of change and so tried to embrace the role Obama had put her in by trying to convince the electorate that experience was better than change? I actually don't think it hurts your argument at all, because then your analysis becomes more about how she is using "experience" to beat "change" (and it's racial undertones, etc). I also don't know how you would prove who framed the terms of the debate, but it's interesting to think about. -- Amanda
 Hole in argument #5: Hillary means "remember Bill" when she says "experience"
  • She doesn't need to code "Bill" . . . she refers to him and to his presidency with regularity.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 5 - 11 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 66 to 66
 

Introduction

Changed:
<
<
Hillary Clinton makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”) in order to broaden her appeal to voters. These slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).
>
>
Hillary Clinton makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”) to broaden her appeal and bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first female president and reminds us the ensuing departure from the politics of George Bush, thus exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).

Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, is a myth that fails to live up to the rhetoric. When she says “experience,” she is speaking in code, attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that traditions are safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works

 
Deleted:
<
<
Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, is a myth that fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code; attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that traditions are safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
 

Hillary’s Experience is Weak

Line: 78 to 79
 

Private Sector Experience is as a Corporate Attorney

Changed:
<
<
Hillary’s experience fails to live up to her hype. Her “35 years of change” includes 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken, with only one year spend doing public interest work. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented.
>
>
Hillary’s experience fails to live up to her hype. Her “35 years of change” includes 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented.
 

Similar in Kind and Quality to Obama

Clinton the First Lady v. Obama state Senator

Changed:
<
<
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gives one a great perspective on what an executive does on a daily basis, insight into how to successfully govern, and a clear picture of what the motions of governing look like. However, claiming such closed door knowledge makes one a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. Her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
>
>
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gives one insight into what an executive does on a daily basis, how to successfully govern, and what the motions of governing look like. However, claiming such knowledge makes one a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with a complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. Her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 

Clinton the Legislator v. Obama the Legislator

Changed:
<
<
After leaving her husband’s shadow, her time in the Senate has been similarly uneventful. There are no major legislative accomplishments and many of the stances that she has taken (for example, supporting the War against Iraq and its continued funding) have proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major congressional issues, it is hard to see why spending for more years in the Senate than has Mr. Obama amounts to greater preparation for the presidency. Therefore, when she speaks of “experience,” she must be referring to something other than a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments.
>
>
After leaving her husband’s shadow, her time in the Senate has been similarly uneventful. There are no major legislative accomplishments to speak of and many of the stances she has taken (for example, supporting the War against Iraq and its continued funding) have proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major congressional issues, it is hard to see why spending for more years in the Senate than has Mr. Obama amounts to greater preparation for the presidency. When Hillary speaks of “experience,” she is not inviting an analysis of her record. Instead of referring to a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments, she is directing us to the prejudices that buttress her “experience” argument.
 

Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

Raising the Age Issue (with racial undertones)

Changed:
<
<
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored in their supporters and so perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience” she is actually asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.
>
>
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored in their supporters. Perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience” she is actually asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.
 
Changed:
<
<
This is a dangerous road to travel; one that backfired on those who used it against Kennedy and Bill Clinton, who was the same age as Obama is now when he was elected. Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Bill Clinton, not to mention her own reliance on Mr. Clinton’s success as president, it would be both foolish and disingenuous for Mrs. Clinton to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk. However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image up in the minds – or at least the subconscious – of those who hear her “experience” argument.
>
>
This is a dangerous tactic; one that backfired when used against John Kennedy Jr. and Bill Clinton (who, like Obama, was 47 when he ran for president). Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Bill Clinton, not to mention her own reliance on Mr. Clinton’s success as president, it would be both foolish and disingenuous for Mrs. Clinton to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk.
 
Added:
>
>
However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image up in the minds – or at least the subconscious – of those who hear her “experience” argument. It is a subliminal cue to voters to be wary; likely one most of us don’t even recognize until it has invaded our subconscious.
 
Deleted:
<
<

Raising the Race Issue

 
Changed:
<
<
If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in the South Carolina primary, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson. An analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.”
>
>

Raising the Race Issue

 
Changed:
<
<
Hillary Clinton’s direct injection of race into the campaign, makes it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”
>
>
If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in the South Carolina primary, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson, an analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then offered confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.” These subtle hints are coming together to form the background music of the Clinton campaign and make it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”
 



AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 4 - 11 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 66 to 66
 

Introduction

Changed:
<
<
Hillary Clinton – like all successful politicians – has developed a set of slogans, campaign tag-lines, and sound bites designed to broaden her appeal. She makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”).
>
>
Hillary Clinton makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”) in order to broaden her appeal to voters. These slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic Party).
 
Changed:
<
<
The slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. On the other hand, Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic party).
>
>
Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument, when taken at face value, is a myth that fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code; attempting to reassure conservative Democrats that traditions are safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
 
Deleted:
<
<
Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument is less straight forward. The experience she boasts of fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code to working class white men and senior citizens in an attempt to reassure them that the traditional world is safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
 

Hillary’s Experience is Weak

Line: 79 to 78
 

Private Sector Experience is as a Corporate Attorney

Added:
>
>
Hillary’s experience fails to live up to her hype. Her “35 years of change” includes 15 years working as a corporate lawyer in Arkansas defending companies like WalMart? and Tyson’s Chicken, with only one year spend doing public interest work. Moral judgments aside, no reasonable person would classify her legal career as change-oriented.
 

Similar in Kind and Quality to Obama

Clinton the First Lady v. Obama state Senator

Added:
>
>
Her public service career is equally suspect. Twenty years as first lady (in Arkansas and in the White House) gives one a great perspective on what an executive does on a daily basis, insight into how to successfully govern, and a clear picture of what the motions of governing look like. However, claiming such closed door knowledge makes one a skilled executive is tantamount to claiming that a sports reporter becomes a better hitter after covering the Red Sox or a historian, armed with complete record of the Kennedy White House would be skilled at negotiating an end to a nuclear missile crisis. Observing and doing are two very different things and, during her years as first lady, Hillary did not do much. Her most important attempt at acting like an executive failed, resulting in our current health care crisis.
 

Clinton the Legislator v. Obama the Legislator

Changed:
<
<
>
>
After leaving her husband’s shadow, her time in the Senate has been similarly uneventful. There are no major legislative accomplishments and many of the stances that she has taken (for example, supporting the War against Iraq and its continued funding) have proven unpopular. Absent leadership on any major congressional issues, it is hard to see why spending for more years in the Senate than has Mr. Obama amounts to greater preparation for the presidency. Therefore, when she speaks of “experience,” she must be referring to something other than a proud history of leadership and legislative accomplishments.
 

Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

Raising the Age Issue (with racial undertones)

Added:
>
>
Mrs. Clinton is nearly 20 years older than Mr. Obama. The generation gap between the two candidates is mirrored in their supporters and so perhaps what she hopes to highlight, in order to sure up her senior base, is Mr. Obama’s relative youth. By asserting her “experience” she is actually asserting to those voters over 55 that she is one of them and Mr. Obama is a precocious child not quite ready for a seat at the adult table.

This is a dangerous road to travel; one that backfired on those who used it against Kennedy and Bill Clinton, who was the same age as Obama is now when he was elected. Given the Democratic Party’s pride in JFK and Bill Clinton, not to mention her own reliance on Mr. Clinton’s success as president, it would be both foolish and disingenuous for Mrs. Clinton to raise the age issue directly. Doing so in a coded fashion; however, offers all the benefits without any of the risk. However, if the age argument couldn’t defeat the great Democrats of the past, why would Hillary use it today? The difference is Mr. Obama’s race. Historically, white supremacy has used words like “son” and “boy” in order to emasculate and infantilize black men in an attempt to neutralize their growing power. While Ms. Clinton can’t directly campaign by positioning Mr. Obama as a child (Mr. Clinton has referred to him as a “kid”), she is able to conjure that image up in the minds – or at least the subconscious – of those who hear her “experience” argument.

 

Raising the Race Issue

Added:
>
>
If Mrs. Clinton’s “experience” argument is attempting to tap into an undercurrent of racism in America, it is not the only weapon in her arsenal. As Mark Penn spoke about Obama’s past drug use, other surrogates referred to him as “the black candidate” in what looked like a coordinated effort to caricature Mr. Obama as the stereotypical urban, black, drug abuser. After a victory in the South Carolina primary, Mr. Clinton publicly compared Obama’s campaign to that of Jesse Jackson. An analogy that misses on every issue except race. During the recent debate, Hillary argued that immigrants were displacing American workers. She then confirmation of her pollster’s false claim that Latino voters have “not shown a lot of willingness . . . to support black candidates.”

Hillary Clinton’s direct injection of race into the campaign, makes it easier for voters (at least subconsciously) to make the leap from “experience” to “white.”

 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.

AdamCarlis-FirstPaper 3 - 10 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstPaper%25"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 68 to 68
 Hillary Clinton – like all successful politicians – has developed a set of slogans, campaign tag-lines, and sound bites designed to broaden her appeal. She makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”).
Changed:
<
<
The slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. On the other hand, Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters: the conservative wing of the Democratic party.
>
>
The slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. On the other hand, Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters (the conservative wing of the Democratic party).
 
Changed:
<
<
Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument is less straight forward. Hillary is, in fact, a woman who often disagrees with the current administration. She is a representative of change. However, the experience she boasts of fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code to working class white men and senior citizens in an attempt to assure them that the traditional world they know is not going anywhere. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
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Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument is less straight forward. The experience she boasts of fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code to working class white men and senior citizens in an attempt to reassure them that the traditional world is safe. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.
 
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Hillary’s Experience is Weak

 
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Much of it Outside of Politics

 
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Private Sector Experience is as a Corporate Attorney

 
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Similar in Kind and Quality to Obama

 
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Clinton the First Lady v. Obama state Senator

 
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Clinton the Legislator v. Obama the Legislator

 
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Given the Weakness of Her Experience, there Must be More to the Message

 
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Raising the Age Issue (with racial undertones)

 
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Raising the Race Issue

 



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-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008

 

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The Meaning Behind Clinton's Creed

-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008

Introduction

Hillary Clinton – like all successful politicians – has developed a set of slogans, campaign tag-lines, and sound bites designed to broaden her appeal. She makes both an “experience” argument (“Ready on Day One”) and a “change” argument (“Working for Change; Working for You”).

The slogans bring different groups into her camp. “Change” highlights her future status as the first women president and reminds us that she offers a departure from the politics of George Bush, exciting liberals, women and the democratic machine. On the other hand, Hillary’s “Experience” is a major issue for the over 65 crowd and working class white male voters: the conservative wing of the Democratic party.

Unlike the “change” argument, her “experience” argument is less straight forward. Hillary is, in fact, a woman who often disagrees with the current administration. She is a representative of change. However, the experience she boasts of fails to live up to the rhetoric. Instead, she is speaking in code to working class white men and senior citizens in an attempt to assure them that the traditional world they know is not going anywhere. It is a conservative argument designed to prey upon hidden prejudices. In this essay I will attempt to show how that argument works.

 

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Subsection A


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Paper Title

-- By AdamCarlis - 09 Feb 2008


Prewriting Notes

Possible Topics:

What does Hillary Clinton mean when she claims to be the most experienced? Is she sending subliminal signals to white voters regarding her race? Is she attempting to emasculate Obama, in the tradition of "boy"?

Is the rejection of McCain by conservative figureheads actually an attept to make him more palatable to the center, thus making him more electable or are they actually just being honest and, therefore, are either very very far right, disingenuous about their own politics, or confused about McCain's record?

Why did the US incarceration rate begin its precipitous increase directly following the Warren court, despite that courts general expanstion of the rights of the accused? (seems like it would take way more than 1000 words).

Is the structure of law school designed to ease one into a misrable future?

The criminal trial/criminal justice system as a means for controling radicals.

-- AdamCarlis - 07 Feb 2008

Clinton Is White

1. Her experience is weak experience. While she is older (14 years), the only real political experience she has had is her time in the Senate (4 more years than Obama) and her time as first lady of Arkansas (comparable to his time is state legislature) and of the United States (where her major policy initiative failed). Could one reasonably argue that 4 extra years in the senate somehow makes someone a better president?

  • Even during her time as first lady, she didn't hold security clearance, didn't receive Bill's daily intelligence briefings, and wasn't a major player (or even really a player) in any foreign affairs issue.
  • When she speaks of 35 years of experience, half of that was spent as a lawyer for the major establishment law firm in Arkansas where she defendent folks like WalMart? and Tyson Foods - hardly the experience she is trying to tout on the campaign trail.

Hole in argument #1: she really means "older" and using it to connect with the over 65 vote and the more conservative folks in the party

  • A fair point, but youth hasn't been a detriment to democratic presidential candidates (JFK, Bill - who was the same age as Obama is now when he became president)

Hole in argument #2: Adam, I think it's worth thinking about whether it's plausible that Hillary Clinton, running against a JFK-type (i.e., a white male with JFK-like credentials) would have been able to tout her experience as a positive. You hint at this in your "Hole in argument #1," but I'm not sure that the fact that youth hasn't been a detriment to presidential candidacies necessarily means that people actually believe it is not a detriment, at lease at the beginning and middle stages of a candidacy. Perhaps Hillary wants to prevent the electorate from making the leap that it was able to make for Kennedy and Bill? Do you think Hillary is creating an issue, or emphasizing (and perhaps distorting) an issue that's already there? -- MichaelBerkovits? - 08 Feb 2008

  • So, the question seems to be whether experience would work as an argument if Obama was white.
  1. If Obama was white, she could run on change (woman) and so wouldn't have to worry about an argument (experience) that is so flawed.
  2. If Obama was white, "experience" could only mean either "experience" or "old" and since old isn't a good thing in an election about change and, if reinforcing the "experience" argument wasn't so detrimental (it wouldn't be to a white Obama unburdened with the race issue), then white Obama would be able to go right at Clinton on her past failures (black Obama is doing this somewhat timidly with his "right on day one" argument).

Hole in argument #3: Hillary and Marc Penn didn't sit around and decide an underhanded way to attack Obama on race (well they might have/probably did, but assuming they didn't). Can we really blame Hillary for our own perceptions of her words or is she only responsible for their plain meening. At face value, she is just making an inconsistent argument, not a racist one.

Hole in argument #4: Hillary is just playing the game of politics, exploiting voters and opponents, and trying to win.

  • Fine. That is true. The analysis here is not that she is breaking any rules. In fact, she is playing by the same racially divisive rules we have had since this nation was founded. It isn't a question of whether what she is doing is right or fair or even within the bounds of modern politics. Rather, it is a question of how she is winning. It is like pulling the curtain off the wizard, but not condemning him for his actions.

Hole in argument #5: Hillary means "remember Bill" when she says "experience"

  • She doesn't need to code "Bill" . . . she refers to him and to his presidency with regularity.
  • It is possible for a coded word to have more than one purpose. For example, "urban" means both "black" and "dangerous".

Support for Argument:

  • She has been more than willing to be underhanded about race in other ways (debate comments about immigrant voters, Bill's campaigning in South Carolina, questionable statements by her surrogates)
  • Race is a deaply powerful subconscious motivator and a lot of traction comes from small hinting.
  • If I, as a white guy, sense it then either (1) I am over sensitive to race issues (2) am deeply racist or (3) she is doing it on purpose
  • Historically racists have infantalized black men . . . "experience" is a perfect modern codeword
  • Gandhi quote

Related Idea: Hillary's platform is a creed - internally contradictory to get as many folks in the tent as possible.

  • Change and experience in Washington seem to be contradictory
  • Change appeals to those seeking progression ... experience appeals to those seeking the status quo. The status quo is white-dominated.


Section I

Subsection A

Subsub 1

Subsection B

Subsub 1

Subsub 2

Section II

Subsection A

Subsection B


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