Not a horse race, it’s a decathlon.

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Before I start: I didn’t watch the debate live last night. I was out. Not out of hand, just out of the house. Watching them before this post, I can see that Romney did well in that he defended his candidacy with vigor and Obama wasn’t crisp or succinct about his successes or his plan for a potential Obama 2nd term. His closing statement itself was under inspiring. Romney’s was as up as he was earlier in the debate. Chalk it up as an “L” for the President. But that is if you judge a debate as a singular event. It’s not. But almost everyone in punditry is judging debates (as usual) sees them as a singular earth moving event.

Debate reaction In Liberal sky is falling on too professorial Obama land (pundits, pols and politics people)

I don’t think Obama even wants this! He is so weak. This is just like him, he always caves. It’s over. Obama/Biden are doing well right now. They are running the country and campaigning. They do more campaign stops than Romney. Romney was defined by Obama’s campaign and not by his own messaging. On top of this, this sounds like a whiny analog to John Sununu’s snide Obama is “lazy” slur. Say that sh*t and realize what you are really saying. It’s not a substantive criticism or even sensical. Has Obama caved on certain things? Taken advantage of some executive powers? Been hypocritical when push came to shove on some issue? Sure. Sometimes legislated against his base? Yes. So has [insert any fucking American president here]!

Let’s just go through some disappointments from the last few Democratic presidents: FDR and Japanese Internment and Social Security Act’s exclusion of minorities? JFK/LBJ and Vietnam? LBJ literally passed civil rights and threw up his hands. Jimmy Carter’s lasting domestic success was bring open religiosity to the oval office. Bill Clinton’s far right financial reform and welfare reform.

Yea. So I agree. Drone war and Drug War really, really suck. We need to get out of Afghanistan faster (even though he promised to prosecute that war in his 2008 campaign). I don’t like the “grand bargain” including social security. I don’t like that some stupid edited tape was enough to make one of his cabinet secretaries fire a hero like Shirley Sherrod. I think Dodd-Frank could have had more financial reform or established a more independent CFPB, I think medicare for all plus optional private supplemental insurance would be the best system. I also think he has done a lot. He has passed a surprising amount of legislation of considerable heft, nominated two liberal Democratic women to the US Supreme Court and he is an affirming executive of our federal government which means FEMA actually works. The EPA actually does things. No president was a saint. It’s not the job description. Stop expecting a liberal unicorn president. They didn’t exist on the West Wing or in real life.

If you want to vote for someone else, then just say the truth: I didn’t realize what the Democratic party was, I had an a-historical view of the modern American presidency and Democratic politics, I am a socialist/green/communist whatever and go do that. But also remember, that position is the position that you should also be cool with Romney f8cking up for 4 years and then seeing if we can pick up the pieces afterwards.

In Republican Obama is Secret [insert wild archetype here] dependent on teleprompter affirmative action Land (pundits, pols and political people)

Obama doesn’t want this! He is so weak. This is just like him, he is only here because of affirmative action. These people believe Obama failed his way to the head of Harvard Law Review. Obama has never been challenged to his face by anyone to his face! Nevermind campaign 2008: the longest campaign and primary in presidential history, “you lie”, Daily Caller reporter, Bill O’Reilly, nomination blocking, the health care summit with congressional Republicans, he’s isolated (even though he has been hitting the campaign much harder than Mitt Romney).

In the Magical guild of the Practitioners of Horse Racery

The horse won the Derby, now can they win the triple crown? The campaign get’s covered like the triple crown of horse racing. For all season they look at candidates like horses. They look at them as political specimens, not actual politicians. So instead of scoring policies, they would rather walk down to the stables look at a horses haunches, talk to the jockey to see how the horse has been practicing, and ask a horse analyst to determine the horses’ psychologies from afar (They look Presidential. Their campaign manager says we should think everything is great. You can just feel how confident he is debating, this is where this candidate belongs) A collection of three horse races that each matter and the biggest, most important race is smack dab in the middle. After a season of horse racing, it’s The Kentucky Derby! Then Preakness! Then Bellmont staaaaaakes! Then who is the winner? Each race has a winner that is always remembered. Each race is a big deal. Only rarely does a horse win all three! And they’re off! The pomp, the circumstance, the horse shit.

McCain steamrolled the GOP primary while Obama and Hillary had a classic knock down, no corner of every state and territory unturned primary. Hillary Clinton performed well in many of the debates vs. Obama. Do you remember how Obama got Iowa? GROUND. GAME. Wearing out shoes and pressing flesh. People fretted that maybe Hawaiian Barry or Inevitable Hillary would be too tired after such a long, tough race to compete against the war horse John Sydney. Nope. There is no jockey riding candidates beyond when they would normally stop so that they win a race. The campaign follows their lead and command. They are the competitor and the raw talent. A candidate has to build his campaign to use a primary to be able to play the way they want in the later rounds of the tourney.

In the Halls of the Association of Color Analysts of the Political Football League

Did the hail mary work? Don’t know! Now let’s toss out some superlatives no one deserves: Best debate since Reagan. Worst performance since ever. See you after commercial! Romney drops back on the debate stage, he’s running the old “trickle down government” trick play…touchdown, Romney is back in the game! He ain’t Eli Manning with a 9-7 marching into opposing stadiums while leading his team to a championship. Obama is not the Patriots, killing the rest of the league and then losing to the Giants in the Super Bowl. No. The debate is not a Super Bowl. It’s not a Bowl Game.

None of these reactions or analogistic views really address a campaign’s dynamic.

The campaign is like a big, long tournament full of different events. Like the Olympic Decathlon or modern Pentathlon any “-athlon”, ok. Two Americans Ashton Eaton and Trey Hardee dominated and finished Gold and Silver in London 2012. They literally ran the 1500m race at a pace finishing 8th and 11th respectively. Why? They already had enough points to win, they just had to finish strong.

You can’t win with one event, you have to run every event to win, but then you have to . Even with a dominating first events, they still gotta get the most points and compete. It’s best 270 out of 538. These two players (Romney and Obama) will be here until the end of the contest and the final score is after someone gets to best of 270.

The primaries are the early rounds of the tourney. It establishes your ranking, qualifies you for the big decathlon. Then you have to go through every state again. What we do know, Obama is winning blue states handily and is making Romney defend red states.

The “events” are:

  • Staged political speeches: announcement speech, concession and victory speeches and speeches in front of constituency interest groups (NAACP, NALEO, AARP, AFL-CIO, CPAC, etc)
  • Conventions
  • Staged social events: candidates on the view, a late night show, giving a video cameo at a conference
  • Political Service: previous political service as another game in a set: performance in office and your ability to present/defend your record.
  • Debates political public event set: debates (primary and general) and prime time interviews.
  • Running Mate choosing your running mate
  • Policy: policy and position papers
  • Message: political messaging, advertising and marketing
  • Cool in a Crisis: response to a real political crisis in real time
  • Off the Cuff/On Camera: off the cuff comment, surreptitiously recorded or transcribed comments and the response of the candidate
  • Organization: campaign ground game and organization as another
  • Surrogacy: surrogate quality
  • Cash Money: fundraising

These events all have different strategies and different winners, but they all matter together and as someone pulls ahead, it becomes to score one big event to change that trajectory. The debates aren’t a singular event that change that paradigm. They fit into that paradigm.

They are part of a continuum. A long thread affected by what happened before and after. It’s not a thing where everything after hinges only on the debate or Romney’s demeanor. Romney was aggressive because he is behind. Far behind. Overly so I would argue. His campaign staff surely has been telling him he has to run the table. Obama wasn’t aggressive because he has to see what the guy about to lose another event is going to do as a last ditch effort. The only problem is that he eased up too much. The problem for Mitt Romney is that history usually shows it’s too late too little.

John Kerry did very well in 2004, but they didn’t change the trajectory of the debate. Already defined as a flip flopper (by Rove) and defamed (by Swift Boat Vets PAC) he was just further arguing the flop. When Mitt Romney says: I’m going to cut funding for PBS and Big Bird and Jim Lehrer and everything PBS will both be fired, what does someone who works on a PBS show think? What does the auto or factory worker in OH or MI think about Romney after hearing him be so excited about cutting funding for Sesame Street and PBS programming? I don’t think that makes them think that Romney is excited about helping the middle class. I think they think about Romney cutting jobs. Ohio is key to Republican Presidential candidates and the current polls show Romney as a guy who people believe doesn’t worry about the working or middle class. “Let Detroit Bankrupt”, “I like to fire people”, pioneer of outsourcing, the 47%. In addition, there can be deductions for saying contradictory things in the debate. In ads, campaigning and subsequent debates, Romney has to defend some of these claims in front of 58m people. I would bet Obama will have a more pointed prepared strategy.

Scarborough and friends are on my TV now saying Obama lost every debate in primary 08 to Dodd, Biden and Clinton and yet he was still president in January 2009.

Strategic Allied Consulting? yes but both sides!

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Anyone screaming “voter fraud” from the Republican party should have their petitions for candidacy reviewed. These witch hunts are borne out of some sort of guilt

“Strategic has a zero-tolerance policy for breaking the law,” said Fred Petti, a company attorney. “Accordingly, once we learned of the irregularities in Palm Beach County, we were able to trace all questionable cards to one individual and immediately terminated our working relationship with the individual in question.”

The company did not identify the individual.

[…]

Palm Beach County Elections Supervisor Susan Bucher’s staff noticed signatures that looked alike and incomplete forms submitted on Sept. 5 by Strategic Allied Consulting. Bucher met with prosecutors on Monday to request an investigation.

source: GOP fires consulting firm after 108 questionable voter registrations in Palm Beach County – The Washington Post.

Yes….but ACORN! The Both Sides Goblin will be possessing the brains of your favorite news pundit. Yes, the Both Sides Goblin awakens every time a Republican is accused of something they ginned up during a witch hunt to absolve them of fault because the Both Sides Goblin asserts the law of false equivalence and that means “even-steven” two wrongs make it right even if one wrong is eating a grape in the grocery store line and the other is grand theft auto.

A Referee has done is job when no one talks about them after the game

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The NFL has made a situation where these guys can simply not succeed. Breaking the union can’t be more important than running a sports league with a professional standard.

When an officiating crew’s awful blatant mistake results in 1/4 to 1 billion of gambling winning changing hands, there is no standard.

The refs aren’t demanding much from the $9billion dollar/year business, it should be given before more of these crucial mistakes are made.

Mad about the refs? Belichick should grab Robert Kraft & tell him to make Roger Goodell settle

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It’s not the replacement official’s fault. They are literally amateur level officials. They have no business being NFL regular season officials. They are doing as best they can, and I sincerely applaud them for their efforts to get calls right even as fans boo them.

Instead of grabbing the replacement official, Bill Belichick should grab his boss and ask why he and his fellow NFL team owners aren’t willing to satisfy the NFL referees rather modest demands on the almost $10billion per year business that is the NFL so they can have quality officiating. Goodell and the owners are stupidly betting that they can train the replacement officials (from the lower levels of college football and even lesser watched leagues like the Lingerie Football League) to become competent pro officials in about 6 weeks and then turn to Ed Hochuli & Mike Carey and friends and say: stay out forever. This is the same league where playoff officials normally have to earn their playoff jobs with accuracy of judgement and by properly maintaining the game.

The highest-rated eligible officials at each position are selected to work the Super Bowl. They must have at least five years of NFL experience and previous playoff assignments

source: 2012 NFL Playoffs — John Parry to referee Super Bowl – ESPN.

Let’s review that again…to referee a Super Bowl in a typical year:

“The highest-rated eligible officials at each position are selected to work the Super Bowl. They must have at least five years of NFL experience and previous playoff assignments”

That means no referee you see on TV is a top caliber official by the NFL’s own standard. This a soon to be 10billion/year cartel run by 32 ownership groups who would rather turn their game over to people who they believe cannot do the job to avoid making 10million/year less. The same owners will demand hundreds of millions for stadium construction and upgrades from your local, state and federal governments, continue to benefit from the Personal Seat License market and continue to raise ticket, concession and parking prices. In addition, the owners say they want accountability: they want to be able to pull who aren’t performing up to par. So to prove they love accountability, they are basically putting in a bunch of inexperienced newbie officials into the game, trying to train them on the spot to replace guys with centuries of experience between them

With only 16 games, every game is a big deal. A lost game can cost you home field advantage or a berth in the playoffs. If replacement officials essentially take a game away from a team with a bad call, and that team misses the playoffs, they have to wonder if the official lockout was all really worth it.

 

 

iPhone 5, IOS6 and Maps

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Charlie Rose hosts John Gruber of Daring Fireball and David Pogue of NY Times

In my view, on the transit directions, I think that’s clearly right — they shouldn’t have launched without transit — it’s crappy for everyone. But I think they must have figured they just didn’t know how to do something in time.

[…] Anyway, it does feel premature to me for them to have done this, and I think will cause a bit of a backlash when Google Maps for iOS6 comes out. But it’s hardly a Ping situation for Apple.

source: John’s Tumblr • Fear & Loathing in Nerdtown: Apple Maps & Twitter Shutoffs.

Although sub par, It’s the only maps program for now for millions of iOS6 users That’s really good for Apple.

Google Maps is by far superior. It’s the only app on Android that is by far, far far superior. Turn By Turn, transit direction and maps accuracy are also far superior. I hear Nokia Maps is even better, but you know, no one will ever know.

But you know what most people call a far superior never used product: nothing. They never know . Google needs to get maps out ASAP. Apple has made a great move because they know most people are OK with the default. They don’t switch between Android and iOS like I or other tech inclined folks may or even between apps (say hopstop for transit and apple maps for driving).

Any foothold Apple Maps gets with users is a loss to the value of the Google Maps crowd sourced, data mash up eco-system and with millions of new users with each new iOS device release and buying frenzy, that’s a lot of losses, you get a lot more users who simply won’t bother to get a Google Maps app if the Apple one is already there and all they need it for is some general driving directions or to remind them when to pay attention when they are driving. There’s a lot of family members who know how to charge their iPhone, make phone calls and face time and play music loaded by their kids or friends and just leave it alone because it works. I have a feeling iOS6’s Maps is one of those types of apps.

…It’s not Ping. That’s really not good for Apple.

Ping failing didn’t matter because not having what Ping offered didn’t mattered. No one used Ping or needs Ping. I looked at Ping, found out what it was and immediately thought: WTF. I don’t want or need it. or even think it’s cool. It was clunky and intrusive. And I don’t care what Lil Wayne has on his iPod. I had a bunch of iPods, iTunes is my music hub (I switched from Winamp and never went back years ago) and I never used Ping once. You could already share and/or gift music through iTunes, make playlists and share those too, so saying “it’s not Ping” is not really applicable here.

I use Google Maps all the time. It’s one of the few reasons I still have my crappy (it is awful) Samsung Galaxy Tab: one I got it as a “free” throw in with my G2, two it’s a great mobile access point and three maps and turn by turn is excellent. Really really excellent. I use it for nothing else. I car share, I use transit all the time. Google Maps is indispensable for me. It is one app that works great on my G2 and Galaxy Tab. As an east coaster based in Philly, I do care and expect my mobile devices to have maps, turn by turn and proper transit maps. My next phone will most probably be an iPhone (mainly because my G2 is using the OS that was released when it came out whereas iOS users get the latest and greatest OS over WiFi regularly). But I don’t want to do it if I can’t get a quality maps app and if/when I do, it will be the 1st app I get and the first app I recommend.

Romney’s demands to Univision

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A weird behind the scenes from Romney’s appearance on Univision’s presidential campaign forums:

But the enthusiasm gap may have been an optical illusion formed by a series of last-minute demands by the Romney campaign, according to Maria Elena Salinas, one of the Univision anchors who moderated the forums.

Salinas told BuzzFeed that tickets for each forum were divided between the network, the respective campaigns, and the University of Miami (which hosted the events) — and she said both campaigns initially agreed to keep the audience comprised mostly of students, in keeping with the events’ education theme.

But after exhausting the few conservative groups on campus, the Romney camp realized there weren’t enough sympathetic students to fill the stands on their night — so they told the network and university that if they weren’t given an exemption to the students-only rule, they might have to “reschedule.”

The organizers relented. One Democrat with ties to the Obama campaign noted that Rudy Fernandez, the university official charged with coordinating the forums, is a member of Romney’s Hispanic steering committee. Fernandez did not respond to BuzzFeed’s questions about whether he gave preferential treatment to Romney’s campaign.

In any case, Romney’s team was allowed to bus in rowdy activists from around southern Florida in order to fill the extra seats at their town hall.

Obama’s campaign, meanwhile, stuck to the original parameters and allowed a large chunk of the tickets to be distributed to interested students on campus. The result was a quiet, well-behaved crowd — and a lot of no-shows. Minutes before Obama’s forum was to begin, producers began frantically directing university staff and volunteers to sit in the empty seats.

Salinas said both candidates ultimately had partisan crowds at their forums, but that Romney’s non-student activists ignored instructions to hold their applause.

“We were a little bit thrown because it was supposed to be a TV show, it wasn’t a rally,” Salinas said of the outspoken Romney supporters. “It was a little bit of disrespect for us.”

That wouldn’t be the last demand from the campaign: Romney himself almost pulled the plug on the whole thing minutes before the broadcast, Salinas said.

While introducing Romney at the top of the broadcast, Salinas’s co-anchor, Jorge Ramos, noted that the Republican candidate had agreed to give the network 35 minutes, and that Obama had agreed to a full hour the next night. Ramos then invited the audience to welcome Romney to the stage — but the candidate didn’t materialize.

“It was a very awkward moment, believe me,” Salinas said.

Apparently, Romney took issue with the anchors beginning the broadcast that way, said Salinas, and he refused to go on stage until they re-taped the introduction. (One Republican present at the taping said Romney “threw a tantrum.”)

source: How Romney Packed The Univision Forum.

Not very presidential.

MA US Senate Debate Warren v Brown

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Senator Scott Brown made an odd request of Elizabeth Warren in the Massachusetts US Senate Debate:

“Professor Warren, you have to stop scaring women”

source: Balloon Juice » Blog Archive » Elizabeth Warren / Scott Brown — Livestreaming Their First Debate.

Seems Brown is the reaper trying to kill the messenger. On tons of women’s issues, Brown’s Republican party has shown themselves to be actually scaring women. Warren is just telling them: you’re right to be fearful of a Republican senator.

So by talking about Republican policies, Elizabeth Warren is “scaring women”. Not the actual policies. Discussion of them.

Funny thing about Scott Brown, Guardian of Massachusetts Women-folk Before this debate, Harry Reid basically called Scott Brown a scaredy-cat for trying to actually dodge the debate by kicking it with his caucus around the capital:

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid suggested Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was looking for an excuse to skip a Thursday night debate with Elizabeth Warren (D). Tussling over an amendment offered by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), the Senate delayed a vote on a short-term spending bill that is expected to pass. Brown had suggested he might miss the debate if Democrats scheduled votes conflicting with its start time. “I’ve been to a few of these rodeos. It is obvious there is a big stall taking place. One of the senators who had a debate tonight doesn’t want to debate. Well, he can’t use the Senate as an excuse. There will be no more votes today,” Reid said.

source: Harry Reid: Scott Brown ‘doesn’t want to debate’.

Was Warren really scaring women or was she scaring Scott Brown who realized he had to debate Warren while fighting top of the ticket drag courtesy of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney?

Ann Romney: “It is time for all Americans to realize how significant this election is and how lucky we are to have someone with Mitt’s qualifications and experience and know-how to be able to have the opportunity to run this country.”

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New Ann Romney messaging seems to be “Thank your lucky stars for Mitt Romney”

“Stop it. This is hard. You want to try it? Get in the ring,” she said. “This is hard and, you know, it’s an important thing that we’re doing right now and it’s an important election and it is time for all Americans to realize how significant this election is and how lucky we are to have someone with Mitt’s qualifications and experience and know-how to be able to have the opportunity to run this country.”

source: Ann Romney, to critics in GOP: “You want to try it? Get in the ring.” (AUDIO).