The Republican establishment is fully aware of the fact that they can't 
 win on any substantial issue of public policy on the merits of their 
 arguments alone. There is no broad constituency in America for showering 
 the top 1 percent with tax breaks, handing huge subsidies to energy 
 firms and giant agribusinesses and pharmaceutical firms, starting wars 
 of choice, cutting social services or privatizing broad swaths of the 
 public sector. 
 
So they emphasize social issues and conjure up fear of foreign bogey-men 
 in order to remain relevant. And they marginalize and demonize their 
 opponents, which has been a central thrust of conservative messaging 
 since the days of Spiro Agnew and Joe McCarthy. In logic, it's known as 
 "poisoning the well 
 <http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/poisoning-the-well.html>" -- 
 making one's interlocutor out to be such a heinous beast that anything 
 he or she says will be perceived, without examination, as an assault on 
 our core values. 
 
At heart, there's a fundamental divide between Obama's post-partisan 
 rhetoric, and the hunger among many progressives for a fighter who will 
 stand up to the Right-wing noise machine and effectively slug it out 
 with the GOP. That goes a long way to explaining why Obama, despite an 
 almost perfect biography and the caché of being a Beltway outsider at a 
 time when the insiders are so widely loathed, never seemed to catch on 
 with the left "blogosphere" the way one would have expected him to. 
 
But if Iowa showed anything, it's that it's not wise to underestimate 
 Obama's approach. As every political observer knows, the themes a 
 politician uses on the campaign trail often don't match his or her style 
 of governance once elected. That's rarely considered a good thing, but 
 in this case, people seeking /real/ change should /hope/ that Obama's 
 feel-good language is just campaign spin. 
 
That's because progressives' best hope with Barack Obama would be that 
 he use his message of "hope" and reconciliation to bring millions of new 
 voters into the process for the first time, gather an enormous amount of 
 political capital, and then turn around, take off the gloves and shove 
 that mandate right down the GOP's throat. 
 
Because if it /is/ Obama in the end, there will be a real opportunity 
 for him to lead the kind of political realignment that this country last 
 saw during the "Reagan Revolution" in 1980. Obscured by the focus on how 
 the race factor will play out, the simple fact is that a contest between 
 Obama and any of the likely GOP nominees is going to present a stark 
 contrast -- a visible manifestation of the "two Americas" theme-- and 
 one that would serve Obama very well. 
 
Because if it comes down to Obama, with his young, optimistic and 
 energized followers, against a grumpy old McCain running on his support 
 of the war, or Huckabee, the affable cleric surrounded by dour looking 
 middle-aged evangelicals (and Chuck Norris), or Giuliani, who's mean as 
 a snake and parodies himself every time he answers a healthcare question 
 by invoking 9/11, or a stuffed shirt like Mitt Romney -- all (except 
 Huckabee) angry, all hoping to scare voters into supporting them -- if 
 that were the choice, then Barack Obama's America might just win in a 
 landslide. 
 
http://www.alternet.org/election08/72807/?page=entire 
 
Sw 
 
  
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