Wednesday Links
Plan for the week - probably no posts through the weekend. With the upcoming extraction, I have no clue how I’ll feel and probably won’t be interested in parsing political commentary. I was going to pre-write a few things, but my allergies are acting up again and I’ll likely go to bed earlier than normal tonight, so yeah.
I’m sure many of you will be devastated.
* Ken McKracken notes Obama’s unawareness regarding Iran policy. This is a pretty interesting note - how did he miss that?
* Adventures in legal prostitution.
* Why is Obama against the South Korean trade deal? Seriously, this is absolutely baffling.
* I have to say, Obama turning down a joint trip to Baghdad with McCain is really ballsy, especially stating that “We don’t need any more ‘facts’ to know that this war has been lost.” I liked the McCain move here - take a calculated gamble and see if you can’t get Obama to change his mind, and it ends up being lose-lose. The simple fact remains that if Obama was at all confident in his position regarding the situation in Iraq, he’d go along with this. He won’t because, I suspect, he knows he’s wrong and this is an issue he feels he simply cannot shift on. After all, for the amount of change he’s espousing, he simply has to stay as closed minded on this issue as his supporters tend to be.
* Jim Geraghty has some questions regarding Obama and his return to the “agricultural specialists” line.
* Adam, you were looking for me to bitch about Bush, here’s one: he signed that anti-genetic “discrimination” law into effect last week. Absolutely ridiculous. Even discounting the whole “government again intervening in the private sector,” the problem with this bill is that it forces insurance carriers to carry risk that they shouldn’t have to carry. I’m sorry, but at what point does it make sense for, say, an insurance company to offer flood insurance to an area that floods twice a year?
* Tom Coburn on the prescription for long-term Republican gains: Act like Republicans. Almost sounds too easy.
* Finally, some poll numbers. McCain beats Obama and Clinton on favorability, Obama’s unfavorables are higher than his favorables (very surprising), and a quarter of Democrats plan to vote for McCain.