Senator Obama has rendered nothing in the ways of action. Being head of an oversight committee that is to discern how to go about the Afghani equation in the War on Terror, and forgoing this important element of fundamental brainstorming for the sake of his campaign in itself seemingly belies his sincerity. The Jul 9, 2007 edition of NewsWeek branded Obama a 'hot-shot fundraiser', who had outpaced the GOP in funds raised combined. That to me is telling about where his priorities lie, and further supports my growing suspicion of him and his sincerity
And Clinton fairs no better. She might have been involved in many of these oversight committees and referendums, but the fact is that she herself voted for the invasion, and has not taken direct accountability for it being misguided on her part to do so. Hindsight is always 20/20, and the mere fact she hasn't straight-up apologized for participating in Bush's War reeks of self preservation. Senetor Clinton screwed up in a decision and cannot fully own up to it. She is no different than The Toxic Texan currently squatting in the White House.
Many supporters from both these camps, from what I have seen here, and elsewhere on HufPo have demonstrated a lack of willingness to digest the sheer and obvious fact that both candidates have no substance that is palpable and concrete. Clinton, in particular, lacks needed continuity in her expressed policies and ideas. She has not done well coming through with a 'top-down' campaign, fiery rhetoric and rampant mudslinging aimed at slowing down the momentous Obama Freight Train. And looks a right selfish cad in doing so, only seemingly interested in her preconceived rite to political ascension and nothing more.
I sense many supporters of all stripes lack one thing: defining what 'substance' is. Rather than sound pandering and condescending, which will illicit ultra-vehement and thoughtless responses, I'll give an example:
Ron Paul. He has constantly battled against corporate lobbying, and has refused such sponsorship for his campaign. He voted "Nay' on the Iraqi Invasion in 2003, and has proposed a complete and immediate pullout as part of his campaign piece. Citing non-constitutionality for his vote against the war, Ron Paul wishes to eliminate the IRS, and 'direct' tax for the same reasoning, as The 16th Amendment was never properly ratified in 1913. He is consistent in his approach and policy on these and other issues, never 'flip-flopping', or altering to put off a persona that is not in line with what he stands for. He's defined and substantive. And his other views I found too conservative for my liking. And even if that weren't the case, he still wouldn't stand a chance...
..because he said no to corporate lobbying and special interest money. That what substance looks like, people. Put down the sloganeering, and do your homework



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Posted March 3, 2008 | 10:00 AM (EST)