3:26AM
Why this election must get dirty

SITE: FiveThirtyEight.com: Electoral Projections Done Right
Obama's projected electoral total is at high point, so he will be accused of all things possible as this window narrows (like Cindy insinuating that he's trying to kill her son by voting no on the same war-funding bill that McCain also voted against). Hopefully, the anger-stoking won't reach a point where his life is in danger, but McCain's campaign needs this anger to turn the tide.
A very risky business that doesn't exactly put country first.
I can't wait for this sort of era to pass.
Yesterday's column.
Reader Comments (4)
As it appears more and more likely that the only question left is how much Obama will win by, I was hoping to get your thoughts on how the margin of victory affects his governing:
If Obama scores a substantial victory (one that's called by 10/11:00 EST on election night), does that free him from having to worry about some of the more fringe elements of the left (Socialists, Protectionists), by claiming a broad majority win? Would that then allowing him to govern from the middle and unite the country? He could get all kinds of common sense compromise solutions on health care, trade, infrastructure, Iraq, and Iran without having to worry about pandering to the hysteria from either the extreme right or left. I could see this as a big benefit, just want to be sure that the big win doesn't encourage those leftist fringe elements that they have a bigger voice after the election.
Not to mention the irresponsible language used by him and his VP choice.
As the political campaign of McCain-Palin turned ugly, and a sharp increaseof their supporters shout racially charged slurs as well as chargingObama with alleged terrorist ties, I recall the ugly season that precededthe assassination of Yitzhak Rabin in Israel. At the time, the failure ofthe opposing party (Likud) to denounce those calls as they happened,fueled and emboldened extremists to act, the tragic outcome is one thatmany would argue, Israel never fully recovered from.
If the McCain campaign continues down this road, they are emboldeningthose extremes in our society that endanger everything we stand for,failing to denounce those voices in unequivocal terms is a failure ofleadership, pure and simple.