What happened with S. 190 and why was it not passed?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the anticipated vice-presidential debate between Sarah Palin and Joe Biden, focusing on their respective debate strategies, public perceptions, and the potential impact on their political standings. Participants explore the implications of their communication styles and the expectations surrounding the debate.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that Palin's low expectations may allow her to perform better than anticipated, as media focus may shift to her unexpected success.
  • Others argue that Biden's experience and articulate nature will likely expose Palin's weaknesses, predicting she will struggle to keep up with the demands of the debate.
  • A participant recalls Margaret Thatcher's debate tactics, proposing that Palin may employ similar strategies of evasion and generality to avoid direct answers.
  • There is a concern that if Biden does not manage his responses carefully, he may inadvertently appear to be attacking Palin rather than engaging in a respectful debate.
  • Some express skepticism about Palin's ability to convey substantive policy knowledge, suggesting she relies on charm and generalities rather than facts.
  • A participant mentions that Palin's past debate performances have shown her skill in using non-answers effectively, which could challenge Biden's approach.
  • Concerns are raised about the audience's ability to discern the quality of the candidates' arguments, with some suggesting that many voters may be swayed by style over substance.
  • There is a discussion about Biden's need to maintain discipline during the debate, allowing Palin to make mistakes without appearing overly critical.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of opinions, with no clear consensus on the outcome of the debate or the effectiveness of either candidate's strategies. Disagreement exists regarding the public's perception of Palin and the potential impact of her debate style.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference past debates and public perceptions, indicating that the discussion is influenced by subjective interpretations of the candidates' abilities and communication styles. There are unresolved assumptions about the audience's intelligence and engagement with the candidates' messages.

  • #121
CNN and Time "Biden is the winner"

Who Won the VP Debate?
After Sarah Palin's interview with Katie Couric, many predicted her debate with Senator Joe Biden would be another "moose in the headlights" train wreck. That wasn't the case. The Alaska governor held her own and had a clear command of the facts. But was she good enough to win?

CNN conducted a national poll and found that Senator Biden won, but that Gov. Palin "exceeded expectations." CNN also found that Palin topped Biden on likability, but Biden was viewed to be more qualified for the job.

Politico acknowledges that Palin escaped a "demolition derby moment," but claimed Biden was still the clear winner. "The financial meltdown has put a new premium on competence, and Palin did nothing to show she is ready to be in charge." Still, Palin's "folksy charm" was, for the most part, well received, and on occasion came with a "sharp edge."

Similar analysis can be found at Time.com. Joe Klein writes that while Sarah Palin "did fine," Joe Biden "demonstrated a real knowledge of the issues." Biden, in Klein's opinion, also had the most memorable moment of the debate when he spoke about his wife's death and what it was like to be a single parent. That moment, according to Klein, "was more real than anything Palin said all night."

Still, Ms. Palin's "you betcha" phrases drew a tremendous amount of search interest. In referencing the average American, she used the phrase "Joe Sixpack." The term immediately shot up in Search ("Hockey Mom" is so last month). Palin also referred to John McCain as "the maverick" several times. For viewers, this clearly inspired memories of one of Tom Cruise's greatest hits. That's right, lookups on "top gun maverick" went supersonic. Finally, Palin's mispronunciation of the word "nuclear" drew an atomic level of searches for "nuclear vs. nucular." Remember: when in doubt, just sound it out.

I guess now Palin will go back under wraps and we can proceed to the next Presidential debate.
 
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  • #122
More on the debate -

She also was allowed to do fine by Joe Biden, who never really challenged her—his criticisms were always directed at John McCain—and never exposed the obvious shallowness of her knowledge on most topics. (He must have been sorely tempted to correct Palin when she called David McKiernan, the commanding general in Afghanistan, "McLellan," but Biden was hard-wired—I imagine his debate prep was a form of electric shock therapy—not to correct her, attack her, disrespect her.)

Indeed, Sarah Palin's high-energy performance in the vice-presidential debate was the most glaring demonstration—since George W. Bush's performances in 2000—of how little you can get away with knowing and still survive one of these things, especially if the rules limit the cross-examination as severely as they did in this debate. Her relentless opacity was impressive. She refused to answer the questions where she hadn't been prepped with answers and when Biden pointed out that an early question had been on deregulation not taxes, she flashed: "I may not answer the questions the way you and the moderator want to hear, but I'm going to talk straight to the American people."

Talk straight she didn't, with only a few exceptions. She talked talking points. And when the talking points concerned areas where she didn't know diddly, she didn't talk them very convincingly. Indeed, there were times I got the distinct impression that she didn't understand the points she was talking about (on the vice president's constitutional powers, for example).

http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1846997,00.html
 
  • #123
The Alaska governor held her own and had a clear command of the facts.
I would say that is false. She had command of talking points.
 
  • #124
CNN? said:
...but that Gov. Palin "exceeded expectations."
Honestly, how could she not?

When expectations include a slight chance that she might have just completely imploded, live on stage in front of 200M people - I mean a cardboard cutout with the McCain/Republican/Rove talking points being played out from a sound recorder might well have exceeded expectations.
 
  • #125
Astronuc said:
I would say that is false. She had command of talking points.

LowlyPion said:
Honestly, how could she not?

When expectations include a slight chance that she might have just completely imploded, live on stage in front of 200M people - I mean a cardboard cutout with the McCain/Republican/Rove talking points being played out from a sound recorder might well have exceeded expectations.
That was the "kind" criticisms, read the next one from Time.
 
  • #126
Evo said:
That was the "kind" criticisms, read the next one from Time.
I'd agree with the last (third) paragraph.

Palin seems like a nice person who has been cast into an unfortunate situation.


There's nothing wrong with ambition - as long as it's realistic.
 
  • #127
Astronuc said:
I'd agree with the last (third) paragraph.

Palin seems like a nice person who has been cast into an unfortunate situation.


There's nothing wrong with ambition - as long as it's realistic.
That was the Evo Child's take on the debate. She said that if Palin was a friend's mother (oh gosh darn it dearie, give me a hug) she'd probably like the oddball gushiness, but definitely NOT someone she'd consider competant to be VP.
 
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  • #128
I heard one analysis that opined that while she may have salvaged herself, she did McCain no favors, by focusing on her experience and not defending McCain and promoting his.

Biden was very careful to represent what Obama and he would do as a team, but not Palin, who even went so far as to think to expand the powers of the VP beyond her own shallow understanding of the Constitution.
 
  • #129
Unfortunately, Palin is a minor leaguer prematurely elevated to a major league team.

It would be nice to have an outsider in Washington, but she's too inexperienced and uninformed. And unfortunately McCain has surrounded himself with Washington insiders.
 
  • #130
That was the other one: "Joe Sixpack". I noticed that she got negative points when she used this expression. The Ohio voters didn't seem to like that or "maverick", which surprised me.
 
  • #131
Astronuc said:
Unfortunately, Palin is a minor leaguer prematurely elevated to a major league team.

That's funny. That metaphor occurred to me as well the other night. And as I can recall sometimes these 18 year old Minor League phenoms come to the bigs and out of nowhere throw a no-hitter, or get a big hit. And that's the last you ever hear from them again, because as a pitcher or a batter they didn't have the necessary foundation or fundamentals to repeat their performances with any consistency.

Palin unfortunately looks to have been a poor student in school and pays the price. Maybe even ditched her history classes, or skipped a lecture on the Constitution or Supreme Court cases, or hasn't read much on policy opinions, and has skated to her own personal fulfillment of the Peter Principle that suggests that people rise to a level higher than their competence.

The real question will be after this defeat in November and she gets shuttled back off to the long winter in Alaska how she will fare, both in her duties and to life outside the spotlight. Alaska is not exactly at the crossroads of national economic or international policy currents, and developing further relevance will likely become even more of a challenge in a state that will have a new view of her than before she left and an ethics investigation that has been shuttled aside in the pursuit of her ambition.
 
  • #132
We have a small local team that feeds into the farm team that feeds into the majors. Palin is not even on a farm team.

The local stadium has been losing money and basically the taxpayers are now carrying it. This is a predominantly Republican/conservative, business oriented area. But the Democrats provide no satisfactory alternative.
 
  • #133
Palin played it much as I expected, ignoring the questions asked, delivering her memorised 'Alaska/energy' answer each time instead and trying to connect with the audience by being 'cute' and folksy.

I thought Biden did very well though I must presume he was under instructions not to be too aggressive because several times Palin lead with her chin and it would have been good to see Biden deliver a knock out blow. Perhaps his advisers thought a tactic like that might win him the battle but lose the war??

As the debate went on and Palin ran out of permutations to her stock answer she began to revert to type and ramble pretty much incoherently such as
I'm not one to attribute every man - activity of man to the changes in the climate," she said.

"There is something to be said also for man's activities, but also for the cyclical temperature changes on our planet... What I want to argue about is, how are we going to get there to positively affect the impacts?"
I wish I could talk England like what she can :)

The BBC say CNN's instapoll of undecideds gave it to Biden 51% - 36% and CBS undecideds gave it to Biden 46% - 21%.

As it is the undecideds both parties were trying to win over it looks like a decisive victory for the Obama campaign team.
 
  • #134
  • #135
But ... but ... but FoxNews says their poll showed Palin won 86% to 12%.

That seems to be a bit beyond a reasonable margin for error. I'm wondering if their methods aren't a little flawed?
 
  • #136
LowlyPion said:
But ... but ... but FoxNews says their poll showed Palin won 86% to 12%.

That seems to be a bit beyond a reasonable margin for error. I'm wondering if their methods aren't a little flawed?
FoxNews should worry. It seems 12% of their hand-picked die-hard Republicans have switched allegiance following the debate :biggrin:
 
  • #137
Any news on how this has shifted the overall national poll numbers?
 
  • #138
LowlyPion said:
But ... but ... but FoxNews says their poll showed Palin won 86% to 12%.

That seems to be a bit beyond a reasonable margin for error. I'm wondering if their methods aren't a little flawed?
Not considering that they only polled the people in the Fox newsroom and McCain's campaign staff. :wink:
 
  • #139
Cyrus said:
Any news on how this has shifted the overall national poll numbers?

Gallup numbers today did not include polling from after the debate. But tomorrow's numbers will begin to.

Right now it's showing 49% Obama - 42% McCain
 
  • #140
It must be humiliating to publicly go before the country and not have any clue what you're talking about.

I mean, honestly. Does she not feel just a *little* stupid standing there making stuff up?
 
  • #141
Cyrus said:
It must be humiliating to publicly go before the country and not have any clue what you're talking about.

I mean, honestly. Does she not feel just a *little* stupid standing there making stuff up?

Things are working out great for her ... maybe.

She gets hours of face time with 10's of millions of people. Her exposure will be something she can build off of. And it's not costing her anything.

McCain on the other hand ... this is it. In 4 years ... who knows what his health or electability will be. I doubt he will be around much after losing. He may not even stand in 2010 for the Senate. It's likely his end of the road.

The maybe comes from what may happen back in Alaska. Can she buckle back down now? Can she escape the ethics damage and the revelations of her meanness and hang on in the office there? Or will she move to take over Ted Stevens seat if he goes to jail and grab at a broader national stage in the Senate? With the Democrats in office, there likely won't be any appointed positions to fatten her resume with.
 
  • #142
I see it reported by MSNBC that despite the euphoria at how well Palin allegedly did, and the McCain complaints the News Media filtered her message, she is not scheduled to be on ANY TV news show for live interviews, this weekend or until the election.

This looks like this is it for her ever answering any more questions.

So much for how well they really think she handled herself and can handle herself.
 
  • #143
You betcha. I don't know LowlyPion, Ill get back to ya. :Wink:

pew pew pew pew...DING
 
  • #144
LowlyPion said:
So much for how well they really think she handled herself . . .
I would imagine the McCain handlers want the public to retain that image, so they won't allow Palin to go public. I'm waiting to see if there is a wedding (Bristol and her dude) just before the election.
 
  • #145
Ivan Seeking said:
That was the other one: "Joe Sixpack". I noticed that she got negative points when she used this expression. The Ohio voters didn't seem to like that or "maverick", which surprised me.

Perhaps they were mad because they were only one square away from winning, and those weren't the phrases they were looking for...

http://www.palinbingo.com/"

LowlyPion said:
Things are working out great for her ... maybe.

She gets hours of face time with 10's of millions of people. Her exposure will be something she can build off of. And it's not costing her anything.

Someone today told me that someone quoted her word for word some past Saturday, and everyone thought it was funny. Perhaps after the election, she can quote Tina Fey and be a new regular on SNL. Eh?

btw, has anyone nicknamed her Sarah Sixpack yet?

hmmmm...

I guess that was too easy. The http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...10/02/AR2008100204250.html?hpid=opinionsbox1" had the scoop on the obvious.
 
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  • #146
OmCheeto said:
btw, has anyone nicknamed her Sarah Sixpack yet?

I prefer "Caribou Barbie"...

...wish I could claim the term, but a guy at work was using it...
 
  • #147
OmCheeto said:
From the Washington Post:
Washington Post said:
"Nice to meet you," Palin told Joe Biden. "Hey, can I call you Joe?"

"You can call me Joe," the senator obliged.

"Okay, thanks," she said brightly.
I am absolutely convinced that this was her setup up for the "Tell me it ain't so Joe" line.

Everything is so practiced with these people, I am quite certain she set that up so that she would not later be charged with being disrespectful of a US Senator that had called her Governor throughout the evening.

If only they would have applied that kind of interest to doing the Nation's business rather than crafting ways to retain power through deception and guile. In their valuing form over content. Image over policy.
 
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  • #148
LowlyPion said:
From the Washington Post:

I am absolutely convinced that this was her setup up for the "Tell me it ain't so Joe" line.

Everything is so practiced with these people, I am quite certain she set that up so that she would not later be charged with being disrespectful of a US Senator that had called her Governor throughout the evening.

If only they would have applied that kind of interest to doing the Nation's business rather than crafting ways to retain power through deception and guile. In their valuing form over content. Image over policy.

Oh my, that's the only explanation for that strangely timed "Can I call you Joe?" comment.

BTW, I didn't get the winking thing...I'm looking for an actual leader, not a cheer leader.
 
  • #149
lisab said:
Oh my, that's the only explanation for that strangely timed "Can I call you Joe?" comment.

BTW, I didn't get the winking thing...I'm looking for an actual leader, not a cheer leader.

It was just too eager for my ear. Like she had so many bases that had to be touched in her talent section of the competition.

Fortunately for Biden they skipped the swim suit part of the program.
 
  • #150
Astronuc said:
For example - She still misrepresents McCain on the current financial crisis. McCain did not seen any of this coming!
pfact/McCain in 2006 speaking for S.190 said:
If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole,
If that is not a warning there is no such thing. Did he claim to see the entire financial crisis rolling out the way it has? No, and he stated that in the interview with the New Hampshire paper [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTmIJ5Aag2Q"], which pfact can't bother to check. Pfact also ignores very similar warnings about the GSEs from both Greenspan and Bernanke in years past, and in fact the author contradicts both fed chairs with its own reinvention of the the cause.

pfact said:
First of all, congressional efforts to increase oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac extend back to the early 1990s, making McCain a latecomer to the debate. The regulatory efforts proved unsuccessful because of Congress’ complicated relationship with the firms, whose dominance in the home financing market makes their stability critical to the economy.
So what? Fannie/Freddie were a not significant threat in the early 90s because at that point they only held/guaranteed http://www.econbrowser.com/archives/2008/07/gse_to_gdp_jul_08.gif" . Then, by 2003, as Greenspan stated they had become a threat.

pfact said:
The extent of the problems was not yet fully known, and it’s a leap of faith to suggest that regulators granted expanded power would have noticed a deterioration in Fannie and Freddie’s loan portfolios soon enough and would have sounded an alarm.
There was no need to do any close inspections of their books. It was well known that the main economic threat was that their portfollio as of 2000 was too large and undercapitalized. Period. Greenspan said so several times and later so did Bernanke. S.190, unlike the other bills before and after that only pretended to do anything, explicitly gave the regulators power to require more capital. S.190 would have immediately allowed regulators to force Freddie/Fannie to shrink, effectively putting on the brakes on the mortage market. No Fannie/Freddie, no buyer that could package Countrywide risky mortgages They knew it and put on a full court lobbying press to stop it.

pfact said:
We give McCain some credit for weighing in on problems surrounding Fannie Mae, even though he got involved after a comprehensive government report issued a loud alarm to anyone watching.
Anyone did not include Dodd, Frank, Waxman, Schumer telling 'anyone' listening that the report was alarmist, Fred/Fan were 'sound', and were critical to minority and affordable housing, implying the motives of anyone calling for GSE shrinkage were suspect.

pfact said:
Barack Obama’s campaign responded to McCain’s remarks by labeling his desire for tougher oversight a myth. Obama spokesman Tommy Vietor noted ...
Good grief. How is some Obama response relevant to an objective fact check on a McCain statements about the GSEs? Where is the response from Elvis?
 
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